Heart to heart: Parent conversations: How does being a Christian affect my parenting?
Itās a label many of us wear with pride: āChristian parent.ā What does it mean, though? How does a Christian mom or dad parent differently than a non-Christian one? Our authors this month give us some examples from their lives, which may help us as we continue on our Christian parenting journeys.
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Nicole Balza
How does Christianity affect my parenting? How does it not? Maybe thereās a bigger question for me, though. Maybe the question is: How does looking like a Christian parent hinder my parenting?
If you have been a lifelong Christian like me, you may have a mental picture of what good, Christian parents look like. I did.
My picture: They are married. They have respectful and well-behaved kids. If they have to discipline, they do it with love and logic. They send their kids to the Lutheran elementary school. Their children are active members of the youth groupsānot only for themselves but also for the example they set for the other youth. You could probably put a few more thoughts in there. I could too.
If you look at my list, it paints a pretty picture. My husband and I worked hard at painting it. Itās not a bad painting. However, striving for this painting started to overshadow real Christian parenting.
What did we look like to the other families of our congregation? What kind of example were we to our neighbors? These questions arenāt bad questions, but they became more important than questions like: Are we loving God? Are we loving others? Are we modeling those things to our children?
Stripping away our concerns of how we think others view our parenting gives us freedom to live under Godās grace. We find that focusing on our own relationship with Christ compels us to love others and therefore model that to our children. Sound familiar? āSeek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as wellā (Matthew 6:33).
My husband, Tad, and I have since made choices that may not look like what good, Christian parents would do. For example, we just finished our sixth year ofĀ homeschooling even though we have a wonderful Lutheran elementary school. We take very seriously the command to ābring them up in the training and instruction of the Lordā (Ephesians 6:4). Our choices are prayerfully deliberated with this as our goal. Because Tad accepted a call to be āThe Youth Guy,ā he is gone nights, weekends, and chunks of summers. Fridays are his day off, which is when the kids were in school. How can Tad be a part of ābringing them upā if he isnāt home when they are? We realized how much impact we could have if our kids were home with us.
Finally, I learned to be careful of my opinions when others painted a different picture of good, Christian parenting. Just because it doesnāt look like my painting doesnāt mean itās wrong or even not as good as mine. I know some people questioned our decision to homeschool. I appreciated the people who asked me about our decision process or why we chose what we did. Those people sought understanding.
Seek God first. Bring your children up in the training of the Lord. Letās encourage parents, as our picture is always changing.
Jenni Schubring and her husband, Tad, have three sons and a daughter.
It was Friday night. My wife was at an event for church, and my daughter was at a sleepover at a friendās house. My son and I had a night off together. We decided to go to a movie and looked at the options. There was one superhero-type movie that I thought looked good. My son thought it looked āawesome!ā Then I saw the rating: āR.ā
My son asked, āDad, why canāt we go to an R-movie?ā
That question reminded me of this Heart to heart topic. Is there a difference in how a Christian versus a non-Christian parent might respond to my sonās question? Couldnāt we both reply by pointing out that the movie has sexual contact, vulgar language, and extreme violence and thatās inappropriate for young children? I think we couldāand that was part of my response.
We all have non-Christian friends who do a great job of instilling basic morals and values in their children. After all, everyone has a natural knowledge of Godās law and can use that in their parenting as they train their children not to hurt others (or watch others do so in a movie), steal, lie, etc.
But as a Christian parent, we have something more! We not only have Godās law, but we also have the gospel. We know that there is no way we can keep the law perfectly, but Christ did for usāand gave his life to pay the penalty for our sin. By Godās grace, we are forgiven and heirs of eternal life. Everything we do now is not merely motivated by Godās law. The law has been fulfilled by Christās sacrifice. Now what we do comes out of joyful response to the gospel message.
āDad, why canāt we go to an R-movie?ā
We can! But, letās think about how we can show our love to God? By watching a movie filled with sexual contact, vulgar language, and extreme violence? Or by staying home with a bowl of popcorn and watching Star Wars? We chose Star Warsāand I ate most of the popcorn.
These teachable moments of gospel opportunity are always before us. Letās admit that we likely err on the side of being more law-based than gospel-based in our parenting. Itās natural, but itās truly at the root of what sets us apart as Christian parents. Remind yourself of your overwhelming thankfulness that despite your sin and imperfections, the Holy Spirit has led you to know Christās love. Now itās our opportunity to demonstrate that thankfulness in the lives of our children.
Dan Nommensen and his wife, Kelly, have a daughter and a son.
Itās been said that we get our view of God from our relationship with our earthly father. If thatās true, then we parents, and especially fathers, want to do the best we can to give an accurate view of God the Father. We want to parent our children the way that God parents us.
Here are some observations Iāve made about the way God parents me and some things Iāve done as I try to father my sons the way God has fathered me.
⢠God takes his law seriously. He makes that clear by allowing and even sending consequences into my life. Likewise, as a loving father, I will allow and give my boys consequences for their sinful actions when they rebel against God and me. These consequences are given in love, not anger, and are meant to teach my boys that Godās way is always best.
⢠But, even as I suffer the consequences of my sin, God regularly assures me of his unconditional love based on Jesusā work in my place. I am forgiven. I am always his dearly loved child. Likewise, I want my boys to know that my love for them is unconditional. I always try to be quick to assure them of my forgiveness and of Godās. In our house we donāt answer, āIām sorry,ā with āItās okay.ā Itās not okay. Itās a sin. Instead we say, āI forgive you, and so does God.ā We live confession and absolution on a daily basis.
⢠God makes it clear that heās not too busy running the universe to make time for me and to listen to my prayers. Likewise, I want to show my boys that Iām not too busy for them. To get to know my boysā hopes and dreams, worries and fears better, Iāve been occasionally taking each one out for breakfastājust the two of us. They promise to answer my questions honestly. I promise to try not to embarrass them.
Role models have an important place in the lives of those who are seeking to grow. But itās not just children who need role models; parents need them too! And what better model can we find as we seek to grow as parents than our heavenly Father who parents us perfectly? So we study his Word to know him better, to be assured of his forgiveness for our failures to be like him, and to find the gospel motivation to mimic him more closely. Just as God loves me and parents me, so I want to love my children and parent them. We want to āfollow Godās example, therefore, as dearly loved childrenā (Ephesians 5:1).
Rob Guenther and his wife, Becky, have four sons ages 11 and under.
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Author: Nicole Balza
Volume 103, Number 8
Issue: August 2016
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