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The Gospel: The Key to Parenting
- 09/30/09
- 21
Last week I reviewed Bill Farley’s new book Gospel-Powered Parenting. I recommended it highly, saying it had “just the right combination of affirmation (your struggles are universal struggles, your joys are universal joys) and exhortation to both encourage and challenge me in all the right ways.” After I reviewed it, I found there were a few things I wanted to ask the author. I went ahead and asked if he would be willing to do a brief interview about the book and he was kind enough to do so. I trust you’ll enjoy his answers as I did.
1. Why the gospel? Why is the gospel the key to empowering parenting? What is the connection between the words “gospel” and “powered?”
Paul tells us that “the gospel is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Rom. 1:16). We hear this verse and think the pulpit or witnessing, but parents should hear this and think family devotions. Parents convinced that God’s power is latent in the gospel center their families around the gospel. They are convinced that it provokes new birth, that it will knit their children’s hearts to God, and motivate godly behavior. Our children receive the “imperishable seed” of new birth through the message of the gospel (1 Pet. 1:23). Often parents don’t center their parenting in the gospel because either they don’t really understand the gospel, or they don’t believe that God’s power is latent in the gospel.
The gospel also protects parents from “moralism,” the idea that well-behaved children are the main thing. New Birth is the main thing. The morality of Christ imputed to your children is the main thing. It is not what our children do for Christ but what Christ has done for our children that is the main thing. Ironically, without aiming at it, gospel centered parents get godly behavior from their children.
In addition, the fear of God is the key to attracting God’s favor upon our parenting. Many think that the fear of God is an Old Testament concept. But the main place we get the fear of God is at the cross of Christ—the heart of the gospel.
2. Today we are hearing the word “gospel” everywhere (at least, those of us within a certain subset of the Christian world). Do you think there’s a danger that it could become cliche? Could gospel begin to lose its meaning when it’s applied to everything?
When the gospel becomes “clich” Christianity has become irrelevant. The center has been displaced. That is because the gospel is the main thing. It is the center of the Bible. The Old Testament predicts it. The gospels recount it, and the epistles look back to explain and apply it. I think the recent surge of Gospel-centeredness is really just a resurgence of biblical Christianity.
This may sound strange to many Christians. To many the gospel is “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life.” But the gospel is deep. It is a well with no bottom. The more we understand it the less apt we are to stray from it. It starts by assuming the bad news. We are in trouble. Our default condition is Hell. God owes us nothing but justice. We are all running pell mell toward damnation. We cannot solve this problem by being good. We are in profound trouble.
The gospel is the “good news” that solves this problem. It reconciles enemies—God and man—and makes them friends. It opens the gate of Heaven to all who believe. It infuses Christians with an indomitable hope. It motivates love, grace, and forgiveness.
In my view, this new Gospel-centeredness is a profound deepening of the faith. It is what really matters. I believe there will be tremendous long-term fruit from the recovery of this emphasis.
Those who understand the gospel never get tired of hearing it. I watched my son preach on penal substitution last Sunday, and even though I covered the same ground ten weeks ago, the congregation was transfixed. Despite the fact that this message is the ABC of the gospel, my congregation would listen to it every week and keep coming back for more. What I am trying to say is that the gospel is not something we start with so that we can pass on to the deeper truths. It is the deeper truth.
The thesis of my previous book, Outrageous Mercy, is that the gospel teaches us everything we need to know about God, man, eternity, Hell, Heaven, how to get into Heaven, what God loves, and what he hates. In addition, it teaches us everything we need to know about how to live. If all of this is true, it must also teach us about parenting. The point of Gospel Powered Parenting is that it does.
3. We want to affirm, of course, that it is well within the rights of any Christian parents to homeschool their children. We want to affirm that this is often a wise decision for parents. Yet in Gospel-Powered Parenting you explicitly mention that your five children, all of whom are believers, went to public schools and state colleges. You emphasize the importance of an offensive mind-set. Do you find that, at least for some Christian parents, homeschooling is really just one aspect of a larger defensive mind-set?
Many things motivate home-schooling—a desire for a better education, the longing to mingle the gospel with academic subjects, the desire to cast our children in a biblical mold, and a longing to protect them from evil influence. What I am saying is that if protection is the main thing, or the only thing, we might be in trouble.
Let me be clear. I am all for home-schooling and/or private Christian education. Although my children all graduated from public High School, my two oldest daughters went to a private Christian school for several years, and we home-schooled my youngest during his Junior High years. None of my fourteen grandchildren are in public education today. My oldest daughter taught in a classical Christian school for twelve years. I am not against home-schooling: I am against a fear-oriented, defensive mindset. Home schooling does not necessarily presume this mentality.
4. What are the potential dangers in this?
The potential dangers are primarily reactionary. You could take this idea to an extreme and fail to protect children when you should. That would not be helpful. I am not saying that you shouldn’t protect your children from some influences. I am just saying that “protection” should never be our primary strategy. Isolating them from worldly influence by itself is seldom productive.
5. What does an offensive mind-set look like in parenting?
An offensive mindset targets the child’s heart not the child’s external environment (friends, music, school, etc.). In order to reach their child’s heart effective parents focus on their relationship with the child. Rather than fearing the world’s negative influence, they focus on the gospel’s power to influence their child. This parent worries more about their example to their child rather than the world’s example. This parent waits patiently for New Birth rather than assuming it because a child was baptized, or made a confession of faith at a summer camp.
6. Why is it such a temptation to try to control, or over-control, our children’s’ environment? Why do parents need to guard against this?
I think it is a temptation because our default condition is independence from God. We think our influence is the deciding factor in our child’s character development. It isn’t. Ultimately, the influence of God trumps all of our efforts. God gives New Birth. We can’t give it to our children. Our children can’t take it. It is God’s gracious gift (Mt 13:11, Mt 16:17,Luke 19:42; 24:16, 24:31, 24:45;Jn 1:12,13;Jn 5:21;Jn 9:39; Jn 6:39,Rm 9:10-24; Eph 1:1-6; 1Pe 2:9). Therefore, and this is crucial, pleasing God is the most important thing a parent can do to move God to regenerate their child. This means that effective parents are God-centered not child-centered. Their focus is always on God, not their children. Fearing God is one crucial way that parents can please God. We learn this fear at the cross. That is why I call it gospel powered parenting.
7. Do you feel that some Christian parents allow fear to be a motivating factor in the education of their children?
Yes, this is sometimes true. I am a pastor. I have watched parents try to protect their children into God’s kingdom. Fear of worldly influence is often their motive. Sometimes they are home-schooling families, but not always. When a parent thinks “protecting” their child from the outside world is the main thing, they are saying something. They are saying that Christianity equals “moralism,” (pleasing God through outward behavior), that obedient children are the main thing, that the child’s problem is “out there” rather than within his own fallen nature. Sometimes they assume that their child is basically good. Negative influence will corrupt that goodness. Therefore, protecting their child will enable that goodness to flourish. This mentality also assumes that New Birth has little power to equip a child to conquer temptation.
8. How can a parent guard against moralism? Isn’t there huge temptation, perhaps especially when we are within view of other Christians, to judge parenting by the outward shows of immediate obedience and other potentially-moralistic standards?
Moralism is the assumption that we make ourselves acceptable to God with good behavior. It is the deadly enemy of Christianity. It is the one thing that all non-Christian religions share in common, and the rejection of moralism is one crucial doctrine that sets Christianity apart. The Bible says God accepts us because we believe, not because we perform.
Moral behavior is important, however it is not the ultimate goal of parenting. New Birth is the final goal. Morality matters because it glorifies God. Our children will never be moral in a pleasing way to God until their hearts are changed through the miracle of New Birth, and even then, their morality will never makes them ultimately acceptable to God.
So, to answer you question, the only way to guard against moralism is to understand the nature of New Birth, to understand justification by faith alone, and to aim all of your parenting efforts at these targets. Parents that center their families around the gospel tend to get these results.
9. Why did you and your wife make decisions about educating your children?
Our children were in public schools during the years 1980 to 2000. We put them in public school because of the convictions mentioned above. There was a Christian sub-culture at their High School. They made their friends there. Generally, they prospered spiritually.
However, I must make some caveats. First, public education has degenerated since our kids were in school. We might do differently today. Second, we made some mistakes. We were not flexible enough. Some of our children easily withstood peer pressure. Others struggled. Looking back, we probably should have put the children that struggled in private school or home-schooled them. In short, I am not making any rules about where your children should be educated. The Bible takes a different tack. It stresses the role of the father, the importance of parental example, and the fear of God taught by the gospel.
10. How will you know if this book has been a success? What do you hope for it?
I will not know if this book has been successful until I am with God in eternity. I will feel successful if I meet saints who came to New Birth because their parents read this book and changed their approach to parenting.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (21)
I haven’t read the book yet but from the interview it seems that the author is approaching this issue from a grace oriented perspective. This is a good thing. In our experience the issue of education choice is often acrimonious. We have encountered parents on all three sides (public, private, home school) who are almost militant about the rightness of their choice. Thank God for all of the options that we have. A little grace and humility would go a long way in this matter.
In questions and responses to 6 and 7, in which I mostly do agree, if I understand them correctly. I have a question is in regards to “parents being afraid of wordly influence”. What is the difference between worldly influence and temptation? If I see that wordly influence as temptation to sin, it would be best for my child in desiring to keep them from temptation. After all, we ask our Father in Heaven to do the same?Maybe I am starting from the wrong understanding of “wordly” influence, and it would greatly help me understand if their were some clarification here and defining of terms and I would appreciate to hear thoughts and clarification between “wordly” influence and temptation.Also, in the questions being asked, it seems very pointed and directed toward a negative when it would also be profitable to seek the positives. At least as much. In seeking the understanding of the questions and the answers, it does not appear that many homeschooling families would be running to buy this book and maybe that is not desired? Thoughts?
Tim,
Thank you for this wonderful interview. Farley’s answers seemed to be well balanced and thought out. I am looking for material to help our young parents at our church and this may be one book that will be extremely helpful.
I graduated from Wheaton College in the early ’90s. I could tell within minutes of meeting students and talking about their backgrounds which had come from homes with a bunker mentality and which had come from homes that believed that Christ in us makes for victory over all opponents. With very few exceptions, the kids that had been bunkered cut loose the second they hit campus ( as many had lived their faith vicariously through their parents). I would also offer that they were the ones that struggled most with having to be perfect. And when they were not perfect, the crash and burn that resulted was enormous. I know; I used to pray in a small chapel where students wrote in a special notebook about their struggles so that others could pray for them. From time to time I would recognize a story, and in those cases the student had been bunkered. And the ensuing flameout had been devastating.
Bunkering our children simply does not work. In the end, in many cases, it leads to the opposite result from what we desire.
Tim, thank you for following up the book review with this interview. It appears that Dr. Farley has written another excellent book with a high view of the cross and the Gospel—I plan to read them both (Outrageous Mercy being the other). The answer in question 7 is the key: parents believing that the child’s problem is “out there” rather than within his own fallen nature. Sometimes they assume that their child is basically good. Negative influence will corrupt that goodness. Therefore, protecting their child will enable that goodness to flourish. Matthew 15: 10-20 reminds us it is what proceeds from the heart that defiles a person. Parents need to be wise in guarding against undue worldly influences, but with the view that within each person (even the most sheltered) there reside remnants of sin in a fallen heart. As Dr. Farley points out, it is only by the New Birth that temptation and sin can be overcome, and the Gospel is powerfully effective to accomplish this.
“Therefore, and this is crucial, pleasing God is the most important thing a parent can do to move God to regenerate their child.”
I hope he did not really mean to say this. Truly, the author seems to be wrestling with his own thoughts; he is all over the place, both philosophically and theologically. I want to give him the benefit of the doubt, as a brother, but he is suggesting that parents are a kind of proxy-pelagian. He speaks of the grace of the Gospel, then undermines grace.
I understand that the power of the Gospel and new Birth in our children being the key part to this but what about those that do not have the Power of Christ in them?Then there is no goodness within a child (wthout New Birth), therefore send him out to the world and its influences with no power to defeat it? Is this a “that’s life” situation and there is no better way to apply the gospel than to let the poor prodigal fall and come crawling back home? Forgive me, if I am not understanding this correctly, I truly want to.
I recommended this book on my blog just a week ago and was glad to see your interview of the author. Very informative. Keep up the good work.Stevehttp://clayjarspeaking.wordpress.com/
I would expect from the above interview that the author is coming from a baptistic understanding of children i.e. that they are not part of a covenant community because of their believing parents.
How do people from a covenant/Presbyterian viewpoint respond to the points above? From their viewpoint the children of believers are in some way in a more priviliged position than the children of non-believers. The premise is somewhat different in that children are not all in the same state starting out.
My own view would be baptistic in that I don’t believe my children have any special entitlements because of what their parents believe.
Graham,You are putting your finger on one of the problems created by the author. He says: environment is no big deal; new birth is what matters; new birth is brought about by environment (ie parents are one aspect of our personal environment). False dichotomies and retractions create this kind of confusion.
Your brother in Christ,Chris
RD, There are many fine books on the meaning of the covenant promises of God to our children. I would suggest that you get ahold of the paper by Dr. Robert Rayburn; it can be foundhere.It is one of the most succinct and beautiful explanations of covenant life that I know of. All the questions of education, family life, grace, etc, are summarized in it.
Graham,
“If I see that wordly influence as temptation to sin, it would be best for my child in desiring to keep them from temptation. After all, we ask our Father in Heaven to do the same?”
When we ask our Father in Heaven to “lead us not into temptation” I believe that it is different then us acting as god and removing our children from the temptation. When we pray to God we are asking him to remove the temptation and for the faith (in the Gospel of Jesus Christ) to withstand the temptation; this is a fundamentally different thing than removing our children from a situation that we deem worldly.
I do not agree that wanting to remove them from all sources of temptation would be the best thing for the child, I think that amounts to what Farley calls “protect[ing] their children into God’s kingdom.” I don’t think it is possible to totally remove temptation anyway.
Instead, I want to teach them to make the right choices (for the right reasons) themselves. The basic point of Biblical parenting is to teach and train them through the lens of the Gospel and I believe that if I am removing as many temptations as I can, then they are bound to have a false view of how sin acts, and therefore, how the Gospel works. They will not be spiritually prepared for the time when they leave the house.
I was home-schooled by my Christian parents, I became a Christian in high school (by God’s providence) which most certainly gave me the good foundation I needed as I went off to a state college. My parents didn’t remove the temptations I faced as a child even though it would have been easier for me short-term. I believe that in the long-term that action would have been a spiritual disservice.
As the first commenter mentioned there are militant proponents to every side of this issue, though I feel strongly about this, my feelings on this issue are not totally static (I am planning on home-schooling.) All sides of this issue have some valid points.
Eric R
Great clarification questions Tim, I am not a big proponent of home schooling due to my association with a “bill gothard style” home schooling over the years and for those who may not be familiar with it it is very moralistic and legalistic but hs done right I know works. I especially liked the way you put question 2 and his answer”I think the recent surge of Gospel-centeredness is really just a resurgence of biblical Christianity.” This new Gospel centeredness revived by the new reformed movement is spilling over into other camps of the church, if you believe there can be other camps, even into catholothism, I know that’s impossible according to their theology but most catholics haven’t a clue to their theology and would agree with a reformed evangelical gospel. Great questions!Mike
Chris Z-
That sentence read in isolation, does seem to contradict the author’s main argument. But when that sentence is read in the context of all his comments and the book as a whole, it makes more sense to me.
What Farley is arguing for is a realignment of our parenting around the ultimate reality of the gospel being at its center, with our own Spirit-empowered living out of that reality in our own life before our children as our first priority, and using the law (all of Scripture) to do what God says the law is meant to do - point our children to their own need of a Savior and a new heart. Many parenting methods, such as the infamous Growing Kids God’s Way, overbuild the cart of “godly character development” and put it out front, with the gospel and regeneration as a little toy pony afterthought (IMHO). Farley seems to be arguing for some needed rearranging.
Graham , I think the answer to your questions actually lie in Farley’s own explanation of what he feels he ought to have done differently regarding his children’s schooling. I can relate as I have 3 kids - one is a dyed-in-the-wool Pharisee, one is a passionate lover of the world, and one is, well, three and a half. She hasn’t made up her mind yet. :) My Pharisee child would do well in public school - she in her flesh wants to be “good” and would keep herself away from a lot of the typical stuff public school kids offer up. She’d take a lot of sinful pride in that and, prayerfully, that very pride might eventually lead to the fall that would cause her to see her own sinfulness. My “sin-magnet” child, OTOH, I’m keeping a tight leash on. Doesn’t matter where she is, if it seems forbidden, raunchy, rebellious - she wants it. Any kid that offers it up, she wants to be their best friend. She’s the one we need to be more careful of. But in both cases, their greatest need is to see my husband and I battle our own sinful tendencies to pride or to love the world with the power of the Holy Spirit, and then to regularly point them to their need for the same.
Regardless, ahem, of whether we’re baptistic or covenental in our philosophy. Maybe we should all have little “b”s or “c”s after our names in the comments, just to show our hand? ;)
Thanks for this discussion. Could someone help me understand what he means in answer to question 6:’Therefore, and this is crucial, pleasing God is the most important thing a parent can do TO MOVE GOD TO REGENERATE THEIR CHILD.’I’m obviously missing something.
Eric R-
Thank you for your thoughts and concerns. I am much appreciative.
I am not sure I understand with what you mean in “acting as God and removing our children from temptation”. I think that it is plain to see that not only as a Parent in my stewardship but as a believer, I am an ambassador in Christ and I must love God, one way to do that is by hating sin, which would mean to be obedient in faith and put it to death the fleshly desires. It would is also that I am my brothers keeper in the way that I would never want to cause to him stumble nor hinder in being obedient in faith also. We have responsibility, right?I would not say and did not say that I would remove or could remove my children from every situation. What I am saying is that a matter of worldview. If I send my child into a place of learning where the worldview is 100% opposed to what is truth, especially without the foundation of a new heart in Christ, and being a child in maturity let alone faith, is that really teaching them how to make good decisions? Is it teaching him to make good decisions by letting him fall? I will show my child in the way he should go and God will be the determining factor of his decisions..
Your right as it seems to be a hard issue, and I am willing to see and hear as scripture being the final say.
Does this apply at all? “but whoever causes one of these a little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.”
Should we not be radical about removing sin?
Thank you again for your comments and consideration in the matter.
Grace and Peace!
Homeschooling isn’t the gospel.The gospel isn’t homeschooling.
His balance and perspective are refreshing. It isn’t about how you educate your child but about your relationship with your child. We (me included) get trapped in methods and morals when neither of those things change the heart.
We have homeschooled from the beginning and hope to continue but I am always checking my heart about why we are doing it. We fool ourselves if we think just becasue they are with us physcially all the time they are safe. They will grow up and be in the world. Their safety comes in knowing Him who can save the soul and in parents who hopefully model dependance not morality.
Farley writes, “When the gospel becomes “clich” Christianity has become irrelevant.”, which sounds all pious and good., and is probably a good answer to the question that was NOT asked, “Does the gospel become irrelevant?”.
Unfortunately, it’s not an answer to the question that WAS asked. THAT question was about the English WORD, “gospel”. Words in English, or any other language, can and do become “overused” and even “useless”. Unless Farley and others are ready to assert that some doctrine of divine protection of Important English Theological Words, there’s no reason to rule out the possibility that the WORD “gospel” is overused.
My observations suggest that a number of English theological words are commonly used by both evangelical lay people and clergy, more for their feeling and familiarity, than for their meaning, and that further, even many clergy can’t say what the mean!
But, it’s easy to test: just ask the nearest evangelical minister to explain the basic meaning of 5 common theological words … WITHOUT using ANY of the standard theological terms. Words like “faith”, “love”, “hope”, “holy” … and “gospel” will do nicely. If you want to extend the test a bit, save the results, and repeat 5 times. In my experience, the result is a bit like the classic child’s game, repeating the message around the circle: nothing agrees!
Fortunately, more people seem to experience God’s grace, than are able to say what it is!
GRAHAM,Thank you, finally someone speaking about what the bible says and not just being reactionary because of extremes within the so called ‘home-schooled’ movement. With Children it’s not a matter of taste, but a matter of stewardship, which must be gospel-centered and done for the glory of God.
TIM CHALLIESYou’ve mentioned your love for Voddie Bacham before why not interview him on such a subject??????
I’m looking more for CHAPTER and VERSE, Doesn’t the bible have something to say about who teaches? (If the blind lead the blind…….)Doesn’t PROVERBS have something to say about the influences of corrupt company (peer pressure anyone?)Aren’t the majority of children in ‘Christian homes’ theologically unstable and consequently not capable of being ‘offensive’??Didn’t the Lord have something to say to Israel about how extensive and frequent they should teach their children and what not to expose them to (keep in mind, I’m not dispensational)?Aren’t children quite impressionable? Consider our cultures obesession and addiction to sex (porn etc..) and don’t we often point out how such images, conversations stay imprinted on our minds and yet is it extreme to attempt to limit that exposure to our children?And yes I’m opposed to raising children to be trophies (in morality, education, or sports) and no I’ve never attended a homeschool conference, nor do I think all are biblically training their children or even truly saved, yet the point we should be striving for is what does the scripture say?Can such a subject be exegetically taught?? Well Pastor Albert Martin preached 40 messages on such a topic and here it is,http://www.trinitymontville.org/SermonMedia/Category.aspx?ID=62
I was homeschooled (http://warrenmyers.com/blog/2005/10/a-response-to-dan-edelen/) all 12 years, and loved it!
But I have seen it implemented poorly, too. No teaching style is perfect, and really needs to be up to the parents to determine the best option for their kids.
Because, after all, as the psalmist says about children, “blest is the man whose quiver is full of them”. You only have a quiver to fire those arrows into an enemy.
I pray that any children I have will be prepared through whatever means are available to be those arrows to fire at Satan’s strongholds.
I’m off to buy the book…