Fathering a Daughter: Be Present, Be Prayerful, Be the Man She Can Trust
First, congratulations. A daughter is not a burden, an interruption, or an accident. Scripture says, “Behold, children are a heritage from the LORD, the fruit of the womb is a reward” (Ps. 127:3). That means your little girl is a gift from God, entrusted to you for a season. She belongs to Him first, and you have the sacred privilege of stewarding her heart, shaping her early understanding of love, safety, correction, protection, and faith. It is right to feel some uncertainty. You are doing this for the first time. When I first learned I was going to be a father, I felt that uncertainty too. Because of my own upbringing, I had to beg God for guidance. I did not want to pass down what wounded me. I wanted my children to know the Lord, to feel loved, to feel safe, and to understand that correction and love are not enemies. So my first advice is simple: start praying now. Pray for your daughter before she is born. Pray for her mother. Pray for yourself. Ask God to teach you how to be the father your daughter needs, the husband your wife needs, and the man God desires you to be. Proverbs 3:5–6 says to “trust in the LORD with all your heart” and not lean on your own understanding. Fatherhood will constantly remind you that you do not know enough on your own. That is not weakness. That is the beginning of wisdom.
Be Present Before You Try To Be Perfect
Your daughter does not need a perfect father. She needs a present, humble, teachable father. Deuteronomy 6:6–7 says God’s words are to be in our hearts, and we are to teach them diligently to our children when we sit in the house, when we walk by the way, when we lie down, and when we rise up. That means fatherhood is not only the big speeches. It is the ordinary moments. Bedtime. Breakfast. Car rides. Tears. Questions. Laughter. Discipline. Apologies. Prayer. Proverbs 22:6 says, “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.” That training is not merely telling her what to believe. It is showing her what faith looks like when life is hard, when you are tired, when you are wrong, when you need to apologize, and when you have to lead your home with patience. Ephesians 6:4 tells fathers, “Do not provoke your children to wrath, but bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord.” Colossians 3:21 adds, “Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged.” A daughter can be wounded by harshness, absence, criticism, broken promises, emotional distance, or a father who treats her like a burden. So be careful. Your tone matters. Your presence matters. Your consistency matters. Your repentance matters.
Love Her Mother Well
One of the strongest ways you will speak into your daughter’s life is by how you treat her mother. Before she understands dating, marriage, vows, or covenant love, she will watch you. She will see whether you speak with kindness. She will notice whether you honor her mother or dismiss her. She will learn something about men by watching you. First Corinthians 13 says love “suffers long and is kind,” “does not behave rudely,” “does not seek its own,” “is not provoked,” and “rejoices in the truth” (1 Cor. 13:4–7). If you want your daughter to one day recognize godly love, show it to her in your home. Treat her mother with tenderness and respect. Let your daughter see a man who can be strong without being cruel, protective without being controlling, and corrective without being harsh. Proverbs 31 describes a woman whose “worth is far above rubies,” whose children rise up and call her blessed, and whose husband praises her (Prov. 31:10–31). Part of fathering a daughter is teaching her, by your words and your example, that godly womanhood is honorable, wisdom is beautiful, strength and dignity matter, and her value is not found in the approval of the world.
Protect Her, But Do Not Control Her
There is a difference between protecting a daughter and controlling her. Protection gives wisdom, boundaries, guidance, and consequences. Control tries to own what God only entrusted to you. Protection teaches her how to make wise choices. Control makes her afraid to tell the truth. Hebrews 12:7–11 reminds us that godly correction is for our profit and can produce “the peaceable fruit of righteousness.” Proverbs 3:11–12 says the Lord corrects the one He loves, “just as a father the son in whom he delights.” Discipline should never communicate rejection. It should communicate, “I love you too much to let you destroy yourself.” That means your daughter should grow up knowing she can call you when she is in trouble. If she makes a foolish choice, sins, fails, gets scared, or finds herself in a situation she does not know how to handle, she should not fear your wrath more than the danger she is facing. The father in Luke 15 saw the prodigal coming from a long way off and ran with compassion. That does not mean he approved of the sin. It means the son knew where home was. Be that kind of father. Be firm, but be safe.
Be Emotionally Present
Your daughter needs more than a paycheck. Provision matters—1 Timothy 5:8 speaks strongly about providing for one’s household—but provision alone is not fatherhood. She needs affection, attention, gentleness, correction, prayer, and emotional steadiness. First Thessalonians 2:11–12 gives a beautiful picture of fatherly care: exhorting, comforting, and charging children to “walk worthy of God.” That means a father does more than command. He comforts. He encourages. He calls his children upward. Psalm 103:13 says, “As a father pities his children, so the LORD pities those who fear Him.” Your daughter needs to see that kind of compassion in you. Being emotionally present means you do not run away when she cries. You sit with her. You listen. You let her tell you her fears, hopes, heartbreaks, and dreams. You do not always have to fix everything immediately. Sometimes the most powerful thing a father can say is, “I’m here. I’m listening. I love you. We will seek the Lord together.”
Teach Her The Lord In The Everyday Moments
Deuteronomy 11:18–19 says to lay up God’s words in our hearts and teach them to our children when we sit, walk, lie down, and rise up. Psalm 78:4–7 says we are to tell the next generation “the praises of the LORD, and His strength and His wonderful works,” so they may “set their hope in God.” That is the goal. Not merely that your daughter behaves well. Not merely that she gets good grades, dresses modestly, works hard, and makes you proud. Those things may matter, but the deepest goal is that she sets her hope in God. Second Timothy 3:14–15 says Timothy knew the Holy Scriptures from childhood, which were able to make him “wise for salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.” That kind of formation begins early. Read Scripture with her. Pray with her. Sing with her. Talk about God naturally. Let her hear you ask God for wisdom. Let her see you repent. Let her watch you choose Christ when it costs something. Joshua said, “As for me and my house, we will serve the LORD” (Josh. 24:15). That is not a wall decoration. That is a daily direction.
Do Not Let Work Steal What Cannot Be Recovered
Work hard, yes. Provide, yes. Build, yes. But do not let work, distraction, anger, fear, selfishness, or chasing success rob you of the short years you have with her. Time lost is not regained. You can learn from regret, but you cannot relive the missed birthday, missed dance recital, missed conversation, missed tearful night, missed graduation, or missed ordinary moment that mattered more than you realized. Psalm 128 describes the blessing of a man who fears the Lord: his wife like a fruitful vine and his children like olive plants around his table (Ps. 128:3–4). That picture includes togetherness. Presence. A table. A home. A life shared. So be there. Be there when she is little and wants to play. Be there when she asks questions that make you uncomfortable. Be there when she is heartbroken. Be there when she succeeds. Be there when she fails. Be there when she needs correction. Be there when she needs prayer. And, Lord willing, be there one day to walk her down the aisle with gratitude, not regret.
Be The Example You Needed
If you did not have a good fatherly example, do not despair. You are not doomed to repeat what hurt you. But you cannot do this in pride. Beg God for guidance. Stay in the Word. Seek wise counsel. Ask godly men and women who know you well enough to tell you the truth. Proverbs 20:7 says, “The righteous man walks in his integrity; his children are blessed after him.” That is what you want: not perfection, but integrity. Malachi 4:6 speaks of turning “the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the hearts of the children to their fathers.” That is a work God can do. He can help you break generational patterns. He can teach you how to love, speak, discipline, protect, and lead differently than what you received. You will not do everything right. None of us do. But if you keep going back to the Lord, keep humbling yourself, keep apologizing when needed, keep praying, and keep showing up, your daughter will see something powerful: a father who knows he needs God.
Final Word To A New Father
Love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. Then love your family from that place. Your daughter is a gift, not a possession. She is a soul, not a project. She is someone God has entrusted to you so you can help shape her heart toward Him. So my advice is this: pray over her now, love her mother well, be present, correct her in love, never make her afraid to come home, and be the kind of man you would one day want her to marry.
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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