Taming Your Child’s Tongue - Girlfriends in God - April 17, 2018

April 17
Taming Your Child’s Tongue
 Ginger Hubbard

Today’s Truth

A good man brings good things out of the good stored up in his heart, and an evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in his heart. For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of. (Luke 6:45, NIV).

Friend to Friend

“Mooooomy, I want some juuuiiice!” Whining

“You’re stupid!” Disrespecting

“Tommy’s not doing what you told him to do!” Tattling

“No, I’m not going to clean my room!” Disobeying

“I didn’t take a cookie from the jar!” Lying

What causes a child to speak such tender words as “I love you” and “You’re the best mommy in the world” in one breath and in the next say something terrible? Before I had children, whenever I thought about my future family, I envisioned happy, well-mannered little darlings who always obeyed. Boy, was I in for a rude awakening. What happened to all my plans for great parenting and well-behaved children? The stick turned blue. Twice.

In short order I became the mom who was consistently taken aback when her kids spoke foolishly, whether it was in the form of whining, lying, or talking back. With an expression of shock, I would ask, “Why do you act like that?” After a closer look at the Word of God, I realized I was asking the wrong question.

Jesus explained, “For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of” (Matthew 12:34). In other words, there is merit to the old saying, “What’s down in the well comes up in the bucket.” Our sin does not begin with our mouths; it begins with our hearts. I slowly learned to quit asking, “Why does my child sin?” and began to ask myself, “When my child sins, how might I point him to the fact that he is a sinner in need of a savior? How might I help him understand and live in the power of the Gospel?”

Through much prayer and searching the Bible, I found that having a three-step plan of action for getting to the heart of behavior, reproving children biblically, and training children in righteousness can make a positive difference in how we respond to a child’s need for correction.

Step 1: Getting to the Heart of Behavior

A wise parent will learn to move beyond the words of her child by addressing the issues of the heart. After all, if the heart is reached, the behavior will take care of itself. Jesus set the ultimate example for how to probe the heart of another in order to draw out what lies within. When dealing with sinners, Jesus did not shake his finger at their faces and tell them what they were doing wrong. Instead, He would ask thought-provoking questions in such a way that the person to whom he was talking had to take his focus off of the circumstances around him and onto the sin in his own heart. Heart-probing questions cause children to evaluate themselves, which helps themrecognize their need for Christ.

Step 2: Reproving Your Child Biblically

In Matthew 18:15 God commands that we reprove those who are caught in sin. A biblical reproof exposes wrong by shedding light where there is darkness. Fortunately, God has faithfully provided us with all that we need to speak wisdom and truth into the hearts of our children. We need not look any further than the infallible Word of God. Once we have determined the issue of the heart that drives the outward behavior, we can then address the offense in accordance with Scripture.

Step 3: Training Your Child in Righteousness

It is never enough to tell kids what not to do; we must teach them what to do. In the book of Ephesians we are told to put off the old selfand to put on the new self (4:22). Teaching children to “put off” wrong behavior comes naturally for parents, mainly because we find wrong behavior unpleasant, but the key to successful parenting is found in training them in righteousness. It is equally important, if not more important, that we teach our kids to replace what is wrong with what is right.

Let’s Pray

Lord Jesus, we thank You so much for the children You have entrusted to our care. We know that true wisdom comes only from You. We ask that You grant us the wisdom we need to point our children to their deep need for You. Bless our desires and efforts to raise our children in your ways that You would be praised and honored in our lives and theirs.

In Jesus’ Name,

Amen.

Now It’s Your Turn

Are you willing to recognize your children’s verbal offenses as precious opportunities to point them to their need for Christ? Are you willing to take time to train them in the ways of the Lord? There is no garden as worthy as seed planting than the fertile soil of a child’s heart.

More from the Girlfriends

Ginger Hubbard is the best-selling author of Don’t Make Me Count to Three and Wise Words for Moms. If you would like to know more about how to reach beyond the behaviors of tongue related struggles—such as lying, tattling, and whining—to address your child’s heart, pre-order Ginger’s new book, I Can’t Believe You Just Said That today and receive four exclusive bonus gifts! 

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Originally published Tuesday, 17 April 2018.

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