Your Child's Greatest Need
by
John MacArthur
Adapted from
What the Bible Says About Parenting: God's Plan for Rearing Your Child
by John MacArthur.
If you've been a parent for any time at all, it shouldn't come as much of a
surprise that your child came into the world with an insatiable faculty for
evil. Even before birth, your baby's little heart was already programmed for
sin and selfishness. The inclination toward depravity is such that, given
free reign, every baby has the potential to become a monster.
Original sin is the biblical doctrine that explains your child's sinful
proclivity. It means children do not come into the world seeking God and
righteousness. They do not even come into the world with a neutral
innocence. They come into the world seeking the fulfillment of sinful and
selfish desires. Scripture also teaches a doctrine called total depravity,
referring to the extent of original sin. Although the outworking of the sin
nature does not necessarily attain full expression in everyone's behavior,
it is nonetheless called total depravity because there is no aspect of the
human personality, character, mind, emotions, or will that is free from the
corruption of sin or immune to sin's enticements.
Put bluntly, sin is not learned—it is an inbred disposition. Your kids got
their sinful nature from you, you got it from your parents, your parents got
it from their parents, and so on, all the way back to Adam. In other words,
Adam's fall tainted the entire human race with sin. Both the guilt and the
corruption of sin are universal. The apostle Paul wrote, "Through one man
sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to
all men, because all sinned" (Rom. 5:12, emphasis added). "Through one
transgression there resulted condemnation to all men" (v. 18), meaning we
inherited the guilt of sin. And "through the one man's disobedience the many
were made sinners" (v. 19), meaning we inherited the corruption of sin. No
one is exempt. No one is born truly innocent.
That means that left to themselves, your children will pursue a course of
sin. And left entirely to themselves, there is no evil of which they are
incapable. You may find that hard to swallow, especially when you see them
as newborns. Infants seem to be the very epitome of chaste, precious,
childlike innocence. But don't let the cute cheeks, the playful coos, and
the bright eyes fool you — those children are a miniature version of you!
The depravity that lives in their hearts is just waiting for the opportunity
to express itself.
So how should the doctrines of original sin and total depravity impact your
parenting? Before I answer that, let me show you three parenting approaches
that miss the mark.
Focus on Behavior
Many parents go off track by focusing all their efforts on controlling their
child’s behavior. Be careful. If you concentrate all your energies on
correcting external behavior, or staving off misbehavior with threats of
discipline, you may be doing little more than training a hypocrite.
I've seen that happen repeatedly. I know Christian parents who think their
parenting is successful because they've taught their children to act
politely on cue, to answer with "Yes, Sir" and "No, Ma'am," and to speak to
adults when spoken to. While that kind of behavior control may appear to
work wonders for a time (especially when the parents are nearby), it does
not address the root problem of depravity. Sinful behavior is a symptom of a
sinful heart.
Focus on Environment
Other parents try to control their child's environment. They attempt to
build a cocoon around their kids to isolate them from bad influences. They
restrict their children's exposure to television, ban popular music from the
home, and sometimes forbid contact with children whose parents may not share
their same parenting philosophy.
While I do think you should shield your kids from the experience of evil,
you need to teach them to be wise and discerning when confronted with evil.
They won’t learn those lessons if they are completely isolated. The
isolationist approach merely produces naïve children who are gullible and
vulnerable, defenseless in the world.
Try as you might, you won't be able to isolate your children forever. When
the day comes that they venture out into the world, they need to be prepared
with discernment skills and wisdom to detect and resist the enticements of
the devil and the world. If you choose to shield them from an evil
environment, you are ignoring the enemy within them — a depraved heart. But
if you win the heart, you win the child.
Focus on Self-Esteem
A very prevalent approach today is to build a child's self-esteem. That
method assumes that if a child sees himself as good, noble, and wonderful,
he'll not only behave better, but he will also treat others better. This
method turns self-love into a virtue.
The truth is that much of the modern effort to spark kids' self-esteem is
simply pouring gasoline on a runaway fire. It encourages already selfish
kids to think they are justified in wanting their own way. It makes you as a
parent think you have to defer to the child, no matter what, because the
child has a right to express himself freely, so he feels good about himself.
All of that only escalates out-of-control behavior and feeds the worst
tendencies of human depravity. Want to ensure that your child will become a
delinquent? Feed his self-esteem and then compound the problem by refusing
to correct him when he is wrong.
Self-esteem is based on an unbiblical perspective that denies original sin
and the doctrine of total depravity. The Bible has nothing positive to say
about self-esteem, self-love, or any other variety of self-centeredness. It
teaches your child to deny himself, not love himself (Luke 9:23).
Focus on the Heart
There's only one remedy for your child's inborn depravity: the new
birth—regeneration. As Jesus said to Nicodemus, "That which is born of flesh
is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit… [Therefore,] you
must be born again" (John 3:6-7). "Born of the flesh" with a sinful bent,
your children have no power to free themselves from sin's bondage. They lack
the Holy Spirit and thus have no capacity to please God or obey Him from the
heart (cf. Rom. 8:7-8). Until your children are born again, they are dead in
"trespasses and sins" (Eph. 2:1).
So your top priority as a parent is to be an evangelist in your home. You
need to teach your children the law of God, show them their need for a
Savior, and point them to Jesus Christ as the only One who can save them. If
they grow up in your home without a keen awareness of their need for
salvation, you have failed as a parent in your primary task as their
spiritual leader. Teach them the gospel and ask God to perform His sovereign
work of regeneration.
One word of caution about that — if you try to force, coerce, or manipulate
your kids into a profession of faith, you may pressure them into making a
false profession. The new birth is a work of the Holy Spirit, and your
child's salvation is a matter that must ultimately be settled between him
and God.
Don't approach parenting by focusing on the symptoms rather than the heart.
If you attempt to modify your children's behavior, isolate them, or bolster
their self-esteem, you will not only exacerbate the problem, you will fail
to reach to the heart of the matter. But if you teach them about their sin
and need for the Savior, and if you live a life that models what you are
teaching them to be, you can rest your hope in God's grace for the salvation
of your children.
Adapted from What the Bible Says About Parenting: God's Plan for Rearing
Your Child by John MacArthur.
© 2000 Grace to You.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John MacArthur Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia