As much as we might want to, we can’t make our adult child bow to the King and live in the fullness of His Kingdom.
In Part 1 and Part 2, I gave the first five of the seven ways we can help our adult children when we find ourselves in this situation. If you missed them, you will want to go back and read them both before reading the final blog of this series.
I have sometimes pictured my children standing on the edge of a cliff. They are very close to jumping off, trying to decide if they want to be totally separated from my beliefs concerning God and church. So I know what I do, or don’t do, is very critical.
Let’s take just a minute to look at this, especially the issue of going to church. Like it or not, it does not say anywhere in the Bible you must go to church to be saved. I know it says we are not to forsake the fellowship, and I know we need to be in fellowship with other believers. But the Western culture church is not a Biblical mandate: going to a specific building at a set time each week, worshiping God being led from a platform of musicians, sitting for another 30-60 minutes facing that same platform while someone preaches a message at us, and then dismissing and going home or out to lunch. Send me an email when you see that formula in the Bible, much less attaching the label of “church” on it in the scriptures.
God Himself is what needs to be relevant to our lives, more than the modern day “church” is. And I believe that is where some of the problem lies in the young adults across our nation. They spent up to 4 years in a youth group with lots of great bands and pizza parties, which had almost nothing to do with how God is relevant in their lives, or how He would be when they were sent out into life on their own.
They are part of a reality generation. They don’t want to watch things happen; they want to be right in the middle of what is happening. They are tired of going to a building, being told that is church. They want to go out into the world and BE the church.
The scary part is our children were not taught how to BE the church while being raised in the church. So when they go out into the world, they are easily swayed by the ways of the world, and we have the painful view of watching them flounder.
With all that being said, let’s look at the last two of the seven ways we can help them from the distance many of us are forced to be in.
With all that being said, let’s look at the last two of the seven ways we can help them from the distance many of us are forced to be in.
6. Claim the promises in the scriptures over them
• I have a much worn book that helped me do this effectively over the years as my children grew up called The Power of a Praying Parent by Stormie Omartian. I have recently purchased her book The Power of Praying for Your Adult Children. I highly recommend getting yourself a copy!
• My most recent event of having my “baby” move out from home and in with a group of friends who don’t have a relationship with the Lord has me working through all seven of these things, so I am writing this to myself just as much as anyone else. A scripture God has me praying over him is one of his own favorites growing up. “Greater is Jesus in him, than the one who is in the world trying to entice and deceive him!” (1 John 4:4).
• Another thing I have done with all of my kids is to take the meaning of their first and middle name, and ask the Holy Spirit to lead me to a scripture that encompasses the meaning of those names. I pray each of my children’s scripture over them frequently. (Several years ago I even made each one of them a plaque with their first and middle names, the meanings of those names, and their scripture which hangs under their yearly school picture – now all of their senior pictures – in our family room.)
7. Take yourself off the hook!
Many years ago I was walking around my subdivision, feeling sorry for myself at being one of the world’s worst moms. God interrupted my pity party with, “Did your parents make any mistakes with you?” I had to say yes to that. “And didn’t I use those things to make you strong and be an overcomer?” Well, yes, I suppose that was true. “Don’t you think I can and will use your mistakes for something good in the lives of your kids in the same way I did for you?” I had to repent for my lack of faith in who God is in their lives, and for putting so much pressure on myself to be a perfect parent, and blaming myself when my kids make bad choices.
In case you haven’t thought of this before: The only “parent” Adam and Eve had was a Perfect Father, and they disobeyed (Eve from deception and Adam from choosing to bend under peer pressure). They went their own way, messing up their lives from the plan God had for them. So if a Perfect Father has children who make bad choices, I don’t need to be burdened under false guilt for their choices, no matter how much I have prayed and modeled how awesome walking in God’s destiny is.
Here is one of the times I will be totally transparent and say, even though I say those things, it is still something I struggle with way more than I want to admit. And guess who my greatest encouragers seem to be? My own kids! Here is part of a text I received from one of them, just within the last month.
“Mom I love you, and you are far from a failure, you have one beautiful daughter who has finished the race and gone to heaven (that’s 1 for 1 so far) and the rest are still running and in their process. To be a failure there has to be a definitive end. The rest of us are still going and learning, far from the end. So, you’re undefeated and still going in my mind. I know it’s hard, but try to stop putting so much pressure on yourself. You show us the way to God’s heart, and there have been things you can’t control so continue with your heart after God and working on you. We do see it, and God’s doing the rest. I love you my triumphant victorious mother!”
Needless to say, that text is locked in so I can’t accidently delete it!
God is faithful, not only to us, but to our children! He has an even deeper love for them than we do, and He has a perfect plan, including things we can’t see. Let’s be determined to REST in the love He has for them, and thank Him that the same grace and mercy He extends to us, is the same grace and mercy He extends to our children. God is a victorious King, yesterday, today, and forever!
In the Crown of Glory Ministries library you can find 31 Scriptural promises written out for you to claim and pray over your adult children. (One for each day of the month.)
I would love to hear from you. Leave the first name of a child you would like lifted up in prayer. I will come into agreement with you, and hold each and every one up to the King on the Throne in prayer.
Derek says
Strength, guidance, wisdom and freedom.
Laura Diehl says
Good words for all of us, Derek.
Jill says
Please pray Phil. 1:6 over Bradley. Thank you so much for being vulnerable and transparent. Your articles help more than you probably realize. I am so thankful for the ways they have encouraged my heart. God knew I needed this and He led me to your blog in His perfect timing and His perfect way. Thank you for being obedient to His voice.
Laura Diehl says
Hello Jill. Thank you for letting me know this blog series was an encouragement to you. That is definitely my prayer. I lift Bradley up to the throne room, and speak God’s protection over him, and that he WILL walk in the purposes and plans God has for him. God, complete the work You have begun in him. Give Jill discernment and wisdom with her son, and remind her to rest in You when she becomes anxious, and help her to actually do it, as so often we can’t do it on our own.
Blessings!