Please read A Wheel, Not a List as an introduction to this devotion.
In the last 40-50 years, there's been a shift in Christian thinking that often makes the family, especially children, an idolatrous priority.
I first heard it at a Bible study:
"Whenever our children want something we should drop everything and be there for them."
This statement was presented as part of a discussion on building our children's self-esteem, being a good mom, putting our family first, being unselfish, assuring our children they were loved.
And it continues to influence most Christian parents today. In fact, the statements we hear from fellow believers have grown in scope and deception: "Tell your child he's wonderful, and he'll be wonderful." "Let your child know that no matter what he does, he's awesome."
But research shows we damage children if we teach them that the world revolves around their desires. They don't become awesome simply because we say they're awesome. Constant, undeserved praise actually makes them arrogant, selfish, and unmotivated.
Multiple studies are now showing that high self-esteem, not low self-esteem, is the cause of selfishness, low achievement and criminal behavior (read more).
Christian children raised in the last 30-40 years tend to have more self-confidence than previous generations, but they're also more self-centered and less content than previous generations.
But we can reverse things in our family by letting Philippians 2:3-4 be our guide:
"Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others."
- Put the needs of others above our children's selfish desires.
- Teach our children to be considerate of the needs and desires of others.
I have one final caution about the rigid priority list we Christians have created. I discuss it in Balanced Marriages.
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Amen, girl!
ReplyDeleteAgain, thanks for linking up!
-The Mrs
So true!! I agree that the pendulum has swung too far to the point where families revolve around the children's needs and wants. Excellent post!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the thought! I couldn't agree more. It's impossible to meet children's every desire but worse it's destructive to the child, the marriage and the family!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great reminder! Sometimes, I feel guilty when I can't meet my kids' desires immediately, but this is such a wonderful reminder of the truth that my kids will actually benefit from not having every desire handed over to them immediately :). And... a relief to me as I seek to do my best but find it constantly imperfect.
ReplyDeleteI agree! I really like the Baby-wise series of books. It gives lots of great reasons to be a family centered parent instead of a kid-centered parent. Thanks for sharing at Mom's Library!
ReplyDeleteThis is so true!! As parents, I want to help my children with anything that they need help with but it is easy to give them too much. We had a conversation with my daughter who is doing online college. We aren't able to totally help her financially. We feel bad, but yet know that is better for her. Her response was that she wouldn't want total financial assistance from us because it would make her ungrateful.
ReplyDeleteI agree, too. This has damaged so many young people that will have a difficult time in marriage because they feel entitled to have all that's coming to them. Also, they see us getting all we want. Praise god we had a perspective reversal years ago. We still need to guard against idolizing our children.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely agree! Shortly after I became a stay-at-home mom, I found the wonderful world of blogging. I got sucked into Christian mommy blogs because, in general, they encouraged me to truly pursue godliness. However, some of them pushed convictions on me that the Bible never mentions; one being that we {moms} cannot/should not have a life outside of our kids because they are our first disciples. Now, I would agree that we should be discipling our children, but not at the expense of sharing the gospel with the rest of the world.
ReplyDelete