by Charles R. Swindoll
Read 1 Samuel 3:1--18
The temptation of any child of vocational Christian
ministers is to see the work of the ministry as just another thing, just
another religious occupation. Breaking through the wall of "public
religion" must be the intense responsibility of the parent-minister if his
or her children are to understand that this isn't a business, a slick
profession, or an entertainment arena where Mommy or Daddy puts on a
performance.
The key word is authenticity. Not perfection, for no one
gets it right all the time. But being real. Admit your faults, own them
completely, ask for forgiveness, be quick to give it, allow children plenty of
room to fail, and let them see you live your life behind the scenes with love,
grace, and humor. All of that takes time and effort, both of which will cost
you productivity on the job. Consider it a priceless sacrifice . . . a
permanent investment.
Disintegrating families have parents who refuse to face the
severity of their children's actions. Eli knew how horrible his sons had
become, yet did nothing! I've seen parents in such denial that they cannot
bring themselves to admit that their child has a serious problem with drugs or
pornography or sexual promiscuity or stealing---behavior that any other normal
person would consider a red flag. Yet they act as though the crisis will
resolve itself if given a little patience. Wrong.
If you have children who are young, you have children who
are impressionable. That's the time to make your most important investment in
them. To wait until they're as tall as you, you will have already allowed them
to sow seeds of self-destruction.
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