A person has no participation or responsibility in their own
conception or its timing. Few would argue with this fact outside of the Mormon
cult. We are unable to choose our parents or our day of conception or even our
day of birth. We bear no responsibility for any of these matters.
Nevertheless, the Bible is crystal clear that fornication is
sin and is violation of one of the Ten Commandments (the 7th
commandment). When this occurs there is legitimate shame for the participants
and their families. This is intensified when the sinful acts (sex outside of
marriage) results in a new life. Some parents will decide to murder the child
in order to hide the shame. Others don’t add a second sin to the first and
should be encouraged for choosing life over death. However, the newborn is the
innocent party of this event (Ezek 18:19-20). Human culture often looks down on
a child born out of wedlock with the same or more scorn than the parents. They
have derogatory names in many languages for such children, ignoring their
innocence in the event.
The first century Pharisee’s made a false accusation toward
the only virgin-born person, Jesus the Anointed One, on this matter (John
8:41). This recorded event shows disdain for the innocent person who was not a
participant in the sin was even common in that day. This cultural mistreatment
of the person who is not at fault is not biblical, wise, moral or legitimate.
Likewise, the breaking of the 7th commandment is not unpardonable if
the guilty parties truly repent and trust God’s provision for the sinner by the
Messiah’s substitutionary atonement (Lk 7:47-48).
Are parents involved in the sin and mistakes of their
children? If it happened in spite of their teaching, example, home life and
provided environment, then the answer is no. However, since most parents fall
short in these areas at least to some degree, there may be legitimate shame and
guilt when their children fail to obey biblical standards and that failure produces
a child. Nevertheless, failure as a parent to any degree can also be repented
of by a believer in the God of the Bible and forgiven. Parental failure is not
an unpardonable sin either (2 Sam 12:13).
Even though all children are born with a sin nature (Psa
51:5), in regards to the conditions of their conceptions, all children are 100%
innocent when the conception did not follow God’s declared pattern and plan.
Therefore, it is wrong for grandparents to allow pride to dictate how they
treat this fearfully and wonderfully made gift from God (Psa 139:14). No matter
how bad they failed as parents or how much their children failed, this new
person added to the family is a wonderful special gift. They need unconditional
love from their grandparents. The grandparents therefore cannot hide these
children’s existence from their church, work, neighborhood or other
communities. As these children grow and meet people who know their
grandparents, they should be told how much their grandparents loved them. They
should be informed that they had their picture on their desks at work, on their
phones and in there homes and were very pleased with this wonderful addition to
their family. Yes, shame was attached to an event, but not to the innocent
person. To treat a grandchild differently because of race, skin tone, timing of
conception, or disability is wrong and harmful to the innocent based on one’s
sinful pride, prejudice or fear of shame. I know of people in their thirties
and forties that have vivid memories of mistreatment by grandparents because of
something for which the grandchild was 100% innocent. The painful memories
linger on and distress their families to this day. Don’t make this mistake or
encourage others to make this mistake.
To truly love a wonderful gift to your family does not mean
you condone the morals of our culture or the current ways of the world system
as acceptable or that you have lowered God’s standards. Biblical wisdom must be
used in this situation. Responding to the sin of the guilty is one thing. Their
relationship to the Lord will dictate this response. However, the mistreatment
of the innocent child is not a biblical response to this circumstance. A baby
changes everything. It is very hard to know how to respond correctly without
seeking advice and thinking through what a commitment to celebrate life over
death looks like in your own family. Being pro-life is much more than placing a
bumper sticker on one’s car.
So, you may shake your head when you see on social media a
picture or a story showing how pleased a grandparent is of their grandchild and
how much they love them when the child’s parents are/were single. Your thoughts
may be that they should cover up their love and involvement with this child
because of the circumstances of the conception. They should not have their
pictures in their house, on their phone or on their desk at work.
Please consider that what you are endorsing is the
mistreatment of an innocent party (innocent on this one matter) and ignoring
the joy God gives a whole family with a new life and a new soul made in His
image (Gen 1:27). You are encouraging others to scar precious lives to avoid
public shame. That is a both a sin and a serious mistake. The child does not
deserve shame for something they had no involvement in or to be mistreated or
publicly hidden because of the fear of shame of the family members. Our culture
is not correct in shaming the child and this is not a deterrent to prevent
childbirth out of wedlock.
The father in Luke
15 shows the posture we should take rather than that of the Pharisaical older
brother. Rather than the disdain for the younger brother held by the older
brother, the father had an open heart and arms and eyes lovingly searching for
his son. He did not disown him. The apostle John reminds us that God is both
Light (Holiness and Truth) and Love (Gracious and Mericful) [1 John 1:5, 4:8].
Not one attribute in exclusion of the other, but both in balance.
Grandchildren are gifts from God. Love them unconditionally
and love them well. It is truly amazing how your love for a grandchild
multiplies and expands over the months and years. You have no idea what this is
like until you experience it. Your different role with the child makes it very
different than parental love.
Be careful how you treat
single-parent children. Jesus warns, “If anyone causes one of these little ones—those
who believe in me—to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large
millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the
sea" (Matt 18:6 NIV).