Tag: raising children


Real World Parents

April 24th, 2010 — 1:00am

Real World Parents: Christian Parenting for Families Living in the Real World, written by Mark Matlock, is an encouraging, uplifting, resourceful book for any parent.  It’s a book that teaches parents how to be a “real world parent,” which means how to live your life in such a way that your kids can see God in you.  This book is a very convicting, powerful read, for sure.  Parenting can be such an overwhelming, scary task, a journey that is not straight and narrow, but long and very curvy with ups and downs.  This book is a great guide, in my opinion, along with the Bible.  The author is very candid and very real.  With questions that make you think and ranging in topics from teaching our kids to entertainment, I highly recommend this book.  You can read more below.

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
Mark Matlock

and the book:

Real World Parents: Christian Parenting for Families Living in the Real World

Zondervan/Youth Specialties (February 23, 2010)

***Special thanks to Audra Jennings of The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Mark Matlock has been working with youth pastors, students, and parents for two decades. He speaks to hundreds of thousands of students around the world each year, and presents biblical truths in ways that motivate people to change. Mark is the vice president of event content at Youth Specialties and the founder of WisdomWorks Ministries and PlanetWisdom. He’s the author of several books including The Wisdom On – series, Living a Life That Matters, Don’t Buy The Lie, Freshman, and Smart Faith. Mark lives in Texas with his wife Jade and their two children.

Visit the author’s website.

Product Details:

List Price: $12.99
Paperback: 176 pages
Publisher: Zondervan/Youth Specialties (February 23, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0310669367
ISBN-13: 978-0310669364

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

What Are Real World Parents?

I have a vivid memory of being a teenager and sitting at the dinner table with my family, rolling my eyes and pretending to gag behind my dad’s back.

Why?

He was trying to do family devotions with us. But my three younger brothers and I just weren’t buying it.

Every four or five months my dad would hear some program on Christian radio about family devotions, and he’d come home with another new idea for making it work with our family. After all, that’s what Christian families are supposed to do, right? But it just never worked in our house. It felt completely forced and unnatural.

Still, somehow all four of us Matlock boys ended up in ministry. My youngest brother, Jonathan, helped me start WisdomWorks Ministries, and now we both do pretty much the same kind of youth ministry and youth minister support through Youth Specialties. Our brother Josh is a senior pastor in Southern California, and our brother Jeremy is a missionary in Russia. And still to this day, whenever Dad tries to bring us together for Ã’family devotionsÓ during the holidays, we mock him a little. It’s become a kind of tradition because it isn’t genuine for who we are as a family.

Now, I’m not saying that having kids who serve in some area of ministry means you’re a successful parent. The point I’m making is that all four of my dad’s sons grew into men with a real passion and appreciation for God’s Word–even though he couldn’t get us to sit still and take the reading of the Word seriously during repeated failed attempts at family devotions.

Why? Because we knew he had a real passion and appreciation for God’s Word. We saw Dad reading the Bible. We saw him struggle to apply it to his life. We saw both of our parents base their decisions on their understanding of what the Bible teaches.

Ultimately we were convinced of the worldview contained in the pages of Scripture because we saw our parents openly endorsing it, talking about it, learning from it, and living it out day after day, year after year. That was enough for us–despite the failed attempts at family devotions.

That’s what this book is about. We’re not interested in presenting more artificial techniques and methodology to Ã’fixÓ our kids or do what Christian families are Ã’supposed to do.Ó Rather we want to help you discover how to live for God in a real way, right in front of your kids, so they can’t help but catch the big picture that God and his Word mean the world to us and that living for Jesus really works in the Real World.

Don’t get me wrong. Not all families are built to the same specifications. We each have our own family DNA. So if family devotions fit who you are, more power to you! Organized, structured, traditional family devotions are a great tool for some families. Now that my wife, Jade, and I have two kids of our own–our son Dax is in middle school, and our daughter Skye is 10–we’ve tried to have a family Bible hour around the table. It kind of worked off and on when the kids were younger, but we eventually realized it wasn’t a good fit for the natural rhythm of our lives. It’s not who we are right now. So instead we’ve found ways to talk about God’s Word that are a better fit for us.

As we work together through the concepts in this book, one thing we’ll discover is that Real World Parents are real in the sense that they do what best fits their families, and they genuinely adjust their own lives to fit into God’s story.

Is God Happy with My Family?

In the church today, there’s some really good teaching on parenting. My wife and I have benefited from writers, conference speakers, and pastors who’ve opened God’s Word and helped us connect with what it means to raise up our children in the way they should go, how to provide godly discipline, and ideas for reinforcing good behavior. But again, that’s not what this book is about.

And, honestly, over the years I’ve been frustrated with some teaching on parenting that’s built around making parents feel guilty. These teachers, authors, books, and programs build parenting models based on our common fear that we’re going to mess up our kids–or that we’ve already messed up our kids. That’s an easy road that plays on our fears and our guilt over the areas in which we struggle as parents. Then they suggest that their programs or perspectives are our final hope to Ã’get it rightÓ or, worse, to do it the only way God wants it done.

That’s not what this book is about, either. I promise not to use your parenting fears and anxieties against you. And we all have those feelings. I know I have them. If you could spend a little time with my family, you’d quickly see that we have issues, too. Those prone to critiquing parents would have no trouble criticizing my wife and me. So, no, I’m not interested in beating up other parents in order to somehow make them feel better or more motivated in their parenting.

In fact, I’d like to communicate exactly the opposite.

In our Real World Parent seminars, held around the United States, our teachers use a self-diagnostic tool to help attendees identify what they believe God thinks of their families.

It goes something like this:

What do you think God sees when he looks at your family? Do you think God grins or grimaces? (Place an X on the line.)

God Grins God Grimaces

This can be a challenging question if you take it seriously. On one hand, those of us who’ve grown up in Christian churches understand the idea of God’s grace. We understand that our relationship with God isn’t based on our performance. God sacrificed his only Son–the Son whom God loves so deeply–to pay for our sins on a cross. And God did this long before we even knew we wanted that gift from God. Thus, we’d always check the box that says God’s love is unconditional for those of us in Christ.

Still, we have trouble carrying the idea of God’s grace into our parenting. We can talk ourselves into believing that failing our kids is an unforgivable sin, that God could never be pleased with us if we’ve been guilty of sloppy or harsh or inconsistent or selfish or fearful or overprotective or neglectful parenting.

We may wonder how God could ever look at our families and grin. And the problem is that, as parents, we sometimes forget that we’re also children–that our God is our Father, and that God is more lovingly inclined to smile at us than we are to smile at our own kids. Our Father loves us, and he forgives our parenting shortcomings and our family failings.

I will say this more than once: Nothing you read in this book will make God the Father love you and your family any more than he does right now, no matter what’s going on with your family today.

I made this statement at one of our Real World Parent seminars, and I noticed that one of the women began to cry. She came up to me later and explained how inferior she’s felt as a mother in her local church. Her husband isn’t a believer, her kids get into trouble, and she just felt like such a failure–like a second-class parent in a church where most of the other parents were both Christians, still married, and raising such Ã’niceÓ children.

I tried to assure her that God’s grace applies to us as parents, and that in Christ she is forgiven and fully accepted as a beloved daughter (and mom!). The idea that God loved her family right now–in its present condition–was a reality she wasn’t living in. She felt she was Ã’underperformingÓ as a parent and couldn’t keep up. So she said the idea that she’s forgiven, accepted, and loved as a parent gave her immense comfort.

Ernest Hemingway’s short story called Ã’The Capital of the WorldÓ begins with an anecdote about a man in Madrid who put an ad in the newspaper to contact his estranged son. The ad read, PACO, MEET ME AT HOTEL MONTANA NOON TUESDAY. ALL IS FORGIVEN. PAPA. The story then describes how at noon on Tuesday, 800 young men arrived at the hotel to make peace with their fathers.

The joke was that there are lots of guys in Spain named Paco. But the other message is that wanting our dads’ approval, specifically, is a universal human experience. Taking nothing away from the indispensable role of our mothers, we all long to have our fathers sign off on who we are and what we’re doing.

It’s what psychologists call Ã’father hunger.Ó

As Christians, followers of Jesus, we have that hunger even in our roles as parents, even if we’ve made mistakes along the way. Our Father has forgiven us. We live in God’s grace. God approves of us in Christ. And, yes, God loves us.

I want to make it perfectly clear–again–that you’ll find no directives in this book that will make God love you or your family even a little bit more than he already does. God’s unconditional love for your family was established long ago. It is full. It cannot grow. Romans 8:1 declares, Ã’Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.Ó And that includes Christian parents.

I hope you’ve heard that. But I also hope you aren’t satisfied to leave your family where it is today. Because while I’m convinced that God will never love or accept you any more than he does right now, I’m also convinced that God loves you so much that he won’t leave you where you are right now, either.

No matter how good or bad you believe your family is, God has plans for you that will unfold in the Real World. God will continue to move your family along in the journey he has in store for you. Which is why this book is designed to help Real World Parents understand that journey–or story–and communicate it to our kids.

ÒHow Will This Book Fix My Kids?Ó

As long as we’re talking about things this book isn’t, I should mention again that in the following pages you won’t find any tips or tricks or techniques to fix your children’s bad behavior. (We’d probably sell more copies if that’s what we were promising, but we’re not.)

In my experience, books full of tips, techniques, and tricks succeed at making readers feel good for a while. They make us feel hopeful. They make us feel as though we’re doing something about the problem. But they often fail in the long run because we just can’t keep it up. We can’t change the personalities of our families to fit the models of the new programs on an ongoing basis.

When my kids came along, though, and I started making my way through all the different kinds of Christian parenting books, I noticed that a lot of them focused on helping me raise well-behaved, well-mannered kids. And while that’s an important element, there wasn’t much focus on raising kids to have hearts that seek after Christ. Of course we can’t force that kind of spiritual openness and connectedness with God onto our kids–but in our Real World homes, we can create environments that promote such growth.

In a sense we become gardeners tending the spiritual development of our kids. God places the spark of life in the seed. We can’t control that or how the plant eventually matures. But we can make sure the soil is rich, the ground is generously watered, the weeds are kept at bay, and the opportunity for sunlight is freely available. We can raise our children in environments where having a heart for God is the norm and not the exception.

What we don’t want to generate are well-behaved kids who mindlessly follow our directions without ever willfully owning the faith in Jesus that they see in us. In the long run, the goal of parenting isn’t for our kids to be known for how well-behaved they are, but for how well they know and respond to God.

Part of our challenge is to communicate to our kids a worldview that supports right actions. It’s true that we (and they) will be held accountable for our behavior based on God’s instructions to us. But whether or not we obey those instructions has a lot to do with whether or not we really believe God’s story–a biblical worldview–and whether or not we walk in God’s power.

In that way, our children’s behavior is kind of like the tip of an iceberg. From countless illustrations we all know that the part of the iceberg that rises above the waterline is just a fraction of its total size. As such, you could conceivably make all kinds of alterations to the exposed part of the iceberg–in other words, the outward stuff (behaviors)–without significantly altering the iceberg itself.

What we’ve got to get at–in our own lives and in the lives of our kids–is the 80 percent of the berg that’s under the waterline. In our illustration that represents one’s worldview. We believe our behavior is ultimately driven by our understanding of the way the world works, of what we believe to be true and false about the universe, of our perception of reality.

And that’s what we want to focus on as Real World Parents. How can we communicate God’s worldview to our kids? What story are we telling them about the universe, both intentionally and–more importantly–in the way we live with and for God over time?

Before you move on to the next chapter, ask yourself these questions:

1. When you imagine God looking at your family, what do you think God sees? What do you believe God’s desire for your family is?

2. When you look at the world your children are living in, do you believe it’s better or worse compared to when you were growing up? Why?

3. Which matters more to you–that your children demonstrate good behavior, or that your children understand and believe in a biblical worldview? Why?

4. In your own life, what has mattered more in the long run–your behavior on any given day or your foundational beliefs about God and the world?

1 comment » | Parenting & Raising Children, Real Heart Prints, Reviews from the Heart

One Million Arrows by Julie Ferwerda

April 20th, 2010 — 1:00am

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:

Julie Ferwerda

and the book:

One Million Arrows: Raising Your Children to Change the World

Winepress Publishing (September 1, 2009)

***Special thanks to Julie Ferwerda for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Julie Ferwerda is recognized for making the Bible exciting and relevant to everyday life through her writing and speaking. Her articles are featured in many Christian magazines and websites for both adults and teens, and she frequently volunteers her time and talents to international orphan ministry.

Visit the author’s website.
Visit the book’s website.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.95
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: Winepress Publishing (September 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1606150111
ISBN-13: 978-1606150115

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Chapter 1: Determine Your Course
And you must love the LORD your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your strength. And you must commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands I am giving you today. Repeat them again and again to your children…Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates. Deuteronomy 6:5–9

_______________________________

Destiny is not a matter of chance. It is a matter of choice. –William Jennings Bryan1

_______________________________

What were you doing on 9/11?

I’d just cranked up the tunes and hopped on my Nordic Track as part of my normal morning routine, when my husband called from work to tell me to turn on the TV. Watching the events unfold, I don’t think I’ve ever felt as helpless or as horrified as I did that day. The world no longer seemed like the safe, secure place I thought it was only one day before. In the worst way, I wanted to keep my two girls, ages seven and ten, out of school that day to protect them and reassure them until the danger had passed.

For the rest of that day, and many more to come, the surreal sights on TV haunted me. The planes striking the buildings; massive explosions; the sudden, momentary collapse—twice—of 110 floors of elaborately constructed concrete, steel, and glass that took years to erect; and the mountains of debris that smoked and smoldered for many days. But nothing shook me as much as the unforgettable images of human bodies spilling out of the buildings like grains of rice. Neither those who lived through it, nor those of us who watched the shocking events unfold on TV will ever forget.

One young man I read about, Cary Sheih, a technical consultant from New York, barely made it out alive. Working on a project for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey at his 72nd floor desk, he’d just finished his usual mid-morning PB&J, when he heard an explosion, followed by tremendous building sways and vibrations. At first, he thought it might be an earthquake, so he dashed to the stairwell, where a quick, but calm, evacuation was underway. As people made their way down, some received messages on their cell phones that an airplane had accidentally crashed into the building, but there was no mention of a terrorist attack.

With the heavy, choking stench of jet fuel, descending the tower proved difficult. But if it was difficult for him, he couldn’t imagine how difficult it was for the rescue crews he passed, huffing their way up an endless corkscrew of stairs and then hurrying back down, carrying badly injured and burned victims. He recalls, “Sometime around the 30th or 40th floor, we passed the first firefighters coming up the stairs. They reassured people that we were safe and that we would all get out fine. By this point, they were absolutely breathless, but still pushing upward, slowly and unyieldingly, one step at a time. I could only imagine how tired they were, carrying their axes, hoses, and heavy outfits, climbing up all those stairs. Young men started offering [to help] the firemen to carry up their gear for a few flights, but they all refused. Each and every one of them.”2

As Cary neared the bottom, the building began to shake and sway again, the lights flickered out, and eerie sounds of buckling steel accompanied screams of people falling down the stairwell. After being assisted by firemen through darkness to a different stairwell, a panicked Cary somehow made it down the last few flights to safety, where his wildest imagination couldn’t have prepared him for what he encountered. The burning trees, wreckage, fireballs, and dust resembled a war zone.

While reading through this and other accounts concerning 9/11, I noticed an inspiring, recurrent theme. While there were many, many heroes and selfless individuals working tirelessly to assist throughout this tragic period, it was the firemen who undoubtedly made some of the greatest sacrifices of all, and whose ultimate acts of bravery impacted lives worldwide. While most everyone else scrambled for the exit signs to save themselves (which I’m positive I would have done, too), these rescue workers fearlessly headed up into the towering infernos that day, many likely aware that they might not make it out alive.

Most kids see firefighters as larger than life heroes, which is probably why many of them want to be one when they grow up. Who wouldn’t want to be thought of as a hero, especially one that saved lives? I came across a touching book report that was written about 9/11 by three kids: “The firefighters of 9/11 are heroes because they have saved the lives of hundreds of people, while they knew the building could collapse. While you go up a burning, 110-story building you would be very scared, because you’ll think of your own life. When you are a firefighter you mustn’t think too much about your own life or you may not be able to save lives. Being a hero means saving lives. That’s the difference between being a celebrity and being a hero. Why would a celebrity be important to you? It is just someone with a well-paying job. You’ll be someone’s hero if you help him with his or her life.”3

As I think about what these insightful kids have so magnificently articulated about the qualities of firemen, particularly the 9/11 firemen, I’m deeply moved with admiration and respect. In an emergency, firemen are:

First responders, well-trained, and ready to save lives, even at the expense of their own.
Purposeful and deliberate, aware that lives are at stake and time is short.
Doggedly determined, knowing that the more lives they can save the better.
Regarded in both life and death as the heroes of this world.
No one involved in 9/11 could disagree with this assessment. Remembering the expressions of both courage and fear etched on rescue workers’ faces as they spoke reassuringly to guide many people to safety, Cary Sheih said, “I am so grateful for the courage of the firemen and policemen who gave up their lives to help us down the burning tower. As I relive this moment over and over in my mind, I can’t help but think that these courageous firemen already knew in their minds that they would not make it out of the building alive, and that they didn’t want to endanger any more civilians or prevent one less person from making it to safety.”4

While they will undoubtedly go down in history as larger than life heroes, we can’t forget how human and vulnerable they were, too. I have looked through their pictures online. Most of them were young family men, with their whole lives ahead of them—men who kissed their own babies goodnight on Monday for the last time so that those they helped to safety could kiss their kids goodnight many more nights to come. They unknowingly said final goodbyes to their own families Tuesday morning so that many others could come home to their families that night.

In the moment of the realization of the grave danger, it had to be a dilemma for the firemen, choosing between lion-hearted courage and paralyzing, self-protective fear. How were they able to do it? Was it because it was their job? Because their buddies were doing it? Because their captain told them to do it? What exactly is it that leads a person to choose a profession where courage must prevail when all pretenses and rewards are stripped away in the face of death?

More than a job identity or a paycheck, more than an obligation or a hope of any kind of recognition, firemen are willing to risk their lives and to face their fears because they are motivated by something far greater than fear.

The Bible refers to this motivating force as love! Authentic, selfless love drives away fear (1 John 4:18). And it was the love—not the duty—of those firemen and emergency workers that truly made them heroes of the day, both the ones who died and the ones who worked doggedly through the wreckage, many suffering permanent damage to their lungs and bodies. And that kind of sacrifice, according to Jesus Christ, is love at its very best. “I command you to love each other in the same way that I love you. And here is how to measure it—the greatest love is shown when people lay down their lives for their friends” (John 15:12–13, emphasis mine).

Firemen of Life

So what does all this talk about 9/11 and firemen have to do with parenting? If you’re a follower of Christ and you want to raise children who are also followers of Christ, quite a lot. And if you want to entertain the possibility of raising children who will change the world around them, and even the world at large, everything!

It’s no secret that every day on this earth, countless lives are at stake. People are dying every day who do not know Jesus, and almost just as bad, people are living every day who do not know Jesus. I don’t know about you, but I cannot imagine struggling through the hardships, losses, disappointments, and sorrows of this world without the comfort and peace of knowing Jesus and His love. And we know that someday soon, this world, with all its carefully planned designs and elaborate structures, along with all the people who have not put their faith in Christ, will collapse in a catastrophic fire (Zephaniah 1:18).

In other words, time is running out.

The seriousness of that reality raises some questions: What is my family here for? As believers, is parenting a more significant and eternity-impacting role than we’ve given it credit for? Are we satisfied with happy, well-adjusted, even ambitious kids who happen to love God, or is there something more? When we consider the possibilities, we find that we’ve been given an invitation into a divine story—into His-story. As this story unfolds throughout the space of our lives, which role will our family accept in this cosmic emergency? Hopefully not the victims. Hopefully not the ones running scared to save ourselves (and I am absolutely not criticizing those who made it out on 9/11—this is for spiritual application only). Hopefully not uninvolved bystanders who are disinterested, unable, or ill equipped to do anything but watch.

I’ve realized that, in the grand scheme of life, more than just raising my kids to “keep the faith,” I want to raise my kids to save lives. I want to raise firemen. Not necessarily the earthly fire-fighting kind, but the heavenly fire-fighting kind. Kids who are well-trained and ready to help save as many lives as possible. Kids who grow up, remembering at the forefront of everything they do, that time is short and lives are at stake, and who will one day be seen as spiritual heroes for helping many to safety.

I want to raise kids who love like Jesus.

Just think what it would be like to have kids who grow up in this self-destructing world with brave faces and hope in their voices, carrying within their hearts the ambition of bringing as many people as possible safely into the Kingdom. I believe that this kind of holy ambition is the secret to life at its best, and I want my kids to experience this kind of life. Jesus said, “If you try to keep your life for yourself, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for me, you will find true life” (Matthew 16:25). And therein, we hear the invitation: Will you raise your kids to be firemen? Will you be a fireman for God’s sake? We may never be called to die for Jesus like so many others in our world today, but we are still called to a holy rescue mission—to live sacrificially for God so that others will be led to safety through our loving assistance.

I recently met two brothers, both firemen of the Kingdom variety, who understand about saving lives by choosing to deliberately head into burning buildings. For them, the rescue mission all started with a small idea and a heart to snatch their fellow teens from a dangerous culture.

At age sixteen, twins Alex and Brett Harris decided to start a little blog in their spare time over the summer called TheRebelution.com, with the intent of starting a teenage rebellion. “The word ‘rebelution’ is a combination of the words ‘rebellion’ and ‘revolution,’” explains Brett. “So it carries a sense of an uprising against social norms. But in this case, it’s not a rebellion against God-established authority, but against the low expectations of our society. It’s a refusal to be defined by our ungodly, rebellious culture.” To their astonishment, within a couple years, their site had received over 14 million hits, becoming the most popular Christian teen blog on the web.

As a follow up, they decided to write a book for teens called Do Hard Things, exhorting young people not to take the easy way out, but to do those things that seem harder now but have a bigger payoff in the end (as in “delayed gratification”). Since then, God has opened doors for them to speak to thousands of teens nationwide through conferences that are planned, organized, and run primarily by youth.

More than just a website, The Rebelution is both a mindset and a movement. “Our goal,” according to the brothers, “is to create a community of young people where thinking deeply is the norm, and where achieving excellence is ‘cool.’ History says young people can be doing big things right now! Don’t let the culture’s expectations toward teenagers dictate what you think is possible. The teen years are not a vacation from responsibility. They are the training ground of future leaders who dare to be responsible now.”5

Whether from media, parents, authority figures, or peers, low expectations have become the rule for this generation, rather than the exception. Not only are kids expected not to possess admirable character or useful competence, but also they are expected to do the opposite. The Rebelution defies this kind of thinking by calling out youth to return to biblical and historical levels of character and competence as exhorted by Paul in 1 Timothy 4:12: “Don’t let anyone think less of you because you are young. Be an example to all believers in what you teach, in the way you live, in your love, your faith, and your purity.”

Their message, based on their belief that God is raising up their generation for global change, is a passionate call back to excellence, purpose, and significance for young people. It’s not about doing more things, or inflicting oneself with toilsome chores; it’s about lifestyle choices that will often take you out of your comfort zone and into places where you are focused on using your abilities and resources to encourage and benefit others…ultimately to save lives.

“Brett and I firmly believe we are living in historic times,” Alex says. “We further believe that God is raising up a generation of young people who will one day assume positions of leadership in all spheres of life: social, political, and spiritual. This is not a call for the complacent or the lackadaisical. This is not a call to those who are willing to lower their standards to meet the expectations of their culture. This is a call to the rebelutionary.”

Initially I wondered how two kids could possibly have achieved so many bold and bright accomplishments, not to mention how they’ve acquired more wisdom than many adults. Was it handed to them? Do they harbor a special gene pool (their parents might agree with that notion)? Did they turn out like this by chance?

Actually, Alex and Brett would probably be ordinary kids, except for one thing. They had parents who believed in making the sacrifices necessary to raise their kids to make a difference. Kids who, in turn, learned to make sacrifices in order to serve others. They had parents who devoted themselves to raising firemen. Keeping this at the forefront of their parenting strategy, Mom and Dad Harris raised kids who understood and accepted the fact that it was going to take a lot of hard work for everyone in order to succeed in this goal. As a result of this mentality, these young men have literally started a Rebelution across our nation…and our world.

There are actually two other grown children from the Harris home. One of them, Joshua, became a best-selling author at the age of twenty, with the book I Kissed Dating Goodbye (Multnomah 1997). He went on to write more bestsellers, developed purity seminars for young people, and toured as a national conference speaker in front of hundreds of thousands of young people, calling them out of their culture to a lifestyle of purity. At age twenty-seven, he became the senior pastor of a large church, where he still serves today.

In 2002, another brother, Joel, launched the Northwest Academy of Worship Music to help raise up worship leaders and worship teams for local churches in the Portland area, where over 150 students of all ages have been successfully trained. Since 2007, he’s also been using his music skills to lead worship for The Rebelution Tour.

As I got to know the Harris family, I saw that “chance” and “opportunity” had nothing to do with their parenting success. “If our teen years have been different than most,” says Alex, “it’s not because we are somehow better than other teens, but because we’ve been motivated by that simple but very big idea filtering down from our parents’ example and training: Do hard things.”

With four out of four grown children serving the Lord and significantly impacting their world, it’s obvious that the Harrises are doing something right. And I’ve discovered that this “something” is available to all parents. Throughout this book, we’re going to visit with more parents like these to find out exactly what they are doing to shape godly kids who are ready and able to help save lives, no matter what their limitations or circumstances. Turning out kids like these is not just possible—it’s possible for you and your family with just a few moderate but important lifestyle changes.

Parenting is, really, at the heart of Jesus’ command for discipleship. It’s teaching our kids to live with Jesus and to love like Jesus. It does require a cost, as anything worthwhile does, but that cost will be far outweighed by the benefits and rewards. God has created our kids with unique abilities, gifts, and desires for a very special purpose. All they need now is to be trained and ready, available for divinely appointed opportunities.

So now it’s time to ask: Do we truly want to give our kids the best of everything we have to offer in the short time we have to impact their lives? Do we want our kids to live—and someday die—the spiritual heroes of this world? If we have answered “yes,” then it’s time to learn about a vision for our families that’s so amazing; it will change the course of history.

My discovery all started on a little trip I took to northwest India.

Comment » | Real Heart Prints, Reviews from the Heart

Mommy Power Review & Giveaway

April 7th, 2010 — 1:00am

Mommy Power is a book written by Dr. Sheila Schuller Coleman; she is the daughter of Robert Schuller, the pastor who founded the Crystal Cathedral.  This book is all about Discovering Your Mommy Strength.  It’s an encouraging, insightful book for moms, especially newer moms, who are trying to find their balance and their place as mommies.  It’s written for that mom who needs an encouraging hand, an encouraging word at this time in her life.

The beginning of the book starts out with the author’s own recollection of her first years as a mom, raising 4 boys who were all within seven years of each other.  I could feel her pain, her harriedness, as I read the beginning chapters.  I could remember when my firstborn was born and what it all felt like.  Throughout the book, she shares her personal stories of triumph, her stories of lessons learned, her stories of just being a mom, her stories of how God brought her to certain points in her life.  She talked about how we feel like we need to be supermoms in this day and age….but really we can’t do it all in our own strength.  She emphasizes over and over how we desperately need our Heavenly Father to make it through each and every day, especially in the job of raising children up to hopefully someday serve Him.

She shares different tips, such as taking one day a week to forget the laundry and housework and simply rest up for the next week that awaits.  She shares her own story of earning her doctorate and how she almost gave up in the very beginning….but it was her sons’ looking to her as their example, that drove her to keep going, eventually earning her doctorate.  She talks about how we as moms have to be the example to our children.  They are looking to us for guidance, and much of that guidance is through our example.

Mommy Power is a book that I would recommend, as it is a great book to be used as a devotional.  The chapters are short, and Scriptures are included in each chapter, along with Biblical examples, where applicable.  One thing that I love is that at the back of the book there is an Appendix with Scriptures for different life applications.  This is something you could turn to when you’re dealing with certain issues in your life.  You can purchase this book from Hachette Book Group for $14.99 or from Amazon for $11.69. You can read more about the author here.

Now for the giveaway.  You can enter to win a copy of this book by doing one or more of the following.  Just be sure to leave a separate comment for each way that you enter.  I will draw the winner on Wednesday, April 21, using random.org.

  1. Leave me a comment, letting me know why you would like to have this book.
  2. Visit Hachette Book Group online, and let me know another book that appeals to you.
  3. Visit the Ask Sheila Blog to read more from the author.
  4. Follow my blog, or subscribe to my posts.
  5. Follow me on Twitter.
  6. Tweet about this giveaway, being sure to link back to Real Heart Prints.  In fact, you can tweet daily to earn extra entries.
  7. Blog about this giveaway, being sure to link back to Real Heart Prints.
  8. Digg or Stumble this post.
  9. Vote for me on Top Mommy Blogs or on the Mom Blog Network (just click on buttons in sidebar to vote).
  10. Place my blog button somewhere on your blog.

Good luck, and have a wonderful day!

(Disclosure: I was provided a copy of this book, free of charge, by Hachette Book Group, for the purposes of this review.)

59 comments » | Giveaways from the Heart, Real Heart Prints, Reviews from the Heart

Motivate Me Monday: Encourage Your Kids

April 5th, 2010 — 1:01am

I’m reading a book right now called Mommy Power. In the book the author talks about how we moms can get over-competitive and actually end up discouraging our kids by that over-competitive drive to push them.  We’ve all seen the shows and movies that depict pageant mommies who push their little girls into becoming something they’re not.  Honestly, in real life, I don’t know if that’s what it’s like, and I’m sure that there are really good pageant mommies out there who don’t push their daughters….it’s just sad to see the little girls who are being pushed because of, again, that over-competitive drive or agenda that the mom, or parents have.  Oh yes, dads have it too, sometimes worse.  We want our kids to be the best they can be, so sometimes we end up forcing the issue.Dan and I have talked about this quite a lot, especially with Jacob doing tae kwon do and soccer.  We don’t want him to feel forced to do it in any way….we don’t want to push him by our own agendas.  BUT then we don’t want to just allow him to give up whenever he’s feeling discouraged or bored either, not that he is….I’m just using him as an example.  Sure, there are times he would rather just stay home, but ultimately, he’s excited about what he’s doing.  The problem is, how do we decipher between when it’s time to move on or when it’s time to keep encouraging him to do his best?

Honestly, just from my own personal perspective, I think we will know….I think you will know when it’s time to let go.  If your child isn’t excited anymore about the particular activity, when they’re actually kind of bored with it, when they put up a fight each and every time on going…..I think those are all signs.  Those are signs we, as parents, have to watch for and listen for.  In pushing them to be something they are not, it’s possible to sort of crush their spirits and actually topple discouragement upon discouragement.  So far, with Jacob, we really haven’t had to face this, but we’re ever watchful and mindful of it.

Maybe he will change his mind at some point and want to do something else, and that’s fine.  Maybe your children will change their minds, as well.  Encourage them in their interests; be there to root them on.  If they’d rather play a musical instrument than run down a football field, then run with it.  The more we can expose our children to, the more varied their interests will be as they grow up; at least, that’s how I look at it.  Why push an agenda, when ultimately, it can lead to resentment and a drift in the relationship, especially as they become teens and start making their own choices?  Why not encourage them to use whatever talents, gifts, and interests that God has uniquely given them?

For more Motivate Me Monday, visit Sarah at The Fifth Street Palace.

Comment » | Inspirational Heart Prints, Parenting & Raising Children, Real Heart Prints

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