Saturday, May 29, 2021

Mutual submission - why parents should sacrifice for their child

 Most parents in the United States abuse their children, with 94% of parents physically battering children as punishment, and 70% of the country agreeing that children a "good, hard spanking every once and a while". The command for children is to submit to your parents, in most circles. However, Divine Codified Jurisprudence calls for mutual submission between parents and children.

It says in Ephesians 6:1-4 KJV:

Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. Honor thy father and mother, as this is the first commandment with promise; May it be well with thee, and thou mayest live long upon the earth. And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath, but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.

The Greek root word translated "obey" is υπακουο (Latin: hupakouo) and refers to receiving care and support from a parent, and owing them nothing in return. This sort of submission is prompted by Christian love, denoted by the Greek root word αγαπαο (Latin: agapao) and refers to sacrifice for one's children, in the light and spirit that Christ sacrificed for His children, so we our sins could be forgiven. Love for a child is submission to them and their needs as an enemy, being convicted of your sin nature, just as mankind is an enemy of God, and is convicted of such. A parent should submit to their child's needs from beneath the child, charring themselves and being convicted of their sin nature. An adult will never again understand what is a child.

The Greek root word translated "nurture" is παιδεία (Latin: paideia) and refers to self-discipline and self-control in relation to children in the form of co-regulation. Parenting in ancient Israel was attachment-based in nature, and involved pro-social pedophilia, in siphon format, meaning siphoning a child's energy and rambunctiousness to the parents, preferably within a domestic home. The idea is to model most morals to children, while giving them a relationship with a parent where they can talk about anything, and be understood and believed, as well as trusted. The Greek root word translated "admonition" is νουθεσία (Latin: nouthesia) and refers to setting the occasional limit or boundary, such as the word "no" or its various variants, but cannot be backed by punishment, as this word is weighted by the Greek root word παροργιζο (Latin: parorgizo) and refers to child abuse, meaning damages, with damages summed up as anything that offends the senses of the child, meaning the slightest of personal slights against a child.

Parents and children are to respect each other, starting with the parent, but ending with the child. A child owes their parents nothing in return. Parents who disrespect their children will be cast into eternal Hell-fire. Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Any comment that
1. Endorses child abuse (including pornography of such)
2. Imposes want to the point of imposition, meaning entitlement.
3. Contains self-entitled parent rhetoric, to the point of self-victimization

will not be published. Flexible application. Debate is allowed, but only civil arguments that presume the best of intentions in their opponent, on both sides.

Righteous co-sleeping: Why God wants parents to sleep next to their children

Many parents think that co-sleeping is the irresponsible choice for a parent to make. This is a common attitude from American parents. Most ...