Leaving a Legacy of Faith

Do you want to leave a legacy of faith? Connecting with your extended family can have an eternal impact.

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If the idea of a family reunion conjures up visions of lukewarm potato salad and a horde of relatives you’ve never met, it’s time to rethink what it means to connect with your extended family. After falling out of favor for several years, family reunions are once again becoming a popular way to discover ancestral roots and pass on a legacy of faith.

Concentrated time with those with whom you share a common past can inspire your whole family to think about the memories you want to leave behind. So before you dismiss the idea as just one more commitment jamming up your summer calendar, consider these four reasons to get the gang together.

REASONS FOR HAVING FAMILY REUNIONS

1.  Kids Can Connect to Something Bigger

Most of us live at least a short distance from our extended families. And while that can sometimes be a blessing, it can also create a sense of rootlessness in our lives, not to mention the lives of our children. According to Kenneth Phillips, a Christian psychiatrist in suburban Chicago, “The tendency for jobs to define the part of the country where people live subtly scissors family ties. Reunions are a means by which siblings who no longer live near each other (or their parents) can maintain regular contact and fertilize their family tree.”

Steve Roskam’s family is typical. He and his four siblings are scattered around the country. Steve, an Illinois physician, lives near one brother and their folks. He has one sister in Seattle and another one in rural Pennsylvania. Another brother lives in Indianapolis.

Roskam and his family have worked hard to remain close, despite the distance. “My parents did an outstanding job ingraining a sense of family in us,” Steve recalls. “They passed on an astonishing legacy of what it takes to love each other and serve the Lord. Our family was very close growing up. But distance and time apart take their toll. Like many families, we were destined to grow apart unless we became proactive.”

Eleven years ago Steve convinced the Roskam clan to gather for three days on their youngest sister’s farm in Rogersville, Pennsylvania. They rented a nearby bed and breakfast, played with the kids, shared meals, and just hung out together. They had such a great time that they decided to do it again the next year. When the second gathering was a smashing success, the Roskam “Highlife Reunion” became an annual tradition.

Even if your reunion involves only your parents, siblings, and their families, such a gathering can create bonds and memories that will help your children feel connected to something beyond your family unit. It will help them discover more about who they are and where they came from. If your family shares a common faith, it will give your children a sense of the depth of the beliefs you are working to instill in them.

2.  It Will Be More Fun Than You Think

Naturally, even the most well-intentioned events can fall flat it you’re not careful to avoid  common landmines that Phillips says can sabotage a reunion. One is a lack of meaningful ways for teenagers and younger children to connect with older people. 

Our family avoided that landmine because of good planning. Last summer my wife’s parents celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. Rather than opting for a traditional cake and punch reception at the church, they expressed a desire to spend uninterrupted time with their four children, their mates, and their ten grandchildren. Like the Roskam clan, we are spread out in four different states. We decided to rent a vacation house in Seaside, Oregon (where Nana and Grandpa Steven honeymooned).

Although the grandchildren vary in age from a 22-year-old college student to a 16-month-old, there were endless opportunities for the kids to have a great time. During the mornings the kids were free to sleep in or go beachcombing or kite-flying with Grandpa. In the afternoons we got together to explore shops, pose for a family portrait, or just sip soft drinks and talk about “when you kids were younger.”   

Each night the older cousins played board games or watched videos, while Nana read picture books to the younger ones. And Grandpa led an all-family discussion of The Last Battle, the final installment of C.S. Lewis’ Narnia Chronicles (which we’d been asked to read prior to the reunion). Because the grandchildren were given both structure and the freedom to make their own fun, the Steven family reunion resulted in kids asking, “When are we going to do this again?”

The second landmine is unrealistic expectations. Amy Dickinson, the family columnist for Time magazine, recently attended her family’s first reunion. She writes, “I remember pulling up to the reunion in a rental car, looking at the gathering clan and thinking, ‘What are they doing here?’ So, first a warning: if you attend a family reunion, there is every likelihood you will see your family there!”

Even the most close-knit families can unravel after a few days of too much fun and not enough sleep. If your family has some unresolved issues (and what family doesn’t), expect a few uncomfortable moments over the course of the event. And as you plan your reunion, make space in the schedule for people to get away from one another if they wish. If things start getting tense, you can certainly pull yourself or your family out of the fray for a time.

3.  Families Are Built on Memories

Dale Hicklin from Seattle loves being with uncles and aunts and all his cousins. Every four years the growing tribe (nearly 100 at last count) gathers to celebrate their shared history. What started out as a homecoming gathering to welcome his missionary parents from a four-year term in Africa became a ritual that glues the cousins and their children into a single family unit.

“Whether the get-together is in Washington, Michigan, Illinois, or Oregon, we make sure the weekend includes the traditional blueberry pancake cook-off, the Saturday night square dance, and the Hicklin Championship Trivia Competition (complete with engraved trophy),” Dale says. “The whole idea is to come together in one place for a long weekend of fun, games, eating, and remembering.”

According to Reuniontips.com, “The primary driving force behind all reunions is our ability to remember the past. This remembrance is the basis of our stories. Family reunions are nothing more than a vehicle for telling the family story.” 

The family story gives children something our generation may take for granted, because so many of us grew up with grandparents nearby. We had the benefit of hearing their stories of life during the Depression or the sacrifices they had to make during wartime. Yet our children may miss out on a sense of belonging to the history of the family, not to mention the history of our faith.

4.  You’ll Build a Legacy of Faith

For Christian families, the story to be passed on involved more than just funny memories and family history. Christian parents and grandparents have an obligation to give to the next generations an understanding of what it means to be a child of God as well as a child of a given family unit.

Beginning in the Old Testament times, the Lord commanded families to share stories of their history and God’s faithfulness. Whether at the crossing of the Jordan when the river rocks were piled as an altar of remembrance or at the annual family festival called Passover, the Hebrews seized the opportunity of a gathered clan to eat, celebrate, and recall the past.

For the Hicklins, no family reunion would be complete without a worship service in which all the clan participates. “When we sing and hear God’s Word and share testimonies of His faithfulness, we are reminded of the foundation each family member stands on,” Dale observes. “It is our identity as members of the family of God that makes being a Hicklin worth celebrating.   If your parents are Christians, imagine the impact it would have on your children to hear about their grandparents’ conversion experience or their struggles to hold on to their faith in times of trouble. If you are the only Christians in the group, imagine the impact it could have on the rest of the crew to see your family living out your faith in this intimate setting.

And best of all, when Christian families come together to testify to the faithfulness of God, there is a sneak peak of what awaits them at the ultimate family reunion in heaven.

HOT TIPS FOR COOL REUNIONS

1. Start small. 

Begin with your immediate family, grandparents, siblings, and their children. A week might be too long. Someone once observed, “Company, like fish, begins to smell after four days.”

2. Plan early. 

Reservations for campsites or vacation homes need to be made months (if not a year) in advance.

3. Neutral locations are best

It evens out the playing field. The Roskams eventually ended up making reservations at the same Christian family camp in Michigan each year. There are worship times and activities for differing age groups, meals are prepared (and cleaned up) by the staff, and free time can be spent as an extended family.

4. Make it a kid-friendly reunion

Bring bikes, skates, and scooters as well as board games, craft supplies, iPods, gaming devices and lots of snacks.

5. Involve as many people as you can in the planning

As in anything else, if people feel a sense of ownership they will contribute more enthusiastically.

6. Record the time together. 

Make sure to record interviews with grandparents.

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