14Jul2026
  • Sanan Pasha Street – El Zeitoun – Cairo
  • [email protected]
TwitterFacebook-fYoutubeSpotifySoundcloud
logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية

Type To Search

Contact Us
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
logotype

Type To Search

logotype
  • Home
  • Index
    • Video Index
    • Audio Index
      • Other Miscellaneous Topics
    • Articles Index
    • Books Index
  • Encyclopedias
  • Video Lectures
  • Audio Lectures
  • E-Books
  • Photo albums
  • العربية
Elements of Interaction Within the Family
Home All Categories Encyclopedias Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology Some Categories of Pastoral Care Elements of Interaction Within the Family
Some Categories of Pastoral Care
By t.keraya26 October 20080 Comments

Elements of Interaction Within the Family

مقالات قداسة البابا
تحميل
📄 تحميل PDF 📝 تحميل Word

Elements of Interaction Within the Family

There are essential elements necessary for healthy interaction within the family in order to preserve its stability and well-being. Among the most important of these elements is understanding.

Parents need to understand the psychology of their children at every stage of life and the appropriate way to deal with each stage. They should know how to deal with the shy child, the mischievous child, the aggressive child, the selfish child, and the stubborn child—each according to his or her nature. Likewise, the husband should understand the woman’s psychology and temperament, and the wife should understand the man’s mentality and emotional nature. Each should deal with the other in a way that suits this understanding.

A wise woman, in order to be a successful wife, should realize how to deal with her husband. She speaks to him with information that satisfies him, without boasting or belittling him with her knowledge so as not to wound his pride. A wise woman preserves her husband’s dignity. She can convince him in matters of truth without making him feel that she is leading or controlling him. In times of his distress, she tolerates him and does not add burden to his burden, but rather tries to ease it as much as possible. If silence suits him, she remains silent; if laughter suits him, she makes him laugh; if he is ready for dialogue, she engages him in discussion.

If there is affection and trust between spouses, each will speak openly about what troubles him. If affection and trust are lacking, both should strive to establish them. Spouses may at times express reproach in an objective way, free from harshness. Reproach should not be constant, for excessive reproach removes feelings of love and respect. Nor should reproach turn into an attempt by each party to prove the other wrong, or be expressed in a hurtful way that makes the other feel a loss of trust or appreciation. In marriage, it is not healthy for either spouse to act as a constant inspector of the other’s behavior, holding them accountable for every action, forgetting past acts of love, or assuming bad intentions.

It is dangerous for either spouse to feel that marriage has deprived them of their freedom, making them restricted in every action—questioned about every word, visit, smile, or innocent admiration—within an exhausting atmosphere of doubt, surveillance, or control. Even more dangerous is when this turns into an atmosphere of constant tension and misery, for many marriages have failed because of such negativity.

Another essential element for family calm is patience. A mother, for example, needs to be emotionally balanced and not make her children victims of her psychological or physical exhaustion, or of conflicts with her husband or others. Children should not bear the burden of her nervousness, irritability, or inability to endure. She should not shout, scold, or resort to harm. Children may adopt such behavior in their dealings with one another, whereas she is supposed to be a role model for them in everything. At times of anger, she should set limits for both the cause and expression of anger, so that it becomes a lesson the children can understand, without turning into violence, inappropriate language, or empty threats.

Another necessary element in dealing with children is affection. It is beneficial for children to be filled with parental affection so that they do not seek it from unsafe external sources. Affection, however, must be wise and should not turn into harmful indulgence that spoils their upbringing, allows careless behavior, or leads one parent—especially the mother—to justify or conceal their mistakes. Affection also includes providing what children need without waiting for them to ask, which leaves a positive impact on their hearts and encourages them to respond with love. This giving, however, should be reasonable, not excessive or wasteful, so children do not grow up expecting every demand to be fulfilled regardless of the family’s circumstances.

Children also love a sense of joy and cheerfulness in the home. Cheerful parents win their children’s affection. Even guests and relatives who are cheerful are loved by children, who enjoy their repeated visits. If children do not find joy at home, they will seek it outside the family, with uncertain consequences. Joy in the home should be disciplined and have clear boundaries, so children learn what kind of humor is acceptable, with whom, and to what extent, and how cheerfulness does not turn into foolishness.

Another essential element in family life is wisdom—wisdom in raising children, in interaction between spouses, in solving problems, and in dealing with mistakes. Some matters require firm intervention, while others are better left for a time, so that parents do not assume the role of police officers within their own home.

Finally, among the essential elements for a stable family is respect and appreciation. This begins with mutual respect between spouses and their appreciation of one another, including exchanging words of courtesy and gratitude that may sometimes be neglected under the pretext of familiarity. Familiarity should never eliminate respect. Mutual respect between spouses becomes a lesson for their children. A cultured, wise woman can speak to her husband in ways that earn respect for her intellect and knowledge, unlike one who speaks only of trivial household matters and cannot engage in meaningful discussion. Respect should also extend to children, relatives, and friends.

Al-Ahram Newspaper Elements of Interaction the Family
Conditions and Formation of a Happy Family

Conditions and Formation of a Happy Family

19 October 2008

Raising Children Between Friendship and Punishment

2 November 2008
Raising Children Between Friendship and Punishment

منشورات ذات صلة

مجلة الكرازة
Some Categories of Pastoral Care
29 May 1998

Child Care

By t.keraya
مقالات قداسة البابا
Some Categories of Pastoral Care
20 March 1981

Why Women Do Not Enter the Sanctuary

By t.keraya

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archive by Date
الاقسام
Related Topics
  • Conditions and Formation of a Happy Family
    Conditions and Formation of a Happy Family
    19 October 2008
  • Youth Care
    Youth Care
    29 April 2007
  • Youth Care
    Youth Care
    22 April 2007
Tags
Al-Ahram Newspaper Al Keraza Magazine Audio Section Baptism Church Creation Discernment Divinity Doctrine Education Eternity Faith Forgiveness giving Grace Holiness Hope Humility Incarnation Knowledge Love Marriage Mercy Monasticism Obedience Peace Prayer Preaching priest Priesthood Purity Redemption Repentance Responsibility Resurrection Salvation Service Sin spirituality Steadfastness Teaching Unity Video Section Watani Newspaper Wisdom
Categories
  • All Categories(63)
  • Atheism(4)
  • Attributes of God(82)
  • Beginning of the New Year(4)
  • Calmness(1)
  • Canons of the Ecumenical Councils(4)
  • Canons of the Fathers (Apostles and Patriarchs)(7)
  • Christian Concepts(10)
  • Christian Conduct(7)
  • Christianity in Egypt(1)
  • Church Occasions(3)
  • Church Organizations(29)
  • Church Penalties(17)
  • Commentary on the New Testament(106)
  • Commentary on the Old Testament(40)
  • Concepts(114)
  • Deacons and Deaconesses(13)
  • Differences with the Catholics(28)
  • Differences with the Protestants(42)
  • Doctrinal Issues(8)
  • E-books(1)
  • Encyclopedia of Ascetic Theology(7)
  • Encyclopedia of Barthology(27)
  • Encyclopedia of Canon Law (Legislative Theology)(43)
  • Encyclopedia of Church History(58)
  • Encyclopedia of Comparative Theology(179)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(17)
  • Encyclopedia of Dogmatic Theology(88)
  • Encyclopedia of Eschatology(36)
  • Encyclopedia of Feasts and Occasions(132)
  • Encyclopedia of Liturgical Theology(34)
  • Encyclopedia of Moral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Pastoral Theology(115)
  • Encyclopedia of Spiritual Theology(397)
  • Encyclopedia of the Holy Bible(157)
  • Encyclopedia of the Saints’ Lives(103)
  • Faith(2)
  • Famous Christians in the Islamic Eras(1)
  • Famous Fathers in the Early Centuries(5)
  • Feast of the Epiphany(11)
  • Feast of the Nativity(17)
  • Feast of the Resurrection(7)
  • Feasts of the Saints(3)
  • General Introduction to Church History(1)
  • God’s Providence(35)
  • Historical Verification(2)
  • History of Heresies and Schisms in the Early Centuries(5)
  • History of the Coptic Church and Its Martyrs(3)
  • Hope(1)
  • Ibn al-‘Assal’s Canonical Collection(6)
  • Jehovah’s Witnesses(12)
  • Judgment(2)
  • Life Experiences(2)
  • Life of Saint Mark the Apostle(3)
  • Life of Stillness(3)
  • Liturgies(5)
  • Lives of the Anchorite Fathers(15)
  • Lives of the Martyrs and Confessors(6)
  • Love(5)
  • Meekness and Humility(5)
  • Milestones of the Spiritual Journey(10)
  • Modern Heresies(42)
  • Monasticism(8)
  • Monasticism(6)
  • New Testament(7)
  • Old Testament(24)
  • Others, Miscellaneous and Various Topics(109)
  • Our Apostolic Fathers(7)
  • Pelagianism and Original Sin(2)
  • Personal Status(35)
  • Persons of the New Testament(6)
  • Persons of the Old Testament(63)
  • Poems, Hymns, and Songs(96)
  • Priestly Service(207)
  • Questions(31)
  • Questions and Answers(21)
  • Redemption(5)
  • Repentance – Self-Examination(1)
  • Saints of Virginity and Monasticism(4)
  • Salvation(1)
  • Seventh-day Adventists(11)
  • Some Categories of Pastoral Care(161)
  • Some Fields of Pastoral Care(55)
  • Spiritual Theology – Virtues(21)
  • Spiritual Topics – New Testament(10)
  • Spiritual Topics – Old Testament(2)
  • Spiritual Warfare(23)
  • The Altar(2)
  • The Angels(6)
  • The Armenians(1)
  • The Beginning of the Christian Church(2)
  • The Church(27)
  • The Church after Chalcedon(1)
  • The Church after the Schism – The Middle Ages(2)
  • The Church before the Schism(5)
  • The Church in the Diaspora(1)
  • The Church of Alexandria and Its Patriarchs(7)
  • The Conscience and the Influencing Factors(7)
  • The Early Church(6)
  • The Fourth Century and Its Importance(7)
  • The Holy Trinity(14)
  • The Human(11)
  • The Incarnation(5)
  • The Self(2)
  • The Spiritual Man(12)
  • The Theology of the Holy Spirit(4)
  • The Virgin Mary, Mother of God(19)
  • Video(1)
  • Virtues (Moral Theology)(2)
  • Wars of Thought(1)
Gallery
caption
caption
caption

caption
caption
caption

Featured image: Elements of Interaction Within the Family

Make Kids Happy

GET IN TOUGHT