r/Christianity • u/Emou123 • 7d ago
Breaking generational patterns when your parents are also believers — has anyone walked this road?
I'm a Christian, married, with a baby on the way. Both my parents are also believers — high-visibility in their church, scripturally literate, the kind of people other Christians look up to. But behind closed doors, there have been decades of manipulation, guilt-tripping, control, and using Scripture as a weapon (1 John 4:20 to enforce closeness, "honour your parents" to override any boundary, etc.).
A few months ago, I had to step back from the relationship for the protection of my wife and our coming son. They've responded with everything from spiritual lectures to legal threats. My sister, who lives in another country, just cancelled a visit and burned £500 on flights because they "forbade her" from seeing me when she comes (btw she's 41, married with 3 yo son). That sparked a huge fight between them — so this isn't just me.
What I'm wrestling with: even after stepping back, I see micro-versions of their patterns showing up in me. Hypocrisy. Religiosity over relationship. The instinct to control. I don't want my child to inherit what I inherited. I want the cycle to actually end with my generation.
If you've walked any version of this road — parents who are believers but unsafe, breaking generational patterns from inside the church, holding boundaries with parents while honouring God — I'd love to talk in DMs. NOT SELLING ANYTHING. Just trying to understand how people actually do this faithfully.
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u/kyloren1217 7d ago
it's reddit mate, we can all talk in the open. only ppl that want to stick to dms have something to hide and anyone having anything to hide is not very Christian :)
now, onto the topic...
you said this, but tbh, that could be a good thing or a bad thing. lets say your church is a JW church, this would be a bad thing as it means they are one of the top cult leaders in the group.
so i would love to know which church it is we are talking about here, to get more of a sense of what actually could be the issue.