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Living By Faith with my Kids- Guest Post

I am happy to say I have had the good fortune to join up with a group of ladies in the Babywise Friendly Blog Network (BFBN)!  These posts are going to be focused mainly on parenting, so if you are reading looking for Ben pictures, you’ll have to check back later.  The purpose of this group is to share techniques, thoughts, and experiences on parenting, specifically focusing on how we implement the Babywise principles into our daily lives.  I’m not looking to start parenting debates.  The purpose is to support one another as we all try to figure out this mothering thing.

Today I am posting over at Valerie’s blog Chronicles of a Babywise Mom.  Here today is Claire from My Devising.  She is talking about how she brings faith and learning about God into daily life.
Kim

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Living by Faith with my Kids

I grew up in a home where people took me to church, prayed with me, and talked to me about Jesus.  I was brought up a certain way and happened to continue on that path into my adulthood, but not because I never had a choice or because I was forced into it.  Even with the many moments of struggling and wrestling with my beliefs, I chose to believe in God.  I choose to believe in God.  I know I’ll hit more spiritual walls in my life that cause me to ask more questions, but I’m forever grateful for the foundation that my parents laid out for me.I hear a lot about letting our kids find their own way when it comes to faith and religion.  Let’s not tell them what to believe; let’s give them a blank slate and let them figure out what they want to believe.  While I always want there to be room for discussion, different opinions, and struggle with faith in my home, I don’t necessarily think that means I need to let my kids loose, giving no guidance at all.  I will teach my kids thousands of things, so I don’t think it’s ridiculous to assume that I will also teach my kids about my faith in God – especially since it is the foundation for how I live my life.  To keep that – the thing that has saved my life and given me true hope – hidden or subdued all for the sake of letting my children explore aimlessly would be heartbreaking.

So when I talk about introducing faith into my kids’ lives, that’s where I’m coming from.  For right now, we have a 3.5 year old and a 1 year old, so we do have to keep things age appropriate.  These are just a few ways we can teach our kids about what we believe.BIBLE VERSES

A couple of years ago at a MOMS Bible Study, I received a huge stack of bible verses that were organized by age level.  These have been so wonderful to use.  We have them clipped to our napkin holder on the dining room table.  I don’t bring them up at every meal time, but I try to talk about them 2-3 times a week.  They are simple and easy to memorize.  Aside from hearing new words and learning how to memorize, these verses prompt some good 3 year old discussions.

*All verses are found on ABCJesusLovesMe.com and are divided by age level.  Select Curriculum > Weekly Lesson Plans > Verse

MUSIC

Duke is pretty up with the Top 40 hits, but these days, I am listening more and more to Christian music.  Not all of the time and not exclusively, but it’s definitely more present than before.  There are plenty of great artists making music that sends hopeful messages, and I want my children dwelling on those thoughts.  I don’t think it’s necessary to completely shut out the “secular” music world.  There’s some really good stuff out there.  But I want it to be paired with songs that encourage and bring light and life to my kids’ minds and hearts.  Duke is at the age where learning a song is easy, so it’s important to make sure that the songs he’s learning are benefiting his soul.

PRAYER

I want my children growing up in a home that lives out the verse in 1 Thessalonians that says to pray continually.  The depth in which I understand how/why I communicate with God influences the depth of my belief in him.  If my children grow up only praying to God when things go wrong or before dinner, they may have a skewed view of who he is.  If prayer is something they observe that happens at all times – saying thanks for small things, asking God to heal us when we’re sick, praying for our friends, asking God for forgiveness – I think they’re more likely to view it as a real conversation with a relational God, rather than something we just do because we’re supposed to.

We will be a home that prays, that discusses why we believe what we believe, that goes to church, and that reads the Bible.  Those things will be present.  But the bottom line below all of it is love.  From that, these things will flow.  The best we can do for our kids is to live our lives as free people who are loved by God.

How do you incorporate your faith into your home?

Claire is a stay-at-home mom of 2 and blogs at mydevising.com.

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