Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Lay of the Land (3): Settling vs. Striving

Are we settling for the cultural expectation when it comes to education, teams, and time? When we settle, who pays the price? While many parents’ hearts are broken by their kids experiences, it is the kids who live the dysfunction and its consequences.

Welcome GREEKS! When parents say that education is the most important thing for their kids to get, it is assured that they have turned to the Greek mindset. Knowledge without context or conviction is like a loaded gun in a monkey’s hand. It’s going off and who knows in what direction? How does education compare to a relationship with God? Which do we invest more money or time into? That is a good indicator of what we believe is more important. By no means do we believe that our children should grow up uneducated but do we want educated kids without the godly fiber of conviction? The present situation in families, churches, and schools seems to be missing the mark.

Do the schools you and I send our kids to hold the view of the world that will prepare our kids for the kind of life that we desire for them to live? What alternatives or solutions are we open to?

GREEKS were into the betterment of man by athletic and intellectual prowess. While sports are benign in and of themselves, the culture that has arisen as part of the Greek mentality of athletics does not lend itself to the life that God would have us pursue in Him. Do we want our kids to live out the normal lifestyle of the average person in this culture? The greatest endeavor: man/woman of God or league champion?

I am afraid that Baucham is right about preparing our kids for divorce. Mini-marriages we call dating prepare our children to attain a level of commitment that should be reserved for that final mate of life. Is this the way we want to continue or do we desire to set a course that will prepare them for one relationship that will last for life and fulfillment that God desires for all of us?

Are we settled and satisfied with the status quo of our culture? Do we desire to prepare them for a godly life with a true foundation? What kind of changes does this desire and decision require?

Monday, April 26, 2010

The Lay of the Land (2): Man’s God vs. Man’s World

What are the most important titles you bear? Are the strategies, projects, plans and production the most important responsibilities in your life? It is hard to neglect family for these things but it happens all the time. If the most important title and impact rest at home then isn’t our walk with Christ in our homes the beginning of the most important responsibilities we have as men?

Baucham states, “It is my relationship with my wife and children that gives my walk with Christ legitimacy.” How do Matthew 22:34-40 & 1John 2:9-11 fit into your walk with your family?

Is there any way in which you could see yourself “teaching the Word to your family or leading them in family worship, disciplines, instructing and encouraging” them?

It bears out that most Christian families are operating in the “full-screen” rather than “wide-screen” mode. After reading these few pages would you concede that there is a great deal that we either ignorantly or inadvertently let slide when it comes to leading our families? Are we given to the cultural “perception” and “failing to question the status quo?”

I was surprised by my lack of realization that the party kids of youth were the ultimate partiers in college. Allowing kids to experiment as teens does not get it out of their system it only wets their appetite for more.

I cannot prevent their bad choices later in life but I can give them the right foundation to be able to make the best choices possible when the time comes. Many have fallen prey to the dangerous behavior of “trading in the Biblical standard for a cultural norm.”

What was the approach your parents took with you? What approach are you taking with your kids? Does God have a plan for the way you bring up his images that have been given to you to raise in partnership with Him?

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

The Lay of the Land (1): Christian Norms?

Do our children and young people know the difference between survival and pursuit? Do they know the difference between “virginity and purity?” Do they know the difference between being a man/woman of God and a culturally acceptable man/woman?

It is interesting and not surprising at all that many young people are speechless when it comes to an understanding or expectation concerning Biblical manhood and plans for marriage. Most are dismissive in ignorance and regretful when understanding arrives.

When we think of 8(or 9) of 10 Christian teens walk away from a Biblical faith into college, does this speak about the church or the home? When a belief in absolute truth is held by only 15% of “born again teens,” who has had the largest impact upon them? By most teens leaving their faith behind after the youth group and leaving home possibly indicating that they were spectators, at the most, to the Christian life. As most teens espouse inclusive, pluralistic and individualistic views of religious truth, this seems to demonstrate that the media and secular humanism are the foundation of belief that they are buying into.

Is there truth to the verse in our day? “They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they went out, so that it would be shown that they all are not of us.” 1John 2:19. How can you tell whether your kids are “going through the motions” and “saying what they have been conditioned to say?” Do you think at any point we possibly “manipulated” our children into responding the way we want/need them to?

Have you noticed the alarming trend? Are you ready to look for the mutigenerational faithfulness that God calls us to?

Family Driven Faith: Introduction

As we enter our second season of this year’s reading, we will be working though the Family Driven Faith by Voddie Bachaum Jr. This is going to be an intense journey of evaluating our backgrounds, upbringing and future plans for our families.

One key issue that I am looking for as we discuss what we read is, “Have we passed the buck of raising our children to the church or the educational system?” It will be interesting to see how we work through this question. It is not the question of the book but as I think through and read, this is the question that has popped into my mind.

I look forward to really gaining an understanding of a godly home and Biblically-based mindset of raising kids. The challenging thing is that you don’t have to wonder where this author stands. Whether we agree with everything he writes or proposes, the real question is where do each of us stand and is the scripture the foundation of our stand or our experience, upbringing and culture?

So I challenge you to journey through this season together and let us challenge/test/evaluate our upbringing, cultural assumptions, present practice and future plans for our families. Will you man-up to the challenge or coast to the difficulty?

We meet on May 16, 2010 at 5:30 pm and we are reading the Introduction –Third Chapter before that night.