STEPS FOR EFFECTIVE PARENTING
There are certain things that parents must do indeed, that only parents can do if their children are to become true servants of God. I don't want to hide the fact that what I'm setting before you will not be gained with-out considerable difficulty, carefulness and work. However, nothing truly good or great is ever accomplished without trouble. I am certain that for every intense hour and patient effort this work demands, parents will be abundantly repaid if they succeed.
Things Parents Should Do
First, there are some things that must be done if you want to reach the great goal in the training of children-for them to love and serve God with a pure heart.
You must aim at that distinct experience for you children. You must explain to them its nature and necessity as soon as they can understand. Pray for it in your own bedroom, and hand-in-hand with their also. Lead them to expect their own conversion, either at the meetings or at home. By-and-by you will have the joy of knowing the great change has actually taken place, and of hearing them testify to the fact: a joy which is nearer to the joys of the angels than any other that can come to a father's or mother's heart.
8. You must make your children kind. Don't allow cruelty of any sort in them; The lack of thought and sympathy for others which is so painfully visible in the vast majority of people, is nothing more than a result of their early training in this area.
They were practically encouraged-that is, they weren't corrected-in little acts of unkindness as toddlers. They pinched the kitten, frightened the bird, or threw down their toys for some tired mother or weary servants to pick up. By-and by they pulled the legs off of the spiders, threw ricks at dogs, and went into fits of pleasure in chasing some poor creature found wounded on their way from school. From that it was only a step to sneering at the beggar who asked for a piece of bread, or mocking the poor and the crippled. And now, they are all around us in their thousands, never having a thought of kindness of a desire to do a kind thing that costs them any trouble or self-denial. Set your face against such things, and against the spirit which makes them possible.
9. Do everything you can to promote the health of your children. Their diet and exercise will affect them in adulthood.
10. Do all you can for the minds of you children. You want to make them wise and thoughtful. However poor and humble you may be, a simple education is within your reach. See that yourchildren get it, and be sure to take interest yourself in what they learn.
11. Strive to make your children good workers. Give them a chance to contribute work around the house, in the garden, or in the workshop-something apart from their studies. Never let them be unoccupied. Keep them working or playing all through their waking hours. Idle hands are the devil's tools.
12. Rely on the Holy Spirit to bless all your efforts. You can depend on the promises in Scriptures that He will rejoice to help you.
13. Insist on obedience to all you ask. You must have this obedience or all you other efforts will be thrown away. It's impossible to overestimate its importance. Forming the habit of ready and willing submission to your will prepares them in forming the habit of obedience to God, which is more important that anything else.
Settle it, therefore, from the first vision of your infant child, from the first kiss you impress upon its little cheek, that, before all else, you will create in this young soul the habit of obedience. How do we do this?
The Habit of Obedience.
PUNISHING YOUR CHILD
When you punish you child, you aim should be to bring him to repentance. You want him to realize his naughtiness, to see that wrongdoing makes misery to be sorry for his sin, and to decide that he will never do the evil thing again.
When he does a wrong thing, his conscience will tell him that he ought to suffer for it. When a painful punishment is the natural outcome of wrong conduct, then wrongdoing and suffering will closely associated in his heart. You should strengthen that conviction, so that in later life he will know that if he lives and dies in sin, hell will be his rightful end. 5. Punishment, painful so that it will be remembered, should be as short as the offense requires. This is in favor of the occasional use of the rod. A little whipping will be remembered, but will not unnecessarily prolong the suffering (proverb 23:13-14).
6. Be careful that you never harm your child's health. It's possible to damage a child for a lifetime by too severe or long-lasting pain. However naughty, disobedient. or cruel children may act, justice must always be tempered with mercy.
7. When telling your child to obey you, avoid drown out conflicts. From some strange motive there is occasionally a bland refusal by a child to obey a direct command. If he doesn't obey you in a reasonable amount of time, a prompt whipping is the best thing. The unfortunate course adopted by many parents is to try to force the child to obey, no matter how long it takes, and under such circumstances a regular battle between the wills of the parent and the child is a common experience.
Things Parents Should Not Do
If children don't actually bring evil natures into the world with them, they certainly acquire selfish and naughty hearts very soon after their arrival here. You need to recognize that fact, and to face it with courage and faith not only for their sakes, but for your own. Remember the terrible condemnation which God pronounced against Eli, the High Priest, in this matter-He said, "I am about to judge his house forever for the iniquity which he knew, because his sons brought a curse on themselves and he did not rebuke them." I Samuel 3:13.
3. Don't expect that children who possess any backbone of resolution and energy will be likely to submit their wills, first to their parents and then to God, without a great deal of patient and persevering effort on your part. There will be exceptions to this rule. Samuel seems to have been of strong character, yet he didn't apparently oppose God's purpose; Josiah was another, Timothy another. I have known some myself. Be that as it may, if you want all your children for the King, whether their natures are pliable or unyielding, you must expect to take trouble for their salvation, and let nothing keep you from persevering.
4. Don't expect your children to be so naive that they won't see beneath the cloak of a false Christianity, especially if they find it in their own home. And don't think that after they discover its unreality, they won't despise it. Don't be surprised if when they see such hypocrisy, they make it an excuse for neglecting, if not positively disbelieving, in Christ altogether.
5. Don't expect your children to be any better character and conduct than the example set before them-by you, by their own friends, or by those they spend time with. If you allow them to associate with half-hearted church goers, with worldly pharisees,or backsliders, then don't be surprised if they are cursed by those examples, and driven from God and true Christianity. Children are likely to suffer more harm by staying one day in the house of some make-believe follower of Christ than they would spending a month in a tavern, where they'd be on their guard because they knew the devil reigned there.
6. Don't contaminate the love of beauty, which exists in the hearts of all children, through the destructive vice of vanity. You will do this if you give then a taste for expensive clothes, fancy hair styles, and wearing all kings of other adornments. And if you fill them with the childish conceit that they have prettier faces or figures that others around them, don't wonder if they should, in later years, be drawn into the world by the attractions of its fashions and empty show.
7. Don't fill your children's minds with the idea of their supposed superiority, mental or otherwise, over their friends, schoolmates, and others around them, a then be surprised when they go out into life as unhappy slaves of an ambition to climb above everyone else, which will alone be enough to destroy all their real peace of mind.
8. Don't allow your boys to think that they're more important or of greater value that their sisters, and then be surprised if they grow up to look down on the domineer over women generally, and to treat their own mother or their wives as if they belonged to an inferior race. This false idea of superiority, if planted in a boy's heart, will in later life produce the spirit of real tyranny.
9. Don't instill, or allow any body else to instill into the hearts of your girls the idea that marriage is the chief end of life. If you do, don't be surprised if they get engaged to the first empty, useless fool they come across.
10. Don't pamper or spoil your children, make them whiny or complaining, and then be surprised if they grow up to be a nuisance to themselves and a torment to everybody around them unless they`re allowed to have their own way, or continuously waited upon and amused. (proverbs 29:15)
11. Don't encourage selfishness in your children. In their infancy, children are ordinarily carried away by the desire for self-gratification. Your first business is to lead them in the opposite direction, to make them forget and deny themselves and delight in serving others.
12. Parents shouldn't discuss or argue about the conduct or character of their children while in the children's presence, and then be surprised if they take sides with the father of mother, depending on whose ideas are the most favorable to their selfishness.
13. Don't make favorites among your children, and then be surprised that those who are not the chosen ones should grow up with a sense of injustice festering in their hearts, which will very likely make them forget all the love you have ever give them.
14. Don't let your children have their own way or give them what they want merely for the sake of peace, or any other reason whatever, when it's opposed to your own judgment of what is best for them. If you do, you can't be surprised when they argue with you, contradict you to your face, ridicule your wishes and opinions behind your back, and a last (to your shame and their own undoing) disregard you altogether. Never forget that it's written of your Savior Himself that in His childhood "He continued in subjection to them"-His parents. (Luke 2:51)
This article was adapted from chapters 22 and 23 of "love Marriage, and Home" by William Booth, published in 1902
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May God bless you and yours. John 3:16,17
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