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- Written by: Sean Carney
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- Read Time: 6 mins
To relate family to the production of God’s image conveys a number of lessons that are worth considering in our reflection about the meaning and function of family.
Lesson of confrontation. It first of all affirms that God’s image can only be achieved in the context of family, where man and woman and later children and parents are confronted with the vis-à-vis, or "other,” as Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas put it. You become God’s image; that is the fulfillment of who you are at your best, but only if you submit yourself to that tough and genuine struggle. This is one of the spiritual messages registered in the name of Israel (see Genesis 32:22–32). In order to deserve his new name, Israel, Jacob had to wrestle with “the other"—God and man. God’s image, human individuality, blossoms only insofar as we are challenged by the other, by his or her difference.
Lesson in responsibility. Family is then not just a gift from above, not just a divine creation. It also involves a response from below. Interestingly, Jewish tradition reads this lesson of human responsibility in the plural formula, “Let us make man in our image” (Genesis 1:26). The idea is that God’s image in the human person is not a mere passive product but instead a dynamic process. Man does not just receive; he or she also responds actively and participates in “building” the divine stamp in him or her. Incidentally, the Hebrew word for family is bayt (house). To found a family means “to build a house” (Deuteronomy 25:9). This language implies human effort and hard work. Family is not just the "home sweet home” to be enjoyed romantically. It is not obtained easily. It is instead something to build day by day, brick by brick, with pain but also with care, because it is something difficult and precious to achieve and to keep.
Lesson of difference. The parallel between house and family also conveys a lesson regarding the nature of the ingredients that make a family. Every brick and every material in the house has something unique and plays a unique role that makes it necessary for the building. It is this uniqueness and this variety that make the house possible. The brick does not behave like a tile, and the window does not claim to be a chimney. Each individual is different in his or her appearance and in his or her character. Family life is never monotonous. It is full of surprises and new discoveries that make life interesting and rich.
Lesson of solidarity. And yet, every element of the house does not stay by itself. The brick, the tile, the window, and the chimney serve each other, and beyond each other, they serve higher purposes: society, the universe, and God. They, therefore, must relate to each other, and everyone participates in making the house possible, comfortable, pleasant, and useful. The tile does not go its own way, and the brick does not follow its personal inclinations. No one would dare declare independence and think that it could do what it wants and that “this is none of your business.” They all know that they depend on each other. If a tile breaks, the brick will suffer. Indeed, “no brick or tile is an island.”
Family and Sabbath
The biblical connection between family and Sabbath is not just attested in the steps of human history in Genesis 1 and 2. This association recurs at the beginning of the history of Israel. In the Law given on Mount Sinai, the commandment about family is related to the commandment about Sabbath. They follow each other in the sequence of the laws. They are also stylistically connected since they are the only two commandments that are expressed positively with the same grammatical form of the infinitive absolute: fourth commandment: “Remember [zakor] the Sabbath day” (Exodus 20:8); fifth commandment: “Honor [kabed] your father and mother” (Exodus 20:12). The same association also introduces the ceremonial laws in the book of Leviticus: “Everyone of you shall revere his mother and his father and keep My Sabbaths; I am the Lord your God” (Leviticus 19:3). This relationship between Sabbath and family contains a number of important lessons.
A lesson of time. The connection between Sabbath and family teaches us what Abraham Heschel has reminded us of, namely that the value of time should prevail over the value of space. The gift of our time and our presence is more important than the gift of objects or money. Sabbath is the day when we stop working, we stop achieving, and we stop valorizing space and things. It is the day when we learn to have time—a day when we can share time together. Sabbath is, therefore, the family day par excellence.
A lesson of grace. Sabbath is the day when we remember that it is not our achievements that count, but the gift we receive from others—from God and from our parents, our spouses, and our brothers. Introducing this perspective of grace into family life will help us appreciate each other and become grateful. We will learn not to take the gift for granted but to enjoy it as something we did not deserve, just as the Sabbath was paradoxically given to Adam and Eve as a reward for the work they did not do. This mentality of grace and gratitude will contribute to creating an atmosphere of love and joy and thus promoting a happy family.
A lesson of duty. It is noteworthy that both family and Sabbath are given to mankind as commandments, as if they were not natural and spontaneous products. The success of a family does not just depend on great sentiments and emotions, or nice words and smiles. The happiness and survival of a family also depend on the imperative duty that should oblige us to respect (Deuteronomy 5:16), to show love (Genesis 25:28; 32:4), to remain faithful (Exodus 20:14), and to do the chores (Genesis 18:7). In fact, love and duty are dependent on each other. Love makes duty possible and easy, and duty makes love strong and lasting.
A lesson of memory. Both Sabbath and family convey the same call for memory. They both invite appreciation and respect for the past. The Sabbath reminds us of the roots of the universe, and the family reminds us of our personal and historical roots. Through the Sabbath, we remember that we are humans created in God’s image. Through the family, we remember our genealogy, the history of our ancestors, and ultimately who we are in human society. Just as the Sabbath functions as a pedagogical device that repeats the lesson from the far past week after week, the family functions as a religious community that preserves past traditions and passes them on through instruction and worship (Deuteronomy 6:7; Micah 7:6).