There's No Place Like Home There's no place like home. " This is most
certainly true, and it becomes more meaningful when we look at the importance God has
placed upon the function of the home. The home is the place where the first and most
lasting impressions are made. Those who are tasked by God to operate the home - that's you
parents - need to feel most deeply the tremendous responsibility and privilege of the
influence found there. The earthly direction and eternal destiny of those who dwell there
is largely shaped by the home's atmosphere. The home is where the where the spiritual
impressions are most profound, and it is impossible to calculate just how deeply those
impressions will effect the lives of the children. In a recent poll published in The Broadcaster, the
determining factor of the child's growth to maturity and remaining faithful to the Lord
was not due to the size of the congregation; was not due to the number of classes or
programs provided by the church; and was not due to the efficiency of the "Youth
Minister." The research showed that where both parents were
faithful and active in the congregation, 93 percent of the children remained faithful into
their adult years. If only one parent was faithful, the rate dropped to 73 percent. Where
parents who were "reasonably active" (attended services but little involvement
otherwise), the rate dropped again to 53 percent. Now, here's the shocker. In cases where both
parents attended only infrequently, the rate of faithfulness in children nose-dived to a
mere 6 percent (stats published in Pulpit Helps, Jan. 88, p. 18). Just how important is
the influence of the home? The words of Solomon ring loudly and clearly, and
need to be practiced, "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old
he will not depart from it" (Prov. 22:6). What are you, as parents, doing to train up
your children? The Bible teaches that the children are to obey
their parents (Eph. 6:1-2). Sadly, however, some parents have the mistaken notion that
children are the slaves and the parents are the masters. You may get compulsory obedience
by beating a slave, but you will never get their honor and respect. Provoking a child to
anger creates only rebellion, and that enforced obedience will last only as long as the
child is within grasp of the parent. When he leaves the home, he will go a different way. The key is, "Provoke not your children to
wrath, but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord" (Eph. 6:4).
Solomon says to "train," and Paul says to "bring" them up. That is
your responsibility. Is there a correlation between "training" and
"bringing" a child to the Lord? It has to do with your nurturing love,
demonstrated in your devotion to the Lord. When your children see your values, they will
follow you, that's the way they know how to go . . . and when they are old, they will
demonstrate the values you have modeled for them when they were little children in your
home. When is the last time you sat down with your
children and read a Bible story to them? When is the last time You Prayed together? When
is the last time you discussed the sermon with them, and inquired about what they learned
in class? How often do you sing spiritual songs while driving in the car? How often do you
use the opportunities to talk about God and his word when seeing flowers, clouds, and
grasshoppers? There are so many ways you can nurture and train your child in God's way. Moses spoke these important words to parents,
"These commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on
your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when
you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your
foreheads. Write them on the door-frames of your houses and on your gates" (Deut.
6:6-9). It sounds like God is wanting parents to take the lion's share of responsibility
in training up the children! No place like home? Yes, nothing else like it - the
most important teaching place in the world. F. David Moyer, 1988 |
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