Radical commitment (2)
Here are more biblical examples of radical commitment: (2) Commitment on the job. In the past, employers appreciated their workers, and workers valued their...
Read moreWhen it comes to discipline, your primary concern should never be your own comfort, but the “soul” (mind, will, and emotions) of your child. Discipline, or the lack thereof, can set off a good or bad chain reaction. If your children don’t respect authority in the home, they won’t respect it in school, the government, the church, or ultimately even heaven itself. It’s just a small step from rebelling against the parents God gave them to rebelling against the God who gave them their parents. And discipline should begin sooner rather than later. When a child is old enough to be told to do what’s right and they choose to do what’s wrong—that child is ready to be disciplined. The Bible doesn’t specify an age limit in its definition of the word child. Just because your child is old enough to drive, shave, and date doesn’t mean they’re beyond correction. They may be too old for a swat on the behind, but there are other, more effective ways to discipline an adolescent or teenager. If you read the book of Proverbs carefully, you’ll find that Solomon was talking to a son who was old enough to join a street gang, be tempted by sexual sin, patronize prostitutes, go into debt, and get drunk. He wasn’t necessarily talking about first-graders. Bottom line: as long as your children are under your roof, they are under your jurisdiction, and you will give an account to God for how you used—or didn’t use—your authority.
The Word for You Today is authored by Bob and Debby Gass and published under licence from Celebration Enterprises, Inc. Copyright © 2024
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