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2: Getting Messy

Or, A Perspective for the Trenches

January 29, 2012 • Sean Higgins

Selected Scriptures
Series: Bring Them Up #2

# Introduction

Our mission as Christian parents is to raise a generation of Christian parents who hope in God as a witness to the world for the pleasure of the Lord. We talked last time about how to give our kids a taste of Christian life, a taste of joyful Christian parenting. We're not giving them the recipe, measuring ingredients, and telling them to make something. We're giving them a taste. God will take that taste, make our kids hungry, and a long time from now, they'll start to pick up how to do it themselves.

I hope that was encouraging, providing a renewed in vision and purpose in parenting. Christian parents witness to the glory of Christ for generations. This is a grand mission and I hope you are caught up in the greatness of your calling.

Because parenting is hard. :) Parenting, especially younger kids, is such a daily grind that the grand mission often becomes muddy. Even tonight, as you prepared to come to church, some of you had a rough time. Kids were cranky or they didn't nap much, maybe because you were out late at lunch, maybe even because you were fellowshipping with other families. They are hungry and you forgot that you were out of milk, so they got dry cereal for breakfast. They need you to change their diaper because they left something special for you. They need you to find them clothes, but you've been too busy to do laundry so they are wearing dirty shirts again. They need you to tie their shoes for the third time. And maybe you've got more than one of these need machines.

These are the parenting trenches and they are messy.1 It's great to know that happy families build a platform for the gospel, but all we need right now is a pair of matching socks. We need perspective, not only of the end goal, but what its supposed to look like here and now at this step.

I love that I have something to say about this because I may have been the worst parent of young kids in the history of the world. God has been very gracious to help me grow and learn and become a much happier parent when we're already 10 minutes late because one of the kids needed some extra time with the rod only to find out that another kid has mashed up french fries in his car seat that's going to get all over his pants and his pants were the only thing clean.

On one hand, what we desperately need is to be better Christians in those moments. That's true, but telling me that I should be patient doesn't actually help me be patient. My goal in this message is not to tell you what brand of wet wipes cleans old fries and dirty faces, but to build some frames for your perspective in the trenches.

# First, God loves growth.

I cannot overemphasize how crucial it is to develop your theology *proper*, that is, your study of God's Himself, God's person. The best parenting theology requires knowing God and one observation we must make is that God loves growth.

This world is His. He created it one way, not another, according to His good pleasure. The earth spins clockwise because that's how He wanted it to spin. Blood is red because He decided it so. And His creation is full of growing, developing things, including humans.

No child is born at 35. For that matter, even when we count a child as one day old, that doesn't take into account the nine months of baking in his mother's belly. Every person who has ever lived--after Adam and Eve--has gone through this process? Why? This isn't a natural law or a physical requirement that some celestial physician's board came up with. This is God's idea and He loves it. For approximately 6000 years He hasn't grown tired of babies and toddlers and kids.

That He loves growth is illustrated annually with the seasons. Year after year, new seed is sown and crops grow to harvest. Perhaps an even more helpful illustration is the Christian life. When God causes someone to be born again, their new spiritual life starts as babes.

> [Y]ou have been born again...[so], Like newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up into salvation— (1 Peter 1:23, 2:2, ESV)

He could save us into immediate and absolute maturity. We were dead; it already took a supernatural work to give us life anyway. Why not add maturity to it? He could take us to heaven immediately after professing faith. Instead, He regenerates us and then begins to grow us.

This is part of the reason why impatience is ungodly. Part of the problem with impatience is a failure on our part to submit to God's sovereignty. We believe God controls everything, including the timing, so we rebel when we complain. But it isn't only that we fail to submit to His timing, impatience with immaturity in our kids argues against His delights. He does what He *pleases*, and what pleases Him is growth from immaturity.

We are made in God's image. We were made to reflect Him. When we get annoyed and angry because the seed isn't bearing fruit on the second day after we planted it, we show our own immaturity.

Of all the beings in the universe, who is most concerned about maturity? God is. And yet the Trinity isn't freaking out that we're not now where we will be then. Growth is part of the process.

I've said it before, but for sake of illustration, in the church, we ought to be thrilled to have a bunch of immature people. Why? It isn't thrilling if they've been around but not grown, but if a steady stream of newborn Christians come by His grace, then they are going to have issues that come with their new life. That's great! As parents, it doesn't take too long before the excitement of the baby's birth wears off because dad, and especially mom, are exhausted from getting up in the 2am trenches because the baby is hungry again.

What you need at that moment is...coffee, and...perspective. The cry is a sign of life. Spaghetti sauce all over your floor means your daughter is alive and home and healthy enough for food. She's growing. God loves that.

We need patience in the trenches, which comes from knowing that God dug the trenches and has glorious plans for us to be there for a while.

# Second, Immaturity is not (necessarily) rebellion.

Immaturity from someone who should be mature is rebellion. Many times, though, parents take their two year old's coloring on the walls as disobedience. They desperately need the discernment to know the difference.

> When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish ways. (1 Corinthians 13:11, ESV)

One of the most well-used parent verses assumes that a child does not know the way he should go, that it takes training, and that it takes time.

> Train up a child in the way he should go;
> even when he is old he will not depart from it.
> (Proverbs 22:6, ESV)

One of the best illustrations I've heard is that children are like concrete; they don't set right away. We've got to keep working to shape them by grace until the concrete is hard. They are easier to work with at the start, so start early.

Coloring on the walls isn't okay. We're not allowed to do that, ever. However, kids need to be trained. They apparently don't come out knowing the difference between dog food and people food. They may not be out to control you or run the house. They may be acting like kids.

Running around and being loud is childish. It's okay for children to do it. We can help them by showing them where a better place for it is. And if we've cooped them up for a few hours (like at church), we ought to find a place for them.

We should not get angry with a five year old who doesn't know how to frame a house. It is not a compromise to give him a little construction set and let him practice.

It's so easy to take it personally, to take it as an attack on our authority. Again, there are times when we need to discipline disobedience. A one year old can rebel, and more so as they get older. But the point is that many of the things that frustrate us are parts of what it means to be a kid. We need perspective to know which is which. The grandparents, and other more mature parents, can help us younger parents by calmly working through a case and encouraging patient discernment.

# Third, Cleanliness is next to godliness; messiness may be closer.

Certainly, most of you have heard the phrase before: "Cleanliness is next to godliness." We say God likes certain things, but is it possible that we're missing a lot of what He's actually doing?

Some of the mess we can blame on Adam's fall and as a consequence of sin being in the world. But what about *before* Genesis 3? Consider that God assigned Adam to tend the garden before God cursed the ground. God added thistles and sweat to the work, but He didn't add dirt, dirt was already there. Adam's hands would have gotten dirty. Adam was made of dirt to work in the dirt (Genesis 2:7, 15). That's messy.

Consider, since the majority of us are parents in the room, what sex would have been like before the fall. Sex is great, that's how we get to be parents in the first place. God made it for reproductive and pleasure purposes, but it is somewhat messy. It's one of Hollywood's cheapest tricks, to make it seem like there's no clean up.

The point is, at its best, life is messy. We live in one of the cleanest parts of the world with some of the highest cultural standards and with a ridiculous amount of science and technology applied to give us disposable wipes and Swiffers and electronic dishwashers and indoor plumbing--hot or cold water, whatever you like. But even for us, life is messy.

So, most of the time, our kids are just living. They aren't doing anything that needs punishment per se because they get grass on their knees. God gave them knees and the gift to use them, He supplied enough water to cause the grass to be green, and money to buy the pants to cover their knees in the cold. We've got 1000 more things to be thankful for than reasons to complain or get angry because it's messy.

This is more than a physical need for growth, it is also a spiritual need. Kids come out with sinful hearts. How we respond to their messy hearts shouldn’t be sinful.

> Blowing up at your children because they were squabbling is jumping into the river to get out of the rain. ([Doug Wilson tweet][tweet])

[tweet]: http://twitter.com/douglaswils/status/13014036361

We won't win our kids to joyful obedience by being disobediently angry ourselves.

I am not saying to leave your house a pig pen. I'm not saying to bathe your kids only once a month because they're just going to get dirty again. I am saying that the trenches are messy, so jump in and clean up. That's what godly parents do.

* As a side note, godly parents don't take the same approach outside the home, especially in someone else's home. Parents shouldn't spring their theology of mess on other people. Talk ahead of time with your kids; make the expectations clear. If you have a kid who needs extra attention, keep them with you, by your side, on your lap.

Also, I'm definitely *not* saying to let disobedience go. I'm saying it shouldn't be surprising. It is the opportunity to train them, especially to teach them about the gospel, and we should be examples of joy in the clean-up.

As usual, there are ditches on both sides of the road. One ditch is all "grace" and no requirement of obedience, the other ditch is never being happy with obedience because it isn't perfect. Grace doesn't lower the expectations of the law, it makes getting there *joyful*. But obedience is never optional.

*Laziness is not mercy*. Just as you scrub the floor, pursue whole-hearted obedience with joy. We know a friend who has her kids sing a fun song after spanking to see if their hearts are right. Don't allow excuses. Teach quick and honest confession. Don't allow laziness.

When it's messy, that means life is happening. That's how God likes it.

> Where there are no oxen, the manger is clean,
> but abundant crops come by the strength of the ox.
> (Proverbs 14:4, ESV)

# Fourth, Life always grows from death.

This brings us to the good news, that is, the really good news of the gospel. One of the principles that fills the world we live in is that death brings life.

As Christians, we know this most clearly because we got life from Christ's death and resurrection. God gave His only begotten Son to die in our place so that we could have eternal life. He died so that we could live. That's the gospel. It is also our calling. We are to give our life so that others may live.

Unlike Christ's death, our dying cannot redeem anyone. We have our own sin so we can't be a substitute for them. But we can be a reflection for them. Paul referred to his dying to bring life in 2 Corinthians 4:10-12

> [We are] always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies. For we who live are always being given over to death for Jesus’ sake, so that the life of Jesus also may be manifested in our mortal flesh. So death is at work in us, but life in you. (2 Corinthians 4:10–12, ESV)

In ministry, our calling is to die, and not for Paul that this wasn't a one time deal; it wasn't his physical martyrdom, otherwise he could be "always carrying about" or say that "death works in us." His dying was serving, giving himself in suffering to embrace their mess.

This is exactly what Paul instructs husbands to do for their wives in Ephesians 5:25.

> Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, (Ephesians 5:25, ESV)

Christ gave Himself for His bride, a husband must give himself for his wife. Husbands are to be like Christ, dying to self for another.

The principle is: *my life for yours*2. That's the gospel on display. That is the need of the hour for Christian parents: to illustrate the serving sacrifice of Christ, to die so that others may live. It starts at home.

I'm not kidding when I say that parenting is a daily grind. It requires daily, hourly dying. Someone needs something when is *not* convenient, and usually their needs always correspond to the times when we are already most exhausted. It is at those moments when we need to think: what would Jesus do? It is at those moments in the trenches when we need to laugh. God is. It's a glorious hassle, and it is life.

# Conclusion

God doesn't mind taking His time to make a point. He's happy with babies crying and toddlers falling and little girls giggling and little men building birdhouses. He's happy with our progressive sanctification and with spiritual battle that has not been finished yet. He's growing us. He promised to conform us to the image of Christ. It's messy, and He's taking His time.

Parenting is a glorious hassle. It requires our daily deaths.

If parents wait to be finished before they’re happy, they will never be happy.

More from Bring Them Up

6: Ministry to the Next Generation

April 1, 2012 • Sean Higgins

Selected Scriptures Series: Bring Them Up #6 # Introduction From the start of Trinity Evangel Church and our very first "family meeting" we have emphasized our desire to nurture the vine (people) and then to build trellis (programs, structure) when it was clear that the vine was growing in a particular direction or when the vine developed a certain need. Since the beginning also, when we've invited questions and feedback, a regular topic of discussion has been children's ministry. It's a normal question. It's normal because that's what most of us are familiar with, what we've come from, what we're used to. Probably what makes the question even more natural though, is that we care about our kids, about their salvation, about providing the best resources for them to grow in knowledge of and likeness to Christ. Historically, especially within the last 100 years or so, the answer to training our kids has included some sort of Sunday school or children's church. That's what most of grew up in and, once we grew up, that's what we provided for the new ones growing up. Of course, we've also known a few people who argue against children's ministry--and boy can they argue. They often fight with such a high pitched shrill that it's hard that to hear if they have any reasonable points or not. They usually pull out Deuteronomy 6, maybe Ephesians 6 too, and condemn churches with ministries that replace parents. Well, that *is* bad, right, to disobey the Bible in order to teach the Bible? Initially at TEC we didn't even have the facilities for a full-blown children's ministry, nor did it seem at the time like a wise use of our trellis building energies and tools when we didn't even know where we were going to meet or who was going to bring the folding chairs. By God's grace things are much more settled now. We've been in the same building for 50 Lord's days and have a better idea of how many people are likely to show up on Sunday. So various questions about children's ministry have come up again over the last few months. Some have been more constructive, some have been more critical. But as we said from the start, we don't want to fear jumping into the "mess," and here we are. Our trajectory may be more clear after the recent series on worship and parenting. Numerous implications are floating around from those messages and discussions. The implications are circling the field, visible up in the sky, but not on the ground. After multiple conversations among the elders and at L2L groups and with individuals, it seemed like a good time to attempt to bring some of those implications in for a landing. In other words, I want to provide an explicit list of our priorities and our plans for ministering to our kids and parents as they raise their sons and daughters in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. # Our Priorities for the Lord's Day By "our" priorities I mean all the elders. I get to be the mouthpiece, but this isn't something I came up with by myself. Most Sunday school ministry takes place on...Sundays. While some children's ministries have mid-week meetings, young kids can't drive themselves. Sunday stuff makes sense because the parents are already driving to church and they can't leave the kids home by themselves anyway. Our discussion about children's ministry, especially in a Sunday school type setting, can't be separated from our corporate Sunday priorities. Here are three. ## 1. Creating a Culture of Corporate Worship When the church assembles on the Lord's day, she gathers to worship, to draw near to God, and to meet with Him as an assembly. That means that *worship is more than instruction*. While there are many good things that have come, and could come, from age-specific teaching on the Lord's day, we believe that there are other and *better* things. Even if we agreed that young kids could not understand anything from the big church teaching, worship is more than teaching. It also means that *worship involves work for everyone*: singing, praying, hearing the Word read, giving, and participating in (or watching) the ordinances. Kids can do all of that even if not at the same level. That's part of the reason we talk about liturgy, not because we're focused on externals or trying to make others feel bad that they don't have our order of service, but because what we do and how we do it makes a point to our souls, and the souls of our kids. It means that *worship is learned by observation*. Why do we confess our sins as a congregation, and why are people kneeling? Why do we have communion every week? Why do we have a charge rather than an altar call at the end of a service? These are the kinds of questions we want everyone, including our kids, to be asking. Kids also *learn by being included*. They are part of us. We want them to worship God. We want them to see what that's like, to see our joy in meeting with God together. We want them to taste it. That can't happen if we send them to another room. We want kids to learn that worship is more than instruction (which is a truth-tube holdover for many of us). We want them to learn that worship is their responsibility and joy. We want them to learn worship by imitation, as we fulfill our responsibility joyfully. And we want them to learn that they are with us, part of us. Those without kids or grown kids, need to be patient and encourage those doing hard enculturating work. We do not want to separate the kids, or a staff of Sunday school teachers, from corporate worship. [Babies and nursing moms are a bit different, so we will continue to provide a place for them where they don't need to be as quiet.] ## 2. Promoting/Protecting a Day of Rest Worship of God on Sunday is patterned by Israel's worship of God on the Sabbath. God established the week with six days for work and one day of ceasing work devoted to Him. After Christ rose from dead on the first day of the week, the early Christians transitioned to meeting on the first day as a weeklyversary of His resurrection. The Sunday purposes of a gathered celebration and vocational rest still continue and are a priority for our church. The very first Sunday night I mentioned our desire to avoid scheduling weariness on the day of rest. This priority is significant because one option for having kids worship with us *and* having a Sunday school could be to start earlier. We could plan a Sunday school "hour" and then a corporate worship "hour" for everyone. That would certainly be better than separating them, but it adds a significant amount of trellis work (finding and training staff, finding and preparing materials, preparing and cleaning up rooms, etc.) for what may not be a significant gain. Even though we currently have some space we could utilize for some level of Sunday school, and while we have a few who have expressed their willingness to serve, we are more excited about promoting more rest, with less events and expectations. There is no verse that tells us how many hours to hold meetings. The decision requires wisdom and, we acknowledge, wisdom grows, so we may realize at some point that the flock, and kids, would be edified more by more meetings. But we do not believe that more meetings than we currently have would do the body that much better, especially when it comes to the day of rest. We do not want to add extra burdens to Sunday. ## 3. Enabling Fatherly/Family Responsibility This may not initially seem like a Lord's day priority, and it isn't *only* for Sundays, but separating dads and the Lord's day shows how little we understand worship, how little we appreciate liturgy, and how little we appreciate God's use of examples. If we want (and we *should* want) our kids or grandkids, the next generation, to be worshippers of God, what should we do? Of course we should tell them about God's worth. We should tell them stories of His work for His people, especially in His Son. We should also tell them that God requires worship and punishes those who don't or who worship another god. We should tell them how to worship. But we must also *show* them how to do it! Enculturation is not a class. Our tastes are not shaped by cook books, but by smelling and tasting food. Our taste of the Lord's goodness is not shaped by crossword puzzles or duck-duck-goose with little Christian peers, but by tasting. And who do kids look to first to know what's good? Their parents, and especially their dads. As a church, we want to encourage kids to watch. As a church, we want to give dads and moms the opportunity to show the tastiness of fellowship with God. As a church, we want for kids to see what their parents love most. > You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. (Deuteronomy 6:5–7) Consider it another way. We could arrange to teach your kids Bible stories here and you can teach your kids Bible stories at home. But you can *NOT* arrange to show your kids corporate worship at home by yourselves. It isn't an either/or decision, but we do believe that many parents, dads especially, do not grasp the power of their humble, joyful, faithful, weekly worship in front of their families. If you want to lead your family, it takes more than getting everyone here. It's showing them what to do once you're here. Then you can talk about it afterward, too. We do not want to remove the opportunity for parents to enculturate their kids. Granted, not all parents are the same. However, every parent's responsibility for his kids is the same. Depending on others to do what parents *won't* do usually ends in disaster. # Our Plan for Ministry to Children Alright, what are we going to **DO**? Priorities are fine, but priorities don't *do* anything, they only aim the works to be done. For now, we have four broad strategies to make worshipping disciples of the next generation without starting a Sunday school ministry. ## 1. Encouraging Dads/Parents I was a youth pastor in a couple different churches for over a decade. As I look back on that ministry, the best we could do is stimulate what was supported at home. I can't think of more than a handful of spiritual "success" stories where a student thrived in Christian joy and service without his parent's support. What's more, in those ministries, we typically offered a lot more than an hour or two of classroom activities each week. We did a lot of work that supplemented what was happening at home, but it could not stand on its own. To serve kids in a sustaining way we must strengthen their parents. I suspect no one disagrees in principle that parents are responsible, but we really *mean* it. It is not without intention that we have **Men to Men** and invite all the men of the church to come. While we've been reading and discussing a book on eldership, it is equally a book on faithful Christian leadership in the home. > an overseer must be above reproach, the husband of one wife, sober-minded, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not a drunkard, not violent but gentle, not quarrelsome, not a lover of money. He must manage his own household well, with all dignity keeping his children submissive, for if someone does not know how to manage his own household, how will he care for God’s church? (1 Timothy 3:2–5) As men are strengthened, as they get a clearer vision of Christ-like leadership, they will raise stronger kids. **Titus 2** is a ministry aimed at encouraging women to love their husbands and to love their kids. > Older women likewise are to be reverent in behavior, not slanderers or slaves to much wine. They are to teach what is good, and so train the young women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled, pure, working at home, kind, and submissive to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be reviled. (Titus 2:3–5) A husband and wife are the first place the kids learn what the Trinity is like (implied from Genesis 1 and 2) and what Christ's relationship with His Church is like (Ephesians 5). > "a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.” This mystery is profound, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the church. (Ephesians 5:31–32, quoting Genesis 2:24 in verse 31) The **Life to Life** groups are also part of children's ministry because, again, parents who are growing spiritually, who are learning to *do* the word not only hear it (James 1:19-25), who are learning to live in community with others sinners (Colossians 3:12-17), will shape the micro-community of their home differently (Colossians 3:18ff). We do plan, also, on having occasional **parenting series** (like the one we finished a month ago) as well as **parenting classes** in the future. There is also already significant **personal shepherding** ("counseling") taking place with numerous families having marital or parenting troubles. The kids are being considered and cared for even though there is obviously more work to do. ## 2. Providing Service Specific Resources Since we're making such a big deal out of corporate worship and wanting everyone to be together in our services as much as is reasonable, we have been and will continue to think about ways to help. It's not easy to take care of kids depending on age, or the kid himself. But it is worth it. Corporate worship is challenging for everyone. It challenges quiet people to be loud at times and loud people to be quiet at other times. It challenges lazy people to participate and it requires leaders to follow. It requires squirmy kids to sit still and lumps on a log to engage. But sitting still is *not* the end, as helpful of a life skill as that is. Paying attention is *not* the end, as helpful as that can be. Having affections for God stirred and expressed in meeting God is the end. We have **singing mixed throughout Sunday morning**. Young and old get to stand up and participate and they don't need to be quiet. The longest time for sitting still is the sermon, which are somewhat shorter as I aim for 40-45 minutes. I also try to **engage the kids purposefully** at different times in different messages. And Gail Martin has faithfully prepared **Kids' Korners**. Mo lead an entire **discussion a few weeks ago at Titus 2 on practical things to do**, and much of it involves work at home throughout the week and before church starts. We can make that audio available if you'd like to hear it. Dads, you also need to work and not expect your wife to do it all. Make it enjoyable for them which starts by enjoying it (and them) yourselves. Make the service sweet/tasty (even with candy) and warm (with hugs and pats). There are things parents can do before and during the service to enable the whole family to worship. ## 3. Offering a School [Evangel Classical School][ecs] is a key component in our strategy to serve children and families, a key strategy for worldview enculturation and additional, weekday catechesis. [ecs]: http://evangelcs.org/ First, not everyone is *interested* in Christian schooling for their kids, let alone classical Christian schooling, let alone a brand-new school. That's okay. Not everyone is interested in Sunday school even when it's available. No parent has to use every resource, though they are responsible to do something. There is a difference between parents being *primarily* responsible to God for their kids and parents acting as the *only* influence on their kids. Wise parents will seek additional influences and helps. Second, not everyone can *afford* a Christian school for their kids. In some sense, calling a school a "ministry" may not fit. But we also aren't doing it for profit. Trinity Evangel Church is working and planning and supporting ECS in such a way that as many like-minded families can take advantage if they desire. Without doubt there is a lot to teach our kids (including catechesis), and it includes much more than school on Sunday only allows for. Plus, because God made and cares for *everything*, not just Noah and the flood, Moses and the Red Sea, David and Bathsheba, Saul on the road to Damascus, we want to train the next generation with a comprehensive eduction under Christ's lordship. All parents should be teaching their kids to love God (again, Deuteronomy 6) and we want to support parents in their work of giving their kids a worldview that never forgets or assumes that Jesus' lordship is inconsequential. We see the school as a help to shape worshippers. Note also, a school isn't the church nor can a school replicate the church's corporate worship. A school can help train individuals at different levels and help inform them for greater joy on Sundays. ## 4. Holding Occasional Age-Specific Events We totally think that occasional events such as **Vacation Bible Schools** or **Backyard Bible Clubs** would be fantastic. We're looking forward to providing resources for those events. For the older students we have **"after glows"** on evenings when we have services, we plan to have more **camps** or **retreats** with another camping retreat this summer. We hope to have more of these ways to serve them and have them serve as well. There is nothing stopping **Life to Life group events** set aside specifically to encourage the kids. But again, these supplement our corporate worship rather than separates us during it. # Conclusion It can't be targeted at this alone, but the final key strategy to helping our kids is to *worship God*, to learn how and why and what we get from worshipping Him. Specifically, we are changed as we meet with God. We become different people, week by week, as we behold His glory. He is transforming parents, and kids, every Lord's day. Some parents aren't comfortable because worship is rooting out sin. Some are realize the power of it, the gospel power to change life, from the heart and into the home. Our kids will learn to love what we love. If we love not having to deal with them, they will come to love not having to deal with us. If we don't love dying to bring them life, we will tell them the gospel and they won't know what it looks or tastes like. Here is a great opportunity to show them that we love God and His gospel.

5: A Culture of Faith

March 4, 2012 • Sean Higgins

Selected Scriptures Series: Bring Them Up #4 # Introduction We are in a battle, as is every generation, to bring up the next generation in such a way that they are equipped to do the same. In the family, we speak about the *parenting* task and, as I defined a few weeks ago, the task of Christian parenting is to raise Christian parents. Our mission as Christian parents is to raise a generation of Christian parents who hope in God as a witness to the world. We are doing something much bigger than feeding, clothing, cleaning, and spanking so that eventually our kids will leave the house, pay for themselves, stay out of jail, and eat vegetables without threats. We are endeavoring to keep them safe, to give them good things, and to equip them to live a certain sort of identified life. In the church, we speak about the *discipling* task and the two tasks (parenting and discipling) have much overlap. Disciple-makers, like parents, desire more for their disciples than deliverance from hell, as eternally crucial as that is. Being a disciple is an ongoing process of growth, a following and imitating of Christ so that we obey *all* that He commands. Our mission as Christian disciples is to make disciples who love God in all nations. In other words, we are endeavoring to keep their souls safe, to give them good things, and to equip them to live a certain sort of identifiable life. There are any number of ways to identify this identifiable life, but one way we've been considering as a congregation is that we are identified by our worship. Men are known, they are defined by their worship. Broken living always grows from broken worshipping; worship is like the wheels on a shopping cart, if the wheel is broken it's just a matter of time before the cart crashes. Like the woman at the well in John 4, when a person's worship is broken, her life will inevitably be broken as well. So one of the things parents and disciplers and pastors need to think about is passing on a way of worship. I don't mean only liturgy, when to stand and sit, or the inspired list of classic hymns, though those things are included. We are bringing up worshippers of the one true God. That is what He requires. That is what we're made for. Another way to say it is, we are enculturating our kids (disciples) in worship. We are bringing them up in a way of life. That way of life involves a community. That community lives in a culture of worship. As a side note, yes, all of life is worship. But there is something special about the assembly's corporate gathering, when God serves us by cleansing us and consecrating us and communing with us. If we become like what/Who we behold, then we cannot bring up our kids to be faithful image-bearers without constant exposure (worship) to Him in whose image we're created. There are a few Christian cultural mountains that our "fathers" (previous generations) have intentionally, or unintentionally in some cases, let build that we need to climb over or level. # A Mountain of Misplaced Fear We have been trained to fear forcing our faith on our children. Our non-believing culture aggressively calls it abuse to indoctrinate one's kids; that's not tolerant. Stated more passively, we might hear a Christian parent say, "I don't want my kids to have *my* faith. I want them to make it their own." Now, sure, we understand that no one gets into heaven by being born into a particular family, having a certain last name, or attending a specific church, no matter how many star stickers are on their attendance chart. We are saved one by one. It does not follow, however, that we ought to leave each other alone to figure it out, every man, woman, and child for himself. "I don't want them to have my faith" is a naive slogan and a bad parenting plan. I pray that my kids would have my faith, my life, my worship, my Christianity. I want them to believe what I believe, and I want them to believe like me, and then go beyond me in understanding, maturity, and fruitfulness. Giving our kids an explanation of faith and examples of faith doesn't require us to hide false worship from them. It does prohibit us from saying, "Here are a bunch of worship options, your mom and I worship like this, but you need to make your own decision." I don't say that as a preacher, why would I say that as a parent? The one, true God does not say, "Decide however you want." He says, "You shall have no other gods before me." It's only been in the last couple years that the subtle significance of Ephesians 6:4 struck me. > Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. (Ephesians 6:4) Christian parents, Christian dads in particular, are responsible to bring up children in a way of life under Christ's lordship. But *when* do dads do that? Right after their kids professes faith? We are always pointing them to God through Christ and teaching them how to live and worship in His kingdom. We are passing on a culture of following and honoring Him. This doesn't mean that kids in a Christian home with dads doing this faithfully are automatically Christians. But it will not be long before we're teaching them about their need for Him and responsibility to Him. A house that holds Christian standards needs Christ to pursue those standards and fix things when the standards are broken. Disobedience is a problem why? Because of God's law. Forgiveness and reconciliation are possible how? Because of Christ's sacrifice on the cross. Receiving that forgiveness happens how? By repenting and believing. In the future, avoiding temptation and obedience happens how? By union with Christ, instruction from the Word, and power from the Holy Spirit. We're passing on a culture of gospel. The gospel is not only our message, not only the entrance to life, but the way of life. It's the gospel that our weekly corporate liturgy represents. An evangelical house (a house with evangelical/gospel believing parents) needs the gospel numerous times a day. We must not fear passing on our faith and worship in the gospel. That's exactly what our faith requires us to do. # A Mountain of Misplaced Focus A second mountain of misrepresentation or misunderstanding that prohibits parental perspective is a Christian culture that loves to make *converts* rather than disciples. We focus more on when faith came (one's spiritual birthday) than the following by faith now. We're concerned with conversion, obsessed with it. Because of that, we assume that failure in practice results from an insufficient profession, rather than from our insufficient help and correction for practice after profession. In other words, you must be sinning because you're not a Christian, not because I haven't taught and modeled how to fight sin. Scripture serious but short sighted *pastors* are probably to blame. Our churches, in particular the liturgy of most churches, teach people to doubt their salvation. What is the aim of a typical Sunday morning? What does the preacher drive the flock toward? He gets all the people to commit to Christ or confirm that they are still really committed. Week by week, invitation after altar call, non-Christians and Christians are exhorted to doubt *first*, then *maybe* come through the test with some level of assurance. Parents can't help but apply the same sort of pressure, follow the same sort of procedure when disciplining disobedient kids. Now, yes, okay, I know. We do not want to be guilty of providing false assurance to church-goers or our children. No doubt, false assurance is a deadly weapon that the enemy has used and will use to destroy many souls for eternity. Parents and disciplers are not charged to make people feel good about their profession of faith regardless. Those who are born of God cannot continue in sin. "No one who keeps on sinning has either seen him or known him" (1 John 3:6). Ongoing, especially hard hearted and unrepentant sinners ought not to have assurance of salvation. Loving parents must speak truth, even when it hurts. But a couple questions. What environment enables false assurance to thrive? False assurance thrives in a conversion focused culture, not a disciple-making culture. In a conversion culture, you can respond to another person's profession on a spectrum with two ends: believe their profession with no basis or doubt their profession no matter the basis. "Love" people tend to believe without basis. "Truth" people tend to doubt just in case (in case they would be guilty of giving false assurance). False assurance is starved in a discipleship culture where you don't look back at a prayer, you look at your worship right now. Another important question: What kind of person tends toward false assurance? A person who doesn't struggle is usually one who doesn't really care about sin today because he prayed a prayer yesterday. When we are laying the guilt on thick with our kids, we wrongly do it to the soft and struggling ones. It's unlikely that they would be sensitive to sin and doubt if their soul was dead and hard. A heavy-hearted sinner who lacks assurance probably doesn't need conversion, he needs discipleship. He needs to learn gospel sanctification, not receive gospel salvation. We parents have been taught to live with weekly doubting of our own conversions more than we've been taught to live by faith and kill sin by faith as disciples. We teach our kids to examine if they really "meant it" rather than teaching them how worship grows faith, even if that faith is the size of a mustard seed. ## The Loss of Baptism One practical compromise that our conversion culture makes, at least those on the truth team, is to treat **baptism** as a confirmation of faith rather than a confession of faith. We treat it as a rite of demonstration rather than a rite of initiation. By "protecting" baptism we're sending believers into the battle unprotected. The Great Commission requires baptism *at the beginning* of discipleship. Baptism is a public identification with Christ followed with instruction for following Christ, how to submit to His lordship in every area of life. > Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. (Matthew 28:19–20) Baptism *introduces* one into the culture of worshipping Christ as King of kings. Baptism connects with one's *initial* confession that Jesus is Lord (Romans 10:9-10), the sign of that commitment to Him coming in water. The order is not insignificant; we baptize and *then* instruct meaning that spiritual immaturity is *not* a reason *not* to baptize. To correct that error (false assurances in empty baptisms in infants or those too young), some Christians--and they are fellow brothers and sisters--believe that the church corresponds to Israel, so baptism corresponds to circumcision. Therefore, kids in Christian families should be baptized into the covenant as infants. That sounds nice, but really doesn't have sound biblical evidence. Baptism is always connected to one's confession, not to one's birth (as with Israel). Without confession of sin and faith in Christ, baptism is unwarranted. Therefore, those who desire baptism should understand, should be able to communicate, who Christ is, why they need Him, what He has done, and their intention to follow Him as a devoted worshipper. This is *credo* baptism. *Credo* is the Latin word for "I believe" or "I confess." When can a person make this confession? When they can comprehend and explain, which requires a minimum level of language development. When does this level occur? Isn't it different for different people/kids? We overcorrect, though, when we turn baptism into (sufficient to us) proof. In fact, this robs a young person of a key discipleship weapon. In Romans 6, Paul instructs the believers how to think about their relationship to sin. > What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. (Romans 6:1–4) He is describing the baptism of the Holy Spirit as symbolized by water. We undo the benefit. We cannot encourage kids or (possible) disciples to consider themselves dead to sin by the Spirit when we won't encourage them to profess that reality in baptism. "You're dead to sin. Serve righteousness. But just in case you're not really dead to sin, let's wait and see." Again, baptism represents the formal beginning of discipleship, of worshipping in a life of righteousness. By withholding baptism we keep them in a culture of doubt and wonder why so many of them walk away from the struggle later on. So, if a child desires to be baptized and he 1. professes faith in Christ 2. can articulate the gospel 3. receives the encouragement of his parents Then we want to consider baptizing them. More than likely, this young person will be at least age six. Since the parents are the primary disciplers with the most direct responsibility for their children, their wisdom is first to consider. Both kids and parents can talk with the elders. Wisdom is required throughout on a case by case basis. ## The Loss of Communion Communion is another common culprit in the culture of doubt and fear rather than a key part of a culture of faith and fellowship. We have been taught, explicitly or through practice, that "communion" is confession, communion is the time to stir up fear, not the time to share peace with God. Paul did warn the Corinthians about unworthy participation. The Corinthians had some serious problems. They were first generation Christians and their time at the Lord's Table got carried away in a selfish party for the well-to-do and neglected the sharing of the community. Paul urged them to examine themselves, to take the Table seriously. He was not, however, trying to keep them away from the blessing. > The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread. (1 Corinthians 10:16–17) Similar to the peace offering in the Old Testament, communion strengthens faith through fellowship with God and God's people. Communion isn't confirmation that we're clean, it's communion with God who cares for us and cleans us. Because of the nature of the ordinances and what each one represents, participation in communion should come *after* baptism. We encourage parents to talk to their kids about the Lord's Supper especially since our congregation does it every Lord's day. But again, generally speaking, communion with Christ (in Spirit and at the Table) follows one's confession (with lips and in baptism) of salvation in Christ. Many Christian parents (and churches) refuse to give their kids the blessings of baptism (for fighting sin) and communion (for fighting doubt) while expecting their kids to live up to Christianity. "Once you've demonstrated that you're dead to sin, then we'll let you demonstrate that you're dead to sin. Once you kill sin, then we'll give you the weapon to kill sin." Or, "Once you're fat with faith, then we'll let you eat for faith." We cry about how wrong it is to judge other people and we save our severest judgment for our kids, because they have to take it. We want to be wise and we want to pass on the faith, not the doubt. We want to pass on a culture of worship by showing our kids how to worship and explaining what it means as they mature. Culture isn't transferred at the flip of a switch. It's transferred over time, with growth, teaching, modeling, opportunity, correction, and commissioning. That's discipleship. That's parenting. We have trouble with the parenting task because we're afraid to parent the "whole way," giving our faith to our kids. We're not committed to victory and then frustrated when we fail. We also have trouble with the parenting task because we're looking to confirm conversion rather than to encourage a life of discipleship and worship. As Jim said in his message, parenting takes a lot of work. It requires a lot of time to build the relationship. It requires a lot of wisdom to know how to train them and when to let them fail. And it requires a lot of grace. Just like discipleship. # A Mountain of Misplaced Faith Finally, we have trouble with parenting because we are often joyless disciples and worshippers ourselves. Perhaps we struggle for joy because we're trying to obey God's instructions without faith. We believe that we're supposed to do Ephesians 6:4, we don't believe that God will bless our obedience. We believe it's important to worship, but we don't think it makes a difference. So we do pass on a culture, one of tiring, tasteless duty-doing, doubting that God is for us. That's not Christian parenting because that's not *Christian*; the faith is in our own obedience rather than faith in God. It's not gospel discipleship because there's no gospel. Gospel-believing Christians (parents and disciplers) pass on a culture of faithful, tasty, satisfied, hoping and happy worship.

4: Avoiding the Traps

February 19, 2012 • Jim Martin

Selected Scriptures Series: Bring Them Up #4