Today's
promise: God celebrates family
What was the most effective discipline you have experienced?
Now his father, King David, had never disciplined him at any
time, even by asking, "What are you going?"
1 Kings 1:6 NLT
Rebounding skills
Suppose you get home from grocery shopping and discover your
six-year-old is eating candy you didn't buy. It might be tempting to just scold
him, send him to his room, and let it go at that. After all, it's only worth a
dollar, and you're tired. But you'd miss an opportunity to turn this
"miss" into a second chance.
It would be better to take away any uneaten candy, put your
little shoplifter back in the car, drive to the grocery store, hunt up the
manager, and tell your kid to apologize. Pay for the candy and deduct it from
the child's allowance. Then, if the culprit is truly sorry, be sure to express
your forgiveness — and God's forgiveness, too.
You've just boxed out the opposition and put your kid in
position to rightly rebound. Because there will come another time in that
grocery store or when he's passing a coveted pair of Nikes or — who knows?
Ricky Birdsong in Coaching Your Kids in the Game of Life
Ricky Birdsong in Coaching Your Kids in the Game of Life
The Bible tells us that parents have the primary
responsibility for the spiritual development of our children. And nowhere is
the job given only to mothers and grandmothers. As Moses told the people of
Israel, "Repeat [the command of God] again and again to your
children" (Deut. 6:7). Why not begin today?
adapted from Men of Integrity
Devotional Bible with devotionals by the editors of Men of
Integrity magazine (Christianity Today, Intl), Tyndale House Publishers
(2002), p 391
It is easier to build boys than to mend men.
AUTHOR UNKNOWN
AUTHOR UNKNOWN
Content is derived from the Holy Bible, New Living
Translation and other publications of Tyndale Publishing House
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