Friday, January 13, 2012

Shepherding a Child's Heart Ch. 12


The last few chapters in the book we looked at methods of communication and the rod. This chapter is titled Embracing Biblical Methods: Appeal to the Conscience.  If we simply tell our children that they did something wrong and punish them with a spanking we have missed out on a great opportunity to help our children learn how to reason. God has given us all, including children, the capability to reason or determine what is right and wrong.  In the last chapter we looked at scripture that supports the use of the rod, but we do not want to miss out of what the other parts of the verses in Proverbs 23 are saying: 

                “Don’t let your heart envy sinners…” vs. 17
                “…keep your heart on the right path…” vs. 19
                “Listen to your father, who gave you life…” vs. 22
                “Buy the truth and do not sell it; get wisdom, discipline, and                        understanding” vs. 23
                “My son, give me your heart…” vs. 26

Giving a spanking is a good way to get a child’s attention and may help them remember to avoid that same offence in the future but it is the molding of the conscience that address the issues of the heart  and fills the heart with God’s truth.  We should be careful to fill our children’s heart with Gods truth and not lies that stem from wounds of our own, or anger and frustration.  It is about dealing with the root of the problem and not just the surface issue.  We know that God is the ultimate judge of our hearts, but God has placed us in a position to judge our children correctly and on His behalf. Our children don’t know God yet.  What a responsibility. God help us! 

“You address the heart by exposing sin and appealing to the conscience as the God-given right and wrong. “ (Tripp 118)

In the book Tripp gives an example of a boy who took money from the offering plate and his father caught him. The boy’s father took him to Tripp’s office and made him give him the money back. He gave the $2 back.  Basically Tripp presents the gospel to the young boy and express his thanks to God that he was caught in sin and able to deal with the boys actions and not live in sin. The boy then began to cry and handed them a $20. Tripp was able to appeal to the boy’s heart through the gospel. So, it became a time of dealing with the issue of his heart instead of just going through the motions!

Being the children’s director at our church God has allowed me to talk to kids in an effort to change their behaviors/attitude of their heart in class. I recently had a parent say, “I don’t know what you said to him, but there is a night and day difference”.  I told her that it was all God because all I did was tell the boy how much God loved him and that God has a plan for his life and how his behavior did not line up with that AND man have I been praying for him!  God does amazing things when we let HIM, right? 

The gospel and scripture speak to our hearts. It is living and active. Use it! 

Redemption is an important part in correcting, just as it is in the gospel. If we focus on the cross in discipline, then when we correct we are revealing our need for Jesus, because we are sinners. We cannot have redemption from our sins without Him.  It is an internal transformation. If we simply work on the outward appearance and simply reward good behavior and punish bad behavior we are raising children no different that Pharisees. The life we are called to live we cannot live up to ourselves. We need Jesus. Focus your discipline on Christ. 

a rare moment captured. thanks katie snyder