Faith, Family, Fatherhood, God, Parenting

Don’t make me come down there! (and other lessons God might be teaching us through parenting)

Me and my little girls

Me and my little girls

The statement “there is no better or harsher corrective to one’s thinking about human transformation and development than one’s children” is so true at times.  As we wind our way through parenting our children, it is easy to envision God looking down at us, the parents, and shaking his head at the irony of how often we miss the lessons we attempt to teach.  I assumed I might find a book or a series of articles on this topic, but could not, so I thought I’d share a few I’ve collected over time.  Where I can recall a direct source for the metaphor it is attributed.

If you believe in God you might identify with some of this content.  Even if you are unresolved spiritually or don’t believe in God, but are a parent you might identify with some of this content.  For me personally, many of the below examples hit closer to home than I would like.

Situation: You are driving in the car and your children are arguing in the backseat about something that is completely trivial.  You respond with something along the lines of “Don’t make me stop this car and come back there.”  Lesson: How often must God look down at us arguing over denomination issues, biblical interpretation issues, inter-family issues, etc. – where we are certain it is more critical to be right than to simply show love to each other – and think, “Don’t make me come down there.”  Metaphor from a Craig Groeschel message.

Situation: Two of your young children are fighting over who gets to cuddle with you (or run an errand, do something fun, etc.).  Before you want to do the fun thing with either of them you want them to reconcile with each other, and if they are not willing, you don’t really want to give either of them any special time.  Lesson: How often do we go to God with prayer, concerns, questions, etc. when we have unresolved conflict in our life?  How often must God look upon us and think first apologize to those you have wronged and then come to me?  Metaphor from a Craig Groeschel message.

Situation: You have bought your child something to eat – candy, popcorn, whatever.  You innocently reach over to grab a bite or a handful and your gesture is met with groans or screams.  Your first instinct is to say “I gave it to you and you can’t share just a little?”  Lesson:  My first instinct is way too often that what is mine is really mine.  It is easy to envision God shaking his head thinking “I gave it to you and you can’t share just a little bit???”  Metaphor from a Kevin Myers message.

Situation:  Think back on the birth of your first child.  Remember looking down at that little girl you just saw for the first time and thinking you would lay down your life for her, that you loved her more than you could describe, etc.  And the truth is that she had done nothing to be deserving of your love and affection.  Lesson: It is easy to forget that God loves each of us to an even greater degree than we can comprehend; despite the fact that we have done nothing to deserve it and way too often actively rebel against it.

Situation: You witness your child do something nice or selfless for someone else.  Your heart gets filled in an amazing way and you find yourself wanting to lift up your child in some positive way.  Lesson:  God lifts up those that lift up others.  Every day I am confronted with many situations where my simple response can lift someone up or bring them down, bring more love into the world or more anger, etc.  I get so proud when I see my kids make the obvious choice – it’s too bad that in a hurry or frustration or whatever other emotion, that I too often make the wrong choice.

Situation:  Your child wants an additional privilege or responsibility and one of the first thoughts through your head is “you haven’t even done a good job with the other stuff you are responsible for, why would I give you more?”  And that once they have proved themselves, you’ll consider their new request.  Lesson:  How often do we want to expand our earnings, our influence, etc. when we have failed to truly be a good steward of our present situation?  It is easy to see God looking down in frustration saying, “please take care of this first and then we can consider something new.”

Situation: You are observing your young child trying to do something difficult – e.g., assembling a new toy.  He or she gets frustrated but continues on without asking for help and their frustration grows along the way.  You think, “I am right here, you just have to ask for my help.”  Lesson:  How often must God see us struggling, living in frustration, and think “I am right here – why don’t you ask me for help?”  Metaphor from a Ken Coleman podcast.

The above sampling is just scratching the surface of real life examples that are easy to see with a bit of reflection – I can only imagine how deep this list will be for me once I’ve survived the teenage years with my kids.  I’d encourage you to look for similar metaphors in your life that you can see in your parent/child relationship.  Sometimes the pause for reflection can lead to real life change.

So, what lessons do you find yourself trying to teach your kids, that perhaps God would say you might need to listen to as well?

Faith, Journaling, Leadership, Parenting, Quotes

Are You Not Inspired?…

Bruce-LeeEveryone loves meaningful and/or inspiring quotes.  People hang great quote signs on their walls or post them on Facebook.  I tend to write quotes that really grab me in my journal and reference them often in work situations, small groups, personal interactions, etc.

If you Google “great quotes” you’ll get 722M results.  The same action with “inspiring quotes” and “leadership quotes” yields 47M and 70M, respectively.

I looked back through hundreds of quotes in my journal to find those most meaningful to me.  I tried to narrow down to those quotes that go beyond offering a temporary burst of inspiration, but rather have led to real changes in my behavior.   In no particular order here is my list, which could broadly be categorized by leadership, business, family and faith (and many of the quotes go across multiple categories).

“Something is fundamentally dismantling when you say the right things but have the wrong actions.  That is, talk like a leader, but act like an anchor.”  Kevin Myers I find this quote applicable in work, family, friendship and faith.

“When those who are the closest to you and know you the best, love and respect you the most.” John Maxwell on the definition of success.  This quote has greatly reshaped how I think about the question “what is success?”

 “Quality time comes at the most unusual moments.  You never know when it will happen.  It usually makes an appearance somewhere in the realm of quantity time.”  Steve Farrar.   This quote always reminds me to be present with my family.

“Every time you make a choice you are turning the control part of you, the part that chooses, into something a little different from what it was before.  And taking your life as a whole, with all your innumerable choices, you are slowly turning this control thing either into a heavenly creature or a hellish creature.”  CS Lewis.  Lewis was a master of packing deep content into everything he wrote.

“My fully exploited strengths will always offer more to the organization than my marginally enhanced weaknesses.”  Andy Stanley.  I find I most often apply this quote in a business environment.

“It’s the Holy Spirit’s job to convict, God’s job to judge and my job to love.”  Billy Graham This quote all to frequently reminds me that I focus too much on the two former jobs and not enough on the latter one.

“Idealism increases in direct proportion to one’s distance from the problem.”  John Galsworthy.  Anyone who has worked for a large company and takes direction from afar is familiar with this.  So is a stay-at-home mom trying to manage a household with a traveling husband’s input.

“Someone living close to us will take no notice of any attempts to tell them about Christ if our lives are not demonstrating the truth of the message we claim to believe.”  Unknown.  A constant gut check for how I am living.

“Materialism begins where your income ends.”  And “Envy begins where your influence ends.”  Ed Young (I believe?).  Who came into your mind first? How often do we simply need to look in the mirror?

 “I doubt when I get all hung up on what is unexplainable and lose sight of what is undeniable.”  Andy Stanley Just a great quote on doubt and faith.

“A good apology has three components.  (1) It’s specific. (2) Forgiveness is asked for. (3) There is no whining about the consequences.”  Craig Groeschel.  My children can quote this one too by now!

“God, let me make a difference for you that is utterly disproportionate to who I am.”  David Brainerd A great quote to help me think bigger about what I might offer.

Someday is a disease that will take your dreams to the grave with you.”  Tim Ferriss I have many friends who have contemplated leaving corporate America and becoming entrepreneurs.  Many suggest the timing isn’t right but it will be someday.  When the right timing keeps getting pushed out, this quote often comes to mind.

“The moment you feel the need to tightly manage someone, you probably made a hiring error or a seat error.”  Jim Collins I constantly apply this quote in the work environment.

“The interest rate on culture debt is crushingly high.”  Unknown This thought goes through my head any time I’m hiring someone, especially in a small company environment where one wrong hire can tank the entire culture.

Incidentally, none of the quotes in my list appear in the Top 100 Inspirational Quotes as determined by Forbes and Quoto.  Regardless, I hope some of these inspire you and you find a place to apply them in your life.

What are your favorites quotes (i.e., the real difference makers) and why?