The Lion Cage – Parenting

The Family Circus August 4, 2024 Ephesians 6:1-4 Notes


The truth is, parents today are worried. They’re worried about their child’s health: obesity, drug abuse, bullying, internet safety, teen pregnancy, gender dysphoria, depression, teen suicide… They’re worried about their education: public, private or home school? College? So, a lot of parenting today is worry-driven, or fear driven. Parents today feel overwhelmed and underprepared. Either because they came from a dysfunctional family themselves or because they have no foundational biblical understanding, they feel lost in their role. So, many are just winging it.

In the apostle Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, he told them how to parent their children in the Lord. We can follow God’s Word for parenting our children in the Lord.

Audio

Transcript

All right. Good morning, church. We're continuing today with our series on the family. We've entitled this the Family Circus. And we all hope for the perfect family, don't we?

We dream of having a family that's blessed, but we often end up with more of a crazy, chaotic kind of circus sometimes, don't we? And so that's what this series is about. It's about instead of aiming at perfection, let's aim at coming under the blessing of the Lord in our families. And so during this five week series a couple of weeks ago, we just covered God's purpose for the family. We began there.

We talked about the family last week. We talked about marriage. And of course, this morning we'll be talking about parenting. Sometimes you kind of feel like it's a lion cage. It seems like one of the most dangerous things you do, and you can't turn your back.

You gotta keep your eyes peeled all the time. Next week, we'll be talking about the tightrope singleness. And so don't check out on this series singles. We have a message just for you. And then finally, we'll be talking about grandparents, the safety net grandparents.

And we've been learning over these past few weeks that rather than aiming for perfection, we should aim for blessing. Aim for God's blessing over the family. And speaking of our children today, look at this family cartoon. This is from the family circus cartoon series. And maybe this is your life right now.

You're a mom or you're a dad, and this is your life. And all you really do is pick up. You just pick up. And while you're picking up, while you're cleaning up, they're right behind you making the next mess, right? This cartoon needs no caption that just describes the chaos, the circus of your life.

But, you know, having a sense of humor is important. This little cartoon series, we've been using it throughout this sermon series written by Bill Keene and his son, Jeff King. And I've always appreciated this little cartoon series. The truth is, parenting is hard. Parenting is like treading water and have somebody throw you a couple cats while you're trying to keep your head above water.

It's a challenging enterprise. And parents today are worried. They're worried about their children's health. They're worried about obesity and drug abuse and bullying and the Internet's teen pregnancy, gender dysphoria, depression, teen suicide. And the list goes on today.

And so we're worried about their health. We're worried about their education. Should we homeschool? Should we send them to private school? Should we send them to public school?

What about college? How are we going to afford that? Should they go to college? These are kind of questions. The truth is, many parents today for parenting, for them is more worry driven.

It's more, I guess you could say, fear driven, that there's a lot of fear among the parents today, but the Lord wants to give us grace. Do you feel overwhelmed and underprepared? Where did you get your plan for parenting? Most of us may have come from a dysfunctional family, and so we're like, okay, I didn't learn much. I learned what not to do in my family.

Growing up. Where did you get your approach to parenting? You know, whenever you have that first child, that little baby, the hospital puts the baby in the mama's lap and rolls her out in a wheelchair to the car, and the only thing they really check for is they put him in the car. I don't know if this is how it was for you when you had your first child. As they check to make sure you have a car seat, that you got a car seat before they'll give you the infant.

Like, that's the one thing they do for you. They check to make sure it's legal that you paid a million dollars for it. And it has that NASA sticker on the side of it, right? Like, these car seats today are amazing, but they don't give you an owner's manual. They just send the baby home with you.

If you buy a car, there's an owner's manual in the glove box. If you buy a lawnmower, they give you an owner's manual, they give you the baby. No owner's manual. But the truth is, God's given us an owner's manual. He's given us his word, he's given us guidance in order to raise up our children in him.

And so that's what we're talking about this morning as we continue in the book of Ephesians, which is really. It's really a book written to the church at Ephesus, and it's really a book written to the family of God and how to be the family of God. And he gets really specific here as he gets closer to the end of the book. Now, he's talking about children and parents. And so, as we're looking at this today, the apostle Paul wrote this letter to the Ephesians, and he told them that they were to raise up their children in the Lord, that they were to raise their children up in the Lord.

And I believe today that we can raise up our children in the Lord. As we look at the text, we'll see that there are four imperatives. Four steps for raising up our children in the Lord. How to parent our children in the Lord. Let's read the text, and then we'll dig in.

Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. Honor your father and mother. This is the first commandment with a promise that it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land. Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. This is God's word.

Amen. So we're looking for these four steps on how to parent children in the Lord. Here's the first step. Give them the right standard to obey. Give them the right standard to obey.

Look at verse one. If you're taking notes here. Circle two words. Circle the word obey and circle the word right. Do you see those two words?

First of all, notice who's he talking to? He says, children. I'm speaking to the kids right now. I'm speaking to children. Now, the truth is, all of us started out as children, didn't we?

We all started out that way. But here, the word in the Greek is speaking to dependent age children. For many of us today, we'd say, that's a child under the age of 18. Another way of saying it is it's a child that still lives under your roof. It's a child that still lives under your care.

It's still dependent on you. And so to that dependent child, the word of God says, obey your parents in the Lord. So let's unpack that for a second. It's in the greek imperative, the word obey. It's an interesting word.

I'll give you this greek word. I don't like to give you too many greek words because, you know, I don't want to overwhelm you. You probably won't use this word at the workplace this week, but it's the greek word hupo akuate. Hupo akuate. The word hoopo, we talked about this last year.

That prefix means under. In English, we say hypo, like hypodermic needle, which means under the skin. And so the word hoopo means under, and akuo means to hear. So, literally, the word obey means to come under hearing. To come under hearing.

Now, that implies something. This is to children. But they're supposed to be hearing something. What are they supposed to be hearing? Your instruction.

You're supposed to be teaching them to obey. They're supposed to come under hearing, what are you going to teach them? There's so many things you could teach them. But the most important thing of all that you could teach them is to teach them obedience, first of all to you. Because notice it says this, children, obey your parents in the Lord.

What is that implying or saying? It's saying that you're the one who represents the Lord for your children. So as you receive your children from the Lord, and as you raise them up, you're the man, you're the woman in the middle, you're the daddy and the mommy in the middle. You're raising them up to follow the Lord so that when they're grown, they take a hold of the Lord's hand and they follow him for themselves. But you're the one teaching them obedience.

That's your job. That's job number one. You might think your job is to feed, clothe, house, educate. Yeah, those all fall into that. But priority number one is to raise them up to obey the Lord.

And you're his representative. And then he says, for this is right, doesn't he? Says, for this is right. Doctor Thayers says, approved by God. That's what it means.

It's the idea, you know, it's just the right thing to do. Interestingly enough, when you read the scriptures and it starts talking about the end times, it will list all these terrible sins. And you'd be like, there's all these terrible sins. And then in the midst of the list, it says, disobedient to parents. Like, that's a sign of the last times.

Disobedient kids. My goodness. Every time I go to Walmart, I start going, I think the Lord is coming. Like, there's like a whole bunch of disobedient kids I see at Walmart sometimes just like yelling at their parents, disobeying. It's a sign of the end times.

The scripture says, so. We're the ones that we're to raise up our children. We're to teach them to obey. Well, what do we teach them? Remember that word, right?

We need to give them the right standard, the right teaching. Here's what deuteronomy says. It says, and these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them to diligently. You shall teach them diligently to your children and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.

This is Moses. He's restating what he's taught them in the book of Deuteronomy. And chapter six opens up with what is Israelites knew as the Shema. The Shema is that prayer that they would pray three times a day. They would teach their children the shema.

The word shema in Hebrew means hear or listen like that. And so they would pray, Shema Yisrael, Adonai eloheinu, Adonai, achad the hero. Israel, the Lord thy God is one God. They were taught that. And then he would say, then after you teach the children that, then do this in a natural way.

Do it in a, in a lifestyle kind of way. When you rise up in the morning and you're putting breakfast on the table, teach them the word of God and make it part of the meal. When you walk along the road or driving down the road and you're looking out the window, say, look what God made. Look at that sun coming up. Look at.

Look at the beauty of that sky or of that, of that ocean wherever you're at. Just make it part of your life so that being a Christ follower is not just something you do on Sunday morning, but it's something that permeates your life, and so that they see the consistency between what you say and what you do. And so Moses was teaching the Israelites, and he's actually talking to fathers in that passage, because fathers often think, don't we sometimes think that raising children is mom's job? But that's not the way the Bible teaches it. You're to take leadership, and you and mom are to be a team raising children.

And I read this article this week. I was thinking about this idea of obedience, and this is an article from Carrie Newhoff. It's an unusual title. That's what caught my eye, how to raise obedient kids for all the wrong reasons. That's the title of the article.

And here's his idea. He says, if you discipline with the motivation of wanting obedience for your child rather than from your child, you parent with the end in mind. He says, there's a difference between I want obedience from my child and I want obedience for my child. He says, he contrasts the two of them. He says, if you'll make that shift, he says, obedience will no longer be something you want from them to get rid of the problem they're causing you.

In other words, they're getting on my last nerve. That's why I'm going to teach them obedience. They're getting on my last nerve. I'm responding to that, he says, but if you want it for them, you'll do it because of the problem they're causing for themselves, because disobedience is going to hurt them in the long run. He says obedience will no longer be something you want from them to make a problem go away.

It will be something you want for them to help them solve a problem for themselves. Obedience will no longer be something you want from them to make you look good in front of others. Oh, you've got the sweetest kids. They're so well behaved. I know.

Like that now, that's not your goal. That's you wanting something from your kids. No, you want obedience for them so that they learn to navigate relationships skillfully and humbly, so when they grow up, they know how to get along with other people at school, at work. They know how to be married because they know how to ask for forgiveness and how to reconcile and how to be at one. You've taught them in the house the gospel.

You've taught them relationships. You've taught them obedience. And so you've done it for them, not just to get something from them to make your life easier. Your job, your priority, is to teach them to obey. And our ultimate motivation should be this.

Colossians, chapter three. Children, obey your parents and everything, for this pleases the Lord. We do it to please the Lord. We do it to please the Lord. Now, here's some worldly methods we fall into.

See if any of these have occurred to you. Some of these worldly methods that I really think we need to put to rest and find better methods. Here are some of them. Here's the bribing method. You ever use the bribing method?

Come to mommy and I'll give you a sucker like that. That's the bribing method of parenting. Here's another one. The threatening method of parenting. If you don't pick up your toys, I'm going to throw them all in the garbage.

Have you ever said that? I guarantee you won't say that about legos. Those things cost a million dollars. But sometimes when you're walking barefoot somewhere and you step on one of those boogers, you're tempted, right? Those Legos, man.

Emotional appeal. This is the parenting method called the emotional appeal. After all I do for you and this is how you repay me? You guilt them. Environmental approach to parenting.

If you can reach it, it's yours. You ever been to one of those kind of houses where everything in the house has been taken off of anything that the toddler can reach? He put it all up high. That's the environmental method of parenting. Here's the reasoning.

I'm going to reason with this toddler. I'm going to use the intellectual method. But sweetie, your hot dog will get cold if you don't eat it. Now, trying to reason with the child. The yelling method.

How many times do I have to scream at you? The countdown method. Don't you make me count to three. The teapot method. I've had all I can take and now you're going to get it.

These are all worldly methods. They're not the way the Bible teaches. In fact, that count to three idea reminds me of a book written by Ginger plowman that I would recommend. And I popping up a photo of it here. Now, when I'm doing a series like this, I like to give you extra reading, especially if you're in the midst of it.

This particular book, it's an easy little read. It's especially aimed at moms, but it'd be good for moms and dads. Here's the thing. Children are not born obedient parents. Did you know that?

They're not born obedient. In fact, they're born with a sin nature inside their little hearts. They want their own way, not your way. That's how they're born. And so your first priority is to teach them to obey.

And recognizing that your authority comes from God, that you're his steward, that those kids ultimately were a gift from him and they're to be given back to him as you release them to him. Here's number two. That's the first step. Teach them to give them a standard to obey. Second, show them the way of honor.

Show them the way of honor. We're at verse two and he's quoting the Ten Commandments now, isn't he? Honor your father and mother. That's from deuteronomy, chapter five, verse 16. Paul's a good preacher.

He's quoting the Bible to us here. He's teaching us from the Ten Commandments. And he says the first command, children obey. Here's the other one. Honor.

Honor your father and mother. Now, I told you that children, the obey part is to dependent children. So there's kind of a time stamp on obedience. I think you owe your parents obedience. As long as you're under that, you're dependent on them.

But I think after you've grown up and established your own family, you don't really owe your parents obedience anymore. But there is a word here now given from the Ten Commandments, that is forever. It's a lifetime command, and that's honor. You owe your parents honor without a time stamp. You continue to owe them honor.

It's just the way it is from the Ten Commandments here. And that word honor means to revere, to hold them in high esteem. It also implies the idea of monetary help. So to honor, like, if you give someone an honorarium, you're giving them money like that. And so you're to look to your parents when you're young, you're to honor them, to revere them, to highly respect and esteem them.

But as you get older and they get older, and they're no longer able to care for themselves, the Bible teaches that the children, the grown children now, are to honor their parents by caring for them and taking care of them. And so the scripture gives us this instruction. Notice that Paul says, this is the first commandment with a promise. It's really a two part promise. Do you see it in verse three?

The first part is that it may go well with you. In Other words, honoring your parents leads to a blessing in your life, that you live under God's blessing as you honor your parents. And the second part of the promise is that you'll live long in the land. So it's a blessed life, and it's a long life. This is what the word of God promises.

As we think about the way of honor, you know, this rule, this law that God's word teaches us, and that is, whatsoever you sow, that you shall also reap this law of reciprocity, that what you sow, you reap. So if you're teaching your children to honor you, what do you need to sow? You need to honor them. If you treat them dishonorably, disrespectfully, you're sowing that. So be CAreful the way you communicate with your childreN.

In fact, the book of Romans says, love one another with brotherly affection, outdo one another and showing honor. Establish a culture of love and honor in your home so that certain ways of talking to each other in the family are just out of bounds, not allowed. And so you're establishing a culture, and you can make it fun. You can make it. You can make it fun.

That's one of the things that we tried to do. I tried to make it fun. We've got two sons and a daughter. So boy, boy, girl. That's our family system.

And when the boys were young, I wanted them to be. I wanted them to grow up to be masculine. I did. I wanted them to grow up to be men and not to be confused about it, but to be, to be manly men. So I wanted that for them.

But more than anything, I want them to be christian men. I want them to be Jesus followers, and I wanted them to honor me and their mom. And so I would just think of these little things. I don't think I was that small. I think the Holy Spirit was just kind of helping me.

Just silly little things we would do. So one of the things we like to do is we like to watch these, like, Bruce Lee kind of movies, these kind of karate fighting kind of movies, you know, and then we would get in the floor and make my wife nervous, you know, like, yah. You know, we'd be like, you know, fighting each other, play fighting, you know, me. And we get down and wrestle, and my wife would have to leave the room. She goes, y'all are being too rough.

But one of the things that I learned is that's part of how you really raise little boys. They're kind of different. I just believe the boys are and girls are different. That seems to be the way the Bible teaches it. And so we would like roughhouse, and we would see, like, one of these kind of karate movies or something where the sensei, you know, would bow like this, you know, at the end of, you know, they would bow.

And so I would say. I would say, thank you, my son, to little Jonathan. And by the way, my middle son, Jonathan, was born with an old man's voice. Like, from the time his first words, he was like, hello. Like that.

He's a little scratchy voice, and I would say, thank you, my son. And he would go, thank you, my father. And like that. Like that. Yeah, and we would.

We would have these fights, and then we'd. At the end, we'd have to bow like that. And it's silly. That's just silly, isn't it? Except if you were to drop by my house on Wednesdays when I study with my pastor, Jonathan's son, who's the pastor of our Rocky Mountain campus, and he comes and shows up, and I'll hear the back door slam where he showed up.

And I'm already sitting at the breakfast nook with my bible open, and I'm studying, and I hear him come in, and I go, good morning, my son. And I'll hear him say, good morning, my father. Like that. You know where he got that? He got that from when he's this big, you know, just this way of.

This way of having a culture. It's kind of fun, but it's a culture of honor to just teach, teach them to honor you. With my daughter, it was more about mixing love and honor together, is what I remember with her. And I remember, boy, she was a daddy's girl. She used to like to climb in my lap and watch tv or whatever we were doing.

She was a daddy's girl. And then she turned twelve. Somewhere around twelve or 13. It's like somebody came in, like invasion of the body snatchers. Somebody came in and took her and put a little girl that looked like her in her bed.

And because we used to do this thing every night before we go to bed, she'd be getting ready to go up to her bedroom upstairs, and she'd say, I love you, Daddy. And I'd say, I love you more. And she'd say, I love you the most. And I'd say, I love you the most. And she was running upstairs to get the last word in.

She'd go, I love you infinity. And then we'd go upstairs and do Bible stories and tuck her in and these kind of things. And then somewhere around twelve or 13, I look up one evening and I'm like, where's Aaron? And Robin's? Like, I think she went to bed.

I said, she did nothing. What she. I think she did. I said, well, she didn't tell me she loved me. And she.

And I didn't tuck her in. And so I go upstairs and she's already got the lights cut off, and I flipped the lights on. She goes, what are you doing? I said, you forgot something. You forgot to tell me you love me.

See, I was determined to make her say she loved me. You think that's weird, Gary? That's just weird. Why would you do that? Because she was going through a season.

I knew she loved me, but she was going through some kind of crazy hormones and something, whatever little girls go through. And she was feeling different. And what I came to realize as she got older was I was teaching her how to love somebody, even when they're going through a hard time, when they're not particularly lovable. And it made her feel safe. It made her feel more secure because I pursued her.

It hurt my feelings. Looking back on it at the time, it was hard for me to go up the stairs and to pursue her and to do the thing I used to do to her, which was I would make her lay still. And she goes, oh, daddy. Like, when she was little, it was the best thing in the world. But I would pull all the covers, the sheep, then the blanket, and then the outer cover over her head.

And then I would pull them back one at a time. And then I would chop them in all around her so she was like a mummy. Like that, so she couldn't move. And then I would. Then I would kiss her on each cheek.

And so try to do that to a 13 year old who doesn't want that anymore. But then I found out by the time she was 15 or 16, she still wanted it. She still wanted a daddy like that and a daddy that would pursue her. See, that was hard because she was hurting my feelings. But I'm supposed to be the grown up, right?

I'm the grown up. She's the child. Even though she's starting to look more like a woman, she's still a child. That's what I'm talking about. Establish a culture of love and honor in your house.

Did I get it right all the time? No. Sometimes I lost my temper. Sometimes I told her how bad she was hurting my feelings. Sometimes I.

But sometimes with the Lord's help and his grace, I got it sort of right. How does honor look? It obeys immediately, sweetly and completely. It respects parents in thought and deed. It addresses parents with the right name.

Dad, daddy. Mom. Mommy. Not old man, not old woman, not whatever. But it uses honorable names that you've taught them.

It answers politely. Yes, sir, no, sir, yes, ma'am. No, ma'am. That's not just southern manners. That's honor.

That's using honorifics to show someone. In fact, they teach. Parents, teach children to honor their elders so that they speak to them in such a way. Children are not born obedient and children are not born honoring. They're born wanting their own way and only honoring themselves.

It must be taught more than that. I think it must be caught. You have to have a culture of love and honor in your house so that husbands honor your wives, wives honor your husband. And so they see mommy and daddy being respectful and honoring. And then honor them in the way that you treat them.

Okay? And so that's where we're at. We've talked about the children part. We've gotten through verses one, two and three, but now we're at verse four. Fathers, do not provoke your children.

Let's look at that. Here's the third step. Encourage them with sensitivity and consistency. Encourage them with sensitivity and consistency. Fathers, do not.

This is the one and only negative command in this passage. Children obey, children honor. And then the final one we'll see fathers parents bring up. But here, nested in the middle is a warning because fathers especially are bad sometimes at using anger as their motivator. And then they end up discouraging their children or exasperating or even causing their children to get angry.

Moms can do this, too, but fathers are especially vulnerable for this, of allowing their anger to be expressed rather than their love. And so let's look at the word provoke. He says, do not provoke. So what's the opposite? How can we place that in the positive sense?

What would be the opposite of provoking? Well, the word provoke means to rouse to wrath, to exasperate to anger, to discourage or frustrate. What's the opposite of that? Encouragement. What's the opposite of provoke?

Encourage fathers, encourage your children. Mothers, encourage your children. Do not provoke them. Do not provoke them to anger so that you cause them to act out the way you're. So you're sowing anger and reaping anger.

Again, you're the grown up. They're the child. Act like a grown up. Act like one who's maturing in Jesus, be the grown up. Don't provoke them and cause you sow anger, you reap anger.

You provoke them, and they provoke you back. Now, what provokes a child? Fault finding. Being overly picky. Overuse of the word no.

So that's right after mommy and daddy. The third word they learn is no. It's probably appropriate, but try to save your nose for important stuff. Try to say yes once in a while. Get a little variety in what you do as a parent.

Fault finding overly picky. This will cause a child to be provoked is not spending enough face to face time with them. And so that the only experience they have with you is. Is constantly correcting them. They never have a loving, enjoyable time with you.

That means quality time is a myth. We need quality quantity time. You have to spend time with your kids. Here's the saying we have in our church. Build a bridge of trust that will bear the weight of truth.

If they trust you, if they know that you love them, they can hear your correction. They can hear your truth. Build a bridge of trust that will bear the weight of truth. Maybe you've heard it said in this cliche, people don't care what you know until they know that you care. And so make sure they know you love them, and then they can hear you.

Be careful with name calling, labeling some of you to this day, you grew up in a family system where your parents gave you a name that you still hear in your head. You're so lazy, you can't do anything.

Or they, even worse, they say you're stupid. You're just dumb.

These are the kind some of you right now, you're grown up, and I'm triggering you because that's how your mom and dad talk to you. And so what's one of the first jobs that God gave Adam? Name the animals and the power to name is still upon the father and the mother. The power to name or to miss. Name with a name that's harmful.

And so that'll provoke your children. That'll provoke them as name calling. Instead, encourage them with blessed names. I believe in you. You're so smart, you're so beautiful.

You do that so well. So name them with greatness. Name them with blessing. We read in the Old Testament the way a child would come to their parents and ask for their blessing. That seems to be a lost art.

We are given the power to bless and the power to curse with the tongue. Comparing them will provoke them. Say, why can't you be like your brother? Why can't you be like your sister? She's so smart.

She's so well behaved. That's provoking. Don't do it. He says. Colossians, chapter three, fathers, do not provoke your children unless they become discouraged.

Don't discourage your children. Don't provoke your children. Instead, encourage them with sensitivity. Sensitivity means what? Be sensitive to who they are.

Cause every child's different. If you've had more than one, you realize they don't come out copies. They come out with different personalities, different ways of responding.

Be sensitive and be consistent.

Doctor Ted Tripp, here's you another book. And this is the book we actually give out when we do our parent child dedication. We always give this out as a gift to young parents. It's from doctor Ted Tripp. Shepherding a child's heart.

Here's what he says in his book. He says your child's needs are far more profound than his behavior. His behavior does not just spring forth uncaused. His behavior reflects his heart. If you really are to help him, you must be concerned with the attitudes of the heart that drive his behavior.

This understanding makes the heart the issue, not the behavior. Your concern is to unmask your child's sin, helping him to understand how it reflects a heart that has strayed, that leads to the cross of Christ. And so when we're teaching them to honor, when we're teaching them to obey, when we're encouraging them not to provoke them, we don't discipline them in front of their siblings or in front of their cousins or in front of their friends. We take them to a private place. We sit down with them eye to eye and knee to knee, and we make sure that we've already dealt with any anger we might have, because sometimes we're angry and we don't want to discipline or correct out of anger.

Right? You pray to the Lord, help me. And then you talk to them and go, why did you do that? No. Look at me.

Look at me. Look me in the eyes. I love you. Okay? But why did you do that?

Why did you hit your brother? Or why did you yell and call someone this word or whatever? And then you begin to talk to them about how every behavior begins as an attitude of the heart, and you begin to help them, because what you want them to learn is your discipline will grow into their self discipline, your external discipline. You can't touch their heart, but you can try to drive the message towards their heart and ask the Holy Spirit to move it the 18 inches from their head to their heart. Say, Holy Spirit, I can't touch their heart.

That's one of the most humbling things about a parent. It's one of the most scary things about a parent. It's like, lord, I can't change their heart. Only you can change their heart. But you can pray for them and you can direct them and you can model it, and you can lean in at those times.

And often the time when you're correcting a child can be one of the most spiritually important, profound moments if you'll do it in the power of the Holy Spirit. So be sensitive to your child's personality and be consistent in the way you parenthood. Here's number four. Here's the final step. Bring them up with discipline and instruction.

Bring them up with discipline and instruction. We're in verse four, last part. But bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. Bring them up. The idea here is to nourish to maturity.

This certainly involves housing and clothing and food. These are basic needs of the physical body. But I think Paul is speaking more spiritually here. Bring them up. Bring them up to maturity.

The idea might be the idea of to train them up so that your tools are, as he says here, discipline and instruction. When I read this, I can't help but think about the picture of a tomato vine. My wife and I love tomatoes. We especially love homegrown tomatoes, and we didn't get to do it this year. We had such a busy schedule.

But we usually plant a three or four different types of tomatoes and so that we can get them right before, you know, we're having supper and we can put it on our salad or put it on our hamburgers or whatever. So just nothing like a homegrown tomato, just in its freshness and so forth. But one of the things you have to know about tomatoes is you have to stake them or you have to put them in something that holds them up off the ground for them to grow up to maturity and produce fruit. And so my grandfather always used a wooden stake. He would drive it in the ground even when the tomato vine was really small.

It'll stand up on its own, right, at first, but he would start tying it off when it was small. And so he would put a stake that was kind of like straight pointing at the sun, right? And as it would grow, he'd tie it off. He'd grow a little bit more, he'd tie it off and just kept on until all of a sudden, here's the tomato vine. It's way up here, right?

And he's getting tomatoes all along the way. Cause he knew how to bring up a tomato plant to maturity. He knew how to train it up in the way it should go. Okay? And you think about it, what's your standard?

It should be God's word. The idea of discipline and instruction. I'm going to discipline them, which means I'm going to tie them off right here to the standard of God's word. I'm going to correct them when they get out of line, and then I'm also going to tell them why I'm doing it. So discipline, instruction go hand in hand.

The word discipline has the idea that includes physical correction, that sometimes you've got to tie them off. In other words, you've got to use physical correction in order to help them go the way they should go. And then the word instruction is clear. That speaks to the mind that you're telling them why you're doing it. You're not just doing it for whatever reason, you're doing it for a reason.

Here's what it says in the book of proverbs. Train up a child in the way he should go, and even when he's old, he'll not depart from it. Train him up and then don't worry about how to discipline. The Bible teaches you about how to discipline. I remember reading some books when I was younger as a parent written by Doctor Dobson.

Anybody remember Doctor Dobson back in the day? All the books he used to read, he used to write about parenting. But one of the things he said, the reason God gave children a little extra padding on the rear end is so you'd have some place to spank them without hurting them. And so when I talk about spanking, I'm not talking about abuse. I'm not talking about talking about inappropriate leaving a mark, but I'm talking about physical correction, which I think is effective from about two, three years old up through eight or nine, somewhere in there.

Physical discipline's pretty effective during that time period. Here's what proverbs 23 says. Don't fail to correct your children. They won't die if you spank them. Physical discipline may well save them from death.

I know somebody's going to stop me in the lobby on the way out and want to say, I don't believe in spanking, and that's fine. I just read proverbs 23. You're not arguing with me. You're just arguing with what God's word says. And so there is an appropriate time.

Now, may I say to you, by the time they're, like, eight or nine, it starts losing its ability to help them. You have to use other tools. Spanking shouldn't be the only tool in your toolbox. And plus, some kids are just quicker to obey. Some kids, you look at them and snap your finger, they start crying.

They have a different shape. And then some kids, you got to chase them around the house a couple times to run them down like that. Depends on what, kidde. My middle child was the one you had to chase around the house. Okay.

I think it was the third time this particular year. He was like, I don't know. He's probably like, nine, something like that. Third note home from the school. This time he was banned from the bus for two weeks.

I'm like, that's not punishing you, that's punishing me. I got to drive you to school now. And so he's up in my office. It's back in the day when we first planted the church, and my office was an upstairs bedroom. And so he's sitting there, and we got the door shut.

We're sitting face to face, knee to knee, and I'm looking at this letter, and I'm shaking my hand. I'm going, what am I going to do with you? This is the third time this year where you've tried everything, and you'd have to know my son. He put his hand on my shoulder and goes, I know, dad. I know.

It's like he's commiserating with me. I know it's hard being you, dad, with a son like me. I know. And so it's hard. It's hard to correct a kid like that when you're about ready to bust out laughing, you know, try to keep it.

And so I thought, okay, I'm gonna give you a choice today. I don't know what to do with you. Either ten, you know, ten licks with the paddle, or I ground you from Nintendo. He goes, dad, I really think you ought to give me the ten licks. I really do.

I think that'd be the best thing to do. And I went, now, I know the season for physical discipline is over, right? Whenever he would rather have that, you know, no, I'm grounding you from Nintendo. And he goes, I started crying. You know, he wouldn't have cried if I'd have given him a paddling.

Well, here's what I'm saying. Every child's different. Ask the holy spirit to give you direction, but use all the tools in your toolbox and use them creatively to try to teach them obedience for them. And use discipline and instruction to bring them up. Chip Ingram, in his book, effective Parenting in a defective world, says the myth for parents today is that your goal should be to make your kids happy, that your goal in life should be, I want my kids to be happy.

I just want them to be happy. But he says that's a myth. He says the real goal for christian parents is that your kids would grow up to be holy. Because if they grow up to be holy, they'll be happy. Cause they'll be living under God's blessing.

And so our goal is not to raise up kids that just want happy meals, but to raise them up to follow the Lord. Now, I've got a couple practical suggestions to you for parents sometimes. In the past, I've preached whole series on parenting. Just one whole sermon just on how to discipline. Whole sermon on just how to teach them the gospel so they can come to Jesus.

And what I've been learning is that hits just parents, but it might miss singles and grandparents and other people that. And so rather this time, what I've decided to do is just going to do one parenting sermon in the midst of this family series and then offer a seminar for those of you that want more. And that's called our parenting Munch and learn. It's on August 24. You can sign up on the church center app.

Okay. And so we want you to take that. So that's our new pattern of how to help parents. If you want the intensive, you need to sign up for that seminar. Now, if you want more help on how to share the gospel with your children, we have that for you, too.

You can take a screenshot of the QR code we have on the screen. I think we put it in the bulletin two, and that takes you to the church website. And we have an actual document in there that teaches how to have a good news conversation with your child. Because a lot of parents, they know the gospel. They're believers, but they just aren't sure how to have that conversation.

And it's how to have that conversation with your child, because may I say to you, may I remind to you that you're raising them up, you're bringing them up in the Lord, and so your job is to receive them as a gift from the Lord. They're not something ruining your life. They're a gift. They're a gift. They're not something that's just taking you away from you, being you.

No, they're going to help you grow to be closer to the Lord, if you'll just follow the Lord. So receive them from the Lord, take hold of them, and begin to raise them up. So receive. Raise up. And there's a day that's going to come where it's time to release.

Those are really the three r's of parenting, right? Receive, raise up, release. And when you release, here's what you hope, that now they're hand in hand with the father. They're hand in hand with the Lord. Because your job the whole time was a holy stewardship.

It was a temporary calling in a way, where your job was to give them the opportunity to have the relationship with Jesus that you have. That's job number one. And so I pray that that would be the way you view it today. Now, may I say to you, if you're sitting here today and you've already raised your kids and you're listening to this sermon and you're going, I blew it, I blew it. That's not the purpose of the sermon.

Oh, yeah, it's in the word of God. And it's disturbing you right now, but the purpose of the sermon is to bring you to repentance. I want to change the way I'm doing something where you're like, it's too late for me. I already raised my kids and I blew it. Don't land there.

Here's what I would say to you from the Lord. Say, lord, I wished I'd have known this back then, but would you show mercy on my kids right now? Would you show mercy on them? And I just. I confess it to you right now, Lord, and I pray that you would do what is necessary to bring them to you and give me the opportunity.

Now I'm a grandma. Help me with the next generation. Now I'm a grandfather like that. Don't leave here beating yourself up like, I wish somebody would have told me, no, that's not the purpose of hearing the word of God like that. It's so that you can come back to the gospel, which is full of grace and forgiveness for you.

Okay, maybe you're sitting here this morning and, and your wife's expecting a baby right now, right? Or like instant family. I think we got twins coming over here to my right. Is that right? Yes, sir.

He says, yeah. And so I hope you took notes. Right, so here you. Yes, sir, again. And so maybe you're just getting ready to get started.

You're not like the person who's going, it's too late. But the gospel speaks to you. The gospel speaks to you too, because once you have a baby and you have these directions, you also have real life. And you go, yeah, but nobody told me about it. Don't say anything about here.

About a 03:00 a.m. feeding. Where's the part here, Lord? About the 03:00 a.m. feeding.

And so there's suffering, there's difficulty, there's challenges. And so we need grace, we need forgiveness. We say, lord, I blew it today. And sometimes you blow it, and you have to ask the Lord to forgive you as a daddy. And then if you're wise, you'll go to your child and say, daddy lost his temper, and I shouldn't have talked to you that way.

Now you were acting up, but you didn't deserve that. Would you forgive daddy? You do that with a child. Sometimes they'll start crying and go, it's okay, daddy. It's okay.

But you know what you're teaching them? You're teaching them the gospel of forgiveness and reconciliation and do over. Yeah. Do you know the gospel? Have you committed to the gospel in your heart?

Have you received Jesus? Because you can't do anything I've taught this morning without following Jesus and asking for his power. Let's pray. Lord, I pray for that person that's here today that's never given their life to you. I pray especially for that person that came in today hurting.

And I pray that right where you're at, you'd make a commitment to following, to say, lord, I'm a sinner. I've really messed up in my life in so many places, but I believe in you, Jesus. I believe you died on the cross for my sin, that you were raised from the grave and that you live today. I believe that. Would you come into my life?

I invite you now to be my lord and savior.

I just give my life to you. I pray that you'd adopt me into your family. I want to be a child of God. If you're praying that prayer of faith, believing he'll save you and he'll adopt you into his family, others are here and you're a Christ follower, but you're feeling a little beat up by the message, and that's not the way God wants to work here. He comes to you with correction, but then he immediately swoops in with grace and forgiveness.

And so we get to start over and say, okay, Lord, I did mess up here, but help me from this day forward by your power right now, Lord, I just pray for parents, christian parents who are doing the best they can, Lord, would you strengthen them, help them to protect their children in this very evil age that we live in, Lord, that they would raise them up to follow the Lord Jesus. We pray it now. In Jesus name. Amen.

Audio

Transcript

Good morning, church. Good to see all of you this morning. I'm so thankful you're here. We're in part three of this series. We've called the Family Circus.

Family circus. And if you've missed the last couple of weeks, they're online. You can check those out. We've already discussed a couple of things that might be important to you if you missed them, just a general how to serve God and be blessed as the family. And then last week, we talked about marriage, specifically.

This week we're in what we've titled the lion cage together. That is, we're gonna talk about parenting today. But if you're single or a grandparent or this isn't quite where you are right now, I pray that the Lord would still speak to you. Through it, I found that even I've got some grandparents in the room. Sometimes you find yourself still having to be in the parenting role from time to time, maybe more often even than you expected.

So it's good to listen in. This is, I pray, gonna be something for all of us. No matter where you're at, God's word never returns. Void. But here's what's happening over the next few weeks.

If you're single, next week's for you. I've never preached a sermon on singleness, so I hope this is a blessing to you. And then a sermon for grandparents. So exciting to come. But this week we're going to talk about this idea of the lion cage.

Getting in the cage with these kids and dealing with that. And so here's a photo for you from the cartoon, the family circus. Mom's in the room. I know. This fits so well.

This one didn't need a caption. It made sense all on its own. Dads, too. This might be your life. The moment you go in one room trying to repair it, clean it up, they're right behind you undoing it.

That's just the nature of children. If you have a couple, they team up and do this very well. And so, trying to keep a tidy house, some of you have been like, I don't know if I want to host small group. I've got a lot of kids. Look, we understand.

Like, it's filthy. We're all dealing with it. We're all wrestling with this, trying to understand how to keep a clean house. But, hey, my house will stay clean, at least this evening for my small group, and that'll be about it. And that's only because the wrath of God has been put out.

You know, this room must stay clean or there will be very, very, very deep payment. But anyway, the next few minutes together, we're going to be talking about this idea of parenting and how it's, it's kind of like a lion cage. We're just kind of playing with that. It's in the sense that you really can't turn your back on this, even for a minute. That's in the sense that we're speaking here, that this idea of parenting, I think the number one skill, certainly in marriage, too, but the number one skill in parenting is perseverance.

It's enduring. It's hanging in there and not giving up and not turning your back on whatever the situation is. Otherwise, you're going to get your head bit off. All right? So stay in there, keep focused, and that's where we're going to be for the next few minutes together.

The truth is, look, we're all pretty concerned about the next generation. We're all pretty concerned about our children. There's a lot to be worried about. I think perhaps a lot of parents over the years have been concerned. There have been fears I'm sure that my parents had for my generation growing up.

I have no doubt that was true. But maybe some of these things are different now. I would argue there's some new challenges. Maybe some of the old ones aren't what they were. But we're worried about some stuff, some old stuff, like drugs and bullies and teen pregnancy or depression or maybe stuff like where do I send my kid to school?

Or maybe you feel overwhelmed. Maybe you feel underprepared. Maybe some of you are fully aware that you've brought some baggage into your parenting that you never expected. That so many of us bring the dysfunctional family we grew up in. We bring that right with us.

And so then we start looking around and going, man, I didn't want to be my dad in this way. I didn't want to be like my mom in this. And it's what we've done so far. Maybe we feel like there's not a good foundation and some of us are simply just winging it. If we're honest, it's like we, we're just making it happen.

We'll see how it turns out. And that's a little scary. How about you? What's your approach? What did you learn from your mom or your dad or both?

Was their approach a biblically founded one or something very different than that? So many of us are really looking for a good foundation. I don't think any of us are really wanting to wing it necessarily. We might go to work on Monday tomorrow and wing it and be okay with that, but these people that we're raising, it'd be better if they turned out well and we didn't wing it, don't you think? Rather than just.

It's guesswork. Hey, a little bit of it is up to the Lord. A lot of it is, but it doesn't have to completely be guesswork. The thing is, goddess has great intention for not only you, friend, but for your children. He has purposes for the people he has put on this earth.

He has purposes for each and every one of them. And he desires very much to be a part of not only your life, but your children's. I have no doubt that God has something to say to you today about this. We're going to be in Ephesians again. So much of the scripture on the family is right there in Ephesians.

If you're ever wondering, where do I go with I'm troubled in this area of my family. Ephesians is probably where you need to go. We're going to be in Ephesians chapter six today, where Paul is here instructing the family. As he started with marriage. Now he moves to parenting.

He told the parents here in Ephesus that they could parent their children in the Lord, to raise them up in that way. And we can follow God's guidance here as well. And see, really four. They're very clear in the text. Four steps to parenting our children in the Lord.

Just a few verses with you. Ephesians, chapter six, verse one through four. It says, children, obey your parents and the Lord, for this is right. Honor your father and mother. This is the first commandment with a promise that it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land.

Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. God bless the reading of his word. Amen. All right, so the challenge in the first two verses, really, is the instruction is given to children. And that's where we're gonna begin.

How to parent our children in. The Lord first begins with giving them the right standard to obey. Giving them the right standard to obey. Now, I recognize something. There's a few of you in the room that are children.

There's just a few of you. And this instruction goes verbatim to you. The word here, children, is the word techni. It's a word that means a dependent child. So here's what I know.

Every single one of us in this room was somebody's kidde, right? But this does not apply to the adults in the room because you are no longer a dependent child. But if you're living with mom and dad right now, you can take this face value. Children, obey your parents. Why in the lord?

Because it is fitting. It is right. The word obey here means. It's from the greek hupo akuate. That means to come under.

Hupo means under hearing. Aku teic. To come under hearing that you would listen. That's the primary function of obedience. You can't obey if you haven't heard.

And not only do you hear it, but you come under that hearing, their instruction, their commands. This implies, though, for the parents in the room, and this is why I've put it this way, give them the right standard to obey. Because for most of us in the room, what are we supposed to do with this? The instruction is children obey. Okay, how do we create an atmosphere where they can obey?

Well, first we need to give something to obey. There should be standards. Again, this goes, this flies against winging it. If your approach is winging it, it's going to be difficult for them to know what to obey, especially if mom and dad have not agreed on how they're winging it. All right, I'm winging it my way.

Well, your kids are observing that every once in a while, dad flies off the handle. And with mom, she's extremely patient. And I don't know how to be right. I don't know what right looks like. That's not what you want as a parent.

You want a standard that is a shared standard from both parents. If you're a single parent today, create a standard for them to obey. And the Bible says for this in the lord is right. Now, that's a funny thing to say. I think most of us would agree it's right to obey your parents.

It's right to. Unless your parents just have been terrible to you and ask you to do things that are wrong or abusive. But that's very rare. Most of us would say, hey, I get that I should obey. Look, God has created this truth.

It goes not just to humanity, it goes to all living creatures. I think this is the idea of what Paul is speaking to here. It is simply right for offspring to obey and follow their parents until they're raised and can go on and be functioning, mature adults. You can look in the animal kingdom and observe this. I mean, just think about lions for a minute, for just a moment.

Like when they're little, they're completely goofballs. You ever watch the Discovery channel? These things, they'll try to go fight a little honey badger or something and get messed up. They'll get after porcupines. The adults know, hey, that thing isn't edible, all right, and what will they do?

You'll see this. You'll see cats in your home do this. They'll pick them up by the scruff of their neck and carry them around. And the kettle, the little baby cattle, looks so silly. This is all throughout the animal kingdom.

And then, for some reason, though, the most functional, the ones made in the image of God, the ones who really have the clarity and vision for their children, we sometimes will be the ones to shirk this responsibility of giving a standard. We'll let kids just touch the hot eye. We'll let them just ruin themselves. Because maybe we were winging it. Maybe we weren't sure what to do.

No, it says, children obey for its right in the Lord, the parental authority. Just so you know, the authority you've been given isn't so much that, hey, you and your wife had a child. That's not the authority. Authority comes from the Lord. He has given them as a blessing, and now they're your responsibility.

So what's the right standard to obey? What does that mean? Well, I could go to a whole lot of places in scripture, but I think the most clear instruction begins way back in Genesis and then repeated again in deuteronomy. Listen to this. Out of deuteronomy, chapter six.

These words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk, by the way, when you lie down, when you rise up. So the standard to obey is something that you're constantly talking about. It's not just a one and done. It's not just every once in a while.

There's so many conversations that you're having with your kids about this. It should be ongoing, kind of like, it's kind of like God has put this, this. This importance on the life of a believer, that everywhere we go, the gospel is present. This is just true. Friend, parent or not, today this is the instruction to you go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, a single person.

That's for you. In the Lord Jesus. You're called to the great commission, parents, you've just got a little opportunity to follow it every day. We're already called to the great commission in our workplaces, with our families, with our brothers and sisters and uncles and aunts and with our friends. Yeah, we're called to that.

What a wonderful opportunity, parents, to be great commission minded every single day. This is what the Bible teaches. As often as you're walking, he says, did you notice this when you're sitting in the house, when you're walking, when you're lying down, when you're rising up? You name the occasion, my friend. And there's an opportunity for the gospel.

There's an opportunity to disciple your children. We talk some at our church about discipleship. We have things that we've tried to do to, like one on one life on life, kind of discipleship. Small groups kind of feed into that somewhat where we're hoping to be building up one another, and I. But discipleship, the most basic element of it begins at home, because you're spending friends, you're spending all the time with them.

We can't even touch that in comparison here at church. And here's another thing. It's not our responsibility. It's not your pastor. It's not your children's leaders.

It's yours, my friend. And maybe you're thinking, oh, well, I didn't really know I was signing up for that. Doesn't matter now. You did. You signed the dotted line whether you liked it or not.

That little kid, that's your disciple first. And it would be, what a blessing to see them mature in their faith. Well, that's your greatest mission. Give them a right standard to obey. And it's not confusing.

It's here. The standard is, here we walk with Jesus. So I heard recently, I was talking to another parent at the pool, and she was just talking about how her kid actually was asking, you know, I'm hearing a lot of my friends cussing. I've been thinking, I don't know if I should. I feel like a dweeb sometimes because I'm not.

And I thought this parent handled it really well. I may have been stronger. I'm just saying I don't know what I would have done. But she said, hey, well, what do you think Christ would want for you in this? What would be Jesus plan for you on your mouth, how you use your words.

The kid said something like, well, I know my answer now. As if the kid was like, I might just start cussing, I guess. I mean, I don't know how that was going to go, but I thought that was such a wonderful opportunity. There's a lot of these kind of opportunities that you may not be seeing, but they're happening all the time where your kids are asking you little questions. And they're so often spiritual, so often.

Here's your standard, and here's the wonderful thing. This is something new this week that I stumbled on. There's a guy that writes a lot for pastors and church leaders. His name's Kerry Newhoff. If you've ever read any of his stuff, it's normally really good, but he wrote an article called how to raise obedient kids for all the wrong reasons.

That's a pretty good article. I would challenge you to read it. But what I took away from this was this one sentence he had where he said, if you discipline with the motivation of wanting obedience for your child rather than from your child, you'll have a better end in mind. I want obedience for my kid, not from my kid. I hope you see that subtle difference.

And here's how he said that begins to play out that obedience now will no longer be something you want from them to get rid of the problem that they're causing you. It will be something you want for them because of the problem they're causing themselves and others. Obedience then will no longer be something you want from them to make a problem go away. It will be something you want for them to help them solve a problem for themselves. I really like this last sentence.

He said, obedience will no longer be something you want from them to make you look good in front of others. It will be something you want for them to help them navigate relationships skillfully and humbly. Now, I do this all the time, friends. I gotta admit, almost every Sunday I have to tell my kids when I'm talking to people after church, don't come up bugging me, all right? And that's where I want obedience from them.

They'll get a stanky look from me. But really what I should be thinking is I want to help them navigate relationships. When two people are talking, regardless of parenting situation, when two people are engaged, you shouldn't just walk up and interrupt. I'm actually, I should be helping train them just how to have good relationships. You see what I'm saying?

So I want obedience for them so that they know how to navigate their life. Because guess what? We have such little time in the scheme of things. We have such little time. So obedience for them now trains them up of how to be an employee, how to be a, a spouse, how to be a parent one day, themselves, how to.

So I don't want so much. Hey, obey me. Cause maybe you gotta start there, but that's not where you wanna end. I want you to obey because this is training you how to live under God and live and honor him. I want you to learn to obey the Lord for yourself, not for me.

Paul says this also to the colossian church. He says, children, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord. It pleases him. Now, I've shared these many times, but honestly, I racked my brain this week and couldn't think of anything better. So, church, if you've heard these before, I bet you're still doing some of them.

So listen, because I know sometimes I still struggle with some of these. These come from Pastor Chuck Swindall. He wrote this a long time ago. But these are worldly methods that parents use and attempt to obtain obedience. And I'm just telling you these are not effective strategies.

So make a note in the column of your notes or maybe somewhere in your brain and think, okay, I'm doing that. What can I do better to follow the Lord? Here's number one. Some of you are doing this. You're bribing worldly method bribe.

Come to mommy and I'll give you a sucker. Do this thing and I promise you will get a treat. Some of you are running out of treats at your house. You're having to buy treats nonstop because everything is a bribe. The problem with that, again, obedience.

For them, not from them. Guess what? Doesn't happen in the real world. No one cares. You didn't do the right thing.

Who cares? There's no one going to give you a sucker because you did the wrong thing. Threatening. If you don't pick up your toys, I'm going to throw them in the garbage. I see these videos sometimes.

You ever seen these on Instagram or Facebook or somewhere on the web where dad has gotten so fed up with his boy playing video games that he just takes the Xbox and all the games outside and runs them over with the lawnmower. You ever seen that clip? I've seen various iterations of that clip. I want you to know something. I've seen people in their comments going, you go, dad, that's great.

That's awesome. I disagree. If you've gotten to that point, what do you think the kid will think after you've done that? He's not going to think, wow, my dad followed through on his threats. He's going to think my dad is crazy.

He might be evil. No, that was a bad threat for one. Now I'll give him applause that I guess that was a threat he made that he followed through on. If you're going to make a threat, you really should follow through on it. Otherwise your kids will learn something else.

They'll learn. You know what? These people don't mean what they say. But here's a better way. Stop the threats.

Cut it out, honey. Do this when they don't. I told you to do that. Get rid of warnings and all that mess. You don't need any of it.

You could save some of your words for your spouse. Wives in the room. Maybe you could use more for your kids. You should go nuts. But I.

Men. You could save some. You could save some threats. No, I think if you've gotten to the point where you're having to run things over with lawnmower. Things have gotten wild at your home.

Emotional appeal. Some of us, boy, we really get. We've started to break down. They wear us down after a while and we start to go. After all I've done for you, this is how you treat me?

Guess what? A kid thinks I. I'm winning. They don't care about your feelings. They will.

I care about my parents feelings now. I didn't as a child. I figured they were invincible. I mean, honestly, I thought these people were untouchable. So if my mom ever expressed such a thing, and it was fairly rare, actually, I would just think she's having a weird day, you know?

I'm not thinking, I better straighten up. It's just not how a kid works. Why? Because we are born overwhelmingly selfish. Have a child, you'll find out.

That's how we come out. It's all about me. Oh, mommy's feelings are hurt. I don't care.

Doesn't work. Reasoning with a kid younger than six, often not effective. Sweetie, your hot dog's gonna get cold if you don't eat it. I don't want to eat it. I don't care if it's hot or cold.

Mom yelling. If you want a loud house, I promise that's an effective strategy. If you want people to constantly be yelling at your house, you'd be a yelling parent. You'll make yelling kids. I've observed it.

I think it's always true. Countdown. Hicks kind of like threats. But I'm going to count to three, and then you better get over here. And sometimes you just keep ratcheting the numbers.

Two and a half, one and a quarter. Because the real. The problem, again, it goes all the way back to the start. The real problem is I'm tired. Perseverance is so hard in parenting.

Having high energy. So you're counting down because you're hoping maybe they'll do it, and I won't have to stand up. But you're gonna have to stand up anyway. And all they're learning is I don't have to actually obey until 25. Maybe you're helping them with mathematic.

And then some of you, this is maybe my biggest flaw is the teapot. I've had all I can take. I've had it up to here. Now you're all going to get it. And they all get it.

Like the volcano personality. Patience, patience, patience. Goose fry. Bah. And then they finally make me snap.

And then I punish out of anger rather than justice. I don't want to punish out of anger. I want a discipline out of justice. I want, again, remember, I want obedience for them, not from them. Here's the second thing, and this one, I think, is equally as challenging, because the word here is for children.

It says to children, honor your father and mother. Young people in the room, listen to me. There's a promise here. Adults in the room, the promise. This promise doesn't have a time stamp.

I've heard from some of you, I know some of your stories, that you had difficult folks. Maybe some of you really didn't have a relationship at all with your father or your mother, or there was some terrible drama at home. So when you hear the words honor your father and mother, I recognize the challenge. I know it's hard. But the promise has been given not only in Exodus, but also repeated in deuteronomy and now repeated again by Paul.

This, he says, is the first commandment with a promise. And he tells us what it is, that it may go well with you, that you may live long in the land. I'm of the opinion that this is one of those reap what you sow kind of promises. And here's what I've observed. When you honor your parents, your children will often honor you.

This is the second step, I believe. You give them a standard to obey, and then you show them the way of honor. You show them the way of honor. Parents in the room, this begins with you. It begins with you deciding my parents were not great, or maybe they were wonderful, and honor comes easy.

But maybe for some of you, it's very difficult growing up with them. But here's what I'm not gonna do. I'm not gonna belittle my parents to my children nonstop. You hear what I'm saying to you?

They may have been awful, but your kids are going to learn to dislike their family history. They're going to learn that we don't really? We don't honor, we don't honor the people in our family. I would say maybe one of the greatest things that my parents and their parents did was to make me proud to be a combs. And there could have been darkness and there could have been a hot mess.

There are, there's some wild people in my family tree. All right, I'm. Everybody's got the crazy uncle. Some of you only have one normal uncle. Everybody else is nuts.

That's some of your families. But I can tell you right now I'm proud of my family line and I'm passing that on. I don't want to pass on to my kids. Hey, your folks, my folks were deadbeats and I'm not interested in passing that on. Oh, if they were horrible then I'm not going to say much about them.

I'm going to honor them by not belittling them.

I'm telling you this is true. Your kids are listening and they're thinking I don't want to, I don't really, I don't really want to be a part of what we're doing as combses. No, I don't want that for my kids at all. I want to show them the way of honor. So that begins with me.

But it also shows that I'm going to have a level of respect for them, that I'm going to teach them that. You know what? Honor goes both ways. I'm going to treat you with respect as you treat me with it. There's that.

This word honor means to revere, to highly esteem. It's really two steps involved, if you will. It's helping them recognize that hey, God has called me to be your dad, God has called me to be your mom and he has called you to give me the honor that is due to that. This goes back to deuteronomy as well. It has to do with financial physical support.

And he goes on to promise it will go well and you will live long. That second part of that is amazing to me. So there's a promise that you will have a better and longer life if you will honor them. And maybe that doesn't always play out in the way we think that does, but that's the promise given. Honor them.

Teach them to honor. RoMans chapter twelve it says, in fact something about honor in the sense that christians show honor constantly. Romans twelve, it says, love one another with brotherly affection, outdo one another in showing honor. I know this much. I think if people come into this place, into our church and they're starting to meet you guys.

And you are very respectful and you honor one another and you take care of each other. I think generally that's something attractive. I think generally people want to be a part of something like that. I know for a fact everybody wants to be a part of a business like that. Where you work, you'd very much like to be given the respect you are due, and you'd like to be in an environment where people take care and honor one another.

Well, certainly on a Sunday morning, you guys chose to be here today. You certainly don't want to show up here and feel like, I don't think those people even like each other. You don't want that? No. You'd love to see this.

This idea of loving one another, in fact, outdo one another and showing honor, that's what your home should also look like. So this is something else. How do you show your children honor when they never see you? Honor mommy when they never see you? Honor daddy.

When all they ever see is mommy and daddy? They talk loud to each other a lot. I think they might be fighting. Eventually they're gonna start to understand, you know, mommy and daddy. I don't think they're getting along all the time.

And this isn't to say your kids should think you're perfect. Cause they figured that out already. They know you're not. But maybe there's some ways in which you can show honor with your spouse that will help your children. And here's a couple of.

If you're not doing these yet, they're easy. If, you know, it's. You feel the. You feel the pressure boiling. You feel it's starting to steam in here.

One of you should look at the other and say, all right, we've got a heated discussion coming. We should probably take it somewhere else, maybe have these arguments behind closed doors as best you can. Some people say, well, that's an old school way of thinking. Sometimes old school stuff works. My parents, I never really saw them fight.

I know they did. I've heard the stories later as an adult about things they had to wrestle and work through. But they tried not to let us see that. What they tried to let us see was, I respect. I honor.

I love your mother, your father. I believe in them. I trust them. That's what they tried to let us see again and again. And it really has an effect on the kids.

Show them the way of honor. Here's what my dad did growing up. Y'all might think this is super cheesy. I think my dad had been watching way too many of, like, martial arts movies when we were growing up. I mean, it was out.

This was something we watched all the time. He would rent these, and he loved the ones that had subtitles. And I have hated to read since I was a very small child. I'm like, why are we renting movies where I got to read the movie? But the martial arts was so great, you know, just crazy stuff.

But we watched so many of these as a kid that my dad. And we loved it. Honestly, it's cheesy now, but as a kid, anytime that we, you know, had to go do something, if we were in a playful mood, normally, we were a yes, sir, yes, ma'am kind of family. All right, that's. We're in the south.

I know that some of. Not all of your styles, if it's not your style that you say yes, sir, at least it should be styled that the yes is tonally accurate. Cause some of you get yes. If you're not gonna get yes, sir, then at least get yes. I will do that.

For me, I wanna not only see, hear yes, sir. I wanna hear yes, sir. Not, yes, sir. Cause then we're gonna have that discussion. All right.

That's not Honora. But when I was growing up, my dad wanted us to yes, my father. Like, that was our thing for yes, my father. And y'all might think that's ridiculous, but we thought it was great as kids. Yes, my and I had a really raspy voice as a child.

There's some of this on recording somewhere, but yes, my father, and go do it. I was told yes, sir. Yes, ma'am. These are ways to show honor. But more, it's about the tone and help them understand that we're showing each other respect.

You model it. Here's the third. These are the ones that really start to function in the way they're written. Fathers, it says, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up. It begins with this idea of a negative command.

Both of these are imperatives. These are both commands to parents. Now, you'll notice it says fathers. There's a reason for that. Don't get upset about this.

This is the way God has designed it. We just talked about this last week that the Bible says in one passage that God is the head of Christ. Christ is the head of the husband, and the husband is the head of the wife. This is the way God has arranged his family. And so he says fathers.

When he says fathers, he means parents. This isn't just dads. Women don't check out. Oh, goody. I don't have to do this.

No, this is mother and father. It says, do not provoke them to anger. Now, you might make the argument that dads have a tendency to do that more anyway, but this is for both parents, it says. In fact, Paul writes to the colossian church in a very similar line. He says, fathers, do not provoke your children lest they become discouraged.

So here's the third step. Encourage them with sensitivity and consistency. With sensitivity and consistency. I don't love that word, sensitivity. I want my kids to grow up and be tough.

And I want them to take the world by storm. So this word isn't about, you know, some of you might be practicing gentle parenting. Good luck. Tell me how that goes later. But I'm not talking about that so much.

I'm talking about the idea of being sensitive to the. To the child's heart. If you've got more than one kid, you're already aware they're not the same. They're so much different. It's crazy.

You'll question at times, like, how did those two people come from us? I thought we only made one model. The coneses make a lot of models. They all seem different. Some of them look alike.

The first and the last kind of look similar. They don't act the same. It's wild. So that's this idea of sensitivity, but also consistency. So it says to fathers and mothers here, don't provoke them to anger.

This word don't provoke, really means, don't rouse them to wrath.

Don't make them. Don't make the. In a sense, don't make your home toxic. Now here's some ways you might do that. Here's another list for you that some of you might want to write in your margins.

What are some ways you might provoke your kids to anger? Constant fault finding. I spoke a little bit last week with husbands and wives, but with parents, sometimes we're constantly. Maybe there's one kid of the group I know which one is mine, that you're constantly on them about fault after fault. I would challenge you.

Find things to show them grace. Find opportunities to speak good truth in their life. Now I feel like every family's got at least one kid that just needs a little extra. I was that kid. Here's the good news, church.

I was that kid. I got a spanking almost every Sunday for six years. Do you know why? Massive amount of energy I still have, praise God. And I don't always focus it well, even now.

But then I really couldn't focus it. Every Sunday, I'm a PK as well. Every Sunday, we would pull in with the church van. At church, we called her big Bertha, and all the sound equipment was in there. As soon as we were done unloading, I was finding something crazy to do.

We were meeting at a middle school at the time. I would go find some kind of place that I could hide from my folks and just run until I couldn't run. Another run. Or I'd go find the teacher's lounge. Sometimes I'd sneak in there, and that room was open too often.

It was just bad for me. And I had very skinny arms that could get all the way up into things and get Reese's cups. That was me. And then after church, I was supposed to be helping tear down. But, boy, I had my little crew, this little crew of young boys.

And we would be rough. And now I've seen my third child, Kenzie. Looks like me, acts like me, gets the red face when she's running every Sunday. I'd be sweating. My whole face would be red, because I had been winning in tag or whatever.

And my dad would just look at me. I could see it now, just how disappointing it must have been for him. We're doing this again. This is not a habit I love. I can see it on his face.

I'm like, I don't love it either, but I can't stop. It's just too much fun. Go sit in the van, son. When we get home, go to your room and I'll be there. Give me a little while.

I just sit up there like, oh, man, I gotta do this again. My dad never lied to me either. He never said, this is gonna hurt me more than it hurts you. I know that to be a lie. He would say something like, I really hate that we have to do this all the time.

It's discouraging. I keep hoping that you'll move past this. This isn't correct behavior. I thought that's the ways in which he dealt with that. And then I'd have to get a switch.

Some of y'all, y'all parent however you want. We had to go off and pick a switch off a tree. It's a branch, and it had to be pretty pliable, effective. If I picked a little flimsy one, then he'd go get one, and then that was not good. So that's how we grew up.

Some of you grew up with belts and paddles, I think whatever works, but fault finding. I have a tendency to look at that little girl of mine and go, man, I see me and you and I don't want that for you. So I don't want to constantly be telling you. You're just nonstop breaking stuff and doing the wrong thing. I don't want to always let that be my language.

Which are you fault finding? Maybe some of you, you're simply not spending enough time face to face with people, with your children. It's a little easier, I think, maybe if you have one or two, but as you have more, you really gotta challenge yourself, parents to spend one on one time with each one. Just challenge yourself.

I have the biggest fear with this one with four kids, and God gave me three daughters. I'm like, why did you do that to me, Goddesse? I'm not very effeminate. I'm not very emotional. I'm not in tune at all with this.

So now I've got to really challenge myself to hear them and have fun with them and take them on little dates. I think that's what dads can do with their little girls, teach them what right looks like, you know, as far as dating a man, that's fun.

Labeling this may be one of the worst things. And some of you had this growing up and you know how much damage it did. Things like, you're worthless, you're lazy, you're passionless, you're, I don't know. I don't know what you may have been called growing up, but I'm telling you this right now, that stuff will linger with you. It'll really hang tight.

Some of you have brought that into your parenting. I know that's not what you want. No more labeling. If you're going to label them anything, say, you know what? I know you're smart.

You're not living up to that, but I know you're smart. I know you're beautiful. You're choosing to look like a weirdo, but you're beautiful. Some of you, your kids are dressing weird, they're doing weird stuff. You don't have to say you look ugly.

No, say you're more beautiful than this. I don't know. You figure out how to word that. Give them positive labels and they'll live up to that. Comparison can be terrifying.

If you've got multiple kids just constantly saying, your older brother didn't struggle here, your younger sister doesn't do this. We again, reminder, kids don't care. They don't care. I don't want to be like my older brother at all. I don't want to be like him.

To this day, I'm happy with who I am. I don't want to be like him. And kids are that way. Comparison's not only ineffective, but can really breed some anger in your kids. Inconsistency, I think, might be the one we struggle with most.

Again, perseverance is the key. Inconsistency is the way in which most parents struggle. One day we're on our a game and we're like, these are the things we're going to make sure the kids do right and don't mess up today. But then tomorrow, a long day of work, I'm too tired, and the kids get away with murderous. Now the kid's going, I don't know what to do.

I guess maybe I can do whatever I want and just see what happens. And then lastly, and I could probably have listed many more things, but hypocrisy can be a terrible thing to see. Mommy's gonna do whatever mommy wants to do, but you can't do that. You know, maybe there's certain behaviors that are for adults only, and you need to explain that. There's certain things, maybe a movie that you might would watch, but they shouldn't watch.

I'm not one of these hard and fast legalist kind of people that says, well, if it's a movie your kids can't watch, you probably shouldn't watch it either. I mean, there's lots of movies our kids can't watch that are really great movies. There's a lot of these kinds of things that you might want to explain to them. Hey, you're not ready for what's going on here. Aiming always past the behavior, aiming always towards the heart.

Here's the last and final instruction that Paul gives. He says, bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. Discipline and instruction is the point. Didn't need to change that at all. Bring them up in discipline and instruction.

The words here are paideia, where we get words like pedagogy, the study of being a teacher, and no, these, which is a form of counseling, even in modern times. New thetic counseling. This is the idea of discipline, not only on the body, but on the mind. The paideia has something to do with physical body, and thenus means mind. So he's saying this is the kind of bringing up that affects them both physically and mentally, essentially, is what he's saying.

And he instructs parents to train them up. This comes from several proverbs. I'll share two of them with you. Proverbs 22. It says, train up a child in the way he should go even when he's old.

He will not depart from it. Some of you are there right now. You did what you thought was right in the Lord, and the kid has strayed. That's where you pray this and say, lord, this is what you said. I'm going to keep praying this over my child and say, God, you promised.

It's in his hands. Proverbs 23. It says, don't fail to correct your children. They won't die if you spank them. Physical discipline may well save them from death.

Spiritual death is what he's implying here.

I want to end with this final kind of thought. A couple of things. First of all, I've shared with you a whole lot of ideas, lists, if you will. And in preaching, I really kind of hate doing that. Do you know why?

Because I recognize something. None of us can really do this without the Holy Spirit. None of us can really do this parenting thing well. We can't do this life thing very well without God's power. We can't be the kind of people that we should be.

And so, as I offer all of these ideas and lists and things you've written down, I want you to hear something. The best thing you can be doing for yourself in life, but also for your children, is a daily habit of prayer. That's the best thing you can be doing. And be praying in these ways. Say, God, I know that I'm the kind of person who's mislabeling my kids, or you fill in the blank.

I'm doing this right now, Lord, and I don't know how I'll change. I brought a ton of baggage into this relationship, God help me, to deal with the dysfunction that I've brought to this.

And it's easier than maybe the sermon laid out. It's easier because your kids do love you. Yes, they do come out sinful. I think you've noticed, right? They come out making bad choices and mistakes, and they're selfish.

Absolutely. But at the end of the day, what they really want is a good relationship with you. They want that. They would like to have a good relationship. And when they're young, you have such a wonderful opportunity all the way up until maybe the late teens.

Some of you can tell me later that at some point your kids just start thinking you're a dummy and don't listen to anything you say. I'm not quite there. Or maybe something weird's happened. Seems like Nate still kind of trusts me. I don't know.

Maybe something will change this year, but he's 15. I never really did that to my dad. So I think it just depends on the kids. I never thought my dad didn't know what he was talking about. I just didn't really care.

It's different. Apathy was my main problem. But I've found with my children, and I think this will be true for you. They want relationship, and there's always an opportunity in dialogue, and it's not as complex as we might be making it.

Any conversation can become spiritual. Any of them. I know this because I do it all the time. My kids don't think that there's something weird going on when we talk about spiritual things. Now, some of you have never done this.

It's going to be awkward at first. It's going to be wild when you start Jesus juking your kids everywhere. It's going to feel like that. Like literally, who we talking about? Jesus for right now, dad.

But start just putting that in the conversation. Here's, I'll give you some examples. Like your kids start getting interested in dating or something. They start talking about, I like this little boy, I like this little girl, whatever. Oh, that's spiritual.

That's too easy. Well, what do they, what do they, what do they like? What do they believe? What do you know about them? Like this.

That faith conversation's too easy or I'm getting bullied at school. Too easy. That's a faith conversation. All right. What are you going to do about that?

How's that going to work out? What would Christ in you do in this situation? Should you return evil for evil? Is that the biblical model? Look, this is a good standard to obey.

It really does work. Should you be just like them and belittle them and say no? Okay, so how should they start talking about sports and grades and goals? All of it spiritual. All of it.

It just takes you making a decision. I'm gonna give them the right standard to obey. I'm gonna make the gospel be life. Not just. Not just something we do on Sunday, which I'm telling you right now is confusing to your kids.

Mom and dad seem like they're in pretty. They're on good behavior for a couple hours on Sunday, but the rest of the time, wild. We don't talk about spiritual things at all Monday through Saturday. Really? We don't even talk about them.

As soon as we get home on Sunday, soon as we're in our pajamas again on Sunday afternoon, it's back to wild.

That's teaching them something that maybe you were taught, and that is the gospel. Doesn't belong in life, but the life is gospel. So this will begin to change things more than anything. Even if you can't do any of this very well, begin with prayer and begin having conversations with them. Look for opportunities and they're happening.

They're going to happen on the way home. I can almost guarantee you some of you are going to have a conversation with your kid on the way home that had seemingly nothing to do with spiritual things. But it's going to be obvious my kids have moved way past that. They're asking me really wild stuff sometimes, like, you know, what about angels and what about heaven and like really great stuff that you start having these conversations now, they'll just verbatim, why do we believe that Jesus died on the cross? Like, just verbatim kind of stuff like this?

Okay, now that's a great question. I don't have to work quite as hard, but that's because I just keep putting it in. Let it be the spice of life in your house. We're going to be offering in a couple of weeks an opportunity for you. We've been announcing this for several weeks.

For some of you, this is a great opportunity. At a bare minimum, go on to church center and just see what breakout sessions we're offering. There's some stuff in there that might really help you. You might be challenged right now about a teen who you're having trouble with social media. That's one of the conversations we're going to have.

You might be having trouble with some disciplinary thing. We're going to have several breakouts that I think will really help you. I don't know if we're doing this this time, but in the past it was we had even one for kids that had special needs and things like that. That can be super challenging. So just check that out and see if maybe this is something that can help you.

That's on August 24. But as we close, I would encourage you, give your children a right standard to obey. Show them the way of honor, encourage them with sensitivity and consistency, and then train them up with discipline and instruction. Let's continue in worship. Let's continue in prayer together.

In Jesus name. We ask that you would just be with us in our parenting. Be with all the people in the room. There's various positions of life that as I look through the room, we're all over the place. Some of us in the room are still in the dependent child face.

I pray for those young people right now, there's a few of them in the room that you would help them to understand what it means to obey in the Lord and how that pleases you. God, help us. Help these young people to really see what it means to honor their folks. I get it. Their parents are imperfect.

So am I. They make mistakes. Sometimes things don't go well at home. I pray that you would help them to see what it means to honor, because they're learning to honor you. That their life should be a life of obeying you, Lord, following you, walking with you, and honoring you.

Help them to see how to do that first with their parents. Help us as parents, Lord, as you've blessed many of us with children, help us to simply lead them to you more than anything in the world. That our lives would really be a story. Tell a life that tells the gospel all the time, not just in the things we say and we do in the workplace, but the way in which we live with our families, our kids, our wives, that the gospel would be really on display and present if we do nothing else right. Lord, I pray that our kids would know you.

If we fail in any way, I pray it wouldn't be that. That we would at least succeed in the task of connecting you to them, that they would see you and know you, God, do that in us. Do that. Do that through us. Lord, that's my primary prayer as a parent, as a father.

Nothing terrifies me more than that I would do something to cause my kids to run from you. I don't want that for me. I don't want that for you. These families, God, I pray that they would know you and know you at a young age. I pray that's occurring in these back hallways right now.

I'm so thankful for the many teachers that are pouring out in those back rooms. I pray, Lord, that these kids are really getting to experience and know you and that they're moving their little hearts towards faith. God, I pray for those singles in the room. I pray for those grandparents in the room, those people in various, you know, that maybe. Maybe you're past this.

God, I pray that you would encourage them that there'll be opportunities still to parent, maybe their grandkids, but there's many opportunities for them to be a safety net, if you will, an encourager. They get to move more into this coaching kind of role now, where they get to encourage and coach their kids to be good parents. I pray that you would give them the wisdom for that, that you would give them the joy of that, really for the singles in the room, that they would recognize, Lord, that they've still got some honoring to do of their own parents. But also, you're preparing them for a purpose. I pray they'd come back next week.

God be with us. Challenge us with this. We pray all these things in Jesus name. Amen.


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