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Pastor Chris White says to all of you: HELLO MY FRIENDS. May the Lord bless you today. HOLA MIS AMIGOS. Que el Señor los bendiga.
There is inherent in the story of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32) several principles that believing parents can use to react
to and deal with children who walk contrary to the way in which the parents
have raised them. Parents need to remember that once their children have
reached adulthood, they are no longer under the authority of their parents.
In the story of the prodigal son, the younger son takes his inheritance and
goes into a far country and wastes it. In the case of a child who is not a
born-again believer, this is just doing what comes naturally. In the case of a
child who at one time made a clear profession of faith in Christ, we call this
child a “prodigal.” The meaning of this word is “a person who has spent his
resources wastefully,” a good description of a child who leaves home and wastes
the spiritual inheritance that his parents have invested in him. All the years
of nurture, teaching, love, and care are forgotten as this child rebels against
God. For all rebellion is against God first, and is manifested in a rebellion
against parents and their authority.
Notice that the father in the parable does not stop his child from leaving. Nor
does he follow after his child to try to protect him. Rather, this parent
faithfully stays at home and prays, and when that child “comes to his senses”
and turns around and heads back, the parent is waiting and watching and runs to
greet that child even when he is a “long way off.”
When our sons and daughters go off on their own—assuming they are of legal age
to do so—and make choices that we know will bring hard consequences, parents
must let go and allow them to leave. The parent does not follow after, and the
parent does not interfere with the consequences that will come. Rather, the
parent stays at home, keeps faithfully praying and watching for the signs of
repentance and a change of direction. Until that comes, parents keep to their
own counsel, do not support the rebellion, and do not interfere (1 Peter 4:15).
Once children are of an age of legal adulthood, they are subject only to the
authority of God and the delegated authority of government (Romans 13:1-7). As parents, we can support our prodigals with love and
prayer and be ready to come alongside once they have made their move toward
God. God often uses self-inflicted misery to bring us to wisdom, and it is up
to each individual to respond correctly. As parents, we cannot save our children—only
God can do that. Until that time comes, we must watch, pray, and leave the
matter in the hands of God. This may be a painful process, but when carried out
biblically, it will bring peace of mind and heart. We cannot judge our
children, only God can. In this there is a great comfort: “Will not the Judge
of all the earth do right?” (Genesis 18:25b).
Thank you to Got Questions Ministries
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