Discipleship

The One Word Important to a Discipling Parent

Youth Group

When we were younger Leslie and I helped out in a youth group at our church. Honestly, there was no better training for being a parent than working within this youth group.

The youth group consisted of roughly 60 young people from middle school to high school. As young parents who had babies at this time, we were able to see this varied collection of teens from different homes influenced by different cultures, parenting styles, and education choices.

The one consistency in this group, just as can be found in any group, was imperfection. Dealing with people is often messy!

True Story

Once I was sitting in the back of the sanctuary with a young man from the youth group when his father walked up to him and started yelling. His father was upset because his son had worn athletic shoes with his nice slacks to church. Apparently, before they left home his dad had already told him to wear something nicer, and the young man had defied his dad. Whether you think this is a crazy request from the father or not, that is not the point. This young man was in the open and apparently there was more going on between them than just a disagreement over shoes. This young man already had a problem with bitterness toward his father, and his father was just exasperating the bitterness through his reaction to his son’s defiance.

As Promised

In my last post, I promised to reveal the most important word to remember when discipling. (You can get to that post here.) This word is so important because we are not going to handle every situation with the right attitude, perfect demeanor, and wisdom every time. Before I tell you this word, I want to make an important point about anger which is related to this word.

Besides, many of you already have a good idea of the word in question. 🙂 

Scripture makes a big deal about provoking your children to anger or wrath in Ephesians 5. Think about this…of all the things Paul could have referenced under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, he points to provoking your children to wrath. I think that tells us a lot about not only the potential power anger has over our children, but also the tendencies of fathers and their children.

Paul knew that anger in the home has the potential to allow bitterness to enter the hearts of mothers, fathers, and children. There is nothing more powerful in ripping a family apart or even separating a person from God the Father than anger and bitterness. The Holy Spirit directed Paul to write this verse in Ephesians because He understood the tendency in our sin to sway into anger.

I am not talking about short-term anger like being upset when children spill drinks on nice furniture, or even when they miss a curfew or fail a test, or your husband forgets an anniversary.

I am talking about the kind of anger that develops into rage, or violence, or grudges, or bitterness.

This is the kind of anger that people hold onto. 

Quick Story

One time my oldest child was arguing with his mother over something he had done. When I heard him argue I became very upset. I don’t even remember what I said or he said; but I remember he was defending himself, and I perceived it as being very disrespectful.

I walked into the room and told him what I thought of what he had done to draw the scolding from his mother, and I also told him to stop defending himself. I did this with a raised voice. At that point, he stopped talking, stuck his jaw out, dropped his head, and sat on his bed. Then, as he was looking down, I told him how I felt about his attitude and how he should never do it again. The next thing I know tears started to show.

After I saw the tears, I backed off and walked out of the room.

I left him in his room for a little while so we both could cool down. Shortly thereafter, I came back into his room and apologized. I didn’t justify it or tell him what he did wrong at this point at all. I just fell on the sword. I told him that I was very sorry for raising my voice in a way that tore him down. And I made sure to ask him to forgive me, which is very important.

The reason I did this was because I knew that it was the way forward. God talks about forgiveness not just because it releases the wrong-doer but also because it also releases the one that was wronged. Sometimes saying sorry is the best way forward.

I Am Sorry

In parenting you are going to mess up. You are not going to handle every punishment and circumstances with perfect consistency, justice, the right measure of grace, and wisdom. To allow any level of anger or bitterness to rise up and develop into a breach in the relationship with your children will make it impossible to reach them…to disciple…to mentor…and to direct them. If your children are holding onto anger or bitterness, it does not matter if you feel like you are right, you need to resolve that. Sometimes the only way forward is to humble yourself and say sorry for your reactions.

That is why SORRY is one of the most important words you can use in discipling your children. You will make mistakes, guaranteed! Don’t think it undermines any level of your authority by saying sorry.

Let me help you a little more on this! What I apologized for to my son was losing my temper and yelling in anger at him in such a way that it belittled him. What the father in the case with his son’s shoes could have done is say sorry to his son for yelling at him in front of everyone and embarrassing him.

Ephesians 5

Think about Ephesians 5 again…what is going to provoke your children to wrath? Make a list…what is it that could be a source of anger for your son or daughter?

  • injustice or unjustified response
  • inconsistency in applying rules
  • choosing something else over them
  • embarrassing them or belittling them
  • withholding love from them
  • misdirected anger landing on them

Keep going! Think about the root causes of any anger that might be in your children. Dig deep!!

These are the kinds of things you should apologize for.

Okay! Now replace the phrase in Ephesian 5 with one of the phrases above.

Fathers…do not withhold love from your children
Fathers…do not embarrass your children or diminish them
Fathers…do not allow the stresses of life to be misdirected into anger on your children

Do those things make sense? I think that is a good test of something you may need to apologize and clear up with your children. Does it make sense in the context of that Bible Verse?

Try this…

Fathers…do not defend your wife when she is being disrespected by your children
Fathers…do not withhold the car when your child failed a test
Fathers…allow your sons to have girls over to the house without adult supervision

Those don’t make sense in the context of Ephesians 5, do they? Therefore, don’t apologize for those things!

For being focused on just a single word, this post has gotten long. I think it might be time to continue to my next topic…

Coming Up

I am going to expand on the method of instruction that is described in Deuteronomy 6. To give you a hint, I believe that God wants you to keep your kids soaking wet. What do I mean? Well, I will describe more soon!

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