- May 21, 2009
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I have a question for you Orthodox parents, and that is, is there any particular "typical" attitude toward the use of spanking as a form of discipline among Orthodox? The prevailing secular approach to discipline is very much against any form of physical discipline (in some states people have introduced bills to outlaw spanking as child abuse). Among Christians I know, the attitude varies. At the Presbyterian church where we'd gone, the attitude was overwhelmingly pro-spanking, and it was reasoned to be "God's design" clearly taught in Scripture...
Which consisted almost entirely of a few verses from Proverbs, such as "Hit the child with a rod so that he shall not die," and "A rod is for the backs of fools." Any figurative meaning of "rod" as general discipline (after all, Paul threatened to come to his churches "with a rod" at times, but I can't imagine he was coming to spank anyone!) was downplayed or ignored, and those verses weren't presented as allowing spanking, or even as recommending spanking, but as requiring corporal punishment. A few people said (not to us, more out loud) that anyone who does not spank is sinning against God and their children. "Worldly" methods like "time outs" were mocked with a rather prideful attitude, in my opinion.
Underlying the entire framework, of course, was the belief that every child (as well as every adult) is totally depraved and inwardly wicked.
Is there an Orthodox understanding of those verses? Of discipline in general? Does it really just matter from one culture to another, or one family to another? I guess with Orthodoxy generally focusing on "therapy" rather than punishment...and not holding to total depravity...it might have a generally different attitude toward discipline?
I'll quit rambling now. Any thoughts?
Which consisted almost entirely of a few verses from Proverbs, such as "Hit the child with a rod so that he shall not die," and "A rod is for the backs of fools." Any figurative meaning of "rod" as general discipline (after all, Paul threatened to come to his churches "with a rod" at times, but I can't imagine he was coming to spank anyone!) was downplayed or ignored, and those verses weren't presented as allowing spanking, or even as recommending spanking, but as requiring corporal punishment. A few people said (not to us, more out loud) that anyone who does not spank is sinning against God and their children. "Worldly" methods like "time outs" were mocked with a rather prideful attitude, in my opinion.
Underlying the entire framework, of course, was the belief that every child (as well as every adult) is totally depraved and inwardly wicked.
Is there an Orthodox understanding of those verses? Of discipline in general? Does it really just matter from one culture to another, or one family to another? I guess with Orthodoxy generally focusing on "therapy" rather than punishment...and not holding to total depravity...it might have a generally different attitude toward discipline?
I'll quit rambling now. Any thoughts?