Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Words are Seeds

"Fix these words of mine in your hearts and minds; tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Teach them to your children, talking about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up." Deuteronomy 11:18-19

Eight years ago I became a parent. Eight years ago, the Hand of God began to mold me and shape me into a different vessel than I had been before. Children have a way of doing that to you. I have learned more about my faith and more about my character in the past eight years than I had in the previous twenty-four.

As a parent, I love teaching my children about God. I love finding ways in our day, usually when I least expect it, to teach them something about my faith. Not their faith, my faith. I don't believe I can choose my children's faith. I can't force them to believe the way I believe or worship the way I worship. It is my job to teach my children who God is from my own heart, and my fervent prayer is that they will fall in love with Jesus as they watch me walk with Him.

These sacred words in Deuteronomy are amongst my favorites. They are a reminder that it is my job, as a parent, to teach them about the Word that God has fixed in my mind and heart. I am especially blessed when I hear my children echoing my words back to me, from their own heart, because I know my teaching has been planted there.

It's a big responsibility and privilege, not to be taken lightly. Words are like seeds, whether they are good or bad, the words, once matured in the life of our children, will either produce an abundant harvest of good or evil. I am very careful with my words, though I am not perfect. I've had to apologize to my children on many occasions when I've said something that has hurt them or frustrated them. But, even then, it was a great opportunity to teach them about God and His forgiveness. I remember once I told the girls that when someone says something hurtful, it's like a bad seed has been planted, but when we choose to forgive them, we are pulling that seed out and throwing it away. If we choose not to forgive, that nasty seed will keep growing and causing us trouble, eventually growing such strong roots that it will be even harder to forgive later on.

Recently, we've been planting the seed of integrity in our children's hearts: doing the right thing, even when no one is looking. In a total act of God, our oldest's Sunday School class talked about the very same thing! They used the analogy of a cookie jar, if you take a cookie without asking, and even if mom doesn't see, it's still wrong. When I was tucking her in the other night we had a great conversation about integrity and the very next day she came home and told me that she had talked to her friend on the playground and told her that some of the things she had said weren't true and she wanted to set her friend straight. I was so proud of her, she decided to do this on her own. I told her it took a lot of courage and showed she had integrity. The seed is growing!

Words are so important, especially the Words spoken from the mouth of God, planted in your heart. Talk about them when you go out and when you stay in, when you get up and when you lie down. Plant those seeds of truth into the lives of your children, and when they grow up they will produce a bountiful harvest of blessings in their life, in yours and in the world.

What seeds are you planting in your children's lives right now? What seeds were planted in your heart when you were young? Is it time to pull some of them out?

6 comments:

  1. I love your mom's heart, Gabrielle - and am still chuckling about the FB comments you made yesterday about your little rascals;)! Like you, I've learned so, so much from being a parent. And I have a far better understanding of God parenting/shepherding us. I just wish I was as longsuffering as He is! Integrity is so important and its' wonderful you're highlighting that in your home. Right now for us it's finding the praiseworthy things about sandpaper people or situations. I have one little man who loves to dwell on the negative! Sigh. We're learning together, I guess! Bless you for this post.

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    1. Laura, I am still getting comments on my Facebook post from yesterday! I'm happy my crazy life can offer some comic relief for others. :)

      Parenting is exhausting, to say the least! Teaching your son to find praiseworthy traits, while keeping a positive attitude yourself, is hard work, but well worth the effort and will bless you for years to come. My oldest is a dreamer and a deep thinker, she keeps me on my toes with thoughtful questions, but she can tend to think more about herself than others. My second has a servant's heart and loves to please people, but she can be a martyr at times. Learning how to strengthen their strengths and curb their shortcomings is such a fine balance. I'm thankful I have my husband's support and the Holy Spirit to guide me or I'd be lost on this journey!

      Thanks for joining in the conversation today. :)

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  2. I love your analogy of the "good" seeds vs "bad" seeds we plant in our children's lives through our words and how they take root. It's so true! I'm still weeding out weeds in my thinking...But how to do be intentional about sharing seeds of faith, integrity, etc for my kids? My mind freezes up, but I'm learning. There is no doubt that words have a great impact on children's lives and I make it a point to be careful of what words I say, but even then the kids are funny in what they take away. Thanks for opening your heart up and posting it online :-)

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    1. Thanks for your thoughtful comments, Jennette. I'm still weeding out some bad seeds in my own life. A few years back God gave me a deep understanding of the garden of my heart and how important it is to weed out those bad seeds to allow the good ones to grow. With that, He also showed me how important it is to be the gardener who tends my children's hearts. It's harder now that Ellis is in school to know what I need to be tending, so instead of asking her "how was school today," which usually gets the "it was fine" answer, I now ask her: "What can I pray for you?" to which she then tells me what's on her heart. It is a daunting task to tend the gardens of their hearts, but ask the Holy Spirit to guide you, and you'd be amazed at how He will.

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  3. Well, I don't have kids now, but my parents definitely planted seeds of faith in me as a kid. They were (and ARE) amazing examples of what it means to live for Christ...they're the best. :)

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    1. My parents also planted amazing seeds of faith into my life. Having parents who lead by example is one of life's greatest blessings, if you ask me. :) Even though you don't have children, yet, you are planting seeds into the lives of so many others. I saw the pictures of you and the little guy on Facebook - is he a nephew? You have a great opportunity to plant seeds into his life, as well. Your writing is the biggest opportunity to sow those seeds and you do such a great job of it. I'm heading over to your blog right now to see what you've posted today!

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