Have
you ever wondered why some families seem to keep repeating the same cycle of
sins and failure in life? It is like
there is a generational curse on their family.
You see the same habits, additions, and life-styles from the grandparents,
children, grandchildren and even great grandchildren. Could it be because there is a generational
curse placed on their family by the LORD?
(Over the years I have watched as scientific research has over and over again been validated by the Bible. The reason I say this is the Bible has been around longer than some of the scientific research we have today.)
The
LORD spoke to Moses and gave a warning that many fail to believe to be true.
Exodus 20:5 “You shall not bow down to
them or serve them, for I the Lord your God am a jealous God, visiting the
iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and the fourth generation
of those who hate me.”
Exodus 34:6-7 “The Lord passed before
him and proclaimed, “The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to
anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love
for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no
means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children
and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth generation.”
Is
God saying that the children and the grandchildren of the father would have to
pay for the sins of their father? What does God mean by this?
Especially since Deuteronomy 24:16 says “Fathers
shall not be put to death for their sons, nor shall sons be put to death for
their fathers; everyone shall be put to death for his own sin” and that “The son will not bear the punishment for
the father’s iniquity, nor will the father bear the punishment for the son’s
iniquity; the righteousness of the righteous will be upon himself, and the
wickedness of the wicked will be upon himself” (Ez 18:20).
We
do know that “as in Adam all die, so also
in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Cor 15:22). The same “all” that
die in Adam and from the original sin nature that we have all inherited, the
same “all” can “be made alive” by repentance and faith.
There
are those who disregard the warnings given in the Bible as superstition and
myth concerning the choice and actions of our life and the impact they have on
future generations. We could say as the
father goes, so goes the family. What
God is saying is that if a father makes wrong personal choices his family will
pay the consequences for generations to come. It is true that each will have to
pay for their own sins, but the father could have prevented many of the sins
that his children and grandchildren would fall into had he led his family in
obedience to the Law of God. The effects of this fatherly mismanagement
would be felt by multiple generations because what has been sown will be reaped
because God cannot be mocked (Gal 6:7). God is not punishing the children
for their father’s sins, but they are feeling the consequences and having to
pay for them. That is what God means in Exodus 20 and 34. These
verses deal with the descendants of those children who would follow their
father’s example of disobedience but each one of us are ultimately responsible
for our own sins and this is what Ezekiel 18 and Deuteronomy 24 is
saying. The father’s disobedience to God’s commandments have a ripple
effect that keep on going until some other father in his lineage breaks that
cycle.
I
do not want you to think of I am using science to prove the Bible, rather I am
using the Bible to prove science. There
is a study in genetics called "epigenetics" this is the study of
potentially heritable changes in gene expression (active versus inactive genes)
that does not involve changes to the underlying DNA sequence — a change in
phenotype without a change in genotype — which in turn affects how cells read
the genes. This term was coined by C.H.
Waddington in 1942. Although, it was set
in motion in by the LORD when He gave Moses the principle in Exodus 34:6-7.
Have you ever wondered why some
patterns in your family history seem to be recurring in your own life?
Strongholds such as anxiety, poverty, illnesses and addictions to name a few.
The Bible refers to these as generational curses, which the church has long
believed was purely spiritual. But according to new brain research, this
biblical principle is far more scientific than we realize.
The concept of generational curses is
presented in Exodus 20:5. In the King James Version it says that God will
“visit” the sins of the fathers down to the third and fourth generation. The
term “visit” makes more sense considering this new study which shows that
generational curses can, indeed, be scientifically traced back from one
generation to another.
Pioneering studies in epigenetics
reveals that our life experiences and choices do change us, including our
brains, down to the DNA level. And these changes can be passed onto our
children and further down the hereditary line. Epigenetics gives insight to how
our diets, work environment – even one time traumatic events – can change the
genetic legacy we pass onto our children and grandchildren.
For
nearly a century after the term “epigenetics” first surfaced, researchers,
physicians, and others poked around in the dark crevices of the gene, trying to
untangle the clues that suggested gene function could be altered by more than
just changes in sequence. In recent
years there has been several groundbreaking studies which have focused fresh
attention on epigenetics. Interest has been enhanced as it has become clear
that understanding epigenetics and epigenomics—the genome wide distribution of
epigenetic changes—will be essential in work related to many other topics
requiring a thorough understanding of all aspects of genetics, such as stem
cells, cloning, aging, synthetic biology, species conservation and agriculture.
The word “epigenetic” literally means “in
addition to changes in genetic sequence.” The term has evolved to include any
process that alters gene activity without changing the DNA sequence and leads
to modifications that can be transmitted to daughter cells (although
experiments show that some epigenetic changes can be reversed).
One
effect of such processes is imprinting. In genetics, imprinting describes the
condition where one of the two alleles of a typical gene pair are silenced by
an epigenetic process such as methylation or acetylation. This becomes a
problem if the expressed allele is damaged or contains a variant that increases
the organism’s vulnerability to microbes, toxic agents, or other harmful
substances. Imprinting was first identified in 1910 in corn, and first
confirmed in mammals in 1991.
Researchers
have identified about 80 human genes that can be imprinted, although that
number is subject to debate since the strength of the evidence varies.
Among
all the epigenetics research conducted so far, the most extensively studied
disease is cancer, and the evidence linking epigenetic processes with cancer is
becoming “extremely compelling,” says Peter Jones, director of the University
of Southern California’s Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center. Halfway around the
world, Toshikazu Ushijima is of the same mind. The chief of the Carcinogenesis
Division of Japan’s National Cancer Center Research Institute says epigenetic
mechanisms are one of the five most important considerations in the cancer
field, and they account for one-third to one-half of known genetic alterations.
Most
epigenetic modification, by whatever mechanism, is believed to be erased with
each new generation, during gameto-genesis and after fertilization. However, one
of the more startling reports published in 2005 challenges this belief and
suggests that epigenetic changes may endure in at least four subsequent generations of organisms.
Along
with behavior, mental health may be affected by epigenetic changes, says
Arturas Petronis, head of the Krembil Family Epigenetics Laboratory at the
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto. His lab is among the first
in the world, and still one of only a few, to study links between epigenetics
and psychiatry. He and his colleagues are conducting large-scale studies
investigating links between schizophrenia and aberrant methylation, and he says
understanding epigenetic mechanisms is one of the highest priorities in human
disease biology research. “We really need some radical revision of key
principles of the traditional genetic research program,” he says. “Epigenetics
brings a new perspective on the old problem and new analytical tools that will
help to test the epigenetic theory.” He suggests that more emphasis is needed
on studying non-Mendelian processes in diseases such as schizophrenia, asthma,
multiple sclerosis, and diabetes.
This quiet scientific revolution could
be a paradigm shift for evolutionary biology, as it pretty much refutes
Darwin’s central premise. Neuropsychologist, Dr. Tim Jennings said, “Which is
more scientifically accurate – the Bible or Charles Darwin? Well guess what?
It’s the Bible. Darwin hypothesized that it was mutation over millions of years
that caused finches to have different beaks. Science has actually now proved,
it’s epigenetic modification.
Epigenetics reveals that not only do
we pass along the DNA sequence to our children, but we also pass along the
epigenetic instructions to them. In other words, information can be inherited
and transmitted through generations. In an experiment on ‘transgenerational
epigenetic inheritance’, researchers at Emory University, trained mice to fear
a fruity odor by pairing it with a mild electric shock to the foot. Ten days
later, the mice could mate. Incredibly, their pups feared the odor even without
having encountered the smell before. But even more fascinating is that the
offspring of those pups – the grandchildren – were born with the same specific
memory. We see the mice study apply to humans. One example were the attacks of
9/11. Among the thousands of people directly exposed to the attack were 1,700
pregnant women. Some of these women developed symptoms of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). Their children reacted with high levels of fear and stress
around loud noises, unfamiliar people, or new foods. It seems the infants
inherited the nightmare that their mothers experienced on that day.
It’s liberating when you can literally
put the concept of generational curses under the microscope. Suddenly your
habits and experiences have far greater social implications, because you no
longer live life just for yourself but for your descendants too. As Jennings
points out, “The choices we make – the foods that we eat, the things that we
watch – can affect how the DNA is expressed. When we have kids, we pass on the
sequence to them. So, if we become addicted to stuff, we can pass along to our
children gene instructions that make them more vulnerable to addictions.”
The good news is that even if
epigenetic modifications are passed onto your offspring, they are reversible.
In other words, it is possible to break the curse. You can go either way. we
can pass along both positive things in our life and or negative, depending on
the choices we make in life.
In another experiment with mice, the
notion of breaking generational curses is clearly demonstrated. Scientists bred
mice to have a memory impairment. In short, they were bred to be stupid. Then
they took the mice and for two weeks, during their adolescence, the mice were
placed in an enriched environment with lots of toys. Not surprisingly, the mice
developed better memory despite their bad genes. The enriched environment
caused an epigenetic modification, switching off the bad gene. But here’s where
it gets interesting: the pups of the mice from the enriched environment were
also born with the gene defect but had the epigenetic modification such that
the bad gene was shut off. Instead, they were born with good memory despite
their bad genes.
But here’s the question: If a Christian is set free from his past after
being born-again, why are there so many “Christians” who still see the effects
of generational curses in their lives? Could it be because so many have not
truly been born again? Salvation is by
grace and once we are gripped by grace, we can truly have the mind of Christ
which transforms our behavior. Suddenly, we are empowered to break the curses,
knowing that the blood of Christ covers us. This transformation is physically
revealed in the genetic changes in our bodies, but also on the legacy we will
be leaving behind. Paul in writing to
the church at Corinth says, Therefore if any man
be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all
things are become new. 2 Corinthians 5:17 (KJV) This is not just a spiritual battle you are fighting it is also a physical battle.
You are fighting the very lineage of your family. If you wish to break the "sin that so easily besets" then you must surrender you life to Jesus Christ and become the new creation that He will make in transforming your life. This is the only hope for your children, grandchildren and great grandchildren.