Why Christian Kids Rebel: Trading Heartache for Hope
By Tim Kimmel
()
About this ebook
Author of Grace-Based Parenting and the best-selling Little House on the Freeway, Dr. Tim Kimmel helps Christian parents avoid the potential problems their well-meaning parenting styles could create. This book offers a new way to look at the "ideal" Christian home and shows why "cocoon-style" Christian homes don't always work.
Many parents have "done it all" when it comes to the checklist of good Christian parenting, only to see their son or daughter step away from their belief system and embrace other lifestyle choices.
Dr. Kimmel helps to increase the chances that your children will develop a vibrant faith early in life and stick with it on into adulthood. It will also provide help and hope for those already dealing with a rebellious teen and teach them how to lead the child back into a walk of faith.
Tim Kimmel
Dr. Tim Kimmel is one of America’s top advocates speaking for the family. He is the Executive Director of the non-profit ministry Family Matters, whose goal is to build great family relationships by educating, equipping and encouraging parents for every age and stage of life. Tim conducts conferences across the country on the unique pressures that confront today’s families. He has authored many books including: Little House on the Freeway (selling over 700,000 copies; Multnomah) and the Gold Medallion winning bestseller Grace Based Parenting (100,000 copies; Thomas Nelson). He lives with his family in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Read more from Tim Kimmel
Extreme Grandparenting: The Ride of Your Life! Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGrace-Based Parenting: Set Your Family Tree Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Raising Kids for True Greatness: Redefine Success for You and Your Child Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Little House on the Freeway: Help for the Hurried Home Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/550 Ways to Really Love Your Kids: Simple Wisdom and Truths for Parents Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Connecting Church & Home: A Grace-Based Partnership Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Related to Why Christian Kids Rebel
Related ebooks
Life Is Messy, God Is Good: Sanity for the Chaos of Everyday Life Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Parenting with Words of Grace: Building Relationships with Your Children One Conversation at a Time Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The 20 Hardest Questions Every Mom Faces: Praying Your Way to Realistic, Biblical Answers Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsParenting Is Heart Work Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Christian Parenting Handbook: 50 Heart-Based Strategies for All the Stages of Your Child's Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Raising an Original: Parenting Each Child According to their Unique God-Given Temperament Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRaising Passionate Jesus Followers: The Power of Intentional Parenting Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Raising Amazing: Bringing Up Kids Who Love God, Like Their Family, and Do the Dishes without Being Asked Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I Can't Believe You Just Said That: Biblical Wisdom for Taming Your Child's Tongue Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Permanent Markers: Spiritual Life Skills to Write on Your Kids' Hearts Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsYour Boy: Raising a Godly Son in an Ungodly World Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMother and Son: The Respect Effect Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Modern Parents, Vintage Values: Instilling Character in Today's Kids Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Humble Moms: How the Work of Christ Sustains the Work of Motherhood Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Prayers for the Battlefield: Staying MomStrong in the Fight for Your Family and Faith Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Sacred Parenting: How Raising Children Shapes Our Souls Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Teaching Your Children Healthy Sexuality (Pure Foundations): A Biblical Approach to Preparing Them for Life Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMoms Raising Sons to Be Men: Guiding Them Toward Their Purpose and Passion Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Unraveled: Hope for the Mom at the End of Her Rope Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Parenting with Scripture: A Topical Guide for Teachable Moments Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Summary of Karis Kimmel Murray's Grace Based Discipline Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCreative Correction Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Famous at Home: 7 Decisions to Put Your Family Center Stage in a World Competing for Your Time, Attention, and Identity Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsParent Differently: Raise Kids with Biblical Character That Changes Culture Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Romancing Your Child's Heart (2nd Edition): A Fresh Vision of Christian Parenting Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFearless Parenting: How to Raise Faithful Kids in a Secular Culture Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPraying for Boys: Asking God for the Things They Need Most Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Guarding Your Child's Heart: Establish Your Child's Faith Through Scripture Memory and Meditation Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Praying Mom: Making Prayer the First and Best Response to Motherhood Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Christianity For You
Mere Christianity Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Decluttering at the Speed of Life: Winning Your Never-Ending Battle with Stuff Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Boundaries Updated and Expanded Edition: When to Say Yes, How to Say No To Take Control of Your Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The 5 Love Languages: The Secret to Love that Lasts Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Screwtape Letters Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Four Loves Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Wild at Heart Expanded Edition: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Uninvited: Living Loved When You Feel Less Than, Left Out, and Lonely Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Anxious for Nothing: Finding Calm in a Chaotic World Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Girl, Wash Your Face: Stop Believing the Lies About Who You Are so You Can Become Who You Were Meant to Be Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership: Follow Them and People Will Follow You Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Good Boundaries and Goodbyes: Loving Others Without Losing the Best of Who You Are Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Law of Connection: Lesson 10 from The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For? Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Unoffendable: How Just One Change Can Make All of Life Better (updated with two new chapters) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5How to Lead When You're Not in Charge: Leveraging Influence When You Lack Authority Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Present Over Perfect: Leaving Behind Frantic for a Simpler, More Soulful Way of Living Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Changes That Heal: Four Practical Steps to a Happier, Healthier You Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Winning the War in Your Mind: Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Book of Enoch Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Boundaries Workbook: When to Say Yes, How to Say No to Take Control of Your Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Bible Recap: A One-Year Guide to Reading and Understanding the Entire Bible Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Doing Life with Your Adult Children: Keep Your Mouth Shut and the Welcome Mat Out Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth: Fourth Edition Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5NIV, Holy Bible Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Less Fret, More Faith: An 11-Week Action Plan to Overcome Anxiety Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Grief Observed Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Related categories
Reviews for Why Christian Kids Rebel
0 ratings0 reviews
Book preview
Why Christian Kids Rebel - Tim Kimmel
Why
Christian
Kids Rebel
TRADING HEARTACHE FOR HOPE
DR. TIM KIMMEL
© 2004 Tim Kimmel.
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version (NIV). © 1973, 1978, 1984, International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Bible Publishers.
Other Scripture quotations are from the following sources:
The Living Bible (TLB), © 1971 by Tyndale House Publishers, Wheaton, Ill. Used by permission.
Good News Translation, Second Edition (GNT). © 2001 by The Zondervan Corporation. All rights reserved.
The King James Version of the Bible (KJV).
New American Standard Bible (NASB). © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. All rights reserved.
The New King James Version (NKJV®), © 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kimmel, Tim.
Why Christian kids rebel : trading heartache for hope / Tim Kimmel.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-8499-1830-8
1. Christian life. 2. Parenting—Religious aspects—Christianity. 3. Parent and teenager—Religious aspects—Christianity. I. Title.
BV4529.K555 2004
248.8'45—dc22
2004017378
Printed in the United States of America
08 09 10 11 12 QW 14 13 12 11 10
Dedicated to
Cammie VanRooy
You never rebelled.
You never wanted to.
You never needed to.
Other Resources
by Dr. Tim Kimmel
BOOKS
Grace-Based Parenting
Little House on the Freeway
Raising Kids Who Turn Out Right
Homegrown Heroes
How to Deal With Powerful Personalities
Basic Training for a Few Good Men
VIDEO STUDIES FOR SMALL GROUPS AND CHURCHES
The Hurried Family Video Series
Raising Kids Who Turn Out Right Video Series
Basic Training for a Few Good Men Video Series
Grandparenthood: More Than Rocking Chairs
Dr. Tim Kimmel does keynote speaking and also conducts parenting,
marriage, and men’s conferences throughout the United States.
To obtain any of these resources or to contact Dr. Kimmel:
Family Matters™
P.O. Box 14382
Scottsdale, AZ 85267-4382
www.familymatters.net
1-800-467-4596
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: When That Gleam
in Your Eye Makes Your Heart Hurt
Chapter 1 The Sheer Weight of Rebellion
Chapter 2 An Overdose of Bad Behavior
Chapter 3 A Prodigal Primer
Chapter 4 A Lesson from the Italian Stallion
Chapter 5 Compulsory Christianity
Chapter 6 Cliché Christianity
Chapter 7 Comfortable Christianity
Chapter 8 Cocoon Christianity
Chapter 9 Compromised Christianity
Chapter 10 Bridges of Hope
Chapter 11 Echoes of Mercy
Notes
Acknowledgments
It’s nice when you have so many people who believe in you and in what you have to say. This book enjoyed a great supporting cast.
Bill and Ann Epley—you provided the setting and the encouragement to get the creative wheels turning.
Steve and Barbara Uhlmann—There’s something about a cabin in the woods that makes me want to get a lot of writing done. Thanks for the access to such a nice view and so much solitude.
The W Group—every last face in the team picture. You’re beautiful.
Laura Kendall, David Moberg, Susan Ligon, and Debbie Wickwire—an author’s Dream Team.
Thanks for your faith in me, your wise counsel, and your belief in this message.
Steve and Cheryl Green—I love the way you cover my front and back.
Mike & Karis, Cody, Shiloh, and Colt—you chose not to rebel. You chose wisely.
Riley and Lydia—Your parents are giving you so much to live for. You make your grandfather proud.
Darcy—You created a home where a kid would be crazy to want to rebel and a husband who would be crazy to take any of the credit. Thanks for a passionate Christian faith that we always wanted to emulate.
INTRODUCTION
When That Gleam
in Your
Eye Makes Your Heart Hurt
A friend recently gave me a CD of classic Christian hymns sung by contemporary artists. I became enamored with this collection of songs because hymn after hymn reminds me of how completely I am forgiven and how certainly I am loved. I put it into my CD alarm clock so that at five, five thirty, or six o’clock in the morning, a quiet synthesizer slips in through the back door of my sleep and a woman’s voice begins to sing about an encounter she has with Jesus each morning. As my mind begins its shift from the depths of sleep to the awareness of a new day, a calming lyric reminds me that . . .
He walks with me, and He talks with me,
and He tells me I am His own.
And the joy we share as we tarry there,
none other has ever known.
Beautiful music and meaningful lyrics can soothe us, encourage us, and give us hope. And I wish so much that I could have a small CD player installed in this book—one that would play songs of reassurance in the background as you read about why kids in Christian homes often rebel. I’d want to provide themes that evoke a confidence in God’s great faithfulness and His amazing grace. I feel certain that our discussion about why kids rebel would be a lot easier to process if you could work through it while hearing a familiar melody that reminds you, no matter what your lot, that it is well with your soul. That’s because the issue of rebellious kids has a way of slipping over us like the shadow of a thunderhead that has suddenly blocked out the sun.
FACING OUR FEARFUL EMOTIONS
The subject of why kids from Christian homes rebel isn’t the punch line to some lighthearted joke, unless maybe you’re into sick jokes. It’s a subject that occupies the sober, tender, and often discouraging corridors of a parent’s soul. Our children’s rebellion trips circuit breakers in our emotional system—the ones labeled panic
and fear.
Kids who are living a life of rebellion often inspire our blood pressure to seek record heights. It’s the reason some parents buy Tums and Pepto-Bismol in big box
quantities at Sam’s Club or Costco.
Besides scaring us to death, our kids’ rebellion can make us angry, too. It’s like a slap in the face to moms and dads. After all you’ve done to give your child’s life a good Christian jump-start, they just throw it right back at you as if you’ve done them some moral disservice. It kind of makes you want to stand on their air hose . . . if they had one.
The problem with all of these emotions—sadness, discouragement, fear, and even anger—is that they might define how we feel, but they don’t give us much help when it comes to dealing with the problems that caused them. And they certainly aren’t great travel partners if you have to ride side by side with them through an entire book—regardless of how helpful the book might be. But to ignore them or treat them as if they aren’t serious factors could trivialize the severity of the problem you are dealing with.
The last thing you need in the middle of this discussion is someone giving you pipe-dream assurances that don’t honestly address the reality of your situation. It would be so easy to soft-pedal your son’s or daughter’s rebellious actions with empty statements like, It’s not that big of a deal,
when in reality it might actually be a bigger deal than either of us thought. Since feeling good is more important to most people than doing good, it would be tempting to beguile you with promises that everything is going to get better. But an honest assessment of the facts tells us that, in reality, things may get far worse. As I write to you, I need to be forthright and honest. Still, I don’t want to steal any sense of true hope.
DEGREES OF DIFFICULTY
Fortunately, for many of you there is no need to offer reassuring promises sung with soft voices in the background. Your children seem to be responding well to the Christian training you are giving them. You’re just checking in to see if there is something you need to do or keep doing so they don’t take a nosedive into rebellion. I’m glad for you. I hope this book will not only encourage you but also help confirm things you’ve already incorporated into your parenting philosophy that may have minimized your child’s inclination toward rebellion.
But there are others of you who have children that have taken their rebellion to discouraging and even dangerous depths. The impact of their bad choices has a choke hold on you. The problems they are making for you, your spouse (if you’re married), and the other kids in the family are nothing short of a road trip through the suburbs of hell. You feel like the tag line of one of those old Roach Motel commercials when it comes to your child’s rebellion: You’ve checked in, but you can’t check out.
AVOIDING CLICHÉD RESPONSES
In the face of your discouragement, I’d rather set a tone that, while not necessarily upbeat, is at least positive. Obviously, no one questions that rebellious Christian kids have a way of sucking the joy and confidence out of their parents’ lives. But there’s got to be some hope to cling to, even though you’re walking through the valley of the shadow of rebellion.
There is.
Let’s make sure, however, that we don’t get confused at the outset. The hope isn’t wrapped up in ingenious people or clever formulas. It’s especially not found in the writings of authors, no matter how much insight they might bring to the discussion. Writers of books are human beings who walk on feet of clay just like you. Your hope is going to be found in your relationship with Christ and how you let Him work through you when it comes to dealing with your rebellious child.
I’m a father of four, a grandfather of two (and counting), a youth worker for fifteen years, and a family advocate for the last twenty. If anything, I’m just one beggar telling the other beggars where the food is. But I’m passionate about this subject. I’ve watched so many nice Christian families have the spiritual rug pulled out from under them as a result of one of their kids rebelling and, frankly, I’m tired of the devastation it creates. And I’m saddened when decent people hear the same old clichés dragged out when it comes to solving their problem. You’ve heard them:
• You need to discipline that kid more!
• Get her out of that heathen public-school environment and put her in Christian school.
• Maybe if you had been reading your Bible more . . .
• You should try having family devotions.
• If you’d just sit together as a family in church . . .
• Are you praying for that child at least three times a day?
• Get those kids busy memorizing Scripture.
• You need counseling, and . . .
• That kid needs medication!
It’s not that any of these suggestions are necessarily bad. In fact, one or more of them might play a role in the final equation you come up with for helping your child. But in reality, everything on this list is just a thing; each item is an isolated action that may or may not have an influence on your child. Your child’s rebellion is not a problem like crooked teeth or bad eyesight that can be corrected with prescribed external actions. It’s an offshoot of an attitude or a series of conclusions your child is embracing about himself or herself, and you, and life, and love, and God. So, for example, reading your Bible more, regardless of how much comfort it might bring you, won’t necessarily change anything in your child’s heart. Meanwhile, hearing someone recite these worn-out suggestions just compounds the guilt, misery, and frustration you’re already dealing with. Besides, you’ve probably already done everything on the list, and then some. And nothing has changed.
In reality, that list of typical suggestions doesn’t address the real problem. Most parents think the problem is their child’s rebellion. That’s where they get sidetracked and why they turn to the isolated items on the cliché
list as solutions. Our children’s rebellion is not the problem. It is the symptom. Why they are rebelling is the problem. And unless we address the why,
the external things we do in reaction to their rebellion will not make much of a difference.
We want to address the why in this book. Why do kids turn their backs on the favorable and even enviable spiritual environment they were brought up in? Understanding the underlying reasons puts you in a much better position to do something positive to correct them.
THE HOPE BUSINESS
Most books that address the issue of teen rebellion march out the usual suspects.
They assume the problem is the peer group, the public schools, the Internet, television, movies, sex, drugs, and rock-’n’-roll. They also assume there’s hope in the solutions we mentioned earlier: more Bible, more prayer, more camp, more discipline, a Christian education, etc., will counter these problems. What they fail to consider is that the Christian subculture we have chosen to raise our children in might precondition them to spiritual apathy or antagonism.
Most books address a change in the child. This book is going to suggest a change in the parent. If you think about it, this is the only thing that makes sense. The one (and possibly only) person you have any true control over is yourself. You can change you. If you could change your child, you would have done it already. A genuine change in you is the best way to create a change in your rebellious child. Changed lives change lives. Willingness to change also puts you in a far better position to transfer authentic faith to your child.
Prodigals cause panic. They break parents’ hearts. They trigger endless self-doubt and second-guessing. In their desperation, many parents simply increase the passion with which they do the same ineffective things. Some even start to question their own faith.
I want this to be a book that helps you get a better glimpse at the source of your child’s rebellion. I hope that before you are done, you will understand the vital role your child’s rebellion may actually be playing in his spiritual pilgrimage.
You may have unwittingly taken up residence inside an evangelical ghetto, thinking it somehow offers a safer and healthier environment in which your children can develop their relationships with God. It doesn’t. My hope is, if that is your case, this book will help you move out of that ghetto and take up residence closer to the front lines of the battle for the cross.
Too many parents feel helpless and hopeless when it comes to their children. They assume the powers of evil have the high ground. Indeed, in many family scenarios the powers of evil do seem to be in control. I want to show you how to turn these odds around. Jesus Christ is, among so many other things, in the hope business. He wants to help you with your rebellious son or daughter by first giving you an authentic love for Him as your Savior and then a grace-filled heart toward your boy or girl who may be careening seriously off course. He loves you more than you can imagine. He knows just what you’re up against. He wants to walk with you and talk with you and tell you you are His own . . .
Even more, He wants to help you lead your son or daughter out of the clutches of rebellion.
QUESTIONING THE STATUS QUO
Don’t freak out on me here, but I think we need to take an honest look at the things we do as typical
Christian parents and ask some hard questions about their effectiveness. I’m not suggesting we turn our backs on the things that make up the checklist of the standard, conscientious Christian family. But there just might be something wrong about the way we are applying these things. More than that, our presuppositions about the role or the impact these Christian activities actually have on our children just might be flawed.
I watch parents raise their children in Sunday school and church from the time they are born. They educate them at home or send them to a Christian school. They have regular devotions with them and pack them off to church camp. They seem like cutting-edge Christian parents. The sad truth is that many of them, who faithfully do parenting that might seem to point kids in the right direction, are often the most disappointed with the results. That compliant, Scripture-quoting, chorushumming child sometimes turns into an apathetic or antagonistic adolescent.
We need to be willing to slip past the veneer of our Christian lifestyle and take a hard look at the heart of our faith. This may require us to question the status quo, but it might also pump some fresh air into our approach to raising our kids.
KIDS REBEL AND PARENTS SELF-REFLECT
There’s one other issue we need to address at the outset of this discussion. It’s one of the true joy stealers
when it comes to dealing with the reality of our children’s rebellion. I’m referring to the inescapable sense that we played some role in it. Kids acting out against their family’s faith and moral value system have a way of drawing their mothers and fathers to mirrors—to study themselves with the haunting sense that somehow they are to blame. And the cold, hard fact is that we may be somewhat to blame. We know we can play a positive role in our children’s lives, and because that is true, we also have to admit we might equally play a negative role. In an honest discussion of why kids rebel, we have to assume that a healthy assessment of our part in the equation is in order.
Therefore, this discussion cannot be held without some possible discomfort to you. I wish I could guarantee that it won’t be that way, but that would be naive on my part. And it would be naive on your part, too. We are parents. We make choices and carry out actions that sometimes have negative effects on our children. Our sons and daughters are unique individuals. What works well with one can blow up in a parent’s face with the other. On top of that, we all make mistakes— sometimes lots of them. Our kids make mistakes—sometimes lots of them. We don’t always see the big picture, either. In fact, we seldom do.
In the midst of all this, times change. We change. Our kids change.
What worked for our parents may not go over as well with our children. The pressures we are processing now may be quite different from what we were contending with when our kids were younger. And we all have blind spots—those enigmatic voids in our perspective that handicap our ability to see our children gracefully.
Most likely, you aren’t too threatened by the possibility of reading some ideas that might be convicting. That’s why most of us choose books like this. But that is not why I write them. I don’t want to beat you up. I want to encourage you and give you hope. I want to suggest some lines of thinking that could actually set your child free from the tyranny that may have taken over his or her heart. Still, you may have to turn a few pages that are painful to read in the process. Try to keep in mind that it will be worth it, because there might well be a new relationship waiting for you and your rebellious child. You could end up seeing her through a whole different set of eyes—gracious eyes.
In any case, it’s got to be better than what you’ve had to contend with so far.
You see why I wish we could play some soothing songs of hope in the background? It’s easy to feel that the picture is bleak and the future is grim when you are assessing the cause and effect of a rebellious child’s behavior. But you need to know at the outset of this discussion that there is hope. And that’s not some empty Sunday-school promise.
Hope is ours for the taking.
Like the voice that serenades me each morning, I’m reminded that regardless of what awaits me today, I’m not alone. The song reminds me that no matter what ails my soul, it is not beyond the healing touch of the God I serve. My days are like your days. They are filled with scenes that aren’t always easy to look at, decisions that aren’t enjoyable to make, and people that aren’t always easy to love.
Because of what I do as a minister, I have been face to face with some extremely angry kids—some of whom are living in the middle of textbook Christian families. I’ve seen the devastation. I’ve felt the despair. And over the years, I’ve also noticed some common denominators within many of these Christian homes. Similar patterns keep appearing in the backdrop of the crises because some aspects of the most popular Christian parenting models actually incite our children to rebel. It’s a bitter pill for many Christian parents to swallow. When it comes to your philosophy of Christian parenting, before you’ve finished reading, you may have to honestly reassess what you are doing. You may have to ask yourself whether what you are doing is helping or hurting your rebellious child.
But again, whatever the answer you come to, there is hope.
A MESSAGE OF HOPE AND GRACE
This book is written to parents who are frustrated or discouraged with the results of their spiritual efforts with their children. You’ve done it all when it comes to the checklist of a good Christian parent, only to see your son or daughter turn away and embrace some frightening lifestyle choices. Some of you are near panic as you assess the human toll of your prodigal child’s rebellion. Others have an opposite but equally serious dilemma: you have a child who is merely going through the motions of Christian behavior but is indifferent to the work of the Holy Spirit in her heart.
In either case, this book is for you.
It’s also for any parent who wants to lower the possibilities of his or her children turning their back on their faith. Some of you with younger children are waiting in fear at the rapidly approaching teenage years and figure it’s just a matter of time. Many parents see the rebellion in young people around them and assume it is a foregone conclusion for their own girls and boys.
It’s not.
I want to show you how to increase the chance that your child will develop a vibrant faith early in life and stick with it into adulthood.
This book, like every other book I’ve written about parenting, is a book about grace—God’s grace to you and the grace you can bring to your role as a mother or father. The amazing grace of God is the greatest gift you have to offer to children who may have lost their way. The wonderful thing about God’s grace is that before you can give it, you first have to receive it. Before we’re done, I hope both will happen.
CHAPTER 1
The Sheer Weight
of Rebellion
There’s nothing that hurts a mom’s or dad’s heart quite like having a child who is going astray. It is a constant ache, and sometimes it’s worse than the pain you feel for a child who is seriously ill or contending with some kind of disability. Those problems aren’t of the child’s choosing. But when your son or daughter is consciously turning his back on God or is hellbent on rejecting the value system you have tried so hard to give her, it’s like a sucker punch to your faith. To think that your son or daughter would deliberately choose a path that can only lead to disappointment and regret—well, it’s a hurt that can seep its way into the deepest crevices of your soul.
And it tears you up to see what kids’ rebellion does to them personally—to their relationships, to their health, and to their potential. They lose credibility as fast as they are losing emotional and spiritual momentum. Many of the kids who take on a mantle of rebellion put together a series of bad choices that place them in bondage to their mistakes—bondage they often can’t get out of on their own. Yet when you try to help them, they react like a cat stuck in a tree, snarling and striking out at you as you attempt to coach them out of the mess they are in.
Most of the time these young people are unresponsive to your reasonable ideas. Sometimes they are closed to talking at all. They won’t let you inside their hearts long enough for you to get a decent glimpse of the contradictions that are tormenting them. When they finally do speak up, you not only face their hostility, but you often hear them spewing out philosophies of life that bear no resemblance to the one you thought you gave them. It hurts to see them making 180-degree turns away from the direction they were going during most of their childhood. It’s as though the little cherubs who sat on your lap and basked in the Bible stories you read to them have suddenly enrolled in Osama Senior High.
Wendy’s daughter serves as an example.
A GOOD GIRL GONE BAD
She couldn’t decide which distressed her the most: the hurt, the resentment, or the fear. Each was fighting for mastery of her heart as she watched her daughter disappear across the front lawn. The screen door still quivered from the power with which the girl had slammed it as she stormed out of the house. It was so hard to believe that the fifteen-year-old who had just fired those F-bombs at her was the same girl who, only a few months earlier, had arrived home from a mission trip with her high-school youth group ready to change the world. How could one child regress so far in such a short time?
This teenager had thrived on her family’s church activities. She had loved her youth group, her youth leaders, and her friends from church. Now she wanted nothing to do with any of them. While she was at it, she had decided she wanted nothing to do with her parents, either—and she especially didn’t want to hear any of her mom’s spiritual insights. Save your homily for someone who gives a (expletive),
was the last thing Wendy heard before her daughter rushed out of the house.
The only thing Wendy’s daughter seemed to be concerned about now was her boyfriend—a young man who was the polar opposite of everything their family stood for. Wendy’s heart sank as she considered what all of this meant. How could this girl, who had been handed Christianity on a platter, suddenly reject everything? What kind of horrible path would her daughter’s antagonism lead her down?
THE PROFILE OF REBELLIOUS KIDS
Rebellious Christian kids often share many similarities. They are blocking God out of their lives, parents annoy them, and family life ticks them off. They are capable of being stubborn, obstinate, argumentative, aloof, and moody. They often seem embarrassed by your outward commitment to God and are disinterested in your spiritual advice. They are no longer fans of church and Sunday school. These kids have no problem making a series of dumb decisions that will get them into trouble. When you inquire about their thinking, it seems almost as though someone has sneaked in and erased most of the spiritual programming from the hard drives of their souls. And it’s not uncommon to hear them offering the most illogical and irrational reasons for their behavior.
Some Christian kids’ rebellion is a short-lived parenthesis of stupidity that they get through rather quickly. It’s just a brief little jaunt down the wrong side of the spiritual street and then they’re over it. It’s an isolated My kid got suspended from school for being a bonehead
–type rebellion (an exercise I put my parents through twice), or a My seventeen-year-old daughter bought a thong bikini for the church pool party and can’t seem to understand why I, as her mother, can’t stop hyperventilating
– type of spiritual crisis. These are the kinds of incidents that jumpstart our relationship with God. It’s as though, during these crises, God puts two spiritual cardiac paddles on the sides of