The Weight of Honor
Discover the power for life and prosperity in the land.
Discover the power for life and prosperity in the land.
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
God inscribed eternal truths in stone through Moses on Mount Sinai, where heaven and earth converged. The Ten Commandments remain unbreakable pillars of our existence on this verdant planet, guiding us toward harmony with God and one another. Among them, one commandment shines with unique prominence:
“Honor your father and your mother, so that your days may be prolonged on the land which the Lord your God gives you” (Exo 20:12).
The Exclusive Depth of Kabed
The Torah of Moses commands ancient Israel—and by extension, all who seek wisdom—to honor parents with unparalleled specificity. Surprisingly, this profound mandate applies solely to parents. We are not commanded to “honor” kings, prophets, or community elders in the same profound way. The Hebrew term כַּבֵּד (kabed) is reserved for parents and for God alone—no one else (at least that is the case in the Torah itself)! This deep difference can only be fully understood in Hebrew.
Some might object, citing, “You shall stand up before the gray head and honor the face of an elder” (Lev 19:32). However, upon closer examination of the Hebrew, the verb is not כַּבֵּד (kabed) but הָדַר (hadar), which conveys adornment, glorification, or respectful deference—a related, yet distinctly different concept.
The Profound Meaning of “Weight”
The Hebrew verb כַּבֵּד (kabed), employed in the Ten Commandments (Exo 20:12 and Deut 5:16), carries the profound idea of “weight” or “heaviness.” “To kabed” means, first and foremost in the mind and heart, to ascribe weight, substance, and supreme importance to one’s parents. It involves refusing to view them as fleeting shadows but rather as vital anchors in our lives, deserving our deepest respect and devotion.
To illustrate these concepts further, the opposite of honor (כָּבוֹד, kavod), which evokes “heaviness,” is dishonor (קָלוֹן, kalon), rooted in the idea of “lightness.” Dishonor renders someone unimportant, inconsequential, and light—like a feather drifting in the wind, ignored. Honor, by contrast, acknowledges their God-given parental worth, dignity, weight, and irreplaceable role in our lives.
The Severity of Dishonor
To underscore the commandment’s gravity, the Torah of Moses declares that whoever curses a parent must be put to death (Exo 21:17; Lev 20:9). The Hebrew verb for “curse,” קַלֵּל (kalel), stands as the direct opposite of כַּבֵּד (kabed). It conveys treating someone lightly, disrespectfully, and inconsequentially.
In today’s world, far removed from biblical society, this penalty sounds shocking and even unacceptable. However, when unbelievers disagree with the Bible, they implicitly claim that God was wrong and they are right. Believers humbly accept that they are wrong when they disagree with the Bible and seek to align their thinking with biblical wisdom.
The Family as Moral Foundation
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Parents are the first divine representatives we encounter—the ones who give us life, exercise authority over us, provide care, and hold out the promise of a bright future. They act on behalf of God for a significant portion of our lives. This reality establishes the family as the primary training ground for moral character, where a child learns how to relate to others in appropriate ways (Eph 6:1-4). Research in psychology consistently affirms what theology has long proclaimed: secure attachment to parents in childhood forms the blueprint for trust, empathy, and healthy relationships throughout life.
In essence, if the relationship with parents is healthy and rightly ordered, then relationships with a spouse, boss, business partner, neighbor, and others (including the children that will follow) will, in most cases, follow suit.
For the Child of an Abusive Parent
To a child who has been through trauma, the order to “honor” can feel like a betrayal. However, the term “kabed” does not imply allowing yourself to be harmed. It can be achieved by bestowing sacred significance upon truth and self-preservation. Honor can mean being sad about the loss of the ideal parent or respecting your own God-given worth by setting limits. To break the cycle of abuse is a very honorable thing to do. It indicates that you care about the relationship and want to make things better in the future. The process of healing becomes a sacred task as it brings the damaged relationship before God.
To the Parent Wronged by a Child
A child’s dishonor hurts a parent’s soul and upsets the natural order. The power to endure must originate from a source more profound than human reciprocity. The Torah brilliantly connects honoring God with honoring parents, reminding us that our ultimate worth comes from the unchanging honor of our Heavenly Father. From that affirmation, a parent can practice the painful honor of release—respecting the child’s agency without retaliation, mirroring God’s patient love. This love, which is full of grace, becomes a spiritual legacy. The parent lives with honor from a source that no one can take away.
Conclusion
In our fractured world, where family ties often weaken under the pressures of modern life, this ancient commandment calls us back to something profound and life-giving. The Hebrew call to kabed—to give weight, substance, and sacred importance to our parents—reminds us that honoring them is not about blind obedience or ignoring pain. It is about recognizing their God-given role as the first human anchors in our story, even as we navigate the complexities of real relationships.
When we listen with intention, forgive with generosity, set healthy boundaries where needed, and remain faithfully present, we embody this kabed. We mirror God’s own steadfast faithfulness. In doing so, we honor our earthly parents and weave our personal journeys into the larger narrative of redemption that God is writing through His people.
May we embrace this sacred heaviness—not as a burden, but as a pathway to true life and lasting blessing. For when families reflect the weight of genuine honor, they become places of healing, hope, and light—illuminating the way toward deeper harmony with God and one another.
Let us carry this commandment forward with joy, knowing that in honoring our parents, we honor the God of Israel who first gave us life.
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Comments (43)
Dr. Eli,
I love this interpretation. Long have I pondered the deep biblical meaning of “Honor your father and your mother..." Thank you, Sir.
May the Lord continue to give us His light!
Thank you for these deep thoughts. They help me not to loose orientation in this corrupted world.
Amen!
Thank you Dr. Eli.
Blessings, Judith!
Wonderful and insightful! Thanks Dr. Eli. I appreciate you addressing this topic. It speaks volumes to the issues many children face in choosing to honor or not honor in the case of an abusive, absent or neglectful parent. While our choices do not override God’s command, the battle is real. How do you address 1 Timothy 5:8 in this context? Also, what advice would you give to a young man or woman who grapples with such issues? Blessings always.🙏🏽
Yvonne, in case of a spouse (especially a man), to me this would be abandonment (a biblical ground for divorce). In the case of a father, this would certainly place him in a very negative light. However, a father can't be divorced from. So the question would need to be asked how to honor your father in this difficult case.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read your messages, as I believe in them. I am Baptized as a Pentecostal, but I read anything that teaches about our loving Father
Bless you as you grow to help others to understand the meaning of God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.
. . . ..... Amen
Blessings and much peace!
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.
Timely response. Thank you for bringing light to the scripture.
You are welcome. Thanks be to God!
❤️❤️❤️
Beautifully said Dr Eli. Very well articulated and insightful. Thank you! 👌
Blessings!
Dr. Eli, you're a blessing to our generation and beyond. I approach my students via your insightful teaching with boldness and they are always happy to hear from me. This makes me to fully understand that to honor parents is unconditional. In black continent it's debatable because of parents negative issues to children. But God's word is the standard.
Serving the Lord at home is most difficult.
Very interesting link between Honor and Heaven (kavod).
In the Middle Ages, honor was important.
I am unsure it is still the case.
It is in some place on earth and in some homes.
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.