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"Church leaders must be sensitive to the complex nature of blended or step-families."
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Blended Families
More than half of 21st-century marriages in the United States will end
in divorce. Many of these marriages will involve children, and the parents
may get married again, creating blended families with new and unique challenges,
issues, and problems. According to a Web site produced by Blue Cross Blue
Shield, blended families may produce as many as eight people who consider
themselves to be grandparents of one child. This is but one of many situations
which are different for blended families. Who has authority over the children?
Who watches the children when parents or stepparents are away? Who is
responsible for disciplining the kids? These questions must often be negotiated
and difficulties resolved.
Four basic tasks confront blended families: (1) parenting, (2) managing
change, (3) separating the current marriage from the previous one, and
(4) dealing with the parent who does not live in the same house. Depending
on how blended families deal with these four issues, a new family structure
is developed. This new family may be a new traditional one, a romantic
family, or a matriarchal family. The new traditional family tries to operate
with harmony, love, and traditional values; but they realize they must
work hard at it, given the many added people with whom a blended family
must communicate. A romantic family is similar to a new traditional family,
with one main exception. The romantic family expects to have harmony and
love established from the start. This is somewhat unrealistic, considering
the amount of adjustments blended families must make. In some blended
families the mother has the desire to take the dominant role and be the
family leader. With these families, a matriarchal pattern may be established
for the new stepfamily. (For more information see Mary Lou Fuller and
Glenn Olsen, eds., Home-School Relations: Working Successfully with
Parents and Families [Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1998].)
Church leaders must be sensitive to the complex nature of blended or
step-families. There is much to consider when working with children from
blended families. During the early days of the new family structure, some
children will be angry and have difficulties adjusting. Others will not.
Showing patience, caring for the child, and listening to the child can
provide a tremendous amount of support during these days. Another thing
to consider is the religious conflict that may occur within blended families.
A child’s biological parents or even the stepparents may have different
views on religion, church attendance, and denominational differences.
Children may even be asked to go to one church with one parent one Sunday
and a different church with another parent the next Sunday.
How many children in your group come from blended families?
Do these children have special needs?
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