There is a lot of guilt about,
within parents’ minds and hearts, for adult children who are not presently
following God. It’s almost as if many parents feel inadequate and possibly even
judged within the Church community for having ‘failed’.
When I hear those parents try and
justify where their kids are at, and tell me “He/she is thinking of coming back
to church” I worry that the parent may have gotten the cart before the horse.
They may see that getting their kids to church is more important than their relationship with them. What I want to
say is, “Relax and just work on loving your kids; let them see Christ through
you, which is nothing to do with quoting Bible passages, or pressuring them to
go to church.”
My personal belief about adult
kids not going to church is simple.
I believe we are all,
individually, cosmically alone with God. What this means is, at the end of
life, it is down to us as individuals with our God. We can take nothing and no
one into eternity with us. And whether our children, our spouses, our mothers
and fathers, our friends, etc, make it or not is not for us to get overly concerned
about. Again, this is my personal view, and many will disagree. But the way I
see it, my philosophy helps me to not bother about where people are at on their
journey towards salvation and within the bounds of sanctification. It’s between
them and God.
The last thing most people want is
to be pressured to follow God.
It’s of More Worth to Work on the
Relationship
As God is relational with us, we
are to be relational with those who rely upon us as examples of love and truth.
It’s far more important for us to be real
within our relationships with our adult children than it is to spout Christian
jargon and manipulate the way to get them to church.
When we are not worried about
whether they will attend church or not we are freed up to just be with them,
listen in to their lives, quietly encourage them, and actually become their
friend; one who can coach (but remember coaches are not advisers; coaches
encourage and quietly challenge when it is appropriate). If our adult kids feel
genuinely loved, by being respected, they may well want to come to
church, eventually.
What a legacy we have the
opportunity to leave. When we, as parents and grandparents, leave this life,
what will our children and grandchildren say about us; what impact will we have
made as supporters and encouragers of them?
***
It’s more important as a parent to
focus on being supporters and encouragers of our adult children than it is for
us to coerce them to go to church.
© 2012 S. J. Wickham.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.