Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Ten

Here is an overview of what we’re talking about. Listed below the summary is a “windsheild time” to help you dialog with your child about the session. The question is intended not just to be asked by you, but to be responded to by BOTH of you. Use this opportunity to find out what God is teaching your child, and allow your child to see what God is teaching you as well.

Series Overview

Thirty-five hundred years ago Moses came down from Mt. Sinai with a short list of rules that has shaped the values of people and nations for centuries. We know them as the Ten Commandments, but do we really know them? Many people believe that the rules are a condition for a relationship with God, things we must do to get in His good graces. But just the opposite is true. The relationship came before the rules. And the commandments were meant to not only reveal God’s heart, but to keep His people free.  
Week One: The Rules
Bottom Line: Relationship always precedes rules with God.
To many, Christianity is about following a set of rules. And if you asked them “Why?” they would point to a single source—the Bible. Specifically, they would probably mention the Ten Commandments. But what most people miss is the whole context for that list. God established a relationship with the Israelites long before He even gave them the rules. He wanted them to know they were His people. The reality is that following the rules will never make God love us more. In fact, when you try to live them out, you begin to see just how much you need Him. With God, the relationship always precedes the rules. Always.
Windshield Time:
The relationship and rules connection is something that you live with in your role as parent/child.
Does relationship always precede rules in your home?
            Ask your student what they think and invite them to be honest.
                        (They may not be receiving or perceiving what you perceive you’re sending)   

 
Week Two: One & Only
Bottom Line: The most important decision you make is what you place in the center of your life.
The first four commandments have to do with our relationship with God. In them God carefully lays out how we are to relate to Him, walk with Him, and talk with Him. We miss the relationship and the beauty of God if we think this is a line drawn in the sand. Instead, if we look at them through the lens of relationship, we see that what God is doing, is telling us who He is, and how he wants to live with us. 
Windshield Time:
What are some things that are other “gods” in our world? How about in your own life?
Making God the center DOESN’T mean you can’t have (for example) friends, cell phones, money or fun.
     So how do we know when other things or people become more important to us than God? 

 
Week Three: Unto Others
Bottom Line: God places value on each person, and desires for everyone to be free.
The final six commandments illustrate a key truth about God—He cares a great deal about how we treat each other. In fact, these commandments were so revolutionary at the time because they showed that everyone had worth and value. God gave us these laws, not as some type of admissions test into heaven, but as instructions on how to live and be free in Him. He knows that not only is our relationship with Him important, but so are the relationships He has placed in our lives.
Windshield Time:
Go through the final six commandments (Exodus 20:12-17) and discuss how these commands are about valuing other people.
Do you think we “steal,” or “murder” one another in other ways? How?
When have you felt “stolen” from or “murdered”? 
Why do you think our world is like this?
    Let your student offer their opinion
    Take this question deeper than a textbook answer. Ultimately, yes it is Sin, but still, why is our world like this?

Perfect Parents

By Reggie Joiner  

There’s something that bothers me. A lot of Christian parenting books I have read start with the premise that there is an ideal mom or dad. These superparents conduct morning devotions, pray together every night, play contemporary Christian music, put framed verses on their walls, stay neatly within their biblical roles as husband and wife, vote conservatively and attend church every week, where they give 10 percent of their income.  

The problem is, I don’t find a lot of good parenting examples in the Bible. I am not dismissing “religious” parents. (I am sure the Pharisees would have made great revolutionary parents and could have been extremely focused on their families.) I’ve searched for some examples, but I just can’t find any paragons of parenting in Scripture. The Bible certainly lends advice about parenting, and there are a number of universal principles we should apply as parents, but you would have a hard time convincing me that David, Noah or Eli was an exceptional parent.  

Don’t even try to point at the Proverbs 31 mom. What was her name? Oh yeah, she didn’t have one. You say, “What about Joseph and Mary? They raised Jesus and He turned out okay.” This is true, but He had a divine advantage because of His real father. Adam and Eve might have been good examples had they not single-handedly caused the downfall of the human race and subsequently raised one son who killed the other.  

My point is this: Parenting is hard. Families are messy. There are no clear biblical examples. Anyone who claims they have discovered the secret to effective parenting is probably covering up something, just had a baby, or recently graduated from Bible College with a degree in youth ministry.

There is a degree of dysfunction in every family. Mine is no exception. When my dad was fifteen, he ran away from home and joined the Air Force to get away from his manipulative stepmom. My mother’s father and mother struggled with alcoholism and both committed suicide one year apart during her elementary years. Neither of my parents had the advantage of reading James Dobson or Gary Smalley books. They never attended a FamilyLife seminar. They simply got married (without any premarital counseling), had kids, and plowed their way through being family. The only thing that kept them going was their faith in God, and their love for my brother and me. As a result, their values of faith and family were effectively passed on to me.  

Unfortunately, they passed along a few other things too. Traits like control issues, stubbornness, moodiness, insecurities, tendencies to manipulate, and a few others. Why? Because they had bad parents? No, they are human parents. Human parents tend to have human issues. Human parents struggle with the humanness their own human parents passed down to them.  

It all started with the first mom and dad. Talk about a dysfunctional family. Adam was quick to blame Eve for causing him to fall into sin, and Eve passed the buck directly to the serpent. Then one of their sons killed the other one, and it all went downhill from there:

Noah had a drinking problem.
Abraham offered his wife to another man.
Rebekah schemed with her son to deceive her husband, Isaac.
Jacob’s sons sold their brother into slavery.
David had an affair, and his son started a rebellion.
Eli lost total control of how his boys acted in church.  

In comparison to the parents described in the Bible, mine were incredible. Has it ever occurred to you that maybe God filled the pages of Scripture with bad parenting examples to encourage us? I know God desires for me to be a responsible parent, but my humanness sometimes gets in the way. When I read the variety of Christian books about parenting, they often make me feel overwhelmed and guilty. If I consider my own inherent faults and personality quirks, I am not sure I have it in me to be an A+ parent. When I read my Bible through, I am actually encouraged, and I am definitely aware that God has a way of doing something incredible in spite of my faults.  

What would happen if parents began to see the family in the same way believers should view the church, as a human part of God’s design to demonstrate who He is to the world? Don’t miss the significance of that vantage point. Our humanness actually becomes the platform from which He demonstrates His power, goodness and love to His people. It is an amazing thought when you realize that both the church and the home are comprised of broken, imperfect people through whom God has chosen to tell His story.  

What if it’s not God’s plan for parents or leaders to restore the church and the home to be a sublime, utopian state? What if, instead, it’s God plan to do an amazing work with the church and the home in order to put His grace on display? Imagine the Supreme Creator visibly and actively involved in both entities—healing, loving, restoring and re-creating a broken people in order to demonstrate His glory and plan of redemption.  

God is at work telling a story of restoration and redemption through family. Never buy into the myth that you need to become the “right” kind of parent before God can use you in your children’s lives. Instead, learn to cooperate with whatever God desires to do in your heart today so your children will have a front-row seat to the grace and goodness of God.  

(Excerpted from Think Orange, © 2009 by Reggie Joiner, David C. Cook Publishing)  

© 2010 Orange. All rights reserved.  

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Welcome

Welcome to theParentsPulse, our blog for parent's of high schoolers! More coming soon!

John