EARNESTLY CONTENDING FOR THE
FAITH:
PROPER DISCIPLINE OF THE CHILD PART 2
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4 That they may teach the young
women to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their
children, 5 To be discreet, chaste,
keepers at
home, good,
obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God be not
blasphemed. (Titus 2:4-5).
Mothers,
if you have young children at home and
you work outside the home, then you and your husband are
blaspheming the Word Of God. |
THE LORD JESUS CHRIST IS
GOD MANIFEST IN THE FLESH.
THAT IS WHY HE IS GOD |
Do you know for a fact that if you were
to
die today that you would not go to hell?
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Train up a child in the way he
should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it
(Proverbs 22:6). Foolishness is bound in the heart of a
child; but the rod of correction shall drive it far from him
(Proverbs 22:15). He that spareth his rod hateth his son:
but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes (Proverbs
13:24). Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let not thy
soul spare for his crying (Proverbs 19:18). Withhold not
correction from the child: for if thou beatest him with the
rod, he shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and
shalt deliver his soul from hell. (Proverbs 23:13-14) The
rod and reproof give wisdom: but a child left to himself
bringeth his mother to shame. (Proverbs 29:15) |
The
following article is posted in its entirety to
http://www.earnestlycontendingforthefaith.com/
with the express written consent of Pastor Terry L. Coomer. For
the Adobe© PDF version click
here.
For the Love of the Family Ministries
Missionaries to America’s Forgotten Mission
Field, the Family
For the Love of the Family Series
Pastor Terry L. Coomer
Ministry of Elwood Bible Baptist Church
504 North 12th Street, P.O. Box 535 Elwood, IN
46036
(765) 552-1973
TLCOOMER@juno.com
These messages may be copied in their entirety to help
Christians in the task of rearing their children for God. They
are not to be changed in any manner or to be sold. This header
must be on any copy. If you have any questions, please feel free
to contact the author.
Proper
Discipline of the Child Part 2
Ephesians 6:1-4 "Children, obey your parents in the Lord: for
this is right. Honor thy father and mother; which is the first
commandment with promise; that it may be well with thee, and
thou mayest live long on the earth. And ye fathers, provoke not
your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord."
Good family relationships between sinful parents and sinful
children do not develop naturally, they require much effort. I
suppose the first question that arises immediately as we look at
verse 4 is why did Paul address the fathers? Why did not he
address mothers? Do not the mothers spend more time with their
children than fathers do? When Paul speaks to fathers he is
speaking to the mothers. As the head of the home, the father is
responsible for what mothers do in the home. The father is
addressed as the manager. In addressing the fathers, he is
addressing the one in whom God has vested his authority for
discipline.
When dad manages his household he does not always need to
administer discipline directly. He must discipline the children
largely through his wife. Yet in all, the father must remain in
control and be aware of what happens. God holds him responsible.
So in this verse Paul speaks to the fathers of their
responsibility to see to it that their children are properly
trained.
Ephesians 6:4 "Provoke not your children to wrath." Fathers must
guard against allowing themselves, their wives, or anyone else
in the family to provoke their children to anger. The word for
"wrath" (anger) here means do not exasperate your children that
they may lose heart. In essence, do not take the heart out of
your child. What is it that provokes the child to anger? The
wrong kind of discipline. When there is the wrong kind of
discipline the child gives up and quits. This often happens when
a child has been disciplined in a non-Biblical manner. The most
interesting fact that emerges in talking with such young people
is that it is not discipline itself, nor primarily over
discipline, but rather, it is under discipline that exasperates
children more than anything else.
An example of this would be unannounced rules that are made
known only after the child has broken them, provoke
exasperation. Parents this is not proper discipline. Another
example is inconsistent discipline. The child is told that if he
does a certain thing he will get a spanking. The next day he
does the certain thing but is not disciplined for it. When rules
change day by day, a child does not know where he stands. The
child then becomes exasperated (angry at the situation).
Let me ask a question here. Would you like to play baseball if
the rules changed ever day and were not announced? Why do
parents keep moving the boundaries? The answer lies partly
because they are lazy and they do not work at discipline. Godly
parenting in the area of discipline takes hard work and effort.
Godly discipline also requires change in parents. Many parents
give up too quickly. If they say something today, and they do
not see change instantly, they quit. In essence, they stick with
it two or three days and do not see change they quit. It is like
when they go on a diet.
Parents, we might as well get one fact straight now, it takes
time to discipline a child, and it takes stated, consistent
enforced rules.
If a child is told not to run in church, and the parent sees the
child run in church and does nothing about it, that is
inconsistent discipline. Folks, the child needs to know the
rules and that if they break the rules they will be disciplined.
Sometimes a child gets exasperated because of over discipline.
The parent never gives them room to breathe, the parent has 100
rules and you consistently have to look for infractions. Do not
think you are a good parent because you have 2500 rules. Every
rule that is made must be policed, or it is not worth making.
When a parent fails to police rules, he teaches that he does not
mean discipline.
Another reason for under discipline is divided authority. We
have husbands and wives who disagree over various rules or
penalties. They may do so because they have never taken the time
to reach agreement during the cool before the battle begins.
Together, parents must think through ahead of time what they
will do. Children can see when parents are divided and use their
division to drive a few wedges of their own.
Have you ever seen a mother who is a yeller? The child learns
that they do not have to obey until mom yells. So what happens
is, mom ends up yelling all the time.
Over discipline in some instances provokes children to anger.
The problem is parents who over react. God's Word is the
Christian's standard. It is always well balanced. Parents must
act Biblically, not react. The Holy Spirit must control a
parent. Many parents rightly conclude they must do a better job
of discipline and many times over react and do so in anger.
I know that many people will disagree with me on this next
point, but I understand that. Many people have said children
must never see their parents disagree. I do not think that is
true. The children need to see how parents settle their
disagreements as a Christian. Otherwise, the parents have failed
to teach their children how to handle the problems of marriage
in God's way. Of course, the parents must be committed to
solving problems in their lives God's way.
Accompanying over discipline is often unfairness in punishment.
Over discipliners use a sledgehammer to drive home a tack.
Children are exasperated under that kind of treatment as well.
The over discipliner has never learned how to distinguish
between things that differ. If a child back talks he needs
discipline, but be careful that you do not discourage all talk.
A child needs to communicate with their parents. Another area in
which over discipliners must come to face involves the
importance of learning how to distinguish between what must be
enforced as a rule and what a child must be allowed to learn on
his own.
When we taught our daughter how to swing, I put her in the swing
and helped her get started and then went off and let her
practice and learn on her own. I watched from a distance, I did
not stand right over her. This was something she needs to learn
to take her lumps on. On the other hand, we had a kerosene
heater in our home when the children were young. The heater was
absolutely something we were not going to let a child take their
lumps on. Parents must learn to distinguish between swing issues
and flame issues.
Another example of over discipline is saying "no" to everything.
If someone always said "no" to you how would you feel if you
never received a word of encouragement?
Ephesians 6:2 Notice, "Honor thy father and mother" is positive.
And if they do they will receive a reward "thou mayest live long
on the earth." Ephesians 6:4 notice the word "nurture", it means
training with structure. Parents must learn to discipline but
they must learn to discipline correctly. If you tell the child
you are going to spank them, and they do the infraction again,
spank them! If you tell the child to do something and they will
not do it, do not let that go.
Listen very carefully, the child's will needs to be broken, but
not his spirit. He needs to know that you love him, but He will
be disciplined for doing wrong. If you do not do so, he will
test you to see how far you will let him go.
Parents, there is a certain conduct in a child that should never
be tolerated. A child who is disobedient to what they have been
told to do and non-Christian attitude and conduct should never
go unpunished. A child must learn how to treat other children
with respect and especially adults in authority with respect. A
parent must teach these matters to their children. Ninety
percent of what you will teach your children you will do so
between the ages of zero and twelve. Parents, a child must learn
that what God thinks about it is the most important thing.
Discipline must be consistent as it appears in the Word of God.
I have three very important rules of thumb for you on
discipline:
1. Discipline Early in the Child's Life, Psalm 51:5, Psalm 58:3
2. Discipline Consistently
a. You must remember parental authority is God's authority.
b. Romans 13:1-2, Ephesians 6:1, Hebrews 12:5-11, Proverbs
3:12, Proverbs 13:24, Proverbs 22:15, Proverbs 23:13-14
3. Discipline Improper Reaction and Attitude in the Child's Life |
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