Godly Homes of the Martyrs
by Denny Kenaston
A
deep love and commitment to Jesus Christ brings an overflow of
grace and power into a life. This grace and power brings
influence on the world of souls around us. Sometimes this
fragrance is sweet to the seeking heart, and sometimes it is
a stench to the hard and impenitent. All who live godly in Christ
Jesus will suffer persecution. This suffering brings more grace,
a deeper love for God, and more burdens for the lost. In time,
this process makes a powerful, dynamic church, which is the body
of Christ on the earth. The annals of church history are
scattered with testimonies of this upflaming of God’s people,
fueled with the effects of persecution.
There was a
precious group of people like this that lived in parts of Europe
in the sixteenth century. Their persecutors named them
Anabaptists because they believed in believer’s baptism and
renounced their infant baptism in the Church of Rome. Oh how
they loved the Lord Jesus! Oh how they loved the Word of God and
wanted to obey it in every way! Persecution and martyrdom
awaited these dear people everywhere they moved. From 1525 to
around 1600, multitudes of them gave their lives for the cause
of Christ. This covers the span of about three generations. I
have thought for some time, “These little flocks were powerful
people. They must have had some powerful homes.” There is only
one problem. There is very little recorded about them, and very
little mentioned about their homes.
Some time ago
the suggestion was made to search through the records of the
martyrs of that period of history. There is a large book called
The Martyr’s Mirror which sits on the shelves of nearly
every home in the community where we live. It contains eleven
hundred pages of letters and stories with vivid accounts of
trials, confessions, and deaths. We have gone through this book
and found a gold mine of inspiration and instruction. There are
many letters written from prison. There are letters from a
father or a mother to their children just before they were
burned at the stake. There are letters from a husband to a wife
and vice versa. There are also letters of young people written
to their parents. I had to read between the lines as I searched
for the gold, because nothing is given as direct teaching on the
home. However, the gold is clearly there.
I have been
teaching for some time now that a dedicated life which is truly
lived, behind closed doors, will produce godly children. This
principle has never been so clearly revealed as it has in this
study of the Anabaptists and their children. Through
persecution, grace has flown like a river from the parents to
the children who lived with them. I want to look at several ways
in which this took place. Forgive me for the lack of stories
and
interesting historical events, but there simply is no such
record of these things. I think the authorities of the Roman
Church and other state churches wanted to stamp out the very
memory of these God-fearing people. Instead, their lives
produced another generation of vibrant Christians that
frustrated and confounded these authorities. I believe that we
and our children will face persecutions in the days to come.
It
will be good for us to see if we are on track with the parents
who raised a generation of young people, willing to die for the
faith once delivered to the saints. Come with me as we read
between the lines, and let us see what we can find.
Love and Unity in Marriage
One of the
most important foundation stones in a holy household is the love
that flows between husband and wife. It is one of those silent,
mysterious influences that shapes the inner strength and
security of the children. When mom and dad love each other
deeply, it seems the children can weather many trials and
troubles.
So it was with
the Anabaptists. I was inspired and challenged as I read letter
after letter to and from the prisoners. There are a few
principles that caught my attention as I read. First of all,
I noticed that their fellowship with the Father and His Son was
so
sweet, that they called each other brother and sister in the
Lord, though they were husband and wife. Secondly, I kept seeing
the words “one,” “oneness,” and “one flesh,” as I was reading.
Without question, they had a powerful oneness in their
marriages, which was referred to over and over. I believe this
was because they were living under the anointing of the Spirit.
There is a unity that the Spirit gives. It cannot be
manufactured simply by agreement. It is the fruit of two lives
who walk with God together. Look at the heart in this godly
marriage:
I, Martin van der
Straten, your dear husband and brother in the Lord, wish you
much grace and mercy from God our heavenly Father. Out of a fond
heart permeated with love, my chosen love, I affectionately
greet you. O my dearest love, whom I love with all my heart, in
accordance with the Word of God, that a man shall leave father
and mother, and cleave to his wife. For you, O my dear lamb, are
flesh of my flesh and bone of my bones. My dearly beloved, whom
I took by the hand with tears of joy, I hope and trust that you
are also well in soul and body.
The True Faith
Oh to pass
on a living, vibrant faith that is real and can be seen! This
is
the longing of every sincere parent. I have observed that there
must be a vibrant faith in the parents if there will ever be
the
same in the children. A good church won’t reach them. Good
preaching is not enough either. The torch has to be burning in
the heart and hand of one generation if you want it to be
burning in the next generation. These martyrs were dying for
their faith. It wasn’t merely theological. The faith to them
was in fact a faith on the inside, but it was practical too.
That is
why many of them died. Like begets like, as the proverb goes,
and this is never truer than in the home. What does our faith
look like? Will our children die for it? Or will their faith
be
like the faith of millions of professing Christians, that does
not bring even a ripple of persecution? Listen to the heart of
this godly father, as he writes his last words to his daughter:
My dearest daughter,
diligently search the holy scriptures and you will find that we
must follow Christ Jesus and obey Him unto the end. You will
also find the little flock who follows Him. This is the sign:
they lead a penitent life. They are not conformed to the world.
They avoid that which is evil, and delight in doing what is
good. They hunger and thirst after righteousness. They crucify
their sinful flesh more and more every day, to die unto sin,
which wars in their members. They strive and seek after that
which is honest and of good report. They do evil to no one, and
they pray for their enemies. They do not resist their enemies,
and their word is their seal. They are sorry that they do not
constantly live more holily, for which reason they often sigh
and weep.
The Word of God
I don’t think
we American Christians have any idea about the powerful effect
the Bible can have on our children. Some even think that too
much Bible reading will make you mad. That is what one worldly
magistrate said to the apostle Paul. Some say, “That’s brainwashing.”
Well, I think we could use some good washing of our
brains in the polluted society in which we live. If we fill the
child’s mind full of the word of God, then he will be thinking
about it all his formative years. And guess what? “Whatsoever
he doeth shall prosper.”
These
Anabaptists were in love with the Bible. They had a New
Testament with them at all times. It was open, and they read
in it during all spare moments at work or at home. The fathers
would encourage the children in their letters to read it every
free chance they could get. It was read and taught diligently
in
the home. They had Bible in the morning, Bible at breakfast,
and Bible at supper. They reverenced God’s Word that much. The
children were all taught to read and write at home. Why? One
reason only—so that they could read and write from God’s Word.
As you read
the many letters and debates that are recorded in The
Martyr’s Mirror, you will notice one thing immediately: they
read like the Bible. So many of their sentences are direct
quotes from the Bible. The letters flow along like a letter,
and yet they are writing verse after blessed verse from the
scriptures. One thousand pages of this are enough to convince
anyone that these people knew their Bibles. They must have had
hundreds of verses committed to memory. I know for sure that
they were not allowed to have a Bible in the prison. They simply
wrote out the memory of their hearts. How did this happen? “From
a child, thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which is able to
make thee wise unto salvation.” The parents had to be placing
the precious seed into their hearts. They had to be filling the
empty spaces of time with the water of the Word, not the
newspaper and not the television. Wake up American
Christians—wake up! Let us prepare ourselves, and prepare our
children.
WANTED: Humble Parents
Often parents
come to me with many failures to confess. They often ask me, “What shall I do?” and “How do I relate my failures to my
children?” I always give them the same counsel. I tell them to
gather the family together for a meeting and humble themselves
through confession. Many parents are reluctant to do this. They
fear they will lose the respect of their children, and then
their children won’t obey them. Nothing could be further from
the truth. When you as a father or mother humble yourself before
your children, they actually respect you much more, because you
are being honest. They know when you haven’t done right. If you
keep silent about it and play the hypocrite, you lose.
As I was
searching through these letters, I noticed something interesting
about most of the parents’ last thoughts and words. They spoke
a lot about how they had failed the family many times. Now I
could
tell by the counsel they were giving that these were powerful
Christian men and women. They could have just as easily
mentioned many things that they had done right, but that didn’t
fit the Sermon on the Mount. These people were poor in spirit
and full of mourning up to the day of their death. If the strong
ones who are an example to us can confess failure, how much more
can we who are failing in many areas! Maybe it is time to have
a
good old-fashioned family revival, and then walk in humility
before the family.
A
Life of Devotion
Enoch walked
with God, Noah walked with God, Abraham walked with God, and
their children followed them and their God. There is a secret
here. A simple secret here that we don’t want to miss. They saw
Him who was invisible and lived to show the next generation
the
same. We have looked into many home histories, and have found
this important key in every one of them. The dear Anabaptist
martyrs are no exception. In fact, it is truer than in any other
history I have studied. Whereas we usually find some parents
here
and some parents there who truly walked with God before their
children, here we find a multitude who did. I know it wouldn’t
be right to pray for persecution, but what an anemic bunch of
Christians we are! We need some suffering and purifying.
I found prayer
everywhere. They prayed in the morning when they arose from the
night’s sleep. They prayed before they ate a meal together, and
then again at the close of the meal. They prayed before they
went to bed at night, and prayed as they were going from place
to place. It seems to me they were praying without ceasing. I
know they had to pray, because they were not sure if someone
would come in the night to take them away. Brethren, we have to
pray also, but we just don’t know how badly we need to do it.
Their lives
seemed to flow with devotion to Christ. The fathers were
encouraging the children to read and meditate at every free
moment, and they did the same. This fosters an entire life of
devotion to God, not just a mere segment of time at the start
of
the day. Many of us have fallen so low that we don’t even have
that. Can we expect to convince our children that God is a
living God if we never have any communion with Him? I think not.
We Hate Sin and the World
To the
Anabaptist martyrs and the Anabaptists who were still allowed
to live, sin and the world were dangerous things. It seems every
dying father or mother had something to say to the children
about these twin sisters of destruction. Sin separates you from
the living God, and to them that was the greatest tragedy that
could happen to a person. So they warned each child over and
over to prepare them to stand in the evil day, “The world is the
place where suffering and persecution come. Don’t go out into it
more than you have to.” It was very clear to me as I read. The
world is not a playground, but a battlefield where the forces
of
good and evil are fighting for the souls of men.
I wonder what
we are teaching our children about sin and the world. By our
words and by our example, we are teaching them something about
these two evils. The world—what is it in the eyes of the
children? A place to make lots of money? A fun place to play and
laugh? Bright lights, fast cars, lots of music and movies? What
about sin—how do they see it? Do they think like modern
Christianity, “Everybody sins most of the time, praise God for
the Blood?” Dear parents, evil communications corrupt good
manners (behavior). Listen to the words of a father who was
going to be burned at the stake not many days hence:
My dearest only
daughter; consider the wickedness of the world, the learned, and
the magistrates, how they shed innocent blood, and are called
spiritual Christians. I beseech you my dearest daughter, do not
follow them. Read the scriptures and when you shall attain your
years, pray the Lord that he will show you what is good and what
is evil, what is lies and what is truth, the way of perdition
and the narrow way that leads to eternal life. When you see
pomp, boasting, dancing, lying, cheating, swearing, fighting and
other wickedness, know my child, this is not the right way. Do
not follow their ways, though they allure you in an inviting
manner, and promise you fine things. Therefore my dear daughter;
follow Christ and beware of sin, that you do not commit it, for
you will be saved through Him.
Prevailing Love
The Law of
the Kingdom is love—powerful, all prevailing love. Sometimes I think
we pass over this word like it was “a,” “the,” “it,” or some
other small word. It is not. It is the most influential word
in
the Bible. I know that it has been watered down to a mere
emotional experience these days. Nevertheless, let us draw it
out of the lives of these Anabaptist martyrs and see what it
looks like. It is understandable by now, that the persecution
anointing they had filled them with the divine nature. Love is
the dominant attribute of divine nature. These dear people had
a
double portion of agape love in their homes. I found this
bonding glue oozing out all over the letters that I read. How
can it be that they who were hated and despised by most are the
ones who are baptized in love? This is one of those divine
paradoxes that only the suffering learn.
It is evident
to me that love reigned at home. Love between all the members
of
the family. You know, you can go through just about anything,
if you are loved and dwell in an atmosphere of love. In the
letters, this love overflowed to the ones receiving the letter.
It overflowed from husband to wife and vice versa. It went from
parents to children, children to parents, and even children to
children. It is a love that can be sensed deeply, and yet a love
that does right and tells the truth in right counsel. This is
what we need in our homes: a deep, sincere love that needs to
show no pretense. A love that can look one in the eye and the
heart and say, “I love you,” and known to be true by the
sincerity of the heart and the actions in the life. Listen to
the heart of a son who is writing to his mother before he died:
My dear mother, I wish
you the gracious, eternal, merciful Father, and the love of God,
and the comfort of the Holy Ghost. My very dear and
affectionately beloved mother who bore me in your own body, and
brought me into the world with great pain. Yes, your breasts
have nourished me and you have nourished and instructed me in
all truth. You, dear mother, have kept me from all sinful
companions; yea you have kept me from the whore of Babylon. You
have brought me into the church of the living God. You have kept
me from sin, according to your best ability.
Blessed Poverty
The last holy
influence I would like to look at briefly is the effect that
poverty had on
the next generation of the Anabaptists. They were persecuted
and chased from village to village. They never knew when
they would
suffer the spoiling of their goods again. They never knew when
they would have to rise in the night and flee with only the
few
items that they could carry. So many of the fathers wrote with
much sadness to their children, “I have no money to leave you as
I die.” This left mother with the financial burden of the
family. Many times a young son had to rise up and grow up
quickly, because of the need. This had many blessed effects on
the children:
-
They learned
to work hard from a young age, and work became a way of life
for them. They thought nothing of it. It was for the cause of
Christ. Not much time for play.
-
They learned
to do without many things. This taught them the exercises of
self-denial.
-
They did not
lay up many treasures on earth. Why should they? The thieves
would come and break through and steal.
-
Their
poverty wrought poverty of spirit in the inner man. This
caused them to lean upon the Lord continually.
There are many
more things we can learn from these dear people. I have only
scratched the surface. Remember, the book has a thousand pages
in it! I would encourage you to get a copy of The Martyr’s
Mirror and do some more reading between the lines. I have
listed below the pages that we found on the home. Enjoy!
The challenge
that I would like to leave you with is this: What about our
families? Are we ready to weather a strong dose of persecution?
Have we prepared our children for such things? The Anabaptists
knew that their children would probably face a burning fire.
They trained them for it. There is a theology of martyrdom. It
was a greatly prized honor to those of the early church. How
do
we look at it? It will not go away. We, the church, will not
be shielded from martyrdom. Don’t kid yourself. If the rapture
was going to take care of everything, then why are people being
martyred today? There are more martyrs now in the last one
hundred years than in all the years preceding it.
Dear Father,
wake us up. Before it is too late, wake us up. Give us the grit
and the grace to raise a generation of children who would thrill
at the opportunity to die for the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.
The
Martyr’s Mirror by
Thieleman J. Van Braght
Herald
Press • ISBN# 0-8361-1390-X
References: pages
915, 916, 918, 920, 921, 922, 925, 929, 935, 949, 950,
951, 955, 957, 969, 978, 979, 981, 982, 984, 985, 986,
987, 988, 1003, 1004 |
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