Monday, March 28, 2011
Bringing Adult Children (back) to Faith 3
After you have rebuilt your relationship with your adult child by hanging with them (don't ever leave this activity and don't push too fast), it is time to begin the work of introducing them to Jesus. This is the stage of accommodation. This is the stage of spiritual growth when people are learning what Jesus teaches and they begin to recognize Him as a good teacher. "Who do people say that I am?" remember Jesus asking that? "A teacher, the prophet...the Messiah." People rarely jump to a complete understanding of who Jesus is. For the disciples, 3 years of following the real, present person of Jesus around, eating and listening to Him, experiencing his crucifixion and seeing Him alive again were not enough for conversion but it is critical plowing. They accommodated His teachings ...some. Finally, the Holy Spirit poured out on them at Pentecost converted them. Your task up to now has been to be simply, fully, present with your child. Now you may start, not preaching, but talking matter-of-factly, not about how your child needs Jesus, but talking matter-of-factly about how Jesus influences your decisions. This is called faith talk. In normal conversation about life, you stop not talking about Jesus and talk about Him casually like He is a part of everything you do- as He is in everything you do. Remember that evangelism is not about convincing people to come to Jesus - which you can't do, it is about your testimony, giving voice to the reason for the hope you have in Christ. "I hear you that you are really struggling in your marriage. You may not know this but I struggle with that, too. Marriage is hard for me. Getting to know what Jesus says about love has really helped me make it through the rough times." After 3 years of this kind of conversation, and your child seeing you crucify your life for them, they will begin to pay attention. If it was a long process for Jesus, it will probably be a long process for you so take your time and do it well. Pray for the Holy Spirit to infiltrate their thinking, to surround them, to open opportunities for faith talk. They will happen. Then your child will start the process of bringing Jesus as teacher, accommodating Him, into their lives.
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Bringing Adult Children (back) to Faith 2
The first step in bringing adult children home is Affiliation (the previous blog).
The second step is Association. When you associate with someone, you work side by side with them.
This is not a long term commitment nor a blood brothers activity. You're helping a neighbor put a roof on. You help put up chairs after an event because a friend asked you to help them.
For alienated children (of all ages), one of the most important steps (remember this is a progression) you can take is to simply do something with them that does not have them as the focus. If your child gets a hint of, "This will be another opportunity to give them the talk," then they are out of there - if they show up at all.
You really need to spend time with your child just doing "stuff". Quality time is important but only in small doses. Quantity time is critical at this stage of wooing someone to Christ. People need to feel safe that you are not going to badger them. This is especially true (and requires longer effort) if you have been at odds with your child for a while. They need to know first that you love them and like them and also, paradoxically, that they are not the center of your life. Partnering primes the conversation pump with trivial matters so that the conversation you long for can happen...later. Trying to pry that rose bud open only makes a mess so relax. Take your time. Shut up and just do something with them. Associate with them. Oh... and pray like crazy.
The second step is Association. When you associate with someone, you work side by side with them.
This is not a long term commitment nor a blood brothers activity. You're helping a neighbor put a roof on. You help put up chairs after an event because a friend asked you to help them.
For alienated children (of all ages), one of the most important steps (remember this is a progression) you can take is to simply do something with them that does not have them as the focus. If your child gets a hint of, "This will be another opportunity to give them the talk," then they are out of there - if they show up at all.
You really need to spend time with your child just doing "stuff". Quality time is important but only in small doses. Quantity time is critical at this stage of wooing someone to Christ. People need to feel safe that you are not going to badger them. This is especially true (and requires longer effort) if you have been at odds with your child for a while. They need to know first that you love them and like them and also, paradoxically, that they are not the center of your life. Partnering primes the conversation pump with trivial matters so that the conversation you long for can happen...later. Trying to pry that rose bud open only makes a mess so relax. Take your time. Shut up and just do something with them. Associate with them. Oh... and pray like crazy.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Bringing Adult Children (back) to Faith
We all want, desperately, for our children to follow Christ. When those children as adults are far away from Christ, we often despair. Be sure of this, it is never too late.
It is much harder to bring someone into the faith or back into the faith when they are adults but
our God is a worker of miracles.
Often a flaw in our efforts to evangelize adults that are close to us is to think that we can reason them into faith. "If I can just find the right argument they will get it."
Other broken methods are trying to guilt them or cajole them or scare them into it.
Many others think that if we just tell them to come to church enough times they will wear down and one day come. Give that up.
Though Paul had a sudden experience of transformation, this is not typical. Usually coming to faith is a process.
The first step in that process is Affiliation.
Affiliation is the stage in formation when people are warming up to the church and Christ. It is just like meeting someone - it is meeting someone, actually. If you are introducing two people that you want to become friends, you make the first meeting light and pleasant in a nice atmosphere. You want them to warm up to each other. This is the first step in bringing adults to faith. If you have been pursuing your child, it will take a while for them to get over that history so be patient. They need time to unlearn what you have been giving them. Drop every other strategy. Quit talking about Christ. Quit trying to win them. Quit telling them that they are not a Christian. Just start walking beside them in a way that is comfortable for them. The disciples wanted to follow Jesus and He didn't demand much from His disciples at first. "Come and see."
One tidbit of psychology: If you try to push someone somewhere, their initial response will be defense, to push back. If you have been pushing your child towards Christ then they have been practicing pushing Christ away. How long have they been practicing that! Time to end that dynamic. Just be there for them. Be someone they want to follow.
That's the first step - feeling the love.
It is much harder to bring someone into the faith or back into the faith when they are adults but
our God is a worker of miracles.
Often a flaw in our efforts to evangelize adults that are close to us is to think that we can reason them into faith. "If I can just find the right argument they will get it."
Other broken methods are trying to guilt them or cajole them or scare them into it.
Many others think that if we just tell them to come to church enough times they will wear down and one day come. Give that up.
Though Paul had a sudden experience of transformation, this is not typical. Usually coming to faith is a process.
The first step in that process is Affiliation.
Affiliation is the stage in formation when people are warming up to the church and Christ. It is just like meeting someone - it is meeting someone, actually. If you are introducing two people that you want to become friends, you make the first meeting light and pleasant in a nice atmosphere. You want them to warm up to each other. This is the first step in bringing adults to faith. If you have been pursuing your child, it will take a while for them to get over that history so be patient. They need time to unlearn what you have been giving them. Drop every other strategy. Quit talking about Christ. Quit trying to win them. Quit telling them that they are not a Christian. Just start walking beside them in a way that is comfortable for them. The disciples wanted to follow Jesus and He didn't demand much from His disciples at first. "Come and see."
One tidbit of psychology: If you try to push someone somewhere, their initial response will be defense, to push back. If you have been pushing your child towards Christ then they have been practicing pushing Christ away. How long have they been practicing that! Time to end that dynamic. Just be there for them. Be someone they want to follow.
That's the first step - feeling the love.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Lent - CounterFormation
Next week we begin our long 40 day trek through the desert with Jesus. Formation happens all the time. Every billboard and magazine cover we see forms us. Every rose we smell and thorn that pricks our fingertip forms us. Every kind word and every slight forms us. James calls us adulterers for loving the world and loving God. The Bible is full of references to our relationship with God as a marriage. Lent is an opportunity for us to step back from our lives and focus on what our adulteries are. This is our season of counter formation. We must cut away the world and, as purely as we can, be formed only by our Father.
Oh, what a lot of work! Sounds like works righteousness. It is a lot of work but it is the work of vacuuming and cleaning and setting a nice table and fixing a special meal for your wife - preparation so that love can happen. Lent is a time of setting aside busy-ness. A time of creating space, a sabbath so that love between you and your God can happen. You can't control God and make Him love you. You can't make you love Him. BUT.... you can make a place where love can happen. In fact, you MUST make a place where love can happen. You should do that every day. But since we don't, the church in its wisdom has set aside a time for us to focus on only that. The negatives: set aside TV; set aside reading; set aside a meal; set aside deserts. Positives to go in their place: kneeling for one minute beside your bed at night; talking with your wife; going for a walk with God every day; eating plainly in solidarity with the poor. Practice finding your comfort and satisfaction in Christ for 40 days and you will find yourself in a place where love has happened. Promise. Be not conformed to the world but be ye counter formed.
Oh, what a lot of work! Sounds like works righteousness. It is a lot of work but it is the work of vacuuming and cleaning and setting a nice table and fixing a special meal for your wife - preparation so that love can happen. Lent is a time of setting aside busy-ness. A time of creating space, a sabbath so that love between you and your God can happen. You can't control God and make Him love you. You can't make you love Him. BUT.... you can make a place where love can happen. In fact, you MUST make a place where love can happen. You should do that every day. But since we don't, the church in its wisdom has set aside a time for us to focus on only that. The negatives: set aside TV; set aside reading; set aside a meal; set aside deserts. Positives to go in their place: kneeling for one minute beside your bed at night; talking with your wife; going for a walk with God every day; eating plainly in solidarity with the poor. Practice finding your comfort and satisfaction in Christ for 40 days and you will find yourself in a place where love has happened. Promise. Be not conformed to the world but be ye counter formed.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Caesar's Children
I don't want to lay a guilt trip on everyone with this one but Voddie Baucham makes one of those clarion call statements that needs to be on everyone's radar. Voddie states that if we send our children to Caesar's schools why are we surprised when we end up with Caesar's children. Obviously, he would like all children in Christian schools, as would most parents - another blog on that. The point though, is that one of the many things that we as parents must do is make sure the balance of power as far as influences go, is not the world but Christ. Your child probably spends at least 50 hours a week in school activities and another 20 in worldly sponsored media. At best, your child spends five, that is 5, in church related functions. Not to despair. God has designed children so that parental input has much, much more salience to children than church or school. However, you have to use that influence. In Christian Smith's book Soul Searching, it is clear that running a close second to parents, hanging out with a Christian peer group is a major predictor of faith perseverance. Your child really must find a sense of belonging in a Christian social network. That is your job since they can't drive or choose wisely. If they understand from you that your choices of influence for them are TV and soccer on Sunday and inappropriate movies or video games then that is where they will begin to believe they belong. If your child can't go to a Christian school or you want them in public school that is not a big problem. The big problem lies in what else they do and your conversations about their school experience.
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Maslow
Not to diss Maslow to heavily because I think he is right that it is hard to teach an empty belly but the world's formation leads us to press into our worldly needs first in the belief that only after those are met can we develop fully as a person. The counter-formation needed here is that self-actualization (by which I will define as becoming a mature Christian) is the first priority. So turn Maslow's pyramid on its head and I think you have it just about right -"seek ye first...." By putting ourselves (allowing ourselves to be put) in Christ's story and not our story, we discover that our lower needs get their proper inattention. Also, in this upside down kingdom of Christ, having the foundation of Christ's story and our being a part of it (level 1) completes our self-esteem needs (level 2) and then provides us with belonging (level 3) and the needs of safety (level 4) and biological needs (level 5) don't consume our attention. Freedom.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Slave
John MacArthur's book Slave has created quite a stir. Being a slave really is the essence of our relationship with Jesus. Most of us continue to accommodate Christ. We move over a little in our lives to make room for Him. We plead for Him to make our lives work, to heal Aunt Martha, to help me pass this evaluation, to get me a job. What we want is for God to do something in our lives to make our lives get better. This is why suffering makes no sense and why God not showing up is so bothersome. If this story is about us, then God should be doing something to make it sweet...if He really does love us.
If we, on the other hand, are His slaves and the story is about Him and not about us, then suffering is easy because God is using that to move His plot line forward, to create His story, to define and refine us as a part of His story. Giving up our agenda, though, is very difficult. We need control of our lives. We can't just go through life letting things happen to us being completely reactive beings. That's the struggle - living on that boundary. Giving up our agenda but not fully knowing God's. A dear friend of mine said when she gets up in the morning she prays that she will just get out of God's way today, "Let me not be me today but your servant, Lord." Oh what Jesus could do if we all did what He asked. "I only do what I see the Father doing." Listening is a great start. Instead of praying at God tomorrow morning, just listen. Notice images in your mind or thoughts that come up. Try following up on those. They may not all be from God at first because you listen so poorly but you'll get better at it. His sheep learn His voice. Takes a little time but His sheep learn His voice.
If we, on the other hand, are His slaves and the story is about Him and not about us, then suffering is easy because God is using that to move His plot line forward, to create His story, to define and refine us as a part of His story. Giving up our agenda, though, is very difficult. We need control of our lives. We can't just go through life letting things happen to us being completely reactive beings. That's the struggle - living on that boundary. Giving up our agenda but not fully knowing God's. A dear friend of mine said when she gets up in the morning she prays that she will just get out of God's way today, "Let me not be me today but your servant, Lord." Oh what Jesus could do if we all did what He asked. "I only do what I see the Father doing." Listening is a great start. Instead of praying at God tomorrow morning, just listen. Notice images in your mind or thoughts that come up. Try following up on those. They may not all be from God at first because you listen so poorly but you'll get better at it. His sheep learn His voice. Takes a little time but His sheep learn His voice.
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