Shepherding a Child's Heart
The Importance of Godward Orientation
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Shepherding a Child\'s Heart by Tedd Trip ( PDFDrive )
The Importance of Godward Orientation
Biblical stories show that shaping influences are not the whole story. Think of Joseph. His childhood experience was far from ideal. His mother died while he was young. He was his father’s favorite. His dreams inflamed his brothers’ hatred. He was further alienated from them by his father’s gift of a coat that set him apart as their authority. His brothers betrayed him. He was thrown into a pit. Opportunistic slave traders bought him to profit from his resale value. He was double-crossed in Potiphar’s house despite his honor and integrity. He was imprisoned. Even there he was forsaken by those whom he had helped. Here was a man you would expect to be bitter, cynical, resentful, and angry. If man is only the sum total of influences that shape him, that would have been the result. Instead, what do we find? When his brothers threw themselves on the ground, begging for mercy, Joseph said to them, “‘Don’t be afraid. Am I in the place of God? You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives. So then, don’t be afraid. I will provide for you and your children.’ And he reassured them and spoke kindly to them” (Genesis 50:19–21). How do we explain Joseph? He had a lens through which he viewed all the events of life. In the midst of difficult shaping influences, he entrusted himself to God. God made him a man who responded out of a living relationship with God. He loved God and found his orientation not in the shaping influences of his life but in the unfailing love and covenant mercies of God. What about the servant girl to Naaman’s wife? Enemy soldiers ripped her from her home in Israel and made her a house girl to an Aramean soldier. She was part of the plunder of war. The shaping influences in her life were far from ideal, yet she was faithful to Jehovah. When her master needed healing, this young girl knew God’s power, and what is more, she knew where the prophet was in Israel. The King of Israel did not know the prophet or have deep faith in the power of God. He responded to the emergency with fear and unbelief (see 2 Kings 5:6–7). Why did this girl respond differently? Clearly, there is more to the person than shaping influences. Here is a girl who was given faith in Jehovah and retained it in spite of the difficult circumstances in which she was reared. Summary This is the point. There are two issues that feed into the persons your children become: 1) the shaping influences of life, and 2) their Godward orientation. Therefore, your parenting must be addressed to both of these issues. You must be concerned about how you structure the shaping influences of life that are under your control (many things are not, e.g. death, and so forth). Secondly, you must be actively shepherding the Godward orientation of your children. In all of this you must pray that God will work in and around your efforts and the responses of your children to make them people who know and honor God. Figures 2 and 3 will provide direction and orientation as you seek to understand your task as parents. While you are concerned with biblical shaping influences, you must also shepherd the hearts of your children in the direction of knowing and serving God. In the next chapter we will examine the foundational issues of parenting. What does it mean for the parent to function as God’s agent? What is the nature of your task? What is the function of discipline and correction? Download 1.16 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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