Speaking Out
Ravi Zacharias International Ministries
Fatherhood's Call to Duty
A love that knows its responsibilities.
My father-in-law had a great impact on my life. A father to four
daughters, he always considered me the son he never had. In one of our
farewell conversations before he died in 2005, I'll never forget a
particular word he used, a noble four-letter word that epitomized his
own life: duty.
When the Second World War began, my father-in-law dutifully enlisted to
serve in the Royal Canadian Air Force as a navigator. He navigated
brilliantly by the stars. He served his country and a cause for the
world with duty and honor at a perilous time in history. As he faced
death, duty came up again. He worried that he had not left his finances
in better shape for his wife. The truth is he had provided for her, but
with his sudden diagnosis, he suddenly felt uncertain. I said to him,
"Please don't worry about it, Dad. We'll be there to take care of her."
He paused, overwhelmed by the weight of his limited time, and said in
somber tones, "But it was my duty to do so," and the tears ran down his
face.
Again, there was that word: duty. I almost never heard him
speak publicly without him somehow bringing it up. He would often quote
Lord Nelson's famous call to his countrymen before the battle of
Trafalgar: "England expects every man to do his duty." So prone was my
father-in-law to quote that line that when he wrote his first book, I
asked him with an amused expression, "Where in the book is Nelson's
line?" I opened the book, and there it was: the opening line of the
first chapter.
Society's two extremes toward the call of duty both miss the mark.
Materially-minded people don't like the word because they think it
somehow handcuffs us. Why place a burden of compliance that is self-made and mere convention?,
they insinuate. The spiritually-minded don't like the word very much
either. They think it diminishes a greater demand, the demand of love.
In his conclusion to the Book of Ecclesiastes, Solomon said that "the
whole duty of man is to fear God and to keep his commandments." Jesus
positioned two commandments as the greatest: to love God and to love our
fellow human beings. Making the love of God and of man our duty is
surely not making them opposite sentiments.
Even to address the need for a father is to run the risk of being
accused of making a veiled attack on the culture of progressive
thinking. That is not my point. Many men over the years have opted for
selfishness over duty, for professional accolades over nurture, for
image rather than substance, for temporal gain over an eternally defined
profit, for sitting in the board room rather than standing by a crib.
There is the old saying that the hand that rocks the cradle rules the
world. Now, that the cradle is ruling the world as we rock ourselves
into the arrogant belief that not only is an earthly father unnecessary,
there is no need for a heavenly Father, either.
Duty is the handmaiden of love and honor. Duty recognizes a cause
greater than one's self; it is choosing the right thing rather than the
convenient thing. As men and as fathers we have a duty before God and
others to do what is right, honorable, and sacrificial.
Contrast these two stories: Some years ago, a fire broke out during an
Air Canada flight from Dallas to Toronto. The pilot began a dramatic and
sudden descent, knowing he had but a few moments to land if any were to
survive. As soon as they opened the door for rescue, the whole
aircraft, sucking in the oxygen, turned into an inferno. There were some
fatalities and some suffered burns, but because of his skill and the
crew's commitment, many were rescued. The captain was the last one to
leave the burning airplane. He was pulled through the window with his
uniform afire. He deserved the tearful and heart-filled commendation he
received as someone who had done his duty.
In April, a ferry in Seoul, South Korea, capsized, killing hundreds.
Most of the passengers were high school students who ultimately drowned
while waiting for instructions to abandon ship. The captain himself had
fled the sinking ship and made sure he was safe on dry ground, prompting
a chorus of condemnation from the loved ones of those lost. The teacher
who had organized the trip took his own life, feeling that he had no
right to be alive while most of his students perished. Even the prime
minister of South Korea offered to resign because of the tragedy. No
celebration here, no commendation of a brave man; just a series of wrong
decisions that resulted in the ultimate wrong decision of a man who put
himself first and failed to do his duty.
This Father's Day, I call upon every man to do his duty to those who
are in his care and toward whatever task is in his trust, regardless of
the personal cost. I pause, myself, to reflect upon ways in which I
could have served my family better. I wish I had done that in more ways
than I did. Watching our children live out their lives for God is a
thrill that cannot be gainsaid.
The hymn writer put it well: "Put on the Gospel armor / and watching
unto prayer, / When duty calls, or danger, / be never wanting there"
(Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus). My father-in-law was that kind of man,
and that's why his last words at the end of his life were incredible.
Looking toward the heavens he said, "Amazing, just amazing!" before
telling his wife, "I love you." Love had at last wedded beauty to duty,
the enrichment of the here and the enchantment of the hereafter. It was
the finest and the most soul-affirming of farewells. Doing your duty
before God and man is ultimately welcomed in the embrace of love and
commendation from whom it really matters. What more could a wife and
children have asked for?
God places before us a call to the most rewarding service: to love that
knows its responsibility and will reap the fitting reward of children
who honor their parents. Out of such homes society can build a better
future. The path to that end is fraught with obstacles, perils,
disappointments, and heartaches, but we cannot fail in our duty. It
begins by knowing the God who sent his Son who, in turn, fulfilled his
duty and laid down his life so that you and I might know the love of our
heavenly Father. Duty and love came from heaven to earth so that earth
might reflect that splendor.
Happy Father's Day, gentlemen. And to families that are missing their
father today, my prayers are especially for you. May God our heavenly
Father be your strength.
Ravi Zacharias is founder and president of Ravi Zacharias International
Ministries (RZIM), a global ministry focused on evangelism,
apologetics, spiritual disciplines, training, and humanitarian support.
An itinerant speaker for 42 years, Zacharias is presently Senior
Research Fellow at Oxford University's Wycliffe Hall and his weekly
radio program, "Let My People Think," airs on over 2,000 outlets
worldwide. Dr. Zacharias and his wife, Margie, have three grown children
and reside in Atlanta.
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