Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Colossians 3:20
Children, obey [your] parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.
20. Children ] Cp. Eph 6:1-3.
obey ] The same word as that below, Col 3:22. The wife “submits herself” as to a guiding friend; the child, and the servant, recognize in parent and master a lawful commander.
Disobedience to parents, as a definite act of rebellion against God (Exo 20:12; Exo 21:17; Lev 19:3; Lev 20:9; Deu 5:16), is always noted in Scripture as a grave crime, and a symptom of general moral mischief. Cp. Deu 21:18-21; Pro 20:20; Pro 30:17; Mat 15:4-6; Rom 1:30; 2Ti 3:2. It is in the school of the well-ordered Christian home that the true idea of the Christian’s position, filial in its freedom, yet (1Co 9:21) “ law-abiding unto Christ,” should be first illustrated as well as taught.
parents ] Mothers as well as fathers. Scripture uniformly upholds the authority of the mother. See reff. in last note, and Pro 1:8; Pro 6:20.
in all things] with the sole limitation of the supreme claims of the Heavenly Father, which may conceivably collide with those of the earthly parents. Cp. Mat 10:37. But let the child be slow indeed to apply this principle in practice. The case can scarcely arise save where the parent directly and positively requires the child to renounce the Lord.
well pleasing unto the Lord ] Jesus Christ. Quesnel beautifully says, “Why does He seem here specially to delight in filial obedience? Because it was His own universal virtue, the soul and law of all His actions.”
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Children, obey your parents … – Notes, Eph 6:1-4.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Col 3:20-21
Children, obey your parents in all things.
The mutual offices of parents and children
Among all those mutual offices by which society is preserved those incumbent on parents and children are the most important. If a man neglect his children or misgovern them, how wilt he duly treat other dependants? Or if a child shake off the parental yoke, how will he bear that of a master or prince? Whereas a good child in the house is likely to be a good subject in the state, and a good father will prove a good master and magistrate (1Ti 3:4-5).
I. The duty of children.
1. Those addressed are of either sex. Daughters, therefore, must not urge their weakness, nor sons their strength, as a reason why obedience should be dispensed with. Nor must time or fortune, for children, of whatever age or rank, are unalterably their fathers and mothers (Gen 46:29).
2. The duty is obedience: which includes the honour prescribed by the law. But the term is used to show us that this honour is not a vain respect, and to condemn hypocritical obsequiousness (Mat 21:30).
3. The extent of the duty is universal. This is natural, and would have been literal but for sin. Now, however, exceptions must be introduced (Eph 6:1), and obedience in things not well pleasing to the Lord is prohibited. If a father should command his son to be an idolater, or to kill or hate his neighbour, or forbid him to embrace the service of God, obedience would be criminal (Luk 14:26; Mat 10:37). But children are to obey–
(1) In those things which are conformable to the Divine will–in which case Gods law has an additional sanction–viz., parental authority, and disobedience involves, therefore, double guilt.
(2) In things indifferent. I wish that fathers would confine themselves to what is human, yet if they command anything not repugnant to Gods law, however harsh, it must be obeyed.
(3) Whence it appears how dangerous and contrary to the Word of God is the doctrine of Rome, which enfranchises children from this authority, daughters at twelve and sons at fourteen, giving them liberty, in spite of their parents, to enter a cloister. This directly contradicts Num 30:3-8; Mat 15:4-6.
4. The enforcement. The apostle might have urged the justice of the thing itself, gratitude prompting it; or from nature, which has engraven this law on animals; or from the custom of all nations, who have authorized the veneration of parents as of sacred persons, and made piety at once Divine worship and filial obedience. But he alleges nothing but the sole will of God. That this is well pleasing to God is seen–
(1) From His commandment.
(2) The promise annexed.
(3) The punishments threatened (Deu 21:18; Exo 21:17 : Lev 20:9; Pro 20:20; Pro 30:17).
(4) His Fatherly relation (Mal 1:6).
II. The duties of parents.
1. The provocation forbidden is an ill effect of the abuse of parental authority. Fathers provoke their children–
(1) When they deny them a suitable maintenance (1Ti 3:1-16).
(2) When they give them inhuman or unrighteous commands (1Sa 20:34; Mat 14:8).
(3) When without necessity they compel them to perform sordid actions.
(4) When they assail them with irritating or angry words (1Sa 20:30).
(5) When they chastise them beyond measure or desert (2Sa 7:14).
2. To dissuade fathers from this fault, the apostle shows the evil it produces. Nothing more dejects the heart of a child than undue vigour.
(1) It saddens him when in the countenance and actions of that person to whom he should be most dear he sees nothing but aversion.
(2) It intimidates and deprives him of all courage for a good undertaking; for, finding himself ill-treated by his father, what can he hope for from others.
(3) Some get hardened, and fall by degrees into desperate impiety. (J. Daille.)
The obligations of parents and children
I. The duty of children.
1. The duty itself contains four things.
(1) Reverence (Lev 19:3; Lev 19:20; Heb 12:9).
(a) With respect to speech, that it be agreeable to the relation, graced with humility and modesty, giving them honourable titles, pleasing answers, respectful requests.
(b) With respect to behaviour. Rude and haughty looks cannot comport with this duty.
(2) Observance.
(a) Attending to their instructions.
(b) Executing their commands.
(c) Depending on their counsels–as regards a calling in life, and marriage.
(d) Following their examples.
(3) Pious regards.
(a) With respect to their benevolence towards us.
(b) With respect to their claims when in indigence, in infirmity, or dead.
(4) Submission.
(a) To their admonitions.
(b) To their corrections.
2. The extent of the duty. We cannot imagine that this is so universal and absolute as obedience to God. He is the only absolute lawgiver (Jam 4:12), and when parental claims conflict with His, we are absolved from our obedience. Hence we find Acrotatus commended among the ancients because, when his parents had required of him to do an unjust thing, he answered, I know you are willing I should do that which is just, for so you taught me to do; I will therefore do what you desire, but not what you bid.
3. The reason for the duty: because it is well pleasing to the Lord. The supreme authority of our heavenly Father makes any duties He requires highly reasonable: and in pleasing God you please your parents and yourself too, for you must needs be happy when God and you are pleased (Psa 19:11; Eph 6:1).
II. The office of parents. They are not to irritate their children, but, by parity of reasoning, to so comport themselves in good government as to secure their childrens honour. Let us look, then, at this positive side of the matter. L The more general parental duties.
(1) Prayer for all necessary things, but more particularly that they may be Gods children.
(2) Good behaviour (Pro 20:7; Pro 3:22).
2. More particular.
(1) Sustenance.
(2) Education (Eph 6:4; Pro 22:6).
(3) Disposal into some fit employment and marriage.
III. The means of managing the duties of both relations. 1, To children.
(1) Be thoroughly sensible of the mischief of disobedience, and the benefit of obedience.
(2) Remove all tendencies to the dishonour of parents, and set a value on their instructions.
(3) Perform all with sincerity and impartiality to both parents.
(4) Set about your filial duties willingly and readily.
(5) Persevere in all, whatever temptations you meet with.
2. To parents.
(1) Be sure you keep up the life and power of godliness in your domestic practice.
(2) Maintain your parental authority, and assert the dignity of your relation, yet with love and mildness.
(3) Sweeten all with expressions of endearment, to insinuate the more into their affections, but still with Christian prudence.
(4) Endeavour to carry it with all evenness and impartiality to every child, according to a rational proportion. (Richard Adams, A. M.)
The duties of parents and children
God hath set the solitary in families. The domestic constitution is the type of all governments. If discipline is neglected in the home, it is rarely that the loss is made up afterwards. Coleridge has said: If you bring up your children in a way which puts them out of sympathy with the religious feelings of the nation in which they live, the chances are that they will ultimately turn out ruffians or fanatics, and one as likely as the other. Lord Bacon observes that fathers have most comfort of the good proof of their sons; but the mothers have most discomfort of their ill proof. It is therefore of vital importance that the reciprocal duties of parents and children should be faithfully and diligently observed.
I. The duty of the child to the parent is to obey.
1. This obedience is universal. In all things. The law commands: Honour thy father, etc., and the most signal way is to obey. Parents have the wisdom of experience, and know the dangers that threaten their children, and are in a position to offer judicious counsel. Filial obedience should be prompt, cheerful, self-denying, uniform; not dilatory and reluctant.
2. This obedience is qualified and limited by the Divine approval.
II. The duty of the parent to the child is to rule.
1. The parent is not to rule in a spirit of exasperating severity. An excessive severity is as baneful as an excessive indulgence.
2. To rule in a spirit of exasperating severity tends only to dishearten. A certain writer has significantly said: What if God should place in your hand a diamond, and tell you to inscribe on it a sentence which should be read at the last day, and shown there as an index of your own thoughts and feelings? What care, what caution, would you exercise in the selection. Now this is what God has done. He has placed before you the immortal minds of your children, more imperishable than the diamond, on which you are about to inscribe every day and every hour, by your instruction, by your spirit, or by your example, something that will remain and be exhibited for or against you at the judgment day!
Lessons:
1. To rule wisely we must first learn to obey.
2. Disobedience is the essence of all sin.
3. That government is the most effective that tempers justice with mercy. (G. Barlow.)
Children entreated to obey their parents
I. Why you should obey.
1. Because it is your duty.
(1) God commands it, and He is so good that we ought to obey Him, and so great that He will not allow disobedience to go unpunished.
(2) Your parents command it, to whom you owe your all of earthly happiness.
2. Because it is your interest. Neither God nor your parents would wish it if it were not for your good.
(1) It will secure for you Gods blessing, whereas disobedience will bring down His curse. Remember Hophni and Phinehas, and Absalom.
(2) It will make you cheerful and happy in your minds, whereas disobedience makes you sullen and disagreeable to yourselves as well as others.
(3) It promotes your daily improvement. Disobey, and your evil dispositions will become daily more tyrannical.
(4) It makes others love you: but no one likes a disobedient child.
(5) It is most favourable to conversion, but the contrary almost precludes the hope of it.
3. Because you have the perfect pattern of our Lord to urge you to obey.
II. How you should obey.
1. Religiously. With a regard to what pleases God, and not what pleases self or parents so much.
2. Heartily and sincerely, as opposed to that hypocritical obedience which some children yield when their parents are in sight, because they are afraid of the consequences.
3. Completely. It is of no use for children to obey in some things and disobey in others; to do half what their parents command, and leave half undone.
4. Instantly, without waiting to ask the reason, or promising to obey at some future time.
5. Cheerfully. There is an obedience of the hand, but a disobedience of the heart.
6. Always. Not simply till you go to business, or are of age, or married. Despise not thy mother when she is old. (B. W. Noel, M. A.)
Obedience of children
The commander of the Orient, before the Battle of the Nile, placed his son, Cassabianea, thirteen years of age, on certain duty, to stay at his post till relieved by his fathers order. Soon after the father was slain. The boy held his post in the midst of fearful carnage, ignorant of his fathers fate; and while the sailors were deserting the burning and sinking ship, he cried, Father, may I go? The permission did not come, and there he stood at his post and perished. (E. Foster.)
Obedience to a master
The Hon. Thomas H. Benton was for many years a United States senator. When making a speech in New York once, he turned to the ladies present, and spoke about his mother in this way My mother asked me never to use tobacco, and I have never touched it from that day to this. She asked me never to gamble, and I never learned to gamble. When I was seven years old she asked me not to drink. I made a resolution of total abstinence. That resolution I have never broken. And now, whatever honour I may have gained, I owe it to my mother. (Kings Highway.)
The rarity of obedience
A tradesman advertised for a boy to assist in his shop, and go on errands. A few hours after the morning papers were circulated he had his shop thronged with all kinds of boys. Not know ing which to choose he advertised again: Wanted, to assist in a shop, a boy who obeys his mother. Only two boys ventured to apply for the situation. (J. Bate.)
Safety of obedience
A pointsman in Prussia was at the junction of two lines of railway, his lever in hand for a train that was signalled. The engine was within a few seconds of reaching the embankment, when the man, on turning his head, perceived his little boy playing on the rails on the line the train was to pass over. Lie down! he shouted to the child, but as to himself, he remained at his post. The train passed safely on its way. The father rushed forward expecting to take up a corpse, but what was his joy on finding that the boy had at once obeyed his order! He had lain down, and the whole train passed over him without injury. The next day the king sent for the man, and attached to his breast the medal for civil courage.
Disobedience regretted
When I was a boy, and a little reckless, my mother used to say to me, De Witt, you will be sorry for this when I am gone. I remember just how she looked, with her cap and spectacles. I remember just how she sat with the Bible on her lap. I laughed the admonition off, but she never said a truer thing in all her life. I have been sorry for it ever since. (T. De W. Talmage, D. D.)
Fathers, provoke not your children to wrath, lest they be discouraged.
The treatment that discourages piety
Discouraged, Paul means, in good. His language is addressed to fathers, for he seems to have had in view the case of advanced children; and yet the language is equally applicable to the case of mothers and very little children. Children are discouraged and hardened to good–
I. By too much prohibition. There is a monotony of continuous prohibition which is really awful. It does not stop with ten, like the words of Sinai, but keeps up the thunder from day to day. All commandments, of course, in such a strain come to sound Very much alike, and as they are all equally annoying, the child learns to hate them all. The study should be rather to forbid as few things as possible, and then soundly to enforce what is forbidden.
II. By unfeeling and absolute government. If a Christian father is felt to be a tyrant, he will seem to his child to be a tyrant in Gods name, and that will be enough to create a sullen prejudice against all sacred things. Nor is the case improved when the child is cowed into fear of such a parent, and thus reduced to submission. There is a beautiful courage in a childs approach to God; but if his courage even toward his father is broken down, he will only shrink from God with a greater fear.
III. By an over-exacting manner and a difficulty in being pleased. Children love approbation, and are specially disappointed when they fail of it in their meritorious endeavours, and especially when they are blamed for a trivial defect which, had they known, they would have avoided. But some parents appear to think it a matter of faithfulness to be not easily pleased, lest the children should have loose impressions of duty. They do not consider how they would fare if God should treat them in the same manner. But what can win a child to attempt to please God when His earthly representative is so difficult to please?
IV. By holding displeasure too long, and yielding with too great difficulty. It is right when children have done wrong to make them feel your displeasure; but that should not take the manner of a grudge, and hold on after repentance. On the contrary, there should be a hastening towards the child like the prodigals father, otherwise repentance will be turned into a sullen aversion, and into a feeling that there is the same heavy tariff of displeasure to be paid when he would turn towards God.
V. By hasty and false accusations. When good intentions are rated low, and children are put under the ban of dishonour, they are very likely to show that they are no better than they are taken to be. To batter self-respect is the surest way to break every natural charm of virtue and religion. The effect is scarcely better where acknowledged faults are exaggerated and set off by colours of derision. It will do for a parent to be severely just, but exaggerated justice is injustice, and more terribly so when it assumes the Christian name.
VI. By keeping children in a continual torment of suppression. We have no right to be anxious anywhere; it is unbelief which trust in God should set at rest. And we have less right to be, in that it destroys the comfort of others. Only to be in a room with an anxious person is enough to make one positively unhappy. What, then, is the woe put upon a hapless little one who is shut up day by day to the fearing look and deprecating whine, and supercautionary keeping of a nervously anxious mother. Nothing will so dreadfully overcast the sky of childhood as the weather this makes. It worries the child in every putting forth and play lest he should be hurt, and takes him away from every contact with the great worlds occasions that would school him for manhood. And then, since the child will most certainly learn how little reason there was for this eternal distress, he is sure to be issued finally in a feeling of confirmed disrespect. No, there must be a certain courage in maternity and the religion of it. The child must be wisely trusted to danger, and shown how to conquer it.
VII. By giving them tests of character that are inappropriate to their age. A child loses his temper, and the conclusion forthwith sprung upon him is that he has a bad heart. Whereupon he is reluctant to pray, as if the wrong were conclusive against him. But how would the father or mother fare if tested by the same rule? So, if the child evinces a desire to play on Sunday, has not the father, who has outgrown play, occupied himself even in church with his secular schemes? If a child is wholly perverse, it will not discourage him to tell him of it; but if he wants to be good, he should be shown how ready God is to help him and to forgive his faults.
VIII. By the holding aloof system by which children are denied a recognition of their church membership. The child giving evidence, however beautiful, of his piety, is still kept back from the Lords table, for the simple defect of years. As if years were a Scriptural evidence of grace. No plan could be devised for the discouragement of piety in children more certain in its object. They are only mocked and tantalized by their baptism itself. (H. Bushnell, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 20. Children, obey – in all things] That is, in the Lord-in every thing that your parents command you, which is not contrary to the will or word of God.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
By children he understands both males and females.
Obey your parents; he requires them to yield humble subjection to those that brought them forth, or have just authority over them; see Exo 20:12; Eph 6:1; paying reverence to them, Lev 19:3; Heb 12:9; observing their holy and prudent prescriptions, Luk 2:51; showing piety and kindness to them in all grateful offices, 1Ti 5:4, and submitting to their parental discipline, Jer 35:6; Heb 12:9.
In all things; in whatsoever is agreeable to the mind of the supreme Governor, who is absolute Sovereign, Act 4:19; 5:29.
For this is well pleasing unto the Lord; and this upon the most cogent reason imaginable, because it is not barely pleasing, but
well pleasing, or very acceptable, to the Lord, who arms parents with authority over their children, Eph 6:1-3.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
20. (Eph6:1.)
unto the LordTheoldest manuscripts read, “INthe Lord,” that is, this is acceptable to God when it is done inthe Lord, namely, from the principle of faith,and as disciples inunion with the Lord.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Children, obey your parents,…. Both father and mother;
[See comments on Eph 6:1].
in all things; not in things sinful, which are contrary to the law of God, and Gospel of Christ; in things repugnant to the duties of religion, the ordinances of the Gospel, and the doctrines of Christ, parents are to be neglected and disobeyed. God is to be regarded, and not men; but in all things good and lawful, and in all things that are of an indifferent nature, which may, or may not be done, in these things the will of earthly parents is to be attended to; of which there is a considerable instance in the Rechabites, see
Jer 35:6 and even they are to be obeyed in things that are hard and difficult to be complied with, and which are disagreeable to flesh and blood, as the cases of Isaac and Jephthah’s daughter show.
For this is well pleasing unto the Lord; and is a reason sufficient to engage to the performance of the duty; for whatever is grateful and well pleasing to God ought to be done with pleasure by us, from a principle of love to him, by faith in him, and with a view to his glory; and then such an action is acceptable in his sight through Jesus Christ our Lord. The Alexandrian copy reads, “in the Lord”; and so the Vulgate Latin version.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Obey your parents ( ). Old verb to listen under (as looking up), to hearken, to heed, to obey.
In all things ( ). This is the hard part for the child, not occasional obedience, but continual. Surely a Christian father or mother will not make unreasonable or unjust demands of the child. Nowhere does modern civilization show more weakness than just here. Waves of lawlessness sweep over the world because the child was not taught to obey. Again Paul argues that this is “in the Lord” ( ).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
This is well pleasing. Expanded in Eph 6:2, 3. Unto the Lord should be in the Lord.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Children obey your parents” (ta tekna hupakouete tois goneusin) “children, you all obey your parents” children are to recognize in their parents a lawful source of command in their family society circle, Exo 20:12; Deu 6:6-9; Pro 6:20-23.
2) “In all things’ (kata panta) “in all respects” The stubborn and rebellious child against parental instruction, except corrected, becomes the lawless adult in society and prison occupant and society problem later. Pro 1:8; Luk 2:51.
3) “For this is well pleasing unto the Lord,” (touto gar euareston estin en kurio) -For this (respect and obedience) is well pleasing in the Lord;” Eph 6:1-3; Deu 5:16. Lengthened life and prosperity are promised by the Lord to children who honor, respect, and obey their parents in the Lord. To learn obedience to parents in youth, and obedience to them in everything, is to learn to subdue or control self-will, so necessary in the Christian life, Eph 5:17; Rom 12:2.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
20 Children, obey your parents. He enjoins it upon children to obey their parents, (458) without any exception. But what if parents (459) should feel disposed to constrain them to anything that is unlawful; will they in that case, too, obey without any reservation? Now it were worse than unreasonable, that the, authority of men should prevail at the expense of neglecting God. I answer, that here, too, we must understand as implied what he expresses elsewhere, (Eph 6:1) — in the Lord. But for what purpose does he employ a term of universality? I answer again, that it is to shew, that obedience must be rendered not merely to just commands, but also to such as are unreasonable. (460) For many make themselves compliant with the wishes of their parents only where the command is not grievous or inconvenient. But, on the other hand, this one thing ought to be considered by children — that whoever may be their parents, they have been allotted to them by the providence of God, who by his appointment makes children subject to their parents.
In all things, therefore, that they may not refuse anything, however difficult or disagreeable — in all things, that in things indifferent they may give deference to the station which their parents occupy — in all things, that they may not put themselves on a footing of equality with their parents, in the way of questioning and debating, or disputing, it being always understood that conscience is not to be infringed upon. (461) He prohibits parents from exercising an immoderate harshness, lest their children should be so disheartened as to be incapable of receiving any honorable training; for we see, from daily experience, the advantage of a liberal education.
(458) “ Leurs peres et meres;” — “Their fathers and mothers.”
(459) “ Les peres ou les meres;” — “Fathers or mothers.”
(460) “ C’est a dire, fascheux et rigoureux;” — “That is to say, grievous and rigorous.”
(461) “ Ou entrant en dispute auec eux, comme compagnon a compagnon, ainsi qu’on dit. Toutesfois, que ce soit tant que faire se pourra sans offenser Dieu;” — “Or entering into dispute with them, as associate with associate, as they say. At the same time, let it be only in so far as it can be done without offending God.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
CRITICAL AND EXPLANATORY NOTES
Col. 3:20. For this is well-pleasing.Eph. 6:1 : This is right. What in Ephesians is regarded as an equitable due from child to parent is here looked at in another light. The best commentary is Luk. 2:51-52. The child Jesus was subject to his parents and increased in favour with God.
Col. 3:21. Fathers, provoke not your children.The word for provoke is not the same as in Eph. 6:4. There the word is do not exasperate. Here it is do not irritate. The difficulty of discriminating between them may perhaps show how near the original words are in meaning. Irritation is the first consequence of being too exacting with children, and irritation leads to moroseness (Lightfoot). Lest they be discouraged.Broken-spirited. It is a sad sight to see a man for whom the stress of life has been too much, but to see a child cowed and dejectedthe world has no sadder spectacle.
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Col. 3:20-21
Duties of Parents and Children.
It is God who hath set the solitary in families. The domestic constitution is the formal type of all governments. If discipline is neglected in the home, it is rarely that the loss is made up when the untaught becomes a citizen of the world. Coleridge has well said: If you bring up your children in a way which puts them out of sympathy with the religious feelings of the nation in which they live, the chances are that they will ultimately turn out ruffians or fanatics, and one as likely as the other. A wise son maketh a glad father; but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother (Pro. 10:1). Lord Bacon observes that fathers have most comfort of the good proof of their sons, but the mothers have most discomfort of their ill proof. It is therefore of vital importance that the reciprocal duties of parents and children should be faithfully and diligently observed. These verses indicate the character of filial duty and of parental authority. Observe:
I. That the duty of the child to the parent is to obey.
1. This obedience is universal. Children, obey your parents in all things (Col. 3:20). The Old Testament law commands, Honour thy father and thy mother; and the most signal way in which a child can honour his parents is to obey them. Parents have learnt wisdom by experience; they know the dangers that threaten their children, and are in a position to offer wise and judicious counsel. Filial obedience should be prompt, cheerful, self-denying, uniform; not dilatory and reluctant. It is universal in its obligation, and is binding, not only in those commands that are pleasant to obey, but in those that are troublesome, and that seem unreasonable and perverse, so long as they do not involve a violation of divine law. It is a painful spectacle to see a child defy parental authority, and even exult in his rebellion and in the distress it causes his father and mother. But filial disobedience rarely reaches such a pitch of cruel retaliation without there having been some defect in the early training. The child who renders due reverence to his parents is sure to meet with the rich rewards of heaven in the enjoyment of temporal and spiritual blessing.
2. This obedience is qualified and limited by the divine approval.For this is well-pleasing unto God (Col. 3:20). It is only when the commands of the parent are in harmony with the will of God that the child is bound to obey, and a powerful motive to practise obedience is derived from the fact that it is well-pleasing unto the Lord. The parent has no authority to enforce obedience beyond what has been given to him of God; and the exercise of that authority must ever be in subjection to the higher authority of the divine law. Obedience to parents in what is right is obedience to the Lord. It is the way of safety and of happiness. A little boy, about seven years old, was on a visit to a lady who was very fond of him. One day, at breakfast, there was some hot bread on the table, and it was handed to him; but he would not take it. Do you not like hot bread? asked the lady. Yes, said the boy; I like it very much. Then, my dear, why do you do not take some? Because, he said, my father does not wish me to eat hot bread. But your father is a great way off, said the lady, and will not know whether you eat it or not. You may take it for once; there will be no harm in that. No, maam; I will not disobey my father and my mother. I must do what they have told me to do, although they are a great way off. I would not touch it if I was sure nobody would see me. I myself should know it, and that would be enough to make me unhappy. A reckless disobedience of parental authority will not go unpunished. The example of Christs subjection to his earthly parents exalts filial duty into a sublime and holy exercise.
II. That the duty of the parent to the child is to rule.
1. The parent is not to rule in a spirit of exasperating severity. Fathers, provoke not your children to anger (Col. 3:21). The obedience of the child will be very much influenced by the character of the parental government. Counsel, remonstrance, and even chastisement will be necessary in the successful training of children. But discipline is to be administered so wisely, lovingly, and firmly as not to irritate to rebellion, but to subdue and bend into obedience. An excessive severity is as baneful as an excessive indulgence.
The voice of parents is the voice of God,
For to their children they are heavens lieutenants;
Made fathers, not for common uses merely,
But to steer
The wanton freight of youth through storms and dangers,
Which, with full sails, they bear upon and straighten
The mortal line of life they bend so often.
For these are we made fathers, and for these
May challenge duty on our childrens part.
Obedience is the sacrifice of angels,
Whose form you carry.Shakespeare.
2. To rule in a spirit of exasperating severity tends only to dishearten.Lest they be discouraged (Col. 3:21). If the child sees that all his endeavours to please are in vain, and that he is repulsed with sternness and cruel severity, he loses heart, and becomes sullen or morose, or is stung into a state of desperate revenge. To be perpetually fault-finding, and to gratify your angry passions in brutal, savage chastisement, will crush the spirit of any youth, and perhaps transform him into a monster more terrible than yourself. Children are to be led, not driven; to be treated as reasonable beings, not forced like brute animals; to be encouraged by commendation where it is merited, and the defects of their obedience kindly interpreted. A certain writer has significantly said: What if God should place in your hand a diamond, and tell you to inscribe on it a sentence which should be read at the last day, and shown there as an index of your own thoughts and feelings? What care, what caution, would you exercise in the selection! Now this is what God has done. He has placed before you the immortal minds of your children, more imperishable than the diamond, on which you are about to inscribe every day and every hour, by your instruction, by your spirit, or by your example, something that will remain and be exhibited for or against you at the judgment-day.
Lessons.
1. To rule wisely we must first learn to obey.
2. Disobedience is the essence of all sin.
3. That government is the most effective that tempers justice with mercy.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
20. Children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well-pleasing in the Lord. 21. Fathers, provoke not your children, that they be not discouraged.
Translation and Paraphrase
20. (You) children (and youths), be obedient to (your) parents in everything, for this is well pleasing in the Lord (and to the Lord).
21. (You) fathers, do not stir up (the emotions of) your children (so as to provoke them), lest they become disheartened.
Notes
1.
Probably the most difficult place to be a true Christian is in our homes. There we do not have to impress anyone, or maintain an image. We may be ourselves, and often the ugly feelings stirred up outside the home are released at home.
2.
In the home children are to obey their parents in all things. The term children is by no means limited to those under twelve! Many teen-agers need to give heed to this verse. Probably they have more ability to give heed to it, and often more need to do so, than younger children.
3.
The father in the home (and indeed the mother too) has a grave responsibility. He must avoid the twin pitfalls of child discipline: over-leniency and over-strictness may induce rebellion or lack of personal decisiveness in the child.
4.
Parents should not provoke children. Provoke here means to excite, stimulate, or rouse the emotions, particularly in a bad sense. Parents may do this by constant criticism, by uneven discipline (sometimes strict, sometimes lenient), by refusing to let their children grow up, and many other unwise acts.
5.
The result of prolonged provoking children is that they may become discouraged (broken-spirited), or that they may rebel. Parents should encourage children, rather than discourage them. Children do not often rise higher than the confidence their parents show in them.
Study and Review
57.
How far are children to go in obeying parents? (Col. 3:20)
58.
Does Paul appeal for obedience of children by a threatening approach, or by some other appeal? (Col. 3:20)
59.
What does provoke mean? (Col. 3:21)
60.
What may be the result of provoking children?
Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series
b. Children and parents, Col 3:20-21 .
20. Children The precept notes no exceptions. While obedience to parents is the natural duty of children, the reason here assigned is its acceptableness as befitting their relation as Christians. Most MSS. read , in the Lord.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Children obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing in the Lord.’
This is the general principle. Children are not to rebel against their parents wishes, but to respond to their directing as though the direction came from Christ Himself. They are to be concerned about the pleasure they give to the Lord by such behaviour. This thus further presses home the commandment to honour father and mother, a commandment which Jesus had also pressed home (Mat 15:4-6; Mat 19:19). But clearly where evil men sought to lead their children into evil ways, or to prevent them worshipping God, this would not apply. A higher law would prevail.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
Submission Between Children and Parents Col 3:20-21 discusses the role of submission in parenting between children and parents in the fear of the Lord.
Col 3:21 Word Study on “be discouraged” – Strong says the Greek word “be discouraged” ( ) (G120) means, “to be spiritless, to be disheartened.”
Col 3:21 Comments – Col 3:20 has just told the children to obey their parents. If the parents then take an unfair advantage of this privilege of leadership by being too harsh or unfair, then the children will become discouraged and lose heart in their efforts to obey and please their parents. Fathers can cause children to deeply resent them so that the children become discouraged about trying to excel in any area of life.
Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures
Col 3:20. Children, obeyin all things: That is, “which are lawful, or to which the parental authority extends.” This must be understood with some such limitation; and there can be no hurt in supplying the sense from Col 3:18 with , in the Lord; and so it is expressed, Eph 6:1. That is, “as the Lord requires you, and as far as is consistent with your duty to him.”
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Col 3:20 f. Comp. Eph 6:1-4 , where likewise is given a characteristic development in fuller detail of what is here only succinctly stated.
] not to be restricted; for Paul is quoting the rule , that which holds good principaliter in the relation of children, while possible exceptional cases obviously come under the principle of obeying God rather than man (Oecumenius: ). Comp. Eph 5:24 .
] In connection with this reading (see the critical remarks), to supply to . is arbitrary (in opposition to de Wette and Baumgarten-Crusius), since this is not suggested by the context as in Rom 12:1-2 ; nor is to be taken as instead of the dative (Flatt, Bhr, Bleek), or in the sense: coram Domino (Bhmer), but rather as in Col 3:18 . We have to leave . without any other more precise definition than what is contained in ., so that it is affirmed of childlike obedience, that it is well-pleasing , and that indeed not in a worldly fashion apart from Christ, (Chrysostom), but in a definite Christian character; consequently the Christian ethical beauty , in which the (Eph 6:1 ) of that virtue manifests itself. Comp. in Phi 4:8 . It would be a perfectly groundless violence to couple, with Hofmann, with . . . ., notwithstanding the clause which is introduced by .
Col 3:21 . ] they, and not the mothers, are addressed as holding the government of the household, also in reference to education. Comp. on Eph 6:4 .
] irritate , very frequent in the classics and LXX., especially in connection with anger , as here (comp. Eph 6:4 ). This irritation takes place through unjust or over-severe ( , Chrysostom) treatment, which the child, provoked thereby to anger, must bear without being able to get satisfaction for its injured sense of justice; whereby it becomes liable to a spiritless and sullen, and therefore immoral, resignation, a despair paralysing all moral power of will; hence . This verb is only found here in the N. T., but frequently in LXX., also Jdt 7:22 ; 1Ma 4:27 ; and in classic writers from the time of Thucydides (v. 91. 1, vii. 21, al .). Its opposite is . Bengel aptly says: “fractus animus pestis juventutis.”
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
b) To children and parents
(Col 3:20-21)
20Children, obey your parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto [in]32 the Lord. 21Fathers, provoke not your children to anger [omit to anger],33 lest they be discouraged [disheartened].34
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
Col 3:20. Children, obey your parents in all things.See Eph 6:1. In all things, , here definitely expresses what is indicated in the parallel passage by the phrase, in the Lord: it is not to be limited (Oeoumenius). It sets forth the principle, the rule, exceptions being left out of view (Meyer). [Eadie suggests, that as the reference is to Christian parents, who were to govern in a Christian spirit, the Apostle takes heed of an exception. On the exceptions see Bish. Taylor, Duct. Dub. III. 5. Ellicott remarks that includes not merely submission to authority, but obedience to a command. Titt. Syn. I. p. 193.R.]
For this is well-pleasing in the Lord.(Eph 6:1, right.) Hence the reference here is to judgment and complacency, there to precept and authority. In the Lord, before Him, as He looks at the matter. We need not supply (Rom 12:2) in thought (De Wette), nor take as the Christian qualification (Meyer) [Alford]; the former is not warranted by the context, the latter is contrary to usage and indistinct in itself. [Ellicott is more exact: the preposition defines the sphere in which the was especially felt and evinced to be so.R.]
Col 3:21. Fathers, provoke not your children.(See Eph 6:4 : ). The verb is used, 2Co 9:2, in a good sense, here in a bad sense; what is forbidden occurs through severe, unjust, capricious treatment. [We might render: do not irritate your children.R.] The motive for the warning is found in the result, which is marked as fixed and certain: lest they be disheartened.Bengel: A broken spirit, the bane of youth.” There is a lack of affection and confidence, pleasure and power for good and against evil.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
Comp. on Eph 4:1-4.
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
Starke: Disobedient children offend not only their parents, but God Himself; therefore they have no prosperity.Children are not given for the service of parents, but parents are ordained for the benefit of children.Actual chastisement should never be resorted to, until the child has been convinced of its guilt and well merited punishment, and God been earnestly implored to bless the infliction. The additional advantage thus gained is that meanwhile ones rising passion can be allayed and the punishment inflicted with proper moderation. The child, too, is thereby shown that the chastisement springs from love, and is more of an advantage than a punishment.In the discipline of children, ignorance, weakness, hastiness, thoughtlessness and childish character must be distinguished from wanton wickedness.
Rieger :Our heavenly Father, the Father of our spirits, Himself carefully guards against our becoming disheartened under His chastisement, and nothing rejoices Him more than that we cast not away our confidence; and so also in the relations of parents and children, much depends upon our not being rendered morose by the faults, but taking courage in final triumph.
Passavant :In this obedience of children from the very cradle lies the foundation and beginning of all good discipline, of all welfare and blessing, external and internal, in the heart, in the family, in the state, in all phases and circles of social life.Has many a yoke of early years been borne in the patience of faith, with what a peaceful gaze does one look back! Those who have grown old should again take it upon them, and as children kneel before their parents.
Heubner :Christian nurture dare not intimidate, but should promote a noble frankness and openness.
[Burkitt:God takes a mighty pleasure in the performance of relative duties; they are not only pleasing, but well-pleasing to Him; we are no more really than what we are relatively in the account of God; that which we call the power of godliness, consists in a conscientious performance of relative duties.R.]
[Henry:
Col 3:21. Let not your authority over them be exercised with rigor and severity, but with kindness and gentleness; lest you raise their passions and discourage them in their duty, and by holding the reins too strait, make them fly out with the greater fierceness. It is by the tenderness of parents, and dutifulness of children, that God ordinarily furnishes His Church with a seed to serve Him, and propagates religion from age to age.R.]
[Eadie :The child should feel that the punishment is not the result of fretful anger.Children teased and irritated lose heart, renounce every endeavor to please, or render at best but a soulless obedience.The twig is to be bent with caution, not broken in the efforts of a rude and hasty zeal.Schenkel:The evil effects of too severe a training of children. 1) In what they consist. 2) Whence they arise.R.]
Footnotes:
[32]Col 3:20.[The reading of Rec., , has not the support of any uncial MS., and is rejected by all modern editors (Ellicott). Tischendorf (eds. 2 and 7) reads , but the order of . A. B. C. D. E. is , followed by Lachmann, Meyer, Alford, Ellicott.R.]
[33]Col 3:21.Instead of (B. and others,) . A. and others have , undoubtedly taken from Eph 6:4. [Lachmann and Scholz adopt the latter reading. The E. V. inserts to angernow unnecessary, since provoke implies this in modern usage.R.]
[34]Col 3:21.[, disheartened, Eadie, Alford, Ellicott. Older versions render: made feeble-hearted, of a desperate mind.R.]
Fuente: A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures, Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical by Lange
20 Children, obey your parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.
Ver. 20. In all things ] Vultu saepe laeditur pietas. See Trapp on “ Eph 6:1 “
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
20 .] See Eph 6:1 .
, the exceptions not being taken into account: St. Paul’s usual way of stating a general rule. It is best to take , as Mey. absolutely, as , Phi 4:8 ; the Christian qualification being given by the : De W., al., understand , which would render that qualification meaningless.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Col 3:20 . is omitted in Eph 6:1 .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Children. App-108.
in = according to. App-104.
well pleasing. See Rom 12:1.
unto = to, but the texts read “in” (Greek. en).
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
20.] See Eph 6:1.
, the exceptions not being taken into account: St. Pauls usual way of stating a general rule. It is best to take , as Mey. absolutely, as , Php 4:8; the Christian qualification being given by the : De W., al., understand , which would render that qualification meaningless.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Col 3:20
Col 3:20
Children, obey your parents in all things,-In the early years of the child life, the parents stand as God unto them. They should be taught implicit obedience. When they come to know and understand their relation to God, then the first and highest duty is to teach, and the command is: Children, obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right. (Eph 6:1). Obey them in all things compatible with their obedience to God.
for this is well-pleasing in the Lord.-[There is something especially pleasing in the behavior of a lovingly obedient child, that wins favor with God and men. (Luk 2:52). The law of filial obedience has its creative ground in him (Col 1:16), and is an essential part of the Christian order of life, which is the natural order restored and perfected. It is a pleasing thing to see children subjecting their impulses, their wishes, their plans, to the belter judgment, and riper experience, of their parents. It is a pleasing thing to see them rendering prompt obedience. This is not only pleasing in itself, but it is well-pleasing in the Lord.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
obey: Gen 28:7, Exo 20:12, Lev 19:3, Deu 21:18-21, Deu 27:16, Pro 6:20, Pro 20:20, Pro 30:11, Pro 30:17, Eze 22:7, Mal 1:6, Mat 15:4-6, Mat 19:19, Eph 6:1-3
in: Col 3:22, Eph 5:24, Tit 2:9
well pleasing: Col 1:10, Phi 4:18, Heb 13:21
Reciprocal: Deu 5:16 – Honour Pro 16:7 – please Jer 35:8 – General Luk 18:20 – Do not commit Rom 8:8 – please
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
(Col 3:20.) , -Children, obey your parents in all things. The wife is generally to be submissive, but children are to be obedient, to listen and execute parental commands, and to exemplify a special form of submission for which the filial relation affords so many opportunities. [Eph 6:1-3.] The love of the child’s heart naturally leads it to obedience. Only an unnatural child can be a domestic rebel. Where the parents are Christians, and govern their children in a Christian spirit, obedience should be without exception, or- . The apostle, speaking in reference to Christian parents, for his epistle could reach none but children of that class, takes no heed of any exception. The principle involved in his admonition is, that children are not the judges of what they should or should not obey in parental precepts.
The best reading of the following clause is -For this is well-pleasing in the Lord, not as the older form had it, well-pleasing to the Lord. The construction is similar to that of the 19th verse, the specific difference of thought being, that in the former case submission is an appropriate thing in the Lord; while in this case filial obedience is marked with special approbation, as being well-pleasing in the Lord. Resting on Christian principle and motive, it meets Divine approbation. In Eph 6:1, the apostle calls it-, a thing right in itself, and then he quotes the fifth commandment to show that such a duty is also inculcated in Scripture, but here he regards it simply in a religious aspect, and awards to it Christ’s approval.
Fuente: Commentary on the Greek Text of Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians and Phillipians
Col 3:20. In all things should be understood with the same proviso as “in the Lord” at Eph 6:1. A full explanation of this subject is given in that passage which the reader should consult. As long as the commands of parents are not in conflict with the law of the Lord, children must obey them, even though they are old enough to have obeyed the Gospel.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Col 3:20. Children, obey your parents. Obey is stronger than submit (Col 3:18); the wife is to be consulted, her wishes considered; but children should obey. whether they know the reasons for the command or not. In their earliest years children learn respecting God from their relation to their parents. If they do not learn to obey, the foundation of their ethics, as well as of their theology, is not properly laid.
In all things. This is the rule; exceptions are left out of view. Christian parents are referred to (Eph 6:1 : in the Lord), and Christian children are addressed, since this motive is added: for this is well pleasing in the Lord. (The received reading is poorly supported) Such obedience is indeed well pleasing unto the Lord, but the Apostle uses the phrase in the Lord, in connection with these social precepts, to set forth the Christian character of the duty: as judged by a Christian standard, as judged by those who are members of Christs body (Lightfoot). Comp. Eph 6:1-2.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Observe here, The duty bound upon all children, and that is, obedience to their parents; this implies inward reverence, outward observance, a pious regard to their instructions, a following their good examples.
Observe, 2. The object of this duty; Obey your parents, that is, both parents; as obedience is due from all children, so it is payable to all parents, to mothers as well as fathers; nay, Lev 19:3 the mother is named first, because in regard of the weakness of her sex, she is the most liable to contempt.
Observe, 3. The extent of the duty, in all things, that is, in all lawful things, and in all indifferent things, in every thing that is not sinful; though to the child it may seem unnecessary or unreasonable, yet the parents command is to be obeyed.
Observe, 4. The argument and motive to excite and quicken to this duty, It is well pleasing unto the Lord; thereby they do acceptable service unto the Lord, who will reward it with long life on earth, and eternal life in heaven.
God takes a mighty pleasure in the performance of relative duties; they are not only pleasing, but well pleasing to him; we are no more really, than what we are relatively in the account of God; that which we call the power of godliness, consists in a conscientioius performance of relative duties.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
“Children, obey [your] parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.”
If you want to please God in your younger life, then follow your parents – the simplest way to please God that I can think of. Elsewhere in the New Testament the same thought is related to long life. I have never taken a widespread survey, but have talked to many older believers and asked them if they obeyed their parents and they said they did. In fact I have never asked one that had not obeyed their parents – may well prove the point – not that the Word needs to be proven true.
Let us consider for a moment this thought of obedience. Do most kids today obey their parents? Maybe on “three” of “one, two, three” but quite often not even on “four” – if they stop on “three” you can almost bet there will be a restart almost immediately.
What is the cost of the lack of obedience?
IN THE FAMILY:
Lack of peace in the home
Lack of unity in the family
Lack of unity within the couple quite often
Dissension between the siblings
IN THE SCHOOLS:
Lack of peace
Lack of learning
Lack of social interaction as it should be
IN THE NATION:
Lack of submission of workers to their employers
Lack of submission to the law
Lack of proper understanding of issues
I might meddle just a little at this point. It could be argued that Paul knew that children would be present in the gathering to hear the reading of this letter. If this is true there could well be direct application to churches today that herd their kids off to all sorts of programs rather than having them in the service.
There are some real things to gain by having children in the services.
1. They learn to be quiet and listen. They may not learn everything that is spoken, but they will pick up things that they will tuck away in their minds.
2. They see mom, dad, pastor, brother, sister, elders and everyone else worshiping God. They will be more responsive in later years knowing what the service is like. It is said that women in Asia bind their children on their backs when they go to pray. The mothers never have to teach the child the chants/prayers. They pick it up automatically.
We are missing some serious teaching time with our children today in the name of keeping the sanctuary quiet. Even small children can learn to be quiet – without a bag of toys or crayons to entertain them.
A child that can read and write can take notes and I know they can pick up on some of the major points of what is being said.
3. They learn of God, they learn of His desire for them, they learn of His love for them and that can’t be bad!
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
3:20 {12} Children, obey [your] parents in {o} all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.
(12) He requires of children, that according to God’s commandment they are obedient to their parents.
(o) In the Lord; and so it is expounded in Eph 6:1 .
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
2. Children and parents 3:20-21 (cf. Eph 6:1-4)
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
Children are to obey (hypakoute) both parents. The Greek word for obey implies a readiness to listen to and carry out parental instructions. The Greek word for children (tekna) means youths in contrast to babes and toddlers. "All things" is the general principle and would cover 99 percent of the cases involved in a Christian home. However every Christian is primarily responsible to the Lord, of course. Consequently if the parent required the child to disobey God, the child should obey God rather than man (Act 4:19; Act 5:29; Eph 6:1). The reason children should please their parents by obeying them is that this behavior pleases the Lord (cf. Exo 20:12; 2Co 5:9).
"I have seen some literature that tells young married couples that they are still to go to their parents and obey them. I think that is nonsense and entirely unscriptural (see Gen 2:24). ’Children, obey your parents in all things’ is a verse for children, for minors." [Note: McGee, 5:361.]