Mailbag

The Mailbag: Grandparents an Ungodly Influence on My Kids

My husband’s family is unsaved and over the years they have encouraged my children to ignore our teachings, rules and God’s word to the point of encouraging and helping them to sneak around. Our oldest son moved out (because he didn’t like our rules) and in with his grandma (who is not saved and we repeatedly asked her not to allow him to live with her) she encourages and allows drinking, pre-marital sex.

I also have two young children. I am struggling with having a relationship with people who have and do tell my children that the Bible is not true, they don’t have to follow the rules at our home and they may live with them so they can live their lives as they please. I don’t know scripturally how respond to this ongoing situation.

I’m so glad you want to handle this situation scripturally. As Christians, we should always go to Scripture first to learn what to do in any circumstance.

We need to start by remembering our heirarchy of responsibility. As Christians, our first responsibility is to love and obey Christ. As Christian wives and moms, our next responsibility is to submit to our husbands’ leadership. Finally, we are responsible for raising our children in a godly way. But we also want to love and honor our extended family, and that can be really difficult when they aren’t saved and have a pagan worldview.

It’s such a comfort to me to know that Jesus knew and addressed the fact that He would be a dividing line between people, sometimes even within families:

โ€œDo not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a person’s enemies will be those of his own household. Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.”
Matthew 10:34-37 (see also Luke 12:51-53)

But Jesus reminds us that, despite those painful divisions and our love for our family members, our loyalty to Him and His word must come first. It’s important to note that the God who said these words in Matthew and Luke is the same God who said in Exodus 20:12 (the Ten Commandments):

Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land that the Lord your God is giving you.

I think that might be your dilemma. How do we honor Christ in our home and still honor our parents who stand in opposition to Christ?

Let’s look at a few more passages, again, remembering that our first obligation is to obey God’s word. God has made it incumbent upon parents, particularly fathers, to raise our children to know His word and to walk in His ways:

You shall therefore lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul…You shall teach them to your children, talking of them when you are sitting in your house, and when you are walking by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.
Deuteronomy 11:18a,19

Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.
Proverbs 22:6

Your children also have a responsibility to honor and obey their parents:

Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right.
Ephesians 6:1

But while you’re raising your children in the ways of the Lord and training them to obey you, you need to make sure you’re not doing things that would make that difficult for them, because doing so will “provoke your children to anger” or “exasperate” them:

Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.
Ephesians 6:4

Imagine how difficult it must be for a child – who already wants only to gratify his fleshly desires – to obey mom and dad’s instruction in godliness when mom and dad keep having him spend time with grandparents whom they love and who allow them to gratify those desires of the flesh. It would be difficult for an adult to be obedient in that situation of being pulled both ways, let alone a child.

In order to discover what God would have you do about your relationship with your in-laws, you and your husband will need to discuss what God’s word says about honoring his parents and raising your children in a godly way. Ultimately, as the spiritual leader of your home, the final decision about the relationship your family will have with his parents rests on his shoulders, and you will need to honor and respect his decision. As you prayerfully study God’s word and discuss things, you might find the following questions helpful:

  • Are our younger children being exasperated or frustrated in their attempts to obey Ephesians 6:1 when we have them spend time with grandparents who are encouraging them to disobey God’s word? Is continually exposing our children to their grandparents’ ungodliness putting a “stumbling block” in front of a weaker person?
  • Since we know God’s word does not contradict itself, how can we honor our parents (Exodus 20:12) even though they are enemies of Christ (Matthew 10:34-37)? Is there a way we can modify the way we spend time with them and/or the amount of time we spend with them so that we still have a relationship with them, yet minimize or remove the ungodly influence they have on our children? Does honoring our parents require us or our children to spend a particular amount of time with them? Is the situation so extreme that our loyalty to Christ demands that we sever the relationship altogether?
  • First Corinthians 15:33 says: Do not be deceived: โ€œBad company ruins good morals.โ€ย Does it make a difference, biblically, if the “bad company” is relatives? Would we let our children spend time with people like this if they were not related to us?
  • Am I, individually, and are we, as a family, regularly praying about this situation and praying for my in-laws’ salvation? Are we sharing the gospel with them? Are we trusting God to answer our prayers and work through this situation?

If you have a question about: a well known Christian author/leader, a Bible passage, an aspect of theology, a current issue in Christianity, or how to biblically handle a family, life, or church situation, comment below (Iโ€™ll hold all questions in queue {unpublished} for a future edition of The Mailbag) or send me an e-mail or private message. If your question is chosen for publication, your anonymity will be protected

Parenting, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday ~ Parenting Without Shame

Originally published March 5, 2015

I donโ€™t know about you, but I find โ€œpet shamingโ€ pictures hilarious. Youโ€™ve seen them. Theyโ€™re the ones that show something like a dog next to a chewed up tube of diaper rash ointment, and the dog is wearing a

Photo courtesy of "Life With Dogs." lifewithdogs.tv
Photo courtesy of โ€œLife With Dogs.โ€
lifewithdogs.tv

sign around its neck saying, โ€œI ate a tube of Desitin and barfed all over the new carpet during my familyโ€™s dinner party.โ€ The funny thing to me is that the dog usually looks like heโ€™s not the least bit sorry, and heโ€™s certainly not ashamed. We can have a good guilt-free laugh at these silly pictures, because the dog has no idea whatโ€™s going on and isnโ€™t feeling humiliated in the slightest. But what about the shaming of human beings?

Shaming as a form of punishment is nothing new. You read The Scarlet Letter in high school right? Youโ€™ve seen pictures of a one room schoolhouse with a child sitting in the corner wearing a dunce cap? More recently, weโ€™ve seen judges sentence petty criminals to stand in a public place holding a sign confessing their crimes. But lately Iโ€™ve been seeing a parenting trend that isnโ€™t funny or appropriate, especially for Christian parents: kid shaming.

This ten year old girl was lying about her age, sneaking out with boyfriends, and breaking her parentsโ€™ social media rules. So they forced her to wear a shirt declaring her age, along with a โ€œlittle girlโ€ hairdo and accessories

This barber offers parents free โ€œbalding manโ€ haircuts for their misbehaving children.

This mom went to school with her teen-aged daughter, mocking, taunting, and videotaping her for skipping class.

If a child were doing this kind of thing to another child, weโ€™d call it bullying, and everyone would be appalled. But if a parent does it and posts pictures of it on social media sheโ€™s hailed as an innovative disciplinarian.

Does kid shaming work to modify a childโ€™s behavior? Sometimes. But as Christian parents, we are not called to merely modify our childrenโ€™s behavior. We are called to cultivate the soil of their hearts, so that those little hearts may one day be fertile ground, ready for the seeds of the gospel and godly discipline. And shaming or humiliating a child doesnโ€™t enrich that heart soil. It hardens it.

Children need discipline, but they need us to discipline them in a godly way. How do we discover the godly way to discipline? By following Godโ€™s example laid down in His Word. There are many reasons God presents Himself to us in the Bible as our Father. First, and foremost, it describes our relationship to Him: the depth of His love for us, His desire for whatโ€™s best for us, His authority over us. Our love for and dependence on Him, our desire to obey Him. But, secondly, God revealing Himself to us as our Father gives us a beautiful, perfect model to follow in parenting.

Want to know how to love your child? Look at the way God loves you. Want to know how to provide for your child? Look at the way God provides for you. And if you want to know how to discipline your child, look at the way God disciplines His children. Does God shame and humiliate us when we sin? No.

He disciplines us because He loves usโ€ฆ

For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives. Hebrews 12:6

He does not shame us into repentance, but draws us with His kindness.

Or do you presume on the riches of his kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that Godโ€™s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance? Romans 2:4

Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged. Colossians 3:21

He does not discipline to humiliate, but to train us in holiness and righteousnessโ€ฆ

but he disciplines us for our good, that we may share his holiness. For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it. Hebrews 12:10b-11

Sometimes Godโ€™s discipline is pretty intense, but it is always done in love and always to draw us away from sin and back to holiness, never to demean us. Our children are a precious gift, entrusted to us by God. We are to reflect Godโ€™s character to them as we walk with Him and seek to love and discipline them His way. Choosing a worldly way of correcting their behavior but not tending their hearts, wellโ€ฆthat would be a shame.

Parenting, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday ~ 12 Techniques for Raising Bible-Saturated Kids

Phew. Thatโ€™s a pretty tall order, isnโ€™t it? God may have said this through Moses to Old Testament Israel, but His words are just as relevant for 21st century Christian parents. God wants our children immersed in His Word as they go about their daily lives. Ephesians 6:4 reminds fathers that they are to bring their children up โ€œin the discipline and instruction of the Lord,โ€ and as moms, we have the joy of supporting our husbands in that venture by bringing Scripture and prayer to bear on all those little daily โ€œwalk by the wayโ€ moments. But how? Here are some practical ways Iโ€™ve discovered for capturing those teachable moments and pouring Godโ€™s Word into them.

1. Set an example.

Be faithful to your own Bible study and prayer time. Let your children โ€œcatch you in the actโ€ from time to time. Share with them what youโ€™re learning from Godโ€™s Word, things youโ€™re praying about, things youโ€™ve asked God to forgive you for, etc.

2. Train your children to have their own daily Bible study time.

You might be surprised at how early you can start developing this godly habit in your child. With an infant, you might simply take a few minutes of her morning feeding to read aloud from your Bible and pray. With a toddler, you can regularly set aside five or ten minutes (when sheโ€™s not tired or hungry) for her to sit down and look at pictures in a childrenโ€™s Bible, maybe while youโ€™re sitting nearby with your own Bible, modeling for her. As children get a little older and can read, you can set aside a block of time before their bedtime for individual Bible study and prayer. When theyโ€™re very small, children arenโ€™t going to understand much from the Bible (although they willย surprise you sometimes!), but they will still be absorbing some valuable things: the Bible is an important book, God is the top priority in my family, and God and His Word should be preeminent in my life.

3. Establish a regular time of family worship at home.

If your husband is a believer, be careful not to usurp his leadership in this area. It is ultimately His responsibility to lead his family in worship. Help each other think of ways to make your family worship time age appropriate for the children, and support your husband as he teaches Godโ€™s Word. Also, understand that with children comes chaos. (My four children who are still at home range in age from 11 to 19, and I stillย have to remind them to quiet down and stay on track during family worship.) Itโ€™s going to happen. Just tuck and roll and donโ€™t give up.

4. Sing.

Who cares if you canโ€™t carry a tune in a bucket? God doesnโ€™t, thatโ€™s for sure. Sing some hymns while youโ€™re washing the dishes. Sing along with some worship music (doctrinally sound, of course) in the car. Music is a great way to get Godโ€™s truths into your childโ€™s heart and mind.

5. Conversation Prayer

During our family worship time, we used to go around and share prayer requests, then one or two people would pray. We found that the children were either forgetting the prayer requests or we would have to spend time writing them down. So now we often do what we have dubbed โ€œconversation prayerโ€. One parent will say a brief opening prayer, and then the โ€œfloor is openโ€ for anyone to say a (or several) one or two sentence prayer about whatever is on his heart (โ€œPlease help me do well on my math test tomorrow,โ€ or โ€œLord, please save Grandmamma.โ€). When it seems like everyone is finished, the other parent says a closing prayer.

6. What is God up to?

Sometimes itโ€™s hard for children (and even adults) to recognize and remember the ways God is answering prayers and working in their lives. When our children were smaller, I put up a piece of posterboard on the wall of the breakfast room with the title โ€œWhat is God up to?โ€ at the top. Whenever God answered something we had been praying about, provided for us, moved in our lives in some way, or blessed us, we made a little note about it, along with the date. It had big things โ€“ like my daughter getting saved โ€“ as well as little things โ€“ like my son finally learning to tie his shoes. It helped my children to recognize Godโ€™s sovereignty over all areas of our lives, that He does answer prayer, and that He gets the glory for everything.

7. Letโ€™s pray about this.

Your children are going to struggle with things. Theyโ€™re going to have times of rejoicing and times of sorrow. There will be times when they have disobeyed and need to repent of their sin. What better opportunities to teach them to take everything to God in prayer? Teach them how to ask God for help when something is too hard. Teach them to thank God for blessing them and ask Him to comfort them when theyโ€™re sad. Show them how to ask God for forgiveness when theyโ€™ve done wrong.

8. Sprinkle life with Scripture.

(In order to do this, youโ€™re going to have to knowย Scripture, so be sure to be faithful to your own study of Godโ€™s Word.) When you see a beautiful sunset, talk about how God created the sun and moon. When your child is kind to someone, praise him and tell him God wantsย us to be kind to others. When you discipline him, show him his sin from Scripture, and talk about repentance and Godโ€™s forgiveness.

9. Memorize Scripture together.

There is a wonderfully wide variety of Scripture memory resources out there. My children were all involved in a Scripture memory program at church when they were small, and we worked on their memory verses together at home. Our home schooling curriculum, at the kindergarten level, had a 26 verse Scripture memory program in which we memorized a verse beginning with each letter of the alphabet. Seeds Kids Worship is a fantastic program with word for word Scripture songs and other great resources. There are even apps that can help. And you can always make up your own fun programs, songs, and contests to help the whole family memorize Godโ€™s Word.

10. Ask questions.

โ€œWould God be pleased with the way youโ€™re acting? How do you know?โ€ โ€œWhat does the Bible say about the way we should treat each other?โ€ โ€œWhat does the Bible say about _____?โ€ Questions like these get your children thinking. They take your children from simply reading and hearing Godโ€™s Word to applying Scripture to their lives and recognizing that they must submit to it.

11. The Gratitude Game

Forget the tablets and the radio. This is a great way to harness that down time in the car (or anywhere else) and use it to teach your kids about prayer and thankfulness. Itโ€™s kind of like playing โ€œI Spy.โ€ Just look out the window and take turns thanking God for what you see: โ€œThank You, God, for making birds.โ€ โ€œThank You for ice cream.โ€ โ€œThank You for police officers who help us.โ€ Or pray for people as you pass by various buildings. โ€œGod, please help the sick people in that hospitalโ€ฆhelp the pastor of that church do a good job of preaching Your Wordโ€ฆprovide homes for the people in that shelterโ€ฆโ€ We also made it a habit to pray for victims of accidents or tragedies whenever we saw an ambulance or fire truck.

12. Kiddievangelism

Our kids need to see us sharing the gospel with people as a normal part of everyday life, and we need to explain to them why itโ€™s so important. Thereโ€™s an easy way to get your kids personally involved, too, especially when theyโ€™re small: tracts. Get some doctrinally sound tracts (my favorites are from Bezeugen) and let your child leave one in the waiting room at the doctorโ€™s office, on the table when you leave McDonaldโ€™s, or hand one to the cashier at the store. Iโ€™ve had people turn me down when I offer them a tract, but whoโ€™s going to refuse an adorable three year old? Get them started on a lifelong habit of sharing the gospel wherever they go.

 

As Christian parents itโ€™s our responsibility before God to train our children in the Scriptures, prayer, and godliness. If we slow down and ask God to direct us, He will show us all kinds of ways we can teach them diligently to our children, when we sit in our houses, and when we walk by the way, and when we lie down, and when we rise.

What are some fun or unique ways youโ€™ve found
to pour Godโ€™s word into your childrenโ€™s everyday lives?

Parenting, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday ~ The 10 Commandments of Parenting- 10

Originally published August 14, 200810 Commandments Parenting 10

10.
Thou shalt love.

Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.
1 John 4:11

Loving our children isn’t something that just happens. It also isn’t just a nice fuzzy feeling. It’s a duty. A responsibility. A command from the lips of God Himself.

“…if Godย SOย loved us…”ย What does that “so” mean? It’s talking about theย wayย God loves us.

By this the love of God was manifested in us, thatย God has sent His only begotten Sonย into the world so that we might live through Him. In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.ย 1 John 4:9-10

God loved us enough to do what was best for us even though it cost Him that which He held most dear. He loved us sacrificially and unselfishly.

But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in thatย while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.ย Romans 5:8

Even when we were living in outright rebellion against Him andย didn’t careย that he wanted what was best for us, God loved us.

Forย whom the LORD loves He reproves; Evenย as a father corrects the son in whom he delights. Proverbs 3:12

God loves His children too much to allow us to continue in our sin, so He disciplines us.

But God,ย beingย rich in mercy, because ofย His great love with which He loved usย Ephesians 2:4
Be kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other,ย just asย God in Christ also has forgivenย you.ย Ephesians 4:32

But, even as God disciplines us, in His mercy he forgives us when we repent of our sin.

The steps of a man are established by the LORD; Andย Heย delights in his way. Whenย he falls, he will not be hurled headlong; Becauseย the LORD is the One who holds his hand.ย Psalm 37:23-24

God delights in our obedience to Him and our love for Him. And even when we fall, Heโ€™s right there holding our hand and helping us get back up.

He who has clean hands and a pure heart; Who has not lifted up his soul to falsehood; And has not sworn deceitfully.ย He shall receive a blessing from the LORD; And righteousness from the God of his salvation. Psalm 24:4-5

God rewards and blesses obedience to His word.

Do we love our children the way God loves us? Do we…

  • love them sacrificially and unselfishly?
  • love them enough to want what’s best for them?
  • love them enough tofollow through and doย what’s best for them even if they fight us every step of the way?
  • love them enough to disicipline them?
  • love them enough to forgive them?
  • love them by delighting in them?
  • love them by blessing and rewarding them for doing well?

It’s a huge challenge. Our kids are going to drive us up the wall, rebel, pout, whine, and at times, break our hearts. Just like we do to God. But if He so loved us, we ought also to love our children.

Parenting, Throwback Thursday

Throwback Thursday ~ The 10 Commandments of Parenting- 9

Originally published July 14, 200810 Commandments Parenting 9

9.
Thou shalt be forgiving.

โ€œbearing with one another, and forgiving each other, whoever has a complaint against anyone; just as the Lord forgave you, so also should you.โ€ Colossians 3:13

Imagine a home where there was no forgiveness. Anger and bitterness would reign supreme. Old wounds would be nursed and rehearsed. Grudges would be held tightly as treasured friends. Is this kind of home healthy forย anyone, let alone children? Is it Christlike?

Of course not. In our homes, the place where we are most inclined to let it all hang out, forgiveness is evenย moreย vital than in any other venue. If you have a husband and/or children, you know that the people who live in your house are going to mess up. Royally, at times. And guess what? So are you.

How will you want to be treated when you mess up? I’m guessing that while you’ll understand your family will be disappointed in you, you’ll still want them to find it in their hearts to forgive you once they work through that disappointment. In obedience to the “Golden Rule” (Luke 6:31), therefore, you’ve got to extend forgiveness when your husband or children offend you.

When we forgive each other, we paint a picture of God’s forgiveness. Just as God does not condone our sin when He forgives us, the forgiveness we extend on the human level does not mean that the offender’s actions were OK. It is merely a way of saying, “I’m going to let this go instead of continually holding it against you.”

God deeply values forgiveness. It is the entire reason He sent His Son, Jesus, to earth and allowed Him to be brutalized to death. Jesus endured all that pain and degradation so that each of us could be forgiven for offending God. And, ifย Godย could go through all of that to forgive us, how could we – out of love for Him – ever refuse to forgive our loved ones?