TLP 337: How to Integrate Parables into Your Parenting | Parabolic Parenting

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How does a parent work parables into their parenting? Join AMBrewster for an easy how-to for working one of Jesus’ preferred teaching methods into your daily parenting. Watch Louie Giglio’s revelation concerning laminin.Find some amazing family games here!Check out 5 Ways to Support TLP. Discover the following episodes by clicking the titles or navigate to the episode in your app:“Four Children” series (starts in episode 55)“Why Does My Family Argue? | and how to stop” (episode 331)“Parent’s 5 Jobs” series (starts in episode 184) Click here for our free Parenting Course! Click here for Today’s Episode Notes and Transcript. Like us on Facebook.Follow us on Instagram.Follow us on Twitter.Follow AMBrewster on Twitter.Pin us on Pinterest.Subscribe to us on YouTube. Need some help? Write to us at [email protected]. Click "Read More" for today’s Episode Notes and Transcript.

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Today's episode is all about building the muscles necessary to make storytelling, and specifically parables, a more regular part of our parenting.
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Welcome to Truth. Love. Parent. Where we use God's Word to become intentional, premeditated parents.
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Here's your host, AM Brewster. If you're new to the show, I want to welcome you and tell you how excited
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I am that you're here. So, we don't really know each other very well, but here's one thing I do know about you simply because you've joined us today.
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First, you're likely a parent. I know. I'm amazing. Second, you probably would like to take your parenting to the next level.
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And third, if you've read any of our reviews or descriptions and still decided to tune in, you're potentially a professing
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Christian who believes that God's Word has something to say about our parenting. Well, my name is Aaron, and I too am a parent and a follower of Christ.
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I also have the joy of having been a family counselor for the past 10 years, as well as the surrogate parent for over 50 teenagers over the past eight years.
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However, I know that I still need to mature in my parenting, and I believe with all my heart that the Bible, God's inscripturated
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Word, is the best place to discover God's expectations for my parenting. For that reason,
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Team TLP and I are dedicated to unpacking Scripture and applying it to family life. We're also passionate about creating as many resources as we can to improve and enrich your household.
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To that end, we started TruthLoveParent .com. Now, there are a lot of great resources you can discover there, but one of my favorites is the games section.
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My family and I love to play games, and I believe playing together as a family is one of the key ways we communicate affection for our kids.
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If you check out our ever -growing list of games at TruthLoveParent .com, you'll find that we've included Amazon links for many of them.
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If you choose to purchase any of those games by using the links we've provided, TLP receives a commission from the sale.
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It's a win -win for everyone. So welcome to TruthLoveParent. I pray your time with us will be enriching and valuable.
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By the way, we also have a blog called Taking Back the Family. Among other things, there you will find free episode notes and transcripts for the vast majority of our podcast episodes.
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And that may be helpful as we discuss parabolic parenting today. Again, for those of you who are just joining us, today's episode is actually a continuation of our last show.
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The focus of that episode was about the importance of us reconsidering one unique parenting strategy.
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On that episode, we reminded ourselves that our parenting isn't perfect the way it is, and therefore needs to grow.
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We saw that when it comes to communication, there's no better example to follow than Christ's, and we were reminded that approximately one -third of his teaching utilized parables.
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I personally have seen great success using object lessons and illustrations and metaphors and parables in my teaching and parenting, and I believe humans resonate with them so well because God created us in his image.
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He is a God of story. We naturally love to tell stories and we naturally love to hear stories, and I believe he's wired us to learn in a unique way from stories.
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I used to teach in a Christian school. I taught sixth grade, but I also taught various subjects to seventh through twelfth graders, and every single one of them, without an exception, has the same response to stories.
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I would be teaching the lesson on English or math or science or history or economics, sharing facts and making application, but when
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I would share the same information within the context of a story, students would literally lean forward in their seats.
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We discussed last time how we'll binge watch shows or stay enraptured in a three -hour movie, but we struggle in Sunday school for 30 minutes, and I don't think it's simply the explosions and special effects in the movie that engage us.
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I believe it's the story. So today's episode is all about building the muscles necessary to make storytelling, and specifically parables, a more regular part of our parenting.
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So first, let's review the nature of parables. Simply put, a parable is a usually short, fictitious story that illustrates a moral attitude or a religious principle.
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It's not far -fetched to say that Jesus' most famous parable is the Good Samaritan. Even unbelievers are at least familiar with the title, even if they've never heard the details of the story or knew that Jesus was the first to tell it.
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The Good Samaritan tells the story of an abused man and his unlikely hero with the express purpose of answering the question, who is my neighbor?
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You see, in Luke 10, 25 through 29, we read, "...a lawyer stood up and put Jesus to the test, saying,
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Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? And he said to him, What is written in the law? How does it read to you?
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And he answered, You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.
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And Jesus said to him, You have answered correctly. Do this, and you will live. But wishing to justify himself, the lawyer said to Jesus, And who is my neighbor?
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Jesus could have answered the man's question in any number of ways. He could have replied, everyone. He could have been more specific and said, everyone, including the person you dislike the most.
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That really was the point Jesus was making, but Jesus didn't say it that way at all. He simply replied with this five -sentence story, one question and one command.
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A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among robbers, and they stripped him and beat him and went away, leaving him half dead.
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And by chance, a priest was going down on that road, and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side.
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Likewise, a Levite also, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a
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Samaritan, who was on a journey, came upon him, and when he saw him, he felt compassion, and came to him and bandaged up his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them.
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And he put him on his own beast, and brought him to an inn, and took care of him. On the next day, he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper and said,
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Take care of him, and whatever more you spend, when I return, I will repay you. Which of these three do you think proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell into the robbers' hands?
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And the lawyer said, The one who showed mercy toward him. Then Jesus said to him,
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Go and do the same. And that short story has informed even the youngest children with the unarguable truth that love is a choice unhindered by ethnic, theological, or economic differences.
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And since the truth is presented in a story format, it helps us chew on the message, digest it better, and apply it to our lives with greater precision.
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So today I'm going to start from the standpoint that none of us have made parables a regular part of our parenting. I want to be a blessing to everyone today, so I'm starting with a worst -case scenario.
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That way, whether you've never used a parable in your parenting before, or you use them with frequency, we can all glean something today.
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There was once a powerful wizard sliding through the woods on his morning constitutional. On this particular day, he wandered into a part of the forest he had never explored.
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After descending into a significantly deep valley, he heard the distressed cry of a woman. Rushing to her side, he discovered the woman hunched over the mangled form of her husband.
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The man had been felling trees and was crushed when his stack of timbers collapsed. But though the wizard was trained in the magical arts and could easily summon storms, create blinding light, destroy attacking hordes of goblins, and cause delusions in his enemies, he was not skilled in human anatomy.
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He didn't know why the husband was dying, and he didn't know how to help. The best the wizard could conjure was to give the dying man a pleasant delusion, in which he slipped out of this life.
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Do you see this point? Uh, Aaron, I'm not sure. There's an interesting dynamic to parables.
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The Bible says that Jesus sometimes used parables as a way of veiling the truth from people. Whoa, whoa,
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Aaron, hold on. I thought object lessons would uncover truth from my kids, not obscure it. We're going to discuss this particular point last, but parables are the needle that puncture the skin, while the explanation of the parable is the plunger that injects the truth into the blood.
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Jesus frequently had to add clarification to his parables. I'm reminded of our Four Children series.
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In that study, we learned how our children respond to truth by dissecting the parable of the soils.
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After sharing the initial parable, the disciples immediately began asking questions about the parable. In Mark 4 .13,
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Jesus responds, Do you not understand this parable? How will you understand all the parables? He then went on to give the interpretation of the parable.
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So, though we'll talk about interpreting the parable later in the story, I'm going to have to do it for us now, practically.
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In the story of the wizard, we have a very powerful man who runs to another's aid only to find out that regardless of his great powers, he wasn't equipped to do something that could have been relatively simple and could have saved a life and a family.
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Number one, to tell good parables, we must know our child's spiritual need. The Bible says that we are daily in a spiritual war.
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Your kids are under attack. The wizard was shown descending into a deep valley of an unknown forest to illustrate our children's deep and significant spiritual struggles.
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In the depths of this valley, the wizard discovers someone in need, a picture of our children. The wizard, just like us, could do many great things, but if we aren't able to determine the real need of the moment, we won't be very helpful.
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I don't know how many times I've witnessed children fighting and the teacher or parent or camp counselor steps in with the sole intention of merely resolving the argument.
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The spiritual need, the heart issue, the adultery in their hearts that led to their conflict was completely ignored, yet the authority walked away, thinking they achieved some great feat of magic by helping these kids resolve the argument.
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We recently asked, why does my family argue and how do I stop it? And we learned that the disagreement is absolutely nothing compared to the worship problem in their hearts.
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We argue because we love ourselves more than we love God and more than we love our neighbor. We're all the worst people in the
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Good Samaritan, and yet too many of us parents are blind to the real need in our children.
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For this reason, in order to parent well in general and utilize this amazing form of communication in particular, we must know our child's spiritual need.
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When we know what's wrong, we can better apply the healing truth to the specific situation. Moving on.
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A mechanic had made a name for himself by being able to fix any car that was brought to his shop.
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He could diagnose any problem and fix it with speed and efficiency. This had resulted in his becoming arrogant and braggadocious.
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One day he received an invitation to an all -expense paid trip to the workshop of the greatest automaker in the world.
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Arriving in Europe, the confident mechanic was picked up in the most exquisite example of the automaker's work he had ever seen.
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However, just as the vehicle pulled up to its maker's house, it shuddered to a stop and died at the end of the expansive driveway.
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The arrogant mechanic, desiring greatly to impress his host, decided that he would use his precision handmade tools he brought with him from the
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States to fix the problem. Because of his extensive skill and experience, he immediately knew the issue was a fuel problem.
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Assured his skills would let him address this complex issue there in the driveway, he popped the hood to see what he could see.
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At the same time, the world -famous automaker, who had staged the event and had been watching the whole time, joined the young mechanic.
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The mechanic's eyes were so fixed on what he assumed was the engine that he barely acknowledged the owner.
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The master automaker asked, what seems to be the problem? Staring intently at the pulsating blue tubes, the mechanic could only guess contained the vehicle's fuel.
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He replied, I know there's a fuel problem, but I don't understand what I'm looking at. The master automaker replied simply, you may be able to diagnose the problem, but until you understand the maker, you will never understand the cure.
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The confused grease monkey turned his eyes to his host and asked, how does understanding you help me fix this car?
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The maker replied, if you don't know what I know, you'll never understand my creation. If you don't study with me, you'll never be able to fix my vehicles.
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Number two, to tell a good parable, you need to know what the Bible says about your child's spiritual need.
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Modern psychiatry will fail every time because, like the argument -quashing authorities from our last example, without a biblical understanding of man's basic sin struggle, no one can cure a person of their behavioral issues.
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They may have an understanding of the problem. Through trial and error, they may even be able to make adjustments that appear to relieve the issue for a time, but without a deep understanding of the creator, no one, no counselor, no pastor, no parent will ever be able to understand what he created and how he created it to work.
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These are the top two things you need to know in order to start using parables with your children. Number one, you need to understand your child's true problem, and two, you need to understand what the
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Bible says about the problem. Otherwise, your illustrations won't be helpful and likely will be fraught with failure philosophies.
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Growing up, most people were familiar with the parenting expert, quote -unquote, Dr. Spock. He popularized the idea that parents know more than they think they do.
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He was known to say, quote, the child supplies the power, but the parents have to do the steering, and, quote, trust yourself.
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What good mothers and fathers instinctively feel like doing for their babies is usually best after all, unquote.
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Of course, though there may be a kernel of truth in those statements, he also misses the much deeper realities that will unlock parenting for us.
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More biblical instruction might be, quote, the child supplies the engine, the parents do the steering, but the
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Holy Spirit has to provide the power and the directions, unquote. Or, quote, trust
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God. What mothers and fathers instinctively feel like doing in their parenting can be deceptively wrong, but what
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God commands in His Word is best after all, unquote. Once you have a working understanding of the real problem and the biblical cure, number three, to tell a good parable, you need to know creation.
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What, Aaron, no parable? Well, we're going to run out of time if I keep up with the stories, especially because I'm not yet adept enough to shorten them to five sentences like our
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Lord did. But I will use Jesus as an object lesson. All of Christ's parables dealt with His creation.
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In fact, each day of creation has its place in Jesus' parables. Nothing was left out. From light to animals to plants to people,
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Jesus shared spiritual truth with nearly every physical category available. To tell parables well, we need to understand two things.
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One, God created the physical world to mirror the spiritual world. And two, if we don't know how the physical world works, it'll be hard to see the spiritual realities illustrated in it.
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If I don't understand how a branch from one tree can be grafted onto another, I'll never think to use that as an example of being born again.
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If I don't understand the nature of new wine and the chemical effect it will have on an old wineskin, I won't be able to understand how the ancient practice of fasting and its motivation compares to New Testament concepts of fasting in light of the
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Messiah's coming. Most sighted people intrinsically understand the relationship between light and dark.
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Those illustrations are easy to use, but there are so many powerful illustrations in nature. If you want to experience something truly exciting,
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I'm going to link a video to a small portion of Louis Giglio's How Great Is Our God. It's shorter than six minutes, but he shares with us something he learned about the human body that radically affected his understanding of his
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Creator. The link is in the description of this episode. Please check it out so you can better understand how your ability to understand
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God's creation will enable you to better understand yourself and your children. Even your ability to fulfill the creation mandate well actually makes it easier for you to mature in Christ and parent your children to do the same.
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Here's a good personal example. I'm a dog trainer. I also absolutely love tigers.
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I know a lot about them, including the fact that they are one of the only big cats that cannot be domesticated. I also watched my parents work with suicidal, rebellious young people for my entire life and I spent nearly 14 years working with at -risk teens in a boarding school setting and as the dean of students at a
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Christian school. So I once was in a counseling scenario and I made up a comparison on the spot using my knowledge and experience of those three topics.
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Praise God, it really resonated with the parent. Nearly a year later, that same mom asked me to share the illustration with someone else.
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We were discussing parents with terrorist teenagers who, perhaps, haven't been equipped to deal with those unique struggles.
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I explained that you can have a man who is a professional dog trainer. He can train any dog to do anything.
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But put him in a cage with a wild tiger and a few things are going to be true. Number one, he won't be able to teach the tiger anything.
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Two, the tiger will make short order of the dog trainer. Three, the dog trainer need not feel ashamed that he doesn't know how to train a tiger.
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And four, the dog trainer would be wise to elicit the help of an experienced tiger trainer.
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I then explained that many parents are fantastic with submissive children. Even if the child is only outwardly obedient, most parents can manage just fine.
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But when a child is in absolute rebellious terror, most parents have absolutely no frame of reference for that.
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They don't understand their kid. They don't get what's going on. They feel absolutely lost and the child holds the home in a state of continual anxiety, depression and confusion.
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However, the parent often feels very uncomfortable asking for help. Far too often, the parent won't even seek help until it's become so bad that they have absolutely no options left.
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This is often motivated by a misplaced sense of responsibility, pride that they may be judged for their parenting, and or the feeling that they should be able to parent this child out of his behavior.
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But how foolish would it be for the dog trainer to enter the tiger cage out of a sense of embarrassment that his friends would think him incapable of training a tiger?
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How ridiculous would it be for the dog expert to risk his life to avoid judgment no one is passing?
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How foolish would it be to risk my safety and the well -being of the tiger simply because I can't bring myself to ask for help?
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Don't be ashamed if you're an amazing dog trainer, but you don't know how to train tigers. Get help for your tiger.
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Find someone who can use God's supernatural word to help the tiger transform into a dog, and then jump back in and help that dog be the best dog it can be.
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Well, how about I learn to train tigers? Well, that's a great idea, and I highly recommend you do that.
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That's why we have so many episodes about terrorists and zombies and cutters and rebels. We want to equip you to train tigers because one day you'll likely have one in your house,
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God forbid. But if someone opened my front door right now and dropped off a tiger, it would be in my best interest not to try to make the thing submit to me.
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I should get help for that. Too many parents think they can become professional tiger trainers in the time it takes the tiger to leap from its multicolored pedestal and pounce on the parent.
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That's not good planning. In situations where you've been blindsided or you're not prepared enough, the best thing you can do is turn to your parenting community, turn to your pastors, turn to experienced biblical counselors, and say, help.
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Anyway, that was just a rabbit trail, but it illustrates how knowledge of creation and knowledge of the problems and knowledge of God's truth about the problem can help you craft an illustration that resonates with the person to whom you're ministering.
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Number four, to tell a good parable, you need to know how to tell a story. I took a class in college called storytelling.
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Now, for you STEM people, that may sound super soft core and potentially pointless. Keep in mind that I was an acting minor, so it may make a little bit more sense when
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I tell you that. That class was extremely helpful for me because along with my other acting classes and my writing classes and my literature classes,
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I learned so much about what it takes to make a story compelling. Now, again, we don't have time to discuss even the basics of storytelling here, but let me be practical.
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First, your parables don't have to be original to you. In fact, it would probably be better if they weren't.
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Use Jesus's parables. I prefer God's illustrations over my own any day. Use morality tales and sermon illustrations next.
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Just make sure they correctly communicate God's expectations. There was once a story going around about how a girl who gets involved with lots of different guys is handing them her heart, and they're breaking off a piece and handing her the other half, and then all she has left is half a heart to give to the next guy.
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And after him ripping off a piece and dumping her, all she has is a quarter of a heart to give to the next guy. And though that sounds really good, it's totally not biblical, okay?
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So please make sure that whatever illustrations you use align with God's revealed truth. So start by telling others stories.
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This will both communicate the necessary information, but will also help you better understand how a story is formed.
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The more you tell, the more with which you engage, the better you'll be at creating your own illustrations and object lessons and parables on the spot, the better you'll become at drawing out metaphors as well.
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First, start by using God's parables and any valuable stories that teach truly biblical lessons. Second, use simple point -for -point comparisons as a starting point.
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I can't help but smile as I think about Flint Lockwood and Earl Devereaux from Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs.
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Earl confronts Flint for being a shenaniganizer and says, you see this contact lens, Flint Lockwood? This contact lens represents you, and my eye represents my eye.
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And as he lays the contact lens onto his eye, he finishes with the foreboding line, I've got my eye on you.
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Now that was a helpful metaphor. And lastly, number five.
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In order to use parables well in your parenting, make the connection for your children between the story and their lives.
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During the Parents 5 Jobs series, we discussed the importance of being an interpreter parent.
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Your children do not think well naturally on their own. You need to teach them to take facts, understand them the way that they were meant to be understood, and apply them to their lives.
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You need to teach them to reason and be analytical and logical. Using parables helps your kids not only understand the spiritual reality you're trying to teach, but also models for them how they are to understand creation, how to think through a complex concept, and how to better understand a metaphor.
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All throughout Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Flint's dad kept lamely attempting to use fishing metaphors to parent his child, and all throughout the movie they returned to the joke,
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Dad, I don't understand fishing metaphor. Unfortunately, this was the dad's fault.
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He was never able to help Flint apply the illustration to his life. Of course, it wasn't really that hard.
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Anyone watching the movie could make the connection, but whereas Flint was lacking in his ability to understand abstract comparisons to fish, his dad was no good at parenting his son to take that next step in his maturity.
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Back in Mark 4, we read, As soon as he was alone, his followers, along with the twelve, began asking him about the parables.
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And he was saying to them, To you has been given the mystery of the kingdom of God. But those who are outside get everything in parables, so that while seeing they may see and not perceive, and while hearing they may hear and not understand.
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Otherwise, they might return and be forgiven. Now this illustration contains a very hard truth for another time concerning why
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Christ seemed apprehensive that some people would be forgiven, but the main point I want to make is that parables can be confusing if you don't take the opportunity to explain the connection.
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But why? I've just taken at least three times the amount of time to illustrate my point and then explain my illustration.
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Why would I do this? I think that question perfectly exemplifies our hesitancy to use parables.
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But if we're being honest, it also reveals our heart concerning parenting in general. We don't view parenting through difficult situations to be the most beautiful calling
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God has bestowed on us. It's something to be avoided, something at which to be annoyed. We want to get in, get done, and get out as quickly as possible so we can move on to not having to parent disobedient children.
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The previous question reveals that someone may not yet understand that the combination of parable and interpretation is what makes the parable so powerful.
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The lesson likely won't be learned as well had we just shared the interpretation or merely shared the parable, but the combination can cement the truth far better.
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That's why I said the parable is like the needle that punctures the skin. That's because the parable helps it to dig deep into the heart very easily, but we still need to push the plunger so that the truth gets into the body, and the plunger is the interpretation of the parable.
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They work together. And this is one of the reasons Jesus used parables in the first place. Please allow me to close with a perfect example.
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But before I do that, don't forget to watch Louis Giglio's discussion on Laminim. It will significantly impress upon you the importance of knowing your child's spiritual need, knowing the biblical truth that can meet that need, and then taking the creation and weaving it all into a story or illustration that communicates the truth in love so your children can grow up into Christ.
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Here's my final illustration. You may have heard it. There was once a little girl who loved her plastic beads.
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They were her favorite toy. She wore them like a string of pearls everywhere she went. One day her father asked her for her beads, but she couldn't imagine parting with them.
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She refused to give them to her father. Day after day, her daddy would request the beads, and day after day, the little girl would refuse.
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One day, though, out of the blue, the little girl ran sobbing into her daddy's arms. Through tears, she said,
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Daddy, I'm sorry. I love you more than I love my beads. She placed the plastic necklace into her daddy's hands, and he said,
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Thank you. Now I have something for you. And he took a little blue case from off his desk, opened it up, and bestowed on his daughter a genuine string of pearls—infinitely more beautiful, valuable, and precious than her beads could ever be.
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My friends, God has strategies for our parenting that are infinitely better than our own. Whether it be parables or the importance of reproof, whether it be parenting like the
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Holy Spirit or evangelism parenting, God has the best plans. I recently tweeted that, quote,
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I try to be original when it comes to biblical parenting, but I find God has already said the best stuff, unquote.
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Trust His plans, and be willing to try new things when we encounter it in the Scriptures. Please share this episode on your favorite social media outlets.
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Check out the awesome games at TruthLoveParent .com under Family Fun, and remember, if we want our children to grow up into Christ, we must parent in truth and love.
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To that end, join us next time as we ask, Should Your Kids Celebrate Valentine's Day? Truth, Love, Parents is part of the
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Evermind Ministries family and is dedicated to helping you become an intentional, premeditated parent.
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Join us next time as we search God's Word for the truth your family needs today!