{"id":11630,"date":"2023-07-23T09:10:05","date_gmt":"2023-07-23T13:10:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/?post_type=message&#038;p=11630"},"modified":"2023-08-03T09:13:56","modified_gmt":"2023-08-03T13:13:56","slug":"raising-up-children-in-the-lord","status":"publish","type":"message","link":"https:\/\/www.garycombs.org\/blog\/message\/raising-up-children-in-the-lord","title":{"rendered":"Raising Up Children in the Lord"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Below is an automated transcript of this message<\/h3>\n\n\n\n<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1.549\">Good <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> morning church!  It is good to see all of you here. Good morning to those that are watching online and a special greeting to those that are watching next door in the Gathering Place venue. We do have two venues at our Wilson campus uh on Sunday mornings at both services. If you&#8217;ve never checked out the Gathering Place, it&#8217;s just next door.  We call it the Gathering Place because it has a different look and feel. We gather and we sing a more low key,  folk kind of music, more interactive and engaging. If you&#8217;ve never \u201ckicked the tires\u201d  on the room next door, we invite you to go. <br \/><br \/>We&#8217;re glad to have you here with us in this venue today,  as we continue our sermon series entitled,  \u201cThe Three Rs of Parenting.\u201d    We&#8217;re not talking about \u201creading, writing and arithmetic.\u201d  We&#8217;re talking about receiving your child as a gift from the Lord, raising up your child in the Lord and then returning them, releasing them back to the <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"58.139\">Lord,  <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> to follow the Lord themselves and  to have their own relationship with the Lord. <br \/><br \/>Today, we&#8217;re in part two,  talking about raising up children in the Lord. It&#8217;s my opinion that one of the things you need when you&#8217;re a parent is a good sense of humor, you need to be able to laugh at yourself,  because parenting can be messy at times. And so with that in mind, I&#8217;ve got five memes for you to consider. (Pastor Gary shows memes on screen.)  Having a good sense of humor is helpful for parents, but the truth is,  parenting is no laughing matter. It&#8217;s profoundly important. It might be one of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"161.035\">the <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> most important jobs on planet earth. So, we want to give it our best .  Yet, many of us give very little thought to the idea of parenting.  All of a sudden,  we have a kid and we  think,  Ok, I&#8217;m just going to wing it or  I&#8217;m just going to  do what my parents did to me or I might do  the opposite. I&#8217;m definitely going to  do the opposite of what my parents did to me. So,  we don&#8217;t know how to parent; we need an \u201cowner&#8217;s manual.\u201d  <br \/><br \/>I was thinking about this.  You might consider parenting styles in three categories. I&#8217;ve used this diagram before to describe how Christians relate to their faith. (Pastor Gary shows a diagram. Refer to this to understand this section.)  You&#8217;ll see that some Christians fall here; they\u2019re no longer under law, but they are under grace. I guess that means <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"213.735\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> can do what I want.   Some people fall into that ditch.<br \/><br \/>Some people fall into the ditch of legalism\u2013I&#8217;m going to follow all the commandments.  They become really legalistic. You&#8217;ll see people act like that in their Christianity. They&#8217;ll also act like that in their parenting style. <br \/><br \/>For the  person who falls into this ditch (refer to diagram), their parenting style is to have \u201cfree range\u201d kids.  Whatever they want to do is fine with me. I don&#8217;t want to teach them anything. Let them figure it out on their own. That&#8217;s kind of an extreme way of looking at it;  this is a  \u201chappy go lucky, anything goes\u201d parenting style. It lets them do whatever they want to do. <br \/><br \/>Then,  there&#8217;s the legalistic parent whose home is kind of like a \u201cprison.\u201d   Everything is about <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"264.404\">rules <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> and regulations.  The home environment is  very strict and very, very orderly.  I&#8217;ve found that children, who have grown up in a house like this,  sometimes go pretty wild.  Then, they become Christ followers and they become  parents who  don\u2019t want their  kids to turn out the way that they did. So then,  they weave the car of parenting into the other ditch.   We see children who grew up in a legalistic home and their whole life was described more by what they don&#8217;t do than what they do.  When they have kids of their own, they fall in the other ditch. <br \/><br \/>There&#8217;s a better way.   There&#8217;s a house that&#8217;s marked by the road of love and liberty.  There\u2019s  a house that has the right balance between affection and discipline. It is  marked by this environment so that they breathe the air of affection and love, but <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"321.119\">with <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> boundaries. This is  what we&#8217;re talking about today. <br \/><br \/>Pastor Chuck Swindoll says, \u201cChildren who breathe the air of love in a nurturing home are more likely to respond with submissive obedience.\u201d Balancing discipline and affection in child-rearing is critical.  We want to strike that balance; it\u2019s the balance that the word of God gives us. <br \/><br \/>As we look at the text today, we&#8217;re going to  be looking at Ephesians 6.  We&#8217;re going to see four imperatives, four commands that Paul gives to the believers in Ephesus, to the town of Ephesus,  where there&#8217;s a great church. He gives these four imperatives,  but may I caution all of us,  as we think about this as parents, as moms and dads, uncles, aunts and grandparents that it is not a \u201crecipe.\u201d   If I do this, this, this and this, I&#8217;ll <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"374.51\">turn <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> out perfect children, but that&#8217;s just not the case. All of us have free will. If we follow these four imperatives, we have to do it in the power of the Lord. You can&#8217;t give what you don&#8217;t have. You have to receive power from the Lord. Then, you have to recognize that it is messy work. It&#8217;s hard work. We need to give ourselves grace because every child has free will.  <br \/><br \/>You can be perfect at following the four imperatives that I&#8217;m about to give you,  yet, your child still has to choose and still has free will to follow you and to follow God. So, we pray for mercy. Being a mom,  a dad,  a grandparent, an uncle or an aunt, more than anything,  drives us to our knees because we need God&#8217;s mercy in order to do it. \n \nLet&#8217;s look at the text, in  Ephesians 6 and then we will look for these four imperatives. Ephesians 6:1-4 (ESV)<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"433.94\">1<i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>1 Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. 2 \u201cHonor your father and mother\u201d (this is the first commandment with a promise), 3 \u201cthat it may go well with you and that you may live long in the land.\u201d 4 Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. This is God&#8217;s word. Amen. <br \/><br \/>How to Raise Up Your Child in the Lord:<br \/><br \/>1. Teach them godly and right obedience.<br \/><br \/>Look at verse one, \u201cChildren, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right.\u201d  There&#8217;s your imperative Greek word; it&#8217;s the word, \u201cobey.\u201d   It&#8217;s the Greek word. The word is \u201c\u1f51\u03c0\u03b1\u03ba\u03bf\u03cd\u03b5\u03c4\u03b5, hupakouete,\u201d which  means \u201cto come under hearing.\u201d  In Greek, it means \u201cto come under.\u201d   We use that in English today. We say, \u2018Ok, He <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"495.67\">gave <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> me a shot with a Hypodermic needle.\u2019   \u201cHypo\u201d is from which means under and \u201cdermic\u201d  is from \u201cdermas\u201d  which means skin. So,  you get a shot under the skin, right?  Obey means to come under hearing. That implies something. <br \/><br \/>I want you to think about this for a second; this commandment is to children. How many of you started out as children? Everybody here started out as children, right? Nobody here just got \u201cbeamed\u201d to earth, you know. We all started out as children; first of all, it&#8217;s to us as children. We have many young people here. The word,  \u201cchildren,\u201d  here is primarily dependent children. <br \/><br \/>There are many Greek words for  the word, \u201cchild.\u201d  This particular one speaks to a dependent child. This is one who&#8217;s still under your roof;  one under the age of 18. There&#8217;s kind of a time stamp here,  if you would, that obedience is what you owe your <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"548.88\">parents <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> at this age.<br \/><br \/>In verse 2,  there&#8217;s the next word, which is \u201chonor,\u201d  which has no time stamp. You owe that to your parents forever. You always owe them honor, but remember the words,  \u201cobey\u201d and to \u201ccome under.\u201d<br \/><br \/>I want to think about this, not just  as children, but as parents, so that if I look at it through that lens, how can I raise my children? So that I can  teach them to obey,  since they are to \u201ccome under hearing.\u201d  My job,  as a parent,  is to teach them to do that. If they&#8217;re to \u201ccome under\u201d  hearing, I must give them something to hear.  I have to give them instruction.   I have to tell them right from wrong. I have to be a voice that&#8217;s speaking into their life.<br \/><br \/>May I say to you, it&#8217;s important  what information you put in.   I think,  primarily,  that you give them the word of God <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"599.44\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> but that is  not all that you give them, but the primary mission is to teach them to obey. <br \/><br \/>Let\u2019s think about that for a second \u2013 to teach them Godly and right obedience. Look at how he says it, 1 \u201cChildren, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right.\u201d  The child&#8217;s motivation should be that the parents are stewards under the Lord. When they obey their mom and dad, they are  obeying the Lord. That&#8217;s an insight, so then,  you as a parent,  should be teaching it that way. <br \/><br \/>Let\u2019s  say that daddy needs to talk to you. Daddy  asks  you to sit on the edge of the bed and look at him.  He needs to ask you some questions. \u2018Why did you hit your brother?  Why did you do it?\u2019  You tell him that it was because you were  frustrated that he wouldn&#8217;t get out of your  room. So you and your daddy continue  talking it out.  <br \/><br \/>You, as a parent <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"653.44\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> try to get to their heart.  You try to get to the place where they recognize  why they  chose violence and why it was  wrong. \u201cDid you hurt your brother?\u201d   \u201cYeah.\u201d   \u201cIs that  a good thing?\u201d  \u201cNo.\u201d You&#8217;re teaching them what is right.  You&#8217;re trying to move past the behavior to the heart issue. As you move to the heart issue, you say,  \u2018Now, you know, daddy needs to discipline you because what you did was wrong. I&#8217;m doing this because I&#8217;m under the Lord. Let&#8217;s take your heart to the Lord right now and say, \u2018Lord, forgive me for hitting my brother.\u2019 We work on that. Then I tell him, \u2018We will go out together and you&#8217;re going to  ask your brother to forgive you. You are to say,  \u201cI&#8217;m sorry, I hit you. Will, you forgive me? I don&#8217;t want to do that again. I&#8217;m sorry that  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"698.2\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> did that.\u201d\u2019 You&#8217;re moving them past to  stop hitting your brother to \u201ccome under hearing\u201d and  to come under the Lord. You&#8217;re trying to move them towards following the Lord on their own. <br \/><br \/>May I say this to you \u2013 Discipling  when a child is young becomes their self discipline as they grow older.   Your lack of discipline will cause them to have a lack of self discipline as they get older. You want to train them up, teach them Godly and right obedience. <br \/><br \/>I like what Paul says.  It&#8217;s just right for children to obey their parents. This is right. It&#8217;s wrong for them not to obey their parents.  He appeals to the Lord, but he,  also,  appeals to our sense of morality that,  regardless of what culture you grew up in, it&#8217;s just wrong to disobey your parents. It&#8217;s right to obey your parents.  It&#8217;s just right. If you think about it like that <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"751.049\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>then  it&#8217;s important.  Now,  what do we give them? I would say you could give them  a lot of things to obey. You could give them  a lot; you could teach them  a lot of different things. <br \/><br \/>I was talking to a grandparent before the first service and he said that his four year old grandson has just learned to snap his fingers.  I asked, \u201cDid you teach him?\u201d  He replied, \u201cYes. I taught him to snap his fingers.\u201d  He can snap his fingers now. His grandfather taught him how to do it.  Another granddaughter was taught to whistle;  she&#8217;s whistling now. No one can whistle as good as the guy on the Andy Griffith show. Have you ever tried to whistle  the opening tune? Some of you can hear it in your heads right now, right? That&#8217;s some good whistling. <br \/><br \/>You can teach your children almost <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"791.94\">anything <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>, but primarily,  you want to  teach them the word of God because you&#8217;re teaching them to obey in the Lord. <br \/><br \/>Look at what it says in Deuteronomy 6:6-7 (NKJV)  \u201cAnd these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up.\u201d  If we look earlier in Deuteronomy 6:4-6, it says, 4 Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.[a] 5 Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. 6 These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts. 7 Impress them on your children\u2026\u201d    Teach them this. <br \/><br \/>How do you teach them? Do we all sit down in a formal classroom and <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"842.45\">get<i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> our  notebooks out?  No. Teach them when you rise up in the morning over the breakfast meal.   Teach them  as you walk along the way or as you&#8217;re driving your car and you&#8217;re looking out the window.  You&#8217;ll have to get those ipads and smartphones out of their hands or it is going to  be hard to get them to look out the window;  kids don&#8217;t even know what&#8217;s outside their window when you are going down the road because of this. <br \/><br \/>When I was growing up, I did stuff like count cows and things like that. How many cows were on my side and how many are on your side.   and we used to do this. We used to  count VW beetles; now, it\u2019s hard to spot them; it is rare to see them  today.  Today, everybody&#8217;s in the back seat, all of your children or  your grandchildren. They\u2019re  in the back seat and you can&#8217;t even get <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"883.455\">their <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> attention. (Well, that&#8217;s a \u201csidebar.\u201d  I didn&#8217;t mean to chase that one. Let me get back to what I was talking about.)  You can teach them  as you&#8217;re driving down the road.   You can teach them as you&#8217;re rising up and as you&#8217;re lying down.  <br \/><br \/>In other words, make your faith part of your life. It&#8217;s not just what you do on Sunday. It&#8217;s what you do every day and your child will see this.   Your child will learn it not by being taught, but by \u201ccatching\u201d  because  \u201cfaith is caught, not taught.\u201d They&#8217;ll \u201ccatch\u201d  it from you because it&#8217;s real,  it&#8217;s vibrant, it&#8217;s the air you breathe,  so you make it part of your life.   <br \/><br \/>Children that obey their parents please the Lord.  Colossians 3:20 (ESV) \u201cChildren, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.\u201d<br \/><br \/>Are you a young person today and still living in your parents\u2019 house? You are  still dependent on them. It pleases the Lord for you to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"937.349\">obey <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> your parents.   <br \/><br \/>Now, there are a couple of parenting myths that we see in the world today. I&#8217;m borrowing this from Pastor Chip Ingram&#8217;s book, \u201cEffective Parenting in a Defective World.\u201d   If you&#8217;re adding books to your parenting library, I encourage you to purchase this one. It&#8217;s a good book. <br \/><br \/>Here&#8217;s one of his parenting myths:  \u201cMy children&#8217;s primary responsibility is to juggle the schoolwork and extracurricular activities that will make them well-rounded, successful adults.\u201d  That\u2019s the American myth now for child rearing.  Parents are trying to make them well rounded so they can play the violin, do gymnastics,  be a professional soccer ball player,  be a straight A student in school and become a doctor. We&#8217;ve got these views of what success is for our children. Here is the parenting reality:   \u201cMy children&#8217;s primary responsibility is to learn healthy obedience.\u201d   If we don&#8217;t teach them obedience, that all those other things will not be open to them. If <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"997.479\">we <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>don&#8217;t teach them obedience, then the teacher at school will try to teach them obedience. If the teacher can&#8217;t teach them obedience, then the principal will try. If the principal can&#8217;t teach them, then the police officer will try to teach them obedience. If the police officer can&#8217;t teach them, then the judge will try. If the judge can&#8217;t succeed, the jail will try. Do you see where I&#8217;m going? Somewhere out there they will learn to obey something. Why not teach them obedience? <br \/><br \/>The primary job is to teach them to obey and to teach them right from wrong.   Parents use all kinds of methods.  Let me throw some out at you that I might call \u201cworldly methods.\u201d  These are the kinds of methods to teach your child obedience that I don&#8217;t recommend. Some of us fall into these types of methods:<br \/><br \/>Bribing\t\t\t\u201cCome to mommy and I\u2019ll give you a sucker.\u201d\nThreatening\t\t\u201cIf you don\u2019t pick up your toys, I\u2019m going to throw them in the garbage!\u201d\nEmotional appeal\t\u201cAfter all I do for you, this is how you repay me?\u201d\nReasoning\t\t\u201cBut Sweetie, your hotdog will get cold if you don\u2019t come to eat now.\u201d\nYelling\t\t\t\u201cHow many times do I have to scream at you?\u201d\nCountdown\t\t\u201cI\u2019m going to count to three, and then you better get over here.\u201d\nTeapot\t\t\t\u201cI\u2019ve had all I can take\u2026 now you\u2019re going to get it.\u201d<br \/><br \/>Let&#8217;s put those aside and learn to teach our children to obey by bringing them under hearing, aiming not just at their outward behavior, but aiming at the heart issues and asking for the Lord&#8217;s help to do that <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1119.03\">. <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> <br \/><br \/>2. Establish an environment of mutual respect.<br \/><br \/>We&#8217;re looking at verses two and three now.   The imperative in the Greek here is the word,  \u201chonor.\u201d  It&#8217;s a Greek comparative.  \u201cHonor your father and mother.\u201d  Paul is  quoting the Ten Commandments here. He&#8217;s quoting commandment number five, \u201cHonor your father and mother.\u201d  This commandment has no time stamp on. It doesn&#8217;t matter how old you are, you&#8217;re to honor your mom and dad. You&#8217;re to give them honor. <br \/><br \/>The word,  \u201chonor,\u201d  could be translated, \u201crespect.\u201d It could be translated as \u201cto revere\u201d or  \u201cto value.\u201d  Honor has two movements; the first movement is to recognize someone is deserving of honor. That person is deserving.   The second movement  is to give them honor. The word, \u201chonor,\u201d  could also be translated \u201cvalue,\u201d  as in monetary value.  We never outgrow this    <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1175.689\">idea <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> that children are taken care of by   their parents when they&#8217;re young. Then,  when parents are old, the grown children now will honor them by not just respecting them, but also taking care of them physically, financially\u2026 This word,  \u201chonor,\u201d  encompasses all of that.<br \/><br \/>If you go and speak somewhere, they&#8217;ll give you an honorarium. In other words, they&#8217;ll give you financial gifts. So,  this word,  \u201chonor,\u201d  includes the idea of  that kind of respect. <br \/><br \/>He gives a couple of reasons. One is there&#8217;s a promise. He says, in verse 3 \u201cthat it may go well with you.\u201d  It goes better if you obey your parents.  Another reason in verse 3  is  \u201cthat you may live long in the land.\u201d  He was speaking primarily to the Jews who were God&#8217;s chosen people and they&#8217;ve been given a <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1232.79\">Promised <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>Land. He was basically saying  that disobedient children,  being raised up disobedient and dishonoring to their parents,  undermines the society so that they could lose their land,  as it were.  They could lose their nation;  they could lose their land. <br \/><br \/>Think about that. Think about our culture today. Disobedient children, dishonoring children put American society at risk.  You don&#8217;t have to make such a leap of logic to see this, to see what happens because the basic building block of any society is the family. Any nation will crumble with disobedient, dishonoring children.  Living  long in the land is the promise if you honor your parents. <br \/><br \/>He&#8217;s quoting the fifth commandment.  Deuteronomy 5:16 (ESV) says,  \u201cHonor your father and your mother, as the Lord your God commanded you, that your days may be long, and that it may go well with you in the land that the Lord your God is giving you.\u201d  If you think about the decalogue <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1297.91\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> the first five of the Ten Commandments  are really more towards God. Sometimes as Christians, we think of that fifth one, \u201cHonor your father and mother,\u201d  as belonging to the horizontal relationship, but that&#8217;s not the way the Jews saw it. The Jews saw the first five as belonging to the way you relate to God and  the last five commandments as  horizontal towards God.  The Jewish mind saw honoring your parents as connected to the way that  you honor God.   To honor God includes honoring your parents. <br \/><br \/>What does this honor look like?   We had a young family attending our church some years ago that was literally following one of these parenting books and it was a good thing. They taught their daughter how to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1354.949\">obey <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>; what&#8217;s an honoring way to obey.  They would ask her, \u201cHow do you obey?\u201d  She would say to them, \u201cImmediately, sweetly and completely.\u201d  That&#8217;s pretty good because slow obedience is no obedience;  so obey immediately.   Sweetly;  that&#8217;s your attitude. Completely;  don\u2019t obey just  halfway done.   Obey all the way. This is  honoring,  so teach them to honor another way. You want your child to respect you, if you want them to honor you, you reap what you sow, so if you disrespect and dishonor your child, what do you reap back? <br \/><br \/>You have to be careful when you correct them. Don&#8217;t do it in front of their siblings because the other siblings will be behind thinking, Get him, dad. It will cause the child being disciplined  to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1415.329\">react <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> in  the wrong manner.   Take him to a private place to have the conversation and to discipline him. Take them to their bedroom and  shut the door.  Get \u201ceyeball to eyeball\u201d with them, getting  down to their level because you are loud and large and they&#8217;re little.   They have little voices. Honor them, and then,  they&#8217;ll learn to honor you.  You create an environment in your house.  <br \/><br \/>Moms and dads, if you&#8217;re disrespectful to each other, you&#8217;re teaching your children disrespect.  You&#8217;re teaching them dishonor. If  grandparents, uncles and aunts are  dishonoring to each other, then they\u2019re  sowing dishonor in your house. Then,  your children reap it. And so you, you, you create an environment of mutual respect and honor in your house. This includes honorifics. <br \/><br \/>What&#8217;s an honorific? Have your children call you dad or mom, daddy or mommy\u2026 Don&#8217;t have them call you by your first name. Now <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1470.02\">, <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> they get confused about this when they are really small because they hear mom and dad talking to each other.  For example, my wife&#8217;s name is Robin.  My children have heard me call her Robin.  Then, your toddler says, \u201cRobin.\u201d  You have to say to that toddler, \u201cNo. You can&#8217;t call her Robin. You have to call her mommy.\u201d What happens is parents stop calling each other by their first names anymore. We lose our first names when we become parents. We start calling each other mommy and daddy to keep them straight, right? When you become a grandparent, you&#8217;ve left your name far behind. I&#8217;m \u201cPapaw\u201d  now to ten  grandkids. When my wife talks to <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1510.545\">me <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>in front of the grandkids, she calls me \u201cPapaw.\u201d What are we doing? We&#8217;re teaching them honorifics; we&#8217;re teaching them the titles of honor that belong to those  because of their status in the family system. We do it even as they talk to other adults, we teach them to say, \u201cYes, sir. No,  sir.\u201d \nI hear people sometimes say, \u201cWhy do we need that?\u201d  It is because our society is crude enough in its language. We need to \u201cback up the bus\u201d  and put that back in the family.   Put that back in the environment. <br \/><br \/>One of the things I like about eastern North Carolina is that \u201cMr.\u201d and \u201cMiss\u201d are added to names as an honorific.  Thank you, Mr Gary. How are you, Mr. Gary?  Mr. is a title of respect.   <br \/><br \/>When we go to Africa and do mission trips to Uganda, the people there  will often refer <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1561.369\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> me as \u201cPapa.\u201d  My wife\u2019s  name is Robin, but pastor George Mbonye, the pastor that we partner with there,  will call my wife, \u201cMama Robinah.\u201d  His wife\u2019s name is Robinah, so he  calls  my wife \u201cRobinah, \u201c but he doesn\u2019t just call her \u201cRobinah.\u201d He calls her \u201cMama Robinah.\u201d  The people  still hold on to the honorifics of their culture,  which creates an environment. They create respect and honor in their language. <br \/><br \/>Our language is becoming coarse today and we&#8217;re losing the honorifics, but we want to teach children to honor. They must be taught to obey.  They must be taught to honor. The best way to do it is by creating an environment of mutual respect.<br \/><br \/>3. Encourage them with sensitivity and consistency.<br \/><br \/>We&#8217;re on verse four.  We&#8217;re going to get our last two imperative verbs out of verse four. The, the verb here is \u201cdo <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1627.089\">not <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> provoke.\u201d  It&#8217;s in the negative. It tells you not to do something;  it addresses fathers. I think that fathers include mothers, but it might be surprising that he doesn&#8217;t just talk to mothers because society would say that the mom&#8217;s job is to raise the kids. That&#8217;s not the way the Bible sees it. The Bible says that fathers are to take the lead. They are  to take responsibility with the mother. I think it includes both parents. <br \/><br \/>Paul might also be mentioning fathers, particularly,  because fathers have a particular problem. We often provoke our children with our anger,  which causes their anger. Remember how I said, \u201cIf you sow honor, you reap honor?\u201d  Well, if you sow anger, guess what? You reap anger if you discipline your children in anger.  Fathers,  by and large on average, are larger and louder. We have a deeper voice, right? It&#8217;s intimidating <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1691.819\">to <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> a little kid. We are more powerful, we&#8217;re stronger. I can make this child do what I want him to do. You can, but is that the best way to do it?  Be careful that you don&#8217;t provoke your children to anger. They might not show anger in front of you because they&#8217;re afraid of you. At least when they&#8217;re small,  they wait until you leave the room. If you discipline out of anger, you&#8217;re sowing anger.  The child will reap your anger; you&#8217;ll be provoking them.  It  has this idea of  \u201cto rouse,\u201d  \u201cto exasperate,\u201d  \u201cto drive them to discouragement or frustration,\u201d so  that you&#8217;re causing the wrong outcome to happen in their heart.  You might change their outward behavior, but their heart is frustrated.  Their heart is  angry. <br \/><br \/>What are some things that you can do to provoke a child to anger? Fault  finding,  just being picky or  they can&#8217;t do anything right will provoke your childr to anger. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1746.619\">Everything <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> is fault, fault, fault, fault, fault. It is found in the legalistic house. <br \/><br \/>I tell you something else that will provoke them  to anger is not spending face to face time to build a relationship of trust. We have a saying at our church, \u201cBuild a bridge of trust that will bear the weight of truth.\u201d   We use that often. We&#8217;re talking about sharing the gospel.  We should share the gospel on a relational bridge.  We  build the bridge of trust that will bear the weight of truth.This is  also true in parenting. Make sure that your child,  above all,  knows that you love him, that your relationship is never at risk. You&#8217;re giving them the truth.  You&#8217;re explaining to them what they&#8217;ve done wrong and you&#8217;re correcting that, but you love them.   Saturate it with love,  so that they trust you. It will   provoke them to anger if they don&#8217;t have that relationship of love and  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1801.88\">all <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> they have is this person who says \u201cno\u201d all of the time.  <br \/><br \/>Something else that will provoke your child  to anger is bad labels. Some of us are still carrying around those labels today as adults\u2013 identities from parents who called us names. Can&#8217;t you do anything right? You&#8217;re so slow. You&#8217;re not good at math. Why can&#8217;t you be like your brother? These kinds of things drive your child, provoke your child to anger;   they demolish their identity.   <br \/><br \/>When my children were small, (I&#8217;m going to confess a sin area to you. My children already know about the sin area) my wife and I were overwhelmed for a season.   I had a sin area. I tried to clean it up by putting it to song. We&#8217;re sitting around the dinner table with  three little kids. One is  five, one is  two and  the other is  one. Can you picture that with me? One is  in a high chair, one is  in a booster chair and one is  in a regular chair. <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1869.849\">The <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> oldest one could not stop talking. You&#8217;re at the table, trying to get a little peace and quiet and he&#8217;s talking.   He&#8217;s pestering  his brother. He can&#8217;t stop talking. The middle child cannot stop spilling his drink. Every time he would spill it, he would spill it towards me. I don&#8217;t know why he couldn&#8217;t spill it towards his mother. Once in a while, he would knock his drink over and it would go into my plate and my whole plate would be filled with whatever kind of drink he was drinking.   Then my baby, she&#8217;s little and she&#8217;s overwhelmed with all this, so she&#8217;s whining.   So I wrote a song. Do you want to  hear it? Do you want me to sing in front of you?  I would be sitting at the table and this chaos was just getting worse and worse.  I would sing,  \u201cWhiner,  Slimer and Gatlin Gun Mouth.\u201d  All three of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1921.199\">my <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> kids can still sing that song.   <br \/><br \/>I was talking to my son, \u201cSlimer,\u201d  earlier this week. He&#8217;s preaching this same sermon in Rocky Mount right now.   Who knows what he&#8217;s saying about his father, right? Earlier this week  I said to him,  \u201cI apologize. I&#8217;m sorry that  I did that to you.\u201d He says to me, \u201cDad, I always thought that was hilarious.\u201d  I said to him,  \u201cYeah, but I look back on it now and I realized I was exasperating you. I was provoking you. I wasn&#8217;t parenting very well.\u201d   He says back to me,  \u201cWell, I guess you were overwhelmed.\u201d  I said, \u201cYeah, I think that&#8217;s what you do when they&#8217;re little. You stay overwhelmed and exhausted.  Your Children find out that you&#8217;re sinners. You&#8217;re not perfect and parenting is messy.\u201d   That&#8217;s why we need Jesus. That&#8217;s why we need grace. That&#8217;s why we need mercy. <br \/><br \/>I look at my three children today and thank the Lord for His mercy because <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"1980.93\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> tried my best to mess them up. I tried my best to do it right, but I often messed up and sometimes I even put it to music. <br \/><br \/>Don&#8217;t provoke your children to anger.  Colossians 3:21 (NLT) \u201cFathers, don&#8217;t aggravate your children. If you do, they will become discouraged and quit trying.\u201d Don&#8217;t aggravate your children;  don&#8217;t provoke them. <br \/><br \/>Here&#8217;s another book that I would recommend to you is  by Dr. Ted Tripp,  \u201cShepherding A Child&#8217;s Heart,\u201d  \u201cYour child\u2019s behavior reflects his heart. If you are to really help him, you must be concerned with the attitudes of the heart that drive his behavior. This understanding does marvelous things for discipline. It makes the heart the issue, not just the behavior.  The point of confrontation is what is occurring in the heart. Your concern is to unmask your child\u2019s sin, helping him to understand how it reflects a heart that has strayed. That leads to the cross of Christ.\u201d  His big idea is that a child&#8217;s outward behavior reflects their inner heart condition. When you parent,  aim at the heart and what this requires is God&#8217;s help.  It requires pulling them away to a quiet place.  Their bedroom was  where we would go when I was raising my children. We would  sit on the corner of the bed. <br \/><br \/>We rented Forest Hills  Middle School for our church services for 15 years. We would set up and tear <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2041.839\">down <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> every Sunday. My son, Jonathan, whenever he was finished with his duties, would start running the hallways.   He had a little \u201ctribe\u201d  that ran with him of these little boys that were of similar age. We always had to have a custodian to  open and close the building. One of the custodian\u2019s  names  was Mr. Barnes. Mr.  Barnes would come to me at the end of almost every service for several years and say, \u201cReverend Combs, that boy of yours was running the halls again. Today,  he got in the teacher&#8217;s lounge and got into their stuff. He was in there eating some of their snacks.\u201d  I would thank Mr. Barnes and go  find Jonathan.  His face would be red from running the halls. I would tell him to get in the van and wait for me.   I&#8217;d get <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2089.8\">in <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> the van and it would be time to go home. I&#8217;d say to him, \u201cNow,  when we get home, I want you to go straight to your room. Do not go anywhere but go straight to your room and sit on the corner of the bed.  Wait for me to come up there. You&#8217;re not coming straight to lunch, you&#8217;re going straight to your room.\u201d   I would give him a minute and give myself a minute because I was just tired of this happening  every Sunday. It didn&#8217;t mean rebellion. It was  like he couldn&#8217;t stop running in the halls and getting in trouble. Plus,  I was embarrassed because the custodian.  That boy of yours.   I was embarrassed. I&#8217;m not saying all of my motivations were pure,  but I would say to him, \u201cGo to your room and wait.\u201d  My son has told me that,  to this day,  the waiting in the room was worse than the discipline. He was picturing everything <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2133.3\">I <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> was going to say to him and everything he was going to say back to me and how he&#8217;s gonna get out of it, but knowing there&#8217;s no way to get out.   One time,  I went up to see him. He was probably about 10 or 11 years old and  he&#8217;s still running the halls on Sundays. I can&#8217;t get him to stop. I go to his room and say to him, \u201cWhat am I going to  do with you? I&#8217;m at my wits end.   I don&#8217;t know what else to do with you.\u201d   He puts his hand on my shoulder and says to me,  \u201cI know dad. It&#8217;s hard.\u201d   How do you keep it together without laughing when you have a kid like that?<br \/><br \/>4. Train them with appropriate discipline and instruction.<br \/><br \/>The fourth imperative is  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2172.86\">in  <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span the latter part of verse four, \u201cbring them up.\u201d In other words, \u201ctrain them up.\u201d  That's in the Greek imperative. This verb, \u201cbring them up,\u201d  has the idea of \u201cto nourish\u201d or  \u201cto train.\u201d <br \/><br \/>If you&#8217;ve ever raised tomatoes, if you just put the tomato plant in the ground, it just runs along the ground and is more susceptible to different kinds of diseases and mildew. People that want to  raise great tomatoes will  put a cage around the plant or put a stake  in the ground. My grandfather always drove a wooden stake in the ground and then, as the tomato vine would grow, he would tie it off and he would train the tomato vine to grow up toward the sun. He would have these beautiful big tomatoes.   As it would grow, he&#8217;d tie it off again.   May I suggest to you that I&#8217;m not really talking <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2227.12\">about <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> tomatoes. I&#8217;m talking about bringing up children, training up children. If you&#8217;ll picture the tomato stake  as God&#8217;s word, pointing to the heavens straight up.   As your children grow, they can only understand a little bit, so you tie off a little bit,  but as they get bigger and stronger you continue to  tie off.  You&#8217;re training them up, you&#8217;re bringing them up, you&#8217;re nourishing them in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.  You are  bringing  them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.<br \/><br \/>Discipline often has the idea of more of an outward kind of physical correction, which I think includes, when they&#8217;re little, to actually pick them up and move  them from whatever they&#8217;re doing wrong to as is appropriate.  Physical discipline, whether it be spanking or whatever, should be appropriate and not damaging. From ages 2 to 8 is a rough idea of when physical discipline is most appropriate. The word,  \u201cdiscipline,\u201d  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2294.879\">here <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> includes disciplinary correction. <br \/><br \/>\u201cChastisement\u201d  includes verbal instruction,  which needs to go hand in hand. Verbal instruction  means to reach the mind. The Greek word here means,  \u201cof the mind.\u201d You need to give them discipline that affects the body and the mind.  May I say to you,  that if you don&#8217;t discipline your children  between the ages of  two and eight, you&#8217;re going to  have a fit with discipling them when they reach the age of 12 through  18.   I see parents get this upside down. They try to be their child&#8217;s little buddy.  Hey, we&#8217;re buds, we&#8217;re friends. I  know you couldn\u2019t help it. You were  just too sleepy.  You  didn&#8217;t mean to slap mommy in the face. You  make excuses for them because they&#8217;re little and then when they&#8217;re between the ages of 12 and 15, they realize, Oh, I&#8217;ve created a monster here. Then they try to be a \u201cprison warden.\u201d  It  <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2349.37\">doesn\u2019t <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>work that way. It&#8217;s so much easier if you&#8217;ll correct them between the ages of two and eight.   Then,  you&#8217;ll have a friend between the ages of 12 and 18. You&#8217;ll have the potential to begin to \u201ctake the training wheels off at that point.<br \/><br \/>Proverbs 22:6 (ESV) \u201cTrain up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it.\u201d  Start training  when they&#8217;re children. That&#8217;s what you do. <br \/><br \/>Proverbs 23:13-14 (NLT) \u201cDon&#8217;t fail to correct your children. They won&#8217;t die if you spank them. Physical discipline may well save them from death.\u201d  It is better for you to spank them than the judge or  the police officer, because you love them and you can do it in an environment that&#8217;s appropriate. <br \/><br \/>Proverbs 19:18 (NLT) \u201cDiscipline your children while there is hope. Otherwise you will ruin their lives.\u201d  This is back to what I was talking about\u2013 between the ages of 2 and 8,  when they&#8217;re little, then here&#8217;s hope.  As they get <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2409.53\">older <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span>, it gets harder and harder to raise them up and discipline them  because you&#8217;ve already set a \u201ctrack record\u201d here.   \u201cDiscipline your children while there&#8217;s hope.\u201d<br \/><br \/>For those of you that might be concerned about spanking and physical discipline,  may I describe to you there&#8217;s a distinction between physical abuse and appropriate discipline. There&#8217;s a big distinctive \u2013 physical abuse leaves a mark. It leaves a scar. It harms the child.   Appropriate physical discipline,  whether  it be spanking or removing their body to somewhere and saying, \u2018Time out.  Sit in this chair,\u201d  doesn&#8217;t leave a scar.   It doesn&#8217;t leave a mark, but it leaves an impression so that they connect the behavior with the discipline. It begins to form self discipline, where the child is thinking, I would prefer this than that. They learn; they begin to learn when they&#8217;re little. It&#8217;s helpful. <br \/><br \/>Hebrews 12:11 (ESV) \u201cFor the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have<span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2474.889\">been <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> trained by it.\u201d Discipline is supposed to cause discomfort but not  permanent harm, so,  there&#8217;s a distinction between abuse and discipline. There&#8217;s a distinction between \u201ccrushing the spirit\u201d and \u201cshaping the will.\u201d  You don&#8217;t want to \u201ccrush their spirit,\u201d especially if you have that strong-willed child;  you don&#8217;t want to \u201ccrush their spirit.\u201d  You want to shape it. They&#8217;re probably going to grow up to be a great leader, so you want to  be careful about how you manage your discipline.   <br \/><br \/>There&#8217;s a distinction between normal childishness and willful defiance. I used to get this wrong.  I&#8217;m sorry. This is turning out to be my parental confession. I used to get this wrong when they were little\u2013 they would just get on my last nerve. Do you know what I mean? I&#8217;d just be so tired. My wife would get tired and it would be a drink that spilled,  something would get  broken or something else.  I would  haul off and say,  \u201cWhy <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2530.29\">can&#8217;t <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> you sit still?\u201d I would  start yelling at them and I would see the little face.   I would realize that  I&#8217;m being loud and large again. I would discipline childishness.   Do you remember those little hands with the little dimples where there are supposed to be knuckles?   Those little fat hands are uncoordinated. They don&#8217;t mean to spill. They don&#8217;t mean to break things. They&#8217;re little;  discipline is not so much required there as it is instruction to help them understand. But,  if they say \u201cno\u201d  to you when you  tell them to do something,  that cannot be tolerated. Mom and dad that must be addressed because refer to imperative. Number one, you must teach your child to obey. You cannot allow willful defiance because that will raise its bitter head against God at a later time. <br \/><br \/>Chip Ingram gives a parenting myth  versus a biblical reality in his book, \u201cEffective Parenting In A Defective World.\u201d   He says that  the <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2590.84\">parenting <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> myth today is:  \u201cYour goal is to make your kids happy.\u201d    Get them a happy meal. That&#8217;s the goal \u2013make them happy.  The Bible says that your goal is to train your kids to be holy and to be \u201cset apart\u201d  in the Lord.   <br \/><br \/>As I close, I want us to think about the three Rs that we&#8217;re covering during this series. Last week, we said you&#8217;re to receive your child as a gift from the Lord, that children are a heritage, a gift and a  blessing. That&#8217;s your attitude. Today,  we&#8217;ve talked about how our job is to raise them up. You&#8217;re taking hold of God&#8217;s hand, asking Him to empower you.   You&#8217;re following His word.   You&#8217;re recognizing that you&#8217;re not perfect. Maybe you&#8217;re like me and you&#8217;re having to confess your sins. Sometimes you have to go to your child and say, \u201cDaddy is  sorry.   <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2641.659\">Mommy <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> is  sorry that I raised my voice. I shouldn&#8217;t have done that. I didn&#8217;t mean to do that.\u201d  You&#8217;re teaching them how to obey and how to get forgiveness. You&#8217;re raising them up, so you receive them as a gift from the Lord. You&#8217;re raising them up.  Next week,  we&#8217;re going to talk about how you release them to the Lord, so that they look to Him as father and now you have a friend, now you have a partner to fellowship with in life.  That&#8217;s what we want to see happen as we raise our children up. <br \/><br \/>Let&#8217;s pray.  Lord, thank You for Your word today. I pray , first of all,  for that person who is here today who has never given their life to You. If you&#8217;ve never given your life to Jesus, then you&#8217;ll not be able to receive children as He intends. You won&#8217;t be empowered to  do this very difficult job. Wherever you&#8217;re at today, whether you&#8217;re a <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2691.86\">parent <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> or whether you&#8217;re a child.  As a child, obeying and honoring  your parents is  impossible without the Lord&#8217;s help.   I pray for you right now,  that you will come to faith in Jesus. Pray with me, \u201cDear Lord Jesus,  I need Your help. I&#8217;m a sinner, but I believe You died on the cross for my sin, You were raised from the grave and that You live today. I believe that.   I placed my faith in that. Would You come into my life? I receive You now as my Savior and Lord.   I commit my life to You. I want to follow You. Thank You for forgiving me of my sin and making me a child of God. If you&#8217;re praying that prayer of faith, believing, He will save you; the very thing you&#8217;ve asked for, He will do.  Others are here today and you&#8217;re a believer, you&#8217;re a Christ follower, but you&#8217;re thinking of <span class=\"messageTimecode\" title=\"Play the video starting here\" data-timecode=\"2742.929\">your <i class=\"fa fa-volume-up\"><\/i><\/span> child right now. You&#8217;re thinking, Boy, I&#8217;m so tired. Lord, will you strengthen me? I&#8217;ve got a newborn,  Lord. I&#8217;ve got a toddler. Would You help me to know when it&#8217;s childishness and when it&#8217;s rebellion? Give me discernment, Lord. I&#8217;ve got a teenager right now that&#8217;s worrying me to death. Name them to the Lord. We&#8217;re praying now for our children.   In Jesus\u2019 name. Amen.\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What is your parenting approach? Where did you learn how to be a mom or dad? Was it from your parents? From friends or a book? 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