It Starts at Home: A Practical Guide to Nurturing Lifelong Faith
By Kurt Bruner and Steve Stroope
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About this ebook
As Your Children Grow, Will Their Faith Grow Too?
As both stories and statistics attest, the number of evangelical children who abandon Christianity in adulthood is staggering. To see effective change, parents cannot leave their child’s faith to chance. Rather, families must start nurturing faith early—you cannot start once your child is grown, you must start at home.
Strengthening family and home life is the best way to encourage your children to maintain a lifelong faith. It Starts at Home upholds marriage and family as the proving ground for lasting success. Experienced pastors Kurt Bruner and Steve Stroope provide a clear purpose, an effective strategy, and a simple plan for anyone who wants to be intentional in their homes. Their insights will help leaders recalibrate their priorities by asking them to evaluate their leadership where it counts most. This newly revised edition evaluates the current trends families and young adults face that can contribute to this crisis. Don’t let your child’s faith fade to memory—learn how you can create a home that will prepare them for lifelong faith.
Kurt Bruner
Kurt Bruner is Director of the Open Doors International Resource Center. A former VP of Focus on the Family, he is a pastor and author of more than twenty books.
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It Starts at Home - Kurt Bruner
Team
CHAPTER 1
Losing Faith
If you’ve ever been part of a loving, healthy family you have smelled the sweet aroma of heaven. If you’ve ever lived in a troubled, broken home you have breathed the foul stench of hell. This book is about making your home what God intended it to be—a place of intimacy and joy instead of isolation and pain; a little bit of heaven rather than a foretaste of hell.
The home is the primary context of our spiritual formation—for better or worse. God wired us for flesh-and-blood relationships with a mom, a dad, a spouse, a child, and others who profoundly shape our perception and experience of the faith—whether they intend to or not. This book is our invitation for you to become highly intentional about fulfilling your God-ordained role at home and, in the process, giving your family something better than you might have received.
FALLING ON DEAF EARS
Your relationship with your parents, and especially your father, has a significant influence on how you perceive God.
While not the main point of my message, those words hit twenty-eight-year-old Maria like nothing she had ever heard. Visiting our church while kicking the tires of Christianity, she nervously approached me at the end of the service to ask whether I would be willing to schedule an appointment.
A few days later, Maria visited my wife and me to discuss her spiritual journey. She brought a journal in which she had been recording thoughts and notes while attending our church with a friend. She read several pages aloud, giving me insights into her concerns and questions. One particular entry grabbed my attention:
I hear the songs and sermons about God sending His only Son to die for us. I wonder: Why would God do that to His Son?
I glanced at my wife, Olivia, wondering whether Maria’s dad had been like hers. Sure enough, he had. A self-centered man, Maria’s father had abandoned the family for a series of other women. He failed to protect his little girl, putting her in harm’s way. Making matters worse, he often quoted the Bible—or, rather, misquoted it. No wonder Maria perceived the death of Christ as the result of a selfish heavenly Father saying, Take My kid, don’t take Me!
That’s what her dad would do.
God is a mystery who can’t be grasped by the human mind. That’s why He reveals Himself to us using metaphors like a good shepherd and a righteous judge. The most common metaphors of His full reality are that of a loving husband and a caring father. We best understand what it means to relate to God by observing what it means to properly relate to a spouse or a parent. But what happens when we have a warped point of reference for these common metaphors?
Imagine describing a fresh-baked chocolate-chip cookie to someone who has eaten only stale dog biscuits. Or describing a relaxing soak in a warm bath to someone who has experienced only the bone-chilling shiver of a cold shower. Something similar happens to those raised in a troubled home. Words spoken of God, even words from the Bible, can evoke an image completely different from the one intended.
I told Maria that my own dad sacrificed himself for his wife and kids every day of my childhood, working two jobs to feed the family and taking us to church no matter how exhausted he might have been. Fatherhood is about giving up your life to care for a wife and children,
I explained. As a father, I have no question that I would literally die for my children. But I would not willingly let someone take the life of one of my kids. That would be asking too much. To me, God willingly giving His only Son means the ultimate sacrifice.
Still, to Maria it suggested something else.
We continued reading her journal entries. I learned that Maria had spent a lot of time with her happily married friend, and that she desperately wanted the same for herself. But Maria had never even been on a date and viewed herself as unlovable, another consequence of growing up without a nurturing dad.
I gently pointed Maria to the metaphor of God as a loving suitor pursuing his cherished beloved, explaining how humanity had been seduced away by a deceiver trying to keep us from the arms of our rightful husband. Maria,
I explained, God made you to be His bride!
The words connected, and within a few weeks, my wife and I were holding hands with Maria as she prayed to accept God’s marriage proposal. As we lifted our heads, I saw Maria’s joyous tears releasing an inner beauty that had been hiding behind a mask of lonely self-protection.
Maria’s story had a happy ending. She grew in her faith, and I had the honor of officiating at her wedding about a year after our first meeting. But the kind of hurdles she faced in embracing Christianity are all too common among the upcoming generation.
CHRISTIANITY’S ORPHANS
The most comprehensive longitudinal study ever done on the religious and spiritual lives of young people, conducted by the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at the University of Notre Dame, found that only about 17 percent of emerging adults become more active in religion than they were as teens, while 54 percent back away from active faith.¹ The same pattern has been found in several other studies such as one explained in a book co-authored by Barna Group president David Kinnaman entitled unChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity … and Why It Matters. Kinnaman reported that the increasingly negative perception of Christian faith in our culture has been fueled by the fact that most self-identified unbelievers in America are, like Maria, former church kids. Their study found that the vast majority of outsiders in this country, particularly among young generations, are actually de-churched individuals.
²
Don’t miss the significance of that statement. Perhaps for the first time in church history, many of those most inclined toward belief—our own children—are actively rejecting or passively abandoning the faith. And the problem, in our opinion, is not what’s happening at church but what desperately needs to happen at home.
In the opening scene of Charles Dicken’s novel Oliver Twist a group of barefoot, ill-kept orphan boys carry their bowls to mealtime while dreaming of various delicious foods. But this day, like every other day, each will receive only one measly serving of an awful gruel. As they take their places on rough wooden benches to receive the day’s meager allowance, we are given a glimpse of the table prepared for those who run the orphanage. It is clear that they will be gorging themselves on a feast fit for kings just a few feet away from the half-starved, ill-kept, unloved boys. The most striking part of the scene, however, is the phrase stenciled on a stone wall above the neglected boys: God Is Love.
Are those three words true? Absolutely.
Does the orphans’ experience tell them it’s true? Certainly not.
Which do you think they will believe?
No matter how creatively we proclaim God’s Word to children at church, they are more likely to believe their experience of the faith at home. That’s because incarnation trumps proclamation.
Incarnation literally means en-flesh-ment.
God became a flesh-and-blood human being to reveal Himself to us in a way written words could not accomplish. The gospel of John tells us that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us
(John 1:14 NKJV). Christianity is not a religion of lofty ideals or a distant lawgiver. The God of Christianity is someone we have seen with our eyes
and whom our hands have handled
because the Father in His Son was manifested to us
(1 John 1:1–2 NKJV). No wonder nearly every major heresy in church history has been an attack on the doctrine of the incarnation. Satan hates that God became flesh. He also hates healthy families because they serve as flesh-and-blood icons of the unity and love that flows within and from the Trinity. The Scriptures tell us that when husband and wife become one flesh in the pleasure of marital union, it creates a picture of the beautiful union between Christ and His church. It also reaps the gift of children, filling the world with more fleshy reminders of Satan’s mortal enemy.
Life comes from unity with God and others—moving toward others. Death means separation—moving away. Happy homes echo the intimate joys of heaven. Broken, troubled families, by contrast, imitate the loneliness, isolation, and anger of hell.
Do you want to make the devil cringe as if hearing scratching nails on a chalkboard? Then celebrate fifty years of marriage or enjoy laughter with your children around the dinner table. Satan does not fear a religion that merely stencils words on a stone wall, or even preaches them in a sermon. What he dreads is when the Word becomes flesh and blood in the tangible context of a God-honoring marriage and family.
THE ROOTS OF FAITH
I have six kids. I want nothing more in life than for them to embrace my Christian faith. Every generation of believing parents has this same hope for their children. So why, all of a sudden, do fewer kids growing up in Christian families embrace Christian faith?
We spent two years facilitating a dialogue on this problem with a national network of church leaders. We came together in recognition that the next generation is abandoning Christianity at an alarming rate despite some of the best teaching, worship, student ministries, and coffee shops in church history. Churches have never worked harder; yet generational faith transfer is in decline. Something doesn’t add up!
Imagine budding flowers representing my children. I gently cradle them in my hand, careful to protect the delicate roots reaching out from the narrowing tips at the bottom of each stem. Aware of their need for the living water of the gospel, I bring them to a watering can called the local church where pastors, Sunday school teachers, and student pastors pour the life-giving nourishment of the good news onto their lives. But the water simply drips off the sides of my hand, failing to penetrate the dangling roots of their thirsty hearts.
Concerned, I urgently look for another solution. Fearing my children will wither and die unless I find a more effective means of imparting strong faith, I grab a bigger, more contemporary-looking watering can—one with cutting-edge music and a cool-looking student pastor—hoping it will more effectively reach my kids. But the heavy flow of water just splashes onto the ground.
Obviously, the problem is not with the size or style of the watering can. Roots grow only if planted in soil. Yet an entire generation of parents seems to have missed God’s design. Faith must be nourished in the rich soil of a God-honoring family. The church’s role is to provide the water. But lifelong faith requires deep, abiding roots.
Let’s face a few sobering facts. The vast majority of those who ever trust Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior do so before reaching their eighteenth birthday. The highest portion do so before age thirteen, while less than a quarter do so after reaching adulthood.³ No wonder Jesus told His disciples to bring the little children to Him. It seems there is a limited window of time when we are most inclined toward belief. During those few years, our tender roots seek nourishment in the context of a believing family.
Does that mean a child growing up in a nonbelieving or passive family has no hope? Certainly not. As I mentioned earlier, my wife grew up in such a home yet became an active, passionate follower of Jesus Christ. Her life of faith began after turning thirteen when a friend invited her