Parenting is Hard. You're More Than Capable. We'd Love to Help.

Tag: orange (Page 2 of 3)

It Takes A Village

sand-summer-outside-playing

 

Are parents the main one’s responsible for their children’s faith and spiritual life?  Absolutely!
Do parents need someone else speaking into their kids life as well?  Absolutely!

As a youth pastor, I’ve often felt like parents want to delegate their child’s spiritual formation to us “experts” at the church (at the very least, they want to outsource the sex talk!).  However, the longer I’ve been in ministry to teens, the more I’ve realized how limited my influence is compared to a parents influence.  At the same time, you can’t underestimate the value of someone outside of the home coming alongside a teenager and letting them know they matter and pointing them towards a life of faith.

Consider this article:

WHY KIDS NEED MORE THAN JUST THEIR PARENTS
By:  Kristen Ivy

If no volunteer can ever know what a parent knows, when why recruit anyone to help with kids and teenagers?

It would definitely make things easier if you could just tell parents, “Since you know more than we can ever know, and you have more time than we will ever have, and you care about this more than we ever will, this is really up to you as the parent.

You could also misquote Deuteronomy 6 to convince parents it’s their job alone, not the church’s to raise their kids. Just skip the part of the text where Moses speaks to every leader in the crowd(not just parents).

Moses was actually the first guy with the idea, “It takes a village.”

Sure, parents should be the primary influence in their kid’s lives.

But research, experts, and statistics suggest that kids who have other adults in their lives have better odds at winning.

Maybe more churches should take Moses seriously when he implied, “We are all responsible for the faith and future of the kids in our community.”

The more you learn about life stages, the more you will be convinced that kids need a consistent adult, besides their parents.

  • Preschoolers need a consistent adult because they can be terrified by unfamiliar faces.
  • Elementary kids need a consistent adult because they will tell anything to a stranger.
  • Middle schoolers need a consistent adult because nothing else in their life is consistent.
  • High schoolers need a consistent adult because they only trust people who will show up consistently.

Some phases will cry more, talk more, doubt more, do more.

That’s why some leaders. . .

  • Embrace preschoolers so they feel safe.
  • Engage children so they can believe.
  • Affirm middle schoolers so they will keep believing.
  • Mobilize teenagers to participate in something significant.

Don’t be afraid to challenge leaders to make different commitments at different phases.

The leader who shows up once a week for second graders will make an easy connection within a few minutes because children will believe in anyone.

The leader who shows up for sixth graders will have to hang out for a while. Sixth graders are skeptics. They need proof over time.

This is one of the great gifts the church can give to families (and to each other!).  In many churches this part of our baptismal or baby dedication vows.

If you’re a parent, how can you widen the circle and help connect your child to someone who can make a difference in their lives?

 

I love the “It’s Just a Phase Project” that Orange has been working on and you can see some of their efforts above.  As parents of any age students, there is something to learn from this project.   What do the top experts, educators, developmental psychologists, youth pastors, etc say that kids need at each stage?  Orange has been researching this and has made it incredibly easy to understand.  Check out more at itsjustaphase.com – it will not be a waste of your time.

New posts are to ParentingThoughts are added weekly, sign up in the sidebar to be notified when they are up!

6 Things Over Time Every Kid Needs

pexels-photo

“What you do this week matters.”

Last week, we set up this conversation to look at how we can better navigate this thing called life. While we can’t be prepared for everything (and this is actually a gift!), we can take a look at how we strategically invest in our sons or daughters over time to make an impact.  (Read last week’s post, Prepare to Be Unprepared here.)

As mentioned, the basic idea stems from a number and a scripture:

From the time a child is born you have 936 weeks until they graduate high school.

“Teach us to number our days, so that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” Ps 90:12

What we do over time cultivates what matters in the hearts of our children.

Whatever matters, will matter more over time.

Orange identified 6 things we can strategically focus on over time to influence and cultivate the hearts of our children. I’ll briefly outline the concept and then highlight a key habit to help us along the way.

TIME OVER TIME

It takes TIME over TIME to make a history worth repeating.

Habit: Visualize Time.
Imagine if you put 936 marbles in a jar the day your child is born.
Now imagine that each week you take one out.

How might this affect the way you parent your child?

On the one hand, you will realize time matters and you only have so much time to work with. If you kids is 9 years old, you will realize you’ve already lost half your marbles!

On the other hand, you realize that you have a significant amount of time to influence your child and you might just get excited about how you can do that this week! It takes the pressure off everything happening in a moment!

“When you see how much TIME you have left, you tend to do more with the TIME you have now.”

LOVE OVER TIME

Love over time is the one thing that matters most.

Habit:  Prove it!
“It’s really pretty simple.  When we show up and make rules, we prove to them we care.  When they break the rules and we show up anyway, we prove to them we still care.  We prove to them they have worth, and we are committed to them even when it’s difficult, inconvenient, and messy.”

There are days we don’t really like our kids.  Days we don’t want to wade into the mess.  Love over time shows them their self-worth.  It helps them understand a God of unconditional love.  It invites them to love others.  If you do nothing else, show your kids you love them over time.

WORDS OVER TIME

WORDS over TIME can impact someone’s direction in life.

Habit:  Expand your vocabulary.
A few words can make a big difference in the direction of someone’s life.

I’ve seen people who do this well – when they speak, their words give life.  Has your teen tuned you out?  Maybe it’s time to change the language and expand your vocabulary, but don’t doubt that your words have power.

When’s the last time your really encouraged your son or daughter.  Try one of these this week – I remember when…, I have noticed…, I hope you know…, I’m really glad…., I’ve been thinking…

STORIES OVER TIME

STORIES over TIME move us to imagine a world beyond ourselves.

Habit:  Amplify the story.
“Every week, you have an opportunity to tell the story to the next generation in a way that will captivate their imagination and move them not only to fall in love with the story itself, but to fall in love with the God who created the story and who was has invited them to be a part of it.”

What stories are you telling?  What stories are you creating?  What stories are worth re-telling?  Just like a great movie, you have the opportunity over time to invite your kids into God’s larger story!

TRIBES OVER TIME

TRIBES over TIME show us how we belong.

Habit:  Go in Circles.
“If kids need to connect in tribes (community) over time in order to understand how they belong, we as parents need to be intentional about how we create circles that will make them feel like they are part of a tribe.”

We all have heard the benefits of eating a meal together.  Well, here it is again.  Eat a meal as a family.  Invite key people over for meals.  Enjoy and help them experience the richness of community.

FUN OVER TIME

FUN over TIME makes a friendship go deeper.

Habit:  Make it Fun.
“You show them you care when you allow yourself to be vulnerable enough to just have fun.  So loosen up.”

“The joy of the Lord is your strength.”  There really is a lot packed into that little scripture.  Go have some fun this week!

 

Now, that you’ve heard these six concepts, what key concepts are you already doing well?
Do you see how this isn’t now or never, but you can build something over time?

How does this change your perspective on how you parent this week?

Want to further explore these ideas, here’s the book to help:  Playing for Keeps: 6 Things Every Kid Needs

Prepared to Be Unprepared.

pier-407252_1920

Are you prepared to be unprepared?

I was recently listening to an interview with Seth Godin who was reflecting that most memorable moments, the most important moments of life are the one’s we are unprepared for.

Think about that for a moment.

Were you prepared for your wedding day?
Were you prepared for the moment you held your child for the first time?
Were you truly prepared for the day you saw your dream become a reality?
Can you rehearse the moments of life that become the most meaningful?

If we are honest, some of the greatest things in our lives are things we could never prepare for.  Seth went on to claim that our obsession with preparation has gone too far.  Our need to be prepared has ventured too far into the realm where we are just naturally unprepared.  We don’t risk because we fear we are unprepared.  Is it possible to allow being unprepared to be a good thing?

“Parenting is always frontier.”

John Elderedge

In parenting, we are not always sure what is coming our way.  We don’t know what’s around the corner.  You get through the terrible two’s and there is the next phase waiting for you.  You are always on the border of something else.

So how do you prepare for life’s big moments?

Our only real option is to step fully into whatever life presents us.  To be in that moment.  Our preparation is who we are and who we are becoming.  Our preparation is everything life has taught us up to this point.  Our goal in these moments is to just get out of the way and be present.

KNOWLEDGE FOR THE JOURNEY

Next week, I will be sharing some principles from Orange that I’ve found very helpful to think through.  The basic idea stems from a number and a scripture.

From the time a child is born you have approximately 936 weeks until they graduate.

To the point above, do you really think you can use those 936 weeks to TRULY prepare for the moment your son or daughter leaves your house…doubtful.

“Teach us to number our days, so that we may gain a heart of wisdom”  Ps. 90:12

Based on these two things, Orange has identified 6 things that we can do over time to influence the life and faith of our kids.  Here’s the thing:  you have time.  Time from now until then.  Time to influence your child to become the person that can step fully into the unprepared moments of life, trust the God who brought them to this moment, and be present for whatever comes next.

Are you prepared to be unprepared?

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 ParentingThoughts

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑

Verified by ExactMetrics