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Archive for Christian family

Family Worship Ideas from Desire Miller

Podcast 14: Family Worship Ideas for the Christian Home –

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, December 5th, 2012 

Podcast 14: Family Worship Ideas for the Christian Home

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

 

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm

 

EPISODE #14

Family Worship Ideas for the Christian Home: A conversation with Desire Miller

Today’s Guest:

Family Worship Ideas from Desire MillerDesire Miller
www.WhenYouRise.com

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

You’ve probably heard a lot about the topic of family worship or family devotions. But many, many parents don’t know where to begin to get that idea off the ground in their own Christian home. Thanks to people like my guest today, Desire Miller, you can find great, FREE resources to get you started. Desire is the owner of When You Rise, a website that provides a ton of truly helpful and valuable resources to help you bring the scriptures down to your child’s level, and work alongside them to help introduce and grow their Christian faith.In this episode of the podcast I talk with Desire about here site, the way she got started creating this kind of curriculum, and what she hopes will come of her efforts. It was a delightful conversation about family worship resources I think you’ll enjoy!

Links & Resources mentioned in this podcast:

  • Covenant Eyes (affiliate link*)
  • My upcoming episode of the podcast using YOUR Christmas traditions! – Submit yours
  • Redeemed Reader
  • My speaking page

* These resources are affiliate links – you pay the same price, but part of your purchase goes to support the ministry of Christian Home and Family. Thanks!

A couple of brief reminders:

  • I’d love to do some future episodes that are “Q & A” in nature, regarding anything related to living as a Christian family. Please submit YOUR questions to me in the comments below or in any of these ways.
  • Christian Home and Family is supported by generous donors like you. If you’d like to know more about how you can partner with me in this vital mission, see my partner page.
  • I am available for SPEAKING engagement at your next retreat, conference, or seminar series. Check out my speaking page to find out more.

NEXT EPISODE: Podcast 15 – Christian Siblings as Best Friends

Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes – Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm

LEAVE FEEDBACK AND A REVIEW ON I-TUNES

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Categories : Parenting, Podcast
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian Home and Family Podcast, Christian parenting, Christian worship, family devotions, family time, family worship, podcast

Podcast 13: The Marriage First Principle – How to make your marriage matter

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, November 28th, 2012 

Podcast 13: The Marriage First Principle – How to make your marriage matter

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

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Today’s presenter:

Carey Green teaching on marriage firstCarey Green

founder, Christian Home and Family

I am available for SPEAKING on this and other topics.

 

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

The busy-ness and stress of life can make even the most important things fade to the background. Your marriage can be one of those things. In this episode Carey will teach from Genesis 1:27 regarding “The Marriage First Principle” – a foundational truth about marriage. Understanding this truth will help you build the solid ground under your marriage that you need in order to build a home that is centered around Christ. At the end, Carey will give some counsel to couples who have not done such a good job at making their marriage first in their lives, and offers some hope and help.

Links & Resources mentioned in this podcast:

  • Covenant Eyes (affiliate link*)
  • Book contest – www.ChristianHomeandFamily.com/win
  • My upcoming episode of the podcast using YOUR Christmas traditions! – Submit yours
  • Marriage Today with Jimmy and Karen Evans
  • The Marriage Improvement Project – the couple’s devotional book resource that today’s teaching was taken from.

* These resources are affiliate links – you pay the same price, but part of your purchase goes to support the ministry of Christian Home and Family. Thanks!

A couple of brief reminders:

  • My Book giveaway is still going on, you can find out how to enter at www.ChristianhomeandFamily.com/win
  • I’d love to do some future episodes that are “Q & A” in nature, regarding anything related to living as a Christian family. Please submit YOUR questions to me in the comments below or in any of these ways.
  • Christian Home and Family is supported by generous donors like you. If you’d like to know more about how you can partner with me in this vital mission, see my partner page.
  • I am available for SPEAKING engagement at your next retreat, conference, or seminar series. Check out my speaking page to find out more.

NEXT EPISODE: Podcast 14 – Practical tools for applying Deuteronomy 6:4-9

Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes – Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

 

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player

 

  LEAVE FEEDBACK AND A REVIEW ON I-TUNES

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Categories : Marriage, Podcast
Tags : Christian family, Christian marriage, marriage counseling, marriage first, marriage help, priority of marriage
christian parenting

Christian parents – Deuteronomy 6 tells you how to parent

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, October 31st, 2012 

How to parent according to Deuteronomy 6

In this post I’m going to point out the most important thing about parenting that the Bible has to say…

TALK ABOUT GOD’S WORD WITH YOUR KIDS – INCESSANTLY

That may sound a bit “over the top” but it’s very obviously what the scriptures teach. Read it for yourself…

Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorpo

Christian parents - how to parent from the scriptures

sts of your house and on your gates.

Notice a few very important things about the SEQUENCE of this passage…

  • A proper honor/respect of God, AS GOD must come first in YOUR heart (the parent).
  • YOU, the PARENT must FIRST love the LORD with all you are.
  • The Word of God must first be on YOUR heart, as the parent.
  • THEN AND ONLY THEN, will you be able to teach them to your children effectively.

Let’s walk through those… one at a time:

Respect of God, AS God

You need to know and honor God for who He is. You, the parent. You need to do that.

The world will try to foist all kinds of ideas about God on your kids. 99.9% of them will be wrong. Your knowledge and honor of God are the main corrective to those lies.

As their parent, you need to be able to set the record straight – tell them the truth – and do so out of a heart of deep, earnest conviction.

Love God with all YOU are

This one is really quite simple. If you don’t love God, why would you expect your kids to?

If you don’t love God, why would you expect your kids to?

CLICK TO TWEET THIS

I’ve beat this drum before, and it won’t be the last time.

It takes diligence and hard work. It takes intentional pursuit of the LORD, day after day.

But it is SO worth it. For you. For your kids.

The Word of God must first be on your heart

Do you see a pattern here? The role of the parent is one of example as much as it is one of guide.

Nobody likes a “do what I say, not what I do” example. We all want to see it, in the flesh, lived out for us to believe and be inspired by.

Your kids are EXACTLY like that.

They need (and want) to see YOU loving the word of God, reading the word of God, memorizing the word of God.

Then they will believe you when you say it’s important.

Then you should teach the word of God to your children

The examples given in the passage are “Old-testament” examples… things that fit the day in which the passage was written.

For us it could easily read, “Talk about God’s word with your kids around the dinner table, in the car, when you tuck your kids in, and when they wake up. Put God’s word all around you, on the walls of your home, make it unavoidable.”

There are many, many helpful resources available for families today…. to help you saturate your household with God’s word.

How to parent…

  1. BE a godly example
  2. TEACH your kids to follow your example

What ways have you discovered to put these principles into practice?

(this post includes affiliate links)

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting
Brad Hambrick

Podcast 9: Christian Families in a Sexualized World

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, October 29th, 2012 

 Podcast 9 – Christian Families in a Sexualized World

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EPISODE #9

Christian Families in a Sexualized World (Dealing with sexual temptations and family life)

Today’s guest:

PASTOR BRAD HAMRICK
Pastor of Counseling
Summit Church
Raleigh/Durham, NC

Brad Hambrick

sexual temptations

This episode is “PG-13” rated… so I suggest that parents remove young children from the room who may overhear this episode. Thanks!

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A conversation with Brad Hambrick, Pastor of Counseling at Summit Church in Raleigh/Durham, NC. We discuss the difficulties that Christian families face in our sexually charged culture, and the particular struggles that exist. Topics include seminars available through Summit Church (False Love / True Betrayal), how the sexual nature of our culture impacts Christian men, women, and children, How sexual tempation and sin threatens the development of a Christ-centered home, sexual hazards, Parents talking to their children about sexual things, the benefits and drawbacks of technological safeguards, and what to do if you are battling sexual temptation.

Links & Resources mentioned in this podcast:

  • Brad Hambrick’s website
  • Passport to Purity – by Family Life **
  • Teens and Sex: How Should We Teach Them? – by Paul Tripp **
  • Sex Is Not The Problem, Lust Is – by Joshua Harris **

CovenantEyes.com
** These resources are affiliate links – you pay the same price, but part of your purchase goes to support the ministry of Christian Home and Family. Thanks!

A brief reminder:

I’d love to do some future episodes that are “Q & A” in nature, regarding anything related to living as a Christian family. Please submit YOUR questions to me in any of these ways.

 

Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player

 LEAVE FEEDBACK AND A REVIEW ON I-TUNES

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Categories : Podcast
Tags : Christian family, Christian parenting, families and sexuality, pornography addictions, sexual temptations, talk to your children about sex
spanking of children

When is spanking of children abusive?

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, September 24th, 2012 

When is spanking of children abusive?

spanking of childrenWhen I was a kid there was very little debate about whether spanking of children was abusive. From conversations I had with my friends I know their parents believed that spanking was an appropriate form of discipline. And mine did for sure. As kids we talked about it as if it was the normal, expected thing to get a spanking when we disobeyed. I don’t think my experience is anything unique. I’d venture a guess that most people reading this who are over the age of 40 had parents who believed in spanking too.

But we can all agree that just because people in the past did something doesn’t make it right. Just because a LOT of people in the past did it doesn’t make it right either. What makes a thing right or wrong is what God says about it… and the scriptures are pretty clear that spanking of children is not only allowed, but even prescribed (you can read about that in my last about the spanking of children).

But in any good thing, even things given to us by God, abuses can happen. Overeating, sexual promiscuity, workaholism, and a slew of other vices prove that point. Sad but true, the same is true of spanking. Please understand that I don’t want you to abuse your child, and I don’t want to abuse mine. We are to care for our children, not damage them. Because of that it can be very difficult to know what a “good” spanking is like and when it crosses the line into the realm of abuse. In order to help clarify the differences between the two, keep this in mind:

A spanking rightly done has a positive effect.

A spanking wrongly done has a harmful effect.

With that in mind, I’m going to give you some quick guidelines my wife and I have learned that help us stay aimed at the positive end of that continuum. Here we go…

Guidelines for the spanking of children

  • Make sure genuine love and concern for your child are at the heart of your discipline.

Motivation is everything, so ask yourself, “Why am I spanking in the first place”? There are good/right reasons, and there are bad/wrong reasons. Ask yourself some questions…

  • Is it because you are irritated with your child? (bad/wrong)
  • Is it because you feel personally put-out or inconvenienced? (bad/wrong)
  • Is it because they have deliberately disobeyed or disrespected you? (good/right)
  • Is it because they are engaged in behavior that, if left unchecked, will be detrimental to them? (good/right)

If you answer “yes” to the first two (be honest) then hold off on the spanking until you get your attitude straight. Loving motives for a spanking have to do with your desire to help your child curb potentially harmful or outright sinful patterns of behavior. You want to help them, guide them, enable them to move into the realm of self-control so that their urges and spontaneous desires don’t control them. That’s behavior that honors God. And that’s a good motive for physical discipline.

  • Take action sooner rather than later.

Don’t let too much time pass between the offense and the spanking, especially with smaller children. They need to be able to associate the spanking with the wrong that has occurred. the longer the clock ticks between the infraction and the discipline, the less they are going to make that connection. Another aspect of this is that the “shock value” of a swat or spanking that comes immediately after an offense will help to communicate the “no nonsense” attitude you have about what they’ve done. They know you mean business – and there’s nothing ambiguous about it. If you make sure to act sooner rather than later, you won’t become one of those parents who counts to 3, or makes empty threats.

  • Make sure the offense is clearly understood.

Depending on the age of the child you may have to clarify the offense in differing ways. With very small children, a firm “NO” when pointing to the electric outlet will do most of the time. If not, say the firm “NO” as you swat their hand, and again pointing to the outlet as you hold and comfort them. With older children, you will need to talk about things with them to make sure they understand. Let’s make sure you understand why this is so important…

If you spank your child but they are unclear on why they are being spanked, you’ve pushed them toward embitterment, not wisdom (Ephesians 6:4). What I suggest is that you talk BRIEFLY about the offense to lay the groundwork, then have the spanking, then talk more extensively about it afterward as you comfort/hold the child. Speak to the reality of the issue. Things like, “You did a bad thing…” aren’t sufficient. You need to say, “YOU hit your brother… that means YOU were not being loving to Him, and God wants YOU to love YOUR brother” (see how it’s personal?). Kids don’t always put 2 and 2 together, so we have to make sure they see the REALITY of what they actually did.

  • Spanking of children should always be controlled.

There is no excuse for a 200 pound man to be wailing away uncontrollably at a 65 pound kid! That’s abuse, not a spanking. You need to be in full control of yourself when you spank your child. And’ let’s not be naive and say that a parent should never be angry when they spank. The truth is, you can (and sometimes should) be hopping mad at your kid for a very legitimate reason when it comes time to spank. The question is, how do you avoid going overboard?

Do you decide “I just won’t spank when I’m angry”? I don’t think that’s healthy or right. Your children need to see your anger at their sin (not at them personally) in order to get a full-blown picture of the significance of the wrong they have done. God gets angry at sin (and He let people see it), so why shouldn’t we? Here’s what we do: We set a limit for ourselves. For us, a spanking consists of 3 firm swats. We hold each other accountable, we let our kids know it will be 3 swats, and we hold ourselves to it strictly. We understand that NONE of us is above beating our kid instead of spanking them… so we put a safeguard in place to help us not to do so.

  • Make sure it hurts.

Hear me out on this one before you call CPS. I’m not saying you should beat your kids black and blue. I'm not suggesting that you be sadistic about it.

I am saying that the spanking needs to smart enough to make them think a second time before committing that sin again. As with any "learn the hard way" scenario, the consequence has to be painful enough to serve as a deterrent. If it isn't we tend to repeat the same behavior in the future.

Sometimes a mom with a heart-the-size-of-Texas is so sad about having to spank her child that she’ll just give him a little “love tap” instead of a real spanking. I understand the sympathy – but what she probably doesn’t understand is that she’s taking it easy for HER SAKE, not his. It’s actually doing damage to her child (Proverbs 13:24) by teaching him that the consequences for his wrong actions aren’t so bad that he should avoid doing the wrong behavior next time.

  • Always follow up with comfort and reassurance of your love.

Once the spanking of your child is over take her immediately into your lap or hug her (depending on size of the child). She needs to know that this offense has not permanently separated her from you. She needs to know your love in a tangible way she can easily recognize (even though the spanking is an act of love itself, she won’t immediately see it as such). Hold her close like this as you talk about the issue. Hold her as you reassure her of your love and your confidence that with God’s help, she can change this kind of behavior. Don’t downplay what she did – it is not “alright.” She sinned. But she is repenting and can move on with the help of God and you, her loving parent.

  • Require effective apologies.

When the offense was committed against another person, have the guilty child apologize. Don’t allow them to say, “I’m sorry…” with their eyes turned down and a sullen or timid voice. Chances are that they really aren’t sorry if that’s the case. Have them look the other person in the eye and say SPECIFICALLY what they are sorry for. “I’m sorry that I hit you.”

In order to get to this point and have it be genuine, you'll have to engage in a significant amount of conversation with the child during the discipline process (see the 3rd point). Some feel that a requirement like this is too humiliating for the child, but it’s actually an essential part of repentance. The formula looks like this:

sin + conviction + confession/apology = repentance.

It's making things right with those who were hurt. Once this is done, you'll have the equally challenging task of helping the offended child learn to forgive from the heart.

Please hear me again – there’s no sense in which I am advocating abuse. Children have a right to be treated justly. But a loving spanking administered the right way is not abuse. It is a motivator toward right attitudes and behavior that will serve the child for the rest of their life.

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : abuse, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, discipline, parenting, spanking children, wplongform
created to be his helpmeet

Created to be his helpmeet – why it’s NOT a negative thing

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, September 19th, 2012 

Created to be his helpmeet?

Our daughter, Maddi, just got a new puppy. She saved up her paychecks all summer, did the research, picked the breed, and purchased all the supplies she would need.We’ve been very impressed at the way she went about the whole thing – and as a result “Little Man” is now asleep in the next room in his kennel.

During the research process, on more than one occasion, Maddi asked me to help her find some information on the internet. So, I helped her. You could truthfully say that I was her “helper” in the puppy research project she was doing. I could take offense at being referred to as her “helper,” (Oh, I see… I’m just the “helper”…..), but it would be silly to do so. Yet, that’s what many wives do when they are taught from the Bible that in relation to their husbands they are created to be his helpmeet or helper.

The vital question:

Wives, if you have been created to be his helpmeet, you need to find out the answer to this question if you want it to make sense:

I’m created to be his helpmeet in WHAT?

In other words, what are you to help him WITH? Here’s the bullet list of what I understand the biblical teaching to be:

  • God created Adam first, alone, without Eve (the one created to be HIS helpmeet). – Genesis 2:7-23
  • This “created first” status was God’s way of designating Adam as the leader of the soon-to-be relationship. – 1 Timothy 2:12-13; 1 Corinthians 11:13; Ephesians 5:23
  • God gave Adam (and Eve, as his helper) the mission of filling the earth with a righteous, godly race of people, and managing the created world for the glory of God. – Genesis 1:28

That is the answer to the question. Wives are created to be his helpmeet in carrying out God’s initial command to the first-ever parents.

THAT COMMAND IS: To build a legacy of believing, faithful people (their children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren) who can rightly lead in and care for the created world, so that God gets the glory.

A simple question to all those created to be his helpmeet

created to be his helpmeet

image: godserv on flickr

Is that a mission you can get on board with? I know very few women who would say, “No.”

The idea of being your husband’s helper in no way implies that you are inferior, less-than, incompetent, or lacking in value. In fact, it’s just the opposite. Let’s go back to the puppy for a minute…

Maddi asked me to help because I spend a good deal of time every week on the internet – working on this website and studying for my weekly sermons. The fact that she asked me indicates that I had some knowledge or skill that she needed in order to get her task completed.

The same is true in the husband wife roles. The husband has been appointed by God as the leader, but that doesn’t make him infallible or ultra-capable. It only makes him responsible. He needs help if he’s going to fulfill the mission he’s been given. In fact, the very nature of the mission makes it impossible for him to do it alone. He needs the help of his wife – the one created to be his helpmeet – because God wired her with things uniquely suited to the task of helping him lead out in their God-given mission.

I see this plainly in my own marriage and parenting:

  • Mindi is much more intuitive about parenting than I am.
  • Mindi is much more tuned in to the kids’ needs.
  • Mindi is better able to draw them out, nurture them, and care for their hearts.
  • In many ways, Mindi is better at applying the truths of scripture to the relational issues of life than I am.
  • Mindi is the EXACT helper I need to carry out God’s mission.

None of that means that I’m off the hook to parent in a tuned-in, proactive, nurturing way. It only means that I must humbly work together with my wife as she helps me lead the family well.

The mission carried out

As my new friend Rob Rienow says, “Families are the discipleship centers” of the world. We parents are responsible before God to:

  • Develop our own vibrant, intimate Christian walk with the LORD.
  • Grow and nurture a marriage which forms the basis for a Christ-centered home.
  • Pass that along in vital, every-day ways to our family.

Did you notice that process? – Christian – Home – Family (sounds like a website I heard about). It’s the way God planned it, and it starts with a right understanding of husband wife roles.

How does knowing God’s mission for the family help YOU better understand your role?

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Categories : Marriage, Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, created to be his helpmeet, ezer, family mission, family purpose, headship, helper, man is the head of the wife, submission
premarital counseling

Podcast 6: The Bible blueprint for marriage

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, September 17th, 2012 

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EPISODE #6

The Bible Blueprint for a biblical Marriage

Presenting the message:

CAREY GREEN
founder Christian Home and Family

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A sermon presented at Community Church of Leadville, Colorado – the church where Carey serves as Pastor (as of this posting).

This message was presented as part of a Expository series of messages through the Epistle to the Ephesians. The series was entitled “IF/THEN” – referring to the reality that IF a person is a believer in Jesus Christ, THEN they have been transformed and certain changes should happen in the way they live. This message came in the “THEN” portion of the study, Ephesians 5:21-33. The message covers some of the New Testament teaching on roles and responsibilities of Christian husbands and wives, that will enable them to build a biblical marriage.

Links mentioned in this podcast:

  • Community Church of Leadville, CO
  • My contact page (to support Christian Home and Family through purchases you already make).

 

Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm
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Categories : Marriage, Podcast
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, ephesians 5:21-33, marriage, marriage counseling, marriage help, podcast, sermon, teaching on marriage

Effective Communication: Ask, don’t guess

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, September 12th, 2012 

Effective Communication: Ask, don’t guess

I have two questions for you.

  1. How well do you REALLY understand what your spouse or kids think or feel?
  2. Is the answer you just gave based on clear, effective communication, or is it a guess based on past experience?

Take some time to deeply consider that last question. Maybe it would help if I asked it a different way: Do you truly know those closest to you because you’ve taken the time to investigate what is going on inside them (through questions)?

That’s the only way we get to know a person. Their thoughts and feelings are their own private, inner world, UNTIL they express them through words (verbal or written).

So if you want to REALLY know your spouse or your kids, you have to become a pro at communication. And much of effective communication comes through questions.

Becoming a pro at effective communication

Here’s a checklist of qualities that you’ll notice about people who practice effective communication:

  • They don’t make assumptions… they ask questions.
  • They aren’t content to guess what people are thinking for feeling… they ask questions.
  • They don’t base their understanding of a person solely on information from the past… they ask questions.

Did you see the common thread? – They learn to ask questions.

But make sure you don’t misunderstand. I’m not talking about interrogation-style questions. That approach will make people clam up even more because they don’t sense your concern or care for them.

What I AM talking about is the kind of questions that flow out of a genuine interest in the person, and a real desire to know and understand them. If you want to learn effective communication, you have to learn to ask good, interested questions.

Spouses can make huge mistakes in this

In my 20+ years of Pastoral counseling I’ve seen couple after couple learn this lesson the hard way. And sadly, many NEVER learn it (don’t be one of those couples, please!). Husbands and wives easily fall into a pattern of assuming they know what their spouse is thinking, instead of asking kind, thoughtful, interested questions.

When you fail to ask questions of your spouse you communicate some very damaging things:

  • that you don’t care what they think or feel.
  • that you are only interested in your own opinions and feelings.
  • that they don’t really matter to you.

Do you really want to be communicating those kinds of things to your spouse? If not, you have to learn to ask good questions.

Parents can be the worst at this

Effective Communication

Too often we parents make assumptions about what our children feel or think about an issue. It’s true that we probably know our kids better than anyone else, but that doesn’t mean that we know them as well as we could, or should. And it definitely doesn’t mean we can accurately predict what they will think or feel about a certain issue or situation.

There are some very amazing things that happen as you begin to ask your kids good questions:

  • you show them that their perception of things matters to you (which shows them that you value them).
  • you get a privileged glimpse into their soul
  • you get to truly KNOW them, instead of just THINKING you know them.

Of course, you have to go about this differently with different ages of children… and you need to always be mindful of the need for instruction in the midst of your communication. You are the parent, who is called by God to guide your children in the way they should go (Proverbs 22:6) and in learning the ways of the LORD (Deuteronomy 6:7).

So your end goal is not just to know how they feel or what they think, but to know how they feel and think SO THAT you can guide them with greater wisdom and direction.

Effective communication requires that you learn to ask good questions.

 

Let's do a short exercise together (in the comments below). Answer the following questions in a way that fits your own situation...
  • Give some examples of questions you’ve found helpful in asking your spouse.
  • Give some examples of good questions you could ask your 3 to 5 year old.
  • Give some examples of good questions you could ask your 6 to 10 year old.
  • Give some examples of good questions you could ask your 11 to 14 year old.
  • Give some examples of good questions you could ask your 15 to 19 year old.
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Categories : Marriage, Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, effective communication, how to communicate, learn to communicate
The Marriage Improvement Project

The marriage first principle

Posted by Carey 
· Friday, September 7th, 2012 

The Marriage First Principle

Priorities. Every one of us has any number of greater and lesser priorities in our lives. Marriage is one of those priorities. But where does it fall on the scale of importance? Should it be toward the top, the bottom, or somewhere in the middle?

Marriage came into being as one of the first acts of God’s plan for all of history. After creating the world and the animals, God created the first man, Adam. But, Adam was alone, and God said that was not a good thing (Genesis 2:18). To solve the problem, God created the first woman, Eve, and the first marriage was the result. In establishing marriage God created the first and most intimate human relationship, one which takes highest priority among all human relationships.

That idea is what I refer to as the “Marriage First” principle.

Genesis 2:24 – Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife.

One important point regarding the Marriage First principle.

Your marriage relationship

comes before

all other earthly relationships.

Did you notice that our verse instructs a man to leave his father and mother when he gets married? Why did God command something like this?

Consider this: The relationships that a person has with their mother and father are normally the closest relationships they’ve had prior to adulthood. In teaching us that a man is to “leave” his father and mother, God is saying that once a couple becomes married, they are moving into a new and different stage in life, where the close relationships of the past (with parents) are to take a lesser place of importance in view of the new relationship that has begun (marriage).

There are many applications of this, but it is important to understand that this is the basic idea behind the Marriage First principle. Let’s flesh the idea out a bit.

You have many relationships that fill your life:

  • extended family members
  • co-workers
  • neighbors
  • friends
  • children

and every one of them is important in it’s own way, and to varying degrees.

But what the Marriage First principle teaches us is that as important as those relationships may be, none of them is to rival your relationship with your spouse. Your spouse is to come first…in your thoughts and in your consideration.

The Marriage Improvement ProjectQuestions for Reflection

  • Are you willing to take the time to learn what it will take for your marriage to be that kind of priority?
  • Make a quick list of the major relationships in your life. After you’ve compiled your list, rank them in two ways. First, rank them in order of how important they are to you currently. Then go back and rank them in order of how you think God desires them to be.
  • Where was your marriage relationship in the first ranking? Where is it in the second ranking?
This post is taken in part from my couple’s devotional book, The Marriage Improvement Project. For more information on the MIP, including a sneak peek into the first chapter and table of contents, you can go to this page. The MIP is available in softcover paperback and e-book (pdf) formats.
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Categories : Marriage
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, marriage counseling, marriage first, marriage health, marriage help, marriage intensive, priority of marriage
spank children

Should parents spank children? – what the Bible says

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, September 5th, 2012 

I recently began a series of posts about whether to spank children as a form of discipline. Here’s what the Bible actually says about spanking…

Let’s dive into the scriptures…

I’m going to start out with a few passages that refer to discipline/correction in general because they set the context for appropriate physical correction….

Proverbs 1:7 –  The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and discipline.

This passage highlights the importance of healthy fear as it relates to God and the discipline process.  We can’t hope to discipline properly if we, as parents, don’t have a proper fear of the Lord, and if we are not helping our children to gain the beginnings of that fear also.

Proverbs 3:11-12 – My son, do not despise the LORD’s discipline and do not resent his rebuke, because the LORD disciplines those he loves, as a father the son he delights in.

  • Discipline is to be an act of love – when from God or a parent.  I have to confess there have been times when I’ve rushed to discipline with one of my kids because I was personally hurt/embarrased/inconvenienced, etc.  It had more to do with what the outcome was on me (a punitive, selfish response) than it did with the wrong that was done.  Be careful to know your own motives, parents…
  • A parent can delight in their child and be very attentive to discipline at the same time.  We discipline our children because we care for them so much. We correct their wrong/unsocial/unkind/inconsiderate behavior because we delight in who they are and in who they are to become.

Proverbs 13:24 – He who spares the rod hates his son, but he who loves him is careful to discipline him.

Some would argue that this passage is speaking of discipline in general, not a spanking. Could be… but coupled with the rest of the passages that speak of the rod, it’s a bit simplistic to make such a wholesale assumption… as you’ll see. But some points here:

  • Not spanking is a form of neglect. Solomon says you hate your child if you withhold the rod of correction.
  • Parents who love their kids are “careful” to discipline them. It’s a thoughtful, controlled process.

Proverbs 22:15 – Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline will drive it far from him.

What is folly?  Some translations call it “foolishness.”  It’s a natural part of being a child to be foolish. Part of the parent’s job is to teach their children, through various means, how to curb that foolish tendency – because it can be very dangerous.  Part of the way we parents are to do that is through the use of a spanking.  Let me explain by way of an example…

Children get excited when they play.  They lose all track of what’s going on around them.  If you’ve ever tried to call your son to dinner when he’s playing Nintendo, you know what I mean.

Once, when my son was very small, he was absorbed in a game of “ball” we were playing in the front yard.  We were having a great time.  Then the ball went bouncing into the street.  He went after it.  Despite my calls and stern voice, he kept running – a look of joy on his cute little face!  FOOLISHNESS!

I ran out, yanked him up, and spanked him – all the while telling him, “NO going out in the street!  NO!  You will get hurt…”  Can you see that my application of a spanking was actually a response to his foolishness, and a loving action?  I’d rather have his little bottom be sore for a bit, than for him to be broken and bleeding in the street.

Proverbs 23:13-14 – Do not withhold discipline from a child; if you punish him with the rod, he will not die. Punish him with the rod and save his soul from death.

I have to laugh each time I read this because it so perfectly answers the concern of many opponents of spanking – and with a little twist of sarcasm, no less!  The verse is making the point that physical punishment is completely appropriate when administered properly.  This kind of punishment is actually very instrumental in leading the child into the right paths. And by the way, this verse makes no sense at all if “rod” only means “discipline.”

Last verse…

Proverbs 29:15 – The rod of correction imparts wisdom, but a child left to himself disgraces his mother.

Wisdom is the opposite of foolishness – and we see that not only does it drive out foolishness when we properly spank, it also embeds wisdom into the hearts of our children in ways they will not forget.  The physical intensity of a spanking is part of what it is that engrains the lesson in the mind of the child.  It was the physical intensity of falling from a 30 ft. cliff when rock climbing one spring that engrained the importance of using proper equipment into my head. I’ll NEVER make that mistake again.  And parents who love their children cannot wait for the natural consequences to happen – if they do, they will have a dead child (remember the car coming down the street)?  Spanking, properly applied, does bring wisdom.

My motives

I don’t want to abuse my children, neither do you. I don’t want to see anyone else abuse their children. But spanking is not abuse. When rightly administered, it is a form of loving discipline that curbs foolishness and imparts wisdom. You could ask my grown children, and they’d tell you the same.

In future posts I’ll go into what makes the difference between an appropriate spanking and an abusive one.

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : child discipline, children obey your parents, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, disciplining children, physical discipline, should parents spank children, spanking children
daily devotions for kids

Podcast 5: Establishing daily devotions for kids – (Interview, part 2)

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, September 3rd, 2012 

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EPISODE #5

ESTABLISHING DAILY DEVOTIONS FOR KIDS – PART 2 (INTERVIEW)

MY GUEST INTERVIEW:

AARON, MELINDA, AND MADELINE GREEN

daily devotions for kids

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A continuation of a conversation I had with my 3 oldest children, Aaron, Melinda, and Madeline – about the establishment of daily devotions for kids.

To clarify, when I say “Daily devotions for kids” I don’t mean family devotions or devotions that parents do with their kids. I mean the establishment of your kids’ own personal habit of daily time with the LORD. This is a vital area of parenting – shepherding your child’s heart to love the LORD and truly want to spend time with Him daily. Over the years I have seen these 3 grow to love and pursue the LORD for themselves, and I wanted to ask them questions regarding how that happened, what the process was like, and what the LORD has done in their lives.

This is PART 2 of the interview – you can find part 1 HERE.

OUTLINE OF THE PODCAST

  • The point at which things began to become personal.
  • Things that helped make that transition occur.
  • Their perspective on God and relationship with Him.
  • Helpful things the parents can do.
  • Advice for parents.

Links mentioned in this podcast:

  • Contact Christian Home and Family
  • Part 1 of this interview
  • My resource page (to support Christian Home and Family through purchases you already make).

 

Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm
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Categories : Parenting, Podcast, Spirit Health
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, daily devotions for kids, devotions for kids, devotions for teenagers, devotions for youth, quiet time for kids, quite times for kids, walk with the Lord

Parenting magazine is anything BUT expert advice

Posted by Carey 
· Friday, August 31st, 2012 

Why would I say Parenting magazine is anything but expert advice? – It could be because of a recent article published in the magazine entitled “20 things Moms should never feel guilty about.” (and many others they publish along the same line)

The list starts out somewhat OK, but once it rolls past #10, it gets really, uhhhh, twisted… here are some examples:

You should never feel guilty about…

12. Telling your partner you’re going to the doctor for a checkup when you’re actually going for a massage, pedicure, or to have your hair highlighted (it’s not like he’s going to notice anyway).

13. Paying cash for your massage/pedicure/highlights so he won’t discover the credit card charge.

14. Refusing another mom’s invitation to a playdate because you can’t stand it that she can leave crystal on her coffee table and toilet paper on the rollers and her baby doesn’t bother any of it.

15. Feeling a twinge of delight when the above mom’s baby still isn’t saying any words and yours has a vocabulary of six!

16. Putting on the Baby Einstein DVD for the third time before lunch so you can apply some makeup because that cute landscaping guy is due to come by and cut your grass sometime this afternoon.

So let me get this straight…

This is a magazine that endeavors to help parents be better parents. Is that right? Yet it is encouraging parents to be the kind of people they would NEVER want their child to be.

My translation of the points above…

You should never feel guilty even though you…

12. Lie to your spouse so that you can go out and do what you want to do without him knowing.

13. Practice deception to cover up your lie.

14. Be unsociable toward someone of whom you are jealous so that you don’t have to face your jealousy.

15. Take delight in the developmental delays of a BABY because of your own jealousy toward the baby’s mother.

16. Indulge in lust and fantasy… even though you have a baby lying in the next room.

See what I mean?

Parenting magazine is anything but expert advice because it misses one of THE fundamentals of good parenting… the power and importance of a good example. That is what parents are first and foremost.

 

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : bad parenting, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, godly parenting, parenting, parenting advice, parenting counsel, parenting help, parenting magazine, parenting tips

30 prayers to pray for your children

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, August 29th, 2012 

30 prayers to pray for your children

Take the challenge to pray for one of these each day of the month and notice what differences you see and sense in your family.

  1. That they will know Christ as Savior early in life. (Psalm 63:1)
  2. That they will have a hatred for sin. (Psalm 97:10, , Matthew 22:37)
  3. That they will be caught when guilty.  (Psalm 119:71)
  4. That they will be protected from the evil one in each area of their lives –  spiritual, emotional, and physical.  (John 17:15)
  5. That they will have a responsible attitude in all their personal relationships, being considerate, mature, and taking the initiative in love.  (Daniel 6:3, Philippians 2:4, Matthew 5:43-44)
  6. That they will respect those in authority over them.  (Romans 13:1)
  7. That they will desire the right kind of friends. (Proverbs 1:10-11)
  8. That they will be protected form the wrong kind of friends. (Proverbs 1:10-11)
  9. That they will be kept from the wrong mate. (2 Corinthians 6:14-17)
  10. That they will be saved for the right mate. (2 Corinthians 6:14-17)
  11. That they, as well as those they marry will be kept pure until marriage.  (2 Corinthians 6:18-20)
  12. That they will learn to totally submit to God.  (James 4:7)
  13. That they will learn to actively resist satan in all circumstances. (James 4:7)
  14. That they will grow in the fear of the Lord. (Psalm 34:9)
  15. That they will be single-hearted, willing to be sold out to Jesus Christ.  (Romans 12:1-2)
  16. That they will be hedged in so they cannot find their way to wrong people or wrong places. (Hosea 2:6)
  17. That evil people cannot find their way to them. (Hosea 2:6)
  18. That their thoughts will be captive to obedience to Christ. (2 Corinthians 10:5)
  19. That they will live by faith, not by emotion. (2 Corinthians 5:7)
  20. That they will live by the Spirit. (Galatians 5:16)
  21. That they will walk in the truth. (3 John 14)
  22. That they will love the Lord with their whole mind, soul, body, and stength.  (Mark 12:30)
  23. That they will ask for and seek wisdom daily.  (Proverbs 4:5, James 1:5-6)
  24. That they will point others to the heart of God and not to other things. (1 Corinthians 6:20, 1 Peter 2:12)
  25. That they will have a growing desire for holiness. (Hebrews 12:14)
  26. That they will have a deep love for God. (1 Timothy 3:15)
  27. That they will first seek God’s kingdom and righteousness. (Matthew 6:33)
  28. That their heart will be inclined toward God’s word. (Psalm 119:36)
  29. That their hearts will be united in service to the LORD. (Psalm 86:11)
  30. That God will create in them a clean heart and a right spirit. (Psalm 51:10)

Are there any ways to pray for your children that you would add to the list?

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, parents praying for children, pray for your children, prayers for children
daily devotions for kids

Podcast 4: Establishing daily devotions for kids – (Interview, part 1)

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, August 27th, 2012 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm

EPISODE #4

ESTABLISHING DAILY DEVOTIONS FOR KIDS – PART 1 (INTERVIEW)

MY GUEST INTERVIEW:

AARON, MELINDA, AND MADELINE GREEN

daily devotions for kids

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A conversation with my 3 oldest children, Aaron, Melinda, and Madeline – about the establishment of daily devotions for kids.

To clarify, when I say “Daily devotions for kids” I don’t mean family devotions or devotions that parents do with their kids. I mean the establishment of your kids’ own personal habit of daily time with the LORD. This is a vital area of parenting – shepherding your child’s heart to love the LORD and truly want to spend time with Him daily. Over the years I have seen these 3 grow to love and pursue the LORD for themselves, and I wanted to ask them questions regarding how that happened, what the process was like, and what the LORD has done in their lives.

This is PART 1 of the interview – part 2 to follow in Episode 5.

OUTLINE OF THE PODCAST

  • Introduction of the podcast and topic
  • Introduction of Aaron, Melinda, and Madeline Green.
  • Discussion of whether a child can truly come to faith in Christ at the age of 3 or 4 (as these 3 did).
  • The beginning years of Aaron, Melinda, and Madeline’s experiences with daily devotions for kids.
  • How and when the habit grew into a desire.
  • Things the LORD has shown them along the way.

Links mentioned in this podcast:

  • Contact Christian Home and Family
  • Part 2 of this conversation

Meat & Potatoes by Adam Rey

The music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out and purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm
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Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, daily devotions for kids, daily walk with the Lord, devotions for kids, devotions for teenagers, devotions for youth, podcast interview, quiet time for kids
provoke your children to anger

6 ways to provoke your children to anger

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, August 22nd, 2012 

1. Boss them around without first convincing them that you care for them

Set up a bunch of rules that are devoid of any real relationship between you and your kids. This is a sure-fire way to make sure that they don’t even get a hint that you are concerned about their well-being. You’re giving them rules to follow… isn’t that enough to show them that you care?

2. Treat them as if they are not important

Don’t listen to your kids… after all, they are kids. Don’t ask them about their lives, their interests, what the LORD is doing in their life… nothing. Basically, just ignore them altogether. You are the parent, you’re the one who matters most.

3. Don’t notice and affirm the good they are doing or have done

If you compliment or affirm them, they’ll get big heads. Why would you want to risk that? Withhold encouraging comments about their competence and abilities, and never let them know what you see the LORD doing in them. You don’t want them being one of those self-righteous religious kids who looks down on everyone else, do you?

4. Don’t allow them to apply new skills and abilities

Yeah, they are supposed to be growing up, but you know that if you want it done right, you’ll have to do it yourself. And don’t let them try things that may be risky. They might get hurt, or make a mistake, or fall into sin… or worse they might embarrass you. Play it safe… don’t let them try anything new.

5. Don’t discipline them, even when they need it

Discipline is highly overrated. You may go too far and damage their self-esteem. They’ll learn their own lessons in time if you’ll just leave them alone to figure out their mistakes and temptations on their own. What they really need is the freedom to discover themselves. Requiring them to toe the line morally or ethically will crush their individuality.

6. Don’t honor or care for the people your kids care about

The relationship your kids have with their other parent, or their siblings, has nothing to do with you. If you treat your kids’ loved ones unfairly, they won’t even notice. They aren’t mature enough to understand injustice or abuse.

provoke your children to anger

If you weren’t sure if I was serious or not, let me put your mind at ease. I wrote those 6 points as pure satire, to get you thinking.

Some of you were really bothered by the sarcastic tone, and that’s understandable. But the real tragedy is that some of you were more bothered by the sarcasm than you were with the possibility that you actually DO think along those lines some of the time.

The scriptures instruct parents in this way:

Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.

To make what I’m saying perfectly clear, I want to quickly run through those points again, only this time without the sarcasm.

1. Boss them around without first convincing them that you care for them

If you set up your household in a way that majors on rules but minors on genuine, caring relationship between the parents and children, you are setting up your children to become angry – with you.

I’m not saying you shouldn’t have rules (we have plenty of rules in our home), but your kids need to know that you CARE about them first. If they know that they are more important to you than the rules, they’ll typically submit to the rules – because they trust YOU. Remember this “3 R” principle:

provoke your children to anger

2. Treat them as if they are not important

If you disregard or ignore your kids they’ll become angry – with you.

You should do your best to treat them as valuable, important individuals in your household. They have their own life, just like you have yours.  And their life is important to them, just like yours is to you. Their concerns may not truly be of much importance in the long run, but you should care about those things because THEY cares about them. That doesn’t mean all you talk about is video games and cartoons… you still need to teach them how to communicate with wisdom and with consideration for others (who may not enjoy talking about those things). But you should communicate that they, and their thoughts and feelings are valuable to you, and to God.

3. Don’t notice and affirm the good they are doing or have done

It’s easy to fall into the mindset that if you aren’t telling them that they are doing something wrong, it means they are doing OK. But as a Christian parent you can’t let yourself go there. Your kids are constantly wondering if you approve of them, and your silence won’t answer the question. They need to know if they are doing well with the challenges life is throwing at them, if the LORD is at work in their lives at all. It’s your job to tell them what you see, and to spur them on to love and good deeds (Hebrews 10:24). If you neglect affirming them, they will become angry – at you.

4. Don’t allow them to apply new skills and abilities

As you raise your children wisely, they are to be growing in wisdom, maturity, and competence. They need opportunities to test their wings, to see for themselves that the work the LORD has been doing in them (through your parenting) is good. So don’t keep them out of sports because they might be hurt. Don’t do their science project for them because it might look like a kid did it. They may get hurt, and they may not make the coolest looking science project… but they will learn how to navigate life and apply Christ-like character through those experiences (with your help). If you shelter or coddle your kids in this way, they will become angry – at you.

5. Don’t discipline them, even when they need it

Your children need discipline. Not overbearing, unreasonable demands… but Godly, Spirit-directed, love-motivated discipline.

Discipline is course correction, instruction, loving redirection of their childish foolishness into better paths. Discipline is a boundary, inside which your children will feel secure and loved. You’ve seen the toddler wreaking havoc in the store, and his mom who did nothing about it. You may have been the mom. The scriptures tell us that a parent like that actually hates their child (Proverbs 13:24). You’re not doing them any favors by withholding appropriate, timely discipline. In fact, you are handicapping them. If you are lax when it comes to appropriate discipline, your kids will become angry – at you.

6. Don’t honor or care for the people your kids care about

If you are harsh, unfeeling, or abusive toward the people your children love (their siblings or other parent) they will become angry – at you. They may be too small at the moment to do anything about the injustices they witness, or to totally understand it in a way they could express. But you can be sure anger will rise within them because of it. Your short fuse, your ungracious tone, your hurtful words – all of these and more are the seeds that grow into future anger in your child. Learn to let the Spirit be in control and entirely different fruit will begin to flow out of you (Galatians 5:22-23).

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : biblical parenting, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, parenting, provoke your children to anger
FINANCIAL ADVICE

Podcast 3: Financial advice for the Christian family

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, August 20th, 2012 

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EPISODE #3

FINANCIAL ADVICE FOR THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY (INTERVIEW)

MY GUEST INTERVIEW:

GLEN STEINSON

FINANCIAL ADVICE

Glen’s Web Ministry

Stewardship Weekly – Since the time of this recording the LORD has moved Glen on to other things and his ministry site is no longer available.

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A conversation with Glen Steinson of Stewardship Weekly, who has a passion for communicating what the Bible teaches about the role Christians play as stewards of God.

I wanted to focus in on the specific area of financial stewardship and found my conversation with Glen to be very challenging and helpful in understanding the LORD’s heart for the financial resources that He gives us. Glen’s financial advice offers a very refreshing and unique perspective on many issues relating to the biblical teaching on finances, and our role in being good managers for the sake of God’s kingdom.

OUTLINE OF THE PODCAST

  • Introduction of the podcast and topic
  • Introduction of Glen Steinson, founder and host of the Stewardship Weekly podcast
  • Glen answers the question, “What is stewardship?”
  • The difference a proper understanding of financial stewardship makes to the Christian Home.
  • The detrimental role debt plays in our financial stewardship.
  • Glen’s “Top 5 Tips” of financial advice for getting yourself on track as a financial steward of God.
  • Dave Ramsey, and what Glen would miraculously help every Christian family understand… if he could.

Links mentioned in this podcast:

  • Christian Home and Family Podcast – Episode 2
Meat & Potatoes by Adam ReyThe music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, so please, support his generosity by checking out an purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm
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Categories : Podcast
Tags : bible's teaching on finances, Christian family, Christian financial advice, Christian home, Christian parenting, Christian stewardship, christians and money, financial podcast, podcast on finances
back to school ideas

Back to school ideas for the Christian home school family – Routine

Posted by Carey 
· Friday, August 17th, 2012 

Back to school ideas for the Christian home school family – Routine

back to school ideas

Stress and “back to school” seem to always go together. It’s even that way for those who home school. I know, we do it too. One of the beauties of schooling your kids at home is that you don’t have to follow somebody else’s schedule or fulfill anyone else’s expectations. That’s wonderful, and one of the things we love about it.

But that doesn’t mean that a “whatever” attitude about your daily school schedule is the best thing. If you want to make Christ the center of your home, you need plan your days so that you can be certain that He is. You should wisely determine your own schedule – one that works best for your family. It can help your family deal with the natural stresses that come with schooling. More importantly, it can help your family THRIVE in the midst of these kinds of pressures.

Basics of a good schedule

As you begin thinking about what your schedule should look like, I’d encourage you to consider these things:

  • A regular rising time each morning. This allows everyone to start the day together, connecting, communicating, and preparing their hearts before the LORD.
  • A regular bed time each evening. Of course this will vary with the ages of your kids, but regularity here will pay huge rewards in terms of productivity and sanity.
  • Have a planned “start time” for your school day instead of just getting to it when you get to it. A regular start time discourages procrastination.

Benefits of a school time schedule

Arranging your school week with a wise, balanced schedule can greatly reduce the stress levels in your home in these ways…

  • It enables you to keep first things first (like Christ being in the center of all you do).
  • Everyone knows what’s expected and what’s going on.
  • There are less surprises to deal with.
  • You are able to ensure that all your students (and parents) are getting adequate rest.

 

Evaluate your “normal” schedule – why has it been the way it has been?

There are all kinds of stated and internal reasons for why we do what we do. Your school schedule is no different. Consider why you have been doing school the way you have?

  • Do you feel pressured to do it a certain way? (Perhaps from the load of books and tapes you got at the last conference?)
  • Are you feeling guilty that your kids are not keeping up with someone else’s kids?
  • Are you feeling an unrealistic pressure to make sure your kids are top of the heap? Why?
  • Are you being intentional about guiding and forming your children’s hearts, or is the intellectual focus wrongly outweighing that priority?
  • Is your schedule the way it is because of deep, God-given conviction?

 

back to school ideas

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : back to school ideas, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marraige, Christian parenting, home school, parenting

How can you teach this to your children?

Posted by Carey 
· Thursday, August 16th, 2012 

A powerful lesson to teach to your children…

I read the following quote in a tweet from Ray Ortland today (You can find me on Twitter here – @withCareyGreen).

All sins are attempts to fill voids

Here’s a simple question for today:
How can you teach that truth to your children?
  • We are all born with a void, caused by sin and only filled with Christ.
  • Your children need to know this about themselves.
  • And they need to know the great salvation from that void offered by Christ.
So back to my question:

How can you teach this truth to your children today?

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, fill the void, godly parents, gospel centered parenting, gospel for kids
back to school ideas

Back to school ideas for the Christian family – Communication

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, August 15th, 2012 

Back to school ideas for the Christian family – Communication

Going back to school each fall is an exciting time. There’s lots to do and lots of new things ahead. But school time can also be one of the most stressful and difficult times of the year as well. I didn’t want the back to school season to slip by without giving you some tips I’ve learned (mainly from my wife) about how to make it the best that it can be!

Make communication a top priority

It doesn’t matter if your kids are going to school outside the home, or are schooled at home. Communication is key. Why? Because communication is what keeps your relationship with your children strong – and relationship is the most important part of home life, even more so than their education. Regular, meaningful communication brings a variety of benefits…

  • It provides security, when your children may be venturing out into new settings and situations.
  • It provides a strong connection to the safety and acceptance of the family, when those outside may not be as accepting.
  • It enables you to be in touch with what is going on in your child’s heart, while all these new challenges are arising.

How does this type of communication come about?

This type of communication comes about because Mom and Dad make it come about. Parents who understand the vital things good communication provides make sure that it is happening in their homes.  Here are some ideas for facilitating communication that you can fit into your regular routine:

  • Breakfast devotions before everyone gets started for the day
  • One night a week set aside for “family time“
  • Intentional conversations with your children as you tuck them into bed (take your time… some of the best stuff comes out then)

Most importantly

In all of this… be sure to constantly bring God into the conversation.

  • Talk about what HE thinks or feels about the situations they are facing.
  • Discuss what HIS will is for their relationships, conversations, school work, and study times.
  • Make HIS INVOLVEMENT in your child’s life obvious to them by the way you include Him in everything.

 

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : back to school, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, family communication, family help, family ideas

Pressing on – in life, marriage, and parenting

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, August 13th, 2012 

Pressing on in life marriage, and parenting

A few weeks back 3 of the kids and I went on a group hike up Mt. Elbert, the highest peak in Colorado and the 2nd highest peak in the contiguous United States. We rose at 3:30 A.M. so we could reach the trail head by 5 A.M. We were trying to avoid afternoon rain showers.

It was a beautiful day and we enjoyed the time with friends and the gorgeous creation of our LORD. By 9 A.M. we were close to tree line, and by 11 A.M. we were well up the shoulder of the mountain. But for us (me) who had never done this sort of thing, it was a hard climb. Really hard (even though Elbert is not one of the more difficult mountains). At one point, we climbed a section of rock that was so steep I could hold my arm straight out in front of me and touch the trail I was ascending. We worked our way up, step by step, until we reached the summit. But it was a false summit. The GPS on my Droid showed that we still had over 580 vertical feet to go… so we kept pressing on.

Many things went through my mind that day as my legs ached and my back complained (I was carrying the backpack with survival gear for the 4 of us). One of the most frequent was that I didn’t really need to make it all the way to the top… it wasn’t really THAT important. Probably true, but I felt a catch in my spirit about stopping. Melinda (almost 19) was ahead with a group of her friends.  Faith (9 years old) was with her… her hunter orange hat making her easy to spot. And Caleb (my 12 year old son) was right behind me. I considered the lessons they’d learn about perseverance, pushing through pain and emotion, and having the opportunity to accomplish something that many others never do. Those wouldn’t be learned as well if Dad bailed out before the end. So I kept pressing on.

We made it all 14,433 feet to the top. It was great. After 40 minutes for lunch and a few photos we headed down.

Down.

Did you know that you use an entirely different set of muscles descending than you do ascending? It hurts.  My toes were constantly sliding down to the front of my shoes (blisters). I rediscovered a knee injury from 20 years ago. I seriously stubbed my toe on a tree stump sticking out of the path. But there was no other choice, I kept pressing on.

It was a great and miserable experience, all at the same time. One I probably won’t do again. But it served me well as a modern parable.

What lessons did I learn?

  • Life (parenting, marriage, work) requires perseverance, even when difficulty is present or on the horizon (James 1:12).
  • There are others counting on you and looking to you, even if you don’t think so.
  • Being intentional as a leader (parent, head of the household) requires you to think through the impact your decisions will have on those you lead.
  • In God’s sovereign plan, sometimes you don’t have a choice but to keep pressing on – and in such cases, we must learn to trust that He knows what He’s doing.
  • Often, after the hard work of perseverance is completed, the view is worth it all.

pressing on

pressing on

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Categories : Marriage, Parenting
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, godly parenting, lessons for kids, life goals, life lessons, marriage, parenting help, perseverance in marriage, pressing on in life, teaching your children

Wives, do you encourage your husband?

Posted by Carey 
· Saturday, August 11th, 2012 

This is what you might call a “sister-in-law” post to another I did recently. That’s because my sister-in-law Val made a comment about that post that got me thinking about this one.

Wives, do you encourage your husband?

Ladies, answer honestly – do you encourage your husband? You might think so… but is he really encouraged by you?

In my mind, there are two kinds of encouragement. Let’s take a look at both…

encourage your husband

Here are some examples:

  • You smell good. Did you put on cologne for a change?
  • Thanks for not throwing your socks on the floor this time.
  • I appreciate that you brushed your teeth before coming to bed.

I call this half-hearted encouragement. It hints at negatives on the way to the positive… and doesn’t quite get there in the end. In addition, it ‘s mainly about externals, not the heart. Your husband needs more than that. He needs your words to enrich his soul, to make him believe that God wants something greater from his life. He needs to know you believe in him and that you are FOR him. That takes us to a better way to encourage your husband…

encourage your husband

Here are some examples of a better way to encourage your husband:

  • I know that things are tough at work right now, but the LORD has done great things in you… you can do it!
  • I appreciate the patience you showed with the kids today. I could see Jesus doing it exactly like that.
  • Thanks for asking my opinion. When you do that I see Christ-like leadership in the way you are considering me.
Do you see the difference? This last set of encouraging comments are focused on God’s desires for your husband and the work He is doing in him. They are affirming and confident that God is at work. THAT is how you should encourage your husband. That is what your husband needs. Trust me, he does.

What encouragement #2 does for your husband

I’ll let you in on a little man-secret ladies. Don’t tell your husband I told you. Here it is:

No matter how tough or together or on top of the world your husband tries to appear, he’s really a scared, insecure little boy inside.

He’s not as sure of himself as he wants you to believe. He’s not as secure as you might think. He’s got self-doubt, guilt, and hang-ups from his past that he carries with him everyplace he goes. He needs YOU to help him get past all that, so that he can be the man God has designed him to be. My guess is, that’s the man YOU are hoping he’ll become too. This second type of encouragement replaces his doubting, self-destructive ideas about himself with the truth of what God thinks of him as a redeemed child of God. Christian wife, YOU can be the primary agent through which the LORD brings about miraculous changes in your husband. But it’s not by nagging. It’s by encouragement #2. I’ve told Mindi at least a hundred times that when I know that she believes in me (and God’s work in me), I can conquer the world!

Here’s your assignment: (and if you’ve read this far, you really need to do it)

  1. Ask your husband if he feels encouragement from you. Be ready for his answer (and don’t let yourself get defensive).
  2. Ask him to give you 5 real things you could do to improve.
  3. Get Sam Crabtree’s book (below) and read it. It’s a short, easy read – and THE BEST book on this subject I’ve ever read.
(affiliate link follows)
522430: Practicing Affirmation Practicing Affirmation by Sam Crabtree – How does affirmation fit into a Christian’s life? Isn’t that simply a humanistic, self-esteem, ego-boosting tool for getting along with others? In Practicing Affirmation, Sam Crabtree skillfully makes a case for and gives practical applications of biblical commendation of others. He states, “[W]e ought to praise God rather than man, while acknowledging that the praise of God does not forbid all praise of others. It only prohibits the praise of others in ways that diminish GodÂ’s glory” (p. 18).Right from the beginning, Crabtree understands the biases of Christian readers and uses Scripture to defend his thesis that affirmation is a required part of blessing one another. Some of the verses he quotes demonstrate the purpose of building each other up so that we will continue to love one another and do good for the LordÂ’s good name (see Heb. 10:24; 1 Cor. 14:26; Rom. 15:2; 1 Pet. 3:9).Along the way, Crabtree gives pointers on proper motivation, what to affirm, responding to compliments, affirming unbelievers, and balancing it with correction. The importance of exercising affirmation becomes clear as our relationships take on a refreshing rather than demanding tone. By becoming the advocate of our children, our spouses, neighbors, and friends, we gain permission to speak to their hearts. Crabtree tells the story of strengthening the relationship with his 11-year-old daughter, saying, “I became a student of her,” in order to find her God-honoring traits and communicate those to her (p. 57). He continues, “The aim is to glorify God by refreshing people as we help them to see God at work in their lives, moving them toward Christlikeness” (p. 69). And this is truly the point of the book.Much like a letter written by Paul, Crabtree begins his book with doctrine and follows it closely with practical living. The first half of the book covers the “why” and “how” to properly affirm one another, which should be read slowly and thoughtfully. The second half moves much quicker, as he goes through a list of “Mistakes I Have Made,” followed by anticipated questions and answers that further explain what godly affirmation looks like. He also wisely includes “100 Affirmation Ideas for Those Who Feel Stuck,” which provides a very specific list of ways to commend coworkers, family, and even missionaries.

encouragement

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Categories : Marriage
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, encourage your husband, help your husband, helpmeet, wife's role
marraige

Life plan while you still can

Posted by Carey 
· Thursday, August 9th, 2012 

Life plans for Christians?

OK, I’ll admit the words “life plan” do not appear in the Bible. But the expectation that Christians are to live life INTENTIONALLY is everywhere! God expects things of you and your life (Matthew 25:14-26), and…

you need to be living on purpose instead of by happen-stance.

Another part of the picture is this: You don’t know how long your life will last, so it would be smart to get started figuring out what you’re supposed to be doing with it.

Do you have a life plan? If you don’t, you should. Because this subject is so important, this post is going to be a tad bit longer than usual, but it’s worth it.

My story

When Mindi and I married, I didn’t think in terms of a life plan. I lived day to day, rolling with whatever came. It’s a pretty stress-free way to live, but you never really get anywhere you want to go.

life plan

image: Alan Cleaver on flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/alancleaver/2378525120/

After we’d been married a few years, Mindi began to refer to my way of living as “floating.” She meant that I was floating through life, not being intentional about my thoughts, time, relationships, direction, talents – anything! I finally came to admit she was right. Not only was I floating through life, I didn’t know how NOT to float.

I thank God that He gave me a wife who is exactly the opposite. Her life is lived intentionally. Underneath her purposeful living is a life plan – she desires to bring glory to her Savior with every aspect of her life. As I was getting to know her (1988) that was one of the first things I noticed about her. She was intentional about her life because she was intentional about loving her Savior (John 14:15).

What a life plan looks like

Your life plan will be as individual as you. God has made you who you are, put you into history where you are, taken you through the experiences you’ve had, and given you your personality and talents ON PURPOSE. He’s made you a very specific tool that He wants to use in very specific ways during the days He has you on the planet. Your job is to make yourself available to what He has in mind.

And how do are you supposed to know what He has in mind for you? It’s called “walking in the Spirit,” (Galatians 5:16), and it’s how God guides us into His will. When you placed your faith in Christ, the Spirit of God came to live inside you. He’s been given to you to be your Helper and Guide (John 14:16, John 16:13), to show you, step-by-step, what the LORD desires for you to do. He’s also the power source by which you do the will of God (Ephesians 3:16). So God is not a tyrant who expects things of you but doesn’t help.  He’s exactly the opposite. When He expects things of your life, He also gives you what you need in order to do what He expects.

How to develop your life plan

Your life plan could be simple, or it could be very detailed. Which it is will depend on a lot of things. Personality, gifting, temperament, experiences, and many others. For now, let’s look at the two extremes. As an example, Mindi and I are pretty opposite:

  • Mindi does NOT have a detailed life plan (it’s not written, she didn’t spend a lot of time “working on it,” and she never had anyone teach her how to do it). But you can be sure, she HAS a life plan that guides her every day. In her case, it’s a mixture of the gifts and personality God has given her that make her such a “natural” at living on purpose.
  • I DO have a detailed life plan (it is written, I did spend a lot of time “working on it,” and I have learned from others how to develop it – Mindi, mainly). In my case, I had to seek the LORD diligently and watch what He was doing in my life to “discover” who He’s made me to be and how I’m to serve Him.
  • Some people know intuitively or naturally what their life is about. Mindi has known since a very young age that she’s called and wired to be a wife, Mom, and a teacher and counselor to others.
  • Others don’t come by this as naturally and need to spend time seeking the LORD’s heart on the issue. That’s me. After 45 years, I’ve just begun to see who God has made me to be, and what He has wired me to do for His sake.
I provide life coaching from a Christian perspective. Find out more here.
If you feel like you need to develop a clear, on-paper life plan there are many tools you can use to get the creative juices flowing… mind-mapping software, word clouds, or coaching from someone who has been through the process. But if you’d like to give it a try all on your own, here’s what I suggest as a starter:
  1. Ask the Holy Spirit to guide and reveal throughout the process. It’s the LORD’s plan for your life that you are after – not something you dream up.
  2. Write down all the “roles” God has placed you in – child of the Father, spouse, parent, friend, employee, etc.
  3. Rewrite those roles in order of importance from God’s point of view. (I covered this in a podcast episode. You might want to give it a listen.)
  4. Write down what you prayerfully consider to be God’s purpose for putting you into each of those roles. In other words, what results does God expect to come of you being in each role?
  5. Next, consider the gifts and abilities the LORD has given to you. You may want to go through a gifts analysis to help you do this. (This is one I created you can have for free).
  6. Once you have identified the “goals” that you are shooting for in each role, and once you have an idea for how God has uniquely gifted you, try to summarize each role-goal in a short, clear statement of purpose that takes into consideration how God has uniquely designed you.
  7. Finally, try to put them all together in a short, easy to understand series of statements. Take your time and refine each sentence until it says exactly what you feel it should say. When you are finished you have a basic life plan.
There is a ton more that could go into this process, and likely a ton more that will. Each person will discover different steps that are helpful to them along the way. But this should serve as track on which you can get started in creating your life plan.

My life plan: one example

It wasn’t too long ago that I finally got my life plan on paper. I did it following a process very much like what I described above. Here is my finished product:

Because Jesus is more than worthy of all my life can ever be…

I will BE a godly man, husband, father, and friend.
I will USE His gifts in me to magnify His worth to others.
I will SERVE others as a model, mentor, leader, teacher, and writer.
I will DO all this depending fully on Jesus, who lives in me.

If you don’t have a life plan, get started on it. If you need some help, I offer life coaching – so feel free to contact me. (If you are part of my church family, give me a call – it’s free for you!). And once you get your own life plan on track, begin thinking about how you can teach this sort of intentionality to your kids!  And I’d love to hear how this process goes for you, so feel free to contact me or post your own life plan in the comments below!

Life plan

 

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Categories : Spirit Health
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian life planning, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, create your life plan, life plan, life planning coach, personal mission statement
provoke your children to anger

Christian Parenting: a chip off the oldest block

Posted by Carey 
· Tuesday, August 7th, 2012 

How God has “parented” His people throughout history

christian parenting

photo taken by flickr user http://www.flickr.com/photos/maveric2003/

The Bible is divided into two sections – Old Testament and New Testament.

One aspect of the Old Testament is that it is a record of how God the Father dealt with His children in the earlier stages of mankind’s spiritual development. There are plentiful examples of His mercy and grace in the Old Testament (the ark God instructed Noah to build, His calling of Abram, His sparing of Lot from the destruction of Sodom, His forgiving of David, etc.).  But it is also clear that in that “stage” of His parenting, the “law” played a major role.  Practically, He gave lots of instruction about what was right and wrong, and commanded obedience from His children.

God’s focus on rules and obedience at that stage of history wasn’t His “Plan A” that had to get Him by until He could get around to His “Plan B” (Jesus). Nope. His focus on law was intentional. It was designed to show that He is holy and we are sinners, and we need His help.

Paul says exactly this in Romans 7…

I was once alive apart from the law, but when the commandment came, sin came alive and I died. The very commandment that promised life proved to be death to me. For sin, seizing an opportunity through the commandment, deceived me and through it killed me. So the law is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good. Did that which is good, then, bring death to me? By no means! It was sin, producing death in me through what is good, in order that sin might be shown to be sin, and through the commandment might become sinful beyond measure. For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am of the flesh, sold under sin.

In a nutshell, Paul said the law shows us 2 things:

  • The holiness of God
  • Our own sinfulness

What does that have to do with Christian parenting today?

christian parentingMany get confused at how rules fit into “Christian” parenting.  To some it seems that since we Christians are “under grace” we should not have a bunch of rules for our kids.  I agree there should not be a “bunch” of rules, but there clearly should be rules. While our children are young, before they come to faith in Jesus, they not only need boundaries, they also need spiritual tutoring.  That is what the rules do.

Let’s consider it through the parable of the sower (Matthew 13:1-9). Jesus describes 4 different kinds of soil (which represented types of “hearts” in people).  Three of the soils were not able to receive the seed (the word of God). The parable is not about the power of the word of God but about the condition of people’s hearts.

In Christian parenting the loving rules we set for our kids serve as cultivation of their hearts. Through rules they  hear and understand right and wrong from God’s perspective, and they begin to see the sinful condition of their own hearts.  It’s at that point their hearts are ready to receive the seed of the gospel. The rules are part of what God uses to prepare them for His grace.

So don’t abandon rules in your desire to “give grace” to your children. Like you and me, they can’t see their need of a Savior if they don’t first see that they are sinners.

Christian parenting

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : bible on parenting, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, God as a parent, God as our father, godly parenting, parenting help
family mission trips

Podcast 2: Thinking “outside the box” about family mission trips

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, August 6th, 2012 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

with Carey Green 

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm

 

EPISODE #2

THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX ABOUT FAMILY MISSION TRIPS (INTERVIEW)

MY GUEST INTERVIEW:

CARL WALKER

family mission trips

Walker Family Excursions

  • Excursion 2011
  • Excursion 2012

SUMMARY OF TODAY’S PODCAST

A conversation with Carl Walker of En Gedi Retreat who has developed, along with his wife, what I am calling an “out of the box” sort of practice they call “excursions.”

An excursion is:  1 part mission trip, 1 part vacation, and 1 part exploration.

Carl and I discuss how these trips first came about, why they came about, and how they put them together and implement them. He shares some powerful stories of how these trips have impacted him, his family, and the people they have served.

I think you’ll enjoy this interview perhaps more than I enjoyed making it (though that might be tough… I had a really good time).

OUTLINE OF THE PODCAST

  • Introduction of the podcast and topic
  • Introduction of Carl Walker, director of En Gedi retreat
  • How the idea of “excursions” came about
  • What IS an excursion?
  • What the family thinks about excursions
  • Excursion stories (How God has worked)
  • Carl’s “Top 5 Tips” for pulling off your own family excursion

Links mentioned in this podcast:

  • En Gedi Retreat (for Pastors)
  • En Gedi Retreat on Facebook
  • Contact Christian Home and Family
The music track used in the Christian Home and Family Podcast is entitled, “Midian” and is from Adam Rey’s instrumental album Meat & Potatoes –  Adam has generously given me permission to use his music, to please, support his generosity by checking out an purchasing his music at www.heyreyguitar.com – (no affiliate relationship, Adam’s just my friend.)

 

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRISTIAN HOME AND FAMILY PODCAST

with Carey Green 

Christian Home and Family subscribe on Stitcher! Miro Video Player listen on player.fm
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Categories : Parenting, Podcast
Tags : carl walker, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, en gedi retreat, family mission trips
ask good questions

Why you do what you do – SCREENCAST

Posted by Carey 
· Friday, August 3rd, 2012 

Why you do what you do… have you ever wondered?

The Apostle Paul did… Romans 7 gives us his account of the confusion that he once struggled with in trying to figure out that very issue. But thanks be to God, Paul was taught by God to understand that struggle, and therefore we can understand it too.

The following SCREENCAST is me, doing a bit of teaching (with some cool graphics), about this very thing.

I can’t tell you how literally TRANSFORMATIONAL the truths contained in this teaching have been to my own life. You need to know this stuff… and you need the Spirit of God to make it take root deep in your soul.

Watch it.

Watch it again.

Get these truths down deep.

 

why you do what you do

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Categories : Spirit Health
Tags : be killing sin, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, Christians and sin nature, emotional control, fighting sin, new spirit, the struggle with our flesh, why you do what you do
spank children

Spanking children – is it abusive?

Posted by Carey 
· Thursday, August 2nd, 2012 

Spanking children – is it abusive?

The common “wisdom” of our day is that spanking children is a form of abuse. Some say it so definitively that it seems beyond question.

But THINK about the statement for just a minute. It is such a GENERALIZED statement…

spanking children

  • In both cases the statement COULD be true, but it isn’t NECESSARILY true.
  • No doubt spanking can, in some cases, be legitimately abusive.
  • But that doesn’t mean it always is.

There is a whole lot more that has to be said before we can determine if it is true in any given case.

In short, here’s what I believe about spanking children…

  • The Bible not only allows spanking of children, the Bible prescribes it (Proverbs 13:24; Proverbs 22:15; Proverbs 23:13-14; Proverbs 29:15) – I’ll deal with these references in more detail in a later post… and the common misinterpretations people foist upon them.
  • Spanking children must be done lovingly, and with great discernment. I’ll cover the “how to” of that in a future post as well.
  • Spanking children cannot be carried out biblically outside a context of good relationship with the child. More on this in a future post.
  • Spanking children cannot be done arbitrarily. Both parent and child must understand why a spanking is administered in a given situation. Again, more to come…
  • Spanking children is not automatically rejected because Jesus didn’t address it specifically. There are many things Jesus didn’t address (political freedom, healthy eating habits, physical exercise, etc.) but that doesn’t mean that He would have rejected them.

Watch for my future posts in this series. I’ll cover the “When, How, and Why” of spanking children… from a biblical perspective (mixed with a little common sense.)

spanking children

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : abuse of spanking children, Christian discipline, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, corporal punishment, physical discipline, spanking children, spare the rod
spirituality of rest

Resting can be spiritual

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, August 1st, 2012 

spirituality of restResting can be spiritual, really…

In our day of hurry, get-it-quick, microwave living, we don’t know the meaning of the word “rest.” But in reality, resting can be spiritual – one of the most spiritual things you can do at certain times. You may not understand… so let me give you a quick rundown of the concept.

Resting can be spiritual – Old Testament

God instituted the Sabbath in the Old Testament (Exodus 20:10-11) as a day of rest for His people, Israel. Depending on what religious background you hail from, you may have heard any number of things about the “Sabbath” being the LORD’s day, a day of worship, etc. But the Old Testament truth is that it was all about rest. Six days were for work, one was for rest.

Resting can be spiritual – New Testament

The New Testament does not require observance of the Sabbath by those who place their faith in Christ. That’s because all of the Old Testament laws were fulfilled in Christ, so we Christians are not required to observe them as a means toward receiving favor from God (Colossians 2:16). But that doesn’t mean the principle behind the Sabbath is not a wise one for today. Jesus Himself said that “the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.” (Mark 2:27).  TRANSLATION: The Sabbath was made for your benefit, not to be a tyrant over you.

What benefit is the principle of Sabbath? Rest… that’s the benefit. You are a human being, made to NEED rest. God designed you in such a way that you spend 1/3 of your life unconscious (sleeping). That fact alone tells you, YOU NEED REST! God’s command to His Old Covenant people (Israel) to take a day off each week was designed to keep them from running themselves ragged… to PROVIDE a much needed rest for them.

Resting can be spiritual - My story

My wife and I became very convicted about this almost 10 years ago.  We attended a retreat within our denomination and the speaker presented a series of talks about Sabbath rest. We both felt a nudge to consider whether we were honoring God with our bodies through the practice of regular, intentional rest. So we left that retreat and worked out a “day off” plan that works for us.  Here’s what we do currently…

  • Mindi’s “day off” is Friday – she can do whatever she wants – read, go out with friends, watch a movie, nap, pray, etc. – anything except her “normal” work (taking care of the home and kids). On that day, since I’m off from the church, I take care of all those things.
  • My day off is Saturday – same rules apply for me.  I do wood carving, read, nap, talk with the kids, whatever – anything except my “normal” work (computer stuff, counseling, sermon prep., etc.)

Suggestions for putting it into practice

  • Do it. Don’t make excuses, make it happen.
  • If you married couples can pull off a Sabbath on the same day, more power to you.  We couldn’t do it. Inevitably Mindi wound up at least fixing meals even on her “day off.”
  • Husbands take care to make sure your wife is getting time to rest. She works as hard as you (or harder), even if she is not earning a paycheck.
  • Teach your kids about rest, and give them “days off” too.
  • Include thoughtful times of reflection and prayer, to bring a sense of peace and rest to your spirit as well as your body.
  • Don’t kid yourself… you really DO need the rest.
  • Don’t get all “legalistic” about it. If circumstances periodically keep you from having your down-time, flex – but make an extra effort to ensure you get it the next week.

After practicing this almost 10 years, we can’t imagine our lives being sane without it. The difficulties we’ve faced in life have been HUGE, and these regular times of rest have been instrumental in helping us weather those storms. And more importantly, we are honoring God by resting.  How’s that? By resting we are reminding ourselves that we don’t have to be striving to keep life in check.  God does that, and we learn to trust Him.

Do you have a regular time of rest each week?

If not, why not?

spirituality of rest

 

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Categories : Spirit Health
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, resting is spiritual, Sabbath principle, Sabbath rest, spirituality of rest
communication in marriage

Is your wife SAFE with you?

Posted by Carey 
· Tuesday, July 31st, 2012 

is your wife safe with youIt may sound like a silly question, but I’m not joking… because God doesn’t joke about the way Christian husbands are to love their wives. You and I are to love our wives in a way that reflects the love that Jesus has for His bride, the church (Ephesians 5:25).

In our first years of marriage the LORD used that truth to hammer me… hard. I can recall innumerable times when He confronted me with my own insensitivity to the person I loved the most (my wife).  I remember His Spirit taking me back to Ephesians 5:25, asking me, “Where is the love in how you are treating her?” I discovered that if I am not intentionally aiming at Christ-like love toward her, I will naturally cause her to feel “unsafe” with me.

So… I ask you, “Is your wife SAFE with you?”  Here’s a “checklist” to help you evaluate…

  • Does she feel safe to express her disagreement with you? (Or do you act threatened, defensive, or become intimidating when she does?)
  • Is she confident that her emotional struggles will never wear you out? (Or have you caused her to feel that her emotions are too much for you?)
  • While we’re on the subject, does she feel cared for in her emotions? (Or does she feel like you just tolerate her emotions?)
  • When she “nags” you (intentionally or unintentionally) is she assured of your love anyway? (Or does she feel that if she says it one more time, it’s gonna’ get ugly?)
  • During “that time of the month” does she know you’ll be extra understanding and tender? (Or does she fear that you’ll once again be irritated and unfeeling toward her struggle?)
  • Does she feel that you really hear her when she shares her heart? (Or are you going through the motions and not really understanding her?)
  • Does she trust you with her heart to the point she opens it up to you? (Or is she guarded because of your careless responses in the past?)
  • Is she physically safe with you? (Or do you use your size, loudness, and physical presence to back her into a place of fearful submission?)

We men can be pretty insensitive. Abrasive. Cold. Calloused. Not always intentionally, but simply because we are men.  Sadly, our wives are the ones we can be the most insensitive toward, when we are supposed to be living with them in a much different way (1 Peter 3:7).

As Christians, we are entirely SAFE with Jesus.

  • His motives are unquestionable. Whatever He does toward us, we can be fully assured that He is doing it out of love (Romans 8:35-39).
  • His track record is spotless. He’s not only told us that He loves us, He’s proved it in the most extreme way imaginable (Romans 5:8)
  • His word truly is His bond. Whatever He has promised (2 Peter 3:13; 1 John 2:25), we can be assured He will do.
  • THEREFORE we are entirely SAFE with Him. We can trust Him with the entirety of who we are.

THAT is how we Christian husbands

are to love our wives.

So once again…

Christian husband, is your wife SAFE with you?

is your wife safe with you

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Categories : Marriage
Tags : 1 Peter 3:7, abusive Christian husband, abusive men, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Ephesians 5:25, husbands love your wives, is your wife safe, marriage, tips for husbands
I need your help

Grace based parenting may not be what you think

Posted by Carey 
· Monday, July 30th, 2012 

Grace based parenting may not be what you think

grace based parenting“Grace” has been a popular topic in the church over the last 20 years… and rightly so.  God’s amazing grace is what makes us able to be His children in the first place (Ephesians 2:8-9).

But some of the meanings that have been poured into the word “grace” are not exactly accurate…

  • Some believe that grace means their sin doesn’t matter (when the truth is that it mattered so much Christ gave His life to remove it).
  • Some believe that grace means they get a “pass” on their sinful behavior (when the Bible argues in exactly the opposite way – Romans 6:1-7)
  • Some believe that others have no right to “judge” them regarding their behavior (when in reality the Bible instructs Christians to exhort and admonish each other concerning sinful behavior).
  • Some believe grace removes “standards” of Christian behavior, and any attempts to uphold such standards is legalism (when most of the New Testament TEACHES standards of Christian behavior).

These false beliefs about grace

are carried over into the way many

Christian parents handle their children.

So what DOES “grace” mean? It means that God does for us what we cannot do for ourselves. He helps us.

He doesn’t remove the standards of holiness, or say that they no longer matter.  He fulfills them for us in Christ AND helps us attain them practically through the empowerment of His Holy Spirit.

What true Grace based parenting looks like

Grace based parenting doesn’t remove God’s holy rules, or lessen the consequences of sin. Grace based parenting “helps” the child by showing them 4 things:

  1. The problem of their own sin.
  2. That they are breaking God’s holy standards.
  3. The love and help offered through Jesus.
  4. The role obedience plays in receiving and applying the grace of God’s help.

A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE
5 year old Johnny doesn’t want to share his toys with his brother, and mommy overhears what’s happening.  She enters into the situation by saying something like this (as she takes him in her arms), “Johnny, you are not being loving to your brother.  Mommy and Daddy want you to love your brother by sharing your toys with him.  And, Jesus wants you to love your brother by sharing your toys with him too.  Jesus loves your brother, and Jesus loves you.  Jesus wants to help you love your brother.  So you need to obey Mommy and Daddy and share with your brother.  When you do that, Jesus is so happy!  He loves it when you share with your brother! And Mommy is happy too, because you are loving your brother like Jesus wants you to. (She helps him take the toy to his brother to share it with him.) When Johnny obeys, Mommy gives him a big hug and says, “Let’s thank Jesus for helping you obey Mommy!” (and they pray)

Notice how these 4 things were highlighted

THE PROBLEM IS IDENTIFIED: Johnny is sinning against his brother by not sharing.

THE STANDARD IS IDENTIFIED: Jesus (and mommy) expect him to love his brother by sharing.

GOD’S LOVE AND HELP IS PRESENTED: Jesus loves him and wants to help him love his brother (grace).

THE ROLE OBEDIENCE PLAYS: Jesus helps you when you obey Mommy and share.

In this case, the Mom is God’s tool to help the child obey. As he matures, Mom and Dad help him know how to obey on his own, relying on Jesus as his strength. But no matter the age, this pattern can be implemented. The sin is identified. God’s thoughts about the situation are revealed. God’s love for the child and desire to help him is clarified, and the action the child needs to take (with Jesus’ help) is explained.

Grace is God’s help to us. Grace based parenting is us helping our children to love and obey God.

grace based parenting

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : child training, Christian family, Christian home, Christian parenting, grace based, grace based parenting, parenting

Train up a child – from day one!

Posted by Carey 
· Friday, July 27th, 2012 

TRAIN UP A CHILD – FROM DAY ONE!

train up a childPerhaps the most popular Bible verse of all time in regard to parenting is this one…

Proverbs 22:6  – Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.

I typically hear this verse quoted by well-meaning people who are trying to comfort the parent of a wayward teen or young adult… but that is a misuse of this verse.  This verse is not meant to ease our fears or soothe our guilty conscience once we are well down the parenting road.  It is meant to instruct us about how to approach parenting, before we even begin. This verse tells us…

  • Our children are to be trained intentionally.
  • Our children are to be trained according to the personality and gifting God has given them (the way HE should go).
  • Our children are to be trained with God’s ends/goals in mind (the way he SHOULD go).
  • The promise is that such training has benefits that extend into adulthood (not that rebels will be turned around once they become an adult)

You and I have a responsibility before God for the people our children become. We are to train up our children, with discernment about who God has called them to be, and to do so with clear direction and conviction from day one.

No more excuses

But we live in a day when parents (like most people) don’t like to be held accountable. Instead of taking responsibility for their lack of parental diligence, they make all kinds of excuses for it:

  • She’s tired
  • He’s hungry
  • He didn’t get his nap
  • Her friends are a bad influence
  • Boys will be boys
  • It’s the environment at her school
  • Video games have ruined his attention span
  • He has ADD or ADHD
  • Adolescent hormones have taken over
  • He’s 17, he’s going to do what he wants

Clearly, these are some of the struggles along the parenting road… but none of them are excuses.

Before any of these has the opportunity to surface, parents should be diligently on the job – beginning day one! They must have the mindset of a trainer.

  • A trainer thinks ahead.
  • He knows where his trainees should arrive.
  • And he relentlessly pursues that destination.

I’m not saying you need to be a drill sergeant parent, but you do need to take your responsibility TO parent seriously. If we are going to “train up a child” we must be committed to it.

Train up a child: a bit late

If you are just beginning to see the weight of your parenting responsibility, and you haven’t been diligent from day one, you may feel that it’s too late. But don’t despair my friend. Our LORD is able to do wonders through a humble parent who is willing to admit their mistakes to themselves and to their children.

Take the time to confess your failings to the LORD, receive His forgiveness, and ask for His empowerment for the days you have left with your children. He rose from the dead, He can breathe new life into your parenting (Romans 8:11).

train up a child

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Categories : Parenting
Tags : child training, christian, Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, discipline of children, parenting
educational choices

Counter productive educational choices?

Posted by Carey 
· Wednesday, July 25th, 2012 
educational choices

Jack London… studying

I have yet to meet a Christian parent who would disagree with the following statement:

  • I want my child to love God with all their heart, all their mind, all their soul, and all their strength.  (Mark 12:30)

Yet, many of them don’t realize that in order for that to happen, priorities have to be adjusted. You simply can’t DO everything you want to do and see that desire fulfilled. It takes time.  It demands investment.  It requires sacrificial purpose on your part as a parent.

I’ve seen this disconnect many times over in the home school community. And I’m not a critic only, but a fellow struggler. When we first began schooling our kids I wanted the very, very best education for them.  But over the years I’ve come to see that it’s very easy for a disconnect to happen in my own mind, between what is good (great education) and what is best (spiritual maturity). Because of this disconnect, well-meaning parents drive their kids toward educational excellence while their spiritual health falls into the shadows. In short, heir educational choices don’t reflect their stated goals (the statement above).

Educational choices: questions to consider

Today’s post is simple.  If you are a parent, or responsible for raising children, I want you to prayerfully ask yourself the following questions.

  • Are you investing in your kids’ spiritual development in significant enough ways that the blue statement above has a good chance of being true?
  • Are you putting too much effort into other good, but less important things?
  • Is your focus on education overshadowing your focus on your child’s spiritual growth and maturity?
  • What difference will your kids’ education really make at the end of their lives… if they don’t love the LORD?
  • What changes might you need to make, in mindset or practice, to help you make a course-correction?

You may find something helpful in your answers. You may check out alright.

Either way, I had to ask.

educational choices

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Categories : Spirit Health
Tags : Christian family, Christian home, Christian marriage, Christian parenting, educational choice, educational choices for your family, home schooling, private schooling, public schooling
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