As a Christian parent, I am keen to learn how to better
bring my children up biblically. So, my attention was captured by a book
entitled ‘Teach them diligently: How to use the Scriptures in child training’ by Lou Priolo. Having finished reading it this evening, I would recommend it for other parents
who wish to know how best to use the Bible to teach, discipline and train our
children.
A key premise is the sufficiency of Scripture. ‘All
Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for
correction, for training in righteousness’ (2 Tim 3:16); we should not need
anything else. The author describes each of these areas in more detail, with
chapters on ‘The Scriptures and your children’, ‘Teaching the Scriptures’, ‘Convicting
with the Scriptures’, ‘Correcting with the Scriptures’, ‘Training with the
Scriptures’, ‘The rod and reproof’ and ‘Learning to use life’s instruction
manual’. There are also helpful appendices which chart specific sin issues and
relevant scriptures, outline some questions which can be used to help bring
conviction to a child, and which outline some methods of working through the book
of Proverbs.
There were several key challenges:
1)
As parents, we must know Scripture ourselves
before we can seek to use it. We are taught to ‘study and do our best to
present ourselves to God as approved, who correctly handle the word of God’;
this takes work. It must become a priority in our lives, if it is not already.
One of my favourite passages is Deuteronomy Chapter 6 where we are challenged
to talk with our children about the things of God as we get up and when we go
to bed, when we walk along the road together, when we share a meal – throughout
many opportunities that arise throughout daily life; we cannot do this if we do
not know and love those Scriptures.
2)
There is no short cut, or easy route to being
able to handle Scripture well. But even the small efforts we make are richly
rewarded.
3)
Behavioural problems should be described
appropriately in Biblical language to make it clear firstly what sin has been
committed, but also to provide a Biblical solution. For example, the Bible does
not say anything about being ‘shy’, but does speak volumes about ‘pride’ and ‘fear’
which are two of the main underlying reasons for a child being shy. The author
warns against modern ‘psychobabble’ and questionable diagnoses which may
prevent us in seeing sin for what it is.
4)
We should train our children gently, not
expecting them to immediately grasp things and get it right straight away. He
uses the analogy of teaching to do gymnastic moves, where these are built in
stages with correction of error, continual supervision and encouragement until
mastery is achieved; the word ‘gumnazo’ (from which gymnasium is derived’) is
used frequently in the Bible to talk about such training. The author expands
the analogy in a way which I found illuminating.
So, how will this change how I live?
1)
Thankfulness that I have a husband who is
equally committed to this, and that we have established routines of family
Bible time each morning and evening; this is not a panacea, but is a helpful
foundation to build upon. I realise how many wives have husbands who may not
lead the family Biblically, and I mustn’t take my blessing here for granted
2)
Greater resolve to meditate on Scripture and
really seek to understand it so that I can help my children understand and
apply it to their lives. Yes, there were times reading the book when I felt a
bit overwhelmed by how much more I have to learn.
3)
To seek to identify the heart issue, the sin
issue, which leads to behaviours which are not right. Not to be distracted by
the whining (or whatever it might be), but to try and get to the heart of the
matter
4)
To pray more and more. I think we do live in an
increasingly godless society, and even within the church there can be an expectation
that children cannot really understand the Bible, or that strict biblical
discipline is ‘old fashioned’. Sometimes
I feel people think we are extreme for seeking to base the boys’ upbringing on
the Bible. Yet this book encouraged me to persevere, to make the most of each
opportunity, to see it as our privilege and responsibility as Christian
parents. We need to pray for strength, perseverance and the ability to stand in
the face of temptation to compromise
As a Christian parent, there can
be nothing more important than seeking to raise our children in the fear and
admonition of the Lord. If you need encouragement on where to start, and how to
use the Bible effectively to do this, let me encourage you to read ‘Teach them
Diligently’.
I've just finished Ted Tripp's Shepherding a child's heart which has similar emphases to those you have written about. Getting to the heart issue seems to be such a challenge. We need God's grace every day in bringing up children.
ReplyDeleteI agree Sarah. We loved Ted Tripp's Shepherding a Child's Heart, and also just read 'Instructing a Child's Heart' which may also be helpful for children of your ages. I love books which focus on what the Bible says - some of those which I have read are full of worldly wisdom, or sometimes go beyond scripture into what can seem a bit like legalism. I love those which draw out what the Bible actually teaches!
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