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For Parents

Junior High Sunday School Session 1

Feb 27, 2012

Junior High Sunday School Session 1 {0}


This Quarter Chip Prins is leading the Junior High Sunday School Class through a study called Knowing The God Who Is. Included in this study are weekly devotional helps. I’ll post these the week leading up to Sunday School. Please encourage your son or daughter to work through these, even better work through these with your son or daughter.

Session 1
Q. How do we know God exists?
A. God exists and reveals his invisible attributes—his eternal power and divine nature—in creation.

Creation is not the only way we know God exists. God’s Word and the Holy Spirit also reveal his existence. This is the way Larger Catechism puts it:
The very light of nature in man, and the works of God, declare plainly that there is a God; but his Word and Spirit only do sufficiently and effectually reveal him unto men for their salvation. (Answer 2)

Read Psalm 19:1–3.
What in these verses declares the glory of God and what proclaims his handiwork? How does this relate to Romans 1?

Read Acts 17:26–31.
God made every nation from one man, Adam, for what purpose (vs. 27)?

What does verse 29 tell us that we are NOT to think about God?

What does God command all people everywhere in verse 30?

Read 1 Corinthians 2:6–13.
Write out verses 9–10 on an index card or in your notebook. Read them each day, and soon these promises will be hidden in your heart.

Read 2 Timothy 3:12–17.
Make a list of what you learn about Scripture from these verses.

Read Isaiah 59:21.
What does God promise in his covenant with believers about his Spirit and his Word?

Wrap it up in prayer:
Thank God for clearly revealing himself in creation, through his Word, and through his Spirit.
Thank God for the grace he has shown to you through Jesus Christ’s sacrifice to pay for your sins.
Pray for someone who does not trust in Christ for salvation.

By futuregrace Category: Devotional, Feature, For Parents, Junior High, Sunday School Tags: "The God Who Is There"

Dec 13, 2011

Pageant Video By Lenin {0}

Lenin put together this video of the Christmas Pageant last Sunday. Enjoy.

 

By futuregrace Category: Christmas, For Parents, Video

Parental Inquisition

Oct 18, 2011

Parental Inquisition {0}

I was reading an exert from a book called Sticky Faith today and while I have not read enough to warrant a recommendation I did wish to share one thing I learned.

It was in regards to how we talk to our children about faith. It said we as parents tend to ask our children after church/sunday school/youth group/school/etc. How was youth group? What did you learn? It stated that these are good questions, we should keep asking them, but don’t expect you’ll always get good answers from those questions. The point was our children learn more about what it means to follow Christ by what we share with them than they do from the answers to those questions.

Share your answer and ask for your child’s answer to questions like this. What has God been teaching you lately? What have you struggled with lately? Why are you a follower of Christ?

It also suggest you spend time at dinner or bedtime or sometime with everyone (including parents) answering, High Low questions. What was the best and worst part of the day? Also, What mistake did you make today? (this gives you a place to remind yourself of the grace of God and for you to remind your children of the grace of God). The last question they suggest asking is, How did you see God today?  This again gives us all some perspective as we go through are days. The reality is we won’t always be able to give an answer, but it will keep us looking from the right perspective.

Anyway these are things I plan to incorporate into our family life and I thought I would share.

By futuregrace Category: Feature, For Parents

Sep 12, 2011

Instructing a Child’s Heart Notes {0}

Here are some notes from Pastor Nathan’s parenting class. You can see how he teaches us in the photo below.

By futuregrace Category: For Parents

Full Pockets & Priorities

Jun 30, 2011

Full Pockets & Priorities {0}

How our decisions reveal our priorities 

“No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.” -Matthew 6:24

This morning I’m still thinking about Summer Gathering last night. (June 16th)
We divide into four different discussion groups and go over the questions in our booklet and then add questions on the fly when they add to the discussion.

Last night as students considered up-coming decisions they will be making soon something interesting happened. Included in their list of concerns were: what college to go to, how to pay for college, what career to pursue, who to marry, when to wed, what electives to take next year, what extracurriculars to do, where to work and various other things.

What I never heard and what I challenged them to consider is the question, “How can I best serve Christ’s Church?” I made clear I didn’t simply mean, “How can you serve Redeemer?” or “How can you serve Oak Hills?”, but the Church in a wider sense. They confirmed the never considered this in any decisions. It’s just left me wondering.

How can we, students and adults alike, who profess faith in Christ worry about so many things in this world and never consider how we are serving?

Why are we not asking, How can my life be poured out for the Glory of Christ?

How can I plan my schedule this fall so that I can meet with so and so to go through such and such book for our mutual growth in Christ?

Can I get off work this Monday to help that family in my church move?

How much could I donate to the HCA scholarship fund if I cut out Starbucks this week for cheaper coffee?

I asked if they realized the place that church often plays in our lives. Most often we see what else is going on in our life and if no sports, movies, or parties, TV shows or concerts are planned then we will totally go to Bible study or come to a service project.

The idea is not that I expect a person or family to be at everything Redeemer does, but I would say how you decide what your family is involved in communicates more to your children and reveals more of ourselves than mere verbal statements that say, “church is important.”

 

Every summer we have students who don’t come to RiverRanch because they work. I’ll admit, I really hate to hear that.

It’s not because I care about numbers. This is why: I know that they will make about $200 during that week if they don’t come to camp. I also know that camp costs nearly $300. That’s a $500 impact on their budget which is a lot of money.

Here is why it bothers me. I’ve yet to see a case where that $500 is needed to support their family, it’s not used to care for anyone. Mostly likely it will be used on gas money, insurance premiums, maybe college education (about 26 minutes of college education), iTunes purchases, fast-food, new clothes, smart phones and many other things that really aren’t that important. (These are all fine purchases, just not necessary.)

Camp is fun, it’s goofy, but it’s also time away from daily life, it’s time away from Facebook and twitter and video games and television. Camp schedules a week for students that puts them alone in the Word of God to begin the day and schedules evenings where they are challenged in God’s Word in teaching.

At camp we pray together, eat together, share living space, ride for hours in a bus and many hours in canoes (often sunken canoes) with brothers and sisters in Christ. It builds into the lives of teenagers a connection to others who, like them, are pursuing a life that orbits around the person and value of Jesus Christ.

So I do see a week at camp as more important than extra cash in your pocket. If nothing else this is beginning a pattern in your life as a Christian determining what real priorities are.

The question of priorities is one for all of us. Laura and I have to re-evaluate our priorities on a regular basis. When we don’t (and that happens often) my concern becomes how do I get more time for myself? More time for video games, movies, just relaxing. How do I free up more money for gadgets, entertainment, bicycles, home improvements, eating out, soccer stuff? What worthless waste.

What I want to be asking is how can I get more time to serve and love people at Oasis?

How can I get more time to meet with students and point them to Christ?

How can I free up more money to help so and so pay for school or to buy great books for people or to help Redeemer pay down the debt or to give to that missionary in India or South Africa who is passionately taking the gospel to faraway lands?

We must evaluate our hearts, we must consider texts like Matthew 6:24, “No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.”

We need to honestly ask ourselves, Who is my heart bowing to? Before making decisions ask the same question, Who is my heart bowing to?

And when we find our hearts are bowing to anyone but Christ the King we must go to God in prayer and plead that He will give us right passions for God alone as the supreme joy of our lives.

By futuregrace Category: Devotional, Feature, For Parents, The Clover Patch

The Clover Patch: Loving Discipline

Jun 17, 2011

The Clover Patch: Loving Discipline {0}

 

“My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of His reproof, for the Lord reproves him whom He loves, as a father the son in whom he delights.” -Proverbs 3:11–12 ESV

On my day off this week I went with Laura and the kids to Hy-vee where they have miniature shopping carts that fit Sadie Piper and Beckham perfectly. As we walked through the produce section we watched a mother tell her 4 or 5 year old son to put his flip flops on. He refused. When she approached him to tell him more sternly he began to hit and kick her. She responded by stepping back and beginning a standoff with him. She looked at him with anger in her eyes, he looked at her with even more anger in his eyes.

Beckham stopped moving and just watched wide-eyed as this interaction went on. Laura said he does this every time they see something like this in public. I admit I don’t know the whole story of what we witnessed at Hy-vee, but as I watched both of them looking miserable and trying to gain control over the other, it got me thinking that how we discipline our children displays our love for them in a way that really nothing else will.

So while I was reading Proverbs 4 this morning, verses 11 and 12 jumped out to me. It speaks of discipline from our God and tells us that behind discipline is love. It illustrates the discipline of the Lord with the picture of a father’s discipline for his son. Note it speaks of discipline and not punishment. Consider this chart for a better understanding of the difference.

I’m afraid abuses of parents who punish their children both physically and emotionally have been highlighted by the media and has lead to too many Christian parents neglecting to discipline their children in the love and admonition of the Lord.

At the risk of offending people, let me encourage you to consider how you discipline young children. We don’t do it perfectly, but our desire is to glorify God and love for our children and this I believe is communicated to them.

Repetitive Commands

The child is told not to touch something. They keep doing it and the parents keep saying not to touch it with no reinforcement. The child learns that mom and dad’s commands are not to be followed. Or…when the child keeps disobeying, the parents raise their voice to sound angry (often becoming angry as well) and their voice and anger at times will cause enough fear for the child to obey.

Communicated to the child is this: I do something Dad doesn’t want me to do and I don’t need to obey until they get very angry, if at all.

Time Out

I’ve seen how this works. A child is told not to throw a toy, they do and their parent picks them up and takes them to time out. They are told to stay there and the parents puts a space between the child and themselves. The most interesting thing and honestly ridiculous aspects of this are when the child learns they can just walk out of timeout. The parent (or Super Nanny) simply puts them back in time out over and over again. It’s a vicious cycle.

I believe this communicates when you are bad I want you away from me. There is no training of their heart at work.

Spanking

This is what we do having been convinced of it in two ways. One was when we were living in Dallas and Laura was pregnant; we observed people’s children in our church and those whose children were joyful and loving and polite and obedient we asked what they did. All of them spanked their children when they were young. Some suggested a book called On Becoming Babywise by Gary Ezzo (first year), others a book called Shepherding a Child’s Heart (after a year) by Tedd Tripp.

The other reason (main reason) we spank is because it is biblical.

Proverbs speaks to this form of disciple in many places: Proverbs 24:13″Whoever spares the rod hates his son, but he who loves him is diligent to discipline him.”

Proverbs 22:15 “Folly is bound up in the heart of a child, but the rod of discipline drives it far from him.”

Proverbs 23:13 “Do not withhold discipline from a child; if you strike him with a rod, he will not die.

We believe spanking is the best and most loving way to discipline our children if done in a biblical manner.

When Beckham (or Sadie Piper, she is not too young to understand how and why we discipline her) knows what is expected of him such as not taking toys from his sister’s hands and does it anyway, we tell him to go get a spoon (we use a wooden cooking spoon so that it is not our direct hand making contact). Usually this upsets him and we help calm him down by talking to him. We ask him what he did and he’ll tell us, “I hit Sadie Piper” or “I argued with mommy” or whatever it is. We’ll ask him what God calls that, he’ll say sin. We’ll help him put a biblical term on it: disobedience, not honoring my mother, anger, selfishness, etc.

It varies, but we’ll ask him something along the lines of , “Who calls you to obey mommy and daddy?” He’ll answer, “God” (Ephesians 6:1, “Children obey your parents in the Lord”). Then we’ll ask why does Daddy (or mommy) spank you? He’ll answer, “Because you love me.” He’s sitting in my lap all this time as I hold him. I’ll spank him and it’s really no big deal as far as pain goes, but I do want it to hurt enough for him to take notice.

Then, and this is why I love this method of discipline, we pray to God together. I lead him and he repeats my words. Something like this, “Dear God, please forgive me for sinning again You, thank you for teaching me to obey (or love or whatever it is). Thank you for forgiving me and loving me. Please help me to obey today and glorify You. In Jesus name I pray, amen.”

The he goes to whoever he sinned against and asks for forgiveness. It may be me or Laura or Sadie Piper. He always asks for forgiveness, they accept it and hug each other. This communicates that when you disobey, I don’t push you away, I pull you towards me because I love you and I want you to find the joy that we experience from obedience to God. Like Proverbs says, I love Beckham, I delight in him and so I discipline him.

Now, our children our sinners, they sin many many times everyday. My child may hit yours, my child may say something very cruel, and he will be disciplined and restored after doing so. As I saw the boy in the standoff with his mother it occurred to me just how miserable they both were from lack of any real discipline. He didn’t feel loved because his mother would not take him outside and discipline him in love, she didn’t train him to obey God. Quite the opposite he saw her anger and he knew he was the object of that anger.

Finally, our children’s parents are sinners and they too sin many many times every single day. We even sin against our children and when we do we go to them and ask for forgiveness, modeling for them that we too are called to a standard set by God and we too fail and we too are forgiven in Christ. In this way, the gospel is preached to us all daily. We are sinners in need of God’s grace and mercy. Praise God for Jesus our Savior!

 

Note: This was on our family blog some time ago, I saved as a draft here and only now have returned to post it.

By futuregrace Category: Devotional, Feature, For Parents, The Clover Patch

1 2 3 4 5

Clover Patch Devotional

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  • Junior High Sunday School Session 7 DevotionalJunior High Sunday School Session 7 Devotional

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