But If He Does Not, He Is Still God: Comfort in the Trials of Parenting
Parents need to pray for bold faith, believing that God will do his work even in the face of fires that from our perspective seem out of control.
Parents need to pray for bold faith, believing that God will do his work even in the face of fires that from our perspective seem out of control.
If your eyes ever see, your ears ever hear, the sin, weakness, and failure of a teenager, it’s never an accident. It’s never an interruption. It’s always grace.
We pray that the hope of the gospel brings comfort and peace even as we are confronted with the horror of more children and teachers lost in the places where they should be safest.
When I am caught up in a spin cycle of anxiety, I do not have the peace of God that would allow me to notice and respond with comfort to my child’s worries.
When we hear our child express a viewpoint that runs contrary to Scripture, we rush to correct them instead of remembering that God is their Father too.
Anxiety has served me well in one respect: I have learned to dig into the Bible to find truth that helps me fight my fear for my children.
God promises a supernatural peace that will defy any human attempt to understand it. It was a promise I desperately wanted to believe, but I was skeptical.
God’s faithfulness to my son is not contingent upon me keeping my cool, or having the exact right thing to say, or making the best decisions.
May we as parents be strengthened by that word of confidence; may we be all the more eager to communicate that confidence to our kids daily.