In recent times the
term "Generational or Ancestral Curses" has received prominence in
preaching, teaching, and Christian literature, especially those that deal with
Spiritual Warfare. Some of my students have written to ask of my input in this
controversial subject. Time is ripe for me to weigh in and clarify this
confusing belief and put the matter to rest.
PROOF TEXT: EXODUS 20:5
“You
shall not worship or serve them; for I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God,
visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and the
fourth generations of those who hate Me.”
Exegetical
Study: Jealous God, what does it mean?
The
Hebrew word for jealous is qanah or qinah (Young's Analytical Concordance to the Bible, 534);
and the Greek term is zeloō (Cleon L. Rogers Jr. & Cleon Rogers III, The New Linguistic and Exegetical Key to the
Greek New Testament, 431).
The word jealous is the synonym
of zealous. However, we tend to use the word jealous in a
negative way. The Bible also uses the word jealous or jealousy
in a negative sense most of the time (Deut. 29:20;
Prov. 6:34; Song of Solomon 8:6; etc). Like love and hate in the OT (Mal. 1:2-3), jealousy does
not refer to an emotion so much as to an activity, in this case
an activity of violence and vehemence. This is not therefore to be seen as
intolerance but exclusiveness, and it springs both from the uniqueness of God
(who is not one among many) and the uniqueness of His relationship to Israel . No
husband who truly loves his wife could endure to share her with another man: no
more will God share Israel with a rival. Therefore, God’s jealousy is always
positive and redemptive.
The
Third and Fourth Generations:
This
is a typical Semitic phrase denoting continuity, not to be understood in
arithmetical sense. Further, it is applied to those who hate God,
who refuse to live their lives in accordance with His will. Since this is God’s
world, and since we are all involved with one another, breaches of God’s law by
one generation do indeed affect those of future generations to come. Slavery,
exploitation, imperialism, pollution, immorality are all examples of this
principle. What we call natural results is just an expression of God’s
law in operation, punishing breaches of His will.
Here
is the difference that is embedded in this principle: God is not talking about
the penalties that would come
to the third and fourth generations. Rather, He is speaking of consequences.
Therefore,
children, and even remote descendants are liable to inherit, not so much the penalties of their
forebears’ sins, but rather their consequences—in
terms of disease (HIV Aids, cancer), poverty, education and lifestyle (Lev.
26:39).[1]
However,
we are not at the mercy of impersonal deterministic forces. It does not follow
that if your parents or grandparents lived in an unprincipled way, you are
inevitably doomed to an unstable or purposeless life (Deut. 24:16; Ezekiel
18:1-4). God does not punish you because of the sin of your parents. The
society is not to punish a person for the crimes committed by his/her parents.
Everybody is responsible for his own actions or sins. Furthermore, ["no
one] will ever be denied eternal life because of what his or her forebears did
or not do" (Walter C. Kaiser, et al., Hard
Sayings of the Bible, 178).
The Doctrine of the Original Sin
(St. Augustine)
This
doctrine teaches that the sin of Adam and Eve affected the human race. This is
what is called human depravity.
However, during the Middle Ages (Medieval times) some concluded that since the
sin of Adam and Eve affects every person both children and adults, it is
imperative to baptize infants (baptismal regeneration). However, if this were
the only human predicament then God would be unfair and capricious. On the
contrary, since it is true that the sin of Adam and Eve affected the human race
in deadly situation, God provided the solution by sending Jesus Christ to die
on the cross to pay the penalty of sin (Rom. 5:8). Therefore, it is not the sin
of Adam and Eve that plunges a person to hell, but a person’s conscious
decision to reject Jesus Christ (John 3:16-19, 36).
In a
true biblical sense “sin” is a human “state”
of life, rather than an act.
Therefore, when you receive Christ as Lord and personal Savior, God removes you
from that state of sin and places you in a position of justification and
righteousness. When a child does not reach the age of accountability and die,
God does not punish the child with the sin of Adam and Eve. God in His divine
grace and mercy makes provision for the child to be with Him in heaven. This
does not mean that parents are not to share the gospel with their children. The
parent knows when the child is ready to make a commitment to Christ.
What
Role should Christians play regarding generational curses?
The moment you were saved,
God justified, sanctified, and declared you righteous. You are therefore under
no condemnation (Rom.
8:1). God has removed every curse from you because you have become His child.
The blood of Jesus Christ has washed away your sins. What we can do to cancel
the generational curses in which our unregenerate family members and friends
find themselves are these: Our preaching, witness, and intercessory prayer can
turn the tables for anyone. When this happens, the lone believer in the
ancestral line becomes the key figure for the whole family. Such is the power
of God’s Word and Spirit.[2]
When God chose Abraham, God said, “I will bless you so that you become a
blessing” (Gen. 12). Therefore, as Christians we are not to be passive but
become actively involved with Christ in the redemption of our family members,
friends, and those who have not yet come to Christ (2 Corinthians 5:15-21).
If
you paid attention to the proof text that the advocates and proponents of this
flawed doctrine of "Generational Curses" use, the word curse is not there. Therefore, it is
fair to conclude that based on textual, biblical, exegetical, theological, and practical analyses,
this doctrine is false, speculative, inaccurate, and should be rejected. Contextually, Exodus 20:6 reads, "But showing lovingkindness to
thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments." The
visiting of the iniquities of the fathers is not upon those who love God and
keep His commandments (covenant people) but those who hate Him. Therefore,
Christians are not under any generational curse as some advocates of this erroneous
teaching would have us to believe.
*This
is not to be copied or duplicated without the permission and written consent of
Kennedy A. Adarkwa, PhD.
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