“…I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her
mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law, and one’s foes will be
members of one’s own household.” Matthew 10:35-36
Anyone who has become a Christian in a family of unbelievers can testify to
the hundreds of ways persecution can be experienced. Jesus warned us up front
about this in chilling language. It was Jesus who experienced this from his own
family, being chided and misunderstood (Luke 2:48), and
his “own people did not accept him” (John 1:11).
Most families in the world are not nuclear in nature, but extended, so an
entire web of kinship relations are fouled up by the action of becoming a
Christian. It can be very difficult to make one’s way in the world accordingly.
We could even say it is one’s family culture that rejects the Christian witness.
One reason for this is over-familiarity. Jesus generalizes from his experience
of rejection in Nazareth saying, “Truly I tell you, no prophet is accepted
in the prophet’s hometown” (Matthew 13:57).
This goes right back to the dawn of human history. The first recorded act of
violence was due to family persecution—Cain murdering his brother Abel out of
religious jealousy. King David bemoans the betrayal of a close friend in Psalm 41:9,
“Even my bosom friend in whom I trusted, who ate of my bread, has lifted
his heel against me.” Jeremiah is dismayed to find members of his own
family involved in an assassination plot against him; “…even your kinsfolk
and your own family, even they have dealt treacherously with you; they are in
full cry after you” (Jeremiah 12:6).
In China today, if a student converts to Christianity it is the parents that
insist he or she give up her faith, for fear of an inferior work placement
bringing dishonor to the family. In many Buddhist societies, like Burma, to
become a Christian is tantamount to saying “I am no longer Burmese.”
It is family misunderstanding that is often hardest to bear. After all, we
long for the love of those who have nurtured us. To have that love relationship
ruptured ranks as one of the greatest traumas a human being can face.
In Pakistan, a father was asked why he murdered his daughter. He answered
simply, “I didn’t murder my daughter. When she became a Christian, she was no
longer my daughter.” He will never be charged for his crime.
RESPONSE: Today I will treasure my family and watch for Satan’s subtle
attacks against it.
PRAYER: Pray for those experiencing Satan’s deadly tactic of persecution
from family members.