TLP 390: Parenting Like the Rich Young Ruler

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Every day we parent either like Christ or the Rich Young Ruler. Today AMBrewster unpacks the rich man’s parenting style and helps Christian parents understand where their parenting overlaps his as well as how to parent like Jesus. Check out how to be a TLP Friend. Discover the following episodes by clicking the titles or navigating to the episode in your app:“Parenting Like The Holy Spirit” (episode 123)“Parenting Like Jonah” (episode 197)“Parenting Like Lot” (episode 214)“Parenting Like Satan” (episode 372)“The Counter-Intuitive Nature of Parenting in Christ” (episode 373)“The Uncomfortable Neighbors of Parenting in Christ” (episode 374)“The Reward of Parenting in Christ” (episode 375) 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 Parler.Follow AMBrewster on Twitter.Pin us on Pinterest.Subscribe to us on YouTube. Need some help? Write to us at [email protected].

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Your children are born in search of comfort and happiness. They want to experience joys beyond their grasp and life beyond their backyard.
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They want something more. How will you answer them? Welcome to Truth.
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Love. Parents. Where we use God's Word to become intentional, premeditated parents.
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Here's your host, AM Brewster. As we close Season 15 and prepare to move into our 16th consecutive season of Biblical Parenting content,
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I want to just stop for a moment and praise the Lord. Season 16 not only represents four years of God's faithfulness, it also marks the beginning of Season 1 of the
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Celebration of God, a discipling experience for Christian parents and their kids, and I'm so incredibly excited about that.
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And as we start our fifth year of ministry and hit our 400th episode, I cannot thank God enough for His truth,
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His empowerment to love, and His provision over these years. But I specifically want to thank Him for using many of you to enable us to do this.
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Back in January of 2020, my family stepped out on faith to pursue Truth. Love. Parent full -time. Season 16 represents our fourth season working full -time for TLP.
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At the end of Season 16, we will have been doing this full -time for a year, and that is amazing. It doesn't feel like it's been that long though, not for me anyway.
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Despite quarantines and international insanity, I really feel like I've been working on TLP full -time for only a couple of months.
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I suppose if time flies when you're having fun, I must be doing the most amazing thing ever, and I praise God for the opportunity to do so.
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And I also thank Him again for using you to keep us going. Your one -time and your monthly gifts are being used to pay our bills, and it's putting food on our table, and I could not be more grateful.
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Now, if you've never sent a financial gift to TLP, will you please consider clicking on the TLP Friend link in the description of this episode?
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There you will learn not only how you can be a blessing to my family and Team TLP, but how we can be a blessing to you.
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There are a lot of cool perks when you become a TLP friend. And speaking of money, let's transition now to our topic for today, parenting like the rich young ruler.
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As always, free episode notes and transcripts are available for all of our TLP followers at TakingBackAtTheFamily .com.
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In Matthew 19, Mark 10, and Luke 18, we're introduced to an interesting interaction between Jesus and a well -to -do young man.
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All of the accounts are extremely similar, so allow me to read Matthew 19, 16 -24 to set the stage.
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And someone came to him and said, Teacher, what good things shall I do that I may obtain eternal life?
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And Jesus said to him, Why are you asking me about what is good? There's only one who is good, but if you wish to enter into life, keep the commandments.
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Then he said to him, Which ones? And Jesus said, You shall not commit murder, you shall not commit adultery, you shall not steal, you shall not bear false witness, honor your father and mother, and you shall love your neighbor as yourself.
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The young man said to him, All these things I have kept, what am I still lacking? Jesus said to him, If you wish to be complete, go and sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven, and come, follow me.
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But when the young man heard this statement, he went away grieving, for he was one who owned much property.
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Now, despite my opener, today's discussion has nothing to do with money per se, but it does have a lot to do with riches.
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We're going to first start, though, by overviewing this parable to understand what God was doing in this passage, and then we're going to apply it specifically to our parenting after that.
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All three recitations of this incident in the gospel follow the same storyline. Seven main points. One, the young man refers to Jesus as being good and asks him how to gain eternal life.
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Two, Jesus revolves his priorities to make an observation about the only person in existence who is good, namely
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God. Three, then Jesus tells the young man to obey the commandments. Four, the young man says that he has.
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Five, Jesus tells him to give away all of his money. Six, the young man leaves very dejected.
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And seven, all three parables end with a discussion between Jesus and his disciples concerning the nature of sacrifice and salvation.
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Now, let's talk quickly about why these seven plot points are so important that they're included in each telling of this anecdote. Number one, we're introduced to someone who wants to earn eternal life.
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But can eternal life truly be earned? Can someone be good enough? Two, Jesus lays a foundation by telling us that God is the only one in the universe who is good.
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Now, Jesus hasn't answered the question yet, but he's establishing from the beginning that when it comes to being good, no one but God can do it.
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Three, Jesus points out that only by keeping the law perfectly could someone earn eternal life.
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The assumption should have been obvious to everyone that no one can perfectly keep the law, but this arrogant young man basically challenges
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Christ by testifying that he had done, quote -unquote, all of them. Four, Jesus then adeptly shows the arrogant young man how wrong he is by putting a divine finger on the pulse of the man's life.
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Jesus pulls the veil back on this man's object of worship and reveals that it's not God, it's the young man himself.
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Five, every person is given the choice to accept or reject reality as Jesus presents it. And unfortunately, this man rejected it.
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Six, this is where Jesus says that it's easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than it is for a rich man to enter heaven, which has significant importance to us.
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And seven, then the disciples bemoan the impossibility of the feat, but Jesus brings it back to the original point he made at the beginning.
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It's impossible with man because man is not good enough, but with the only good God, all things are possible.
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Now, among other things, this account is included in all of the synoptic gospels because mankind desperately needs to understand the impossibility of saving ourselves.
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It does not matter how, quote -unquote, good you think you are, you are still a sinner. In fact, your righteousness is as filthy rags.
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The best you have to offer is as disgusting as old rags soaked in bodily fluids. But God is good.
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And through the power of God, we can have eternal life, not because of our righteousness, but because of His. That, my friends, is a powerful message on which we and our families need to dwell.
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But there's another parenting -specific lesson we need to learn here as well. Over the years, we've done episodes called
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Parenting Like the Holy Spirit, Jonah, Lot, and even Satan. Unlike the Parenting Like the
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Holy Spirit episode, each of them has been designed to show us how easy it is to slip into destructive thinking when it comes to our parenting.
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Jonah was selfish and fought God's plan. That episode shows us how we do the same. Lot had distracted righteousness.
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He believed he could have God's will and his own. And Satan is a control freak whose parenting style too often mirrors ours.
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Or perhaps maybe ours just mirrors his. If you'd be interested in listening to any of these episodes, I'll provide links in the description.
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So if you haven't deduced it yet, today we're going to try to unveil the sinful parenting tendencies we have as illustrated by the choice of the rich young ruler.
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Before we begin, though, allow me to set the parameters for our metaphor. The rich young ruler had means.
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He had wealth and possessions. He could be compared to the men we studied in the parable of the talents. They were gifted of God to complete a task, but how they used their gifts and talents was going to reveal what they truly worshipped.
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All of that to say, there is nothing wrong with being financially rich. There is nothing wrong with having knowledge and abilities.
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These are amoral concepts. The difference between sin and righteousness is how we choose to use our money, skills, knowledge, and other resources.
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That is one of the fine points Jesus reveals in this account. For our discussion today, though, the ruler's money is going to represent a resource all
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Christian parents have. And just like the ruler, we're going to have to decide whether or not we're going to sacrifice it for the benefit of those in need or hoard it.
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With that in mind, let's consider the comparisons between our parenting and the historical count of the rich young ruler.
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1. God has given us children who want to know how they too can have eternal life. The Bible says that no one seeks after God, but everyone is looking for a way to cheat death, a way to escape the consequences of our choices.
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That is the lifelong pursuit of every pagan. Your children are born in search of comfort and happiness, just like you were.
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They want to experience joys beyond their grasp and life beyond their backyard. They want something more, and they want something more because God created us to be worshipers.
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But as we know, there are only two possible recipients of our worship, God and we ourselves. And it is the natural bent of our sinful flesh to want to worship self.
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So it's due, in large part, to our selfish desire for self -gratification that mankind even goes looking for eternal life in the first place.
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But when our kids come to us in search of this eternal happiness and joy and blessing and health and vitality, will we respond like the rich young ruler, or will we respond like Jesus?
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2. God has given Christian parents riches beyond compare, and He expects us to pour it into our parenting.
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Jesus had these riches. Jesus responded to the young man out of the riches he possessed. But we, too often, instead of responding like Jesus, pouring
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His riches on all who ask, we don't want to sacrifice our riches. It's too hard. It's too uncomfortable.
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And so we hide our riches away in a vault so that they're no good to anyone. And 3.
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The paradoxical reality is that, more often than not, parenting out of the riches of God will often result in children who reject the gospel.
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But parenting out of the stinginess of self produces children who think they're embracing the gospel just fine.
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How could such a thing happen? Why were the riches Jesus poured out not enough to convince the young man, and why would
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I suggest that stingy hoarding would lead our kids to believe they're fine when it comes to eternal life? It all comes down to understanding what our greatest resource really is.
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So let's unveil our parenting riches, the riches Jesus Himself utilized in this scenario, and then walk back through the last three points.
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The riches to which all Christian parents have access is the theme of our last show. Defensible parenting is parenting that roots itself deep in the scriptures for our knowledge, understanding, and practical parenting application.
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The metaphorical riches we're discussing today, the riches that you have if you are a born -again parent, are the boundless truth and majesty of the
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Bible. Now, before we move on, I need to address why unbelieving parents do not have access to these riches even if they own a thousand copies of the
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Bible. God's Word can only be understood and used by Holy Spirit -filled followers of Christ.
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It's the presence of the indwelling Spirit of God that enables us to comprehend and live in the truths we encounter in Scripture.
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Satan tried to use the Bible against Jesus and failed miserably because he can't even begin to understand the divine truths we mortals can access through the
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Holy Spirit. That's why I'm specifying that only truly born -again parents who are in Christ have access to these riches.
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It's not good enough to throw verses at our kids. It's not good enough to interpret them however we feel.
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We must be able to rightly divide the word of truth. We need to be able to interpret and apply the scriptures the way
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God intends, and we will never do that outside of God Himself. Now, let's work back through our three points.
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1. God has given us children who want to know how they too can have eternal life. This point remains unchanged.
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Regardless of whether or not I'm born again or whether or not my parenting is defensible, my children are on a lifelong search for satisfaction, and Lord willing, they will look to me for the answers.
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Whether they ask outright or whether I get to introduce them to genuine satisfaction as I watch them stumble toward experiences that will only hurt them,
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God has put me into my kid's life to introduce them to Him and His life eternal. Call it evangelism parenting, call it
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Deuteronomy 6 parenting, it's the highest calling we have. But we all make a daily, moment -by -moment choice whether we're going to sacrificially give our scriptural riches away or whether we're going to keep it from our kids.
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2. God has given Christian parents riches beyond compare, and He expects us to pour it into our parenting.
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Jesus told the young man truth, and He did it in the most loving way possible. He helped the young man see that true satisfaction is only attainable through God.
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Eternal life requires perfection, but there is only one who is perfect. That means that the rich young ruler and everyone else are completely incapable of earning eternal satisfaction on our own.
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We are in a desperate state because we're idolaters. Only through God, and completely through God, can we ever hope to experience eternal joy.
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That was the most loving thing Jesus could tell His audience that day. There is nothing more important they all needed to hear.
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All day, every day, our children ask us how they can have eternal life. Sometimes they actually ask it with their words, but most of the time their behavior betrays the fact they're selfishly living for their own pleasure.
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They may not be asking about it, but they are definitely looking for it. We can either respond like Jesus and consistently bring them back to truth and love, or we can bury the biblical riches at our disposal.
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We can do this in a number of ways. We can ignore our kids. We pretend like we can't see or hear what's going on because we just don't want to have to deal with it.
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We know the Bible addresses their behaviors and their hearts, but we just don't want to have to parent right now. We might demand our kids worship us.
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Instead of telling our kids that no one is good but God and they need to rely on Him for salvation and satisfaction, we make ourselves and our desires the standard of goodness in our homes by saying things like, why can't you just give me some peace and quiet for five minutes?
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And see, we substitute the counterfeit riches of this world for the genuine riches of God. Instead of answering our children's need with God's perfect philosophy of life, we lean hard on the failure philosophies of the world.
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Yet, regardless of which tact we take, we're ignoring the treasure trove of infinite wisdom in God's Word. We're refusing to give them the answers that they really need.
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Now, of course, our metaphor breaks down on this point. The rich young ruler hoarded his riches for himself. He didn't want to give them away lest he be left with nothing.
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Unfortunately, when we refuse to give our kids the glorious golden answers of God, it's not because we want to save them all for ourselves or that we'll run out of it if we invest it in our kids.
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It's also not a situation where we know how important the Bible is for us, but we hate our kids and we don't want to share it.
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A more accurate analogy is that we and our kids are starving for food, but instead of going to the storehouse of God's Word for the sustenance needed to give us life, we ignore the cornucopia of biblical delicacies and we dig through the dirt of worldly wisdom looking for worms we hope will fill our stomachs.
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That's a more accurate portrayal of what we're doing when we refuse to give our spiritual riches to the needy. We're exposing ourselves as being equally needy.
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So why do we do this? We do it for the same reason the rich young ruler wouldn't give away his riches. He believed that his money would bring him more satisfaction than the eternal life promised by God.
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And we believe that ignoring our kids or making ourselves the motivation for our kids' obedience or leaning on man's understanding will give us more satisfaction than parenting in God's truth.
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If we truly believe that parenting in Christ would not only provide our kids with absolutely everything they need for life and godliness, but it would also be a fountain of water springing up in our own souls, we would parent in Christ by using the
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Bible. But we believe our way is best. We ignore the riches of God because we're certain there's a better way to parent.
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Now what about that last point? Do you remember that last one? Number three, parenting out of the riches of God will often result in children who reject the gospel, but parenting out of the stinginess of self produces children who think they're embracing the gospel.
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The reality of this statement is another reason fewer and fewer Christian parents turn to the Bible for their daily parenting needs.
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Allow me to explain it this way. If I can ignore my kids, or I can get them to submit to my desires, or I can manage my home on the superficial parenting methods of our day, then two things have happened.
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A, I've exercised only the smallest amount of parenting energy, and B, I've created an atmosphere that deceives me and my family that everything is okay.
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I ignore my kids because I believe the issue isn't big enough to address. As long as I get my way as a parent, how bad can it be?
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When I snag the low -hanging, man -centered fruit of secular methodology, I'm actually encouraging my kids to worship themselves, which they are more than happy to do.
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And everything seems fine, at least for a while. We can focus on dinner and soccer and watching movies and mowing the lawn because we've convinced ourselves that there are either no big issues with our kids or we believe we've addressed it enough.
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From our kids' perspective, if mom and dad are ignoring us, what we're doing must be fine. If I can just speak and act in a way that keeps dad and mom from giving me consequences, all is well.
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Of course, we love it when our parents use parenting techniques they learned online because it gives us the freedom we want to live the way we feel is right.
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And everything is fine. And when we do that, we're actually creating rocky and thorny -hearted kids.
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We have all bought into the delusion that everything is just peachy when in fact it's desperately dead.
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But what happens when the truth and love of God's Word comes into our lives? Well, the
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Bible says it's confusing to our hard -hearted kids, it's convicting to our rocky -hearted kids, and it's annoying to our thorny -hearted kids.
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God created the Bible to teach us, reprove us, correct us, and train us, and those are difficult processes because they rub our sinful flesh raw and call us to follow
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Christ instead of self. And that goes directly against our sin nature. So when
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Jesus poured out the divine riches of truth in order to show the rich young ruler that he couldn't rely on his good works but instead needed to deny the false
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God of himself, he was saddened because he wanted eternal life on his own terms. And he left.
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And Jesus watched him go. Jesus could have told the man that he was just fine.
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He could have kept all the commandments and didn't need to do anything else. The young man would have been happy and the two could have gone on to any number of things because the spiritual issues were quote -unquote taken care of.
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But it would have been false and hateful for Jesus to lie to him like that. Still, it was his choice to accept or reject the riches
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Jesus lavished on him, and he chose the latter. When you invest biblical truth into your kids, it will convict them.
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They may accept it, but they also may reject it. I have a friend who recently did just that.
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I've been pouring God's truth and love into him for months, but he recently rejected it all. It's really sad.
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I could have lied to him and told him that he was okay pursuing God on his own terms. I could have convinced him that he had a tight hold on the gospel that would help him sleep well at night.
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But I loved God and him too much to do that, and he's rejected God and me because of it. We parent like the rich young ruler when we refuse to use
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God's word in our parenting. When we don't teach our kids from the Bible, reprove them from the
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Bible, counsel them from the Bible, and train them with the Bible, we're disobeying God. We're leading our kids away from life eternal, and we ourselves are refusing to act like someone who truly is born again.
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Instead, let's do the right thing, no matter how hard it may be. Let's parent like Christ. Let's speak the truth in love at every opportunity.
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Let's not ignore sin. Let's not set our own opinions and desires up as the most important standard for our kids.
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Let's not waste our parenting opportunities spouting the godless lies of the world. Let's parent in Christ.
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Please share this episode on your favorite social media outlets. And if you need specialized help with your marriage or family, please don't hesitate to reach out to us at counselor at truthloveparent .com
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or call 828 -423 -0894. Remember, if we want our children to grow up into Christ, we must parent in the truth and love of God's Word.
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To that end, join us next time as we get into season 16 and prepare to discuss some real -world, super practical issues we and our kids are facing or are going to face nearly every single day.
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Among other things, we plan to talk this season about authority, ideas, injustice, racism, unity, and the government.
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And we plan to apply God's Word to every single one of them. I'll see you in season 16, but before that, don't forget to subscribe and listen to The Celebration of God!
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Truth. Love. Parents. is part of the 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.