TLP 531: Is Being a Parent Really Like Owning a Puppy?

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People compare parenting to a lot of other things, but are they helpful comparisons? Join AMBrewster to find out if owning a puppy is adequate preparation for parenting.Truth.Love.Parent. is a podcast of Truth.Love.Family., an Evermind Ministry.Download the Evermind App! https://evermind.passion.io/checkout/102683Support our 501(c)(3) by becoming a TLP Friend: https://www.truthloveparent.com/donate.htmlJoin the conversation with AMBrewster on Wisdom: https://joinwisdom.audio/ambrewsterClick here for Today’s resources and transcript: https://www.truthloveparent.com/taking-back-the-family-blog/tlp-531-is-being-a-parent-really-like-owning-a-puppyLike us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TruthLoveParent/Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/truth.love.parent/Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TruthLoveParentFollow AMBrewster on Facebook: https://fb.me/TheAMBrewsterFollow AMBrewster on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thebrewsterhome/Follow AMBrewster on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AMBrewsterPin us on Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/TruthLoveParent/Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTHV-6sMt4p2KVSeLD-DbcwClick here for more of our social media accounts: https://www.truthloveparent.com/presskit.htmlNeed some help? Write to us at [email protected].

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The barking, the bolting, the breaking, the biting, and that's not even the dog, that's the kid.
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Parenting isn't about us. In fact, parenting isn't even about our kids. Parenting is just one way
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Christian dads and moms are to worship God. So welcome to the Truth, Love, Parent podcast, where we train dads and moms to give
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God the preeminence in their parenting. Welcome back to our newly relaunched parenting podcast.
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If you are new, I welcome you. If you're returning, thank you so much for joining me again today.
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For you new people, Truth, Love, Parent is a podcast that equips dads and moms to worship God with their parenting.
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So though today's episode title might sound a little silly, is being a parent like owning a puppy?
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This is a really important question to consider because the Bible has a lot to say about parenting. By the way, the
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Bible also has things to say about dog ownership, and that will not be the focus of today's episode.
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I'll probably have to mention a few things here and there, though. So let's jump right in. In case you've never heard it before, people have been making the claim that owning a puppy is a good introduction to having a baby.
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They've also said that parenting is like having a dog, and I'm sure we've all encountered someone who refers to themselves as their animal's mommy or daddy and to their pet as their quote unquote fur baby.
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And someone even posted on the socials recently about encountering an older woman at a store who was making it a point to show the employee a picture of her new quote unquote grand puppy.
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She was carrying on the exact same way an actual grandmother would about her grandchild, only it was a dog.
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So yeah, even if you've never heard that comparison before, there are people who definitely equate to dog ownership and parenting.
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But the question for us today is, is that valuable? Does it truly set up new and soon to be parents for success?
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And that is the topic of today's episode, and I hope it'll be as informative as it is fun. But before we dive into the chewy center of today's show,
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I want to tell you a little bit about the Truth, Love, Family Biblical Parenting Essentials Conference. I had the privilege of presenting this conference in Howell, Michigan, and the amazing people there recorded the conference so I could share it with you.
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The conference includes nearly three hours of teaching spread over six sessions. I cover the purpose of parenting, the five types of parents, how to teach and reprove your child, how to correct and train your child, and I answer some great parenting questions in our two
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Q &As. In addition to the six hours of conferencing, you will also receive access to multiple hours of additional resources that build on and expand on the conference material so that you can dig into any of the topics to a greater depth.
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And you can access all of that for only $10. If you already have a free account on the Evermind app, all you have to do is purchase the conference in the
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Evermind app overview tab under the Truth, Love, Family online courses. It'll automatically be added to your library and you can start enjoying it today.
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If you haven't downloaded the Evermind app and set up your free account yet, click on the link in the description to do so and you too can get access to it today.
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I hope you'll take advantage of this offer. Yes, purchasing the online course supports the ministry, but it supports your family that much more.
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Now, it's time to get into our main show notes, but before I do, I thought I'd take a moment to make good on my claim that the
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Bible does have stuff to say about dog ownership. My favorite quote -unquote pet passage comes from Proverbs 12 .10.
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It says, "...a righteous man has regard for the life of his animal, but even the companion of the wicked is cruel."
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2 Samuel 12 is interesting in that while Nathan the prophet is confronting David about his adultery and murder, he tells the story of a man who has a lamb.
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In verse 3 we read, "...but the poor man had nothing except one little ewe lamb, which he bought and nourished.
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And it grew up together with him and his children. It would eat of his bread and drink of his cup and lie in his bosom, and was like a daughter to him."
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Now, I don't think we can necessarily use that passage to justify the quote -unquote dog parent craze, but it is interesting to note that people have been serious about their pets for a very long time.
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James 3 alludes to the fact that animals can be tamed. Proverbs 27 .23 tells us to "...know
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well the condition of your flocks, and pay attention to your herds." This command is given in the context of monetary stewardship, but the consequential applications are still appropriate when we recognize the fact that God does want us to care for our animals and not abuse them.
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And Deuteronomy 25 .4, which was referenced in 1 Corinthians 9 .9 and 1 Timothy 5 .18, says that "...you
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shall not muzzle the ox while he is threshing." So, yes, there are passages of Scripture that speak to our animal ownership, and there are many more principles that can be applied to how we treat, train, and take care of them.
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But now we need to answer the age -old question, is rearing a child like owning a dog? 1.
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This is an impossible question to answer if you don't know how to rear a child or care for a dog.
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One of the biggest faults I've found with people who make such statements is that they often don't really know what it takes to do either.
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They're either not good dog owners, not great parents, or both. Now, I'm not the perfect parent and I'm not the perfect dog owner, but I do want you to know that I am going to do my best to accurately answer this question today because I know what the
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Bible says about rearing children, and I'm also a dog trainer. My dog will be ten this year, and when we got her at two months old,
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I started training her to be a service dog, therapy animal, and an all -around good pet. Those who know my dog would agree that, though she's no more perfect than I am, she's a very well -trained dog.
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I share all of this not to toot my own horn, but simply to make the observation that I believe I have the necessary knowledge and experience to answer today's question with valuable clarity.
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Again, I'm not the perfect parent, nor am I the perfect dog trainer, but the Bible tells us everything we need to know about parenting our kids, and I do know a thing or two about training a good dog.
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So number two, owning a pet and raising children do have a lot in common. Let's address the similarities first.
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A, both require keeping a living thing living. That should be obvious. If that's not our number one goal,
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I don't know what we're doing. B, they both take a lot of work. Again, there are those who have no idea the amount of work that goes into parenting and dog training, but it is a lot.
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You should no more have kids and then leave them to raise themselves as you should have a dog and let it do whatever it wants.
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Unfortunately, a lot of people who've owned a dog, or more appropriately, been owned by a dog, and then take a similar approach to their kids get all confused when they find out they're being owned by their children in a very similar way.
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So yes, it does take a lot of work to train both of them well. C, they're both very easy to mess up.
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I alluded to this in the last point, but I want to really hash it out here. If you can easily mess up owning a dog, you better believe you can super easily mess up rearing a child.
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How many people live in constant annoyance with their dog? The barking, the bolting, the breaking, the biting.
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Some people never seem to get control of their animals. And many people seem to have absolutely no influence over their kids as well.
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Now, that's not to say that the best parenting produces perfect kids every time. There's a big difference in the two approaches on this point.
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A poorly trained dog is nearly always the owner's fault. I haven't met a dog yet that couldn't be trained to be a good dog.
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Among dog trainers, the maxim is that there's no bad dogs, just bad owners. But that's not the case with kids.
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A very good parent can have a very bad child. It's also possible that by the grace of God, a bad parent can have really good kids, but that's another episode.
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Now with all those caveats carefully piled on top of each other, this point really that I'm making right now is for the people who put about as much effort into their parenting as they do their pets.
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And in some really sad situations, they put more effort into their pets than their kids, or at least the right effort into their pets, but the wrong effort into their kids.
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That's really kind of more about them on this particular point. Now keeping a living thing living, and better yet thriving, takes a lot of work and is really easy to mess up.
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That's why D, to do either well, you need to know what you're doing. The best dog owners and the best parents have one huge thing in common.
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They do their research. They've studied and learned and changed and grown. They've gone to the experts to learn how to do their job well.
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I'm not saying that anybody is an expert to the same degree that a person may be called a dog training expert, but as mentioned earlier,
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God is the expert on rearing kids and he has given us everything we need to know about parenting. But knowing something and living something are two very different things.
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That's why letter E, to do either well, you need to be consistent. Both children and dogs are hypocrisy detectors and inconsistency abusers.
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If they're dead set on getting their way, if they find a loophole or even able to manipulate the situation to achieve their purposes, they will do it every single time.
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Dog training and child rearing both require consistency to do it well. And finally, letter
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F, how you handle your emotions will make or break the training. If you hadn't noticed, dogs don't communicate like humans.
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In fact, they are wired very differently and one of their main ways of understanding someone is to get a read on what
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Cesar Millan calls a person's energy. This energy is mostly put off by our emotional state.
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Let's say that your dog once again makes a huge mess in your house. If you start yelling at the dog and dragging it to its crate, you're not really communicating what you think you're communicating.
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You want the dog to understand the severity of your displeasure so that it will know how unacceptable such behavior is.
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But even though the dog will likely cower at your anger, all the dog is really thinking in their doggy brains is, wow, this person is unstable.
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They need someone to take care of them. There's absolutely no correlation between your annoyance and the dog's behavior.
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Now, as the dog starts to train you, it may change its behavior in order to avoid emotional outbursts and help you calm down, but the dog is not inherently trying to please you so much as it is trying to control you.
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And though the impact of our unbridled emotions may have a different effect on our kids, the consequences are similar.
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Our lack of control in our emotions will never, I repeat, never draw our kids to the Lord and help them become the people
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God wants them to be. So, yeah, dog training and child rearing have those things in common, but that's pretty much it.
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I think the people who like to compare the two are probably thinking mostly about puppies and babies.
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They both make a lot of messes. It can feel like your relationship with them is about as deep. They're both small and they both make a lot of noise.
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But if we truly consider the differences between quality dog training and Christ -honoring parenting, we will find some very important dissimilarities.
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So number three, the two are desperately dissimilar. A. Dogs and children think very differently.
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As was alluded to earlier, dogs are incapable of thinking through concepts like people do, and though one may make an argument for similar mental capabilities of infants, does it really matter since children mature out of the phase so quickly?
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Children are capable of thinking, desiring, and believing that is completely impossible for dogs.
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For this reason, the comparisons to training kids and dogs absolutely must be different. Dogs require a repetitive understanding of their position within the house, and they need to have a dog equivalency of trust for the people higher up on the totem pole than they.
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But children's actions, words, and emotions are motivated by so much more. Therefore, if we reduce our parenting to mere commands, rewards, consequences, and we don't dive early and often into the vital importance of motivation, we're going to fail our kids.
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Letter B. The relationship with our animals is far too superficial. This shouldn't need to be said, but I find myself compelled.
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You neither can, nor should you try to, have the same type of relationship with your kids and dogs.
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Trying to have a child -parent relationship with a dog will never work because the dog is incapable of that level of relationship, and having a pet -like relationship with your kids is abominable.
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If someone owns a dog and believes that relating to their kids will be anything like relating to their dogs, I fear for that household.
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Letter C. Whether or not dogs go to heaven, children will relate to God as an enemy or a child.
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Do I believe that dogs go to heaven? Well, I'm not dogmatic one way or the other, pun intended, but I can see the arguments on both sides.
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Regardless of whether dogs live on in eternity or their lives end at physical death, your children will either spend eternity with God or separated from Him.
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That one difference is the cornerstone reality that separates the mere behavior modification of animal training and the heart training of parenting.
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We're not parenting simply so that our kids will make their beds and be respectful and successful. At least, we shouldn't be.
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We need to be parenting our kids to know and relate to their Creator. They need to live for Him because He deserves it.
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That means that how they make their bed and why they're respectful to others and the kind of success they pursue absolutely needs to be motivated by their relationship with the
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Lord. Therefore, Letter D. The training requirements could not be more different.
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With everything the Bible says about animals, God never demands that we bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the
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Lord. He doesn't say that those who fail to care for or govern their animals well has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.
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Though the Lord would have us steward our animals and exercise dominion over them, only of our kids does
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He require that we be His ambassadors to introduce them to Him. He didn't give us the
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Bible to teach, reprove, correct, and train our dogs. He gave it to us foremost that we could be taught, reproved, corrected, and trained ourselves, but also so that we could use the
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Scriptures to help others in those same areas, namely our children. Once again, godly parenting is so much more than mere behavior modification.
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When I'm out with my kids and they start doing something they shouldn't, I absolutely mustn't simply distract them with a piece of candy like I might distract a dog with a delicious smelling treat.
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My relationship with my kids isn't on a pack leader, pack follower basis. No, my relationship with them is ordained by God for His glory.
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Though I am the leader of my home and parent my kids, we are in this together, working as a team to glorify
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God. So, is rearing a child like owning a pet? Not in any way that really matters.
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The similarities are some of the most superficial concerns any parent could have. I'm not saying that keeping our kids alive is superficial, but I am saying that if that's my only concern,
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I don't understand parenting from God's perspective. So, no, I would encourage you to not believe nor try to convince others that the two have so much in common.
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I would argue that telling young people that getting a puppy will prepare them for being a parent is really actually very unkind.
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So, if they ask you what having a baby is like, you could respond, have you ever owned a puppy? Do you remember all the messes and midnight crying and constant attention and all the other things that you had to learn?
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Well, there's even more of that in having a baby. But even then, what's the point you're trying to make with that picture?
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Too many of our descriptions about parenting are all centered on the inconveniences that parenting brings into our lives.
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Wouldn't it be so much better to tell those young people something like, having a child is a miraculous blessing because you have the expressed joy and purpose of helping that little person learn who their creator is and how they can have a personal relationship with him.
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Of course, it's a ton of work and early on it can seem like most of that what you're doing is just keeping the child alive and happy, but there is so much more to parenting than just that.
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And then you can open your Evermind app and let them scan the QR code that will give them free access to the
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Biblical Parenting Essentials Conference and resources to get them started on the right foot. In fact, you could enjoy the conference together, answer their questions, and mentor them as they begin their parenting journey.
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So to that end, please share this episode with your friends and the new parents in your church and community, and don't hesitate to send an email to counselor at truthloveparent .com
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or call 828 -423 -0894 if you need some additional individualized counsel for your unique family situation.
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And Lord willing, I'll see you next week as we examine another common comparison. Is being a parent really like being a gardener?
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We'll find out. I'll see you then. Truth Love Parent is part of the Evermind Ministries family and is dedicated to helping you worship
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God through your parenting. So join us next time as we study God's Word to learn how to parent our children for life and godliness.
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And remember that TLP is a listener -supported ministry. You can visit truthloveparent .com forward slash donate to learn more.