![]() ![]() While there’s significant variety among such books, the most notorious is To Train Up a Child by Michael and Debi Pearl, which features in the docuseries. Hence, there is a plethora of evangelical how-to manuals on childhood discipline. 127:3–5), yes, but children are also sinners in need of restraint and correction. God says that children are blessings (Ps. Among so-called quiverfull families, like those featured in Shiny Happy People, this lack is especially pronounced.įoremost in the evangelical imagination is the notion that children are sinners. ![]() Yet in my research on the lived theology of family in US evangelicalism, I found an alarming lack of awareness regarding childhood vulnerability. Due to their developmental immaturity and negligible socioeconomic power, kids are weak and wholly reliant on others to protect them and meet their needs. One reason why families can be damaging places for children is because of their innate vulnerability. In these and many other cases like it, abusers and their enablers are quick to see sin in young children and especially in the outside world, but not in themselves. But there remains a distinction between “The Family” and “families.” Indeed, the gap between the family in theory and families in reality can be a yawning chasm-just ask the Duggar daughters. Isn’t the family God’s first created institution? Isn’t it the primary place God places children for their benefit? Isn’t it designed by God for the good of its members and broader society? Yes, yes, and yes. This claim might sound unnecessarily provocative. Yet such efforts have largely overlooked the painful truth that appears with chilling clarity in Shiny Happy People: that families can be pernicious places for children. Thatcher’s words were a steady refrain in my mind as I watched the new Amazon Prime docuseries Shiny Happy People.Īmerican evangelicals have devoted an extraordinary amount of time, energy, and resources toward the goal of shoring up and strengthening the family. Theologian Adrian Thatcher notes this in his book Theology and Families, which I read over a decade ago. ![]() Families can be pernicious places for children. ![]()
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