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EVANGELIZING
OUR CHILDREN
by E. Calvin Beisner
Reformed Christians take
comfort from Acts 2:39: "the promise is for you and for your
children." God's promises are multi-generational. Paul's
assurance that children even of just one believing parent are
"holy" (1 Cor. 7:14) reinforces our confidence, as does
his statement: "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be
saved, you and your household" (Acts 16:31).
We find the root of this comfort in God's covenant with Abraham:
"I will establish my covenant between me and you and your
offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting
covenant" (Gen. 17:7).
Yet simply being born of believers doesn't guarantee salvation
(Rom. 2:12-29). A child must also be raised faithfully in the
covenant (Gen. 18:19; Deut. 6:6-9; Ps. 78:1-7), and he must believe
(John 3:18). Only those "who were born, not of blood nor
of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God"
are children of God (John 1:10-13).
But if there is no blanket promise of salvation to the children
of believers, is there no advantage to being born to Christian
parents?
Yes! There is great advantage. Like the Jews, they are entrusted
with the oracles of God (Rom. 3:2). That is a tremendous advantage,
for "you have been born again, not of perishable seed but
of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God"
(1 Peter 1:23-25).
What other children hear the Word in the home, grow up in the
church where they hear the preaching and teaching of the Word
week in and week out, and where their friends and teachers encourage
them to believe and obey? Where they learn the great hymns of
the faith and soon have them in memory?
Yet the promise of salvation is to all who believe, and only to
them. Far from unconditionally guaranteeing their salvation, the
promises of Scripture to believers for their children establish
Christian parents' responsibility to evangelize our children.
God tells us to command our children to keep the way of the Lord
(Gen. 18:19), which includes faith in Jesus Christ. We are to
command our children to trust in Jesus for their salvation. We
are to teach them the fifth commandment, "Honor your father
and your mother," and its implication, "Children, obey
your parents in the Lord" (Eph. 6:1). "Child, God tells
you to obey me. I tell you, repent of your sins and trust in Christ."
In short, we must evangelize our children. We must tell them the
gospel at every opportunity, before and after they ever profess
faith.
That means teaching them that through law comes the knowledge
of sin and therefore no flesh will be justified by works of the
law but by faith apart from any such works (Rom. 3:19-28). It
means repeating to them over and over again, before and after
they are admitted to the Lord's Table: "Believe in the Lord
Jesus, and you will be saved."
Not only must we evangelize our children, but we also can evangelize
them, and our labor will not be in vain. The normal connection
between a parent's faithfully teaching law and gospel to his child
and his child's believing is implicit in one of the qualifications
of an elder - he must have "children who believe" (Titus
1:6).
But how can we evangelize our children? Here are three concrete,
practical things you can do to ensure that your children regularly
encounter the gospel in a context that will encourage them to
believe it.
First, and foremost in their younger years, involve them frequently,
preferably daily, in family worship. Don't be intimidated. Keep
it simple: read a Bible portion, pray, and sing a hymn or chorus
or children's Bible song.
Second, inculcate the habit of personal devotions. Again, keep
it simple. Simply reading a chapter of the Bible and praying are
all they need to do. If they want to keep a journal, prayer list,
or write notes, that's fine, but if pushing for it intimidates
them, don't.
Third, have your children, every Lord's Day, in the worship of
God, under the preaching of the Word, in the fellowship of the
saints, partaking regularly of the Lord's Supper from their earliest
ability to confess their faith to the elders. While personal and
family devotions are important, the Bible emphasizes corporate
worship.
But the fundamental thing is this: The more they see that we,
though we know ourselves sinners, "[believe] to be true whatsoever
is revealed in the Word, for the authority of God himself speaking
therein; and [act] differently upon that which each particular
passage thereof containeth," and principally that they see
we "[accept, receive, and rest] upon Christ alone for justification,
sanctification, and eternal life," as the Westminster Confession
of Faith describes the acts of saving faith (14.2), the more likely
our children will follow in our footsteps (John 5:19).
You can evangelize your children through family worship, teaching
them personal devotions, and faithful participation in corporate
worship. And take heart. The promise - believe and you will be
saved - is to you and to your children!
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