Tagged: Parenting
Leadership is…
Leadership is walking by the leading and in the power of the Spirit of God in daily life, and inviting others to join you.
Think and pray over the implications of that statement in…
- Your friendships
- Your parenting
- Your marriage
- Your vocation
- Your ministry opportunities
Timeless Principles for Christian Parenting (from Tedd Tripp)
Yes, I’m back from sabbatical… but haven’t yet coalesced the lessons learned into thoughts that would make sen
se to anyone else… so look for something about that in the near future.
I read this book years ago with my wife… and was blessed (and continue to be blessed). In this passage, Tedd NAILS the basic foundation of biblical parenting… read and learn…
If the goal of parenting is no more profound than securing appropriate behavior, we will never help our children understand the internal things, the heart issues, that push and pull behavior. Those internal issues: self-love, rebellion, anger, bitterness, envy, and pride of the heart show our children how profoundly they need grace. If the problem with children is deeper than inappropriate behavior, if the problem is the overflow of the heart, then the need for grace is established. Jesus came to earth, lived a perfect life and died as an infinite sacrifice so that children (and their parents) can be forgiven, transformed, liberated and empowered to love God and love others.
When we miss the heart, we miss the glory of God. The need of children (or adults) who have fallen into various forms of personal idolatry is not only to tear down the high places of the alien gods, but to enthrone God. Children are spring-loaded for worship. One of the most important callings God has given parents is to display the greatness, goodness, and glory of the God for whom they are made. Parents have the opportunity, through word and deed, to show children the one true object of worship—the God of the Bible. We know that the greatest delights our children can ever experience are found in delighting in the God who has made them for his glory.
Tedd Tripp, Shepherding a Child’s Heart (Shepherd Press, 2005), xii.
Dads, 5 ways to love your kids – from Mark Driscoll
This is a post that was too good not to pass along… it’s from Mark Driscoll of Mars Hill Church in Seattle.
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Here are some practical ways to love your kids like God, our Father, loves us:
1. Delight in your kids before discipline.
In Proverbs 3:11–12 the father says, “My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of his reproof, for the Lord reproves him whom he loves, as a father the son in whom he delights.”
Before any father disciplines his children, he is commanded to delight in them. Practically, this means that most of a father’s time is spent enjoying his children, encouraging his children, laughing with his children, being affectionate with his children, and enjoying his children so that there is a deep bond of love and joy between the children and their dad.
“A godly father models submission to authority and the welcoming of correction by repenting of his own sin.”
Part of that love includes a father disciplining his children as needed to keep them on a path of wisdom and righteousness. This pattern is to be modeled by the father who has God as his Father and gladly receives instruction and correction from God the Father and other authorities God has placed over him (e.g., church elders and other leaders).
Therefore, a godly father models submission to authority and the welcoming of correction by repenting of his own sin, receiving forgiveness, and walking in restored intimacy with God the Father by empowering grace. All of this is the essence of love, as sin leads to death and hell, and discipline leads to repentance, which points us back to life and God. Practically, this means that a good father lives out the gospel every day in fellowship with God and his child, and that he knows what to do about sin in the life of his child because he’s been dealing with his own sin in his own life first.
2. Protect your kids by fearing God.
Proverbs 14:26 says, “In the fear of the Lord one has strong confidence, and his children will have a refuge.” Sadly, our world is not a very safe place for children, as the statistics on neglect, abuse, molestation, fornication, and rape indicate. But God says that the safest place for children is with a man who fears the Lord.
Men who fear God take God’s wisdom and use their masculine strength to create a fortress of protection and provision around their homes so that their wives and children can live freely and happily under their care. Practically, this means that a godly father does not allow his children to be unsupervised at the homes of people he does not know, is very careful to oversee any dating done by his daughters, and goes to great lengths to ensure that safety is pursued in everything from where the family lives to who they are in close friendship with and who is welcomed into their home.
3. Be a man for your kids and live righteously.
Proverbs 20:7 says, “The righteous who walks in his integrity—blessed are his children after him!” Similarly, Paul tells the Corinthians that when he was a boy he acted like one, but when he became a man he put childish ways behind him (1 Cor. 13:11). It is imperative that Christian fathers repent of their childish ways (i.e., laziness, lust, whining, drunkenness, juvenile antics, neglecting family in the pursuit of hobbies, foolish spending, and so on) because their sins impinge upon the lives of their children and grandchildren. A Christian father should aspire to live in such a way as to be a righteous example to his children, which produces a path of blessing that flows to the children from the faithfulness of their father as they follow his loving leadership.
4. Work hard for your kids.
Lazy fathers are disobedient to God but want to have children who are obedient to them. Such fathers may speak good wisdom, but it is overshadowed by the loudness of the foolish hypocrisy in their lives. Proverbs 26:7 stands as a warning to such men, saying, “Like a lame man’s legs, which hang useless, is a proverb in the mouth of fools.”
Wisdom is not merely what a father says, but also his lifestyle and the degree of congruence between his words and his actions. Foolish fathers say things such as, “Well, don’t do as I do, do as I say.” What they mean is, “I’m a complete hypocrite, but do what I tell you to do anyways.” Proverbs says that these men speak with no authority and so their children ignore them or mock them as funny and foolish hypocrites. Tragically, these children often face the most devastating teen years because they have no wise father to turn to in a culture of folly, and themselves fall prey to many sins and pains.
5. Create a legacy for your kids.
While fools are consumed with the present, wisdom looks to the future. Proverbs 17:6 leans us into the future, saying, “Grandchildren are the crown of the aged, and the glory of children is their fathers.”
The point God is teaching here is that young men should be thinking about what kind of grandfather they aspire to be before they even take a wife, because they have a lot of work to do to get there. Godly men aspire to be both good fathers and good grandfathers, like Jonathan Edwards, America’s greatest theologian, who prayed each day for five generations of his offspring in hopes of being a patriarch like Abraham. Wisdom enables a father to see that the way he lives affects the kind of children he raises, which affects the kind of children they raise, and so on.
The above image is from a recent Leadership Coaching video Pastor Mark did with his son Gideon.
This post is adapted from Pastor Mark’s book, Pastor Dad: Scriptural Insights On Fatherhood. Download a free PDF version of the entire book here.
A Letter to God – from my (almost) 8 year old…
My little girl Faith is very expressive. She goes around the house humming or singing most of the time. She loves to draw. She loves to write. She’s a very creative youngun…
Today she brought me a piece of notebook paper that had writing all over it and said, “I wrote a letter to God.” I asked if I could read it. She said, “Yes.” I asked her if I could let all of you read it. She said, “Yes.” So… in a proud-papa moment, I want to share it with you – because I am so touched by what the Lord has done and is doing in her 8-year old heart. You’ll see what I mean when you read the letter.
So here is Faith’s letter to God…

Wisdom from a 14 year old
This morning my daughter Maddi recounted a conversation she was having with a friend recently… here’s an excerpt…
FRIEND: I don’t think that people who are gay are bad just because they are gay…
MADDI: We’re all bad… unless we have Jesus. Then He makes us good.
Biblically, here’s what she was saying…
”None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God. All have turned aside; together they have become worthless; no one does good, not even one.” Romans 3:10-12
“For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit. – Romans 8:3-4
Theologically, these ideas are called “Total Depravity” and “Imputed Righteousness.“
Way to go Maddi~
Ideas to pray for your children…
Years ago my wife came across a list (I have no idea where she got it) called “How to Pray for your Child.” She’s been faithful to daily pray at least parts of it, for our 5, beginning with the birth of our oldest (who is almost 20 at the time of this writing).
Anyway… I’ve not prayed it myself, but as I read through it this morning I saw great value in these thoroughly-biblical prayers for our children… and am SO thankful my wife has been faithful in praying for them in these ways. Originally, there were 12, and Mindi has added some of her own. So, below I give you… “How to Pray for Your Child”
HOW TO PRAY FOR YOUR CHILD
The following suggestions might be helpful as you think of praying for your children, for their needs now and for their needs in the future.
- That they will know Christ as Savior early in life. (Psalm 63:1, 1 Timothy 3:15)
- That they will have a hatred for sin, a desire for holiness, and a love for God. (Psalm 97:10, Hebrews 12:14, Matthew 22:37)
- That they will be caught when guilty. (Psalm 119:71)
- That they will be protected from the evil one in each area of their lives - spiritual, emotional, and physical. (John 17:15)
- That they will have a responsible attitude in all their personal relationships, being considerate, mature, and taking the initiative in love. (Daniel 6:3, Philippians 2:4, Matthew 5:43-44)
- That they will respect those in authority over them. (Romans 13:1)
- That they will desire the right kind of friends and be protected from the wrong friends. (Proverbs 1:10-11)
- That they will be kept from the wrong mate and saved for the right one. (2 Corinthians 6:14-17)
- That they, as well as those they marry will be kept pure until marriage. (2 Corinthians 6:18-20)
- That they will learn to totally submit to God and actively resist satan in all circumstances, and to fear the Lord. (James 4:7, Psalm 34:9)
- That they will be singlehearted, willing to be sold out to Jesus Christ – to be passionate followers of Christ. (Romans 12:1-2)
- That they will be hedged in so they cannot find their way to wrong people or wrong places and that they wrong people cannot find their way to them. (Hosea 2:6)
- That their thoughts will be captive to obedience to Christ. (2 Corinthians 10:5)
- That they will live by faith, by the Spirit, and by truth – not by their emotions. (2 Corinthians 5:7, Galatians 5:16, John 8:32, 1 Peter 1:14)
- That they will love the Lord with their whole mind, soul, body, and stength. (Mark 12:30)
- That they will ask for and seek wisdom daily. (Proverbs 4:5, James 1:5-6)
- That they will point others to the heart of God and not to other things. (1 Corinthians 6:20, 1 Peter 2:12)
Poem by 3 of my kids – Christmas Tree
Madeline and Faith made a “countdown” calendar this year, with flaps on each day leading up to Christmas. Underneath each flap is an activity to do together, to help build anticipation for Christmas. Today’s activity was to write a poem about Christmas… so here’s what Melinda (17), Caleb (11), and Faith (7) wrote…
Christmas Tree
by Melinda, Caleb & Faith Green
Slender branches like outstretched arms
reaching to the heavens
The star is up there,
glowing through the dark of the house.
Lights run down
like so many fireflies nestled in her branches.
Floating spheres of color circle around
laughing, dancing, smiling, shining…
Beneath it all – scrumptious gifts
rest in the shelter
reminding me of Jesus – the merciful gift from God.
Dying in my place, that I might live
and give my life to Him.
Now I can grow up,
strong like the tree, with Christ as my life
and herald His coming
just as the start, many years ago.
Train Up A Child – Child Dedication Sermon
You can find “Train Up A Child” – a sermon for Child Dedication Sunday by hovering your mouse HERE
Christian Parenting Mistake #7 – “He’s just tired…”
Let me paint the scenario for you (it happened just today, so it’s pretty easy)…
My daughter is leaving Kindergarten with my wife and calling “good-bye” to her friends. She says “Good-bye” and hugs one little girl, who is stiff as a board and says nothing. Another of them who was walking away hand in hand with her mother, is called BY NAME – “Bye so-and-so!” The little girl didn’t even turn around. Her mother turned her around and said, “Say good-bye, so-and-so…” The little girl scowled with her head down and refused to say anything. The Mom then said to my wife, (here it comes)… “She’s just tired…”
Let me ask you a question… since when is it acceptable for ANYONE to intentionally ignore another person who is talking directly to them? When adults do that we call it “RUDE.” It’s frowned upon, and is clearly not loving or considerate to the person attempting to interact with them.
Yet, Christian parents (people who are supposed to be following Jesus’ teachings and teaching their children to do the same) repeatedly (and I mean REPEATEDLY) excuse the selfish, rude, and UNACCEPTABLE behavior of their own children with the “He’s just tired…” excuse.
Are our kids sometimes tired and therefore more prone to being cranky and selfish? Absolutely! It goes for adults too – (and probably describes me at least once a week)! But since when is that a legitimate reason for bad, rude, inconsiderate behavior? If I were to ignore you when you were talking directly to me, and then say, “I’m just tired…”, You wouldn’t buy it for a second! Why do we allow it with our kids?!!???
Maybe it’s because we think, “They are just kids… they’ll learn in time…” But the truth is (and experience bears this out), they WON’T learn it if YOU, the PARENT, don’t TEACH THEM why it’s wrong and what to do instead! Many of the selfish, prideful, inconsiderate ADULTS of today are the result of such tragic parenting mistakes! The only thing they learned is that when their emotions get the best of them, then they are excused from decent behavior.
As Christian parents we must understand that there is a two-fold responsibility on us as parents in areas like this.
- We need to teach our children that THEY ARE RESPONSIBLE BEFORE GOD (and us as their parents and God’s primary representative authority in their lives) to be filled and controlled by the Spirit of God – NO MATTER THE SITUATION (tired, frustrated, angry, fearful, etc.)
- That requires that WE as parents REQUIRE appropriate behavior of them, even in public (as was the case at my daughter’s school today). The fruit of the Spirit listed in Galatians chapter 5 need to be flowing out of our children as young representatives of Christ! It takes some appropriate discipline to bring this about (which many parents are afraid of – another of the many Christian parenting mistakes), but it can and SHOULD be done.
You may think, “My kid is just shy…” The truth is that my daughter is naturally shy too – but my wife has been teaching her to be friendly to her friends – to be like Jesus EVEN THOUGH she is shy. Shyness, like the other things mentioned, is not an excuse to be rude or inconsiderate.
My desire is not for parents to be “Drill Sgts.” to their kids, but to teach them the self-control and discipline needed to be loving, considerate CHRISTIANS in a world that knows very little about such things.
“She’s just tired…” No, she’s just badly parented.
Dogs, Children, and Foolish Parents
This makes be SOOO angry!
My wife was having coffee with a friend today. The friend glanced out the window of the coffee shop and saw furniture being moved out of her Chiropractor’s office. She said, “Oh, I hope he’s not quitting business. He might have been forced to…”
She went on to tell this tragic / foolish / terrible story…
The Chiropractor was in the habit of having his dog at his office. It was a gentle dog, had never caused any trouble, but had been adopted by the Chiropractor out of an abusive situation. A customer had come into the Chiropractor’s office with her little girl. The Chiropractor saw the little girl playing with the dog in a manner that wasn’t very safe. She was getting it it’s face, holding it’s ears, etc. He told her not to do that sort of thing because the dog didn’t like it. She continued to do it anyway. The Chiropractor warned her again – repeatedly. She still persisted in her behavior. All the while the mom, within earshot of everything, did nothing.
I don’t have to tell you the end of the story. The dog eventually DID bite the little girl – right across her face. My wife’s friend was alluding to a hope that the Chiropractor didn’t have to quit business because he was sued.
For the sake of clarity I have to say – dogs will be dogs. They are animals. They will bite when they feel intimidated, harrassed, or in danger. No question. But was the dog the one to blame in this situation? I don’t think so… I think it was a very foolish mom who was to blame. Let me explain…
I can only find a handful of options for why we continue to read about this sort of thing in the papers…
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The mom didn’t have the ability to control her daughter (an issue of bad parenting)
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The mom didn’t care to control her daughter (an issue of neglectful parenting)
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The mom had not taught her daughter a proper respect for animals and adults (another issue of bad parenting)
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Or a combination of these…
But like most of our lawsuit-happy culture, the Chiropractor was to blame, not the mom or the girl.
I’ve seen this sort of thing happen again and again. People (or their children) do stupid things to or around animals and when the animal responds as animals are bound to do, they owner of the animal is slapped with a lawsuit. Then I being to wonder, “Who’s more foolish? Those who bring such tragedies on themselves and then sue, or the courts that find their lawsuit to be valid and rule in their favor?” It’s certifiably insane how our society has devolved into an “Anyone-to-blame-but-me” mentality.
The moral of the story: Parents – BE PARENTS! It is your responsibility before God to control your children, teach them proper boundaries (for their own safety, if nothing else), and teach them respect for other people and their property (including their pets). It may take a firm hand if you’ve lost ground with your child in this area. It may take the dreaded “S” word (spanking – gasp!). But the bottom line (no pun intended) is that your child NEEDS you to enforce healthy boundaries for them. If you don’t, life eventually will.
Weigh out the difference: Would you rather spank your child if needed and save them from consequences much more horrible than a spanking, or will it take a tragic circumstance, where YOUR child is the one injured, to make you wake up?!!???
Don’t worry so much about damaging your child’s fragile ego… be more concerned about damaging your child’s LIFE by allowing such foolish behavior to put them in harm’s way! It’s the epitome of foolishness to expect that your child can behave any way they want to, simply because they are a child, and others should be liable for the results. That’s unwise (foolish) parenting – at best.
Leadership is walking by the leading and in the power of the Spirit of God in daily life, and inviting others to join you.