Five Things to Teach Your Kids – Part 5 (last one)

parentsI began a series on the five basic principles that should be taught in the home. These principles can only be reinforced in church or school, but the model of what they learn comes from home.

First principle was the principle of love
Second principle of justice.
Third is the principle of respect.
Fourth is the principle of honesty.
Lastly, and possibly the most important is the principal of forgiveness.

I have mentioned before that the Lord likes to teach me in object lessons. I can not teach or share in a devotion or even on this blog if I have not had a taste of the struggle. I think that is one of the more difficult things about sharing God’s word, in order for you to really believe what you are saying God makes it real by allowing you to go through that struggle a little bit. Forgiveness has been a struggle I have experience for over a year. I never knew I struggled with this or at least the Lord allowed me to see some hidden areas of my heart.

Almost a year to today I shared with you my journey to forgiveness from the pain caused by a pastor. I wish I could tell you after sharing that post all was forgiven and life goes on. As I shared at the end, “I will be the first to tell you [forgiveness] can be a difficult journey;” and I am here to say it is STILL a difficult journey. Satan took that situation and sifted my heart. This has nothing to do with what happened it had to do with me letting go of my feelings of anger, disappointment, and hurt.

Then the Lord even brought it in closer. Just yesterday I had two incidents that really hurt my feelings, left me crying. Even though I did not do any wrong in either situation, the Lord said I just need you to forgive. You know what I said, “Father there are so many other areas I struggle with, why do we need to add to the list!!” The Lord quietly reminded me, “Daughter so you realize that I am with you and only through ME can you forgive, not on your own power.”

I ask you is there ever a human relationship that a time does not come when you have to say, “I’m sorry.”

You hear the saying that you should forgive and forget, I suggest you should forgive and forgo judgment and retribution. There are just some things in life you can not forget!

How often do you forgive?

Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Up to seven times?”

Jesus answered, “I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times. (Matt 18:21-22)

How do our children learn to forgive? By watching their parents forgive. I had great examples from my parents, I hurt my parents pretty bad in college. In return all I ever felt was love and acceptance. So easily the reaction could have been “this is not how I raised you,” they had justification for their anger. But honestly I don’t even think it entered their mind. So today I am stand as the last person on this earth to withhold forgiveness from anyone and the only reason I know I can do that is because it was modeled for me.
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This concludes five things to teach your kids IN THE HOME! Yes these principles overlap each other, but each one carry its own weight. Your kids can not be taught these principles in school or EVEN in church. These have to come directly from parents or caregivers. We as a society are struggling because some of these principles are not being reinforced. Parenting is the hardest job anyone will ever have; one moment it will bring you to your knees before the Lord and have you singing from the mountain tops the next.

Deuteronomy 4:9-10 Only be careful, and watch yourselves closely so that you do not forget the things your eyes have seen or let them slip from your heart as long as you live. Teach them to your children and to their children after them. Remember the day you stood before the Lord your God at Horeb, when he said to me, “Assemble the people before me to hear my words so that they may learn to revere me as long as they live in the land and may teach them to their children.”

Five Things to Teach Your Kids – Part 4 (with an update on the bottom)


I began a series on the five basic principles that should be taught in the home. These principles can only be reinforced in church or school, but the model of what they learn comes from home. The first principle was the principle of love and the second principle was the principle of justice, third principle was the principle of respect, and the second to last principle is the principle of honesty.

As you can see, some of these principles overlap with each other, but each are important in their own right and deserve individual attention. I know most everyone knows this story about George Washington, but the moral never grows old.

    When George was about six years old, he was made the wealthy master of a hatchet of which, like most little boys, he was extremely fond. He went about chopping everything that came his way.
    One day, as he wandered about the garden amusing himself by hacking his mother’s pea sticks, he found a beautiful, young English cherry tree, of which his father was most proud. He tried the edge of his hatchet on the trunk of the tree and barked it so that it died.

    Some time after this, his father discovered what had happened to his favorite tree. He came into the house in great anger, and demanded to know who the mischievous person was who had cut away the bark. Nobody could tell him anything about it.

    Just then George, with his little hatchet, came into the room.

    “George,” said his father, “do you know who has killed my beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden? I would not have taken five guineas for it!”

    This was a hard question to answer, and for a moment George was staggered by it, but quickly recovering himself he cried:

    “I cannot tell a lie, father, you know I cannot tell a lie! I did cut it with my little hatchet.”

    The anger died out of his father’s face, and taking the boy tenderly in his arms, he said:

    “My son, that you should not be afraid to tell the truth is more to me than a thousand trees! Yes – though they were blossomed with silver and had leaves of the purest gold!”

This legend most likely is not true, but the story still carries a powerful message. When our children are first born, no one needs to teach them how to lie. We as parents have to teach them to tell the truth and stand up for the truth. We need to display honesty in all things.

When you are in a sticky situation, how do your kids see you respond? Do you tell the truth even if you would rather lie? Do you “stretch” the truth or give half-truths?

In my book, a half-truth is a lie, I always tell my kids.

If your child is caught by you doing something, do you make them accept the consequences by telling the truth to the offending party? Or do you sweep it under the rug and tell them “not to do it again?”

    As parents what should we do?

    1. Be clear in what you expect in your home.
    2. Through stories or examples, tell your child why honesty is so important.
    3. Treat lying through compassion. Yes there are consequences, but they need to be encouraged to tell the truth not brow beaten because they lied.
    4. If this is a serious battle in your home, get some outside professional help. Don’t be afraid to bring in an objective third person.


Honesty must be displayed by the parents in the home.
Lying comes easy, telling the truth is hard; teaching them to do the hard thing is one of the greatest lessons they can learn. If your child asks you a question you do not want to respond to, tell them “I have always committed to telling you the truth, but I chose not to answer your question at this time.”

As a mother of all boys, we had a time with one of our boys where we struggled with lying. It was not something that was easily solved, but through much positive reinforcement when they told the truth and through constantly displaying honesty in our own lives, we have come to a place where it is easier for this child to tell the truth.

    Exodus. 20:16
    You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor.

    Psalm 51:6
    Surely you desire truth in the inner parts; you teach me wisdom in the inmost place.

Parents need to treat honesty as seriously as they do academic, athletic or other kinds of achievement for their children. If children learn honesty first in the home, then you give them the best tool around to face anything that comes their way. Next week I will be covering the last principle in the five things that need to be taught in the home.

Has lying ever been a struggle in your home or have you struggled with being lied to? How did you handle the situation?

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UPDATE: I always say the Lord likes to teach me in object lessons. And because I had just written this post I was approached by something this weekend where I had to make a decision of being up front and honest or be sneaky.

Let me share…

This weekend a relative was telling me there is a new GPS unit you can put on a car that tells you where your child’s car is and how many miles they have driven. This relative encouraged me to get this and to put it on my son’s car (next year) when he is driving and not telling him about it.

On the surface this sounds good, it keeps the parents informed, etc. But the more I thought about it the more I thought it would be dishonest. Now mind you I love the idea of the device and I may purchase it next year, but I will let my son know about it. This is how we approached his computer use also. I told him nothing is blocked, but every site and everything he writes it emailed to me. I did not need to tell him, because you can not tell this program is on the computer. But I always believe being up front, helping them make the right decisions (instead of catching them making the wrong ones), and one of the biggies for teenagers is being upfront, not secretive. This is a prime example of something that sounds good from a parent’s perspective, but can lead to distrust from the child. Obviously this is an example for normal situations. If you find a child using drugs or doing other things harmful then I believe a parent needs to intervene any way they can.

Honesty is always the best policy.

Five Things to Teach Your Kids

DSC06793If you are a parent, raising good kids is one of your chief concerns. I don’t claim to be an expert in this; I have made my share of mistakes. If you look on the shelves in bookstores you will see a whole aisle on disciplining your child, how to hand the difficult child or books that help you become a better parent. I have read these books too. Some parents rely on the church to teach their kids or worse yet, the school system. All school and church can do is reinforce what is already being taught at home. I believe as a country we are struggling because our family unit is struggling.

Parenting comes down to five basic principles.

If these five basic principles become your foundation in parenting, you will have developed deep roots that are needed to weather any storm that may come. I will be covering these five principles in the next few days and would love your thoughts on each one also.

The first basic principle of raising good kids is teaching them the principle of love. God is the model of love, everything he did was because of love. There are several ways to make sure you develop this principle of love. This foundation of horizontal love will strengthen the love they have with the Father. How do we do that? (And I know some of this might be obvious, but as I said before, our country is struggling because our families are struggling.) Parents develop the principle of love by modeling love in their everyday actions.

    Displaying love between a husband and a wife.
    The love towards others when they are not perfect and make mistakes.
    The love of putting someone else’s needs before our own.
    The love towards someone who is hurting.
    And love displayed towards someone who appears to be unlovable.

Your child will first learn horizontal love; the act of loving people around them. And their horizontal love will determine the strength of their vertical love with the heavenly Father. If we struggle with horizontal love, then we struggle with vertical love. This is why God sent his son here on earth, so we would have the model of perfect horizontal love so we can love the Heavenly Father.

What is your family atmosphere like? Is there love or turmoil? Does your child see you and your husband being affectionate towards one another? The security a child develops is often developed by what they see displayed. Has your child witnessed you loving someone who was being difficult? Or do they hear you complain about the other person behind closed doors? Have you shown compassion towards someone who was hurting while your child was a witness.

The principle of love is one of the first things that should be taught in the home. This is not something that can be taught at church or at school. Your child will display love dependent on what they witness you as the parent doing. Come back for principle two later this week….

What are your thoughts on horizontal love affecting a child’s vertical love towards their Heavenly Father?

photo by kahanaboy