Using data analysis, our smartphones and smartwatches can monitor all kinds of details of our lives: our health, calls and texts, finances, media consumption, and more. My phone often informs me about my schedule: “You have a full day tomorrow that starts early,” it says.
There are apps that go further—by helping users keep a log of their time in order to determine what they are doing over the course of 24-hour periods.
What would such a tool show about your life? What would it indicate about your work, exercise, or leisure time? And what would it indicate about your life as a Christian dad?
There aren’t many instructions in the Bible written specifically to Christian dads, but Paul speaks directly to us in his letter to the Ephesians: “Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord” (Ephesians 6:4).
Logging the Right Kind of Time
If you were to log your time, what would your schedule say about your attention to this verse? What data would accumulate in your log from the time you discipline your children in a corrective way; from the time you take your children to church; or from the time you put into any intentional family discipleship?
Faithfulness as a Christian father isn’t measured in a specific quantity of hours logged, but our schedules are a reflection of what’s important to us. In The Family Ministry Field Guide, Dr. Timothy Paul Jones describes a survey he conducted of Christian parents. He found a large majority understand their responsibility to raise their children in the instruction of the Lord, but they find it difficult to make time to do it intentionally, such as through family Bible reading, worship, and prayer.
It’s not that parents are unable to bring their intentions to bear on their schedules. An analysis of time logs for many Christian parents would reveal that many family aspirations related to education, music, and sports somehow made the jump from intention to committed time.
This is significant, because much of what fills up our schedule as parents tends to be what can be described as secondary parenting goals.
A large majority of parents understand their responsibility to raise their children in the instruction of the Lord, but they find it difficult to make time to do it intentionally.
Jeremy Pierre, a counselling professor at Southern Seminary, explains that an unspoken goal of many parents is “to maximise opportunities for the highest quality education and vocational training.” This leads them to fill up their schedules with sports, music lessons, and other related activities for their children.
Pierre recognises that while such a goal can be important to fulfilling a parent’s mission, it has to be seen as secondary to primary goals that are mission critical—that if not met will result in mission failure.
One of the mission critical, primary goals Pierre identifies for dads, based on Scripture, is to “demonstrate personal commitment to, and enjoyment of, the gospel of Jesus Christ in front of children, instructing them carefully in it.” That’s a well-articulated goal. Notice it’s not about punching a clock and knocking out family discipleship activities—it’s about instruction that grows out of a love for the gospel.
Dads who love soccer and hope to pass along a love of the game to their kids don’t settle for just watching soccer games on TV with their kids or occasionally playing it with their kids at the park. They talk about it naturally in various settings. They sign their kids up for soccer lessons and everything that follows it.
A dad’s love for soccer will be obvious in his schedule, even to the point of pushing beyond resistance from his kids or enduring the demands of regular practice and games.
Our kids quickly discern what we love and what we want them to love based on how we live out our schedules.
Our kids are smarter than any app that analyses schedules. They quickly discern what we love and what we want them to love based on how we live out our schedules. Children can benefit greatly from hearing Sunday school lessons and sermons from teachers and preachers who love the gospel. But they are also watching to see if you love the gospel and if you want them to love it.
Faithfulness Is Key
You don’t have to be qualified to teach or preach in order to demonstrate that to your kids. In fact, Paul doesn’t include any qualifications for dads the way he does for elders and deacons when it comes to instruction in the Lord. You can do this.
Much of your faithfulness will come in the form of regularly leading your children to church and talking with them after the service about what they heard; in the form of patiently leading in the discipline of your children in a way that doesn’t provoke them to anger; and in leading your family in daily prayer.
But your children also need to regularly hear Scripture and biblical instruction coming from your mouth. That’s why your schedule needs some kind of regular family devotional time.
When I first started trying to get into a devotions routine with my family, I looked to models that had multiple steps and required a lot of front-end planning. I pulled off a few of these, but quickly found myself feeling unqualified to execute the model, and stretched in carving out prep time. As a result, our family devotion time was sporadic, even though I knew it was important to do.
I was grateful for an older friend who came along and encouraged me to scrap the complicated model and simply pick up the Bible and read it to my family.
“Just start reading through a book of the Bible, maybe start with the Gospel of John,” he said. “Now that my kids are grown, they tell me that our time together reading the Bible was the most meaningful part of their spiritual formation.”
When I asked him what kind of discussion they had about the text, he said they would talk about what the passage revealed about God and what it revealed about us and our need for Christ—but he said there were many nights his family would simply read a chapter from the Bible, pray for the Holy Spirit to illuminate it, and call it a night.
Even when you feel under-qualified and crunched for time, you can trust the Holy Spirit to produce fruit from the means of regularly reading the Word to your children.
Since taking this approach, our family has been able to fit in much more family devotion time than we thought possible, and we’ve been able to read much more of the Bible as a family than we would have imagined.
Even when you feel under-qualified and crunched for time, you can trust the Holy Spirit to produce fruit from the means of regularly reading the Word to your children, from leading your family in regular prayer, from lovingly disciplining them, and from regularly leading your family to church for faithful preaching and teaching.
We probably won’t see an app come along anytime soon that informs us how our schedule lines up with our responsibilities as Christian dads. But we can pray that the Holy Spirit will grow our love for the gospel and our desire to faithfully instruct our children from that love with as much of our schedule as we can, within the limited years in which God places them in our care.
Give Us This Day 17
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This article was originally published on The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. Adapted with permission.