A Dad After God's Own Heart: Becoming the Father Your Kids Need
By Jim George
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About this ebook
What does it take to become a great dad? The question alone might overwhelm you, but it's really more simple than you might think. It all starts with having a heart for God, and a heart for your kids.
In A Dad After God's Own Heart, bestselling author Jim George shares the basics for how to be a good dad with your kids, including...
- letting your kids know you love and care for them
- learning the keys to positive and effective communication
- knowing the qualities kids need most in a dad
- ways to encourage your children in their spiritual growth
- how to build healthy relationships that will last for a lifetime
As you commit to learning how to become the dad your kids need, you'll not only draw closer to your children, but you'll find incredible blessings in fatherhood.
Jim George
Jim George (1943 – 2023) and his wife, Elizabeth George, are Christian authors and speakers. Jim, author of A Husband After God’s Own Heart (a Gold Medallion finalist) and The Bare Bones Bible® Handbook, has MDiv and ThM degrees from Talbot Theological Seminary. He has served in various pastoral roles for 25 years and on The Master’s Seminary staff for ten years. Jim and Elizabeth are parents and grandparents.They love spending time with their family and enjoying beautiful Hawaiian sunsets.
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A Dad After God's Own Heart - Jim George
Publisher
From a Dad’s Heart
Dear Dad,
At last! After having written books on being a man after God’s own heart and a husband after God’s own heart, I have finally written one about being a dad after God’s own heart. And I want to alert you right away that I didn’t write it because I’m an expert on parenting or because I was always successful as a father. In fact, trying to be a good dad is where my journey toward becoming a good dad began.
One day at age 30, I woke up, looked at my two little daughters just a year apart in age, and realized I didn’t have a clue about what it meant to be God’s kind of dad. Fortunately, about that time, I had started reading my Bible and was beginning to get some idea of what was required of a father.
Next I found several men in my church who agreed to help me understand and fulfill my role as a dad. After several decades of growing spiritually, I wrote the two books I mentioned a moment ago—one for men, and one for husbands. I even wrote books for teen and tween guys¹ about their priorities. But I remained hesitant to write a book on being a dad. You see, the jury was still out on my parenting. Were my efforts fruitful? Were my grown-up girls walking with the Lord and raising their own children to love God too?
Finally, after seeing my own children spiritually strong, walking with the Lord, and pointing their eight little ones toward God, I felt it was now okay to write about being a dad after God’s own heart.
Friend and fellow dad, it’s been 30 years since my wake-up call about my God-given responsibilities for my two little girls. That’s 30 years of learning how I could give my best to applying God’s principles for parents, 30 years of fervent prayer, and 30 years of discovering what being a dad after God’s own heart requires.
Being a Dad After God’s Own Heart…
…requires time. How much time does it take for an acorn to become a tall, sturdy oak tree? Years—in fact, decades! Parenting takes daily time for a lifetime. Daily teaching and training must be continuous and purposeful as you invest your life into raising children after God’s own heart.
…requires personal commitment. The most effective modeling comes with a close relationship between parent and child. There is little impact without contact. Discipleship requires personal involvement. The closer your relationship with your child is, the more effective the training—and the greater the impact.
…requires perseverance. There are no quick fixes when it comes to being God’s kind of dad. Rather than being a series of short-term solutions to child-raising, a dad’s role is a multifaceted relationship that lasts a lifetime.
…requires focus. Effective parenting is not a casual undertaking. It takes being a faithful dad, submitting yourself to God’s instructions, and actively seeking to bring up your children according to biblical principles.
…requires planning. Success doesn’t just happen. You either plan to be a good dad and go for it, or you end up with whatever happens. If you don’t plan a path for your children to walk, others will be glad to take control of their minds and futures.
…requires a team effort. Parenting is a team sport. If you’re married, your wife, the mother of your children, is the first and best resource you have to assist you in your desire to be a solid, proactive dad. Beyond your wife, you have your church, the youth leaders in your church, and maybe some godly grandparents. Allow them to assist you, but realize that you are the one who is ultimately responsible to God for your children.
…reaps the greatest of blessings. Children are a heritage from the LORD…happy is the man who has his quiver full of them
(Psalm 127:3,5). A father experiences no greater joy than to hear that [his] children walk in truth
(3 John 4).
This book is not the final answer to all your parenting problems or difficulties. It’s actually more of a guide for you as you grow into a spiritually mature man and equip yourself to model spiritual truths for your children. To help you with these goals, at the end of this book you’ll find a daily Bible reading schedule and a brief guide titled How to Study the Bible.
I’ve also included study questions to help you dig a little deeper into your role of father. You can do this in your quiet time or with a few other dads or in your men’s study group.
You can do it, Dad. You can be a dad after God’s own heart. How can I say that? Because His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness
(2 Peter 1:3). God will be with you all the way, giving you wisdom that is from above, strength that enables you to do all things (including be a great dad), and a love for your children that knows no bounds. I’m praying for you!
Yours for the Master,
We can never afford to forget that we teach our children to call God father, and the only conception of fatherhood that they can have is the conception which we give them. Human fatherhood should be molded and modeled on the pattern of the fatherhood of God. It is the tremendous duty of the human father to be as good a father as God.¹
WILLIAM BARCLAY
1
A Dad Who Has a Divine Model
Grace to you and peace from God our Father.
1 CORINTHIANS 1:3
Greg had assumed a posture that wasn’t all that familiar—he was on his knees. He had just come from the hospital, where he had just experienced the birth of his first child, a baby girl he and his wife had named Mary Lou. The reason for including Mary in her name was because his wife, Margaret, had once had a little sister by that name. Tragically, this sister had died of cancer at a young age.
Now, after the birth and initial celebration, Greg had staggered home feeling quite tired. He had gotten very little sleep, and he was hoping to get some rest before going back to the hospital. The way he was feeling, you would have thought he had been the one in labor all those hours. Maybe it was the lack of sleep, or the impact of seeing that new little life, but whatever it was, Greg was overwhelmed by the prospect of being a new dad. Only now, after the months of anticipation, was Greg feeling the gravity of his new role and responsibility. He was a dad!
So, as he knelt with his arms leaning on a kitchen chair, Greg prayed, God, I don’t have a clue of what it means to be a father, a dad, or a parent to little Mary Lou. I need help. Please guide me each step of the way as I assume my new role.
Then Greg went on to pray his way through little Mary Lou’s life from infancy all the way through marriage!
As Greg got up off his knees, he felt like a reassuring celestial hand was resting on his shoulder. He believed his prayer had been heard and that God would be faithful to give him the wisdom he needed to be a good dad.
Greg felt that he had just entered into a partnership with God. If he was faithful to do his part, Greg knew God was there to lead him through the process of becoming a dad after God’s own heart.
As a brand new dad, Greg was concerned about being a father. He was operating in a vacuum. He had no good role models. His dad had been killed in a car accident when he was seven, and his mother had continually made wrong choices with the men she had married since then. Greg could think of very few, if any, actions or attitudes exhibited by any of these men that could be of help in raising little Mary Lou. He shuddered to think where he would have been if Jesus hadn’t entered his life and transformed him into a child of God.
Why is it that for many of us, it takes a major event to provide a wake-up call for spiritual growth? For Greg it was the responsibility of a first child. For others, it may be the death of someone close, or a divorce or a disabling condition. Greg got his wake-up call, and thankfully, he has begun to start thinking in the right direction. But how? How—and where—is he going to find a model of what a father should look and act like?
The Impact of a Role Model
The effects of nearly 20 years of growing up under a parent (for our purposes, a dad) will leave a lasting impression on a child. The imprint of that modeling isn’t always visible, but the results of a father’s influence will show up in the child at some point in the future. If Dad had an anger problem, guess what? His children will have trouble containing their anger. If Dad physically abused his children, guess what? The next generation of moms and dads will most likely treat their own children the same way. Or, as an overreaction, they may go to the other extreme and completely withhold discipline of any kind whatsoever.
Even in the Bible we don’t find a lot of good human role models for dads. So let me make my point with a classic negative role model in a dad named Eli.
In Eli we see a case of like father, like sons.
Eli was a priest of Israel during the last days of the Judges (1 Samuel 2). As a priest, he was allowed to take a portion of certain offerings from the people for his services to them. Unfortunately, he abused this privilege and took more than his portion. Here is God’s indictment of Eli:
Why do you scorn my sacrifices and offerings? Why do you give your sons more honor than you give me—for you and they have become fat from the best offerings of my people Israel! (1 Samuel 2:29 NLT).
Did you notice the connection between father and sons? God spelled it out: You and they have become fat from the best offerings of my people Israel.
Eli was guilty of taking more of the sacrifice than he was allotted, which had made him fat. He was guilty of despising the offerings the people were giving to the Lord. And guess what? Eli’s boys were following in their dad’s footsteps (see 2:12-17).
Now the sons of Eli were corrupt; they did not know the LORD. And the priests’ custom with the people was that when any man offered a sacrifice, the priest’s servant would come with a three-pronged fleshhook in his hand while the meat was boiling. Then he would thrust it into the [cooking vessel]…and the priest would take for himself all that the fleshhook brought up. So they did in Shiloh to all the Israelites who came there (verses 12-14).
For a priest to take part of the offering was permitted. But the sons of Eli went beyond what was prescribed by the Law of Moses and demanded meat from the people before they cooked it. If the people balked, Eli’s sons would say, No, but you must give it now; and if not, I will take it by force
(verse 16). God did not take this offense lightly: The sin of the young men was very great before the LORD, for men abhorred the offering of the LORD
(verse 17). Tragically, Eli was a participant in this, for as God said, You give your sons more honor than you give me
(1 Samuel 2:29 NLT).
What a chilling thought to realize that your children are observing your life, logging your activities, and repeating your actions, whether good or bad. I know from personal experience that what I observed from my own father’s behavior served as both a positive and negative influence on my role as a husband and father. Modeling is truly a powerful force!
God, Our Father
Are you beginning to understand the importance of presenting the right kind of model for your children? And are you wondering where can you find this right kind of model? The Bible is an obvious first place to look. Hopefully, your spiritual understanding is much further along than Greg’s. Unlike Greg, you may be aware of what the Bible says about the model you have in your loving, caring, giving, and guiding Father in heaven. The Bible presents many verses about what a strong, consistent model you have in God the Father. And you are doubly blessed if you have an earthly father who has also provided a constant model of godly fatherhood.
But for those of us who don’t have this kind of legacy to fall back on, we, like Greg, are forced to look around for others who can model what a father should be for his children. So where do we start?
Of course, the first place is your Bible. There, you find that God is the ultimate model of what it means to be a father.
God is often spoken of as the Father
in the Bible. He is called the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
(Ephesians 3:14). Probably the most famous reference to God as Father came in the most famous of prayers uttered by Jesus Himself. Jesus began this prayer by saying, Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name
(Matthew 6:9).
God the Father is a person; therefore, He has character qualities that theologians refer to as attributes. These attributes are what identify and distinguish who God is as a person.
Some of God’s characteristics belong only to Him, such as His infinity, eternity, immutability, omnipresence, omniscience, and sovereignty. These qualities cannot be passed on to His creation. But other characteristics, like love, truth, holiness, patience, and kindness, can—at least in a limited sense—be found in man, who was created in God’s image. These are called the communicable
qualities of God because they can be expressed by man. And hopefully that includes you and me as dads.
The Father of Those Who Believe
Having God as your heavenly Father and emulating His attributes to your children presupposes that you are His child. As the saying goes, You can’t impart what you do not possess.
To be personally related to God as your Father can only come through putting your faith and trust in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. This has to be the starting point in your quest to be a dad after God’s own heart.
If you are not a child of the Father, it’s going to be difficult for you to live out His character before your children. Oh, you can still be a decent dad without God’s help, but without God’s character abiding in you, being a dad after God’s own heart just isn’t possible.
So if you truly desire to be God’s kind of a dad, then now is the time to make sure you have access to God’s power through a relationship with Him. To do that you need to think about your sin, because sin is what separates you from a holy God. Sin is anything that you do that misses God’s perfect standard of holy behavior. Have you ever told just one lie, even a little white lie
? According to Scripture, whoever attempts to keep all of God’s law yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it
(James 2:10). And we are told in Romans 3 that there is none righteous; no, not one…there is none who does good; no, not one
(verses 10,12). This means all of us. Everyone has sinned and fallen short of what God calls for.
But there is hope! The Bible gives clear instructions on how to deal with your sin. So if you are a new dad like Greg or a seasoned veteran who truly wants God’s help in raising your children, then read these verses from the Bible. They form what is called the Roman Road
toward a relationship with God the Father because all these verses come out of the book of Romans. Follow what the apostle Paul says as he leads you down the Romans Road toward salvation through the Father’s Son, Jesus Christ:
Romans 3:23—All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
We were all
born with sin. You might not want to admit it, but you have sin in your heart. You are under the power of sin’s control. Oh, maybe you do a few good things in your life, but unless you are perfect, you are still a sinner. Step 1 for you is to admit that you are a sinner.
Romans 6:23a—The wages of sin is death.
Sin is a dead-end street. It ends in spiritual death.
We all face physical death. But spiritual death is worse because it separates you from God for all eternity. The Bible teaches that there is a place called the lake of fire, where lost people will be in torment forever. It is the place where people who are spiritually dead will