TRUTH
FOR TODAY
Jun
Malazo
"My son, give me thine heart, and let thine eyes observe
my ways." (Proverbs
23:26, KJV)
One of the greatest and most tragic mistakes that parents
make in child rearing is to attempt to
nurture their children without winning their hearts. Children can be trained to follow rules, but
external conformity will not last. I
have witnessed far too many cases where families break apart because of
children that rebelled against their parents after reaching their adolescent
years. The main reason is because the
parents never were able to win the hearts of their children.
Winning a child’s heart
is paramount if parents expect their children to continue to obey and respect
them. Solomon, the wisest man that has
ever lived in the Bible, believed that if he were to properly train his sons,
he must win their hearts first. I
believe that Solomon understood that rebellion in children is not always seen
in an open retaliation against parental authority. Children’s rebellion can also be very subtle
and quiet. I believe the latter is more
serious because it is indicative of a child’s heart that is not given to the
parents.
Rules are important, and
we must make sure that they are consistently enforced in our homes. However, while diligently enforcing the
rules, we must also nurture a relationship with our children. Someone once wisely said, “Rules without
relationship breed rebellion.”
Parents that have won
their children’s hearts have essentially won their trust. There are many times that parents must
protect the minds of their children especially at a very young age. Part of this protection sometimes means
setting a rule without having to explain the intricate details about certain
areas of life. When my boys were little,
I warned them about the different vices that people fall prey to. However, in order to protect their minds, I
did not give a detailed documentary of the dangers of drugs and the type of
lifestyle they lead to. I just needed
them to trust me.
Winning the hearts of
children does not just happen during times when we have heart-to-heart talks
with them. Winning their hearts usually
happens while they observe our daily living.
Our actions and reactions to everyday life situations are what will win
the hearts of our children. Also, our
relationship with our spouse bears a heavy weight in our attempt to win the
hearts of our children. This is why most
children of separated parents often have a harder time in their lives.
Children’s hearts are
fragile. Coming from a secular child
psychology philosophy, Dr. John J. MacGee the following has been said about the
delicateness of a child’s heart:
All children are like
flowers. They need to be nurtured with great care. They are delicate and need
our full attentions until their roots are deep and strong. The main nurturing
that we do is to teach our little ones to feel safe with us and loved by us. As
they grow in body and spirit, we then teach them to feel engaged with us and
loving toward us and others. Without realizing it, parents and teachers
generally give this nurturing, teach these life-lessons, and help children
flourish. It is an instinctive act. It is an act of our hearts.
There are many ways that
parents can win the heart of their child.
First, we must be an engaged parent.
When children are neglected and are left in their own worlds, they feel
unloved and unworthy. Being an engaged
parent takes work to be actively involved in the lives of our children.
Too often, parents feel
bothered when their young children desire to just talk to them about what
happened at school or when they want to show them an art project they’ve worked
on at home or at school. I understand
that as a father we carry much of the burden of our family, so in turn our minds
are often disengaged with our children.
However, our children need our undivided attention. They must feel loved by us. The amazing discovery that I have made my own
life is that my children’s demands for my attention do not really take much
time at all. I have found that when my
children are little they just want to see if they are important enough for me
to stop what I’m doing to listen to them.
Secondly, we can win our
children’s hearts by showing them patience and love. Carnal criticism breeds bitterness and anger
in our children. In Christian Parenting
13, a writer said the following:
Parents
must be very patient and kind with their children. They are delicate. We must
have rules and the rules must be enforced and there must be discipline, but we
must never forget that they are children and that learning godly character
habits and spiritual growth does not happen overnight. It is a long process.
The parents must not forget the long and probably arduous process it took them
to get where they are.
This is especially
important for parents to understand because if we are not careful, our
criticism can wound the spirit of our children.
Children often keep their wounded spirits all the way even up to
adulthood. Pastor Troy Dorrell said the
following in the article he wrote entitled, “Healing A Wounded Spirit”:
In many
homes, parents and their teenagers may not experience a close relationship in
part because of an offense that created an injured spirit, which in turn
creates distance. Most of us understand that dynamic in our marital
relationships; hurt results in distance and loss of closeness. The problem with
teens is that they often do not articulate their hurt. They often just
keep it inside and little by little allow their hearts to be moved far away
from our own, until one day rebellion, resentment, or indifference has taken
hold.
Pastor Dorrell continues
to offer a solution by saying the following from the same article:
The
answer to this dilemma is simple but not always easy. When you know your child
has a wounded spirit because of something you have done; discuss it, address
it, and if necessary apologize for your part in their hurt. Too often pride and
fear keep parents from being real and asking for forgiveness for poor choices
or attitudes. Your esteem in their eyes will only increase if you admit it when
you are wrong.
Lastly, parents win the
hearts of the children by taking time for heart-to-heart communication and
involvement. The absence of close
communication and involvement between parents and children destroys the type of
closeness that God intended for a parent/child relationship. Notice what a parent said about this topic:
I believe that parents can reach the hearts of their children
by having a relationship with them. That is, after all, how God reaches us and
gets our hearts for Him. Parents in today's society have too little time for
their children. Even when kids are homeschooled, my experience is that the
majority of the homeschooled kids are teaching themselves.
My nine-year-old son is always coming up to me and asking to
do something with me. Now, I can't always, but if I never took the time to say,
'Ok, let's sit down and play a game,' then he would want nothing to do with me
because he would see that I want nothing to do with him. We must make time to
put down what we are doing and sit down with the kids. We parents have to take
the time to raise our children. That means spending time with them in God's
Word and out of God's Word.
In closing, our role as
parents is not just to modify the behavior of our children. We are to nurture their hearts towards loving
God and others. This happens everyday as
we fully engage ourselves in being the kind of parents that God wants us to
be.
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