Family

Introduction

Why a family resource page?  It has been often said that the family is the most important institution in the nation.  But never has this sentiment been as greatly emphasized in our history as a nation than now in recent times.  Indeed, the family is the most important institution because it is the first environment to which every person is exposed; it is the primary influence of a person, especially in his early formative years.  And failure of the family to influence and mould the child positively has contributed to the moral and ethical breakdown of societies.  Even the expert opinions of sociologists and psychologists point to the truth of this statement.  Counselors and mental health workers increasingly have to rely on Family Therapy to deal with the problems of the clients, seeing as how many adult conflicts and problems are actually conflicts and problems not resolved in youth within the family.  Of course, it is not surprising to find such delinquency and immaturity in the world.  And sadly, it is not surprising to find such worldliness and worldly problems in the church, as families capitulate their God-given rights.  More than ever, there is need for a family resource page, where families can be encouraged and taught to raise up Godly homes and to revive the Covenant family.  

And one of the main emphases of this resource page is on the subject and discipline of Family Worship.  According to the Westminster Directory of Family Worship, we are told that “BESIDES the publick worship in congregations, mercifully established in this land in great purity, it is expedient and necessary that secret worship of each person alone, and private worship of families, be pressed and set up; that, with national reformation, the profession and power of godliness, both personal and domestick, be advanced.”  Herein, it is suggested that national and ecclesiastical revival finds its genesis in the home.  And this is biblical. 

The theological foundations of family worship is in Deuteronomy 4:9,10 where believers are told to “keep thy soul diligently…[and to]…teach them thy sons, and thy sons’ sons when the Lord said unto me, Gather me the people together, and I will make them hear my words, that they may learn to fear me all the days that they shall live upon the earth, and that they may teach their children.” 

It is also in Deuteronomy 6:4-7 where the words which God had commanded believers should be taught diligently to their children, that they should “talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.”  The chief Christian educators of our children are their parents, who have been given this sacred duty.

Psalm 78:2-7 also teaches this, especially when it says regarding the law “which he commanded our fathers, that they should make them known to their children: that the generation to come might know them, even the children which should be born, who should arise and declare them to their children: that they might set their hope in God, and not forget the works of God, but keep his commandments.” 

According to Dr Joel Beeke, “Every church desires growth. Surprisingly few churches, however, seek to promote internal church growth by stressing the need to raise children in covenantal truth. Few seriously grapple with why many adolescents become nominal members with mere notional faith or abandon evangelical truth for unbiblical doctrine and modes of worship. I believe one major reason for this failure is the lack of stress upon family worship. In many churches and homes family worship is an optional thing, or at most a superficial exercise such as a brief table grace before meals. Consequently, many children grow up with no experience or impression of Christian faith and worship as a daily reality.”

“Would we see revival among our children? Let us remember that God often uses the restoration of family worship to usher in church revival. For example, the 1677 church covenant of the Puritan congregation in Dorchester, Massachusetts, included the commitment ‘to reform our families, engaging ourselves to a conscientious care to set before us and to maintain the worship of God in them; and to walk in our houses with perfect hearts in a faithful discharge of all domestic duties, educating, instructing, and charging our children and households to keep the ways of the Lord.’”

Douglas Kelly says that “Family religion, which depends not a little on the household head daily leading the family before God in worship, is one of the most powerful structures that the covenant-keeping God has given for the expansion of redemption through the generations, so that countless multitudes may be brought into communion with and worship” of God. 

So may these resources help all Lifers to build up their families in the fear and admonition of the Lord; that Family Worship would not be an optional exercise but a time of day and activity well-sought after by Godly parents and children.  Amen.

Family Devotions

By Rev Charles Seet
(Preached at Life BPC, 8am service, 11 June 2000)

Text: Deuteronomy 11:16-19

It is a joy and privilege once again to be able to bring the Word of God to all of you. We have been doing a series of studies on Strengthening the Christian Home. And our topic for today is Family Devotions. Family devotion is also called family worship or the family altar. Whatever term we use, it refers to the family's practice of devotion to God, as distinguished from the individual's devotion to the Lord. Before we learn the steps of having family worship, it would be useful for us to ask why devotion should be a family matter at all. We all know from the Scriptures that the Christian faith is based on a personal relationship with God. No one is saved merely by being born into a Christian family. Salvation and devotion must be personal, and each of us must ensure that we know Christ personally and are walking with Him.

 

However, the scriptures also teach that there is a familial aspect to devotion. In an earlier message we had seen that many of the promises given in the Scriptures deal with families. For instance, when God made the promise to Abraham, He said, "And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." (Genesis 12:3) When Peter delivered his first gospel sermon at Pentecost, he proclaimed: 'Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call.' (Acts 2:38,39)

When Paul and Silas brought the Gospel message to their Philippian jailer, they said to him, 'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house.' Earlier on in the same chapter (vv.14,15) another family was saved - that of Lydia, a seller of a purple dye from Thyatira. The Lord opened her heart when the Apostle Paul preached the gospel, and she and her household (family) were baptized. Her house thus became the meeting place of the first church at Philippi. It is because of the fact that the promise of God is extended to families and, that household baptisms are recorded in the NT, that we practise infant baptism in our church. We believe that baptism is a sign of the covenant that God has made with His people, a covenant to bless not just individuals but their families as well.

And our part in this covenant is to build our families in godliness, to cultivate Christian homes that are faithful to the Covenant, or what we will call 'Covenant homes.' Why use this term? Because it is common to hear people today saying that they come from a "Christian home", and what is commonly understand by this is that all or most of the family members profess to be Christians. But one can have a Christian home and yet not have a covenant home. And therefore we want our homes not be only be Christian homes but Covenant homes as well.

The Covenant home is a home that has at least 3 characteristics: It is firstly a home where the father, mother, sons and daughters are all growing in their love and commitment to Christ. Secondly it is a home where all family members look to God for help whenever they have to deal with any problem or difficult situation in life. And thirdly it is a home where family members praise and thank God for His daily blessings. But how can such a home be realized? It cannot come about without effort. Effort must be made to cultivate love and devotion to God in every member of the home.

This morning we want to deal in detail with how to do this by having regular family devotions. If we understand the covenant concept- that it applies not just to the individual believer, but to the believer's family, then having family devotions would be the logical outworking of that concept. In the passage of scripture that we read awhile ago from Deuteronomy 11:16-19, we see some steps that Israel was commanded to take in order to maintain their devotion of God.

The first step is mentioned in v.16 - "Take heed to yourselves, that your heart be not deceived, and ye turn aside, and serve other gods, and worship them;" The Israelites were to be careful not to be deceived into idol worship, because the environment that they were going to have shortly, was an idolatrous one. The Canaanites worships many different gods and Israel was told to be careful to destroy all of them - every shrine, altar and idols had to be eradicated from their living environment.

The second step is mentioned in vv. 18,19 - "Therefore shall ye lay up these My words in your heart and in your soul, and bind them for a sign upon your hand, that they may be as frontlets between your eyes.  And ye shall teach them your children, speaking of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, when thou liest down, and when thou risest  up."

Here the Israelites were told to keep the Word of God well and impart it to their children. They were told to take the initiative to communicate the Word of God in their homes, whether it was at times when they were sitting down to eat with their family, or walking, lying down to rest or rising.

From these verses, we can derive two basic steps for our family devotions: The first step is to Provide a home environment that is conducive for Family Devotions. Although there may be no idols or altars to other gods in our homes, we are going to see that there are many things in the home environment that can gravely affect our family's devotion to God. The second step is to Prepare to Lead in Family Devotions. We need to lay up God's Word in our hearts and teach them to our children regularly and consistently. Let us begin with the first step:

I. Provide a Home Environment that Is Conducive for Family Devotions

The home environment very often turns out to be the most important influence in a person's life. But unfortunately today, we are witnessing the invasion of the home environment by the world. The Christian home today faces powerful influences from the world. And we cannot close our eyes and pretend that these strong influences are not there.

Now, you may ask, 'How do these influences get into our homes?' Through the various media that are found in every household: The television, the radio, the internet, CD or cassette player, books, magazines, journals, newspapers, pictures and posters on the walls and even calendars. Now all of these can be very useful to us, and keep us informed about what is going on around us.

We cannot afford to live in the world today without being informed through the various channels of media available to us. But if we are not careful about regulating what we allow these media to bring into our homes, then our home environment could very well influence our children to think, feel, speak and act the way the world does, instead of the way they should. All our efforts at having family devotions would then be a waste of time and effort, because the world which comes right into our homes through all these media speaks to them with a louder voice. Covenant homes must be guarded from becoming such an environment - so filled with the world that God is crowded out of them.

Dearly beloved, what kind of music pervades your homes from the radios, tapes and CDs players that you have? What kind of decorations and pin ups do you have on the walls of your home? What kind of books and magazines do you fill your  bookshelves and magazine racks with? And what kind of television programmes get air time in your home environment? Remember that all of these will make a deeper impression on your children and even on yourself, than you think. As adult believers we should be able to discern between what is good and what is bad, but we need to understand that the mind of a child is like a sponge: it will soak in most of what it hears, sees and reads.

What then can we do about this? I would like to suggest three things we can do, in order to provide a home environment that is conducive for Family devotions: Firstly, carefully regulate what the media brings into your homes. Assess the songs that are played and the programs on TV; assess the reading material that are lying around the house: are they going to have a destructive influence? Choose only those songs and programs that will not teach the wrong kind of principles and values to your children. Be selective when you buy books, comics, magazines and even games for your children. Quickly review each one of them. Monitor the websites that get accessed on your home computer.

You need to function like a censorship board to prevent minds from being polluted and poisoned by the filth that is being communicated through the media today in the name of freedom of expression. Remove whatever pictures or reading material that communicate undesirable values and attitudes from your home. If you are not sure how to decide, just think: If Christ were to come into my home, what material would I want to remove?

Secondly, be ready to give your child the right perspective they should have on the world's standards and values. Inevitably, you cannot stop all of the world's influence from coming in some way or other. But you can teach your child to choose what is good and to reject what is bad. How do you do this? You can do this by expressing your own comments and remarks on what they see, hear and read in the media. Sometimes your child may ask you, 'Daddy what do you think of this?' Well you don't have to wait for them to ask this. Just indicate your approval or disapproval appropriately, but always immediately if you want to have the best impact.

Thirdly, fill your home with books, magazines, tapes and pictures that are educational and edifying, and that communicate the right attitudes and values. You can drown out the world's influence in your home simply by increasing the output from good and enriching media. And if you want to do even better than that, then get Christian books, tapes, magazines, games, posters, and calendars for your home. Invite Christians to your home as guests. This will teach your children to prefer the company of believers. In all these things, your objective is to create a home environment that is conducive for cultivating devotion to the Lord, and for enhancing the time you spend together in family devotion.

Having seen the first step in having family devotions we can now proceed to the second step which is to:

II. Prepare to Lead in Family Devotions

Some may say, "We don't have time for family devotions, and anyway our children can learn God's Word when they go to Sunday School." Well it is true that God's Word is powerful and effective when taught by any person. But a tremendous difference can be made in a child's life by whom the child learns the Scripture from. A child is more likely to remember and regard principles and values when they are taught to him by his parents than when they are taught to him by his Sunday School teacher. To hear the same truths from the lips of one's parents adds assurance, confidence and familiarity to the child in what he learns.

I thank God that I was taught Basic Bible truths by my parents when I was a little child - 3-4 years old. If you are a parent or plan to be parent, please remember this. It is most important that you make time to have devotions with your family. No matter how busy you are, you need to do this. A story is told about a young man who stood at the bar of a court of justice to be sentenced for forgery. The judge had known this man from the time he was a child, because this man's father had been a famous lawyer. 'Do you remember your father?' asked the judge sternly, 'that father whom you have disgraced?' The young man answered, 'I remember him perfectly. When I went to him for advice or companionship, he would look up from his work and say, 'Run away boy, I am busy. My father finished his work, and here I am.' That famous lawyer had neglected his son, with awful results.

Please do not let this happen in your own family. If you are a parent, remember that you have an important duty to your children: The duty of inculcating moral and spiritual values in them, as well as healthy spiritual habits: Your children must learn from you how to love God and His Word, how to do basic things like giving thanks at mealtimes and at bedtime, and also how to do their quiet time. Remember that you are your children's spiritual leader or mentor, seeking to bring them to faith in Jesus Christ. And one of your duties as a Christian parent is to have regular family devotions.

Now, those who have not had family devotions before, like newly wed couples or new parents many may not know exactly how to have a family devotion. For their benefit I would like to spend the rest of our time dealing with the way to conduct family worship. These points are taken from Dr. SH Tow. First of all --

A. Some Practical Considerations:

1.  Find a Place: Your sitting lounge or some convenient place. (The dining table)

2.  Find a time: 'No Time' is no good excuse! (We used to have it at bedtime, but now find that meal time is better.)

3.  Find a Leader: Father, mother, or some mature leader.

4.  Find a Song: Be a singing Christian, not a sinning Christian! (The book "Every Home a Godly Home" is designed for providing to provide resources for Family devotions.)

5.  Read a Bible Passage: Read together a portion of God's Word. Use RPG or some daily Guide. (There are some books in our bookroom that provide material for family worship: Jim Cromarty, A Book for Family Worship, A Book of Family Reading, vols. 1-3. These are useful for older children. If you have younger children, you could use the booklet "Questions and Answers on Eternal Life" that is published by our church.) Apply the portion of God's Word to some situation in life.

6.  Pray together: God hears and answers prayer. 'Men ought always to pray and not to faint' (Luke 18:1). Seek God's blessings for the family, for the church, for friends and loved ones.

7.  Enjoy fellowship. As believers, we have fellowship one with another, and with God the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ (1 John 1:3). What a blessed fellowship!

B. Some Advice:

1.  Do not be too ambitious. This is not a formal full-scale worship service. 10 minutes is quite good. Remember that we want to train our children to love worshipping God, not to dread it. Don't make elaborate plans.

2.  Don't hurry. Everyone is bound to be busy and wanting to hurry off for something: to do housework, homework, to get ready for a meeting or appointment. Why is it important not to hurry? Because it is more important to have Quality time than just to get over with the family worship time.

3.  Remove all distractions so that there will be full attention: Turn off the TV or sound system. Put away toys. Leave phone off the hook. No one should leave unless there is a good reason. No one should be talking or whispering to one another.

4.  Variety is important. - Strict discipline is good, but there is no need to be too rigid. On some days you can spend more time on Bible reading than on other things. On other days you can spend more time singing, or praying. Do whatever your children will be interested in doing. Sing songs that are familiar to your children - eg short choruses. This will help them to look forward to having family devotions.

5.  Get everyone to participate. Eg. Prayer time - assign items to each member of the family. Encourage children to ask questions and to tell how they feel about God, about church and Sunday School. If someone in the family can play the piano or guitar. Encourage him to provide some accompaniment for singing.

6.  Use the Question and Answer Method to Teach. E.g. using the booklet 'Questions and Answers on Eternal life' printed by our church. Do one question a day. Read through the answer the first time round and explain the meaning. The next time, just ask the question and get the child to answer. Give each child a turn to answer the question. Some memorization projects: Books of OT, Books of NT, Ten commandments, Lord's Prayer. verses: Jn 3:16, Jn 14:6, Ps 23

This evening we have seen two steps to having Family Devotions. The first is to Provide a Home Environment that Is Conducive for Family Devotions, and the second is to Prepare to Lead in Family Devotions. And finally, when we have done all that we possibly can, we still need to commit our family to the Lord's hands, and pray that He will guide all family members in the right direction. Let us be faithful to do our part then, while we trust in the Lord to do His part.

Duties of Parents

 By J. C. Ryle (1816-1900)

 Part 1 of 3

"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6)

I suppose that most professing Christians are acquainted with the text at the head of this page. The sound of it is probably familiar to your ears, like an old tune. It is likely you have heard it, or read it, talked of it, or quoted it, many a time. Is it not so?

But, after all, how little is the substance of this text regarded! The doctrine it contains appears scarcely known, the duty it puts before us seems fearfully seldom practised. Reader, do I not speak the truth?

It cannot be said that the subject is a new one. The world is old, and we have the experience of nearly six thousand years to help us. We live in days when there is a mighty zeal for education in every quarter. We hear of new schools rising on all sides. We are told of new systems, and new books for the young, of every sort and description. And still for all this, the vast majority of children are manifestly not trained in the way they should go, for when they grow up to man’s estate, they do not walk with God.

Now how shall we account for this state of things? The plain truth is, the Lord’s commandment in our text is not regarded; and therefore the Lord’s promise in our text is not fulfilled.

Reader, these things may well give rise to great searchings of heart. Suffer then a word of exhortation from a minister, about the right training of children. Believe me, the subject is one that should come home to every conscience, and make every one ask himself the question, "Am I in this matter doing what I can?"

It is a subject that concerns almost all. There is hardly a household that it does not touch. Parents, nurses, teachers, godfathers, godmothers, uncles, aunts, brothers, sisters,—all have an interest in it. Few can be found, I think, who might not influence some parent in the management of his family, or affect the training of some child by suggestion or advice. All of us, I suspect, can do something here, either directly or indirectly, and I wish to stir up all to bear this in remembrance.

It is a subject, too, on which all concerned are in great danger of coming short of their duty. This is pre-eminently a point in which men can see the faults of their neighbours more clearly than their own. They will often bring up their children in the very path which they have denounced to their friends as unsafe. They will see motes in other men’s families, and overlook beams in their own. They will be quick sighted as eagles in detecting mistakes abroad, and yet blind as bats to fatal errors which are daily going on at home. They will be wise about their brother’s house, but foolish about their own flesh and blood. Here, if anywhere, we have need to suspect our own judgment. This, too, you will do well to bear in mind.

Come now, and let me place before you a few hints about right training. God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Ghost bless them, and make them words in season to you all. Reject them not because they are blunt and simple; despise them not because they contain nothing new. Be very sure, if you would train children for heaven, they are hints that ought not to be lightly set aside.

1. Train in the way they Should go, not in the way they Would

First, then, if you would train your children rightly, train them in the way they should go, and not in the way that they would.

Remember children are born with a decided bias towards evil, and therefore if you let them choose for themselves, they are certain to choose wrong.

The mother cannot tell what her tender infant may grow up to be,—tall or short, weak or strong, wise or foolish he may be any of these things or not,—it is all uncertain. But one thing the mother can say with certainty: he will have a corrupt and sinful heart. It is natural to us to do wrong. "Foolishness," says Solomon, "is bound in the heart of a child" (Prov 22:15). "A child left to himself bringeth his mother to shame" (Prov 29:15). Our hearts are like the earth on which we tread; let it alone, and it is sure to bear weeds.

If, then, you would deal wisely with your child, you must not leave him to the guidance of his own will. Think for him, judge for him, act for him, just as you would for one weak and blind; but for pity’s sake, give him not up to his own wayward tastes and inclinations. It must not be his likings and wishes that are consulted. He knows not yet what is good for his mind and soul, any more than what is good for his body. You do not let him decide what he shall eat, and what he shall drink, and how he shall be clothed. Be consistent, and deal with his mind in like manner. Train him in the way that is scriptural and right, and not in the way that he fancies.

If you cannot make up your mind to this first principle of Christian training, it is useless for you to read any further. Self-will is almost the first thing that appears in a child’s mind; and it must be your first step to resist it.

2. Train with all Tenderness, Affection, and Patience

Train up your child with all tenderness, affection, and patience. I do not mean that you are to spoil him, but I do mean that you should let him see that you love him.

Love should be the silver thread that runs through all your conduct. Kindness, gentleness, long-suffering, forbearance, patience, sympathy, a willingness to enter into childish troubles, a readiness to take part in childish joys,—these are the cords by which a child may be led most easily,—these are the clues you must follow if you would find the way to his heart.

Few are to be found, even among grown-up people, who are not more easy to draw than to drive. There is that in all our minds which rises in arms against compulsion; we set up our backs and stiffen our necks at the very idea of a forced obedience. We are like young horses in the hand of a breaker: handle them kindly, and make much of them, and by and by you may guide them with thread; use them roughly and violently, and it will be many a month before you get the mastery of them at all.

Now children’s minds are cast in much the same mould as our own. Sternness and severity of manner chill them and throw them back. It shuts up their hearts, and you will weary yourself to find the door. But let them only see that you have an affectionate feeling towards them,—that you are really desirous to make them happy, and do them good,—that if you punish them, it is intended for their profit, and that, like the pelican, you would give your heart’s blood to nourish their souls; let them see this, I say, and they will soon be all your own. But they must be wooed with kindness, if their attention is ever to be won.

And surely reason itself might teach us this lesson. Children are weak and tender creatures, and, as such, they need patient and considerate treatment. We must handle them delicately, like frail machines, lest by rough fingering we do more harm than good. They are like young plants, and need gentle watering,—often, but little at a time.

We must not expect all things at once. We must remember what children are, and teach them as they are able to bear. Their minds are like a lump of metal— not to be forged and made useful at once, but only by a succession of little blows. Their understandings are like narrow-necked vessels: we must pour in the wine of knowledge gradually, or much of it will be spilled and lost. "Line upon line, and precept upon precept, here a little and there a little," must be our rule. The whetstone does its work slowly, but frequent rubbing will bring the scythe to a fine edge. Truly there is need of patience in training a child, but without it nothing can be done.

Nothing will compensate for the absence of this tenderness and love. A minister may speak the truth as it is in Jesus, clearly, forcibly, unanswerably; but if he does not speak it in love, few souls will be won. Just so you must set before your children their duty,—command, threaten, punish, reason,—but if affection be wanting in your treatment, your labour will be all in vain.

Love is one grand secret of successful training. Anger and harshness may frighten, but they will not persuade the child that you are right; and if he sees you often out of temper, you will soon cease to have his respect. A father who speaks to his son as Saul did to Jonathan (1Sam 20:30), need not expect to retain his influence over that son’s mind.

Try hard to keep up a hold on your child’s affections. It is a dangerous thing to make your children afraid of you. Anything is almost better than reserve and constraint between your child and yourself; and this will come in with fear. Fear puts an end to openness of manner; —fear leads to concealment; —fear sows the seed of much hypocrisy, and leads to many a lie. There is a mine of truth in the Apostle’s words to the Colossians: "Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged" (Col 3:21). Let not the advice it contains be overlooked.

3. Train as if it all Depends on You

Train your children with an abiding persuasion on your mind that much depends upon you.

Grace is the strongest of all principles. See what a revolution grace effects when it comes into the heart of an old sinner,—how it overturns the strongholds of Satan,—how it casts down mountains, fills up valleys,—makes crooked things straight,—and new creates the whole man. Truly nothing is impossible to grace.

Nature, too, is very strong. See how it struggles against the things of the kingdom of God,—how it fights against every attempt to be more holy,—how it keeps up an unceasing warfare within us to the last hour of life. Nature indeed is strong.

But after nature and grace, undoubtedly, there is nothing more powerful than education. Early habits (if I may so speak) are everything with us, under God. We are made what we are by training. Our character takes the form of that mould into which our first years are cast.

We depend, in a vast measure, on those who bring us up. We get from them a colour, a taste, a bias which cling to us more or less all our lives. We catch the language of our nurses and mothers, and learn to speak it almost insensibly, and unquestionably we catch something of their manners, ways, and mind at the same time. Time only will show, I suspect, how much we all owe to early impressions, and how many things in us may be traced up to seeds sown in the days of our very infancy, by those who were about us. A very learned Englishman, Mr. Locke, has gone so far as to say: "That of all the men we meet with, nine parts out of ten are what they are, good or bad, useful or not, according to their education."

And all this is one of God’s merciful arrangements. He gives your children a mind that will receive impressions like moist clay. He gives them a disposition at the starting-point of life to believe what you tell them, and to take for granted what you advise them, and to trust your word rather than a stranger’s. He gives you, in short, a golden opportunity of doing them good. See that the opportunity be not neglected, and thrown away. Once let slip, it is gone for ever.

Beware of that miserable delusion into which some have fallen,—that parents can do nothing for their children, that you must leave them alone, wait for grace, and sit still. These persons have wishes for their children in Balaam’s fashion,—they would like them to die the death of the righteous man, but they do nothing to make them live his life. They desire much, and have nothing. And the devil rejoices to see such reasoning, just as he always does over anything which seems to excuse indolence, or to encourage neglect of means.

I know that you cannot convert your child. I know well that they who are born again are born, not of the will of man, but of God. But I know also that God says expressly, "Train up a child in the way he should go," and that He never laid a command on man which He would not give man grace to perform. And I know, too, that our duty is not to stand still and dispute, but to go forward and obey. It is just in the going forward that God will meet us. The path of obedience is the way in which He gives the blessing. We have only to do as the servants were commanded at the marriage feast in Cana, to fill the water-pots with water, and we may safely leave it to the Lord to turn that water into wine.

4. Train with an Eye of Priority on the Soul

Train with this thought continually before your eyes—that the soul of your child is the first thing to be considered.

Precious, no doubt, are these little ones in your eyes; but if you love them, think often of their souls. No interest should weigh with you so much as their eternal interests. No part of them should be so dear to you as that part which will never die. The world, with all its glory, shall pass away; the hills shall melt; the heavens shall be wrapped together as a scroll; the sun shall cease to shine. But the spirit which dwells in those little creatures, whom you love so well, shall outlive them all, and whether in happiness or misery (to speak as a man) will depend on you.

This is the thought that should be uppermost on your mind in all you do for your children. In every step you take about them, in every plan, and scheme, and arrangement that concerns them, do not leave out that mighty question, "How will this affect their souls?"

Soul love is the soul of all love. To pet and pamper and indulge your child, as if this world was all he had to look to, and this life the only season for happiness—to do this is not true love, but cruelty. It is treating him like some beast of the earth, which has but one world to look to, and nothing after death. It is hiding from him that grand truth, which he ought to be made to learn from his very infancy,—that the chief end of his life is the salvation of his soul.

A true Christian must be no slave to fashion, if he would train his child for heaven. He must not be content to do things merely because they are the custom of the world; to teach them and instruct them in certain ways, merely because it is usual; to allow them to read books of a questionable sort, merely because everybody else reads them; to let them form habits of a doubtful tendency, merely because they are the habits of the day. He must train with an eye to his children’s souls. He must not be ashamed to hear his training called singular and strange. What if it is? The time is short,—the fashion of this world passeth away. He that has trained his children for heaven, rather than for earth,—for God, rather than for man,—he is the parent that will be called wise at last.

5. Train them to Know the Bible

Train your child to a knowledge of the Bible. You cannot make your children love the Bible, I allow. None but the Holy Ghost can give us a heart to delight in the Word. But you can make your children acquainted with the Bible; and be sure they cannot be acquainted with that blessed book too soon, or too well.

A thorough knowledge of the Bible is the foundation of all clear views of religion. He that is well-grounded in it will not generally be found a waverer, and carried about by every wind of new doctrine. Any system of training which does not make a knowledge of Scripture the first thing is unsafe and unsound.

You have need to be careful on this point just now, for the devil is abroad, and error abounds. Some are to be found amongst us who give the Church the honour due to Jesus Christ. Some are to be found who make the sacraments saviours and passports to eternal life. And some are to be found who fill the minds of their children with miserable little story-books, instead of the Scripture of truth. But if you love your children, let the simple Bible be everything in the training of their souls; and let all other books go down and take the second place. This is the training, believe me, that God will honour. The Psalmist says of Him, "Thou hast magnified Thy Word above all Thy name" (Ps 138:2); and I think that He gives an especial blessing to all who try to magnify it among men.

See that your children read the Bible reverently. Train them to look on it, not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the Word of God, written by the Holy Ghost Himself,—all true, all profitable, and able to make us wise unto salvation, through faith which is in Christ Jesus.

See that they read it regularly. Train them to regard it as their soul’s daily food,—as a thing essential to their soul’s daily health. I know well you cannot make this anything more than a form; but there is no telling the amount of sin which a mere form may indirectly restrain.

See that they read it all. You need not shrink from bringing any doctrine before them. You need not fancy that the leading doctrines of Christianity are things which children cannot understand. Children understand far more of the Bible than we are apt to suppose.

Tell them of sin, its guilt, its consequences, its power, its vileness: you will find they can comprehend something of this. Tell them of the Lord Jesus Christ, and His work for our salvation,—the atonement, the cross, the blood, the sacrifice, the intercession: you will discover there is something not beyond them in all this.

Tell them of the work of the Holy Spirit in man’s heart, how He changes, and renews, and sanctifies, and purifies: you will soon see they can go along with you in some measure in this. In short, I suspect we have no idea how much a little child can take in of the length and breadth of the glorious gospel. They see far more of these things than we suppose.

Fill their minds with Scripture. Let the Word dwell in them richly. Give them the Bible, the whole Bible, even while they are young.

6. Train them to Pray

Train them to a habit of prayer. Prayer is the very life-breath of true religion. It is one of the first evidences that a man is born again. "Behold," said the Lord of Saul, in the day he sent Ananias to him, "Behold, he prayeth" (Acts 9:11). He had begun to pray, and that was proof enough.

Prayer was the distinguishing mark of the Lord’s people in the day that there began to be a separation between them and the world. "Then began men to call upon the name of the Lord" (Gen 4:26).

Prayer is the peculiarity of all real Christians now. They pray,—for they tell God their wants, their feelings, their desires, their fears; and mean what they say. The nominal Christian may repeat prayers, and good prayers too, but he goes no further. Prayer is the turning-point in a man’s soul. Our ministry is unprofitable, and our labour is vain, till you are brought to your knees. Till then, we have no hope about you.

Prayer is one great secret of spiritual prosperity. When there is much private communion with God, your soul will grow like the grass after rain; when there is little, all will be at a standstill, you will barely keep your soul alive. Show me a growing Christian, a going forward Christian, a strong Christian, a flourishing Christian, and sure am I, he is one that speaks often with his Lord. He asks much, and he has much. He tells Jesus everything, and so he always knows how to act.

Prayer is the mightiest engine God has placed in our hands. It is the best weapon to use in every difficulty, and the surest remedy in every trouble. It is the key that unlocks the treasury of promises, and the hand that draws forth grace and help in time of need. It is the silver trumpet God commands us to sound in all our necessity, and it is the cry He has promised always to attend to, even as a loving mother to the voice of her child.

Prayer is the simplest means that man can use in coming to God. It is within reach of all,—the sick, the aged, the infirm, the paralytic, the blind, the poor, the unlearned,—all can pray. It avails you nothing to plead want of memory, and want of learning, and want of books, and want of scholarship in this matter. So long as you have a tongue to tell your soul’s state, you may and ought to pray. Those words, "Ye have not, because ye ask not" (Jas 4:2) will be a fearful condemnation to many in the day of judgment.

Parents, if you love your children, do all that lies in your power to train them up to a habit of prayer. Show them how to begin. Tell them what to say. Encourage them to persevere. Remind them if they become careless and slack about it. Let it not be your fault, at any rate, if they never call on the name of the Lord. This, remember, is the first step in religion which a child is able to take. Long before he can read, you can teach him to kneel by his mother’s side, and repeat the simple words of prayer and praise which she puts in his mouth. And as the first steps in any undertaking are always the most important, so is the manner in which your children’s prayers are prayed, a point which deserves your closest attention. Few seem to know how much depends on this. You must beware lest they get into a way of saying them in a hasty, careless, and irreverent manner. You must beware of giving up the oversight of this matter to servants and nurses, or of trusting too much to your children doing it when left to themselves. I cannot praise that mother who never looks after this most important part of her child’s daily life herself. Surely if there be any habit which your own hand and eye should help in forming, it is the habit of prayer. Believe me, if you never hear your children pray yourself, you are much to blame. You are little wiser than the bird described in Job, "which leaveth her eggs in the earth, and warmeth them in dust, And forgetteth that the foot may crush them, or that the wild beast may break them. She is hardened against her young ones, as though they were not hers: her labour is in vain without fear" (Job 39:14-16).

Prayer is, of all habits, the one which we recollect the longest. Many a grey-headed man could tell you how his mother used to make him pray in the days of his childhood. Other things have passed away from his mind perhaps. The church where he was taken to worship, the minister whom he heard preach, the companions who used to play with him,—all these, it may be, have passed from his memory, and left no mark behind. But you will often find it is far different with his first prayers. He will often be able to tell you where he knelt, and what he was taught to say, and even how his mother looked all the while. It will come up as fresh before his mind’s eye as if it was but yesterday.

Reader, if you love your children, I charge you, do not let the seed-time of a prayerful habit pass away unimproved. If you train your children to anything, train them, at least, to a habit of prayer. 

 

 

Part 2 of 3

"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6)

7. Train them to Love Church and Public Worship

Train them to habits of diligence, and regularity about public means of grace. Tell them of the duty and privilege of going to the house of God, and joining in the prayers of the congregation. Tell them that wherever the Lord’s people are gathered together, there the Lord Jesus is present in an especial manner, and that those who absent themselves must expect, like the Apostle Thomas, to miss a blessing. Tell them of the importance of hearing the Word preached, and that it is God’s ordinance for converting, sanctifying, and building up the souls of men. Tell them how the Apostle Paul enjoins us not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is;but to exhort one another, to stir one another up to it, and so much the more as we see the day approaching (Heb 10:25).

I call it a sad sight in a church when nobody comes up to the Lord’s table but the elderly people, and the young men and the young women all turn away. But I call it a sadder sight still when no children are to be seen in a church, excepting those who come to the Sunday School, and are obliged to attend. Let none of this guilt lie at your doors. There are many boys and girls in every parish, besides those who come to school, and you who are their parents and friends should see to it that they come with you to church.

Do not allow them to grow up with a habit of making vain excuses for not coming. Give them plainly to understand, that so long as they are under your roof it is the rule of your house for every one in health to honour the Lord’s house upon the Lord’s day, and that you reckon the Sabbath-breaker to be a murderer of his own soul.

See to it too, if it can be so arranged, that your children go with you to church, and sit near you when they are there. To go to church is one thing, but to behave well at church is quite another. And believe me, there is no security for good behaviour like that of having them under your own eye.

The minds of young people are easily drawn aside, and their attention lost, and every possible means should be used to counteract this. I do not like to see them coming to church by themselves,—they often get into bad company by the way, and so learn more evil on the Lord’s day than in all the rest of the week. Neither do I like to see what I call "a young people’s corner" in a church. They often catch habits of inattention and irreverence there, which it takes years to unlearn, if ever they are unlearned at all. What I like to see is a whole family sitting together, old and young, side by side,—men, women, and children, serving God according to their households.

But there are some who say that it is useless to urge children to attend means of grace, because they cannot understand them.

I would not have you listen to such reasoning. I find no such doctrine in the Old Testament.

When Moses goes before Pharaoh, I observe he says, "We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and with our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds will we go; for we must hold a feast unto the LORD" (Ex 10:9). When Joshua read the law, I observe, "There was not a word of all that Moses commanded, which Joshua read not before all the congregation of Israel, with the women, and the little ones, and the strangers that were conversant among them" (Jos 8:35). "Thrice in the year," says Exodus 34:23, "shall all your men-children appear before the Lord God, the God of Israel." And when I turn to the New Testament, I find children mentioned there as partaking in public acts of religion as well as in the Old. When Paul was leaving the disciples at Tyre for the last time, I find it said, "they all brought us on our way, with wives and children, till we were out of the city: and we kneeled down on the shore, and prayed" (Acts 21:5).

Samuel, in the days of his childhood, appears to have ministered unto the Lord some time before he really knew Him: "Samuel did not yet know the LORD, neither was the word of the LORD yet revealed unto him." (1 Sam 3:7). The Apostles themselves do not seem to have understood all that our Lord said at the time that it was spoken: "These things understood not his disciples at the first: but when Jesus was glorified, then remembered they that these things were written of him, and that they had done these things unto him" (Jn 12:16).

Parents, comfort your minds with these examples. Be not cast down because your children see not the full value of the means of grace now. Only train them up to a habit of regular attendance. Set it before their minds as a high, holy, and solemn duty, and believe me, the day will very likely come when they will bless you for your deed.

8. Train them to have Confidence in your Words

Train them to a habit of faith. I mean by this, you should train them up to believe what you say. You should try to make them feel confidence in your judgment, and respect your opinions, as better than their own. You should accustom them to think that, when you say a thing is bad for them, it must be bad, and when you say it is good for them, it must be good; that your knowledge, in short, is better than their own, and that they may rely implicitly on your word. Teach them to feel that what they know not now, they will probably know hereafter, and to be satisfied there is a reason and a needs-be for everything you require them to do.

Who indeed can describe the blessedness of a real spirit of faith? Or rather, who can tell the misery that unbelief has brought upon the world? Unbelief made Eve eat the forbidden fruit,—she doubted the truth of God’s word: "Ye shall surely die." Unbelief made the old world reject Noah’s warning, and so perish in sin. Unbelief kept Israel in the wilderness,—it was the bar that kept them from entering the promised land. Unbelief made the Jews crucify the Lord of glory,— they believed not the voice of Moses and the prophets, though read to them every day. And unbelief is the reigning sin of man’s heart down to this very hour,—unbelief in God’s promises,—unbelief in God’s threats,—unbelief in our own sinfulness,—unbelief in our own danger,—unbelief in everything that runs counter to the pride and worldliness of our evil hearts. Reader, you train your children to little purpose if you do not train them to a habit of implicit faith,—faith in their parents’ word, confidence that what their parents say must be right.

I have heard it said by some, that you should require nothing of children which they cannot understand: that you should explain and give a reason for everything you desire them to do. I warn you solemnly against such a notion. I tell you plainly, I think it an unsound and rotten principle. No doubt it is absurd to make a mystery of everything you do, and there are many things which it is well to explain to children, in order that they may see that they are reasonable and wise. But to bring them up with the idea that they must take nothing on trust, that they, with their weak and imperfect understandings, must have the "why" and the "wherefore" made clear to them at every step they take,—this is indeed a fearful mistake, and likely to have the worst effect on their minds.

Reason with your child if you are so disposed, at certain times, but never forget to keep him in mind (if you really love him) that he is but a child after all,—that he thinks as a child, he understands as a child, and therefore must not expect to know the reason of everything at once.

Set before him the example of Isaac, in the day when Abraham took him to offer him on Mount Moriah (Gen 22). He asked his father that single question, "Where is the lamb for a burnt-offering?" and he got no answer but this, "God will provide Himself a lamb." How, or where, or whence, or in what manner, or by what means,—all this Isaac was not told; but the answer was enough. He believed that it would be well, because his father said so, and he was content.

Tell your children, too, that we must all be learners in our beginnings, that there is an alphabet to be mastered in every kind of knowledge,—that the best horse in the world had need once to be broken,—that a day will come when they will see the wisdom of all your training. But in the meantime if you say a thing is right, it must be enough for them,—they must believe you, and be content. Parents, if any point in training is important, it is this. I charge you by the affection you have for your children, use every means to train them up to a habit of faith.

9. Train them to be Obedient

Train them to a habit of obedience. This is an object which it is worth any labour to attain. No habit, I suspect, has such an influence over our lives as this. Parents, determine to make your children obey you, though it may cost you much trouble, and cost them many tears. Let there be no questioning, and reasoning, and disputing, and delaying, and answering again. When you give them a command, let them see plainly that you will have it done.

Obedience is the only reality. It is faith visible, faith acting, and faith incarnate. It is the test of real discipleship among the Lord’s people. "Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you" (Jn 15:14). It ought to be the mark of well-trained children, that they do whatsoever their parents command them. Where, indeed, is the honour which the fifth commandment enjoins, if fathers and mothers are not obeyed cheerfully, willingly, and at once?

Early obedience has all Scripture on its side. It is in Abraham’s praise, not merely he will train his family, but "he will command his children, and his household after him" (Gen 18:19). It is said of the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, that when He was young He was subject to Mary and Joseph (Lk 2:51). Observe how implicitly Joseph obeyed the order of his father Jacob (Gen 37:13). See how Isaiah speaks of it as an evil thing, when "the child shall behave himself proudly against the ancient" (Isa 3:5). Mark how the Apostle Paul names disobedience to parents as one of the bad signs of the latter days (2Tim 3:2). Mark how he singles out this grace of requiring obedience as one that should adorn an elder in the church, for he must be "one that ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all gravity" (1 Tim 3:4). And likewise he adds, "Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife, ruling their children and their own houses well" (1 Tim 3:12). And again, an elder must be one "having faithful children not accused of riot or unruly" (Tit 1:6).

Parents, do you wish to see your children happy? Take care, then, that you train them to obey when they are spoken to,—to do as they are bid. Believe me, we are not made for entire independence,—we are not fit for it. Even Christ’s freemen have a yoke to wear, they "serve the Lord Christ" (Col 3:24). Children cannot learn too soon that this is a world in which we are not all intended to rule, and that we are never in our right place until we know how to obey our betters. Teach them to obey while young, or else they will be fretting against God all their lives long, and wear themselves out with the vain idea of being independent of His control.

Reader, this hint is only too much needed. You will see many in this day who allow their children to choose and think for themselves long before they are able, and even make excuses for their disobedience, as if it were a thing not to be blamed. To my eyes, a parent always yielding, and a child always having its own way, are a most painful sight;—painful, because I see God’s appointed order of things inverted and turned upside down;—painful, because I feel sure the consequence to that child’s character in the end will be self-will, pride, and self-conceit. You must not wonder that men refuse to obey their Father which is in heaven, if you allow them, when children, to disobey their father who is upon earth.

Parents, if you love your children, let obedience be a motto and a watchword continually before their eyes.

10. Train them to tell the Truth

Train them to a habit of always speaking the truth. Truth-speaking is far less common in the world than at first sight we are disposed to think. The whole truth, and nothing but the truth, is a golden rule which many would do well to bear in mind. Lying and prevarication are old sins. The devil was the father of them,—he deceived Eve by a bold lie, and ever since the fall it is a sin against which all the children of Eve have need to be on their guard.

Only think how much falsehood and deceit there is in the world! How much exaggeration! How many additions are made to a simple story! How many things left out, if it does not serve the speaker’s interest to tell them! How few there are about us of whom we can say, we put unhesitating trust in their word! Verily the ancient Persians were wise in their generation: it was a leading point with them in educating their children, that they should learn to speak the truth. What an awful proof it is of man’s natural sinfulness, that it should be needful to name such a point at all!

Reader, I would have you remark how often God is spoken of in the Old Testament as the God of truth. Truth seems to be especially set before us as a leading feature in the character of Him with whom we have to do. He never swerves from the straight line. He abhors lying and hypocrisy. Try to keep this continually before your children’s minds. Press upon them at all times, that less than the truth is a lie; that evasion, excuse-making, and exaggeration are all halfway houses towards what is false, and ought to be avoided. Encourage them in any circumstances to be straightforward, and, whatever it may cost them, to speak the truth.

I press this subject on your attention, not merely for the sake of your children’s character in the world,— though I might dwell much on this,—I urge it rather for your own comfort and assistance in all your dealings with them. You will find it a mighty help indeed, to be able always to trust their word. It will go far to prevent that habit of concealment, which so unhappily prevails sometimes among children. Openness and straightforwardness depend much upon a parent’s treatment of this matter in the days of our infancy.

11. Train them to Redeem the Time

Train them to a habit of always redeeming the time. Idleness is the devil’s best friend. It is the surest way to give him an opportunity of doing us harm. An idle mind is like an open door, and if Satan does not enter in himself by it, it is certain he will throw in something to raise bad thoughts in our souls.

No created being was ever meant to be idle. Service and work is the appointed portion of every creature of God. The angels in heaven work,—they are the Lord’s ministering servants, ever doing His will. Adam, in Paradise, had work,—he was appointed to dress the garden of Eden, and to keep it. The redeemed saints in glory will have work, they rest not day and night singing praise and glory to Him who bought them. And man, weak, sinful man, must have something to do, or else his soul will soon get into an unhealthy state. We must have our hands filled, and our minds occupied with something, or else our imaginations will soon ferment and breed mischief.

And what is true of us, is true of our children too. Alas, indeed, for the man that has nothing to do! The Jews thought idleness a positive sin: it was a law of theirs that every man should bring up his son to some useful trade,—and they were right. They knew the heart of man better than some of us appear to do.

Idleness made Sodom what she was: "this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fulness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her" (Ezk 16:49). Idleness had much to do with David’s awful sin with the wife of Uriah. —I see in 2 Samuel 11 that Joab went out to war against Ammon, "but David tarried still at Jerusalem." Was not that idleness? And then it was that he saw Bathsheba,—and the next step we read of is his tremendous and miserable fall.

Verily, I believe that idleness has led to more sin than almost any other habit that could be named. I suspect it is the mother of many a work of the flesh, the mother of adultery, fornication, drunkenness, and many other deeds of darkness that I have not time to name. Let your own conscience say whether I do not speak the truth. You were idle, and at once the devil knocked at the door and came in.

And indeed I do not wonder; everything in the world around us seems to teach the same lesson. It is the still water which becomes stagnant and impure: the running, moving streams are always clear. If you have steam machinery, you must work it, or it soon gets out of order. If you have a horse, you must exercise him; he is never so well as when he has regular work. If you would have good bodily health yourself, you must take exercise. If you always sit still, your body is sure at length to complain. And just so is it with the soul. The active moving mind is a hard mark for the devil to shoot at. Try to be always full of useful employment, and thus your enemy will find it difficult to get room to sow tares.

Reader, I ask you to set these things before the minds of your children. Teach them the value of time, and try to make them learn the habit of using it well. It pains me to see children idling over what they have in hand, whatever it may be. I love to see them active and industrious, and giving their whole heart to all they do; giving their whole heart to lessons, when they have to learn; giving their whole heart even to their amusements, when they go to play.

But if you love them well, let idleness be counted a sin in your family.

12. Train them with a Fear of Spoiling them

Train them with a constant fear of over-indulgence. This is the one point of all on which you have most need to be on your guard. It is natural to be tender and affectionate towards your own flesh and blood, and it is the excess of this very tenderness and affection which you have to fear. Take heed that it does not make you blind to your children’s faults, and deaf to all advice about them. Take heed lest it make you overlook bad conduct, rather than have the pain of inflicting punishment and correction.

I know well that punishment and correction are disagreeable things. Nothing is more unpleasant than giving pain to those we love, and calling forth their tears. But so long as hearts are what hearts are, it is vain to suppose, as a general rule, that children can ever be brought up without correction.

Spoiling is a very expressive word, and sadly full of meaning. Now it is the shortest way to spoil children to let them have their own way, to allow them to do wrong and not to punish them for it. Believe me, you must not do it, whatever pain it may cost you unless you wish to ruin your children’s souls.

You cannot say that Scripture does not speak expressly on this subject: "He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes" (Prov 13:24). "Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let not thy soul spare for his crying" (Prov 19:18). "Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child; but the rod of correction shall drive it far from him" (Prov 22:15). "Withhold not correction from the child: for if thou beatest him with the rod, he shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt deliver his soul from hell" (Prov 23:13-14) "The rod and reproof give wisdom: but a child left to himself bringeth his mother to shame." "Correct thy son, and he shall give thee rest; yea, he shall give delight unto thy soul" (Prov 29:15,17). 

 

Part 3 of 3

"Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6)

13. Train them as God trains His Children

Train them remembering continually how God trains His children. The Bible tells us that God has an elect people, a family in this world. All poor sinners who have been convinced of sin, and fled to Jesus for peace, make up that family. All of us who really believe on Christ for salvation are its members.

Now God the Father is ever training the members of this family for their everlasting abode with Him in heaven. He acts as a husbandman pruning his vines, that they may bear more fruit. He knows the character of each of us, our besetting sins, our weaknesses, our peculiar infirmities, our special wants. He knows our works and where we dwell, who are our companions in life, and what are our trials, what are our temptations, and what are our privileges. He knows all these things, and is ever ordering all for our good. He allots to each of us, in His providence, the very things we need, in order to bear the most fruit: as much of sunshine as we can stand, and as much of rain, as much of bitter things as we can bear, and as much of sweet. Reader, if you would train your children wisely, mark well how God the Father trains His. He doeth all things well; the plan which He adopts must be right.

See, then, how many things there are which God withholds from His children. Few could be found, I suspect, among them who have not had desires which He has never been pleased to fulfil. There has often been some one thing they wanted to attain, and yet there has always been some barrier to prevent attainment. It has been just as if God was placing it above our reach, and saying, "This is not good for you; this must not be." Moses desired exceedingly to cross over Jordan, and see the goodly land of promise; but you will remember his desire was never granted.

See, too, how often God leads His people by ways which seem dark and mysterious to our eyes. We cannot see the meaning of all His dealings with us; we cannot see the reasonableness of the path in which our feet are treading. Sometimes so many trials have assailed us, so many difficulties encompassed us, that we have not been able to discover the needs-be of it all. It has been just as if our Father was taking us by the hand into a dark place and saying, "Ask no questions, but follow Me." There was a direct road from Egypt to Canaan, yet Israel was not led into it; but round, through the wilderness. And this seemed hard at the time. "The soul of the people," we are told, "was much discouraged because of the way" (Ex 13:17; Num 21:4).

See, also, how often God chastens His people with trial and affliction. He sends them crosses and disappointments; He lays them low with sickness; He strips them of property and friends; He changes them from one position to another; He visits them with things most hard to flesh and blood; and some of us have well- nigh fainted under the burdens laid upon us.

We have felt pressed beyond strength, and have been almost ready to murmur at the hand which chastened us. Paul the Apostle had a thorn in the flesh appointed him, some bitter bodily trial, no doubt, though we know not exactly what it was. But this we know, he besought the Lord thrice that it might be removed; yet it was not taken away (2Cor 12:8, 9).

Now, reader, notwithstanding all these things, did you ever hear of a single child of God who thought his Father did not treat him wisely? No, I am sure you never did. God’s children would always tell you, in the long run, it was a blessed thing they did not have their own way, and that God had done far better for them than they could have done for themselves. Yes! And they could tell you, too, that God’s dealings had provided more happiness for them than they ever would have obtained themselves, and that His way, however dark at times, was the way of pleasantness and the path of peace.

I ask you to lay to heart the lesson which God’s dealings with His people is meant to teach you. Fear not to withhold from your child anything you think will do him harm, whatever his own wishes may be. This is God’s plan.

Hesitate not to lay on him commands, of which he may not at present see the wisdom, and to guide himin ways which may not now seem reasonable to his mind. This is God’s plan.

Shrink not from chastising and correcting him whenever you see his soul’s health requires it, however painful it may be to your feelings; and remember medicines for the mind must not be rejected because they are bitter. This is God’s plan.

And be not afraid, above all, that such a plan of training will make your child unhappy. I warn you against this delusion. Depend on it, there is no surer road to unhappiness than always having our own way. To have our wills checked and denied is a blessed thing for us; it makes us value enjoyments when they come. To be indulged perpetually is the way to be made selfish; and selfish people and spoiled children, believe me, are seldom happy.

Reader, be not wiser than God; train your children as He trains His.

14. Train them by Godly Example

Train them remembering continually the influence of your own example.

Instruction, and advice, and commands will profit little, unless they are backed up by the pattern of your own life. Your children will never believe you are in earnest, and really wish them to obey you, so long as your actions contradict your counsel. Archbishop Tillotson made a wise remark when he said, "To give children good instruction, and a bad example, is but beckoning to them with the head to show them the way to heaven, while we take them by the hand and lead them in the way to hell."

We little know the force and power of example. No one of us can live to himself in this world; we are always influencing those around us, in one way or another, either for good or for evil, either for God or for sin. They see our ways, they mark our conduct, they observe our behaviour, and what they see us practise, that they may fairly suppose we think right. And never, I believe, does example tell so powerfully as it does in the case of parents and children.

Fathers and mothers, do not forget that children learn more by the eye than they do by the ear. No school will make such deep marks on character as home. The best of schoolmasters will not imprint on their minds as much as they will pick up at your fireside. Imitation is a far stronger principle with children than memory. What they see has a much stronger effect on their minds than what they are told.

Take care, then, what you do before a child. It is a true proverb, "Who sins before a child, sins double." Strive rather to be a living epistle of Christ, such as your families can read, and that plainly too. Be an example of reverence for the Word of God, reverence in prayer, reverence for means of grace, reverence for the Lord’s day. Be an example in words, in temper, in diligence, in temperance, in faith, in charity, in kindness, in humility. Think not your children will practise what they do not see you do. You are their model picture, and they will copy what you are. Your reasoning and your lecturing, your wise commands and your good advice; all this they may not understand, but they can understand your life.

Children are very quick observers; very quick in seeing through some kinds of hypocrisy, very quick in finding out what you really think and feel, very quick in adopting all your ways and opinions. You will often find as the father is, so is the son.

Remember the word that the conqueror Caesar always used to his soldiers in a battle. He did not say "Goforward," but "Come." So it must be with you in training your children. They will seldom learn habits which they see you despise, or walk in paths in which you do not walk yourself. He that preaches to his children what he does not practise, is working a work that never goes forward. It is like the fabled web of Penelope of old, who wove all day, and unwove all night. Even so, the parent who tries to train without setting a good example is building with one hand, and pulling down with the other.

15. Train them bearing in Mind the Power of Sin

Train them remembering continually the power of sin.

I name this shortly, in order to guard you against unscriptural expectations.

You must not expect to find your children’s minds a sheet of pure white paper, and to have no trouble if you only use right means. I warn you plainly you will find no such thing. It is painful to see how much corruption and evil there is in a young child’s heart, and how soon it begins to bear fruit. Violent tempers, self-will, pride, envy, sullenness, passion, idleness, selfishness, deceit, cunning, falsehood, hypocrisy, a terrible aptness to learn what is bad, a painful slowness to learn what is good, a readiness to pretend anything in order to gain their own ends; all these things, or some of them, you must be prepared to see, even in your own flesh and blood. In little ways they will creep out at a very early age; it is almost startling to observe how naturally they seem to spring up. Children require no schooling to learn to sin.

But you must not be discouraged and cast down by what you see. You must not think it a strange and unusual thing, that little hearts can be so full of sin. It is the only portion which our father Adam left us; it is that fallen nature with which we come into the world; it is that inheritance which belongs to us all. Let it rather make you more diligent in using every means which seem most likely, by God’s blessing, to counteract the mischief. Let it make you more and more careful, so far as in you lies, to keep your children out of the way of temptation.

Never listen to those who tell you your children are good, and well brought up, and can be trusted. Think rather that their hearts are always inflammable as tinder. At their very best, they only want a spark to set their corruptions alight. Parents are seldom too cautious. Remember the natural depravity of your children, and take care.

16. Train them with an Eye of Faith on God’s Promises

Train them remembering continually the promises of Scripture.

I name this also shortly, in order to guard you against discouragement.

You have a plain promise on your side, "Train up your child in the way he should go, and when he is old he shall not depart from it"(Prov 22:6). Think what it is to have a promise like this. Promises were the only lamp of hope which cheered the hearts of the patriarchs before the Bible was written. Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, all lived on a few promises, and prospered in their souls. Promises are the cordials which in every age have supported and strengthened the believer. He that has got a plain text upon his side need never be cast down. Fathers and mothers, when your hearts are failing, and ready to halt, look at the word of this text, and take comfort.

Think who it is that promises. It is not the word of a man, who may lie or repent; it is the word of the King of kings, who never changes. Hath He said a thing, and shall He not do it? Or hath He spoken, and shall He not make it good? Neither is anything too hard for Him to perform. The things that are impossible with men are possible with God. Reader, if we get not the benefit of the promise we are dwelling upon, the fault is not in Him, but in ourselves. Think, too, what the promise contains, before you refuse to take comfort from it. It speaks of a certain time when good training shall especially bear fruit, namely "when he [i.e. the a child] is old." Surely there is comfort in this. You may not see with your own eyes the result of careful training, but you know not what blessed fruits may spring from it, long after you are dead and gone. It is not God’s way to give everything at once. "Afterward" is the time when He often chooses to work, both in the things of nature and in the things of grace. "Afterward" is the season when affliction bears the peaceable fruit of righteousness (Heb 12:11). "Afterward" was the time when the son who refused to work in his father’s vineyard repented and went (Mt 21:29). And "afterward" is the time to which parents must look forward if they see not success at once, you must sow in hope and plant in hope.

"Cast thy bread upon the waters," saith the Spirit, "for thou shalt find it after many days" (Ecc 11:1). Many children, I doubt not, shall rise up in the day of judgment, and bless their parents for good training, who never gave any signs of having profited by it during their parents’ lives. Go forward then in faith, and be sure that your labour shall not be altogether thrown away. Three times did Elijah stretch himself upon the widow’s child before it revived. Take example from him, and persevere.

17. Train them with Prayer

Train them, lastly, with continual prayer for a blessing on all you do.

Without the blessing of the Lord, your best endeavours will do no good. He has the hearts of all men in His hands, and except He touch the hearts of your children by His Spirit, you will weary yourself to no purpose. Water, therefore, the seed you sow on their minds with unceasing prayer. The Lord is far more willing to hear than we to pray; far more ready to give blessings than we to ask them; —but He loves to be entreated for them. And I set this matter of prayer before you, as the top-stone and seal of all you do. I suspect the child of many prayers is seldom cast away.

Look upon your children as Jacob did on his; he tells Esau his father, "the children which God hath graciously given thy servant" (Gen 33:5). Look on them as Joseph did on his; he told his father, "They are my sons, whom God hath given me" (Gen 48:9). Count them with the Psalmist to be an heritage and reward from the Lord (Ps 127:3). And then ask the Lord, with a holy boldness, to be gracious and merciful to His own gifts. Mark how Abraham intercedes for Ishmael, because he loved him, "Oh that Ishmael might live before thee" (Gen 17:18). See how Manoah speaks to the angel about Samson, "How shall we order the child, and how shall we do unto him?" (Jdg 13:12). Observe how tenderly Job cared for his children’s souls, for he "offered burnt-offerings according to the number of them all, for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually" (Job 1:5). Parents, if you love your children, go and do likewise. You cannot name their names before the mercy-seat too often.

And now, reader, in conclusion, let me once more press upon you the necessity and importance of using every single means in your power, if you would train children for heaven.

I know well that God is a sovereign God, and doeth all things according to the counsel of His own will. I know that Rehoboam was the son of Solomon, and Manasseh the son of Hezekiah, and that you do not always see godly parents having a godly seed. But I know also that God is a God who works by means, and sure am I, if you make light of such means as I have mentioned, your children are not likely to turn out well.

Fathers and mothers, you may take your children to be baptized, and have them enrolled in the ranks of Christ’s Church; you may send them to the best of schools, and give them Bibles and good books, and fill them with head knowledge but if all this time there is no regular training at home, I tell you plainly, I fear it will go hard in the end with your children’s souls. Home is the place where habits are formed; home is the place where the foundations of character are laid; home gives the bias to our tastes, and likings, and opinions. See then, I pray you, that there be careful training at home. Happy indeed is the man who can say, as Bolton did upon his dying bed, to his children, "I do believe not one of you will dare to meet me before the tribunal of Christ in an unregenerate state."

Fathers and mothers, I charge you solemnly before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, take every pains to train your children in the way they should go. I charge you not merely for the sake of your children’s souls; I charge you for the sake of your own future comfort and peace. Truly it is your interest so to do. Truly your own happiness in great measure depends on it. Children have ever been the bow from which the sharpest arrows have pierced man’s heart. Children have mixed the bitterest cups that man has ever had to drink. Children have caused the saddest tears that man has ever had to shed. Adam could tell you so; Jacob could tell you so; David could tell you so. There are no sorrows on earth like those which children have brought upon their parents. Oh! take heed, lest your own neglect should lay up misery for you in your old age. Take heed, lest you weep under the ill-treatment of a thankless child, in the days when your eye is dim, and your natural force abated.

If ever you wish your children to be the restorers of your life, and the nourishers of your old age, if you would have them blessings and not curses, joys and not sorrows, Judahs and not Reubens, Ruths and not Orpahs, if you would not, like Noah, be ashamed of their deeds, and, like Rebekah, be made weary of your life by them: if this be your wish, remember my advice betimes, train them while young in the right way.

And as for me, I will conclude by putting up my prayer to God for all who read this paper, that you may all be taught of God to feel the value of your own souls. This is one reason why baptism is too often a mere form, and Christian training despised and disregarded. Too often parents feel not for themselves, and so they feel not for their children. They do not realize the tremendous difference between a state of nature and a state of grace, and therefore they are content to let them alone.

Now the Lord teach you all that sin is that abominable thing which God hateth. Then, I know you will mourn over the sins of your children, and strive to pluck them out as brands from the fire.

The Lord teach you all how precious Christ is, and what a mighty and complete work He hath done for our salvation. Then, I feel confident you will use every means to bring your children to Jesus, that they may live through Him.

The Lord teach you all your need of the Holy Spirit, to renew, sanctify, and quicken your souls. Then, I feel sure you will urge your children to pray for Him without ceasing, and never rest till He has come down into their hearts with power, and made them new creatures.

The Lord grant this, and then I have a good hope that you will indeed train up your children well, train well for this life, and train well for the life to come; train well for earth, and train well for heaven; train them for God, for Christ, and for eternity.

Christ the Supreme Head of the Home

by Calvin Loh

(A Devotional Article on the Headship of Christ in the Family)

INTRODUCTION 

Four years ago when we were just married, Chin Ping and I bought a nice family-tree picture frame with three slots for family photographs. And right in the middle of these slots were the following words written prominently in the middle, “Christ is the Head of this House.”  

Originally, we had wanted to put our wedding photo on it, together with the photos of our children in time to come. But unfortunately, both of us were later so caught up with our work and family commitments that we soon clean forgot about it. Today, if you visit my family, you will see that the picture frame still stands prominently on our Hi-Fi speaker in the living room, but it’s still empty, largely neglected, and the words “Christ is the Head of this House” are covered with a thin layer of dust. 

Now, to some extent, does this not remind us of the spiritual state within many Christian families today, including ours as well? After hanging up a wooden plaque with the following words “Christ is the Head of our Home” inscribed on it, we get so caught with the affairs of life that Christ is often ignored or forgotten in our homes. And when we do remember Him once in a while, we don’t really understand what it means for Him to be the Head of our house in practical terms.   

CHRIST’S AUTHORITY OVER THE CHURCH AND THE HOME 

Now, in order for us to answer this question, it is important for us to understand, first of all, the nature of Christ’s authority over the Church as Her Supreme Head.  

Unlike some secular head of states who are nothing more than a figurehead in their respectively countries e.g. the Queen of England, the Scripture tells us plainly that Christ is not merely an Advisor whom the Church turns to for advise without feeling obligated to obey wholehearted, neither is He sitting passively by the wayside while the ministers decide the affairs of the Church on their own.  

Christ IS the Head over the Church, not only as Her originating Head (cf. Col 1:18), but also as Her legislative Head, meaning to say that He actually rules the Church through His ministers, and expects Her to submit under the authority and demands of His Word (cf. Eph 5:24). 

Now, since the local Church is basically made up of various family units (and individuals as well), this naturally implies that Christ’s authority is also applicable to the Christian Family. While the husband is the immediate head of the house as we read in Ephesians 5, Christ is the Supreme Head who alone demands the absolute and cheerful obedience of the entire family. His will alone overrules every decision within the family. 

THE PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE DOCTRINE 

With this crucial understanding in mind, we can now talk about the important practical implications of the doctrine. Since space will not permit me to list them exhaustively, I will mention just two of them. 

The Family Must be Governed by His Word 

The first implication has to do with Obedience. In other words, while we may own Christ as the Supreme Head of our family, do we really obey Him at home? Does the Word of Christ govern every affair within the family, regardless of how insignificant it may be in our sight?  

As I ponder over these questions, one of the areas that immediately comes into my mind is the catechizing or religious instructions of our own children at home. Now, the Scripture makes it abundantly clear that the awesome responsibility of instructing our children in the ways of the Lord, through catechizing and by our own examples, rests squarely upon our shoulders as parents, period (cf. Deut 4:9-10, 6:4-7). It is crucial for us to understand that no matter how well equipped or trained our Sunday School teachers may be, they are only here to play a supportive role, and not to replace us.   

But if we, for one reason or another, disregard the laws of Christ by abrogating our God-given responsibility towards our children at home, then it is utterly meaningless for us to claim Him as the supreme Head in our home. 

The Family Must Seek the Lord through Prayer and the Word 

Besides catechizing our children, another important practical implication has to do with setting aside time regularly to seek the mind of Christ through prayer and the diligent study of the Word.  

Now, I suppose this should be obvious to many of us since a family who own Christ as its Supreme Head must be governed by His will, and there is no way whereby we can positively know His will except through sincere prayer and the diligent study of His written Word.  

But despite of this, how many Christian families today actually set aside time apart from their daily work or family commitments to seek Him through these means of grace? In times of peace, do we as parents set aside time regularly to draw close to Him, so that we may constantly attune ourselves spiritually to the mind of Christ? And in times of trouble, or when difficult decisions must be made, do we, as a family, come before Him to seek His guidance and will?  

If we do not seek the Lord regularly in our homes, how then can we claim to know His will for our families? Are we not in effect mocking God by actually doing our own will rather than the will of Christ in our homes? 

CONCLUSION 

Dear Brethren, be not like the soldiers who bowed their knee before the Lord in His final hours and cried ‘Hail, King of the Jews’, for they proclaimed his as a King with their mouths but sought to mock him with their crown of thorns.  

As His dear children, let us bow genuinely before the Lord as the Supreme Head of our homes, always striving to know and to obey His will for our families, for this is good and reasonable in His sight. Amen. 

Books on Marriage, Family and Parenting in our Church Library

Marriage: 

MARRIAGE TAKES MORE THAN LOVE by Jack and Carole Mayhall

In a day when the very institution of marriage is crumbling, when the divorce rate is climbing to astronomical proportions, when proponents of egalitarian marriages are increasing, and when even those husbands and wives who stay together are having real problems, the concerned couple is looking for real and practical answers.  

STAYING CLOSE – Stopping the Natural Drift toward Isolation in Marriage, by Dennis & Barbara Rainey

Countless married couples end up living alone – in the same house! Over 28 years of conducting “Weekend to Remember” conferences have convinced Dennis and Barbara Rainey that isolation is the number one problem in marriages today. But they believe it’s possible to overcome “marital drift” and experience the miracle of oneness. This book provides a positive, workable strategy for keeping your marriage vital and intimate. 

THE 10 COMMANDMENTS OF MARRIAGE – The Do’s and Don’ts for a Lifelong Covenant, by Ed Young

In words that are profound, often humorous, but always biblical, Ed Young draws from decades of counseling couples to provide 10 commandments for a lifelong marriage that sizzles. 

EACH FOR THE OTHER – Marriage as it’s Meant to Be, by Bryan Chappell

Each for the Other offers hope and invaluable instruction for married and engaged couples and for counselors and pastors who desire to promote healthy, grace-filled families. Bryan Chappell illustrates clearly how offering Christ’s unconditional love to a mate can transform an individual and build a spiritual foundation that binds partners together as one. 

 

For Families:

GOD, MARRIAGE AND FAMILY – Rebuilding the Biblical Foundation, by Andreas J. Kostenberger with David W. Jones

We live in a time of crisis regarding marriage and the family, and only by a return to the biblical foundation can these institutions be rebuilt. To provide an integrated, biblical treatment of the full range of marriage and family issues, the authors of God, Marriage and Family examine what Scripture says about God’s purposes for humans in their marriage and family interactions. Their examination covers the special issues stemming from marriage, childrearing, singleness, homosexuality, and divorce and remarriage. With study questions and points for further discussion, this book is a comprehensive yet concise resource for anyone seeking a Scriptural response to our culture’s complex challenges to God’s intentions for marriage and family. 

BUILDING STRONG FAMILIES by Dennis Rainey

Besides our relationship with our heavenly Father, there is nothing more important than our relationship with our family. It is the building block of our churches, communities and nation. So when we neglect our families, the foundation of our churches and nation crumbles, and our homes begin to splinter. If we desire to fulfill God’s calling in our lives and to make a difference in others’ lives for eternity, then we must start within our families. Whether single or married, with children or not, we all have a part in God’s calling to build strong spiritual families. In this book you will find challenging, encouraging words on key issues ranging from gender roles and sexual intimacy within marriage to raising masculine boys and feminine girls, as well as the practical concerns of renewal in your own home and effective mentoring within the church and community. 

THE FAMILY WORSHIP BOOK – A Resource Book for Family Devotions, by Terry L, Johnson

Do you struggle to provide enjoyable, meaningful and spiritual times of family devotions? Have you nagging thoughts that you should be doing something about it? Here is the solution, a book that will give you the impetus to start and the means to follow through. It answers 4 key questions -  What is Family Worship? What have other people done? Why should I do it? How can I start? 

 

For Singles:

DID I KISS MARRIAGE GOODBYE? By Carolyn McCulley

Through personal anecdotes and careful examination of Scripture, Carolyn McCulley challenges single women to regard their singles not as a burden, but as a gift from God that allows them to perform a unique role in the body of Christ 

 

Parenting:

THE DUTIES OF PARENTS by Jacobus Koelman

It is one of the few Reformed books on parenting from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The goal of Koelman was to point out to parents their extremely responsible task of leading their children into a life of godliness. 

SHEPHERDING A CHILD’S HEART by Ted Tripp

This book is about how to speak to the heart of your child. Written for parents with children of any age, this insightful book provides perspectives and procedures for shepherding your child’s heart into the paths of life. 

OLD PATHS FOR LITTLE FEET by Carol Brandt

Carol Brandt provides a solid balance of theological teaching and helpful illustrations in leading our children in the Lord. Reminding us of the importance of sound biblical doctrine, she instructs parents on our unique responsibilities to teach and love our children, so that they know of their sin and of God’s sovereignty, judgement and abounding grace in Christ Jesus. 

IF YOU TAKE MY HAND, MY SON – Leading a Boy to be a Man of God, by Wayne Hastings

Spiritual development isn’t automatic. It requires desire and determination, a commitment to be involved through all the changes of your boy’s life; the integrity to be a godly model for him, the humility to bring other teachers and role models into his life, and the faith to trust your heavenly Father through the whole process. If You Take My Hand, My Son will encourage, challenge and inspire you to take the initiative in your son’s spiritual development. With insights from Paul’s relationship with Timothy, illuminating examples from his own parenting experience, and practical suggestions you can put into practice today. 

A MOTHER’S TOUCH by Elise Arndt

As a Mother-Teacher in your home, you prepare your children for life. No one can replace your love and care in their early years. And no one else can teach them, as you can, of Jesus’ love and of His world. Elise Arndt shows you how to teach your children in the everyday happenings of life. 

A MOTHER’S TIME by Elise Arndt

Your days may be filled with diapers and teething babies, or they may be filled with car pools and Little League. Either way, the demands on your time probably exceeds your supply. What is the solution to the time crunch so many mothers experience? Elise Arndt believes that our success as mothers comes in doing the will of our Heavenly Father. From Him we can learn to deal with time pressures, accomplish the important when the urgent constantly beckons, and take time to be with Him so that we may know His will for us each day. 

WITHHOLD NOT CORRECTION by Bruce A. Ray

In today’s society, where parental authority is being compromised more than ever, this Proverbs 23:13 command may seem nearly impossible to obey. The line between discipline and abuse has been blurred and now appears to vanish. As both father and pastor, Bruce A. ray uinderstands the difficulties facing modern parents, and he points to firm, biblical discipline as the solution. In this practical guide, Ray offers direction to all parents who struggle with doubt or indecision in their roles was God-ordained disciplinarians. With timely and inspiring wisdom, he exposes the emptiness of contemporary advice on child-rearing and clearly outlines from Scripture the duties of every Christian parent. 

TEACHING YOUR CHILD HOW TO PRAY by Rick Osborne

The book explains, in language we can all understand, the importance of laying a foundation of prayer that will sustain us all of our lives. In a step by step approach, Rick Osborne lays out a plan for working with children that meets their needs from the beginning of their lives, but the plan is just as effective for someone starting the learning process with older children. 

AGE OF OPPORTUNITY – A Biblical Guide to Parenting Teens, by Paul David Tripp

Paul Tripp uncovers the heart issues affecting parents and their teenagers during the often chaotic adolescent years. With wit, wisdom, humility and compassion he shows parents how to seize the countless opportunities to deepen communication, learn, and grow with their teenagers. 

 

Retirement:

LOST IN THE MIDDLE –Midlife and the Grace of God, by Paul David Tripp

The Bible never discusses midlife, just like it never discusses teenagers. Yet the Bible is able to unpack any of life’s experiences because it was written by the One who made them all. Life on this side of glory is hard. This world is a broken place. You will face things in midlife that beat at the borders of your faith, but you do not have to be lost in the middle of your story. You do not have to be paralysed by regret, defeated by aging, and discouraged by the passing of your dreams. This time of life, which can seem like an end of many things, can actually welcome you to a brand new way of living. As is so often the case in your walk with the Lord, this moment of pain is also a moment of grace. Because of this, we all need to occasionally step back, slow down and consider where we are going. Lost in the Middle will help you to do just that.

* * *

Good Books on Family Worship

The Church would like to recommend the following books for Family Worship.  It is hoped that you and your family benefit greatly from reading these books and your private worship enriched. 

1.     Family Worship (by James Alexander; Ambassador Publishers)

First published in 1847, this book gives Scriptural warrant for family worship, relates the benefits of this discipline on family members, and gives practical directions for conducting family worship. An excellent and thorough treatise on this subject. 

2.     Family Worship (by Joel R. Beeke; Reformation Heritage Books)

Similar to the book by James Alexander, but more condensed. It is also more practical, with step-by-step instructions on how to conduct family worship. Also tackles our weak objections to having family worship! An excellent primer and first book to own on this subject. 

3.     Homeward Bound (by Edward A. Hartman; Christian Focus Publications)

This book aims to teach heads of homes to prepare their families for eternity. It speaks of the roles of husbands and wives; the importance of family worship and the centrality of the Lord's Day in the Godly home. 

4.     Leading Little Ones to God (by Marian M. Schoolland; Banner of Truth Trust)

An effective resource for catechizing children. Major Reformed doctrines made easy and written in simple language for parents to read out to their children. There are suggested Bible readings as well as suggested hymns for singing. 

5.     Wise Words (by Peter Leithart; Holly Hall Publications)

Stories that can be read on the Lord's Day as well as at bedtime. They bring the Proverbs to life, illustrating Biblical truths to children in easy to understand and intriguing stories.

6.     A Sad Little Dog: 52 Stories that Teach Biblical Truths (by Jim Cromarty; Evangelical Press)

52 Bible stories (one for each Lord's Day of the year) told in a refreshing manner with many illustrations and anecdotes. Good for Upper Primary children.

7.     The Catechism for Young Children with Cartoons, Book 1 & 2  (by Vic Lockman)

Two small books of doctrinal questions and answers. A good resource for starting kids early in memorizing the catechism.

Building & Strengthening the Covenant Home

by Rev Jack Sin

A GODLY MODEL OF HOUSEHOLD GOVERNMENT 

The Glory of God

The purpose of a family is the glory of God because God had established the institution of the family for Himself. In the words of William Perkins, “Marriage was made . . . by God Himself, to be the fountain . . . of all other sorts and kinds of life in the commonwealth and in the church.” Why is it important to view the purpose of the family as the glory of God? It is because, in the long run, it determines what goes on in a family. It sets the priorities in a spiritual rather than material direction. It determines what a family does with its time and how it spends its money. The family is also the foundational unit of a society. Why? Simply because the family is the school wherein the first principles and grounds of government and subjection are learned. All will be well with the country where families are properly regulated and vice versa. The moral fibre of our society today depend on what children have picked up or failed to pick up in the family. “Well-ordered families,” said Cotton Mather, “naturally produce a good order in other societies. When families are under an ill-disciplined system, all other societies [will be] ill-disciplined.”  

The Headship of the Husband / Father

The biblical teaching on the family is a hierarchy of God-given authority. Hierarchy in the family means, first of all, that the husband and father is the accountable head for what happens, and the one who is finally responsible for seeing that essential matters are happening in a family. Calvin had written, “Let the husband so rule as to be the head . . . of his wife and let the woman . . . yield modestly to his demands.” Luther had stated that “a wife is indeed to live according to the direction of her husband; what he bids and commands is to be done.” And Katherine von Bora lived up to that expectation. If we reverse the order, we court trouble in the home. 

Modelled on Christ’s Headship of the Church, the husband’s headship is not a ticket to privilege or to tyranny but a charge to responsibility based on love for his wife and submission to God (Col 3:22–25). Every husband is to be responsible to guide and lead the family in the right direction. But it must be said here also that while the husband is the head of the home, the wife is the heart of the house. She is the God-ordained partnership in the management of a Christian home. 

The Total Depravity of Man (including Children)

Reformed theology informs us that “children should not be left to themselves, to a loose end, to do as they please, because they are not fit to govern themselves yet.” The cost of such discipline is the same for parents in any age: an enormous outlay of alertness, perseverance, time, and physical and emotional energy. 

The theological foundation on child training should begin with the acknowledgement of original sin or innate depravity. As Calvinists, we believe that children, if left to themselves, are “inclined to follow their own evil will.”   

Either children are born good and can be allowed to follow their instinctive bent, or they are born sinful and in need of redirection. Our culture and human intuition generally accept the former principle but the Bible teaches us the latter. Rom 3:10 says, As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one and Jer 17:9 says,The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? And that includes the children. This biblical doctrine provides the practical principle of the guidance and governing of our children today (as opposed to semi-Pelagian psychology that props up the self-esteem of every child and laud them as intrinsically good). 

Striking a Balance in Discipline

Effective child training has two sides to it, one negative, one positive. Some need to depress impulses towards selfishness and dishonesty and unsociable manners, while at the same time build a child’s confidence and faith in God, and loveable qualities. The negative task is to restrain, reprove, correct, it must be balanced by the parents’ resolve to nourish in themselves a very tender love and affection to their children and manifest it. Prov 22:6 says, Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it. 

Excessive chastisement and severity in punishment do not always work. Remember the sun that melts the wax also hardens the clay. It must be tempered with love and gentleness; and there is a right mode of correction for every situation. Use a variety of methods and know well the temperament and disposition of your child. Some respond well to a soft approach while others to a more vigorous training. 

We should steer a middle course between harshness and leniency. Children are not to be treated as brutes and neither with excessive fondness and doting as to harden their hearts towards evil and sin. Sadly we are often guilty of both and lose our effectiveness in the proper discipline of children. Also, do not spare the rod and spoil the child. 

The Picture of the Family As a Church

A good image for the family is the church. Richard Baxter wrote that “a Christian family . . . is a church . . ., a society of Christians combined for the better worshipping and serving God.”  William Gouge said that the family is “a little church,” while William Perkins wrote, “These families wherein the service of God is performed are, as it were, little churches, yea, even a kind of Paradise upon earth.”  

We need to know that the church can never be a substitute for the religious life of a family. In fact, the health of the church depends on what happens in the family. Richard Greenham claimed that “if ever we would have the church of God to continue among us, we must bring it into our households, and nourish it in our families.” William Cartwright insisted that catechising should be carried on “both at home by the master of the house, and in the church by the minister.” To the question, “Why at home?” He replied, “Because houses are the nurseries of the church.” 

One day, I asked a member, “Who is responsible for the training of the child? The family, church or state?” He said, “the church.” Others have relegated it to teachers in the public schools. The model answer from the Bible is given in Deut 6:6–7, And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. 

The Apostle Paul said in 2 Tim 1:5, When I call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in thee, which dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois, and thy mother Eunice; and I am persuaded that in thee also.

In 2 Tim 3:14–15, But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them; And that from a child thou hast known the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 

Both the church and the school have their complementary roles to play in the instruction of the child but this does not diminish the primary responsibility of the parents from nurturing and teaching their children.

When one was speaking at a recent YF camp of a certain B-P church, a mother came up to me and requested the author to counsel her teenage son. He spent 30 minutes talking to a 16-year-old lad who is estranged from his mother for the past 3 months. There is no replacement for an abiding and intimate relationship with our children. Some have tried the 3M’s—money, maid and machines (computers, cars, handphones, Xbox, Playstation, etc). But there is an announcement to make: “There is no substitute for mother” (and father).

We must not think that we have done our part to provide for their material needs without catering to their spiritual and social needs. An optimistic lifestyle does not always churn out good kids. Eli was a high priest but his sons were an abomination to God and a disgrace to him (1 Sam 2:12–17), being involved in all kinds of immorality and sins. Eli was not absolved of his responsibility for their untoward behaviour.

Wise Solomon in Prov 24:3–4, says, Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established: And by knowledge shall the chambers be filled with all precious and pleasant riches.

So the home is not a matter of concrete bricks, but of spiritual wisdom and the understanding of God’s Word. The rooms in the home are not just filled with worldly things, clothes, accessories, but spiritual knowledge of biblical truths and the wardrobe of godly character to be put on everyday. That requires great energy and effort to prayerfully build up a spiritually stable and sound Christian home. The architect is God and He used the parents as His agents and instruments. To construct and erect a vibrant, blessed, Christ-centred outfit and testimony of covenant grace and mercies to the inhabitants and all around them. We need to depend and submit to God alone and put Him first always.

The Biblical View of the Family

The all-important theme of the family is emphasised throughout the whole Bible. Families existed with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, long before human societies and nations were formed. One recognises the crucial importance of God fearing families with parents with regard to the upbringing and education of children. Eph 6:4 echoes this same theme by reminding parents to nurture their children in the discipline and instruction of the Word and not to provoke them to anger.

Secondly, a Christian family is characterised by discipline with dignity. Hebrews 12 reminds us that effective discipline is not abusive but corrective and it is a mark of sonship. Some are afraid to discipline and others overdo it. There is a fair and proper discipline which builds up character and yet not discourage the child’s spiritual and social development.

Thirdly, the Christian family seeks to follow God’s will and values in daily living (Jas 4:13–17). Decision-making is centred on God and preceded by family prayer, led by the father. The child learns that every time he / she needs to decide on something, he / she has to consult God first. So he / she grows in dependence on God, and not himself / herself or his / her parents.

Fourthly, Bible reading and worship is part of a covenant home. The family that worships and prays together stays together. Worship is our privilege and joy and the corporate body of a church / family is commanded to worship God together.

1.      Find a suitable time for all to meet regularly, say once a week for a start, on a Sunday afternoon / night.

2.      Sing a psalm / hymn together and open in prayer.

3.      Let every member share their needs and / or thanksgiving.

4.      Listen attentively to one another’s sharing, and show concern and care for them.

5.      The head of the home reads a passage and share a short exhortation. It can be reading from even a devotional book. One or two appropriate points will do.

6.      Take time to pray and let everyone have a chance to pray, if possible.

You can even have the Shorter Catechism as a start to teach them spiritual Bible doctrines systematically, or topical series that are relevant to Christian diligence, responsibility, honesty, integrity, purity, godliness, word, etc.

From the Scriptures, emphasise principles of life and encourage obedience to the Word. Cultivate the fear of God in them and use daily events to teach a lesson (eg bullying, bribery, stealing; consequences from fighting, etc lessons — to learn to control your anger; no fist fights, be patient and temperate, ie self-controlled).

Other relevant questions can be discussed as well, eg use of Internet, what about tattoos, and strange dressing, Charismatics, vulgar language, drinking, dancing, watching movies, discos, Boy Girl Relationships, etc.

These could also be useful discussion on school work, or church ministry or family projects, like reaching out to grandma or third uncle with gospel, or studying through the Psalms together as a family.

The Role and Privilege of Covenant Children

Children of covenant homes are blessed and sanctified of the Lord (1 Cor 7:14). Parents are to commit them to the Lord in infant baptism and honour their vow to bring them up in the fear of the Lord (Acts 2:38-9). They are to be given to the fear of God to respect and honour their parents to love the word and prayer and be a vibrant and effective witness for Christ.

An Exemplary Parentage

The godly man Job, has an excellent family practice recorded in Job 1:5, And it was so, when the days of their feasting were gone about, that Job sent and sanctified them, and rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all: for Job said, It may be that my sons have sinned, and cursed God in their hearts. Thus did Job continually.

Do we remember to pray for and with our children every morning? Monica prayed fervently for her son and he turned out to be the great theologian, Augustine, who stood against Pelagianism in the 4th century. Susanna Wesley, another prayerful and godly lady, had two sons, Charles and John Wesley, who revived England together with George Whitefield in the 18th century. Within a family, it is important to know that a bad example can wipe out good instruction. Be sure to set a good example before your children. Other methods of instruction will not do much good if you don’t teach them by a godly example. Your children will not mind the good rules you give them if you don’t act contrary to those rules yourselves. If your counsels are good, and your examples are contrary, your children will be more likely to be hurt by the latter, than benefit by the former. Someone said,

If parents would have their children blessed at church and at school, let them beware they give their children no corrupt examples at home by any carelessness, profaneness, or ungodliness. Otherwise, parents will do them more harm at home than both pastors and schoolmasters can do them good.

In practice, parents have to earn the right to inculcate values and biblical principles in their children. Remember this: “The best gift you can give another is a worthy example.” You can easily nullify what you have taught by doing the exact opposite. Imagine a father saying to the son, “Do not watch TV, it is too late now. Go to bed.” The next thing is that the child wakes up in the middle of the night and discover that his dad is still glued to the goggle box. So much for precept when it is not matched by practice. Things like honesty can only be taught if you are consistent (eg pirated software at home?) or diligence, industry (are you hardworking your self ?), or godliness (do they see you praying?).

THE BUILDLING OF A VIBRANT CHRISTIAN HOME

The marital relationship between a husband and a wife has first to be founded on Christ, the Solid Rock. We can love each other because He first loved us. Love is the language the deaf can hear and the blind can see. It is the lubricant that takes away the friction in life. It is conventional wisdom that if we were to construct a building, we need to have the sound foundation of love in Christ. So to build a block of HDB flats, you need solid piling and it certainly requires a certain depth. You need concrete and you need to meet certain legal and technical stipulations. The last thing you want is a collapsed building like the Hotel New World 16 years ago here. It is in vain for the watchman to do a job when God is not protecting the city (Ps 127:1). It is fruitless for us to work so hard when there are holes in our pockets as the prophet Haggai puts it (Hag 1:5).

There is more than just human effort; there is a divine side to things, which sometimes we fail to recognise. It is just like you can buy a bed but not sleep, food but not appetite, weapons but not peace, sex but not love, insurance but not security. Only the Almighty Jehovah who is our Redeemer and Lord is sovereign over the affairs of our lives. Do you know Him? Do you seek Him first and honour Him. So, the secret of a happy home is one where Christ is the Head, and is honoured and revered not just occasionally but in a real sense all the time in our decision making, conflict resolution, in bringing up children, in our values and our principles with a clear conscience. But first you must know Him personally as your Lord and Saviour. Romans 10:9–10 says, “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.” Christ is the propitiation for our sins and is accepted by God.

Ps 127:1—The Building of God’s Home

The tedious construction process requires proper planning, digging and good materials. It is elaborate and honest hardwork and heartwork. It takes time and effort, but yet its success also depends on other factors like weather that affects its progress ultimately. It is not wrong to want to build a strong Christian home but how do we build from the beginning is it is important.

The foundation has to be strong: The basis is firm grounding in the Word and prayer; not money, not intellect, not worldly advice or beauty or degrees but the LORD, our Jehovah God, our Creator. A covenant home is God-centred. And it affects every aspect from inter-personal relations, decision-makings, communications, solving problems and conflicts. We need to be humble and do away with pride and self-righteousness before God. Divorce is increasing In Singapore, and families are breaking down. What is the secret of strong family ties? What are the elements of a loving and stable home?

 

Elements for Building a Strong Marriage

If there are inherent threats to a happy Christian marriage today. What then are any safeguards to protect or to preserve it? Below are four vital elements or biblical directive for a vibrant and healthy Christian marriage. And we shall use this acrostic ABCD to illustrate them here.

Authority

In Every marriage, the almighty God is the supreme Authority and is to be submitted to unconditionally. However, He has delegated the authority to the husband as the head of the home. Every Christian husband should be a godly and loving leader of the home. Marriage is like a life long carriage and the husband is the driver.  Often, problems in the family erupt when we do not have a proper authority structure in the marriage or home. God has sovereignly given the burden and responsibility to the man (Eph 5:23–25; Col 3:18–20). As for the ladies, remember that wives are to obey and submit as you have just covenanted in your marriage vow. Marriage comes with its privilege and obligation. This is not a matter of superiority or inferiority but a divine economy of God’s order. Ladies, it is a joy and duty to submit to someone who you covenanted with in holy matrimony and loves you and cares for the family. while the husband is the head of the house, the wife is the heart of the home. The biblical basis for the wife’s submission is given in 1 Tim 2:12-15 and we abide by God’s holy word. It is a fearful thing to lead and you must pray for your husbands as they lead you and the family. As leader, husbands, let us keep close to our God, who is our ultimate Ruler and leader, and we are to lead by example and by love to you spouse who is worthy of all your affections and care. Be a knowledgeable and loving and God fearing leader and you will lead well in a covenant family.

Bible/Basis

In every set up, there is only one leader or person in charge for orderliness and effectiveness Authority is not possible without submission and a proper and well regarded system or reliable guide, laws or basis. The unchanging and providentially preserved, inspired and sufficient authoritative Bible is to be central to the Christian home, just like the hymnwriter says,

O give us homes where Christ is Lord and Master,

The Bible read, the precious hymns still sung. 

Your infallible standard for the directions and management of the home is the Manual by the manufacturer Our Creator which is the unchanging and sufficient 66 books of the HolyScriptures. Always refer to it often and (especially when things go wrong though not only), read the instructions carefully again and again and practice what is written inside. This will prevent many unnecessary quarrels and problems and will ensure a harmonious and happy home in the Lord. Let the Bible be a lamp to your feet and a light to your path (Ps 119:9, 11). Cherish it and use it as map and compass to navigate through the still and storm of your married life. Love it and know its content well and memorise it. Read it and share it with your spouse or family and seek to live it out daily. Meditate upon it daily and internalise and assimilate it into your life and do not forget Sabbath worship as well and worship as family and couple. The prophet in Jer 15:16 says, “Thy words were found, and I did eat them; and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart: for I am called by thy name, O LORD God of hosts” and 2 Tim 2:15 says,“Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”

Communication and Concern

One of the common problems in marital relations is the breakdown of effective communication between husband and wife. This aspect of the marital relation-ship cannot be over-emphasised.

Consider what happens when people don’t communicate effectively:-

   1. Issues remain unclarified (Prov 18:17).

   2. Wrong ideas are uncorrected and perpetuate in our minds.

   3. Conflicts and misunderstandings are unresolved (Matt 5:23–26).

   4. Confusion and disorder occur (1 Cor 14:33, 40).

   5. Wise decision-making is thwarted (Prov 18:13).

   6. The development of deep unity and intimacy within the family is hindered (Amos 3:3).

   7. Interpersonal problems pile up and barriers become higher and wider.

   8. Boredom and discontentment and frustration develop in the home.

   9. Temptation to look for someone more exciting outside the marriage may occur.

10. We don’t really get to know a person as we ought to.

Eph 4:29 says, Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.” Paul reminds us in Col 4:6, “Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man.

We need to remember to talk to God about me n before you talk to men about God. Firstly, communication begins with our relationship with God. Do we pray often and do we constantly intercede together as a family before the Throne of Grace? Sometimes, when we are in trouble, we tell everyone except God.

Secondly, do you also share and talk to each other frequently? Do you share your visions, emotions, aspirations, and your hurts and feelings? Do you bother to take time to listen to each other? Sometimes you may come back from a long day work has a lot to tell you. Listen to her even though you may be tired or are busy firs things first and give quality time to depend relationships by purposeful interaction. We have different affiliation, needs and companionship; and conversation go together. You must be all ears to each other and vice versa.

Spend quality time together by setting a side time for it. Before of uncontrolled anger remember those who fly in a rage seldom makes a good landing .In our premarital counselling we would always share this with the couple to be, never shout at each other unless the house is on fire. Learn to manage and control your temper remember that anger is one letter sort of danger and anger is a choice no one can make you angry except yourself.  Deepen relationship by purposeful interaction. Do not always email or SMS or call, speak to her or him personally and often with profound emotions, care and concern. This is necessary in maintaining a healthy and vibrant married life.
 

Discipline / Diligence / Devotion

There is a sense in which discipline and diligence are almost responsible for the success of anything, from our studies to our jobs, to the church and the home. One of the facts of the fruit of the Sprit is temperance and that is self-control or discipline. God expects us to do our part in hardwork and heartwork in our marriage as well, the hardware and software of married life. There is blessing in Christian self-discipline and labour. Our example is that of the ant (Prov 6) and not the pig.  

The Christian home requires both the husband and wife to cooperate and work hard in their own spiritual lives. Not only in our careers but building up each other in love and only in the rearing of children in the home and the responsible stewardship of the talents that God gives you. Nothing venture, nothing gain.There is no elevator to success in marriage, you have to use the stairs of diligence in your devotion to God and to each other. Whatever you had find it, do it heartily unto the Lord. Glorify God by your love for him and in honest industry and God will surely bless and prosper your family and days ahead. And exercise moderation in all things and be content with God has given you. Consider the following practical rules in proper communication. 

Discipline of ourselves first includes setting our priorities for our marriage and family aright first. Consider the following below:-

1.      God first before self and family —Matt 6:33, “But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” Matt 6:12, For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

2.      With eternal values in view—Col 3:1, “If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God.”

3.      Regular Bible / Prayer and Sabbath and family worship.

4.      Quality time with family members and responsible stewardship in the church.

5.      Catechising of children—teaching them to honour God in word and deeds, to have a sincere desire, and aspiration, to please God (Heb 11:6, But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him). This will save us from many troubles and pain later.

 

Discipline of Children and Correction

The wise king of Israel, Solomon teaches that correction must be consistent and repetitive. The  verse “spare the rod and spoil the child” is not a one-time action. The verb calls for ongoing activity of discipline. Therefore a parent may not reasonably expect that one or two times of Biblically beating the child is going to deliver that child once and for all of the rebellious heart with which he was born. However in the same breath, we must emphasize that godly parents who insist on complete obedience and back up their demands with immediate application of the rod discover to their joy that the need for the rod diminishes as the child recognises the parents' determination to apply it when necessary.

Many parents have admitted to their lack of consistency in application of the rod of correction, "I have tried that; it doesn't work." Let us think about that response for a moment. Can it really be true that a child correction procedure that is ordered directly in the Scriptures for Godly parents will work in some cases and not in others? Remember that a child is manifesting the rebellion bound in his naturally depraved heart and only the Holy Spirit can changed hi m from within. I believe the answer lies with the children primarily and the parents collectively.

To carry out the spirit of this passage, a parent must immediately carry out correction with the rod as soon as practical after the offense has occurred. This is fully in keeping with Eccl 8:11 Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil.God clearly states that the further correction is removed from the actual offense in terms of relative time, the less effective that correction will be. What an instructive lesson for our judicial system! How corrective can any method of punishment be when it is weeks, months, and even years after the actual offense? Therefore, a parent should apply the rod as quickly as is possible following the breaking of a rule.

For this reason, a mother who is alone with her children during the day is wise to use her delegated authority from her husband to speedily execute the correction against the erring child rather than wait the minutes or even the hours that it may take for dad to arrive home. When one keeps in mind that the greater the time difference between the offense and the correction the less effect will be gained from the correction, it is obviously wise to follow God's method and apply the correction immediately after the offence.

Many parents in using the rod of correction on their child do so with an obvious lack of vigor and often stop short of the child's will being completely broken. Manifestation of this error is illustrated in countless homes as a child gets up from his session of correction still spouting rebellious words and giving willful looks at his discouraged parent. The parent has no one to blame but himself for this problem since he did not completely break the will of the child during the session of correction. A child who is still willing to resist the authority of his parent after having received the rod of correction is still in need of more of that same rod.

Christian parents must be very wise today in how they carry out Godly correction. Be vigorous and consistent in the application of these procedures in the privacy of your home. Correct your child in the privacy of your home so that the fruit of your training will be so indelibly fixed on the child's heart that you will not have to use the rod of correction in a public setting and expose your family to this very real risk in today's permissive lawless society.

Another aspect of this is that if you carry through with Godly correction in the privacy of your home your child will not embarrass you in public. Many are the parents who are embarrassed in a church service or in a public setting by their child's unruly behavior simply because they have not enforced rules of obedience on that child in the home.

Grandparents should also recognise one possible complication in their lives with regard to this issue of child correction. The Scripture states that the crown of older men is children's children (Prov 17:6). That being the case, a grandparent is tempted not to follow through with the rod of correction being used for his grandchild. However a godly grandparent will recognise the necessity of doing so as well as the Godly reason for doing so.

The journey of love in building a loving marital home is a responsible burden.  We must be wise and prudent in a treacherous immoral world and look up to Jesus as the author and finisher of our faith always

Child catechism is a vital aspect of the child’s individual character, is broader in scope than just for the sake of the individual. It affects the whole community and church. It is a tragic state of affairs that one can see little difference between the families and that of the unsaved communities. The rates of teenage rebellion, premarital pregnancies, abortions, body pierces per capita, within each community are the same whether Christian or pagan. 

For Christian families to fulfill their duty of proclaiming the truth of God’s gospel they must look to the only source that distinguishes them from the pagan families: God’s covenant promises are identified and they must be implemented in the covenant family, diligently and consistently. Implementation doesn’t happen automatically or easily. Effective implementation takes vision, effort, planning, discussion, agreements, determination, perseverance, adjustments, et al. Effective implementation means God-centred consistent discipline.

Family Worship and Catechising Children

The family worship and the catechising of covenant Children (the shorter catechisms of the WCF is recommended. Know it well yourself first. What you do not have you cannot give) is so important to the spiritual health and vitality of a Christian home. It includes quality time for family Bible study and a time of worship and the systematic study of the word. Every Christian family should have such a blessed time daily. It is amazing how few families really take this seriously and practise this routinely. It is the best guarantee to have Christian children with good moral standards that do not drift through the teen years, to have a family that has a witness for Christ in the community, and to have a family that takes the church seriously and enjoys going to all the s.

It is well to remember the great command that the Lord gave to His covenant people.

Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord: And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might. And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up (Deut. 6:4-7).

Worship of the Lord is first of all vertical and then horizontal and begins in the home and takes in the whole family.

I. What Is the Purpose of the Family Worship and catechism of children?

  1. To worship God together and learn more of His ways through his Word. What could be a better purpose. Children should learn to worship God in their early years that they might have respect for Him in the later years. They need to learn how to regard Him and to realize that He is the Creator, Holy, and to be honored in all that we say and do.
  2. To honor God's Word, develop respect for it, and to live by it. James says, But be ye doers of the Word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves (James 1:22). Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God (Matthew 4:4). Home is a good place to practice the exhortation, Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord (Col. 3:16). In these days when we have put the Bible out of our schools, we need to put it back in our homes and teach our children from it.
  3. To establish the family in the faith, personal convictions, and doctrine. Children and young people need convictions to stand up against their peers. They must understand their faith and know something of good Bible doctrine so they know what they believe and why. The home makes a good Bible school where the children can be grounded as they face the humanistic, evolutionary philosophy of [our modern society].
  4. To pray over family problems and needs, burdens the children may have, and that they may have confidence in the God that answers prayer in the everyday things of life. All the members of the family have personal needs. It would be good if they could learn to share them openly and take them before the Lord together. There are school needs, boy and girl friend problems, problems with play mates, character problems such as timidity and fears of all kinds, questions about amusements, finances. Teenagers have deep needs and hate to express them for fear of being misunderstood or embarrassed. Their problems are big problems to them and must be considered. Mom and Dad have needs of all kinds. Financial needs, Dad's work needs, the car, moving, and all kinds of things can be prayed through with God. All the family needs to know they can have confidence in Him and that He will hear and answer prayer.
  5. To pray and intercede for others such as the pastor, missionaries, sick folk, unsaved loved ones, the neighbours, fellow believers in need, the church, our president, the shut-ins, those who are in trial or going through persecutions. Children who can learn to pray openly at home will have no problem praying publicly in the church weekly prayer meetings as they grow.

II. Practical Suggestions That May Be of Help.

  1. Search out materials (ie RPG, Shorter catechism) that will be relevant to all age levels in the family. Different ages have different interests and what may appeal to one may not appeal to another.
  2. Vary the methods so as to keep family time from being boring and just mere routine. Interest for all should be maintained so monotony does not kill it.
  3. Do not make it a time of forced listening to the Bible, of bitter participation, or unhappy endurance while you just superficially read through whole chapters of the Bible beyond family comprehension and then drag the family through a long dry, routine prayer. If they participate in anger and unwillingness, they will abhor the family altar time.
  4. Make it a delightful, edifying, interesting time filled with enthusiasm so that the whole family looks forward to it with real expectancy.
  5. Do not make it so long that the children despise the time it takes. Better have it short and sweet, vital and satisfying, so their appetites hunger for more.
  6. Let all participate and become involved. Those that can read should take turns in reading as well as in prayer. Even the little ones can say a few words in prayer even if they cannot read. They can be taught songs in which all can take part.
  7. Take time for discussion, answering questions, solving problems, and for interaction. . Children especially are inquisitive and want to know.
  8. Do not spend time in criticizing or gossiping or dealing with a pet subject. There is nothing that will sour the whole thing more than engaging in tearing something or someone apart. This is not time to air church problems unless for a matter of prayer.  Remember it is a worship and sharing time.
  9. Let the children that are old enough take part in the family worship time some time either in the whole or in part. Let them do it their way and express themselves. It will create interest in it for them. This is also a good way to develop them spiritually and in self confidence. They should be encouraged in what they do or say and not be belittled.
  10. Have the family altar when it is most convenient for all. Dinner time every day or afternoon on Sabbath day is usually best for all before the various activities of the evening begin.

III. Possible Methods That May Be Used.

  1. Paragraph Bible study. Rather than read a whole chapter at a time which may be quite long and hard to retain, do just a paragraph a day. Let all the members of the family suggest a title to the paragraph according to its content. Let each one list some things they observe in the paragraph such as places, people, things, special words, etc. This can be great fun for the children and a real challenge to all. It is like observing things in a room or in car ride. When you have gone through the paragraph like that, then investigate and expound some spiritual lessons that may be learned. Let each one make it personal and tell what they have learned for themselves.
  2. Read Bible stories from the Bible. (Moses, David, Isaiah) They supply answers to different family needs and give a challenge to spiritual living for the children as well.
  3. Go through the ministry and life of Christ. You could do one a night and learn something about Christ from each encounter and especially let each one learn something for himself. Study the miracle as to where it was, the occasion, what happened, who was involved, and then personal lessons.
  4. Study Bible characters. (ie Elijah, Nehemiah, Jonah) This can be good for a different kind of study for the sake of variety. Read about the character in the Bible and study his weak and strong points and discuss how you may learn something from him or her. You can see yourself in Bible characters and learn many precious lessons.
  5. Study Bible doctrine. Everyone should know the basic doctrines of the Bible. All the family should be grounded in the truth. You could follow the doctrine by means of a good concordance or perhaps taken from a book on basic doctrines of the Bible.
  6. Bible book study. This might be more difficult and might be better for older ones rather than children. Take one Bible book at a time and find out its theme, major divisions, lessons, key chapters and ideas, etc.
  7. Important chapters of the Bible may be used. If not done this way, one can go through a Bible book chapter by chapter. To read a chapter a day could well be done if the children are not too young so they can comprehend. Learn the key verse in the chapter, get the key word, study any special promises, see how Christ is seen, look at the important doctrine in the chapter, break the chapter down into its paragraph parts if you can to get the structure of the chapter, study what sins should be avoided and what things a person should do and what lessons can be learned.
  8. Devotional books for various age levels. You can buy such books in a local Christian bookstore or send for some from a Christian publishing house. They are written for various age levels. Children enjoy these and find them very interesting. There are books for primaries, juniors, teens, etc. Major verses. This is a good method for variety. Just take a verse a night for a period of time and scrutinize it as to what it means for each one. For example, you might take a series of verses on great promises in the Bible such as on prayer, salvation, victorious living, Christ's second coming. Try to memorize the verse.
  9. Bible games. This can be interesting and add challenge to the family altar and can be  appealing to the young folks and keep the family worship time from being boring. Use Bible games that teach a lesson and from which you may learn something helpful for Christian living.
  10. Have a map study. After all, salvation is also geographical and children might learn where certain countries, rivers, and mountains are and what happened there such as the law on Mt. Sinai, crossing the Red Sea, and Christ walking on the water. Show them where it took place and draw some lessons from it.
  11. Use pictures and other bible aids. This is a wonderful way to interest children. Many Bible storybooks have many pictures in them that tell a story for the child.
  12. Object lessons. Visual aids of all kinds can be used. Be creative and use whatever object you may have handy to teach a Bible truth. Christ readily used object lessons such as the parables in the sheep and goats, types in the rock, water in the well of Samaria, etc. There is no end to object lessons.
  13. Have a scripture memorisation programme during the summer months. Even a 3-4 year old can learn ten verses during the holidays if you select the right verses, and by the time a child is five years old, he can learn Psalm 23. Try it, make it interesting, and you will be amazed at what your family can accomplish! Give little rewards along the way.
  14. Use songs [Eph. 5:19. Col 3:23,24]. You should always sing if possible. [Have a hymnal or then sings my souls for each member of the family. Learn the great hymns of the faith.] You can also teach from the songs that are sung and there are stories behind the hymns if you investigate them 
  15. Read God's Word together. Use RPG or Select a book of the Bible appropriate for your children's ages and have each family member read 2-3 verses as you go around the room. You can read anywhere from 1-2 chapters to an entire epistle such as Philippians each night. Let the children help choose what book of the Bible to read.

HOW TO RAISE A CHILD FOR GOD

Grace and wisdom are desperately needed for parents to learn how to relate to the family (especially the children) and friends in an edifying way. Thank God for growing families and the setting up of covenant homes in our churches. A relevant issue recently to all Christian parents is, how do we bring up a child in the fear and nurture of the Lord.

The following is edited (with some additions and modifications) from Wayne Mack, A Homework Manual for Biblical Living, Vol. 2, Philipburg: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing, 1980, 74–76.

Study the following principles and apply them in your home when appropriate.

1. Examine your expectations for your child. Are they realistic? Evaluate them in the light of the Bible (1 Cor 13:11; Matt 18:10; Gen 33:12–14).

2. Love him unconditionally, just like how Christ has loved us (Deut 7:7; 1 John 4:10, 19).

3. Look for opportunities in which you can commend him. Express appreciation for him frequently (Phil 1:3; 1 Thess 1:2; 2 Thess 1:3).

4. Remember, be niggard with criticism, generous with commendation. Seldom criticise without first expressing appreciation for good points (1 Cor 1:3–13).

5. Give freedom to make decisions where serious issues are not at stake (eg what to eat). Your goal should be to bring your child to maturity in Christ and not to depend on you (Eph 4:13–15; 6:4; Prov 22:6; Col 1:27–28).

6. Do not compare him with others, it does not edify. Compare him with what the Bible teaches (Gal 6:4; 2 Cor 10:12–13; 1 Cor 12:4–11).

7. Never mock him or make fun of him. Do not demean or belittle your child. Beware of calling him dumb or clumsy or stupid (Matt 7:12; Eph 4:29–30; Col 4:6; Prov 12:18; 16:24).

8. Do not scold or embarrass him in front of others unless absolutely necessary. Discipline is not for public display (Matt 16:22–23; 18:15; 1 Cor 16:14).

9. Never make empty threats or promises that you do not intend to keep (Matt 5:37; Jas 5:12; Col 3:9).

10. Don’t be afraid to say, “no” (though not all the time); when you say it, mean it (Prov 22:15; 29:15; 1 Sam 3:13; Gen 18:19).

11. When your child has problems, do no overreact or lose control of yourself. Do not yell or shout or scream at him. It frightens the child temporarily but achieves nothing in the end (Eph 4:26–27; 1 Cor 16:14; 2 Tim 2:24–25; 1 Tim 5:1–2).

12. Communicate faith, optimism and expectancy. Do not communicate by word or action that you have given up on your child and are resigned to his being a failure; it may become a self–fulfilled “prophecy.” (Phlm 21; 2 Cor 9:1–2; 1 Cor 13:7).

13. Make sure your child knows exactly what is expected of him. Most of the book of Proverbs is specific counsel from a father to his son.

14. Ask his advice—include him in some of the family planning, eg when to go for holiday (Rom 1:11–12; 2 Tim 4:11; 1 Tim 4:12; John 6:5).

15. When you make a mistake with your child, admit it and ask your child for forgiveness (Matt 5:23–24; Jas 5:16).

16. Have family conferences where you discuss family goals, family projects, etc. Welcome contributions or criticisms from your child (Ps 128; Jas 1:19; 3:13–18; Titus 1:6–8; Prov 15:22).

17. Assess his areas of strength (and weakness) and then encourage him to develop them (2 Tim 1:16; 4:5; 1 Pet 4:10).

18. Give him plenty of tender loving care (and that means time and energy). Be free in your expression of love by word or deed (1 Cor 13:1–8; 16:14; John 13:34; 1 Thess 2:7–8).

19. Practice selective reinforcement. When your child does something well, commend him. Especially let him know when his attitude and effort are what they should be. Conversely, punish him proportionately if he wilfully persist in wrongdoing (1 Thess 1:3–10; Phil 1:3–5; Col 1:3–4; Eph 1:15).

20. Be more concerned about Christian attitudes and character than you are about performance, athletic skills, clothing or external beauty, or intelligence (1 Sam 16:7; Gal 5:22–23; 1 Pet 3:4–5; Prov 4:23; Matt 23:25–28).

21. Spend quality time with your child. Plan to have many fun times and many special events with your child. Make a list of fun things your family can do (Ps 128; Prov 5:15–18; 15:13; 17:22; Eph 6:4; Col 3:21; Eccl 3:4; Luke 15:22–24).

22. Help your child to learn responsibility by administering discipline fairly, consistently, lovingly, and promptly (1 Sam 3:13; Prov 13:24; 19:18; 22:15).

23. Look upon your child as a depraved individual who needs saving grace and share with him God’s love. Look upon the task of raising children as a process which takes a long time to complete (Eph 6:4; Prov 22:6; Gal 6:9; 1 Cor 15:58; Isa 28:9–10).

24. Live your convictions consistently. Your child will learn more by observing your example than he will by listening to your words. Remember, the best gift (besides the gospel) you can give him is a worthy example (Deut 6:4–9; 1 Thess 2:10–12; Phil 4:9; 2 Tim 1:5, 7).

25. Recognise that you are responsible to prepare your child for life in this world and in the world to come (Eph 6:4; Deut 6:4–9; Ps 78:5–7; 2 Tim 3:15–17).

26. Be sensitive to the needs, feelings, fears, and opinions of your child. We are dealing with a person, not a machine (Matt 18:10; Col 3:21).

27. Treat the child with great care and attention. Ours is only a temporal stewardship which we are to be accountable finally. He belongs to God (Matt 18:5–6).

28. Do not provoke your child to anger or exasperate him. Deal with sin firmly and encourage repentance from it (Prov 15:1; Eph 4:31–32; 2 Cor 7:10).

29. Maintain the practice of catechism, daily Bible reading, discussions, prayer and family worship(Deut 6:4–9; 2 Tim 3:15; Eph 6:4; Ps 1:1–3; 78:5–8; 119:9, 11).

30. Become thoroughly involved as a family in a biblical church (Heb 10:24–25; Eph 4:11–16).

31. Make your home a centre of Christian hospitality, where your child will be brought into frequent contact with many Christians (Rom 12:13; Heb 13:1–2; 2 Kgs 4:8–37).

32. Make it easy for your child to approach you with problems, difficulties, and concerns. Learn to be a good listener when he needs you. Give your child your undivided attention. Avoid being a mind reader or an interrupter or a critic. Show an interest in whatever interests your child. Make yourself available when your child needs you—even if you are busy (Jas 1:19–20; 3:16–18; 1 John 3:16–18; 1 Cor 9:19–23; Phil 2:3–4).

33. Seek to bring your child to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. Become all things to your child that you might win your child to Christ. God, of course, must do the saving, bring conviction, give repentance and faith. You, however, may provide the environment in which God saves—by your prayers, godly speech and example, family devotions, and involvement in a sound biblical church (2 Tim 1:5–7; 3:14–17; Eph 6:4; Deut 6:4–9; Mark 10:13–14; Rom 10:13–17; 1 Cor 1:18–21).

 

Mass Media Influences in the Christian Family

We live in a world of mass information and communication. The late 20th century witnesses an unprecedented electronic revolution with the introduction of Information Technology (IT) into the work place, schools, and the home. Never before have so many people have access to so much information at a click of a button. Advancement in IT revolutionises the way we communicate, learn, do business and relate to one another and keep in touch. It has been estimated that more than 1/3 of Singaporeans are IT savvy, and many more are expected to use it over the next few years. New acronyms are coined, from SGRAM, GPU, LAN, URL, DVDs to HTML, e-commerce, e-business, palm tops, SMS, MMS and others, demonstrating the technological revolution that we are facing today. Children and adults have at their disposal wide range of overwhelming global information (with the help of search engines as well), which can be both good or bad, depending whether it is used for good or evil. How do all these affect the Christian family? The following are to be considered:-

The Stewardship of Time

The use of the Internet has taken much time and attention from the average family. Our children use it for emailing, chat rooms (even with strangers) computer games, like the Nintendo, MP3, surfing the Internet; others may use it for business opportunities, learning or leisure. Almost variably it displaces or take up valuable time of the user watching videos as opposed to healthy family interaction and reading of good Christian books, and fellowship. Beware that it does not become a substitute for edifying Christian interaction. Paul in Eph 5:15–16 says, "See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, Redeeming the time, because the days are evil." Moses said in Ps 90:12, "So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom." Spending three to five hours a day just surfing, talking in chatrooms or playing computer games can be poor stewardship of the time, to say the least. (I know of a teenager that spends 8 hours a day on the computer and some Christian families that allows the children to earn computer time by their hardwork and good behaviour as an incentive). Beware that this and do not substitute time for personal devotion and prayer for the doing of school homework or  the time of for leisure

 

The Exposure to Spiritually and Morally Undesirable Elements

The availability of the cyberspace provides a wide range of desirable and undesirable elements to the average user, both young and old. It is almost impossible now to censor the billions of websites that are constantly being developed by many, although there are software (ie Net Nanny that can help to censor them). Children and teenagers are curious and often easily enticed and attracted to websites on violence, pornography, horror, comedy, or the occult (eg there is an Angel’s net started by an New Ager, when you can supposedly contact ‘angels’ to be your spiritual guide). They will be easy prey to the virtual influence that are on the world wide webs in cyberspace.

The parents have a role to play, to both inculcate values, educate and nurture their children, to keep them away from spiritually harmful and morally unedifying sites. 1 Thes 5:21,22 says, Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. Abstain from all appearance of evil. Parents are to watch the games that their children play, that they are not about violence, pornography, or occult, which are commonly accessible in the Internet. It must be said in the same breath that there are edifying and helpful portals as well. Some schools or institutions of higher learning require Internet research by the students as part of the overall curriculum. Absolute censorship is not the viable solution. There is a need to teach our children personal discipline and responsibility grounded in the fear of God (Prov 9:10), the constant presence of the Lord with them (Ps 139:7,8) and our accountability to God one day before the judgment seat of Christ (2 Cor 5:10). The best censor is still a personal desire to maintain good conscience before God and man (act 23:1) when the person concerned chose not to view certain sites himself or herself positively. On the other hand, the church can have their own website for a global audience. There are also intellectually and spiritually stimulating (eg educational websites, information on Christian religion, church history, bible, facts on science and geography, etc) which we can use.

 

Virtual Fun with the Forces of Darkness

A commentary in Computer Times (26 September 2001) had said it well, "Let’s not kid ourselves, most games are somewhat lacking in educational value." Some games are often just mindless, acquaintance with violence and horror in interactive games. For example, in games like Wolfenstein, the player is to storm and wrestle with ghouls, zombies and other occultic elements. In the Throne of Darkness, the player is set up in a fantasy world and have to do battle with demon Zanshin and his evil hordes. In Diablos 2, there are monsters galore and the player is to vanquish these foes both human and supernatural. In the Lord of Destruction, Baal the game chief villain and his malevolent plans have to be combated against together with other forces of darkness. In some multi-media interactive games, characters screamed in pain as their flesh are being torn off and hysterical and mystical sobbings can be heard from a mysterious source. Game developers are piling up the multi-media playhouse with sinister character and genetically modified mortals, to entice and seduce young and unsuspecting players into a surreal game of diabolical make-belief.

Paul says in Eph 5:11 And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove themand Gal 5:20 Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies that as believers we should have nothing to do with such unedifying influences in our lives. The latest is that you can catch blockbusters in the comfort of your home on your PCs. PAC TV: a subscription base, personal entertainment suite on broadband was launched as a trial in Singapore. Subscribers can enjoy unlimited screenings of any shows from beauty pageants, music videos, (ie MTV) sitcoms to the latest movies wit h SCV. These unedifying time robbers had been the pre-occupation of many teenagers and adults as well, substituting bible reading, fellowship and prayer. Paul in Phil 4:7-8 say, And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.

 

The New Substitute for Fellowship/Personal Communications

It is noted that the Internet and computer have the tendency to displace sound interpersonal relationships. Impersonal Emails are used instead of personal meetings, phone calls or a group interaction and healthy socialisation. There will also be available to many distance-learning programme over the net without the personal interaction of the teacher and the classroom. Some users have been known to get acquainted with a stranger on the Internet and then develop an intimate relationship with them and forsake home or work to be with a virtual friend or fiend often to their detriment.

Often, as guardians and parents, we need to be there physically and join our children in their activities. Chat with them and show them other interesting and edifying websites and things that they can see and do. Often discuss and talk to them about dangers and things that they ought to avoid or beware of, eg horror (ie Diabolos game) pornography, violence or other undesirable elements. Some video games allow the user to cut off the heads of the opponents or bomb buildings in retaliation. There is always the peril of being addicted to it, which has happened to many (1 Cor 6:12). As parents, we may get in touch with their friends and interact with them once a while and find out about our children’s interest, behaviour and conduct. You can also check on the history of their surfing and the sites they visited and have a password that is managed by someone responsible. If there is a need to discipline, do not hesitate to do it with love, making it commensurate with the offence committed. Forfeiture of privileges (eg no computer play time for a week or so) or other punitive measures can be administered, tampered with prudence, patience and care. Give place for a gradual change with guidance for the better and encourage a lasting reformation of heart and mind (Rom 12:1,2). Paul said in 2 Tim 2:22 Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart.

 

The Home as a Workplace?

One good (or bad) consequence of the IT revolution is that some work can be done from home. With some computer software and the Internet, it is now possible for financial analysts, accounting and banking professionals to literally work from home, so that they can be with their family and yet useful economically. The danger is turning the cosy and warm home into a cold and formal office completely, hence not separating work and family life. Good discipline and management of time is necessary here for a healthy balanced family and work life. Workaholics will find this a real temptation to handle. There is to be clear demarcation of when is work time and when is family time and the confusion between the two is unhelpful. Work must not be allowed to substitute quality family time with the children and spouse. A quick word about domestic helps although one is not against it in principle. One has to caution against reliance on domestic helps for the upbringing and discipline of  the child. Does not a precious child of God demands our ful time attention and nurture in the fear and admonition of the Lord? Prioritise your life in the view of eternity and not for temporal gains only (Col 3:1,2).

TV—TRANSFORMING VALUES OF YOUNG MINDS

One of the most effective means of influencing the minds of the young (and old) is through the mass media, particularly the TV or movies, videos or magazines. With SCV, we can have 24 hours of non-stop entertainment, news movies, (HBO) sports (footlball fever) and other programmes. While it may be said here that there are some good programmes that one can get from the TV, like news and documentaries,(Discovery Channel)  generally speaking, there is an abundance of immoral, unethical and occultic episodes that are depicted in many programmes as well. Excessive TV watching is a time-robber and how many hours has been lost daily instead of it being used for the reading the word, edifying of the saints, in reading the word and prayer. Many so-called harmless cartoons, comedies and science-fiction movies are not that innocent after all. Hollywood and Walt Disney are vehicles of the devil to propagate New Age and cultic and occultic ideas.

Disney uses three forms of divination in the movie “Pocahontas”: dreams, fortune telling, and astrology. Grandmother Willow said to Pocahontas, “Spirits live in the earth, the water and the sky.” Pocahontas was told that the spirits would guide her if she would listen with her heart. In “Lion King,” Simba’s father told him that the stars were ascended masters who would help him. The Bible condemns astrology in Isa 47:13–14, Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels. Let now the astrologers, the stargazers, the monthly prognosticators, stand up, and save thee from these things that shall come upon thee. Behold, they shall be as stubble; the fire shall burn them; they shall not deliver themselves from the power of the flame: there shall not be a coal to warm at, nor fire to sit before it.

 

These so-called “harmless” cartoons for children by Walt Disney promotes animism, pantheism, and many New Age concepts as well. In one scene in “Lion King,” Rafiki was in an altered state of consciousness with his eyes closed, legs crossed and his fingers together. If you remember, Leonardo was also in an altered state of consciousness in the movie “The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle.” That is how he contacted Splinters, his Zen master, so that he could rescue him. Children pick these up quickly and this will be indelibly marked in their minds, giving them a warped view of God and things spiritual.

The TV transforms (or should I say, deforms) our children’s mind. In the “Mighty Morphine Power Rangers,” the movie, an evil villain named Ivan Ooze was set free by accident. His vengeance was aimed toward Zordon, the leader of the Power Rangers and Zordon is empowered by crystals that will protect him. This is what New Agers believe in. The supernatural power of crystals that can heal, save and protect a person spiritually and young unsuspecting children.

We need to ask ourselves honestly these questions:

a) Has our child become more aggressive or violent? 
b) Do our children have any phobia?
c) Does our child reject authority and disobey us often?
d) Do our children have a problem with distinguishing between fantasy and reality?
e) Do our children have a problem believing God as the only living and true God? Have they lost their desire for prayer and the reading of the Bible?

f)  Are they antisocial and do they have something to hide from us?

We have to carefully watch the mental, social and spiritual development of our children. These young impressionable minds are to be changed or transformed by the renewing of the mind through Scripture, prayer and sound Christian teaching and example, or they will be conformed to the secular values of the world, accentuated by the TV, movies, videos, magazines and even undesirable elements from the Internet. Paul said in Rom 12:1–2, I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.

There is a subtle attack on these young impressionable minds of our children and these diabolical tactics are successfully influencing behaviour, dressing, speech and thought life. Paul admonishes us in 2 Corinthians 10:5, “Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ.”

Christian parents are to be wary of the fiery darts of the evil one, and to carefully regulate and screen the programmes watched by their children. The gogglebox glamorises sex, horror and violence, comedy and advance New Age and secular ideas which are slowly infecting our children. Hollywood movies exalt vice, immorality, dishonesty, the occult (ie Harry Potter) and hooliganism. It is an enemy of the Christian home, of holy living, and a mission-minded God honouring church. Because of these influences, some look to the heaven not for the soon return of Christ but for aliens, UFOs popularised by “Independence Day,” “X-Files,” “ET” and “Star Wars.” Horror is exhibited in y Bluffy the vampire slayer, Sabrina the witch and the blair project and others   We are becoming an increasing pagan, pantheistic and syncretistic world full of superstitions, falsehood and spiritual darkness. Jesus warns us already in Matt 24:24, For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.

 

The renewing of our mind comes from the meditation of Scriptures and prayer, and not from a memory bank of horror, sex and violence fed to us by the TV, movies, videos, DVDs and secular or rock or sentimental music. 2 Tim 2:22 says, Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart.

May we be forewarned and forearmed of such diabolical stratagems and hidden spiritual persuaders, and guard and watch over the precious souls of our children lest they be misled and drawn away eternally by the evil one in these perilous last days (1 Tim 6:11).

The 21st century is an age of technological change and as parents and leaders of the Church. We have to keep abreast with it without being ignorant or overwhelmed by it. The computer and electronic gadgets today is almost indispensable for the average person in a new era of the 21st century. Children need guidance and attention in this matter. It is requisite that parents encourage Christian fellowship and edifying communication with others and their children. As parents, we need to know what our children are seeing, reading and doing on the computer. Do not give them free access to the computer all the time without supervision until they are responsible enough to be left alone. One safeguard is a strong parent-child relationship that brings the child to the parent (and to God in daily prayer and dependence) every time he / she needs counsel. The Christian here is to be characterised by fervent prayer and the reading of the Word, not an obsession with diabolical games, movies, comedies, violent shows (ie wrestling) and TV sitcoms and other shows. Proper education of our selves and our children is desperately needed. At other times, discipline corrective actions like punishment is necessary but it has to be done in a positively edifying manner and not just the venting of our inordinate anger or frustration unnecessarily. Col 3:21 says, Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.

 

The Church and Christian family can benefit from the IT revolution (and the TV) by using it with regard to positively edifying websites, programmes and correspondence with family and friends abroad. Ultimately, pray and ask the Lord for wisdom and prudence to manage and nurture the child in the fear and knowledge of the Lord. The parents’ example and Godly principles are important for the children to follow therein. We are all accountable to God one day (2 Cor 5:10) including the way we relate to our culture, social and technical environment and bring up our children in a covenant home (Prov 24:3,4, Ps 127:1).

The IT revolution and the TV possess vast potential for both good and evil. As Christians, we are to have sound spiritual and moral fibre to use it for good only. We end with Paul’s admonition in 1 Cor 6:12 All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any. 1 Cor 10:23,31 says, All things are lawful for me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but all things edify not. Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God. The end of all men is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever and this applies to all aspects of our lives as well -

Conclusion

The family provides a good test case for us to apply our belief in covenant theology. Covenant means relationship and a set of privileges and obligations to abide by, first to God and then to other persons. The purpose of a family is to glorify God. The family is ideally a place of sanctified relationships and the worship of God and the enrichment of one another. A well-ordered family is a hierarchical one in which the husband/father is the accountable head, the wife/mother his subordinate with her own spheres of responsibility, and children subject to the discipline and nurture of both parents (Eph 5:24–26; Col 3:24).

Proper child development is not about building self-esteem as some secular psychologists would have told us to do. Like us, children are fallen creatures whose sinful bent is to be redirected toward God and moral goodness through Jesus Christ our Lord. The foundation of good childbearing is the influence of example of parents and other “significant others” as well as precepts of the Scriptures, and a balance between restraint and positive support.

Above all, the parents are to teach their children the knowledge of the Christian religion so that God willing, our children may arrive at eternal happiness through the saving knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ.

A historic document concerning the family was the 1677 resolution of the members in Dorchester, Massachusetts, to undertake a reformation of their lives. Part of the covenant that they signed was the resolve:

to reform our families, engaging themselves to a conscientious care to set up and maintain the worship of God in them and to walk in our houses with perfect hearts in a faithful discharge of all domestic duties: educating, instructing, and charging our children and our households to keep the ways of the Lord.

The Church and state need a reformation today too. It is not a resuscitation of an ailing economy, but a reformation of domestic life and it starts with our individual families; when we humble ourselves and cry to God for repentance and assistance to bring up our children in the fear and admonition of the Lord (Deut 6:6–7).

Be Ye Not Unequally Yoked

By Rev Charles Seet

Text: 2 Corinthians 6:14-7:1

The passage for our meditation deals with the subject of the Christian’s relationships with people around him, and how we must be willing to submit to God in this area. In this passage, the apostle Paul addressed the subject of the relationships that the Corinthian believers had with their idol-worshipping friends who were non-Christians. This was a great problem to them, because of the Christians in Corinth lived in the midst of a very worldly, immoral and idolatrous society. This environment had a strong influence on them. Because of this strong influence, the case of immorality in the church could not be dealt with so easily. Because of this influence, there was a dissenting and divisive spirit among some of the members, and some were adopting worldly methods to deal with the problems, like suing one another in the public courts.

 

What the Corinthians needed to do was to renounce all compromise with their pagan, worldly environment. But as long as their non-Christian friends continued to influence them, they could not do this. Hence there was a great need for them to sever the close relationships they had with these people. It is never easy for anyone to break an established relationship. This is why the apostle Paul used the strongest possible argument to convince them to do this – their relationship with God! The argument is that their new relationship with a holy and righteous God demands a radical change in their relationships with their friends who were unbelievers.

The contrast between God and unbelievers is brought out in 5 stark comparisons: Righteousness and Unrighteousness, Light and Darkness, Christ and Belial, the believer and the infidel, the temple of God and idols. These five comparisons are presented in the form of rhetorical questions. The answer to all of them is obvious – None! There can be no fellowship, no communion, no concord, no part and no agreement between these two. Hence our relationship with God demands and change in the way we relate to unbelievers.

When we turned to Christ for salvation we entered into a permanent and unbreakable covenant relationship with Him. We took Him to be our God. And He took us to be His people. And He is a Holy and Righteous God, who will not tolerate any sin. This relationship which we have with God must bring about fundamental changes in the way we relate to others, and especially in the way we relate with non-Christians around us. We may still enjoy each other’s company and conversation for a time, but as we grow in our love for Christ, while most of our non-Christian friends remain unreceptive to the gospel, a painful parting of ways inevitably comes.

Usually, however, the pain of losing close friends is compensated by the joy of making new friends with like-minded Christians in church, or in fellowship groups. We develop new relationships that are closer and more meaningful than the ones we used to have, because there is now an added dimension in the relationship: a spiritual dimension.

But our relationships with the non-Christian world are not over yet, because our daily interaction with people in the course of our work or studies still brings us into contact with them. And God never intended us to isolate ourselves completely from society. In fact the Lord wants us to still be in the world, and to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world (as Matthew 5:13,14 tells us). For it is only through the relationships that non-Christians have with us that they will have the opportunity to learn about Christ and be saved.

But while God wants us to be in the world, He also wants us to be careful not to be of the world (John 17:15,16). And what this means ultimately is that we must strike a balance in our relationships with non-Christians. On one hand we must be close enough to them to influence them with our Christian lives, but on the other hand we must not be so close to them as to be influenced by their non-Christian lives. Striking this balance is not an easy thing to do. And we need to study what God’s Word says about these relationships. We are going to look at two important guidelines that we should follow closely in our relationships with non-Christians.

I. Guard yourself from being influenced by them to compromise your loyalty of God.

We must not allow anyone to compromise our relationship with God, even if they are people who are very close to us. The Bible shows us the disastrous results of violating this principle in the life of Solomon: King Solomon with all of his great God-given wisdom could not resist the strong influence of the 700 wives and 300 concubines he married. Most of them were actually gifts to him from neighbouring nations that wanted his favour. But these women brought their pagan idol worship right into Jerusalem and gradually they led Solomon into idolatry.

1 Kings 11:4-6 relates the sad account of Solomon’s spiritual decline: “For it came to pass, when Solomon was old, that his wives turned away his heart after other gods: and his heart was not perfect with the LORD his God, as was the heart of David his father. For Solomon went after Ashtoreth the goddess of the Zidonians, and after Milcom the abomination of the Ammonites. And Solomon did evil in the sight of the LORD, and went not fully after the LORD, as did David his father.”

This was one of the saddest turning points in Old Testament history, because it brought the whole nation of Israel from the heights of its golden age of spiritual and material prosperity all the way down into the depths of sinful darkness and destruction. Let this example of Solomon be a strong reminder to us, so that we will not allow ourselves to be influenced to compromise our commitment and loyalty to God through our relationships with non-Christians.

There are some who have the mistaken idea that in order to win non-Christians to Christ, they must identify with them and come down to their level, even to the point of adopting the same kind of appearance, language and worldly lifestyle that they have. They think that this was what the apostle Paul meant when he said in 1 Corinthians 9:22 “I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some.” So, in order to reach out to those who frequent discos and other nite spots, they actually join in with them, going to these places and doing whatever their non-Christian friends do, hoping that this would give them the opportunity to communicate the gospel to them. But what usually happens is the very opposite. The non-Christian asks them, “How is it that you as a Christian can indulge in all these things with us?” This kind of evangelism is known as infiltration, and it does not work.

So please remember this principle: You must not allow any friendship or relationship to compromise your loyalty and commitment to God. If you have a good relationship with a friend who is a non-Christian and it has been going on for some time and you find that all your efforts to influence him for Christ are not producing any results, and you find also that it is starting to have an adverse influence on you spiritually, then you should seriously consider ending the relationship.

When I was a teenager, I had a close friend whom I was very fond of, because we had so much in common. We were always together, studying, eating and playing together. We went through secondary school, pre-U and even NS together. But I was a Christian and he wasn’t. And though I had tried a number of times to share Christ with him, he refused to budge an inch from his Buddhist beliefs. When we became university students I saw him less and less because we were in different campuses. And because I became more involved at that time in a Christian fellowship group and was growing spiritually, I did not have much time for him. I had to turn him down a number of times when he asked me to go for a concert or party. My friend was upset about this and he came and confronted me one evening with another friend. We had a very long heart to heart talk and it finally boiled down to this: He felt that my commitment to Christ was hindering our friendship and I felt that our friendship was endangering my commitment to Christ. And so with heavy hearts, we ended our friendship. It was a painful decision, but it was necessary.

But this raises the question: What if the relationship that is affecting my commitment to God is not just a friendship, but a family bond? What if my parents are the non-Christians who are influencing me against Christ? Then I cannot just leave and separate myself from their influence. Instead I have to resist it. There may be times when issues like ancestor worship, eating food that has been offered to idols, and Chinese funeral rites will come up. And because we love and respect our parents and don’t want to upset them, it might be quite tempting to just do everything they want us to do. Then we must remember the important principle that no matter how much we want to please our loved ones, we cannot compromise our loyalty to God.

One way you can avoid unpleasant confrontations if you come from a non-Christian family is to talk with them plainly about these issues long before critical situations arise. For example, if a Chinese festival is coming, it is good to tell them a few weeks beforehand that you cannot eat the food that will be offered to idols. This will give them time to get used to the idea.

II. Do not become unequally yoked with them

The Scriptures clearly demarcate a line that we must never cross when we develop relationships with non-Christians. Once we cross that line, we become unequally yoked. This term is taken from v.14 of our text –“Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light with darkness?”

If we involve ourselves in relationships that compromise our holiness we would be going against the Lord. This is especially the case in courtship and marriage. This is where you have to be very careful. I say this with great emphasis, because I have known so many fine Christian brothers and sisters who ended up marrying non-Christians, even though they knew full well what the Bible says about unequally yoked partnerships.

The question is often raised, “I know it is wrong to marry a non-Christian, but can I go out for a date with a non-Christian?” Please realise that this is a dangerous thing to do. A Christian friend I knew when I was a university student was very attracted to a tall and handsome classmate who was not a believer. One day he asked her out for a date, and she found it hard to resist his request. In spite of her Christian convictions she went out with him, reasoning to herself that she will use the opportunity to win him to Christ. This ‘missionary’ dating did not lead him to Christ but instead it led them both deeper and deeper into a steady relationship.

Her closest Christian friends all counselled her about the dangers of the relationship, and then in desperation, she asked me to do an evangelistic Bible study with him. She prayed very hard that he would be converted. After about 8 weeks of in-depth Bible study, this tall guy told me that that he now believes in Christ for forgiveness.

You can imagine how overjoyed my friend was when she heard the news. They started going to church together, but did they lived happily ever after? – No they did not! As soon as their relationship became steady enough, he stopped going to church, stopped reading the Bible, stopped praying and professing to be a Christian. On looking back, I realise that his conversion was a false one, because what he wanted was her, not Christ. As she continued her relationship with him, her spiritual life suffered severe backsliding, and the last that I heard is that she has not yet come back to the Lord.

The tragedy of this story is that it is not an isolated incident, but is repeated again and again as time after time single Christian men and women find themselves attracted to non-Christians by a love that is not from God. Probably no committed Christian ever sets out purposely to fall in love with a non-Christian. The relationships start out as friendships or even casual acquaintances.

The critical point when the faith of single Christians is put to the test is when the friendship crosses the line into a dating relationship, a relationship which is exclusive to some extent. Single Christians must be very careful and selective about who they should and should not date. Why? Because for most men and women, some date will eventually lead to marriage. While the purposes of dating go beyond just looking for a marriage partner, the fact is that the majority of marriages begin with a dating relationship. When you regard someone of the opposite sex as your special friend eventually you may say to that someone, “I want to share my life with you. I want to share your values, your goals, your successes and failures. I want to marry you.”

Listen carefully to this: When a Christian deliberately marries a non-Christian, he or she has fallen into two very serious errors: Firstly, the Christian has disobeyed God’s explicit command given in 2 Corinthians 6:14 –“Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: . . .” Secondly, the Christian has broken the first of the Ten Commandments, “Thou shalt have no other gods before Me.” Because he or she has made an unholy and unsaved sinner an object of greater love than God. He or she has actually mocked God to His face.

As a true believer what should matter most to you is not whether “she is all that you’ve ever wanted” or whether “he is the man of your dreams.” What should matter to you most is whether he or she is the one that God wants you to marry. This is one instance where you must be controlled by your mind, by what you know from the Word of God. You must not allow your heart to take over the control from your mind. Because as Jeremiah 17:9 says, “the heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked. Who can know it?”  Now, what should you do if you are already involved in a dating relationship with a non-Christian? Please do not let it continue. Although breaking up will be a painful experience, it is better for you to bear the pain than to grieve the Lord your God.

We must believe that God’s Word should have the final say in all our relationships. And if we believe that, then we must faithfully follow the two guidelines we have studied today about our relationships with the non-Christian world: The first is: Guard yourself from being influenced by them to compromise your loyalty of God. And the second guideline is: Do not become unequally yoked with them. Commit yourself right now to applying these guidelines, for if you do, God will surely bless you and help you, as He promised in 2 Corinthians 6:17,18 -- “Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, And will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.”

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