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Father's DayAnabaptist~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Beyond the Patriarch: Compassionate Fatherhood in the Way of Jesus

Deuteronomy 6:4-9Psalm 103:13-14

Redefining masculinity beyond patriarchy, fathers and economic justice, and non-patriarchal fatherhood rooted in the compassion of God

Anabaptist / Peace Church

Radical discipleship, peace, and community

Tradition vocabulary:compassionate masculinityeconomic justicecommon tablesolidaritynon-patriarchal fatherhoodpeace traditionpreferential option

Redefining Fatherhood Beyond Patriarchy

I want to begin with honesty — because this day demands it. Father's Day is a celebration for many. But it is also a wound for many. Some of you had fathers who loved you with everything they had. Some of you had fathers who harmed you — and the harm was often wrapped in the language of authority, headship, and discipline. Some of you never had a father at all. And some of you are fathers who are trying to build something different from what you received — trying to father without a blueprint. Every one of you is welcome in this room today. And every one of your stories matters to God. Now — Deuteronomy 6 opens with the Shema: "Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. Love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength." And then the command: "Impress them on your children." The text does not say: dominate your children. It does not say: control your children. It says: impress. The Hebrew word shanan means to engrave, to sharpen — through repetition, through conversation, through the rhythm of daily life. This is formation, not coercion. The progressive, liberation, and Anabaptist traditions share a conviction: fatherhood must be liberated from patriarchy. Patriarchy is not fatherhood. Patriarchy is a system of power that uses the language of fatherhood to justify control, domination, and the subordination of women and children. But the God revealed in Scripture is not a patriarch in this sense. Psalm 103:13 — "As a father has compassion on his children." The defining quality of God's fatherhood is not authority. It is compassion. Not control. Tenderness. Not domination. The visceral, gut-level love of a parent who knows their child is fragile and chooses gentleness. Jesus modeled a masculinity that the patriarchal world did not recognize. He washed feet. He wept publicly. He touched lepers. He elevated women. He held children. He refused violence even when violence would have saved His life. If Jesus is the fullest revelation of God — including God the Father — then fatherhood looks like foot-washing, not throne-sitting. It looks like compassion, not command. It looks like the man who kneels, not the man who towers.
Deuteronomy 6:4-7Psalm 103:13-14John 13:14-15Philippians 2:5-8

The Foot-Washing Father

In John 13, Jesus — whom the disciples call "Teacher" and "Lord" — wraps a towel around his waist, pours water into a basin, and washes the feet of his disciples. This is the work of the lowest servant. Peter protests: "You shall never wash my feet." Jesus responds: "Unless I wash you, you have no part with me." The foot-washing is not optional. It is the model. And if the Son of God defines leadership as service — as getting on your knees with a towel — then fatherhood must be defined the same way. The greatest father is not the one who commands from the head of the table. He is the one who kneels at the feet of his children and says: "How can I serve you?"

Source: John 13:1-17

Fathers and Economic Justice

Fatherhood does not exist in a vacuum. It exists within systems — economic systems, criminal justice systems, housing systems, healthcare systems — and those systems shape what fatherhood looks like. You cannot preach fatherhood without preaching justice. You cannot celebrate the father who provides without confronting the systems that prevent fathers from providing. Deuteronomy 6:10-12 warns Israel: when you enter the land of abundance — "houses you did not build, vineyards you did not plant" — "be careful that you do not forget the LORD." The text recognizes that abundance creates amnesia. Those who have forget those who have not. And the forgetting is deadly — because it allows us to celebrate fatherhood without asking why some fathers cannot afford to feed their children. The liberation tradition insists: the father who works three jobs to feed his family is not a failure. The system that requires three jobs to feed a family is the failure. The father who cannot attend his child's school play because he is working a shift with no PTO is not negligent. The economy that denies working parents paid leave is negligent. The father who is incarcerated for a nonviolent offense and cannot hold his newborn is not absent by choice. The justice system that incarcerates at the highest rate in the world is the absent party. Psalm 103:14 — "He remembers that we are dust." If God's posture toward human frailty is compassion, then our posture toward struggling fathers must be compassion too — not judgment, not shame, not moralizing sermons about "stepping up." The father who is drowning does not need a lecture on swimming. He needs a lifeline. And the church — if it is truly the body of Christ — should be the first to throw one. Economic justice is a fatherhood issue. Affordable housing is a fatherhood issue. Living wages, healthcare, education equity — all fatherhood issues. You cannot separate the father from the system that shapes his fathering.
Deuteronomy 6:10-12Psalm 103:14Amos 5:24Micah 6:8Luke 4:18-19

Compassionate Masculinity: The Way of Jesus

The Anabaptist tradition has always been suspicious of power — especially the kind of power that wraps itself in spiritual language. Fatherhood-as-authority has too often been fatherhood-as-abuse. The father who hits and calls it discipline. The father who controls and calls it headship. The father who silences and calls it order. The peace church tradition says: that is not fatherhood. That is violence wearing a cross. Psalm 103:13 defines the father by compassion — racham, from the Hebrew root for "womb." The compassion of God is not distant or detached. It is intimate, embodied, vulnerable. It is the compassion of a parent who carried you inside their body. God chose this word — this feminine, vulnerable, embodied word — to describe the way a father loves his children. That alone should shatter every rigid definition of masculinity that the culture has tried to impose. Jesus wept at the tomb of Lazarus. He was moved with compassion when He saw the crowds. He took children in His arms — an act that shocked His disciples, because in that culture, children were beneath the attention of a rabbi. Jesus modeled a masculinity that was strong enough to be tender. Courageous enough to cry. Powerful enough to kneel. Fathers, the way of Jesus is the way of compassion. It is the willingness to say "I was wrong" to your child. The willingness to cry in front of your family. The willingness to reject every voice — cultural, religious, or familial — that says a real man does not show emotion. The strongest thing you can do is be vulnerable with the people you love. The bravest thing you can do is let your children see you pray, see you struggle, see you trust God when you do not have the answers. That is compassionate masculinity. That is the fatherhood of the kingdom. And it looks nothing like the world's definition of a "real man." It looks like Jesus.
Psalm 103:13John 11:35Mark 10:13-16Matthew 9:36Colossians 3:12-14

Applications

  • 1Examine your model of fatherhood. Is it shaped by Jesus — foot-washing, compassion, vulnerability — or by cultural expectations of dominance and control? Let Jesus redefine it.
  • 2Advocate for fathers. Support policies that give fathers the economic stability to be present: paid family leave, living wages, criminal justice reform. Justice is a fatherhood issue.
  • 3Practice compassionate masculinity this week. Say "I was wrong" to someone you love. Cry if you need to cry. Let your children see you be human.
  • 4For those wounded by patriarchal fatherhood — the father who controlled, silenced, or harmed in God's name — hear this: that was not God. Psalm 103 defines the Father by compassion, not by coercion. You deserve better. God is better.

Prayer Suggestions

  • God of compassion, You are the Father who kneels — who washes feet, who holds children, who weeps with those who weep. Teach us to father like Jesus.
  • God of justice, we confess that our systems have made fatherhood impossible for too many. Forgive us for blaming fathers while ignoring the systems that failed them. Make us agents of change.
  • God of peace, deliver us from patriarchy — from the abuse of power disguised as authority, from control disguised as headship, from violence disguised as discipline. Show us a better way.
  • For every person wounded by a father who used God's name to justify harm — heal them. Show them that You are not that father. You are the Father of compassion — racham — tender, intimate, safe. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)

Atticus Finch defends a Black man in a racist town — not because it is popular, not because it will succeed, but because it is right. His children, Scout and Jem, watch their father absorb hatred without retaliating, stand alone without flinching, and lose a case he should have won without losing his integrity. Atticus does not father through dominance. He fathers through moral courage, through quiet compassion, through the willingness to kneel beside his children and explain the world honestly. 'You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view.' That is Psalm 103 fatherhood: the father who remembers that others are dust — fragile, struggling, formed by forces beyond their control — and responds with empathy, not judgment.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Psalm 103:13 uses the word racham for compassion — from the Hebrew root for "womb." God chose a feminine, vulnerable word to define fatherhood. That should reshape every rigid definition of masculinity.

Pastoral

If your father used God to justify harm — if headship meant control, if discipline meant violence — hear this: that was not God. The Father revealed in Jesus washes feet, holds children, and weeps. You are safe with Him.

Edgy

You cannot preach fatherhood without preaching justice. The father who works three jobs is not a failure. The economy that requires three jobs to feed a family is the failure. Economic justice is a fatherhood issue.

More Titles

Beyond the Patriarch: What Jesus Teaches About FatherhoodThe Foot-Washing Father: Redefining Masculine LeadershipJustice and Fatherhood: Why Systems Matter More Than SermonsCompassionate Masculinity: Strong Enough to Be TenderRacham: The Womb-Word That Defines God's Fatherhood
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Frequently Asked Questions

How do progressive and liberation traditions approach Father's Day?

By redefining fatherhood beyond patriarchy. Jesus modeled leadership as service (foot-washing), compassion (weeping, holding children), and vulnerability. The progressive tradition also connects fatherhood to economic justice: systems that prevent fathers from providing must be reformed alongside individual responsibility.

What does non-patriarchal fatherhood look like?

It is fatherhood defined by compassion (Psalm 103:13), service (John 13), and vulnerability — not by domination or control. The Hebrew word for God's fatherly compassion (racham) shares a root with 'womb,' suggesting that God's fatherhood transcends rigid gender categories. Jesus modeled this: He wept, held children, washed feet, and rejected violence.