2009/09/14

Wall-to-Wall Parenting: Part 1

"First Things First"

Many parents today are overly committed to parenting. Yes, you read that accurately. I have taught Christian parenting for the past 30+ years. For most of those years I have pleaded with parents to increase their commitment to their children. But in the past decade there has been a shift in our culture and in my teaching. While our children still have great needs for our involvement, I now believe many Christian parents need to cut back what they do for their children. Let me explain.

Deuteronomy 6 is a foundational passage for teaching parents how to pass on a living faith to their children. In that chapter, God instructs parents to: "Love the Lord YOUR God with all YOUR heart and with all YOUR soul and with all YOUR strength. These commandments I give you today are to be upon YOUR hearts." Parents, if you are serious about your children learning how to love God, then loving God must be the priority of your life--an even more important commitment than your commitment to your children.

But many Christian parents complain that after cooking meals, chauffeuring the kids, doing laundry, maintaining a yard, running errands, attending children’s activities, etc., etc., they don’t have the time or energy for individual time with God. But are all of these tasks part of the job description for The Good Parent? Not only are many of them unnecessary, but some are harmful. One of the major tasks for children is to learn how to be independent of their parents. If parents do too much for their kids, it will stunt their growth.

So where should we cut back what we do for our children? First, by including ALL family members in the upkeep of a household. Psychologist John Rosemond has said that when he speaks to groups of parents he asks them a question: “Raise your hand if you had chores when you were a child?” Almost all of them raise a hand. But then he asks: “Raise your hand if you require your kids to do regular chores?” And only a few raise a hand. Please, for your children’s sake, don’t treat them like privileged house guests. When our boys were growing up, they would occasionally complain about their household responsibilities: “Why do we have to weed the garden and do our own laundry? Our friends aren’t their parents’ slaves!” To those complaints we would calmly (most of the time!) answer: “Family life is a joint effort. If you don’t help out then some other member of this family will be unfairly burdened.”

So even if you’re a super-Mom who has unlimited energy, your children still need you to do less. By the time they leave home permanently, they will need to know how to wash their own clothes, clean a bathroom, fix a meal, care for a lawn, budget their money, etc. If they don’t learn this during childhood, it is much harder to learn this as an adult. (I still don’t know how to do my own laundry!)

The sacrificial, “wall-to-wall” parenting that many parents are committed to may feel good, but it may not do good. If you cut back what you do for your kids, your kids will benefit by learning how to care for themselves. You will benefit by having more time to pursue your first priority--your relationship with God.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Your blog post was well timed for me.

I'm grateful for the Deuteronomy 6 reminder to Love God first.

I also appreciate the "Raise your hand if you had chores when you were a child?" That really startled me into realizing just how overly helpful I am to my kids. I'm certainly not doing them any favor.

My 9-year-old daughter is gone four nights a week to activities (Wednesday is AWANA night). My 7-year-old son begins basketball next month (this in addition to gymnastics on Tuesdays).

I think we need to cut back some and work in a few chores.

Anonymous said...

Your blog posting is closely tied with our pastor's sermon this past Sunday. His message was built around Deuteronomy 6--although he used other passages to expand on other things that may be keeping us from spiritual development: texting, online time, recreational sports, etc. In closing, he challenged the congregation to give up something that is keeping them too busy to spend enough time building their relationship with God for a period of 3 weeks. My wonderful husband took that challenge and has given up Facebook. Something as simple as that has, at the very least, helped him realize that he was inadvertently "checking out" when it came to our family.

On another note, I grew up having household responsibilities (and complaining about my unfair treatment!). I was mildly active in extra activities, but my parents attended less than 5 of my events my entire junior high and high school years. It never made me feel like they were not proud of me or that they didn't care about me. Honestly, I was grateful then (and even more so now) that they did not obsess over my life and that they did not let scheduling get in the way of their spiritual life, their marriage, or the operation of our family.

Bernie, I think your blog should have a front page newspaper spot.