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February 4, 2020 Jfuglerwriter Comments Off on Courage and Parenting

Courage and Parenting

I’ve never heard the phrase “courageous parenting,” but it’s certainly a quality moms and dads need for their overwhelming roles.

When our twin sons were two, they gave my wife a big scare. She was in the kitchen and heard an unidentifiable sound. A rumbling followed by a patterned thunder of some kind. Perplexed, she walked outside. Gazing upward, Noonie saw our young whippersnappers running back and forth along our slightly angled roof.

Terrified, yet with a calm voice, my wife ordered them to “come down at once, exactly the same way you got up there.” That was courageous parenting at its best. Of course, I had to exhibit a form of courageous parenting when I arrived home to discipline them.

Looking through Scripture, even kings had varied results raising their kids. This is what I found:

“Joram son of Ahab became king of Israel in Samaria in the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat king of Judah, and he reigned twelve years. He did evil in the eyes of the Lord.” (2 Kings 3:1-2 NIV)

“In the second year of Jehoash son of Jehoahaz king of Israel, Amaziah son of Joash king of Judah began to reign. He did what was right in the eyes of the Lord.” (2 Kings 14: 1,3 NIV)

“Jeroboam son of Jehoash king of Israel became king in Samaria, and he reigned forty-one years. He did evil in the eyes of the Lord.” (2 Kings 14:23-24 NIV)

Whether or not the parents were to blame, I’m not sure. We know that our kids can stray despite our great parenting efforts. One child might thrive but the next one can go off the rails.

I reflected on my own parenting history with our three kids. Let me share my limited wisdom about what we can do to be courageous in raising our children.

Admit our mistakes. The natural tendency is to look perfect to our kids. We want to appear to have it all together. You know as well as I do that we make thousands of mistakes as parents. By the time we get this role figured out, our kids are gone. It takes courage to admit our mistakes, especially our sins against our kids. When it’s necessary, coming to our child and asking forgiveness is a towering act of courage. Let’s make it a habit any time we fail.

Be honest. As our kids get older, it seems like we get dumber. They stop asking for advice. We need to be ready when they do ask. It might be about a relationship, crisis, failing, big decision or some other issue they’re grappling with. Ask God for wisdom. Be honest with them, even if you need to tell them something they may not want to hear. It takes courage to do that. Be sure to speak with a heart of love.

Discipline well. When our kids get out of line, we have a choice. Will we let it go, punish out of anger or discipline out of love? The third is the right choice. It takes courage to carry out discipline that’s not driven by anger or other destructive emotions. At the end of a long day, this is especially challenging. Be intentional about exercising courage in those frayed moments.

Have courage. Raise your child wisely. Admit your mistakes, be honest in giving advice and be faithful to discipline in love.

Make your connection with God your top priority. Your parenting depends on it. It’s a big job.

(From my new Devotional, Your Life With God: 30 Days of Courage. Available on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback formats.

October 23, 2018 Jfuglerwriter Comments Off on Faith and Fear

Faith and Fear

“Fear not, for I am with you.” (Isaiah 41:10 ESV)

My wife and I were at a crossroads two years ago that defined our faith.

She was diagnosed with cancer. The word itself can send chills up and down your spine. It stops you in your tracks. It puts life on hold.

Fear tried to show up, as it often does when cancer strikes. If you’ve been there, you know what I mean.

Miraculously, God spared us from fear. I can’t explain it. I can’t say our faith was so well grounded it couldn’t be shaken by the news of cancer. However, I do know that was part of the reason.

So you don’t assume we are some super-faith couple, I will tell you we experienced many other hard emotions. Like trauma, discouragement, heartache and sorrow. Thankfully not all at once!

We had a choice. Would we let God into our experience, or would we bear cancer on our own?

We invited God to walk with us. We experienced his presence through his Holy Spirit, the Bible, each other and hundreds of other friends. We were not alone.

Cancer isn’t the only thing that can bring fear into our lives. I could list a dozen other things and so could you.

Fear paralyzes our faith. Other than unforgiveness, I can’t think of anything that puts an instant deep-freeze on our faith.

Why is that?

Fear is most often tied to the unknown. My wife and I had never done cancer before, so as we walked through it, we rarely knew what was next.

Your teenager is out with the car at night. You fear what could happen out on the road. When he pulls into the driveway, there’s immediate relief.

Things are unstable at work and many co-workers have been laid off. Could you be next? How will you provide for your family? Where will the next job come from? An unknown future can cause fear.

The doctor ran tests and you won’t get the results for three days. Those three days can be agonizing if you let fear take over. It’s hard not to!

The key to chasing out fear is to invite Jesus into your experience. Then your faith can thrive. It’s the only way.

Jesus himself said, “I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:20 ESV)

He comes into our situation with his perfect love. Then we experience this truth: “Perfect love casts out fear.” (I John 4:18 ESV) God is The Perfect Love that expels fear from our life.

When you live in God’s perfect love, there’s no room for fear.

The darkest, most fearful experiences don’t have to be absent the love of Christ. He will banish your fear.

Invite Jesus into your fears. Please don’t go down this road without him.

(From my upcoming devotional, Your Life With God: 30 Days of Faith. Releasing January 1.)

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