My Kids and Hearing the Voice of God

May 21, 2008

One of the great joys of my life is being a Dad. I love being with my kids and especially love when we get an opportunity to talk about the real way God interacts with His children. The other week, my son was forgetting a part of a verse we’ve been praying through every night. I told him that Jesus said the Holy Spirit would help him remember everything that Jesus taught us and had him ask the Holy Spirit for the word. Immediately he said “compassion” with this big look of surprise on his face.

A couple of days later, I was talking to my kids, 4 and almost 7, about hearing God speak to us. I used my son’s example from a couple of days earlier and I was encouraging them to ask the Holy Spirit to speak to them in prayer, give them direction etc. My four year old interrupted me to tell me that she already knew that God wanted to talk to her. She learned it in Sunday School. (big shout out to our 4 year old teachers!) So I asked her if she’d ever heard God speak. Here’s how the conversation played out:

Mercy: Oh yeah.
Me: What does he sound like?
Mercy: Daddy. He sounds just like you.
Me: (muffled sound…trying not to cry)

My wife and I have always hoped to be the kind of parents that our kids would grow up to say, if God is like Mommy and Daddy, then I want to know Him. We’ve also prayed that they would far exceed us in all things pertaining to life and Godliness. Here’s believing that these are just the first in a long line of confirmations that they are well on their way.

Judah’s Baptism

March 27, 2008

I had the chance to baptize my son a couple of weeks ago. What a blessing! Check it out! Peace…adam

What is my life telling my kids?

March 27, 2008

I had this thought that struck me the other day while I was on the road to lead worship at a friend’s church. “What am I telling my kids with my non-verbal actions that life is about?” I was thinking about everything that I place priority on in my life and how, when I’m gone and they’re grown, they are going to take cues on how life should be lived from me. I can leave them at home while I go and do the work God has called me to and they will most likely grow up and do the same with their kids. I could sit at home and only watch TV and they will probably do the same. You get the idea.

I thought I would challenge myself, and some of my friends, on this idea. I would say that I am most passionate about Jesus, my wife, my kids, others and then everything else. But, the actions that my kids see might portray a different set of priorities. They see me after I’m done praying/worshiping/leading/mentoring/studying etc. They don’t get to see a lot of the more “spiritual” things that I do. So as I took an honest inventory of what they do see, I felt like my kids would know a few things if I were gone tomorrow.

1. Jesus is the most important thing.
2. We should worship with passion.
3. I love their Mom more than anyone else. (so far so good)
4. Tarheel Basketball is VERY important.
5. The TV can stay on most of the time. (uh-oh)
6. Having fun with friends is one of the most important things in life.
7. Daddy’s PlayStation is a lot of fun and I should definitely learn how to play it.
8. The computer and cell phone trump most things.

1-3 are pretty good, but the rest of the list isn’t reflective of my true priorities (at least in my heart) but it is probably what they see. That last one hurts especially bad. I thought about how I read and I pray, but rarely in front of my kids. Don’t get me wrong, we bless our kids every night. We talk about God. What His Word says. How its principles should affect how we live our everyday lives. But they don’t see me pounding it down, working it through, talking about it with friends, asking the Holy Spirit for wisdom.

When I’m gone, I want my kids to be able to know how they should live. I want them to say, “I saw my Dad and Mom live it; now it’s my turn and my turn to teach my kids the same.” I am sending this out to a few friends and asking them, “What is my life telling my kids?” and “What do I want it to be telling them?” If they allow me, I’ll post some of their thoughts here.

I, for one, intend to start being a little more intentional with what my non-verbal communications say to my kids. I want them to know that a relationship with God changes who we are, prioritizes our life and gives us an eternal perspective. I want them to know God is alive and well, not just by what they hear, but by what they see.