Categorized | Family

What parents’ actions often teach kids about God

Posted on 07 February 2008 by Tim Schmoyer | Trackback link

Actions speak louder than words. Whether parents like it or not, kids see the priorities and values they set for the family and it makes a difference on how kids live their lives.

All the hype over the past couple years about the student drop-out rate from church seems to be focused at the church, specifically the youth workers. Almost every other week I see a new Chicken Little article about how the sky is falling and that youth ministry is failing miserably. However, the biblical structure of raising kids is through the parents, not church youth workers. Statistically, the kids who graduate from high school and stay in the church are not those who had a super-dynamic youth group. Rather, it’s those whose parents have intentionally passed on the faith. Of course, this assumes that parents have a living and vital faith that’s worth passing on. As much as we hate to admit it, we have a lot of parents who are sold out to the world and give lip-service in church, so their kids see that and do the same. Teenagers reflect what they see in the church.

According to the Family Driven Faith audio series by Dr. Voddie Baucham Jr., 92% of families don’t have devotions together even once a year. He also says that the average Christian family has less than 30 minutes of spiritual discussion each week. Maybe the church should focus more on discipling parents who will in turn pass that on to their kids.

I wish we heard more Deuteronomy 6:1-9 values being passed along to students by parents, but instead youth workers hear, “We won’t be at church for the next couple weeks because Jonny made the traveling baseball team.” Actions speak louder than words! Students learn that sports trump God so they can collect trophies that will collect dust in the basement in 40 years. And then we say idolatry isn’t alive in our churches? No wonder church is often a student’s last priority.

Even our homes communicate something about priorities. In most American families, the TV is the focal point of the living room. Notice that all the furniture is arranged around the room to focus on it, as if it’s the alter of our homes. Maybe family priorities need to change, not just “We go to church once a week unless something better comes up,” thinking that will somehow teach our kids that God is important, but in integrating God into daily life and decisions.

Lest I be misunderstood, I am not trying to blame parents as many have done to youth workers. Rather, youth workers need to consider parents as a vital contact for reaching students for Christ knowing that they have a much bigger impact in their lives than we ever will.

My Personal Story
My parents definitely didn’t do everything right, but one thing they did get right: they communicated by their actions and decisions that God always comes first. As kids, we noticed that and learn valuable lessons from it. When my brother was invited to join the travel soccer team, my parents made him turn it down because their games were on Sunday mornings. When we had wrestling matches on Sunday mornings, we’d always go to church instead. We often saw financial priorities when they spent money on helping other people even though we knew money was very tight at home. My dad taught us the Bible almost every day, including lots of scripture memorization (that I still use today!). Now that we’re grown and out of the house, every one of us are leaders in either vocational or volunteer ministry. Coincidence?

I understand this is all by God’s grace, not a formula with guaranteed results, but following God’s family principles definitely seems to have a better rate of return than any other alternative.

  1. When parents ground their kids from youth group
  2. A plan for helping parents reach their teenagers
  3. Why do kids come to youth group?
  4. Time Out: Actions speak louder than words
  5. Issues in Youth Ministry: Your biggest struggle


4 Comments For This Post

  1. Larry Says:

    Thanks for addressing what might be viewed as a sensitive sujbect. Dr. Voddie Baucham Jr’s message, “The Centrality of the Home,” is a definite compliment to your post . . . http://www.voddiebaucham.org/vbm/Podcast/Entries/2007/1/17_The_Centrality_of_the_Home.html

  2. Tim Schmoyer Says:

    Thanks for that link, Larry! I didn’t know it was available online.

  3. gavin Says:

    ouch! it hits home quite a bit my friend.

  4. Luke Says:

    Great post, Tim! At RVC, we’re trying to look at how we can minister to the entire family, instead of just middle school or high school. How can we better empower parents to lead their family spiritually?



6 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. parents are still the #1 influence « Ramblings On. . . Says:

    [...] parents are still the #1 influence Jump to Comments Great article from Tim at life in student ministryread it here.  [...]

  2. Ramblings On. . . Says:

    links from TechnoratiGreat article from Tim at life in student ministryread it here. 

  3. Hit the Back Button to Move Fwd Says:

    links from Technoratithis post is stemmed off oftim’s recent post on parents and youth ministry. i don’t know if will go the same direction, but i want to uplift that sharing as critical to this one. a few weeks ago had one of those big parents meeting for our youth ministry. running through the programming and events of the next eight months.

  4. Down In My Little Valley Says:

    links from TechnoratiOh, and my adopted son put up a very timely and thoughtful post here that I agree with one-hundred percent. Two other blog posts that I found very interesting, concerning ministering to today’s youth, can be foundhereand here. Even though we are no longer youth leaders, I still read as much as I can about ministering to youth. I love young people and want so much to see them succeed in living for the Lord and finding salvation in Him if they do not know Him.

  5. A plan for helping parents reach their teenagers | Life in Student Ministry Says:

    [...] seminary for one of my Family Life classes. It makes a great follow-up from my post last week about what parents actions often teach kids about God. Kind of ironic that I do some of this in my ministry already, but never defined it as well as I [...]

  6. The Home of Community Christian Assembly of God - Two Articles every Christian parent should read! Says:

    Kramer auto Pingback[...] Article #1: Why church is often a student’s last priority | Life in Student MinistryArticle #2: What parents’ actions often teach kids about God | Life in Student Ministry [...]

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About me: I am married to my beautiful wife, Dana, and together we live in Minnesota where I serve as the youth pastor at our local church. The opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my church.
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