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Friday, June 26, 2026

How Do I Engage in Theological Discussions with Grace and Wisdom?

 

Speaking Truth Without Losing Grace

 

Theological discussions can be some of the most meaningful conversations Christians have, but they can also become defensive, combative, and unproductive. When deeply held beliefs are challenged, our first impulse may be to prove that we are right, expose the other person’s error, or end the conversation altogether. Scripture calls us to something better. We are to speak truth, but we are to speak it in love. We are to defend the faith, but with meekness and reverence. We are to correct errors, but without becoming quarrelsome. We are to listen before answering, restrain anger, and remember that only God can open a person’s heart to the truth. Colossians 4:6 says, “Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one.” Grace and wisdom are not optional additions to theological truth. They are part of how truth should be communicated. 

 

Examine The Motive Before Entering The Discussion 

The difference between defending biblical truth and trying to win an argument often begins with motive. Am I seeking to understand the other person and represent Christ faithfully, or am I trying to prove that I am intellectually superior? Am I concerned about the person’s soul, or am I mainly concerned about protecting my pride? Am I willing to listen, or have I already decided that nothing they say is worth hearing? A conversation that begins with “I am right, and you are wrong” usually leaves little room for understanding. It resembles a marriage argument filled with accusations such as “You always” or “You never.” Once the other person feels condemned before being heard, the conversation becomes a contest rather than a search for truth. Second Timothy 2:24–25 says: “A servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient, in humility correcting those who are in opposition.”That passage does not tell us to avoid correction. It tells us how correction must be given. The servant of Christ is gentle, patient, teachable, and humble because repentance is ultimately the work of God, not the result of our rhetorical power. 

 

Seek First To Understand 

Before responding to another person’s theology, I want to understand how they reached their conclusions. Every person is shaped by family, culture, religious teaching, personal experiences, suffering, relationships, and social expectations. Understanding those influences does not mean every belief is equally true. It means I should not assume I understand someone merely because I know the label they use. Proverbs 18:13 warns: “He who answers a matter before he hears it, it is folly and shame to him.” Listening carefully allows me to discover whether the person is asking an honest question, expressing pain, repeating something they heard, defending a family tradition, or simply attempting to provoke an argument. People often need to be heard before they are prepared to hear. This is why thoughtful questions are so important. I may ask, “What led you to believe that?” “How do you understand this passage?” “What do you believe about God, sin, salvation, and eternal life?” “Have you personally studied the biblical text, or are you repeating something you were taught?” Questions reveal the foundation of a belief. They also communicate respect. 

 

Let Your Life Support Your Words 

The strongest theological argument can be undermined by an ungodly attitude. If I speak about the love of Christ while treating someone with contempt, my conduct contradicts my message. If I defend biblical morality while speaking dishonestly, arrogantly, or cruelly, the other person may reject the truth because of the way I represented it. First Peter 3:15–16 tells believers to be ready to give a defense for their hope “with meekness and fear,” while maintaining a good conscience and good conduct. Many people may never begin by reading the Bible, but they will read the lives of Christians. They will watch how we respond to insults, disagreements, inconveniences, suffering, and criticism. They will notice whether our faith produces patience, honesty, courage, kindness, and self-control. Our lives do not replace the Gospel, but they can either support or contradict it. First Corinthians 13 reminds us that even great knowledge becomes empty without love. We may understand doctrine and still communicate it like “sounding brass or a clanging cymbal.” Truth without love becomes noise. Love without truth becomes sentimentality. Biblical witness requires both. 

 

Remain Firm Without Becoming Harsh 

Grace does not mean treating every theological claim as equally valid. Scripture commands believers to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 3). There are teachings that must be challenged because they contradict the Gospel. However, firmness and hostility are not the same thing. A soft answer can turn away wrath, while a harsh word stirs up anger (Prov. 15:1). A gentle tone does not weaken truth. It makes the truth easier to hear. When discussing Christianity with skeptics or people from other religions, I should avoid making assumptions about what every member of that group believes. People within the same tradition may interpret and practice their faith differently. I should ask questions, examine primary sources carefully, and distinguish between official teachings, cultural customs, extremist interpretations, and the individual standing before me. At the same time, I should be honest about the Christian message. Jesus Christ is not merely one religious teacher among many. Scripture teaches that humanity is separated from God by sin and that reconciliation comes through the death and resurrection of Christ. The central question is not whether someone is polite, religious, or sincere. The essential question is whether they understand who Christ is, why He died, and whether they are trusting Him for salvation. 

 

Distinguish Essential Truth From Secondary Disagreements 

Not every theological disagreement is equally important. Some doctrines stand at the heart of the Christian faith: the nature of God, the person and work of Jesus Christ, His death and resurrection, the reality of sin, salvation by grace through faith, and the authority of Scripture. Other matters are important but secondary. Faithful believers may disagree about certain practices, church structures, prophetic interpretations, or questions of Christian liberty without denying the Gospel. Romans 14:1 tells us to receive those who are weak in faith, “but not to disputes over doubtful things.” Wisdom requires knowing when a disagreement threatens the Gospel and when it concerns a matter on which believers may differ. Treating every issue as a test of salvation creates unnecessary division. Treating essential doctrine as unimportant creates serious spiritual danger. Maturity means holding the central truths firmly while discussing secondary issues charitably.

 

Respond To Challenges With Questions And Scripture 

When someone claims that the Bible contains contradictions or teaches something false, I often ask, “Can you show me the passage?” That question can slow the conversation and shift it from a general accusation to a specific examination. Many objections are repeated secondhand. A person may have heard that the Bible contradicts itself without ever reading the passages in context. Rather than becoming offended, I can invite them to examine the text with me. Acts 17:11 commends the Bereans for searching the Scriptures daily to determine whether what they heard was true. Christians should welcome honest examination. We do not need to fear careful questions. At the same time, we should be willing to admit when we do not know the answer. Saying, “I need to study that more carefully,” does not weaken our witness. Pretending certainty where we lack understanding does. Humility increases credibility. 

 

Depend On Prayer And The Holy Spirit 

Theological discussion should never be merely intellectual. Prayer reminds me that I am dependent upon God before, during, and after the conversation. I need the Holy Spirit to govern my tone, restrain my pride, bring Scripture to mind, give wisdom, and protect me from speaking carelessly. James 1:5 says that if anyone lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously. Dependence on God is not limited to a formal prayer immediately before a discussion. It should be the continuing posture of the heart. Whether I am writing, speaking, listening, answering a question, or deciding to remain silent, I should be acknowledging God. The goal is not to display my intelligence. It is to glorify Christ. First Peter 4:11 says that if anyone speaks, he should speak as one representing God’s truth and rely on the ability God supplies, “that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.”

 

Know When To End The Conversation 

Not every discussion should continue indefinitely. Some people genuinely want to understand. Others want only to argue, provoke, mock, or consume time. Proverbs 20:3 says, “It is honorable for a man to stop striving, since any fool can start a quarrel.” Second Timothy 2:14 warns against striving about words to no profit and to the ruin of the hearers. First Timothy 6 describes people who are obsessed with disputes and arguments, producing envy, strife, and useless wrangling. When I recognize that someone is not interested in truth but only in winning, I do not need to remain trapped in the exchange. On social media, people may respond to a Christian post simply to draw the writer into endless debate. I do not believe I must answer every challenge, direct message, or accusation. My responsibility is to present the truth faithfully. God is able to defend His Word and use it in the hearts of those who read it. Wisdom knows when to answer and when to remain silent. 

 

Protect Honesty Without Becoming Naïve 

Christian humility does not require carelessness. I value honesty and transparency, but I have also learned that not everyone should receive the same level of personal access. Some people may exploit another person’s openness to manipulate or deceive. Jesus was loving, but He was not naïve. He knew what was in people and did not entrust Himself indiscriminately. Theological engagement should be relational, but relationships require discernment. We can treat others with dignity without giving every person unrestricted influence in our lives. It is possible to be gracious and cautious at the same time. 

 

The Purpose Is Love From A Pure Heart 

First Timothy 1:5 says: “The purpose of the commandment is love from a pure heart, from a good conscience, and from sincere faith.” That should govern every theological conversation. The goal is not simply to expose error. It is to represent Christ, clarify truth, strengthen believers, and point people toward salvation. The Gospel itself may offend because it confronts human pride, sin, and self-sufficiency. We do not need to remove that offense. But we should not add the unnecessary offense of arrogance, contempt, impatience, or cruelty. Ephesians 4:15 calls us to speak “the truth in love.” That means truth must remain truth, and love must remain love.

 

The Central Truth 

The most effective theological conversations usually grow through relationships. Just as friendship develops over time through listening, honesty, and trust, spiritual conversations often deepen when people see that we genuinely care about them rather than merely viewing them as opponents to defeat. I want to understand the person, ask thoughtful questions, explain Scripture clearly, acknowledge what I do not know, and live consistently with what I profess. I also want to remember that I cannot argue anyone into the kingdom of God. I can speak the truth. I can answer questions. I can correct the error. I can share my testimony. I can model the love of Christ. I can pray. But God must open the heart. Grace and wisdom mean that I remain faithful to biblical truth while treating the person before me as someone created in the image of God and in need of the same mercy that I have received. 

 

#Theology #ChristianApologetics #SpeakTheTruthInLove #BiblicalWisdom #ChristianCommunication #GraceAndTruth #FaithDiscussions #SpiritualDiscernment #ChristianLeadership #Listening #Humility #DefendTheFaith

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

How do I stay faithful and productive in seasons of unemployment?

Staying Faithful and Productive in Seasons of Unemployment 

 

Unemployment can create fear, discouragement, shame, and uncertainty. For many of us, especially those who feel responsible for providing for a family, losing work can feel like losing part of our identity. I understand that pressure. Earlier in my life, I saw myself as the provider. I believed everything depended on my ability to work hard, solve problems, and keep income coming into the home. Over time, however, God taught me that I was never the ultimate provider. I was only one of the means through which He provided. The Lord gave me the strength, health, knowledge, opportunities, relationships, and abilities that made work possible. Even the breath I used to labor came from Him. That does not remove our responsibility to work. It places our responsibility under God’s sovereignty. 

 

Your Employment Status Is Not Your Identity 

A job can provide income, structure, purpose, and dignity, but it cannot determine our worth. Our identity is not found in a title, salary, company, trade, or position. Our identity is found in Christ. During unemployment, it is easy to think, “I am failing my family,” “I am no longer useful,” “I have lost my value,” or “My future is disappearing.” Those thoughts may feel real, but they are not the complete truth. Jesus said our heavenly Father knows what we need before we ask, and He told us to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness (Matt. 6:25–34). That does not mean we sit passively and wait for money to appear. It means we act responsibly without allowing fear to become our master. Philippians 4:6–7 tells us to bring our requests to God with thanksgiving so that His peace can guard our hearts and minds. Unemployment may change how God provides, but it does not change who He is. 

 

Look Back and Recognize God’s Preparation 

Now that I can look back over a long career, I can see how one position prepared me for the next. Skills learned in one role became useful in another. Knowledge gained on one job allowed me to adapt to new responsibilities later. Rarely did I enter a position completely unprepared. God had been teaching and equipping me along the way, even when I did not recognize it. This matters during unemployment because the waiting period may not be wasted time. God may use it to strengthen a skill, deepen a relationship, redirect a career, expose an unhealthy dependence on work, create a new area of service, prepare us for a responsibility we cannot yet see, or teach us to trust Him more fully. Proverbs 16:9 says, “A man’s heart plans his way, but the LORD directs his steps.” Our plans matter, but God is not limited by them. 

 

Treat Looking for Work as Work 

Waiting on God is not the same as doing nothing. In the construction industry, slowdowns were part of the cycle. Jobs ended, economies changed, and new work had to be found. I learned to treat finding work as part of the work itself. That meant contacting people in the trade, letting others know I was available, following leads, accepting side jobs, and remaining prepared for the next opportunity. A productive season of unemployment may involve updating a résumé, contacting former coworkers, applying consistently, learning a needed skill, following up on applications, exploring related fields, accepting temporary or part-time work, and asking trusted people to inform us of openings. Matthew 7:7 says, “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.” Seeking is active. We pray, prepare, ask, network, and continue moving while trusting God with the outcome. 

 

Build Structure Into the Day

Unemployment removes the structure that work once provided. Without a plan, days can become disorganized, and discouragement can deepen. A healthy daily rhythm can include prayer, Scripture, a set period for job searching, physical activity, household responsibilities, skill development, rest, time with family, ministry or volunteer work, and something creative or constructive. For me, side electrical work, woodworking, and ministry writing became important ways to remain active and stable. I had begun building a woodshop before I knew how useful it would become during later seasons of limitation and retirement. God sometimes prepares us before we know why. Ephesians 5:15–16 tells us to walk wisely, “redeeming the time.” Redeeming the time does not mean filling every minute with frantic activity. It means using the season intentionally. 

 

Productivity Is Larger Than Paid Employment 

Paid employment is important, but it is not the only form of useful work. Colossians 3:23 says, “Whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men.” That “whatever” may include caring for family, repairing the home, helping a neighbor, volunteering at church, counseling a friend, learning, creating, praying, mentoring, or completing responsibilities that were neglected while working full-time. God sees labor that no employer records. Hebrews 6:10 says He does not forget our work and labor of love. A season without wages can still be a season of faithfulness. 

 

Waiting Is Not Passivity

Psalm 27:14 says, “Wait on the LORD; Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart.” Biblical waiting is not laziness. It is active trust. We continue doing what is right while accepting that the timing is not entirely within our control. Passivity says, “There is nothing I can do.” Faithful waiting says, “I will do what is mine to do and trust God with what is beyond me.” In my field, I also understood that part of my responsibility was preparing the person below me to step into my role. That was not making myself unnecessary. It was leadership. A faithful worker does not cling to a position as though no one else can do it. He serves well, trains others, and leaves the work stronger than he found it. Luke 16:10 says, “He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much.” Faithfulness in a small or temporary season matters. 

 

Bring Financial Fear to God Honestly 

Financial uncertainty is one of the hardest parts of unemployment. Savings may decrease. Bills continue. Family needs remain. Fear may lead us to ask questions we cannot answer. Jesus never taught us to pretend those needs do not exist. He taught us not to be ruled by worry. First Peter 5:7 says, “Casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you.” There were times when I worried about provision, but looking back, I can say that God sustained my family. He did not always provide in the way or at the time I expected, but He did not abandon us. Psalm 37:25 says, “I have been young, and now am old; Yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken.” This is not a promise that believers will never face financial hardship. It is testimony to the faithfulness of God. We should budget, reduce unnecessary spending, ask for help when needed, and accept legitimate work that may not match our previous status. There is no shame in wise adjustment. Humility may become part of the provision. 

 

Seek First God’s Kingdom Through Responsible Action 

Seeking first the kingdom of God does not mean neglecting practical responsibilities. It means using our gifts, abilities, knowledge, and opportunities according to God’s purposes rather than selfishly or dishonestly. When I use the skills God gave me to provide for my family, serve others, and work with integrity, I am honoring His kingdom. When someone uses intelligence to deceive, exploit, or steal, that person may gain financially, but they are not seeking God’s righteousness. The issue is not simply whether we work. It is who we serve and how we work. First Corinthians 10:31 teaches that whatever we do should be done to the glory of God. 

 

Let Others Help Without Surrendering Responsibility 

Family, friends, pastors, mentors, former coworkers, and professional contacts can provide encouragement, counsel, leads, and perspective. Sometimes another person sees an opportunity we cannot see. Sometimes they remind us of abilities we have forgotten. Sometimes they challenge us when discouragement has made us passive. Receiving help is not failure. Proverbs teaches repeatedly that wisdom is found in counsel. At the same time, others cannot do our faithful work for us. They may open a door, but we must walk through it. They may provide advice, but we must act on it. Community strengthens responsibility; it does not replace it. 

 

God May Be Redirecting, Not Rejecting 

One of the hardest lessons is accepting that our plans are not always God’s plans. Jeremiah 29:11 is often quoted as though God promises immediate success, but the original audience was facing a long season of exile. God’s plans included waiting, endurance, and faithfulness before restoration. Romans 8:28 says God works all things together for good for those who love Him and are called according to His purpose. That does not mean every circumstance is good. It means God is able to use even painful circumstances within His larger purpose. Unemployment may close one chapter and open another. It may move us into a different field, prepare us for service, or reveal that our identity has become too closely tied to work. Sometimes the loss of a job is not the loss of purpose. It is the beginning of seeing purpose more clearly. 

 

Do What Is Next

One principle has helped me through many seasons: do what is next. Do not attempt to carry the entire future today. Ask what responsibility is in front of you, what phone call should be made, what application should be completed, what skill should be practiced, who needs help, what your family needs from you today, and what God is asking you to obey now. Ecclesiastes 9:10 says, “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might.” We cannot control every result, but we can remain faithful in the next step. 

 

The Central Truth

Unemployment does not mean God has forgotten you. Your usefulness is not measured only by a paycheck. Your worth is not determined by a title. Your future is not controlled entirely by the economy. God gives us the ability to think, move, breathe, work, love, serve, and endure. Everything we have is received from Him. We should pray earnestly, search diligently, use our time wisely, serve where we can, develop what God has placed within us, accept help, provide in every honest way available, and trust God with the timing and result. As Romans 14:8 teaches, whether we live or die, we are the Lord’s. We do not belong to unemployment. We do not belong to fear. We belong to Christ. 

 

 

#Unemployment #JobSearch #FaithAndWork #ChristianEncouragement #TrustGod #CareerTransition #BiblicalWisdom #Productivity #Stewardship #HopeInChrist #FinancialStress #DoWhatIsNext 

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Why Should You Never Tell Your Child To Shut Up?

A Child’s Voice Is Part of Their God-Given Dignity 

 

Because those words do more than stop a conversation. They can communicate to a child that their voice does not matter, their feelings are inconvenient, and their presence is a burden. A parent may say “shut up” in frustration without intending lasting harm. But children often hear our words more deeply than we realize. If harsh silencing becomes a pattern, a child may begin to believe that “What I think does not matter,” “My feelings are a problem,” or even “I am not worth listening to.” That is not the lesson God calls parents to teach. 

Scripture describes children as “a heritage from the LORD” (Ps. 127:3). They are not possessions to control or interruptions to manage. They are people created by God and entrusted to our care. Parenting, therefore, is stewardship.

 

Harsh Words Can Become A Child’s Inner Voice 

I grew up hearing the idea that children should be seen and not heard. I learned how to remain compliant at home while becoming someone different around my peers. That kind of environment can produce hypocrisy, not because the child is naturally dishonest, but because the child learns that honesty is unsafe. A child who is repeatedly silenced may become withdrawn, fearful, angry, resentful, overly compliant, or desperate to please others. Some children stop speaking openly. Others express the anger they have observed in the home.

Children learn not only from what we tell them but from how we treat them. If anger, contempt, or intimidation are normal in the home, children may carry those patterns into adulthood. They may repeat them in marriage, parenting, friendships, and the workplace unless something interrupts the cycle. Colossians 3:21 warns: “Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged.” Ephesians 6:4 gives the same balance: “Do not provoke your children to wrath, but bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord.” Correction is necessary. Crushing a child’s spirit is not.

 

Discipline Should Correct Behavior Without Attacking Dignity 

There is an important difference between saying “That behavior is disrespectful” and communicating “You are a problem.” Healthy discipline identifies what needs correction while preserving the child’s dignity. Instead of “Shut up,” a parent can say: “Please lower your voice.” “I want to hear you, but not while you are yelling.” “Take a moment to calm down, and then we will talk.” “That is not how we speak to one another in this home.” “Ask again respectfully.” These responses still establish authority and boundaries. But they also teach self-control, respectful communication, and responsibility. 

When my children were young, I tried to help them think about what they were asking. Were they asking permission? Were they asking for something? Were they asking whether they were able to do something? I often had them restate the question respectfully. That required them to slow down, think clearly, and communicate rather than merely react. The goal was not to silence them. It was to teach them how to use their voice wisely.

 

Listening Is Part of Training 

Deuteronomy 6:6–7 tells parents to teach God’s words diligently throughout ordinary life, at home, on the road, at bedtime, and in the morning. That kind of teaching requires conversation. Parents cannot understand what is happening in a child’s heart if the child never feels safe enough to speak. Listening helps us discover whether difficult behavior is connected to fear, confusion, disappointment, hurt, jealousy, exhaustion, or an unmet need. Listening does not mean the child controls the home. It means the parent seeks understanding before reacting. Proverbs repeatedly tells children to hear instruction, but parents must also speak in a way that makes instruction worth hearing. First Thessalonians 2:11–12 describes the manner of godly guidance as exhorting, comforting, and charging others “as a father does his own children.” 

All three matter. Children need directionThey also need comfortThey need correctionThey also need reassurance

 

Parents Must Surrender: The Myth of Control 

One reason parents become harsh is that we start believing everything depends on us. We want immediate obedience, immediate quiet, and immediate control. When our child does not respond as expected, frustration rises. But children are not machines. They have minds, emotions, personalities, strengths, weaknesses, and wills of their own. Our task is not to control every feeling. It is to guide their responses, shape their character, teach truth, and model self-control. I eventually learned that my children were not mine in the sense of ownership. They belonged to God and were entrusted to my care. That changed how I saw parenting. I had experienced harshness in my own childhood, and I did not want to reproduce it. I knew what abusive language could do, so there were times when I chose silence because I feared saying something I would later regret. That was not always perfect parenting, but it was better than taking out my anger on my children. 

Sometimes the wisest parental response is to pause. Pray. Breathe. Step away briefly. Attend to hunger, anger, loneliness, or exhaustion. Return when you can speak with restraint. Self-control is not weakness. It is strength under the direction of God.

 

Parents Also Need Repentance 

No parent gets every conversation right. A parent who has said “shut up” should not hide behind authority or pretend the words did not matter. The right response is repentance. 

Say: “I am sorry for the way I spoke to you.” “I was frustrated, but that does not excuse what I said.” “You did not deserve to be spoken to that way.” “I want to hear what you were trying to tell me.” That apology does not weaken parental authority. It strengthens trust and teaches the child what genuine repentance looks like. We should also explain the difference between the child and the behavior. The child may need correction, but they should not be made to believe they are unwanted, foolish, or worthless. 

 

Breaking Inherited Communication Patterns

Many parents speak harshly because harshness was normal in their own homes. That history helps explain the pattern, but it does not excuse continuing it. We must learn our triggers. We should recognize when we are hungry, angry, lonely, tired, anxious, pressured, or carrying frustration from another situation. Often, a parent’s explosion has less to do with the child than with unresolved stress elsewhere. The child becomes the nearest target. Breaking the pattern may require prayer, counseling, accountability, parenting instruction, and honest reflection. Parents who grew up in abusive or controlling homes may need help learning a language of correction that is firm without being cruel. God’s grace does not merely forgive our past. It teaches us a different way to live. 

 

Our Children Learn Something About God Through Us 

Parents are often the first authority figures through whom children form ideas about God. That does not mean parents represent God perfectly. None of us can. But our children may associate authority with the way we use it. If authority is harsh, unpredictable, humiliating, or dismissive, a child may struggle to understand God as patient, gracious, truthful, and safe. If authority is loving, consistent, humble, and just, the child receives a clearer picture of stewardship. Psalm 78:5–7 says one generation should teach the next so that children may “set their hope in God.” That is the higher purpose of parenting. We are not merely trying to produce quiet children. We are helping form people who can think wisely, speak truthfully, receive correction, show respect, and place their hope in God.

 

The Central Truth 

Children are gifts from God, not possessions to control. They need training, boundaries, correction, and discipline. But they also need to know that their voice matters, their feelings can be expressed, and their dignity will not be destroyed when they make mistakes. Parents are still children before God. Whether we are ten years old or one hundred, we remain dependent upon the Father’s guidance, mercy, patience, and grace. So before telling a child to “shut up,” we should stop and remember: 

This child belongs to God. This moment is part of their formation. My words may remain with them long after my frustration passes. Correct the behavior. Protect the relationship. Steward the child’s heart with truth, patience, and love. 

 

#ChristianParenting #ParentingWithPurpose #GentleCorrection #HealthyCommunication #GenerationalHealing #BiblicalParenting #ParentChildRelationship #EmotionalHealth #ParentingAdvice #Stewardship #FamilyHealing #WordsMatter 

 

Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW

 

Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H33MHYMY