By Brenda Jank
Do you love a child in your life – or a bunch of children between the ages of 1 and 18? (They don’t even have to live under your roof.) If so, this post is for you.
Think
Why do we spend most of our prayer time talking to God? Talking to God is predictable. I know the routine. I sit in the driver’s seat. I know what to expect. But it falls short. Something is missing.
Why does monologue prayer come so easily to us? Because that’s what we were taught. It’s relatively easy to teach kids to talk to God, except for a handful of thoughtful kids who announce, “How am I supposed to talk to someone I can’t see?”
Dialogue, however, is a whole different ball game. While monologue is predictable, teaching kids to dialogue with God is potentially unwieldy. Be still before God? Listen? That’s not easy. It hints of mystery and could get messy.
“How in the world do I teach a child to be still, to know God, to listen?”
“What if I show kids how to be still, to listen to God and he doesn’t say anything?”
“What if they hear something I don’t think God said? What then?!”
Those are questions we have to ask and wrestle through, but there’s one that under-girds them all.
Have you ever been taught how to be still in the presence of God?
Have you ever taught your kids to be still in the presence of God?
It’s easier than you might think.
Prepare
Preparing the next generation to listen to God requires some forethought.
- Ground your kids in God’s Word. Share with them what he is saying to you through his Word. Those tidbits are powerful.
- Learn to “be still and know God” yourself. Become familiar and comfortable with stillness.
Guard your steps when you go to the house of God. Go near to listen rather than to offer the sacrifice of fools, who do not know that they do wrong. Ecclesiastes 5:1
- The work of stillness, of listening to God is tied to the work of the Holy Spirit. Spend some time in John 14-16. A good starting place is John 14:15-20.
- The word for spirit in the Bible is linked to breath and wind. Do a word study and share your insights with your children. Pay attention to the wind. It has much to teach us.
Launch
- Sometime this month go outside with your favorite child – or adult! Immerse yourself in the sanctuary of God—together. There is no better place for stillness or attentiveness to the Presence of God. Lay in the grass. Watch the clouds. Count the stars. Watch a sunset. Share your heart. Tell them about your own (old or new) journey of learning how to be still before God. You don’t have to have all the answers. Just share your heart. Read Psalm 19:1-4. Then read Psalm 95:1-7. Pray “Dear Jesus, help us be still and know you are God.”
- Be still. When it feels like it’s time to move on, end with “Thank you, Lord.”
- Keep in mind – we are not responsible for what God does or doesn’t do with stillness in the hearts of our children. We must release the reins. He’s God. We can trust his handiwork.
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Note: This post is Post #19 of our original series on rest and restoration. We are reposting some of our favorite articles because we believe they’re just as important today as ever. We hope you’re challenged to think of rest in a fresh, new way and will invite others to join in.
Brenda Jank and the Run Hard. Rest Well. team are thought leaders in the arena of Restorative Wellness. Find additional resources at www.RunHardRestWell.org. Contact us at: Brenda@runhardrestwell.org
So good! Thanks for the reminder!
Thank you!
YES – the noise and the busy of life set us up to forget what feeds our soul.
Praying for what God has waiting for you and for me, as we hit pause and go face to face with the One who loves us so!
Onward!
I will commit to listening. I want this element of communion and I haven’t been making room for it.
Blessings, Tami
Tami – It does take time, and patience.
Sometimes physically being a “set apart” space, like sitting or standing in a spot in your home you do not frequent or stopping your car in a picturesque place on your way home from work can “open the door” …
Blessings !