It's time to sign up to volunteer your time on Sunday Nights and bring a snack for the youth group to share! If you can give 1.5 hours of your time, please sign up at the link below!
Sunday Night Adult Volunteers
It's time to sign up to volunteer your time on Sunday Nights and bring a snack for the youth group to share! If you can give 1.5 hours of your time, please sign up at the link below!
Sunday Night Adult Volunteers
All people, regardless of Age are invited to join us for our Lenten Study Starting March 1! Check out the commercial below to learn more about it and then sign up at the link below!
Just Eat and Serve - Lenten Study Sign-Up
We are counting down the days till the 2023 Summer Mission Trip which will take place in Charleston, SC July 23-28! The sign ups are now live at the link below. A $100 deposit is due to reserve your spot.
2023 Mission Trip Sign-Up
When I was growing up and did something I knew that I should not do, my parents would spank me. My dad had an interesting spanking technique. I can remember him getting mad, deciding he was going to spank me, and then he'd say, "Douglas, go get me something to hit you with."
Today, this sounds funny. Back then, it sounded completely rational.
I eventually learned that the longer I took to get something for him to hit me with, the more he would cool off and the easier the spanking would be. Once I was tempted to return with a pillow, but it didn't seem like he would think it was funny.
Spanking a younger child may thwart inappropriate behavior, but there can be a high cost connected to it---emotionally, relationally, and physically. And when kids become teenagers, then what is the parent going to do (especially if the teenager is now bigger than the parent)?
Understand that discipline is unique to each situation. There's no one-way to handle each disciplinary situation, but just smacking a kid when he or she messes up may make a parent feel better for awhile, but there has to be a better, more effective method.
There is no one way to discipline children, but some ways are better than others.
Here are five questions Cathy and I tried to use when we had to discipline our teenagers:
1. What did you do?
2. Why was that behavior wrong?
3. How could you have handled it better?
4. Next time, what do you think you could do?
5. Should you repeat the wrong behavior, what would be a fair and natural consequence?
These questions gave us some cool down time and also helped us teach our kids to think about their actions. Sure, there were many times when it would have been a lot easier to simply scream at them, smack them, or send them to their bedrooms.
But healthy parenting requires parents to use wisdom, discernment, confidence, and often times, patience. So remind yourself over and over again of the goal of discipline: to teach teenagers responsibility for their own behavior. Then, when the moment for discipline arises, do your best to help both you and your teen to reach the goal.