May 1, 2024

Second Base: Think Season, Not Game

HomeRunKids


Raising Home Runs Kids
Second Base: Think Season, Not Game
Sycamore Creek Church
May 17/18, 2015
Tom Arthur

Let’s play ball!

Today we continue this series raising home run kids.  In week one we stepped up to the plate and realized that we are our child’s first coach when it comes to faith and following Jesus.  And before we’re a coach, we need to be a player first.  You can’t coach something you don’t know.  Week two, we rounded first base as we learned that raising your kids isn’t a solo sport.  You need a team.  Today we hit a double as we get to second base.  We’re thinking this whole raising kids is about the long haul.  It’s a whole season or even multiple seasons.  Not just one game.  So as we get to second base today, I want to look at training over an entire season.

Have you ever trained for something?  I remember when I took what was then called a “keyboarding” class in Jr. High.  We were learning to type.  It wasn’t just one day at the typewriter learning where all the keys were at.  It was an entire semester of learning followed by years and years of practice.  I also played baseball growing up.  By high school being on the baseball team meant a morning gym period with the team during the winter, and daily practice after school the rest of the year.  Then there was training to read Hebrew in seminary.  Learning Hebrew was three years of daily study.  Or I think back to hiking the John Muir Trail in southern California with my friend, Bill, who is an Iron Man.  I spent months and months of walking and exercising on stair masters.  I remember the first time I got on a stair master.  I could barely do it for five minutes, but by the end of my training I was easily doing sixty minutes or more on the stair master.  These are all examples of things I’ve had to train for over a long period of time to do well.  What is something you’ve had to train for over a long period of time to be able to do well?

I think it’s helpful to understand that training is a long-term process with some setbacks but an overall general movement forward.  So when we think of our key verse for this series, we should think of it in the context of a season, not a single game:

Train children in the right way,
and when old, they will not stray.
~Proverbs 22:6 NRSV

Or as Dave Stone says, “God is more concerned with your direction than he is with your perfection.”

As we look toward training today, I want to explore a topic of parenting that vexes the best of us.  Another word for training is discipline:

Discipline – noun dis·ci·pline \?di-s?-pl?n\
Training that corrects, molds, or perfects the mental faculties or moral character.
~Merriam-Webster

Isn’t that what we’re trying to do?  Correct, mold, and perfect (or at least steps toward a kind of perfection) of the mental and moral faculties and character of our children?  Discipline is a kind of development of self-control.  We read in the ancient wisdom of the Proverbs:

Those who do not control themselves
are like a city whose walls are broken down.
~Proverbs 25:28 NCV

The walls of an ancient city were the primary defense against enemies.  Children without training and discipline are like a city with no defense against enemies.  The problem is that discipline or developing self-control in children is hard work.  Really hard work.  Really really really really hard work!  But discipline isn’t achieved in one game.  Discipline is achieved over an entire season and even several seasons back to back to back.  Search Institute, a research group that has done significant research on the faith development of children found that “Single factors alone do not usually explain much of young people’s well-being, but that it takes multiple influences operating in multiple parts of young people’s worlds, and over multiple points in time, to promote positive youth development.”

So what I want to look at today are four drills for faithful discipline that will help you win over a season even if you’re not necessarily winning every game.

1.      Faithful Discipline is Based on God’s discipline

First, it’s important to understand that faithful discipline of children is based on God’s discipline of us.  Paul, the first missionary of the church and the writer of many books of the Bible, says:

Children, obey your parents because you belong to the Lord, for this is the right thing to do.
~Ephesians 6:1 NLT

Parents’ discipline of their children is rooted in the character of God.  Our children belong to the Lord.  We all do.  So parents are essentially stewards of someone else’s property.  Our children belong to God.  Therefore, it is the right thing for children to obey parents and for parents to train and discipline their children.

I think that discipline can sometimes come across as a rules vs. heart kind of activity.  Should we as parents set down rules that kids are to follow or are we to try to speak to the heart.  I think the ultimate aim of God’s discipline is always heart formation.  But rules play a part in that heart formation.  Looking for direction from Paul we find that he makes an interesting observation about the role of the law (the rules guiding personal, religious, and national behavior) in the Old Testament:

The law was our [paidagogos] until Christ came; it protected us until we could be made right with God through faith.
~Galatians 3:24 NLT

The word “paidagogos” is translated in different versions of the Bible as guardian, tutor, schoolmaster, governess, guide, or pedagogue.  So let’s put that back in the verse:

The law was our guardian/tutor/schoolmaster/governess/guide/pedagogue until Christ came; it protected us until we could be made right with God through faith.
~Galatians 3:24 NLT

So the rules governing or disciplining our behavior were like a guide until our heart was formed in the right way.  Or as the prophet Jeremiah said:

I will put my instructions deep within them, and I will write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.
~Jeremiah 31:33 NLT

God’s goal was never just to give us a set or rules to live by.  Rather, God gave us a set of rules to live by so that our hearts might be formed in love for God and others.  In this way we could get to a point where we could “love God and do what you like” as Augustine, an early church leader, liked to say.  If we love God, then what we like will ultimately be what God loves too.

Faithful discipline of our children is rooted in the character of God and God’s discipline of us: heart formation.

2.      Faithful Discipline Is an Expression of Love

Second, faithful discipline is an expression of love.  Sometimes when you’re in the throes of disciplining your child and your child is pushing all your buttons, you can lose sight of the motivation here: love of your child.  Of course, your child doesn’t feel like you’re loving them.  As the author of Hebrews says:

My child, don’t make light of the Lord’s discipline,
and don’t give up when he corrects you.
For the Lord disciplines those he loves,
and he punishes each one he accepts as his child.
~Hebrews 12:5-6 NLT

If you didn’t discipline your child and gave them no training in self-control, you would be building a city with no defense.  Any enemy could walk in and do whatever they wanted.  It’s tough to remember, but don’t forget, discipline is an expression of love.  Or as the ancient wisdom of the Proverbs says:

A refusal to correct is a refusal to love;
love your children by disciplining them.
~Proverbs 13:24 NLT

Or as more literal translations have put it:

Whoever spares the rod hates his son.
~Proverbs 13:24 ESV

Now this verse can really send us for a loop these days, can’t it?  We’re in the thick of the parenting wars now.  To spank or not to spank?  At the risk of spinning us perilously out of control, let me share with you my thoughts on this modern day discipline controversy.

First, Sarah and I haven’t felt a need to spank to discipline.  We find that there are a lot of other creative ways we can accomplish the same thing.  And we’re committed to active non-violent resistance as a method of change that finds its roots in the nature and character of the cross.  Jesus could have taken the world by storm, but instead he chose to empty himself of his right to divinity and take upon himself the nature of a servant, even a slave who willingly gave his life for us.  Somehow that doesn’t seem to jive with us with the act of spanking.  Add to that theological understanding modern day research on spanking.  Psychological research shows that spanking has some pretty negative long-term results that most of us would probably not want to train our child in (http://www.apa.org/monitor/2012/04/spanking.aspx). And yet, even as I read all this research, I don’t really see an important distinction being made about spanking.  I think most of our ideas of spanking look something like the child in the grocery store line crying because they want some piece of candy.  To stop the crying, ironically, the parent swats the child’s bottom.  More crying, just of a different kind ensues.  This kind of impulsive on the spot spanking really isn’t very effective at accomplishing much of anything.  On the other hand, my mom practiced a very different kind of spanking with us.  If we did something particularly egregious, we would be asked to go to her room.  A couple of minutes later she would show up and ask us if we’d prefer to be grounded for a set amount of time or to be spanked.  I always chose spanking because it was over quicker.  If we chose spanking, she would then spank us.  I can remember maybe three times that she ever did this.  It was not impulsive.  It wasn’t an expression of frustration or anger in the moment.  It was very deliberate, and she even put the choice in our hands.  When I read the literature about spanking, I don’t see this kind of spanking represented in the literature, and I can think of a lot of other worse ways to discipline a child.

I’m not certain there’s a perfectly clear answer to the question of spanking, but I do know this, the principle of Proverbs 13:24 still holds: if you don’t discipline your child, you’re doing them harm.   Faithful discipline is an expression of love for your child.

3. Faithful Discipline is United

Third, faithful discipline is a united front between parents.  This united front requires submission.  Paul tells the church at Ephesus, particularly husbands and wives to:

Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
~Ephesians 5:12 NIV

I know you usually hear about wives submitting to husbands but this is always in the context of husbands and wives submitting to one another.  Notice how it’s also rooted in the character of Christ.  We see Christ practicing submission when John, one of Jesus’ closest friends and followers, says:

So Jesus explained, “I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by himself. He does only what he sees the Father doing. Whatever the Father does, the Son also does.”
~John 5:19 NLT

How confusing it must be for a child to get one set of training from one parent and another set of training from another parent.  Faithful parenting is united which requires submission to one another.  Or course, this is the ideal.  So let’s take a moment and talk about the less than ideal situation when parents disagree on how to discipline children.  And then throw into the mix co-parenting between divorced parents.  Things get really sticky and messy.  How do you faithfully discipline your child as a united front when you aren’t a united front?

My friend Bill, who I mentioned earlier is an Iron Man who I hiked the John Muir trail with, is also a research psychologist at Duke. He’s been studying child development for over a decade.  He has a theory of parenting he’s developed after studying kids longitudinally over several decades.  Basically, Bill has noticed that there are only a couple of things that can really throw your kid off the tracks: abuse, domestic violence, and sustained bullying.  If those three things aren’t in your kid’s life, then Bill has noticed that kids are really resilient.  He wrote me a summary of his research in an email saying:

Most negative experiences and parental missteps – even some things that we all agree are suboptimal – don’t affect children’s functioning long-term even if they are unpleasant in the moment. Contrariwise, there is very little evidence to support the long-term value of many of our ‘enrichment’ activities. Read to your kids, yes, and certainly give them a broad range of experiences and opportunities. Just don’t be under the illusion that baby Einstein or Spanish-immersion preschool is going to super-charge their development. Implicitly this suggests that parents’ every decision is perhaps less important/critical than they may fear. I hope that it frees parents up to relax a bit, put their parenting foibles in perspective, co-parent without judgment, and avoid viewing parenting as a minefield where they might inadvertently step wrong and cause irreparable harm.

In other words, it just might be more important that you show a united front by not complaining in front of your kids about your divorced spouse’s parenting methods.  If your spouse or ex aren’t abusing your child, abusing other members of the home, or putting your child in situations where they’re getting bullied, then it’s likely that your child will turn out OK.  Give your co-parent some grace even if he or she doesn’t parent quite the way you want him or her to parent.

Faithful discipline is united.

4.      Faithful Discipline is Consistent

Fourth, faithful discipline is consistent just as God is consistent.  The prophet Malachi says:

I am the Lord, and I do not change.
~Malachi 3:6 NLT

God doesn’t change.  Of course, none of us are God, and when we realize we’ve been doing it wrong, we should change.  But the principle here is that God is consistent, and in as much as our discipline is good, it should be consistent too.

Sarah and I were recently looking for some help from our Facebook friends on ideas about how to set up a chore and payment system with our kids.  I wrote on Facebook:

Pondering with Sarah Faulman Arthur how to set up chores and payments for our four year old. I’m curious to hear how others are thinking about this. List of chores? How much you’d pay for each? Etc…

Dave Hemingway, a Facebook friend and regular attender of SCC, commented:
Our plan was to be haphazard and inconsistent. We found that approach kept them on their toes as they never knew what to expect. It also helped them develop their sales techniques as they continuously had to think of new arguments to convince us to buy things they wanted. Our approach also helped them develop their drama skills. As I recall they responded to the chore of loading/unloading the dishwasher as though we were dabbling in medieval torture.

Of course, Dave is being sarcastic to be funny, and funny it was.  I laughed out loud!  But he makes my point for me by stating the opposite.  Haphazard and inconsistent doesn’t work as a discipline strategy for children.

So what method do you use to be consistent with your children?  I don’t think there’s any one right method, but one that we’ve found helpful was suggested to us by Jana Aupperlee, a child psychologist who is a partner at SCC.  When Micah was about two, we found that we were wrestling with him being really fussy.  We didn’t know how to navigate our own emotions and frustrations with his fussing.  So we asked Jana to come over and give us some parenting coaching.  She did what she does best and mostly asked us really good questions.  But she also gave us some tips and left us with a book titled 1 2 3 Magic.  The basic gist of the book was a strategy for responding to behaviors you wanted to see stop, like fussing.  When the behavior occurs, you simply name it and say, “No fussing.  That’s one.”  No emotion.  No trying to explain everything and getting into a debate with your child.  Just count, “One.”  Then if it happens again, you count, “Two.”  No emotion.  No trying to explain everything and getting into a debate.  If the behavior continues, you say, “That’s three.  Timeout.”  No emotion.  No debating.  No “2 and half…two and three quarters…don’t make me count three.”  Just a dispassionate count and timeout in their room.  One minute for every year of their age.  We found this method really was magical.  Micah learns from the consistency of the process.  One is a warning.  Two is further warning.  He knows three means business.  He almost always pulls it together at two.  It gives us clear direction and Micah clear direction.  But it only works if we are consistent.

I want to emphasize that there are a lot of right ways to be consistent.  You don’t have to count like we do.  You can find lots of good methods out there.  The key is finding a method that works for you to be consistent.  Because faithful discipline is consistent.

Closing

Let’s go back to Hebrews:

No discipline is enjoyable while it is happening—it’s painful! But afterward there will be a peaceful harvest of right living for those who are trained in this way.
~Hebrews 12:11 NLT

Training and discipline are rarely fun.  But peace in the heart of the child is the ultimate goal.  What does this look like?  Thinking back to training for the John Muir trail, I realize that it wasn’t much fun to do the training.  But when I got on the trail after having trained well, I had the chance to see things very few people ever see.  We were able to climb up the back side of Half Dome and be there for the sunrise all by ourselves.  I was able to keep up with an Iron Man! Even on the really big day we had where we hiked 16 miles and climbed over 3500 feet, I kept pace with an Iron Man, and it felt good.  And I had the satisfaction of having trained so that I enjoyed the journey rather than just suffering through it.  The training and discipline reaped a harvest of good living on the trail.

I want the same thing for our kids.  I want them to see things in this world that very few people ever see.  I want them to recognize God’s glory, God’s call, and God’s rescue mission to the world!  I want them to keep up with the great cloud of witnesses, the saints who go alongside of us and have gone before us.  I want our children to have the satisfaction of hearing the master say at the end of their life, “Well done, good and faithful servant.  Enter the joy of the Lord.”

God, give us wisdom to train and discipline our children as you train and discipline us.  May our children grow to see it as an expression of our love for them.  May we be united even in the tricky places of parenting.  And help us to be consistent so that our children might one day hear you say to them, “Well done, good and faithful servant.  Enter the joy of the Lord.”

Step Up To The Plate

HomeRunKids

 

Raising Home Run Kids – Step Up To Home Plate
Sycamore Creek Church
May 3/4, 2015
Proverbs 22:6
Tom Arthur

Peace friends!

My first interaction with parenting came before I was a parent myself.  I was living in a house with other people who had kids.  Several of these people were homeless women and children.  One of the women had a little three-year-old boy named CJ.  CJ was a handful at times.  He didn’t have a lot of structure in his life.  He loved to treat me as a living room jungle gym.  He’s climb all over me like I was a set of monkey bars.  He’d grab hold of whatever he could get his little hands on and pull himself up and over my shoulders and head plopping down behind me on the couch.  One day while he was climbing all over me, he found a great handhold at the neck of my church.  As he pulled himself up the neck of my shirt stretched out far enough for him to put his head down into my shirt.  He immediately popped his head back out, looked me straight in the eye, and said (I’m quoting here….), “Where are your titties!?”  I sputtered, thought, paused, then responded, “I think you need to go ask your mom.”  What I did in that moment was drop the ball for helping this single mom talk about how God made us different.  I lost the chance to teach him something about the beauty of God’s creation, including our bodies.  I failed to step up to the plate.

Today is a great day to be at SCC, because we’re starting a new series called Raising Home Run Kids.  Some of you who think you’re not parents are thinking, “A whole series on parenting!?”  Let me remind you that if you’re not a parent right now, good chances are that you are a grandparent or that you have children in your life in some shape or form (nephews, nieces, cousins).  And then there’s the church.  All of you are spiritual moms and dads if you’re part of SCC.  Fuller Youth Institute, based at Fuller Seminary in southern California, has been running a longitudinal study on youth learning what makes faith “sticky faith.”  In other words, what has to happen for faith to stick in a child as he or she transitions into adulthood.  They found that:

“While most U.S. churches focus on building strong youth groups, teenagers also need to build relationships with adults of all ages…Churches and families wanting to instill deep faith in youth should help them build a web of relationships with committed and caring adults” (Emphasis added).
~Fuller Youth Institute’s “Sticky Faith” Longitudinal study of Youth
(See more at: http://stickyfaith.org/leader/about/press-releases#sthash.bjMAhD4u.dpuf)

So you may not think this series directly applies to you, but I think it does.  I think it does because you are part of the web of relationships that my boys will form as they grow into young men.  Each of you is an essential part of Sarah and my parenting strategy.  But let’s assume for a moment you don’t buy it.  So what do you do when a message series isn’t specific to you?  Here are four things to consider:

1. Don’t drop out (Your presence encourages others who need you).
2. Learn to help others (Enjoy learning about something you may not have chosen to learn about so that you can help others).
3. Pray for those who need it.
4. Invite someone you know who does need it.

So we’ve established that this series isn’t just for parents.  It’s for all of us.  So let’s talk about three ways to step up to the plate when it comes to the children in our lives.

1.     You Are Your Child’s First Coach.

Our theme verse for this series is Proverbs 22:6 NRSV which says:

Train children in the right way,
and when old, they will not stray.
~Proverbs 22:6 NRSV

Let’s talk about some potential pitfalls when it comes to this verse.  This is not a promise, it is wisdom.  Wisdom is ancient psychological research.  Wisdom is what happens most of the time.  But we all know examples of parents who did all the training you could reasonably expect of a parent and whose child exercised the amazing and terrible freedom that God gives each of us: free-will.  And yet, generally speaking, when you train up a child in the right way, when they grow up, they will certainly improvise on that way but they’ll stick to it.

Another research group that has studied what is effective in the faith development of children is Search Institute (By the way, much of what I share today is based not only in the Bible but also confirmed by research).  Search Institute did a big cross-denominational study on the Effectiveness of Christian Education (aka Sunday School, children’s programs, etc.).  What they found was that the biggest influence in the faith formation of children and teenagers is Mom and Dad.  Here’s the results of their study:

Top Positive Faith Influences (Search Institute)

  1. Mother – 64%
  2. Father – 34%
  3. Sunday School – 33%
  4. Spouse – 32%
  5. God’s Presence – 31%
  6. Worship – 30%
  7. Bible – 25%
  8. Prayer – 24%
  9. Love – 22%
  10. Pastor – 21%

Notice how I’m number ten on that list.  Mom and Dad are first.  But not far behind is Sunday School.  That’s a great team.  Parents and Kids Creek together train children in the way they should go.  That raises an interesting question in my mind: What “way” do you want your children to go?  What are you aiming at?  I think most of us are aiming at least at healthy behaviors.  Here’s some good news: church participation predicts healthy behaviors.  Search Institute found that:

“Young people who are religiously active are, on average, 39% less likely to engage in 10 high-risk behavior patterns, especially use of tobacco, illicit drugs, school problems, alcohol abuse, antisocial behavior, and driving and alcohol…In addition, they are, on average, 26% more likely to have 8 indicators of thriving, especially getting good grades in school, resisting danger, maintaining physical health, and leadership.”
~Search Institute

Now that sounds nice and safe.  But I want more!  If I think about it clearly, there are worse things in my mind than sex, drugs, and rock and roll.  More than my kids staying away from “dangerous things,” I want dangerous kids.  I want fully committed followers of Jesus!  I want children who have joined the divine rescue mission to the world! I want kids who love Jesus with everything they’ve got.  I want kids who are dangerous to all that is wrong with the world!  Parents, what are you coaching your children toward?  In order to train your child in this way, parents, you are your child’s first coach.  Not me.  Not Kids Creek Teachers.  You.  Parents are a child’s first coach.  Of course, it’s good to have a team, and we’ll talk about that more in the coming weeks, but today, you are your child’s first coach.

2.  Be a Player First, Coach Second (Be a Christian first, parent second)

Have you ever played a sport and had a coach?  Every sport I’ve ever played had a coach.  And every coach I’ve ever had was a player before he or she was a coach.  Consider some of the great coaches.  Mark Dantonio “attended the University of South Carolina and earned three letters as a defensive back.” Tom Izzo “played guard for the Northern Michigan men’s basketball team. In his senior season, he set a school record for minutes played and was named a Division II All-American.”  Then there’s the best coach of all time: Coach K.  Coach K played basketball under Bob Knight while training at West Point to become an officer in the United States Army. “He was captain of the Army basketball team in his senior season, 1968–69, leading his team to the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) at Madison Square Garden in New York City, where West Point finished fourth in the tournament” (Thank you Wikipedia).

While these coaches were good players, they weren’t perfect star players.  But they were players first before they were coaches.  The same is true of your coaching your children in the faith.  You’ve got to be a player first before you can coach your kids.  You’ve got to be a Christian first before you can coach your kids to become Christians.

Jesus says:

Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.”
~Matthew 6:33 NLT

You may be tempted to put your identity as a parent first.  Resist that temptation.  If you pick parent first, you will lose something.  But if you pick Jesus first, and put parenting second, you will gain both.  I think it could be said that if your identity is primarily in your child, your child will train you rather than you training your child!  So here’s some training questions for you today from your pastor coach:

  1. What are your personal spiritual H.A.B.I.T.S?  (H.A.B.I.T.S. is an acronym for basic spiritual practices that we all need to develop: Hanging out with God and Hospitality; Authenticity in Small Groups; Bible Reading and Memorization; Involvement with the Church and Inviting; Tithing and Stewarding God’s Money; and Serving the Church, Community, and World).
  2. Have you developed a personal spiritual growth plan for yourself? (Consider the 3 Simple Rules: Do No Harm, Do Good, and Stay in Love with God.  What intentional steps are you taking under each of those “rules” to grow as a better “player”?)
  3. Are you investing time in other significant relationships/friendships, particularly your spouse?  Do you set time aside from parenting to nurture your marriage?  Do you set time aside from marriage to nurture your friendships?  Friendships support your marriage and your marriage is ground zero for your parenting.  If you neglect the significant relationships in your life, there’s no way you will be a healthy player first to be able to be a healthy coach to your kids.  Your kids need you to spend time on your marriage and friendships.  (Of course you can take this and any other important thing overboard.)

If you want to coach your kids to follow Jesus, then you’ve got to be a player first yourself.  Follow Jesus first yourself.

3.  Get Your Family in the Game (Family Faith Practices Matter)

There’s a crucial point in the story of Israel, when God’s People are tempted to begin following other gods.  Joshua, the leader of Israel following Moses, stands up and says:

But if you refuse to serve the Lord, then choose today whom you will serve. Would you prefer the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates? Or will it be the gods of the Amorites in whose land you now live? But as for me and my family, we will serve the Lord.
~Joshua 24:15 NLT

Joshua is picking his team and getting his whole family in the game.  How do you get your family in the game?  What are family faith practices you can do at home?  What are family faith H.A.B.I.T.S.?  The answer to this question is almost limitless, but I want to focus on three today that we practice in our home.  Let me clarify.  These are practices that we aim at but we’re not batting 1.000.  But we are definitely far above .500.

1.       Family Prayer & Bible Reading

Before we go to bed each night, we gather together and pray the Lord’s Prayer as a family.  The Lord’s Prayer was probably the first long text Micah had memorized (the next was probably Psalm 23).  Then while I’m laying in Bed with Micah, we reach from a Children’s version of the Psalms and a children’s Bible (I’m kind of a children’s Bible snob and the version we use is no longer in print.  What I like about it is that it’s not a paraphrase of the Bible, but it’s an actual children’s translation of selected stories.  It’s gritty and sometimes makes me a squirm a little reading the real stories to my children.  But I like that it makes no attempt to sanitize the stories.  The stories of the Bible aren’t just simple clean morality stories.  Sometimes they are meant to be wrestled with amidst other Christians.  The closest I’ve found to the Bible we use that is currently in print can be found here.)  After we read the Bible we take a couple of moments to ask what made us happy and what made us sad from the day.  We then thank God for what made us happy and we ask for help with what made us sad.  That’s it.  Easy.  Simple.  Children’s Psalms.  Children’s Bible.  Happy.  Sad.  Prayer. (I should add that between the Children’s Bible and the Happy/Sad/Prayer almost always comes a book about dinosaurs.)

2.       Family worship

The second family practice is regular corporate worship attendance.  Do you attend worship regularly?  What about when you can’t attend?  Do you gather with a local or online church when you’re on vacation?  Do you prioritize worship involvement over extracurricular activities?  One year one of the teenagers I was baptizing ended up with a conflict.  His sports camp began on Sunday morning when he was scheduled to be baptized.  He had a conflict here.  I told him that I would baptize him on another day, but that I would recommend telling his coach that he was being baptized that Sunday and would show up at camp late.  He was worried that it would cause his coach to think he wasn’t committed.  Turns out that he chose baptism over his sports camp, told his coach, and his coach was so impressed that he asked him to share with the sports camp why he was late and why he was being baptized!  It became a moment to share his faith.  Wow!

Now I’m not a purist about this issue.  We do have a vision here at SCC to have seven satellites in seven venues on seven days of the week: 7 – 7 – 7.  You’ve hit the jackpot at SCC!  So if you can’t get your Sunday on Sunday, get your Sunday on Monday @ Church in a Diner.  Can’t make it on Sunday or Monday?  Then get your Sunday on Saturday  @ Riverview or Trinity.  I often go to one of these mega church Saturday services just so I can worship without being in charge of anything.  And I bring my kids with me!  Or you can’t do Saturday, Sunday, or Monday.  Then get your Sunday on the first Tuesdays @ The Loft, Crossroad’s Church in a Bar downtown (yes, they stole our “Church in a Diner” idea and just made it sexier in a bar downtown).

The National Study of Youth and Religion found that:

“On average, adolescent religious service attendance declines over time, related to major life course transitions such as becoming employed, leaving home, and initiating sexual activity. Parents’ affiliation and attendance, on the other hand, are protective factors against decreasing attendance…The religious context within the home, however, is also an important buffer against declining rates of attendance. Parental religiosity predicts a smaller decrease in religious service attendance over time.”
(http://youthandreligion.nd.edu/assets/124513/hardie_pearce_denton_2013.pdf)

Want your kids to attend worship as they grow into adults?  How’s your worship attendance?

3.       Family Faith Conversations

Do you talk about faith at home?  Do your kids know how you became a Christian? Do your kids know how God has worked in your life in the past? Do your kids know how God is working in your life right now? Do your kids know how faith impacts your finances? Do your kids know what you believe and why?  One way we begin faith conversations at our home is through a set of cards we keep on our table called Faith Talk Cards.  We used to try to do this at dinner, but for some reason it didn’t work very well.  So we moved this practice to breakfast.  At breakfast most mornings we pull out the Faith Talk Cards, and Micah pulls out one or more cards.  The cards have questions on them or faith conversation starters.  Micah loves it.  He often gets to answer the question too.

Get your family in the game by taking time to read the Bible with your kids and pray with your kids.  Get your family in the game by attending worship together regularly.  Get your family in the game by having family faith conversations.

Train children in the right way,
and when old, they will not stray.
~Proverbs 22:6 NRSV

What is “the way” you are training your child?  Do you have to be perfect?  No.  Dave Stone, a pastor and author, says, “God is more concerned with your direction than he is with your perfection.”  But if you don’t think intentionally about it, then it’s unlikely that you’ll have moments like this:

My oldest Son Micah, has a stuffed animal puppy he’s named Huckle.  Huckle is always doing whatever we’re doing.  Huckle is currently building church.  Or Huckle is in a band and plays the drums.  Or Huckle is cooking dinner tonight.  Or Huckle is doing chores and getting paid for them.  The other day, Micah told us that when Huckle does his chores and saves up his money, he wants to give the money to Nicaragua and Compassion Closet!  Now where did Huckle come up with that idea?  You know.  He came up with it because Micah (and Huckle) attend Sycamore Creek Church, and SCC gives us opportunities as parents to participate in things like Nicaragua medical missions and collecting items for Compassion Closet.  Micah is being coached by his parents and by his church in the way he should go, and when he is older, it’s my prayer (and I think it’s your prayer too) that he would be dangerous to all that is wrong with the world because he’s faithfully following Jesus.  Church, thank you for helping Sarah and me coach our child.  Thank you for helping us step up to the plate.  Now are you ready to step up to the plate too?

Mothers Give More than Money

Not So Random Acts of Giving
Not So Random Acts of Giving – Mothers Give More than Money
Sycamore Creek Church
May 13, 2012 (Mother’s Day)
Tom Arthur

Peace Friends!

I’m a new parent.  I have a seventeen month old.  Like every good parent, we occasionally dress him up in our alma mater, Wheaton, which has me thinking.  How am I going to pay for college?  How am I going to prepare for his future financially?  Micah’s godparents gave us a jumpstart on this by contributing to a college savings account.  So on his first birthday and first Christmas, we asked family to give to this college savings account rather than give him lots of gifts. 

But along the way, I’ve also been thinking a lot about how to intentionally teach Micah about God’s plan for money.  He’s got a lot to learn to not end up in the same boat as a lot of college students.  According to creditcards.com, the average household carries almost $16,000 in credit card debt.  In 2008 half of undergraduates had at least four credit cards, up from 43 percent in 2004 and 32 percent in 2000.  (Source: Sallie Mae, “How Undergraduate Students Use Credit Cards,” April 2009).  The average college student graduates with almost $20,000 in debt, and average credit card debt has increased 47 percent between 1989 and 2004 for 25- to 34-year-olds and 11 percent for 18- to 24-year-olds. Nearly one in five 18- to 24-year-olds is in “debt hardship,” up from 12 percent in 1989. (Source: Demos.org, “The Economic State of Young America,” May 2008).  According to USA Today, the average undergraduate carried $3,173 in credit card debt.  Yikes!  How can we all help teach our children to live differently?  We talk a lot about how to live differently when it comes to money, but rarely do we talk about how to intentionally teach our children how to live differently.  Thankfully the Bible has some principles that can guide us.

An old Methodist way of summarizing what the Bible teaches about money is to say make all you can, save all you can, and give all you can.  What I’d like to do today is walk through each of these and ask how we can intentionally teach our children how to live the way the Bible teaches.

Make All You Can

Lazy people are soon poor; hard workers get rich. 

A wise youth harvests in the summer, but one who sleeps during harvest is a disgrace.
Proverbs 10:4-5 NLT

For the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil
1 Timothy 6:10 NLT

The Bible is clear that providing a living for yourself, your family, and your community is an important part of being human.  We aren’t made to lounge around in leisure all day long.  The question is, how do you teach your children to “make all they can” while at the same time not to fall into the love of money?

Over the past week I interviewed several different moms to see how they intentionally taught their children how to live into God’s plan for their money. Here are some of the ideas I heard along with a couple from Larry Burkett’s book, Financial Parenting.

Kris Richards’ family gives their children—Noah, Elise, and Lindsay—a commission on doing housework.  While there are some things everyone is required to do and not get paid for (like clearing the dishes from the table), they have a list of things that need to be done (trash, kitty litter, etc.) and they are required to do it to get paid.  If they don’t do it, they don’t get paid, but they are still required to do it!  Kris also provides several other opportunities around the house to do various projects to get paid. 

Marilyn Mannino got her daughter, Miranda, involved in 4H at a very young age.  Miranda was seeing other friends raise animals, take them to auction, and get paid at the end of it.  Miranda began with chickens and then progressed on to hogs.  She was required to pay all the expenses to feed and house the hogs. 

Sarah Arthur, my wife, grew up with parents who were in no hurry to have her find a job.  They encouraged her to be creative and enjoy time with family and friends, especially spending time outside.  They grew up without a TV so they weren’t wasting their time inside, but they also weren’t driven to get a job just so they could buy more stuff.  Eventually Sarah did get a job, but it wasn’t until her later teens. 

Larry Burkett recommends thinking of the family as a community.  There are certain benefits that one receives by being a part of a community, and there are certain responsibilities.  He suggests not tying too closely together those benefits (allowance) and responsibilities (chores).  Both are expected.  At the same time, he suggests hanging up a list of extra projects that can be done to earn money (e.g., mow the yard – $20).  These extra projects allow kids a chance to be assertive in making some extra money on top of their allowance. 

Save All You Can 

Know the state of your flocks, and put your heart into caring for your herds, for riches don’t last forever, and the crown might not be secure for the next generation.
Proverbs 27:23-24 NLT

Unless you’re part of 4H or live on the farm, you probably don’t have to teach your kids about flocks and herds, but you do have to teach them about how income and expenses come and go.   Here we’re talking about teaching your children how to live simply, save, and budget. 

Kris Richards has a three-envelope budgeting system with her children: giving, savings, and spending.  When they are given their “commission” each week, they put part of it in each of these three envelopes.  The kids have over time saved up hundreds of dollars.  When I asked her what they were saving it for, she didn’t have a specific thing, but imagined that it would probably be used for a car some day in the not so distant future (Noah and Elise are both thirteen).  Kris also mentioned that her kids can sometimes get focused on stuff.  They notice fancy new cars in their neighbors’ driveways and in-ground pools in their backyards.  Kris and her husband, Brian, often remind them that these things are probably bought on a lease or debt.  

Marilyn Mannino has had a hard time with this over the years because her husband doesn’t like to budget.  While they live simply and have paid off all their debts, and save to buy for cars, they have always made a comfortable living and haven’t needed the discipline of a budget.  At the same time, she has found it important to try to teach her children about budgeting.  Her son, Joe, wanted to go to prom this year.  So they put an envelope in his drawer and began contributing to it weekly.  They had to plan ahead because the tickets were so much and only sold at certain dates. 

Sarah Arthur’s parents gave Sarah and her sister comparative huge allowances each month because they gave them money for all their monthly expenses: lunch money, clothing, school supplies, entertainment, etc.  They were required to budget this money and make it last.  If they ran out, that was too bad.  They’d have to find a way to make it to next month’s allowance and plan better.  Also, when Sarah did begin working, her parents required her to pay a certain percentage (about 15%) for “room and board.”  She was expected to contribute to the household.  What she didn’t know was that her parents were setting that aside and when she got married, they gave it to her as a gift. 

Larry Burkett suggests beginning with a basic budget like Kris Richards’ family: give, save, spend.  As the children grow older, this budget should get more complex and become more and more like real life.  Burkett even suggests as they become teenagers to institute a household “tax” of 5%.  This money then goes in a community fund that the family decides together how to spend.  This helps them realize and learn about taxes and making financial decisions with a community of people.  Perhaps, one of Burkett’s more startling ideas is that as teenagers get older, they should be given a supervised opportunity to run the family finances for six months.  He likens it to teaching kids how to drive. 

Give All You Can

 Remember this — a farmer who plants only a few seeds will get a small crop. But the one who plants generously will get a generous crop. You must each make up your own mind as to how much you should give. Don’t give reluctantly or in response to pressure. For God loves the person who gives cheerfully. And God will generously provide all you need. Then you will always have everything you need and plenty left over to share with others.
2 Corinthians 9:6-8 NLT
 

If you sow generously by giving generously, then you’ll reap generously.  But if you’re a scrooge with your money, then you won’t receive many blessing back either.  I don’t think the Bible is always talking about financial blessings here.  Giving generously and cheerfully nurtures a kind of joy and freedom that is priceless.  So how do families intentionally teach their children how to be generous?  Back to our moms. 

Marilyn shared about how she tries to model it.  This is a little tricky at times because she and her husband aren’t always in agreement on this, so she tithes from her own income.  In this way she models it for her kids. 

Kris makes this part of each child’s budget.  She says it’s not hard for them to give joyfully because they began young.  It was all given to them freely in the first place, so why get upset when they’ve always been required to put aside 10%?  Because an offering isn’t taken in the youth gathering (something we’ll explore changing!), Noah and Elise both give their portion to their younger sister, Lindsay, to give in Kids Creek.  

Sarah described how her parents never complained about what they weren’t being able to buy because of their tithing.  She remembers driving with someone one time and hearing this person wistfully comment about a big house they were driving by, “If I hadn’t tithed my whole life, maybe I could have afforded a house like that.”  This way of thinking was foreign to her.  Sarah has also watched her parents be generous with us.  Two times they have given us interest free loans: when we bought a house to make some upgrades, and when we had our son to buy a new car.  In both ways they were able to give generously not just to church but to their family because they were living simply.  I recently wrote them a note thanking them for their generosity and telling them that when I grow up I want to be generous just like them. 

Larry Burkett points out that sometimes children who are natural savers need to be encouraged to spend their money.  Hoarding isn’t a biblical idea.  The Bible teaches that money is for living and giving.  One wonderful reminder that Burkett gives parents is that savings can also be used by children to give generously to the needs of others.  Giving is one way of “spending” savings. 

Changed Lives

What would our church look like if all our parents were teaching their kids about God’s plan for money?  If parents intentionally taught their children God’s plan for money, I think that we would be a seriously counter cultural community that would have several distinctive features: 

First, we’d be a community full of families living in peace.  Imagine not having arguments about money.  Imagine not being torn about whether to pay this bill or that bill.  Marilyn described the conflict in her family growing up because of money issues.  It was what motivated her to live differently so that her children didn’t have to live with the same kind of stress. 

Second, we’d be an attractive community.  If all our families were living full of peace about finances, how long would it take before our friends, extended families, and neighbors began to notice and be curious about what was making this peace possible?  Not long.  Sharing our faith is most effective when it comes from a place of transformation. 

Third, we’d have more integrity in our own financial dealings.  It’s said that teaching is learning twice.  If all our families began intentionally teaching children how to handle money, they just might begin living into those principles more fully themselves.  Kris said that this already happens for her.  Her children are reminders of what they have taught them about living differently. 

Fourth, we as a community could be more generous with our church, community, and world.  We could reach out and touch more lives.  We could meet more needs.  A generous church is generous because it is made up of generous families. 

So what’s your plan?  How will you intentionally teach your children about God’s plan for money?  Don’t have a plan? Then set aside some time this week to make a plan.  Or check out the resources listed below.  Let me pray for you in that effort. 

Creator God, all that we have is yours to begin with.  Help us to be good stewards of those gifts, and help us to be good stewards of the children that you have given us.  Help us to intentionally teach them your plan for money.  May it be so in our lives in the name of your son, Jesus Christ. Amen. 

Further Resources

www.daveramsey.com (Brian and Kris Richards – 393-6107)
Financial Parenting by Larry Burkett and Rick Osborn
Share, Save, Spend Money Discussion Cards by Vibrant Faith Ministries

Small Group Discussion Questions

Each week we provide discussion questions for small groups that meet regularly to discuss the message for the week.  Want to find a small group to join?  Email Mark Aupperlee – m_aupperlee@hotmail.com

 How are you intentionally teaching your children or how did your parents intentionally teach you to…

1. Make money in honest ways?
2. Budget, save, and live simply?
3. Give generously and cheerfully?
4. What helpful resources are you familiar with for family finances?

Not So Random Acts of Giving – Begins this Sunday

Not So Random Acts of Giving

If you want to get better at anything, what’s the best way to do it?  Wait for random opportunities or create a plan?  The answer is obvious.  The same is true about the way that we handle our money.  God wants us to give generously.  So what’s the best way to go about growing in our generosity?  Waiting for random opportunities or creating a plan?  The answer is obvious.  Join us for a two-week series where we explore God’s plan for growing your faith and love by intentional giving.

May 13, 2012 – Mother’s Give More than Money

May 20, 2012 – Big Dreams and Bold Prayers (Commitment Sunday Annual Pledge)

Audio Downloads

Meeting at Lansing Christian School
3405 Belle Chase Way
Lansing, MI 48911
517-394-6100

Sunday Worship & Nursery – 9:30 AM & 11:15 AM
Kid’s Creek and StuREV – 11:15AM

Map

French Parenting at the Table

Bringing Up Bebe

As the father of a sixteen-month-old, I found this video and suggestions very helpful.

Sacred Parenting by Gary Thomas

Sacred ParentingSacred Parenting
By
Gary Thomas
Library (
Book)
Rating: 9 of 10

Sacred Parenting isn’t your average parenting book.  It’s actually not  a parenting book at all.  You’ll be disappointed if you’re looking for advice or counsel on how to parent better.  What this book is about is how parenting itself is a spiritual discipline that shapes and forms the life of the parent.  Gary Thomas says, “Raising children surely serves as a masterful school of spiritual formation” (212).

In the midst of learning to be a new parent (my son is now eight months old!), this book is exactly what I needed (and probably will continue to need over and over again as Micah grows).  I am a pretty structured person.  I like rhythms.  I like my morning and days to come and go in a predictable manner.  My own spiritual life is like that too.  I have set aside time to pray, read, study, be silent, and so on.  Having a new child has messed that rhythm up.  At first I found myself asking, “How can I find time to pray and be a new dad too?”  What Thomas reminds us is that parenting is itself a spiritual discipline like prayer.

Each chapter of the book highlights a particular way that parenting forms us.  For example, chapter two is about “how raising children teaches us to value character and service over comfort.”  Chapter seven is about “how raising children teaches us to handle anger”, and chapter nine is about “how raising kids teaches patience, long-suffering, and perseverance.”  Ouch!  Aren’t these the character qualities I’m seeking though prayer?  Absolutely.

Throughout the entire book Thomas reminds we parents again and again that these children are not our children.  They are God’s children on loan to us.  Our job as parents is not to make parenting as easy as possible for us but to nurture the discipline to make the sacrifices needed to raise our children to become who God has called them to become.  The last chapter was particularly moving to me.  Thomas quotes C.J. Mahaney saying, “The purpose of my life is to prepare [my son] for his death” (211).  Wow!  That truth will certainly change the way I approach parenting, and will change me too.

Currently Reading/Listening
Generation to Generation
by Edwin H. Friedman
The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ
by Phillip Pullman
Love Wins
by Rob Bell
Exponential
by Dave and Jon Ferguson
The Busy Family’s Guide to Spirituality
by David Robinson
Parenting with Purpose
by Oddbjorn Evenshaug, Dag Hallen, and Roland Martinson
At the Still Point
compiled by Sarah Arthur
Caleb’s Crossing
by Geraldine Brooks
Ignite
by Nelson Searcy

Why Mothers Need Their Sleep

A word to the wise…