What does it mean to be called as a husband, a wife, a parent, a child?
How does the grace of the gospel impact how we carry out these particular callings?
How does Godās presence address the struggles that our own family faces?
Gene Veith joins forces with his daughter Mary Moerbe to explore these kinds of questions in light of Christian vocation and its applications for family life. They show how the Christian faith is lived out precisely in our ordinary relationships, and how a biblical understanding can equip us to move away from common confusions and dysfunctions to persevere in love.
Written with sensitivity and wisdom, Family Vocation addresses the perennial problems and joys of family life and provides a compelling paradigm for creating loving families in the face of cultural pressure.
256 pages
āGene Veith is one of the most powerful thinkers and apologists in the Christian world today. In Family Vocation, Veith and Moerbe have really hit the markāwe must learn to think of marriage and families as vocations from God. Here is an ancient and sacred vision of marriage and family that we would do well to understand, promote, and most importantly live out.ā
āCharles Colson, Founder, Prison Fellowship and the Colson Center for Christian Worldview
āA great president once referred to the family as the āunseen pillar of civilization.ā He was right, and so is Gene Veith in this luminous book, which underscores the centrality of family, marriage, and parenting. Timely and absorbing, this book arrives on the scene at exactly the right time.ā
āTim Goeglein, Vice President, Focus on the Family
āFamily Vocation is a thorough and thoughtful look at family as a calling from God. Using Martin Lutherās teaching on family living as a starting point, Gene Veith and his daughter Mary Moerbe have produced a foundational book addressing all the callings of family life. In a marketplace in which so many family books only scratch the surface, Family Vocation digs down deep. The things I look for in a book on family are all here: a focus on nurture, the priority of internal change, and the power of grace and the gospel to enable. A worthy read!ā
āTedd Tripp,Ā pastor; international conference speaker; author, Shepherding a Child's Heart
āThe phrase āgospel-centeredā has become almost a clichĆ© when describing Christian writing. Every Christian author would desire such an epitaph for his or her work. However, in so many books, especially those dealing with family, gospel-centered deteriorates into ābe like Jesus.ā Family Vocation is the epitome of what gospel-centered truly means. The authors introduce it plainly, āThe gospelāthat is, the message of Christ crucified for sinnersārelates to every moment of the believerās life.ā Every chapter has its foundation, built not upon what we do in our various vocations, but upon what God has done in Christ. This approach to vocation is the means through which Christian families can truly be strengthened and restored, and then bring their influence to bear on our culture.ā
āJames I. Lamb, Executive Director, Lutherans for Life
āThe ageless questions weāve pondered about marriage, divorce, sexuality, and parenting are asked candidly and answered faithfully by Veith and Moerbe in this timely application of Lutherās doctrine of vocation. The word family has been hijacked by our culture and Christians reel with each new and dysfunctional incarnation of the concept. What is family? What is marriage? What is Godās call to be a husband, wife, parent, or child? The authors offer rich, biblical responses to these questions and bring clarity to our understanding about cross-bearing love and sacrifice. Family Vocation is sure to find a home on the desks of pastors, teachers, and counselors who seek an engaging resource for Bible classes, spiritual care conversations, and godly counsel. This book leads the way to abiding grace and hope in Godās promisesāa āneed-to-readā for Christian husbands, wives, mothers, fathers, daughters, and sons!ā
āBeverly K. Yahnke, Department Chair of Social Sciences, Concordia University Wisconsin
āMartin Luther identified marriage and family as one of three fundamental estates of human life instituted by God for the good of his creation. In this book, a father and daughter team up to bring Lutherās rich insights into the twenty-first century in a way that challenges and encourages Christians to see the family as the arena for Godās work. In an age when the fabric of the family is strained by cultural forces of self-interest and hedonism, this book suggests a way forward for Christian families to see life together as husband/wife, parent/childāencompassed in vocation lived out under the cross.ā
āJohn T. Pless, Assistant Professor of Pastoral Ministry and Missions, Concordia Theological Seminary
āIn the church today, there is no more significant issue than the family. This divine institution is in the crosshairs of every evil plan and purpose of the Devil himself. Take down the family, and with it go education, order, decency, law, church, and even faith. How my years in a struggling inner-city parish taught me that the gospel does not thrive in a community of chaos, dilapidation, crime, and disorder! The root cause of it, as I came to be convinced, is institutional and spiritual forces attacking the stability of Godās best agent for good in both the kingdom of the civil realm and that of the churchāthe family. What was once more commonly an urban reality has become a rural and suburban way of life. As we all struggle in the families we haveāoften rag-tag rings of sinners, sometimes a patchwork quilt of multiple families and forcesāwe need Christ and the vocation to forgive.ā
āMatthew Harrison, President, The Lutheran ChurchāMissouri Synod
Family Vocation: God's Calling in Marriage, Parenting, and Childhood is in the following collections: