The rear view mirror revealed a slight change in Kate’s
status: a sweet smile playing around the corners of her mouth as she thought
about her beloved Granny. Feeling like
the moment was going well, I continued, really wanting to drive home the idea
of God answering our prayers. “Kate?
You know that we are talking to God when we pray and He will answer our
prayers; we just might not always get the answer we want.” I paused briefly before heading into the “sometimes
yes/sometimes no/sometimes not right now” portion of my lesson, when Kate
suddenly turned from the window, her eyes wide with excitement and sudden
revelation. “Mommy! God just told me that I
could have some gum!” Oh, dear.
Thus the teachable “moment” became the teachable “afternoon while
running errands”.
As a Christian, I know that the Bible is inspired of God (2
Timothy 3:16). I recognize that God
speaks to me, not through any supernatural means, but through my own study and
understanding of the scriptures. I understand
that when I read letters from Paul, or psalms of David, or one of the gospels, or
any one of the 66 books of the Bible, I am reading the words of God Himself as
He, through the Holy Spirit, guided the hand of each writer (2 Peter 1:20-21). I just need to be sure that I am teaching this
to others, as well.
I love reading books to my children. It’s one of my favorite bedtime rituals at
our house and we enjoy all types:
fiction, fantasy, adventure, you name it! It is important though, that as they grow
older, children realize the difference between the book about a magical world
that exists within a rabbit hole and the Bible’s account of Balaam’s talking
donkey. One is written by a talented man
and the other comes from the very mouth of God.
Our children should be taught that the Bible is not simply another book
of stories, but rather the one and only book written by God and given to us
that we might have a means of hearing His words today (1 Thessalonians 2:13).
We teach our children to sing “Jesus Loves Me” when they are very young and praise their efforts
as they belt out the finale: “……the Bible
tells me so!” But, do our children
know why they can believe what is
read in the Bible? They sing the words, “Oh, the B-I-B-L-E, yes, that’s the book for
me! I stand alone on the Word of God,
the B-I-B-L-E!” But, do they know why they can “stand alone” on the Bible? We empower our children when we teach them the
scriptural and historical facts that support the Bible as God’s divinely inspired
book. Then, when confronted with
questions about the Bible, they are confident and ready to answer!
Kate and I had a great afternoon running errands
together. While we were in the car we
talked about how we speak to God through prayer and how God speaks to us
through His words recorded in the Bible.
We talked about how God answers our prayers and the importance of
thanking Him when He gives us what we ask.
We also laughed, sang songs, bought groceries, and chewed a lot of
gum.
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