The devil has sadly been winning in many families. He's a liar and a deceiver, always will be.
The woke cancel culture and the cut-off culture are one!
It's been happening in homes. We are living during strange times where younger people opt of cutting off.. short, long. Some use their kids to create punishments and bring distance from family members. How did all this become normalized in our culture.. calling it healing or protecting my peace? Hey, this is not always healing or called for.
Yes, cutting off is often mistaken for healing, and silent estrangement is mistaken for peace. The Prince of Peace is the one who gives real and lasting peace (starting in the heart).
A generation is being trained by therapists (who have the problems)—subtly, steadily—to believe that removing family members who cause discomfort from disagreeing is the same as resolving pain. But Scripture never equates avoidance with restoration.
God’s Word consistently calls each of us towards Jesus, towards reconciliation, towards our heavenly home, not towards retreat over differences of opinion:
"Be careful that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deceit based on human tradition, based on the elements of the world, rather than Christ." (Colossians 2:8)
"If parents have raised their children to be doctors, lawyers, athletes, musicians, but have not raised them to honor and obey God, and to be respectful of their Christian elders, then they have failed." ~ V. Baucham
“If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men.” (Romans 12:18)
Yet the spirit of this age whispers the opposite: punish the parents, withdraw, label, detach.
Cut Off, Yet Called Toward Your Real Home
Do they ghost and sever you for shorter periods to hurt and train you, parent when you've done zero wrong? Who made your adult kids your disrespectful disciplinarians? To be “cut off” is not merely to be ignored—it is to be severed. It is the quiet exile of the soul from fellowship, the ache of being removed from belonging. What today is branded as “protecting my peace” or canceling relationships often echoes an ancient reality Scripture has already named: separation born from truth, sin, and allegiance.
In the Old Testament, to be “cut off” was no light matter. It was covenant language. God warned that those who rejected His commands were not just socially distanced—they were spiritually removed from the life and blessing of His people (Genesis 17:14; Numbers 9:13). This was not cruelty; it was clarity. To walk outside of God’s covenant was to step outside of His covering.
Sin always separates. That is its nature. Jesus Christ is the Solution to all the Brokenness We See Today.
And this separation runs deeper than family tension or cultural division—it reaches heaven itself. “All we like sheep have gone astray” (Isaiah 53:6). Estrangement from God is the great fracture beneath every lesser fracture. When Adam fell, humanity was cut off at the root. Since then, every cold silence, every broken relationship, every family divided by truth reflects that original breach.
Yet here is the glory of the gospel:
God did not accept the separation—He pursued reconciliation.
“God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself” (2 Corinthians 5:19).
The story of Scripture is not merely about who is cut off, but how the cut off are brought back.
Like the prodigal son, we wander—often proudly, sometimes blindly—until grace brings us to our senses (Luke 15:17). And when we return, we do not find a closed door, but a running Father.
When Separation Comes From Standing for Truth
There is another kind of being “cut off”—not for sin, but for righteousness.
Jesus prepared His followers for this reality without softening it:
“If the world hates you, know that it hated Me first” (John 15:18).
“All who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution” (2 Timothy 3:12).
Sometimes the separation you feel is not because you failed Christ—but because you followed Him.
In the early church, believers were cast out by families, rejected by communities, and opposed by religious leaders (Acts 4:1–3). Today, the forms may look more polished—silence, exclusion, labels—but the root is the same. Truth divides where hearts refuse it.
Even within families, allegiance to Christ can bring painful distance. Jesus said so plainly: “A man’s enemies will be those of his own household” (Matthew 10:36). Not because Christ destroys families—but because truth exposes what cannot coexist.
The Cross: Not Just Believed, But Carried
Following Christ is not casual agreement—it is crucifixion.
In Jesus’ day, a cross was not symbolic—it was terminal. To carry it meant you were as good as dead.
Paul makes it personal:
“I have been crucified with Christ.. and the life I now live, I live by faith in the Son of God” (Galatians 2:20).
To follow Jesus is to die—to self-rule, self-protection, self-exaltation. And death is not painless. The flesh resists. Pride fights back. The heart wrestles for control (Romans 7:15–25).
But here is the paradox of the kingdom. Me thinks what dies with Christ, believer, rises with Him.
Suffering: Not a Detour, But a Mark
Scripture does not present suffering as an exception for believers—but as an expectation.
Paul goes so far as to say:
“It has been granted to you… not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake” (Philippians 1:29).
Granted—given as a gift.
That overturns everything.
Suffering for Christ is not evidence that something is wrong—it is often evidence that something is right. The apostles, beaten and shamed, walked away rejoicing that they were counted worthy (Acts 5:41).
That kind of joy does not come from comfort.
It comes from clarity—knowing Who you belong to.
Modern Estrangement and Ancient Truth
Today’s “cut-off culture” often claims moral high ground, but it frequently lacks biblical reconciliation. Scripture never celebrates permanent relational severing where repentance is possible. God’s pattern is always this:
- Truth confronted
- Sin confessed
- Grace extended
- Fellowship restored
Where pride reigns, estrangement lingers.
Where humility enters, healing begins.
James writes plainly: “God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble” (James 4:6).
A Final Word for the Wounded and Faithful
If you are being distanced, dismissed, or quietly cut off because you hold to Christ—do not be shaken.
You are walking a well-worn path.
Christ walked it.
The apostles walked it.
Faithful believers across generations have walked it.
You are not alone—you are aligned.
And remember this:
No one who is truly in Christ is ever ultimately cut off.
“I will never leave you nor forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5).
Even if earthly relationships fracture, the deepest union remains unbreakable.
Need a Moment or Two for Reflection"?
- Biblical grounding: strong and consistent across OT and NT
- Theological clarity: aligned with evangelical doctrine
- Historical/statistical note: I’m not confident giving exact Barna statistics on estrangement without risking inaccuracy, but multiple Barna studies do confirm rising relational fragmentation and declining church connection in recent decades
“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?” (Jeremiah 17:9)
Parents—flawed, learning, often weary—once carried the sacred responsibility of raising children while navigating their own immaturity, stress, and limitations. They were never omniscient. They were never sinless. And yet today, they are often judged as if they should have been.
“Honour thy father and thy mother…” (Exodus 20:12)
That command has not expired.
But in our time, a single misstep can overshadow years of sacrifice. One disagreement is recast as harm. One imperfect moment becomes a verdict.
This is not discernment—it is distortion.
a growing appetite for outrage.
Week after week, many are conditioned to search for offense—to identify a wrong, assign blame, and find validation in opposition. But this constant agitation reveals something profound:
It is not strength—it is instability.
“For where envying and strife is, there is confusion and every evil work.” (James 3:16)
Those who are quietly building—raising families, serving others, walking with God—do not live in a constant state of indignation. They are too occupied with eternal things.
This endless cycle of offense often flows from a fragile sense of identity. When a person does not know who they are before God, they begin to define themselves by what—and whom—they oppose.
The Lens That Distorts Reality
When a person is trained to search for wounds, they will eventually find them—even where they were never intended.
Every interaction becomes suspect. Every memory is reinterpreted. Every flaw is magnified.
And instead of moving forward, the soul becomes trapped—analyzing, reanalyzing, and never arriving at peace.
Scripture warns us about this inward spiral:
“The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?” (Jeremiah 17:9)
Without the stabilizing truth of God’s Word, feelings become the authority—and feelings are a poor master.
You cannot control the voices shaping others. You cannot silence every influence speaking into their lives. But you can control this:
Your spirit.
Your consistency.
Your Christlikeness.
“A soft answer turneth away wrath…” (Proverbs 15:1)
Your calm, steady, faithful presence—over time—can do what arguments never will. It quietly reshapes perception. It bears witness to truth.
This is not a weakness. This is spiritual strength.
Let's, each one, return to what God's Word has always required:
- Repentance and humility over pride
- Reconciliation over rejection
- Endurance over escape
- Truth over popular trends
Jesus did not cancel sinners—He called them to repentance. If the person chooses to stay closed to the gospel message, there is a time to move on. Pray for that closed-minded person and live your life.
Jesus did not avoid broken people—He moved toward them in love, until they paused Him from being Himself and sharing what was so, putting him in a time-out. They'd show him the palm of their hand, saying stop so to speak.
“For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.” (Luke 19:10)
A Sobering Perspective
And we must not forget:
Life is brief.
“Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour…” (James 4:14)
Start talking to God about all this. Do it again. "Cutoff culture has gotten worse these days because the world keeps rewarding emotional avoidance. People are being taught that removing anyone who triggers pain.. that equals healing, even if that person is a loving parent. Social media therapy 'Trends' keep pushing the idea that cutting people off is empowerment. But what it's really done is create a generation that's terrified of any discomfort.
It's easier to label someone toxic than it is to face the hard work of relational communication; it's easier to (punish) cancel, diagnose, and distance than it is to repair a relationship. And the more that gets praised online, as it has been. The harder the honest conversation becomes in real life, but the biggest thing to remember is that no outside worldly therapy voice is more powerful than your calm presence. You can't always control what they're consuming, but you can control what they're experiencing from you, and that's what can slowly rewire their perception over time if they become open to the truth. Can, might, could.
What is this so? Parents are the only people on the planet, it seems, who have been expected to be perfect for an entire lifetime, from the get-go and all the way to their graves. Why? Is that fair? Who warned parents that they would get blindsided by this cut-off (cancel) culture?
They were raising children while they were stressed from paying the bills, and exhausted after work hard. Parents were just learning as they go and carrying a lot of responsibility that no one prepared them for, and yet somehow, they're now judged like they should never have gotten it wrong cuz they disagreed ..from seeing differently have having more experiences. Now, one mistake can outweigh decades of love. Your history together doesn't matter, and you don't either.
One disagreement is labeled as harm, disrupting one's peace. One imperfect moment gets used as "proof to confirm" that someone was unsafe (and perhaps you weren't even saying anything). Listen, when parents are held to standards that no human could ever meet, estrangement stops becoming surprising, and it becomes the outcome of what we now see in this wacko woke culture.
Today this cut-off culture weirdness is happening in America and Canada primarily. We meet parents cut off. Every single week it seems like someone is hurting for their non-loud disagreement that somehow triggered, hurting by the next personal attack, by the parental mistake that deserves to be punished. You didn't choose to be the deligated authority over them, but it seems this adult child has hated me all their life. It never ends, and all of it really shows us how privileged it is to live, like that, to have the time to sit around looking for reasons to be angry or triggered, needing someone to be wrong so that you can feel right and better about yourself.
People who are actually building lives, raising families, caring with real responsibilities, aren't to live like this. They don't need a new enemy every week. This constant outrage isn't about values or standards. It's about people who don't know who they are, unless they're tearing someone else down from visits.
The more you’re told to look for issues and “figure out your triggers,” the more you start seeing problems, even where they didn’t exist. Everything starts getting filtered through that woke lens.
And instead of the parents moving forward spiritually, they stay stuck trying to figure themselves out.
How did the parents become the problem in their child’s eyes? The wacko "therapy that started in schools, on TV, even in their school's books" has sadly trained a whole generation to look for trauma and made parents the easiest place to put the blame.
Christ suffered on the Cross. God in Christ absorbed the worst trauma this world could produce, physical torture, mockery, abandonment, spitting and blows, and death, and transformed it into resurrection.
This is not some metaphor for trauma survivors. It really happened, and now this is the actual pattern of our Christian experience. We die to the stuff we need to die to, and then we live! Jesus is Lord of all.
How will it end? God will be “all in all”. That is rooted in the truth of Jesus’ resurrection and the resultant future, when Christ returns and “the Son himself will be made subject to him who put everything under him, so that God may be all in all” (1 Corinthians 15:28).
"We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed...always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies" (2 Corinthians 4:8-10).
What does the Bible say about dealing with real abuse in families?
There is no official, fixed total number of "traumas" because they keep creating more. Just like many keep adding letters to who they are.
1. Acute (Single-Incident) Trauma A one-time shocking event: accident, assault, natural disaster, sudden death of a loved one.
2. Chronic (Complex/Repeated) Trauma Prolonged abuse, domestic violence, repeated childhood neglect. This produces what the ICD-11 calls Complex PTSD (C-PTSD).
3. Childhood/Developmental Trauma Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs): physical, emotional, or sexual abuse; neglect; household dysfunction. The ACE study identifies 10 core categories.
4. Combat/War Trauma Military exposure to death, injury, atrocity, and moral injury.
5. Sexual Trauma Rape, assault, childhood sexual abuse.
6. Medical Trauma Sudden catastrophic illness, surgical emergencies, ICU experiences.
7. Natural Disaster Trauma Earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, fires.
8. Vicarious/Secondary Trauma Trauma absorbed by first responders, therapists, medical workers, or journalists through repeated exposure to others' suffering.
9. Generational/Intergenerational Trauma The argument that trauma responses are passed through family systems and even epigenetically. This category is the most contested scientifically.
10. Racial/Identity-Based Trauma This is the newest and most culturally/politically loaded category. Therapists such as those affiliated with the APA now argue that racism, microaggressions, and discrimination cause clinical-level trauma responses. This is genuinely controversial even within psychology itself.
11. Grief and Loss Trauma Complicated grief from sudden or violent loss.
12. Betrayal Trauma Trauma caused specifically by someone in a trusted relationship (parent, spouse, church leader).
Parents aren’t really losing their children because of what happened years ago (if they made real mistakes or not). Have you really caused your kids or grandkids trauma? Stop it. Many parents are losing them because of brand new expectations placed on them, the parents, and the weird lens their child keeps using on them now. Are those from woke teachers with their books and school therapists? Most parents are shocked, surprised, and then respond without realizing they’re only making it worse, to confirm" in their adult kids' eyes.
Too many younger people handle any disagreements without wanting to cancel (or totally cut off) the other person. Don't hyper focus on within. Look away to Him (to the Lord). Have you been looking within and are now perplexed, starting to see problems even where they didn’t exist -- is everything beginning to get filtered through their lens? People are ready to cut someone off / cancel anyone who doesn’t agree. No one can handle anything semi-tough or hard anymore.Man, if we aren't now living in the last moments of the last days, it sure looks like we are, huh. Guess what.. you're indeed living in your last days. Life here is so brief.
"We now live in a nation where (therapists and) doctors destroy health, (judges and) lawyers destroy justice, (woke teachers and top) universities destroy knowledge, (many) governments destroy freedom (even in their own nations via pay for importing, and many journalists with) the press destroy true information, (many dead religous leaders with their political biased) religions destroy good morals, and (many of) our banks destroy the economy." ~ Chris Hedges tweaked
It's evil people who are doing all that.
Q: Is corruption quickly gettin extremely corrupt in every sector? What does that leaven in the Bible symbolize?
Me thinks: that as the dark is getting darker, the light should get brighter.
Sure, just as the leaven quietly works its way through a whole batch, the gospel will have a profound impact on all sectors of society.
What does the Bible say about corruption?
It starts in the mind. Corruption in the Bible is the state of moral contamination and spiritual decay expressed through disobedience toward God.
What does it mean to escape the pollutions of the world (2 Peter 2:20)?
Are we in the last moments of the last days, or are the tech billionaires just trying to make it all look like that? Kind of makes ya wonder.
Second Peter 2:20 speaks about those who have, “escaped the corruption of the world" ..that corrupt worldly lifestyle today is driven solely by satisfaction at any price.
How does a bad therapist corrupt good therapy? They simply ignore God and His truth and take on the twisted education of godless people. Yep, bad company corrupts good character (1 Corinthians 15:33)?
God is warning us that if we closely associate with false teachers, we will be adversely influenced by them. The truth is that false teachings do not lead to holiness or health.
Instead of sowing to the world or to the fleshly nature, what does it even mean to sow to the Spirit (Galatians 6:8)?
But the terms take on a spiritual connotation in the New Testament: “For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one ...
What does leaven symbolize in the Bible?
Corruption is the puffing up of a person with vanity until they love sinning. You know how lies and hypocrisy can poison one's whole character - Paul firmly warned the church at Corinth 'bout this.
1) “Last days” breakdown in family relationships
These don’t use modern phrases like “cancel (or cut-off to punish) culture,” but they clearly describe the relational fractures, the betrayals, and the loss of natural affection as described in the Bible:
-
2 Timothy 3:1–5
“In the last days… people will be lovers of self… disobedient to parents… ungrateful… unholy…
without natural affection… unforgiving… slanderers… brutal…” -
Matthew 10:34–36
“A man’s enemies will be those of his own household.” -
Luke 12:51–53
“They will be divided, father against son and son against father…” -
Micah 7:5–6 (quoted by Jesus later)
“A man’s enemies are the men of his own house.” -
2 Timothy 3:3 (KJV)
“Without natural affection, trucebreakers…”
(Greek: “astorgos” = lack of family love—this is directly relevant.) -
Romans 1:28–31
“They became filled with…
inventors of evil… disobedient to parents… without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving…”
* The verses with context support Kurt's claim: in later times, family bonds often get weakened, and people become harsh, fleshly reactive, and relationally destructive.
2) Verses that speak directly to relational cutoff / rejection / unforgiveness
A. What goes directly against the cutoff culture?
-
Ephesians 4:31–32
“Let all bitterness.. be put away.. forgiving one another…” -
Colossians 3:13
“Bearing with one another.. forgiving each other…” -
1 Corinthians 13:5–7
“Love… is not easily provoked… bears all things…” -
Proverbs 17:9
“Whoever covers an offense seeks love, but he who repeats a matter separates close friends.” -
Matthew 18:21–22
“Forgive… seventy times seven.” -
Romans 12:18
“If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.”
B. God addressed this relational destruction
-
Proverbs 18:19
“A brother offended is harder to win than a strong city.” -
Proverbs 6:16–19
God hates “one who sows discord among brethren.” -
James 1:19–20
“Be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger…” -
Galatians 5:14–15
“If you bite and devour one another, watch out…”
3) Who in the Bible punished parents or cut off their family members to estrange them?
A. Ungodly a.k.a. sinful relational breakdowns
-
Absalom
Rebelled against his flawed father (2 Samuel 15–18. What does God say of David?)
→ Bitterness → separation → destruction -
Cain
Killed his brother (Genesis 4. Zero love in him cuz he was rebellious and worldly.)
→ Ultimate relational cutoff -
Joseph's brothers
Sold him into far away slavery (Genesis 37. That hurt real long and real hard.)
→ Jealousy → rejection -
King Saul
Turned against David a lot like a son (1 Samuel 18–19 King Saul even called David "my son" specifically in 1 Samuel 26:17, 21, and 25.. after David spared Saul's mean person. Remember when King Saul threw a spear [or javelin] at his own son Jonathan during a feast in 1 Samuel 20:33 after Jonathan defended David. It happened. This is the type of dad a son needs to put distance between.) -
Demas
“Forsook” Paul (2 Timothy 4:10. That was a spiritual family cut off/cancel)
B. Estrangement for sinful or very selfish reasons
-
The Prodigal Son
Walked away from his kind father, he canceled → rebellion → regret
C. Separation for righteous or necessary reasons
Do the Scriptures allow for punishments of limited separation (time-outs), but for sharing truth and holiness, not emotional reaction? No:
-
Abraham
Separated from Lot due to conflict (Genesis 13) -
Paul the Apostle
Separated from Barnabas over the issue of John Mark flaking/bailing out on a mission trip (Acts 15:36–40)
→ Not ideal, but real -
Jesus Himself
Redefined loyalty:
“Whoever does the will of my Father is my brother…” (Matthew 12:46–50) -
Luke 14:26
“If anyone comes to Me and does not hate father and mother…”
→ Meaning: It's a lesser love. Christ first, not literal hatred. Our love for God is to be so great that our love for others is like hate in comparison.
* What's a key distinction:
- Sinful cutoff = pride, greed, covetousness, offense, lack of forgiveness
- Righteous separation = due to truth, need for physical protection, obedience to God
4) People estranged from godly parents
Here are some patterns -- they include:
-
Esau
Grieved his parents through bad choices (Genesis 26:34–35) -
Rehoboam
Rejected wise counsel → division (1 Kings 12) -
Hophni and Phinehas
Rejected their godly upbringing (has happened a lot) → judgment (1 Samuel 2)
* We are living in a broken world that seems to be getting more broken. “Cutoffs from fam” - Rebellion against God and godly influences (healthy churches) often leads to relational fracture.
5) How Scripture says to deal with easily-triggered, cutoff-minded people
Let’s stay very precise here.
Step-by-step biblical approach
1. Stay spiritually steady yourself
-
2 Timothy 2:24–25
“The Lord’s servant must not quarrel but be gentle… correcting with gentleness.”
2. Slow down reactions
-
Proverbs 15:1
“A soft answer turns away wrath.”
3. Refuse escalation
-
Romans 12:17–21
“Do not repay evil for evil…”
4. Pursue reconciliation—but with limits
-
Matthew 18:15–17
Go privately → then witnesses → then distance if necessary
5. Guard your heart
-
Proverbs 4:23
“Guard your heart…”
6. Accept reality when needed
-
Romans 12:18
“If possible…”
* Reconciliation requires two willing hearts.
6) Final synthesis (high confidence)
What Scripture clearly teaches:
- In the last days, family breakdown increases (2 Tim 3, Luke 12)
- God commands forgiveness, patience, and endurance
-
Many biblical conflicts came from:
- Pride
- Offense
- Jealousy
- Lack of self-control
-
Some separation is necessary, but:
- It must be rooted in truth and righteousness, not emotion
7) What's Balanced, a walk in the Spirit
Not walking in the wrong spirit. You know this.
Of course, not all family estrangement is from the devil “winning” or work.
Sometimes:
- it’s discipline (1 Cor 5)
- or protection
- or obedience to truth
I'm talkin' about those easily offended, quick offense, cutting people off at the drop of a hat, lack of forgiveness, hardness of heart—this stuff does closely align with those 2 Timothy 3 characteristics.
1) Disrespect toward parents is expected in a fallen world
-
Ephesians 6:1–3
“Children, obey your parents in the Lord… ‘Honor your father and mother…’” -
Proverbs 30:11–14
“There is a generation that curses its father and does not bless its mother…” -
2 Timothy 3:1–2
“In the last days… people will be… disobedient to parents…”
* So what you’re feeling isn’t imagined—it’s foretold.
2) The tension: endurance vs enabling
Here’s where your insight is sharp—but needs careful balance.
A father does endure:
-
1 Corinthians 13:7
“Love… bears all things… endures all things.”
But a father is not called to enable sin:
-
Proverbs 13:24
“Whoever spares the rod hates his son…” -
Hebrews 12:6–7
“The Lord disciplines the one He loves…”
- Some “tolerance” = godly patience
- Some “tolerance” = unhealthy avoidance
Those are not the same—and Scripture separates them.
3) Your statement: “It wasn’t strength—it was survival”
There’s truth there—but not always the whole truth.
Let’s refine it biblically:
- If you avoided conflict out of fear → that leans toward survival
- If you endured while still standing for truth → that is strength
James 1:20
“The anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.”
Proverbs 19:11
“It is a man’s glory to overlook an offense.”
* The key question isn’t: Did I tolerate things?
It’s: Did I tolerate sin, or did I shepherd through it?
4) Seeing clearly is where change starts
That part is solid.
-
Psalm 51:6
“You desire truth in the inward parts…” -
Lamentations 3:40
“Let us examine our ways…”
But Scripture never leaves you in regret—it moves you to wise action, not just realization.
5) Your insight about God the Father
This is powerful—but needs careful correction so it stays biblical.
God does endure:
-
2 Peter 3:9
“The Lord is… patient… not wishing that any should perish…” -
Romans 2:4
“God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance…”
But God is never in survival mode.
He is:
- holy (Isaiah 6:3)
- just (Deuteronomy 32:4)
- and He disciplines decisively when needed
* So the clearer comparison is:
God is patient and long-suffering—but never passive, never powerless, never compromised.
6) What to do in this season (clear, grounded steps)
1. Reestablish God-centered authority
-
Joshua 24:15
“As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.”
2. Replace silence with calm, firm truth
-
Ephesians 4:15
“Speaking the truth in love…”
3. Correct with consistency, not emotion
-
2 Timothy 2:24–25
“Not quarrelsome… patient… correcting with gentleness”
4. Stop tolerating what God calls sin
-
Proverbs 29:15
“A child left to himself brings shame…”
5. Keep your heart soft before God
-
Colossians 3:21
“Fathers, do not provoke your children…” (Have you seen this good verse used to accuse a dad by those who yell that their own kids? We believers are to be discerning, decisive..not divisive..) to be fruit inspectors, and make good evaluations. Want to hear the most quoted verse of our day by people on the streets? It is this one: "Judge not lest you be judged." It's used to ward off witnessing, when "Not now" should really work.)
7) Need a synthesis?
- Yes—many fathers today endure real disrespect
- Yes—some endurance crosses into unhealthy tolerance
- Yes—seeing it clearly can be the turning point
But the biblical path forward is not:
- harsh control
- nor passive survival
It is:
* steady, truth-filled, God-centered fatherhood
with both compassion and backbone
"Above all, be careful what you think because your thoughts control your life." Proverbs 4:23
Listen, it only takes 70 hours to read through the whole Bible. Be blessed, go for it Bro or soon to be one. Try again, let the Lord wash you and your thoughts.
When you get punished for zip, parent, do you feel like steering wat clear of all that disrespectful drama? Hey, that's normal. Talking to God about it is the best thing to do, even though it takes some time.
And that last line you said—about feeling compassion toward your Heavenly Father—that’s actually a healthy spiritual instinct…
just anchor it this way:
Listen, Jesus Christ was cut-off, punished, and canceled at Calvary. He has endured far more rejection from arrogant people than we ever will—yet He remains perfectly righteous in how He responds to that jive. Walk close with and be like Him!
Listen, the Gospel is true whether you believe it or not - it always has been, and always will be. Cuz Christ is true!
