When Our Children Sin

It’s not hard to allow our hearts to grow faint and our spirits to become weary. The hard part is gearing up to fight against that battle.

Our expectations can often get in the way of God’s work in us and our children. We wear ourselves out trying to create children who will behave well so that they can affirm us as “good mothers”. But, does this answer the deeper question of Christ? Are we satisfied by a false security cloaked in good behavior?

Good behavior is a by-product of a deeper story; it should be worked from the inside out.

But setting aside the exact reasons, let’s focus on the exhaustion caused by trying to do it backwards.

Our children, like us, have sin in their lives. They can’t help it. We can’t help it. This is why Jesus chose to come to the cross—to give us a way out so we wouldn’t be separated from God forever.

Sometimes coming back to the very basics is just what we need to see clearly ahead. We cannot nag, threaten, or yell our children into perfection. It’s unrealistic. Perfection does not exist.

Instead, we need to focus on their relationship with Christ and how the Spirit helps them live righteous lives. Living a morally good life is too small a thing to live for. It’s not enough. Is it important that we live righteous lives? Absolutely! But this is not something we can do, or our children can do, alone. It requires the Holy Spirit guiding, directing, and living in us.

It requires that we actually let go of our ideals rather than cling to them. We were given freedom in Christ so we didn’t have to live in bondage to the things we simply cannot do. That doesn’t mean we don’t aim high. It means we don’t hold so tightly to the missed mark. Christ hit the mark we couldn’t hit. He filled the gap we couldn’t reach so we could live for Him.

When our children sin, when they disobey, when they fight, yes there are consequences. But it shouldn’t be a constant disappointment from us that they aren’t living up to our standards. Because eventually, they will stop trying, knowing that nothing they do is good enough for us. If we base our acceptance and love off their performance, they will fall short every time.

Instead, show them the cross. Guide them through their mistakes lovingly and share the consequences of sin. But refrain from badgering a child for messing up. Even Christ does not put such a yoke on His children.

This is not license to make sin “OK”. Not at all! It’s a guide to help lead a child to repentance, forgiveness and grace with conviction, not guilt and shame.

It also releases us from the bondage of expecting perfection from our children and allows us to see them through the lens of grace. Compassion is more powerful than shame and blame; conviction more constructive than guilt.

Do not let your heart grow faint in helping your children when things are tough. Go to Christ, and renew your strength and lead your child to renew theirs. The goal is Christ. To know Him. Do this first, and all other things will fall into place.

Keep sin in its rightful place. It’s not to be glorified. Christ is to be glorified for wiping out the sin we could not do away with. Our children are no different. When they sin, yes, talk about it, but don’t glorify it. Don’t give it more attention than it deserves. Recognize it and then praise your Father for removing it. He alone deserves the glory.

Teach your children to follow in the footsteps of Christ, but when they stumble, help them back up, brush them off, and continue to guide them.

Joy in Him,

Christin - Joyful Mothering

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About Christin

Christin is wife to a compassionate, God-fearing man, and mother to 2 gracious girls and 3 busy boys. She tries to see the beauty in the simple things and appreciates a good cup of coffee. She is learning to live everyday with joy, find gratitude in the mundane, and speak words of grace. You can find Christin writing through her days on Joyful Mothering, helping women in blogging and conversing on twitter.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/lauren.servingfromhome Lauren Servingfromhome

    Ow. Christin, this is something that God has been showing to me lately. That though I KNOW good behaviour itself is not enough, but the heart change is what we’re going for – how I communicate and show that to my children is off. Do they see me as the hard-to-please mom, or the grace-filled-when-I-fail mom? I’m afraid too often when I’m ordering and giving directions it is the first case….something I need to pray for heart change about in my own life.

    • http://joyfulmothering.net Christin

      Oh friend, you are not alone. I needed this just as much–which is why I wrote it. My parenting philosophy has changed so much since I was a “younger” mom.

  • http://twitter.com/landofbinks Holly Thompson

    Thank you so much for this today, Christin. I needed this reminder and I’m so encouraged!

  • Mickey

    I used to be that mother. I wanted to have good children… good behavior, good grades, and whatever else I thought good meant. This way we could look like a “good family”. Then, I messed up big time. So glad I did because it changed my whole perspective on parenting. Not every one knows about our mistakes or sin but I can now teach my children what grace and mercy look like and it’s not about being good enough but having a relationship with Jesus Christ and always looking towards the cross.

    • http://joyfulmothering.net Christin

      Amen!! And whatever that mistake was God used for good. Blessings to you!

  • Nanette Hall

    Thank you for this, I struggle to do this consistantly but I try to get my children (and myself) to look to the heart of the matter when they (or I) do something sinfull and ask “How do you stand before God right now?” our only answer can be ‘In and through Christ’ thank God that in Christ forgiveness is found.

  • trekwithtandis.blogspot.com

    Thank you so much for writing this. I am definitely struggling in this area. My prideful self doesn’t want to admit it but… I do get nervous that my children’s behavior will reflect my parenting. Whoa! I need an attitude change! Also, I do need to point them to the cross more than I do. You are so right, it is a matter of their heart.
    I would be wise to spend a lot more time praying for my children… and my own sin of pride instead of being angry at their sin.
    Thankful for God’s mercy in life.

  • sherri

    this is EXACTLY what i needed to hear at this VERY moment…. I need HIM to help her…thanks so much for this…my heart is already lighter…

  • mrsg30286

    I REALLY needed this. This has been my heart’s cry for so many weeks now, but WHAT do you say to the child? I wasn’t raised this way, but it is a conviction of my heart for my own children. I have one that continually talks quite mean to a sibling when she thinks I can’t hear, and I am at my wits end. I don’t know WHAT to say or do anymore. Any help or suggestions would be so welcome!

  • Lisa Jacobson

    This is such a good word! Yes, “keeping sin in its rightful place.” Thank you for saying so and saying it so well.

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