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Category: Spiritual Formation (Page 5 of 15)

They Need You

Myth:  Your teen doesn’t want a relationship with you.

Truth:  It’s not that your teen doesn’t want a relationship with you, they just want a different relationship.

Parents with teenagers don’t need to disengage, they need to re-engage and redefine.  They need you as much now as they did when they were a child.”

–Reggie Joiner

I bump into this thinking all the time.  Parents, for a multitude of reasons, start to back off the relationship with their teen.  They see the teen pushing for autonomy and often misinterpret some of that natural process as a direct challenge to the relationship.

The reality is as your teens approaches adulthood, they need you even more.

They don’t need the same relationship, but they still need you.

They need you to adjust to the fact they’re not a kid anymore.

They need you to redefine and re-imagine how you relate to them.

Don’t give up!  You have more influence than you know!

One of the greatest myths we could ever buy into is that high schoolers don’t need or want adults. The truth is, they don’t think they need adults when things seem to be going well. But inevitably there will be days when they do need someone. And the only way to be there when they need you is to prove that you care about them even when they think they don’t need you. So keep proving you care. Keep showing up when they push you away so they know you will be there when they need to talk.

–Kristen Ivy

How have you seen or experienced this dynamic?  Do you agree?
How can you can you adjust the way you relate to your teen to further your relationship?

 

Prepared to Be Unprepared.

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Are you prepared to be unprepared?

I was recently listening to an interview with Seth Godin who was reflecting that most memorable moments, the most important moments of life are the one’s we are unprepared for.

Think about that for a moment.

Were you prepared for your wedding day?
Were you prepared for the moment you held your child for the first time?
Were you truly prepared for the day you saw your dream become a reality?
Can you rehearse the moments of life that become the most meaningful?

If we are honest, some of the greatest things in our lives are things we could never prepare for.  Seth went on to claim that our obsession with preparation has gone too far.  Our need to be prepared has ventured too far into the realm where we are just naturally unprepared.  We don’t risk because we fear we are unprepared.  Is it possible to allow being unprepared to be a good thing?

“Parenting is always frontier.”

John Elderedge

In parenting, we are not always sure what is coming our way.  We don’t know what’s around the corner.  You get through the terrible two’s and there is the next phase waiting for you.  You are always on the border of something else.

So how do you prepare for life’s big moments?

Our only real option is to step fully into whatever life presents us.  To be in that moment.  Our preparation is who we are and who we are becoming.  Our preparation is everything life has taught us up to this point.  Our goal in these moments is to just get out of the way and be present.

KNOWLEDGE FOR THE JOURNEY

Next week, I will be sharing some principles from Orange that I’ve found very helpful to think through.  The basic idea stems from a number and a scripture.

From the time a child is born you have approximately 936 weeks until they graduate.

To the point above, do you really think you can use those 936 weeks to TRULY prepare for the moment your son or daughter leaves your house…doubtful.

“Teach us to number our days, so that we may gain a heart of wisdom”  Ps. 90:12

Based on these two things, Orange has identified 6 things that we can do over time to influence the life and faith of our kids.  Here’s the thing:  you have time.  Time from now until then.  Time to influence your child to become the person that can step fully into the unprepared moments of life, trust the God who brought them to this moment, and be present for whatever comes next.

Are you prepared to be unprepared?

Don’t Forget to Talk About It

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“A crucial link exists between your ability to parent and your personal growth”  –Reggie Joiner

“Who we are and how we engage with the world are much stronger predictors of how our children will do than what we know about parenting ”   –Brene Brown

Maybe you relate to this story I read recently about a dad who was proud of his diligence in growing spiritually:

During the process of reading each day, I was reminded of a conversation I had with my kids. One evening I casually mentioned I had been studying the Bible. Both my kids burst into laughter. That was not the reaction I was expecting. I asked them why they were laughing and they said:

“You don’t study the Bible! Mom studies the Bible.”

If you’d like to ship my “Christian dad of the year trophy” to me, there’s a mailing address on my site.

YOU GET WHAT YOU ARE

Christian Smith, who conducted extensive research around the faith of young people, said at parenting panel – “When it comes to our kid’s faith, parents get what they are.”

Of course there are exceptions to this rule, but the basic idea is this:  How you practice/share/display your faith as a parent matters.  You are the most important influence in their life and in regards to their faith.

As a youth pastor, I’m convinced one of the greatest needs a student has in regards to faith is to see adults with living, active faith.  Think about it this way – if they don’t see it, they can infer that faith doesn’t matter when it comes to adult life (making a living, engaging the world, raising a family, enjoying life).  Here’s a scary question – “Hey kids, based on the way I live and what I talk about, what do you think the most important things in life are.”  (I’m guessing mine would say something about food or college football)

QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER

How do you understand your role in your child’s spiritual formation?
How do you understand the church’s role in your child’s spiritual formation?
How do you talk about your faith with your children?

Kara Powell, another one who has done some great research on the faith of young people, shared how her research – and namely realizing the role parents play in the spiritual formation of their kids – changed the way she talked about her faith with her kids.

Before the research, she would leverage church to try and have a conversation with her kids in the car on the way home from service or an activity.  “What did you learn today?” or “How was youth group?”, which depending on their mood or a hundred other variables, only went so far.  She realized she never shared her own faith in a personal way, but was constantly trying to pry it out of her kids.

When it came down to it, she was just interviewing her kids and never opening up herself.

After the research, she knew she need to talk on a personal level.  If a kid interrupted her reading her Bible, instead of just thinking “how great is it they see me doing this” she would instead invite them over saying, “hey check out what I’m reading in John right now” or “can I show you this page in my prayer journal where I’m praying for you.”  She knew she had to start verbally sharing her faith and not just hoping they put it all together.

She also decided to change the nature of the dinner conversation.  She added questions like “What mistakes have you made recently?” to allow her and her husband to share their failings and invite the kids to do the same.  She also added, “How did you see God working today?” to create some space for a faith conversation around dinner.

Was it always magical? – nope!

Were their God sightings theologically correct or even spiritually significant- not always!

But they were talking about it.

YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE A BETTER CHRISTIAN

Here’s what you need to understand.  You don’t have to share the perfect faith with them.  You don’t have to have it all together or have the answers.  You don’t have to be more like that really great Christian parent you know or try to share the “better” faith you think they have.

You just have to share the faith you have.

That’s it.

It’s not about what you know.  It’s about giving kids a front row seat to God’s activity in someone’s life.  You can be a total mess, but if you are willing to engage, then your kids will see that engagement and not the mess.  If you are willing to experience God’s grace and share the spirituality you have, then your kids will have a front row seat to how God’s grace moves in someone’s life.

Your experience of faith matters in the faith of your child.  How will they know that experience if you don’t honestly share it with them?!

As you go about the rest of your week — Don’t forget to talk about it.

 

To Subscribe to the posts – see the sidebar or bottom of this page!
To read more about making your faith personal, check out this post – Make It Personal
To read more about how you already have what it takes as a parent – I Have Nothing To Wear

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