What
 saves and makes for good children is the life of the parents in the 
home. The parents need to devote themselves to the love of God. They 
need to become saints in their relation to their children through their 
mildness, patience and love. They need to make a new start every day, 
with a fresh outlook, renewed enthusiasm and love for their children. 
And the joy that will come to them, the holiness that will visit them, 
will shower grace on their children. Generally the parents are to blame 
for the bad behaviour of the children. And their behaviour is not 
improved by reprimands, disciplining, or strictness. If the parents do 
not pursue a life of holiness and if they don't engage in spiritual 
struggle, they make great mistakes and transmit the faults they have 
within them. If the parents do not live a holy life and do not display 
love towards each other, the devil torments the parents with the 
reactions of the children. Love, harmony and understanding between the 
parents are what are required for the children. This provides a great 
sense of security and certainty.
The
 behaviour of the children is directly related to the state of the 
parents. When the children are hurt by the bad behaviour of the parents 
towards each other, they lose the strength and desire to progress in 
their lives. Their lives are constructed shoddily and the edifice of 
their soul is in constant danger of collapsing. Let me give you two 
examples.
Two
 sisters came to see me. One of them had gone through some very 
distressing experiences and they asked me what was the cause of these. I
 answered them:
'It's because of your home; it stems from your parents.' And as I looked at the girl I said:
'These are things you've inherited from your mother.'
'But,'
 she said,' my parents are such perfect people. They're Christians, 
they go to confession, they receive Holy Communion and we had a 
religious upbringing. Unless it is religion that is to blame...'
I said to them:
'I
 don't believe a word of all that you're telling me. I see one tiling 
only, and that is that your parents don't live with the joy of Christ.'
On hearing this, the other girl said:
'Listen,
 Maria, the Father's quite right. Our parents go to confession and 
receive Holy Communion, but did we ever have any peace at home. Our 
father was constantly complaining about our mother. And every day either
 the one refused to sit at the table or the other refused to go out 
somewhere together. So you see what the Father is saying is true.
'What's your father's name?' I asked her,
She told me.
'What's your mother's name?'
She told me.
'Well,' I said,' the feelings you've got inside you towards your mother are not at all good.'
You
 see, the moment she told me her father's name I saw his soul, and the 
moment she told me her mother's name, I saw her mother and I saw the way
 her daughter looked at her.
Another day a mother came to visit me with one of her daughters. She was very distressed and broke down in tears.
'What's the matter?' I asked.
'I'm in total despair over my older daughter. She threw her husband out the house and deceived us all with a pack of lies.'
'What kind of lies?' I inquired.
'She
 threw her husband out the house ages ago and she didn't tell us 
anything. We would ask on the phone, "How's Stelios doing?', and she 
would reply, "Oh, he's fine. He's just gone out to buy a newspaper." 
Each time she would think up some new excuse so that we wouldn't suspect
 anything. And this went on for two whole years. A few days ago we 
learned the truth from Stelios himself when we bumped into him by 
chance.'
So I said to her:
'The fault's your own. It's you that's to blame, you and your husband, but you most of all.'
'What
 do you mean!' she said indignantly. 'I loved my children to the point 
that I was never out of the kitchen. I had no life of my own at all. I 
took them to the church and I was always telling them the right thing to
 do. How can you say that I'm to blame?'
I turned to her other daughter who was with her and asked:
 'What do you think about the matter?'
'The Father's right, Mum,' she said. 'We never ever enjoyed a single day when you weren't quarrelling with Dad.'
'Do
 you see then, how I'm right? It is you that are to blame. You 
traumatised the children. They are not to blame, but they are suffering 
the consequences.'
Wounded by Love: The Life and the Wisdom of Elder Porphyrios, trans.
 by John Raffan (Limni, Evia, Greece: Denise Harvey, 2005), 195-205.  

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