Episoder
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
The Bridge that Love Built
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Relationships (Day 1 of 3)
Bob: All of us, as parents, want our children to be able to form healthy relationships as they grow up. Dennis Rainey says, for that to happen, moms and dads need to know how to skillfully pursue a strong relationship with each of their children.
Dennis: First Corinthians 13 says, if youâve missed love, youâve missed life; so these little children that youâre raising, who will become big people, have to be trained in the basics of love. That begins with us as parents. You and I, as parents, are Godâs physical arms of love to these little people to tutor them in what love truly means.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, December 5th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Donât assume that your children are going to be naturally good at forming strong, healthy relationships; thatâs a bad assumption. They need your help to know how to develop those kinds of skills.
1:00
Weâll talk more about that today. Stay with us.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. You know, when I think back on all of the things that Mary Ann and I thought aboutâin terms of âThese are things we need to make sure we teach our children,ââI donât know that it ever dawned on us that one of the things we needed to teach our children was how to be good at relationships. I donât know that that was ever a conscious thoughtâthat teaching them how to be good at relationships was something we would need to do. I guess we just thought: âWell, that just happens,ââright?ââYou grow up, and youâre good at relationships.â
Dennis: Right. And youâre supposed to know how to do it naturally; right? I want to ask my bride, Barbaraâwe just celebrated our 46 years of marriage,â
2:00
Bob: Congratulations, by the way.
Barbara: Thank you, sir.
Dennis: âand we had six kids that are all married now: âGo back to the beginning. Did you and I ever have a consciousâwe probably had some, when we were unconscious, raising kidsâ[Laughter]âDid we ever have a conscious thought about training our kids to love others?â
Barbara: Not early on, but I remember having conscious thoughts about it when sibling rivalry was at its peak; because then Iâm thinking, âOh my; I have to teach these kids how to relate to each other.â
Bob: ââhow not to kill each other.â
Barbara: Yes; so it was defensive.
Bob: I do remember thatâthat you have to teach them how to get along with one another and, maybe, how to get along with kids on the playground. But again, the whole idea that relationship training is a part of a parentâs responsibilityâI think thatâs one of the big ideas I think you guys have captured in your book, The Art of Parenting. Itâs what weâre going to spend time talking about on todayâs program.
Dennis: You know, you never know, Bob, whoâs listening to the broadcast. I had a young lady come up to me in Boulder, Colorado, this past summerâ
3:00
she said: âI grew up in Southern California. In the backseat of our car, as my mom would be driving me to school, Iâd be listening to FamilyLife Today.â [Laughter] She said, âI listened to it for yearsâall the way through elementary school, junior high, high school. Then I kind of left the faith.â
She said: âI went to Stanford, and I kind of lost my way; but graduatedâcame out the other sideâand was listening to FamilyLife Today again when it got my attention. It was like, âI need to come back to what I had heard.ââ She said: âIâm not married. I have a couple of kids. All that trainingâall that training I heardâas a little girl, growing upâis now paying off for me, as a mom. I just want to say, âThank you to FamilyLife Today for doing what you do.ââ
Bob: Well, you know who we need to say, âThank you,â toâ
Dennis: I do!
Bob: âthe people, who have made this program possible over the years.
Dennis: Thatâs what I want to say to our listeners right now: âWould you make this broadcast possible to another little girl like that?ââ
4:00
ââmaybe to their mom and dad,âmaybe to a couple, who are engaged, who need to go to a Weekend to RememberÂź,â Youâve heard about it here, so you know how to get them there; but to do that, we need folks, like you, standing with us, financially, with generous gifts, here at yearend. Over 40 percent of our donations come in in the next 30 days, and those 30 days make the other 11 months possible.
Bob: Yes; thatâs right.
Dennis: Would you stand with us? Iâm serious. Iâve been doing this now for 27 years, and none of your money is sticking to my fingersâtrust me. Itâs all going in to provide help and hopeâbiblical help and hopeâfor marriages and families, all across the country, and around the world.
Bob: Well, and hereâs why right now is a really good time for you to make a yearend donation. We have some friends of the ministry, who have come along, and offered to match every donation that we receive, as a ministry, between now and the end of the year, dollar for dollar, up to a total of $2.5 million. You make a $50 donation; we get $50 from the matching fund.
5:00
You make a $100 donation; we get $100. Weâre hoping to take full advantage of this matching-gift opportunity. Thatâs why weâre asking you, as a listener, to be as generous as you can possibly be, here at yearend, and help us head into 2019 fully ready to take on the challenges that are in front of us, as a ministry.
If you can help with a donation right now, weâd like to say, âThank you,â by sending you a gift. Several months ago, FamilyLifeÂź had our first feature filmâa movie called Like Arrows in movie theaters. That movie is not yet available for purchase on DVD, but we have a limited supply of the DVDs that weâre making available to those of you who make a yearend donation. Again, itâs our thank-you gift when you go to FamilyLifeToday.com and make an online donation or when you call 1-800-FL-TODAY to donate. Again, we appreciate your support of this ministry and your partnership with us, here, on FamilyLife Today.
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
The Family as a Training Center
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Relationships (Day 2 of 3)
Bob: Is it okay for moms and dads to fight in front of the kids? Barbara Rainey says, sometimes, it is.
Barbara: We decided that we wanted our kids to see us having some disagreementsânot big conflictâbut if we were disagreeing about something that was not a huge thing, but we really both had a strong opinion on it, we decided that we would go again and occasionally express our disagreement in front of our kids and let them watch us work it out. We just disagree, and parents disagree. Itâs okay for parents to disagree.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, December 6th. Our host is Dennis Rainey; I'm Bob Lepine. Your kids are going to have to know how to resolve conflict, because conflict is a part of life. They need your coaching, and they need to see how you do it. Weâre going to talk more about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us on the Thursday edition. Weâre going to talk today about what moms and dads can do to help their children develop some relational intelligenceâto help them know how to do relationships right.
Dennis: âhow to love imperfect people. Itâs that kind of programming that we try to provide, here, at FamilyLife Today that keeps listeners coming back for more. You ought to hear one of my favorite storiesâmy all-time storiesâin 27 years of broadcasting. It was a letter from a woman, who lived in Alaska. Where she lived, she couldnât get a radio signal; so she, every dayâit was like at 10 oâclock/10:30âshe would get on her snowmobile and drive out to a ridge [Laughter] so she could listen to FamilyLife Today. A womanâa wife/a motherâwho needed practical biblical help and hope for her home.
When you give to FamilyLife Today, youâre making this broadcast possibleâ
2:00
ânot merely to folks who live on the outskirts of humanity in Alaskaâbut youâre making it possible, all across our country. If you believe in what weâre doing, here, on FamilyLife Today, I need you to pick up the phone, or go online, or take out a check and say: âGuys, keep going! Twenty-seven years has been great, but we need this broadcast to stand strong now. Hereâs my investment in godly homes and legacies for generations to come.â
Bob: During the Christmas season, and as we approach the end of the year, this is a particularly critical time to hear from listeners; isnât it?
Dennis: It is; over 40 percent of our donations come in this month. As I said on a recent broadcast, these 30 days determine how FamilyLifeÂź is going to continue broadcasting over the next 11 months.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: Please, stand with us. We need your help now.
Bob: Hereâs good news: right now, if you help with a donation, your donation is going to be doubledâitâs going to be matched, dollar for dollar.
3:00
Weâve got some friends of the ministry who have offered to match every donation we receive, during the month of December, dollar for dollar, up to a total of $2.5 million. Thatâs a huge opportunity for us; and weâre hoping FamilyLife Today listeners will respond and make an online donation, or call to donate.
When you do, weâd like to say, âThank you,â this year by sending you a DVD copy of the movie that FamilyLife produced this year that was in theaters a few months ago. Itâs a movie called Like Arrows. Itâs going to be available for purchase in early 2019; but right now, we have a limited supply available if you can help with a yearend donation. Donate, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or call 1-800-FL-TODAY to donate. Just ask for the DVD, Like Arrows, and weâll send that out to you, along with our thanks for your support of the ministry.
Now, I want to tell you guys about my next-door neighbor when I was growing up. His name was Dee; he was a year younger than me. We grew up across the driveway from one anotherâwe had a shared driveway.
4:00
Dennis: Youâre not talking about recently; youâre talking about when you were a kid.
Bob: This was when I was a kid; yes. This was back in Glendale, Missouri.
Dennis: Back before the earthâs crust had hardened. [Laughter]
Bob: We shared a driveway that âYâ-d off. As you came up the driveway, the right side went to their house; the left side went to our house. We moved in when I was two; Dee was one. We went all the way through high school together. He was the best man in my wedding.
Barbara: Really?
Bob: Yes; so we had a great relationship. In fact, Dee just came and spent a weekend at our house a couple of months ago. We had a great time getting caught up on everything.
Barbara: Wow!
Bob: So Dee and I played together a lot as we were growing up. One timeâmy mom loved telling this storyâone time, she was watching us out the back door. Dee was like a year-and-a-half, and I was two-and-a-half years old. I pushed him downâI pushed him onto the ground, and he fell down. He was crying; and she came out and she said, âBobby, why did you push him?â I said: âI shot him. Heâs dead, and he wonât fall down! [Laughter] So I pushed him to the ground!â
5:00
I remember Deeâs dadâDeeâs dad would alwaysâwhen he would step into the room, where we were playing, or where his sister and my sister were, and we were all together and there was squabbling or somethingâDeeâs dad would come in, and he would just laugh. Heâd say: âLittle children! Love one another.â [Laughter] He would repeat that over and over again. I didnât realize he was quoting Scripture when he was saying that. He was just stepping in to what is, often, the case with kids; that is, that kids often donât do a great job of loving one another. He was giving us a little coaching on what really matters.
Barbara: Thatâs cute!
Bob: Itâs one of the themes that you address. And, by the way, Barbara, welcome back to FamilyLife Today.
Barbara: Thank you, Bob.
Bob: Itâs nice to have you here agai...
-
Mangler du episoder?
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Teaching Kids to Love God
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Relationships (Day 3 of 3)
Bob: As parents, we want our children to be skillful in relationships; but thereâs one relationship that matters more than any otherâthat is our childrenâs relationship with Jesus. Barbara Rainey says thatâs something that, as parents, we canât engineer.
Barbara: Itâs not our responsibility. I think thatâs where parents get confusedâI know I felt it. I felt like it was my responsibility to teach my kids and to make sure they had a relationship with Christ, but thatâs not it. My responsibility was to present the truth to them and to model a relationship; itâs Godâs responsibility to call their hearts. I think thatâs where we get mixed up, as moms and dadsâwe own what is not ours.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Friday, December 7th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. As parents, how can we prepare our childâs heart so that, when the seeds of the gospel are planted, they can take root?
1:00
Weâre going to talk more today about our responsibility, as parents, to introduce our children to Jesus. Stay with us.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. I had kind of an âAhaâ momentâthis was a number of years agoâbut I remember reading in Romans, Chapter 1, where it says that, since the beginning of time, itâs been obvious to everybody that thereâs a God. Thatâs not new news for anybody. Anybody who can look around and see the world/anybody whoâs aware of their own existenceâ
Dennis: This is the Lepine paraphrase of Romans 1.
Bob: Yes! This is what Romans 1 says: âIf youâre alive and you can take a breath, you know, deep inside, youâre here because there is a God.â
2:00
The âAhaâ moment for me wasâas I raise my kids, my kids know thereâs a God. The issue isâI donât have to convince my kids that thereâs a God who existsâI just have to introduce them to the God they already know exists. Or my assignment is to explain who this God, that they know already, is; so they can have a relationship with him.
Weâve been talking this week about relationships and how that fits into parenting and the priority for us, as parents, to help our kids know how to do relationshipsâto build strong relationships with our children to help them know how to relate to one another. At the core of all of thisâthey need to understand the God who created them and what it means to have a relationship with Him.
Dennis: A listener recently wrote us, Bob, and said something very similar to that. She said: âYour broadcasts, in general, are so helpful; but a blessing to my life. First, as a follower of Jesus Christ.
3:00
But secondly, now that Iâm 36 years old, I donât have the wisdom and the training to disciple my kids and to know how to pass this truth on to my family. You guys are equipping me with those biblical principles and spiritual growth so that our kids donât wither when they go out into the world, but they know how to thrive.â
Bob: Well, we ought to say, âThank you,â right here, at the beginning, to those who, not only listen to FamilyLife Today, but to those that make it possible for listeners like this to get the help and hope they need for their marriage and their family.
Dennis: And as weâre here at yearend, I just need to turn to you, as a listener, and invite youâand may I also say, âchallenge youââto join with us, financially, in this broadcast. Help make it possible so that othersânot only you and your familyâbut that others can benefit from this broadcast as well. We need you right now to pull out a checkbook or a credit cardâ
4:00
âgo online or get an envelope and put that check in the mail to FamilyLife Todayâso that we can be on air with stories of redemption and hope that do give wisdom to those who are in the trenches. Bob, I think thatâs what marriages and families need todayâis that practical biblical help and hope that FamilyLife Today can be counted on to provide.
Bob: Well, as Iâve said, this is a particularly good time of year for you to make a donation; because weâve had some friends of the ministry who have come along and offered to double every donation we receive. Theyâre going to match it, dollar for dollar, up to a total of $2.5 million. For us to take full advantage of that matching gift, we need every listener, who has benefited from this program over the course of the year, to be as generous as you can be so that we can end the year in a strong position.
You can donate, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or you can call 1-800-FL-TODAY to donate. When you do, weâre going to say, âThank you,â by sending you a copy of the movie, Like Arrows, on DVD.
5:00
This is the movie we produced this year that was in theaters a few months ago. Itâs not available for purchase yet, but we have a limited supply weâre making available to those of you who can help support the ministry this month. Again, you can donate, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or call 1-800-FL-TODAY to donate. Thanks, in advance, for supporting the work of FamilyLife Today; and thanks for listening to FamilyLife Today.
In fact, we want to focus today on what moms and dads can do to help raise the next generation.
Dennis: Thatâs exactly right. Earlier, we talked about how this big idea of training your kids in relationships begins with you. As parents, youâre a mirror of how your kid is to love another personâyou train them; you teach them; you instruct them; you coach them; you correct them.
We brought the number-one coach in the country in to this broadcast, Bob, to help us know how to best train our kids to love God.
6:00
Barbara Rainey joins us, again, on FamilyLife Today. [Laughter]
Bob: Congratulations!ânumber one in the country. I didnât know that!
Dennis: Coach of the year!âcoach of the decade!
Barbara: [Not sounding convinced] Yes. [Laughter] That doesnât feel quite right, since I know my failures so well.
Dennis: We just finished a book called The Art of Parenting. In that book, weâve got four big ideas: relationships, character, id...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Godâs Got Your Back
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: What Kids Need (Day 1 of 3)
Bob: When you have a newborn or there are toddlers around the house, itâs easy to get focused on the day-to-day and forget what the long game is in parenting. Hereâs Dennis Rainey.
Dennis: Children are Godâs statement that the next generation must take our place. What we must do is impart to our children the truth about God, the experience of God, and also the gospel of Godâhow they can know Himâthatâs our assignment.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, September 5th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Okay; letâs pull back and look at the big picture: âWhat is it that we are supposed to do, as parents, as we raise the next generation? Whatâs the priority? Whatâs job one?â Weâre going to talk about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. I think Iâve heard you sayâI donât know if youâve called it a mistake or notâbut you said something about the fact that you wrote a book on parenting teenagers before you were done parenting teenagers.
Dennis: One of the big mistakesâ
Bob: Okay; I just wanted to make sure. I didnât want to put words in your mouth. [Laughter]
Dennis: âof ourâof our lives.
Barbara joins us. Would you agree, Sweetie?
Barbara: Well, it was rather brash, I think, to write on parenting when we hadnât finished.
Bob: The truth isâitâs a great book. The concepts in the book are solid, and Iâve referred to it many times as we were in the process of raising our kids.
Dennis: And we paid the price for many of those lessons, Bob; but we were not done raising teenagers. [Laughter] What we had to do, on numerous occasions, is go back and rip pages out or reread what weâve written.
Bob: Well, now, here we areâand you have finished the process of raising your childrenâ
2:00
âand you decided, âOkay; now, itâs safe to write a book on parenting,ââright?
Dennis: We did. This is something that Iâve wanted to doâactually, weâve wanted to do since we were a part of starting FamilyLifeÂź, all the way back to 1976. Barbara and I had been working with high school students nationwide, and we saw the need and really wanted to make an impact on teenagers and the next generation. The way we did that was by helping people stay married / have a good marriage; but also, ultimately, one day, I wanted to get to this topic of equipping parents to know how to doânot just marriage Godâs wayâbut do parenting His way as well.
Bob: Barbara, Iâll ask you; and then Iâll ask you as well, Dennis. If you could only speak or write about one or the otherâ
Dennis: Oh, youâre going to do that to her?
Bob: âmarriage or parenting?
Barbara: Oh, thatâs a terrible question. [Laughter]
Bob: If I said, âFor the rest of your life, you have to either talk about parenting or you have to talk about marriage,â which would you pick?
Dennis: I thinkâI know the answer.
3:00
Barbara: Well, I think I would have to say marriage, because not all couples have children; and if you donât get your marriage right, you canât get parenting right. So I would say marriage over parenting if I had to pick oneâif youâre going to force me.
Dennis: And I thought she would have said motherhood.
Barbara: That wasnât an option, though! [Laughter]
Bob: Well, thatâs parenting.
Barbara: Iâm very precise. Laughter]
Bob: Being a mom and raising kids has been a passion of your life.
Barbara: Well, yes; and I loved being a mom; I loved raising kids. It really wasâit was stressful; it was hard, but it was rewarding. It was what I felt like I was made to do in those years that I was doing it. I was very engaged, very committed, very involvedâreading things all the timeâtrying to improve, trying to be a great mom, trying to give my kids what they needed; so I was very invested.
Bob: If you had to pick?âmarriage or parentingâand thatâs all you could talk about / write about.
Dennis: Well, hereâs the thing.
4:00
I have to answer the way Barbara did, because thatâs where we have been focused over the past 41 yearsâwe have been focusing on marriage. We have done a lot of parenting workâweâve written a lot of books on parenting; weâve had a conference that we created on parenting, which we mothballed until recently, Bob. You know that weâre finally getting a chance to roll this outâa parenting conference in a box, which is a small group kit to help folks know how to do the art of parenting, which is also the name of a book that Barbara and I just completed as well.
Weâve been wanting to get after this and do this for some time; and Iâm excited, because these are some of the best days for FamilyLife to help families that have ever existed over four decades.
Bob: You have shared this story with our listeners before, but thereâs a story from when you were raising your kids that kind of gets to the heart of the parenting issue; doesnât it?
Dennis: It does.
5:00
Our daughter, Deborah, came to me one timeâdo you remember how old, Sweetheart, she was?
Barbara: No; but I would guess 13/14âearly teens.
Dennis: Yesâjust in that age that kind of knows it all, you know. She came and she said, âDad, I want to be able to do what I want to do, with whoever I want to do it with, whenever I want to do it, for as long as I want to do it.â I said, âReally, sweetheart?!â [Laughter] I said, âWhat if your parakeet came to you,ââand the parakeetâs name wasâ
Barbara: âSweet Pea.
Dennis: Sweet PeaââSweet Pea came to you and said, âI want to be able to do whatever I w...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Needs of Kids, Part 1
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: What Kids Need (Day 2 of 3)
Bob: Your kids need you to be a parent. Hereâs Barbara Rainey.
Barbara: I think there is a movement / I think there is a common thinking today in parents that I see that mom and dad need to be buddies with their kidsâthey need to be friends / they need to be pals. Thereâs nothing wrong with having that kind of a relationshipâlike if you go camping or you go to the parkâyouâre going to play together; youâre going to do some things together; youâre going to get down on the same level; but that isnât the posture that you need to have, as a parent, all the time.
Homes do not need to be child-centric. Homes need to be God-centric, and then mom and dad need to be in charge and directing the life of their childânot being dictated by the children. You need to train your child that heâs not the center of the universe, and thatâs the differenceâis helping them begin to understand that theyâre not in control; theyâre not in charge.
1:00
They do have needs; they do have wants; and they do have feelings; but they arenât / donât always have to be met immediately.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, September 6th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and Iâm Bob Lepine. Your kids need to know that you love them, and that you care about them, and that you are their friend; but they need to know, first, that you are their parent and that you have authority over them. Weâre going to talk more about that today with Dennis and Barbara Rainey. Stay with us.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today.
2:00
Thanks for joining us. You know, if you stop and think about it, there is a reason that God, in His wisdom, gave kids to moms and dads.
Dennis: Oh, you think? [Laughter] Why do you think He did that, Bob?Bob: Well, Iâve been reading your book; so I know the answer to why He did that. [Laughter] Kids need a mom and a dad to do what moms and dads are supposed to do so that the kids grow up with an understanding of who they are and what they are all about; donât they?
Dennis: Psalm 127, verses 3-5 say thisâlisten carefullyâsome parents who I read this to right now donât believe this, because they have real problems with their kidsâwe understand that: âBehold, children are a heritage from the Lord, the fruit of the womb a reward. Like arrows in the hand of a warrior are the children of oneâs youth. Blessed is the man who fills his quiver with them. He shall not be put to shame when he speaks with his enemies in the gate.â
3:00
Children are a gift to be received. They are arrows to be raised; and then they are also arrows that were meant to be released. They were not designed to stay in the quiver; they were meant to be designed for a target.
Bob: And if parents are going to raise their kids successfully, they need to know what their assignment is.
Your wife Barbara is back again today. Barbara, welcome back to FamilyLife Today.
Barbara: Thank you, Bob.Bob: Do you think most moms and dads start the parenting journey understanding what it is that they are supposed to do?
Barbara: Probably not. I would say they probably have some ideas of what they want to do. I think they probably have some ideas of what they donât want to do / what they donât want to repeat. Most young couples come in and say, âIâm not going to do it the way my parents did,ââ
Bob: Right.
Barbara: âor âI donât want to do it the way I saw it done by So-and-so.â
I think they have a vague, general idea; but parenting is such a hands-on learning experiencing.
4:00
I often say that a woman can read a dozen booksâon how to have a baby, whatâs itâs like to have a baby, whatâs happening inside, what you can expectâbut until she actually goes through the experience, itâs all theory. In some ways, thatâs true with parenting, too; because you can read tons of books; but once you get in thereâand you know who your kids are / you know who you are; and youâre beginning to figure out, âHow do we work together?ââthen, thatâs when you really need to have practical help.
Bob: My preparation for parenting happened over six summers from 1972 until 1977.
Dennis: Boy Scouts?
Bob: It was YMCA Camp Lakewood in Potosi, Missouri.
Dennis: I was close; I was close!
Bob: I was a camp counselor for many years at Camp Lakewood. As we would have kids come into the cabin, it was my job to take care of those kids for the week. I caught on: âHereâs the big idea of parenting. You want your kids to have a blast every day and sleep well at night.â [Laughter]
Dennis: ââand be clothed.â
5:00
Bob: âYou feed them, and you make sure they get to the bathroomâ; but youâthe whole idea is to have fun. I really think, when we had our kids, thatâs what I reverted to: âMy job here is to make sure that they have a fun time in lifeâ
Barbara: ââand they are tired at night.â
Bob: ââand they are tired at night. They sleep all night long.â
There is a little more to it than just your kids having fun.
Dennis: There is. Iâm glad you illustrated that, because I would have said that was mine as well. You would say that forâ
Barbara: What?âthat I would say that was your expectation?
Dennis: Yes; wouldnât you say that?
Barbara: Probably; yes.
Bob: His goal was fun with the kids?
Barbara: Yes; for sure.
Dennis: Yes; she would see me come in after work and says: âYouâre just always having fun with the kids! Iâve been here all day with theseâ
Barbara: Problem-solving, constantly, all day long.
Dennis:
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Needs of Kids, Part 2
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: What Kids Need (Day 3 of 3)
Bob: While youâre making sure today that your children are fedâthat theyâve got something to wearâthat theyâre doing their homework and that theyâre protectedâBarbara Rainey wants you to remember there is an even higher priority that we should never lose sight of, as parents.
Barbara: The number one thing that kids need from a mom and dad is to know how to have an authentic faith for themselves. They need a relationship with Jesus Christ, so that they can live for Him and take the message of Christ to their generation. What they need from you is to see it!
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Friday, September 7th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and Iâm Bob Lepine. Your children are going to live forever, just like you are. Thatâs why their spiritual condition is the most important thing we need to be focusing on, as parents. Weâll talk more about that today with Dennis and Barbara Rainey. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. So one of the great things about learning about parenting from parents whoâve already done it is theyâve made the mistakes you donât have to make; right? [Laughter]
Barbara: I wish it were that easy!
Dennis: Well, we were parents. We still are parents, by the way.
Bob: Right.
Dennis: But we were parents in the thick of it for 28 straight years: six childrenânow, all adults; now, all married; lots of grandkidsâ[our kids] raising their own crew. I have to tell you, Bobâmy hat goes off to them.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: I think theyâre raising this generation in much more challenging days than we ever thought about.
Bob: Weâve been taking time this week, and your wife Barbara is joining us. Barbara, welcome back.
Barbara: Thank you, Bob.
Bob: We are talking about parenting, because you guys have just finished a book called The Art of Parenting. The book is, really, the centerpiece of what has become a parenting initiative, here, at FamilyLifeÂź.
2:00
It led to the video seriesâthe Art of Parentingâąâthat churches are starting to use in small groups. People are using this in their living room with their neighbors, inviting them over for dinner and going through the video series. And this is what led to the movie that we produced, called Like Arrows, which is also going to be available very soon for people to purchase and to watch. I know a lot of our listeners did not get a chance to see it in theatersâtheyâve been asking me, âWhen does it come out on DVD?â Weâll have news for you about that soon.
Your book, The Art of Parenting, is really the headwaters for all that weâve been talking about here. Weâre spending time helping parents understand what their kids need from them. You put these needs in the form of tweets, and weâve already covered half of your list of ten tweets. Do you want to go back through the first five that we covered?
Dennis: I think it might be good; yes.
Barbara: Except it starts with ten; so the first five, but itâ
Bob: Okay; weâre counting down until we get to number one. [Laughter]
Dennis: Number tenâitâs: âA home that is not child-centric.â
Bob: Your kids need the home they grow up in not to revolve around them.
3:00
Dennis: Exactly. Number nineâitâs: âA home led by intentional and purposeful parents.â That means parents who are really thinking through where they are taking their kidsâ
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âand âWhat is the target that theyâre going to release their arrow toward?â
Bob: ânot just in the momentâbut youâre thinking, long-term and strategically, with your kids.
Barbara: Yes; youâre thinking: âWhy are we doing what weâre doing? Whatâs our goal?â
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: âWhere are we headed?â
Bob: Alright; what else?
Dennis: Number eight: âA secure home.â Security is different than an alarm system. Itâs the security of a mom and dad, who are committed to one another, and who are committed to following Jesus Christ.
Bob: Itâs emotional security. Barbara, that goes beyond a mom and a dad being together. It is part of how we communicate to our kids, âItâs safe here for you to be who you areâ; right?
Barbara: Yes; and mom and dad model that by being committed to one another and having a love relationship with one another that spills over to their kids. Their kids feel thatâthey feel that security and that freedom to be who they are.
4:00
Dennis: Number seven: âParents who pray together every day.â I believe this more than everâparenting is a spiritual battle. Marriages and families are taking place on a spiritual battlefield today that is unseen, but you are in a battle over your childâs soul.
Bob: And let me just sayâin August, we launched a â30-Day Parenting Prayer Challenge,â where moms and dads can sign up and get a prayer prompt every day that will give them things to be praying for their children. Itâs not too late to sign up for that. You can go to FamilyLifeToday.comâgive us your email addressâand every day, for the next 30 days, weâll send you a prayer prompt. You can be praying, together, for your kids.
Dennis: Number six: âYour child or children need parents who donât freak out when their children fail.â When theyâre developing a faith of their own, parents can be a shock-absorber/a safe place to share their doubts.
Bob: Okay; weâre to number five. So, Barbara, as we count down to number one, whatâs the number five tweet?
5:00
Barbara: Tweet number five is: âParents who embrace God-given differences, as male and female.â The tweet goes on to say: âMen ...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Leaning on the Lord
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: Art of Parenting: What Every Parent Needs (Day 1 of 3)
Bob: The demands we face as parents are daily and, sometimes, urgent demands. Barbara Rainey says, in the midst of that, weâve got to keep in mind the long-term perspective of parenting.
Barbara: As parents, weâre so often reactive; and weâre so often mired in today and the issues of todayâwhether itâs potty training, or lying, or first day of school, or whatever it isâwe get really bogged down in the today. Itâs hard to make ourselves think ahead.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, October 29th. Our host is Dennis Rainey; I'm Bob Lepine. In parenting, itâs important that all of us keep the main thing the main thing. Weâre going to talk about how we do that, as parents, today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. I donât know if you guys have had this kind of an opportunityâI say âyou guysâ because your wife, Barbara, is in the studio with us today. Welcome Barbara.
Barbara: Thank you Bob.
Dennis: Hi Sweetheart.
Barbara: Hi!
Bob: Have you had the opportunity to sit down with expectant parents, who are about to have their first baby, and just say: âOkay; let me give you the lay of the land. Let me tell you whatâs comingâ? Have you had parents like that, who have said, âWould you just prep us?â You know, we do premarital counseling, but we donât do a whole lot of pre-parenting counseling for first-time parents. Have you ever had that opportunity?
Barbara: Well, Iâve had a lot of opportunities to talk to young women, who are going to have their first baby about the birthing process, because thatâs really front and center in most of their mindsâitâs: âHow am I going to get this kid here? How am I going to survive it? How are we going toâŠââall that stuff at the beginningâfeeding and all of that. Thatâs really where most young womenâs minds are: âHow am I going to survive the first six months?â
2:00
So they donât really think much beyond thatâI donât think. I think itâs getting the baby here, getting it healthy, learning how to feed it and take care of itâand thatâs about as far as I think they go, mentally.
Bob: When I was a young parent, I wasnât thinking much beyond the here and nowâthe next couple of weeks. I didnât have the big picture in mind. I think, for a lot of parents, thatâs just where we live.
Dennis: I think itâs a time of blissful joy, and they really donât know whatâs ahead for them. I think there is a lot of optimismâand may I say it about us?âa lot of arrogance. We thought weâd do a better job than our parents would do. It wasnât that we thought we were better people; we just thought weâve been better-equipped. Weâve had some great teachers of the Bible; weâve had some mentors that have built into our lives, and we thought we could do it, Bob. I donât think I thought it would be easy, but I thought it was going to be easier than it was. [Laughter]
3:00
Bob: So today, what weâre going to do isâweâre going to do some of this pre-parenting counseling that will, hopefully, help moms and dads thinkânot so much about labor and deliveryâbecause theyâre taking classes for that; right?
Barbara: Right.
Bob: Theyâre going through sessions on how to breathe and all of this. But we want them to be thinking about the next 18 years with this son or daughter that they are about to have and to come back and say, âOkay; whatâs the big objective here?â
And this is one of the things you deal with in the book that youâve just written called The Art of Parenting. Youâve got a chapter in hereâa section of the bookâthatâs all about what parents need in order to be good parents; and at the center of that, they need the right perspective; donât they?
Dennis: They do. This first point weâd like to make for parents is absolutely essential. Itâs like gravityâit isâit must be in place in your life, in your marriage, in your family to be successful, as a parent.
You see what Iâm holding.
Bob: I do.
Dennis: Itâs a Bible.
Bob: Yes.
4:00
Dennis: We say, âA dusty Bible will lead to a dirty life.â It will also lead to children who are aimless, spiritually, and who donât know who they are and why they were created.
Barbara: So the most important thing we believe for every parent is that you must be individually, and then as a couple, dependent on God. Assuming that you know Himâwhich weâre assuming that at this momentâif you know Him, then the most important thing for you to do is to grow in your relationship with Him so that you can, therefore, guide your child according to the principles that God has put forth in His Scripture.
Bob: When you talk about parents being in Godâs Word and following God, youâre talking about being in there with more purpose and more intentionality than just taking a Bible verse vitamin every morning; right?
Barbara: Yes; and I mean more than just going to church on Sunday morning. I think weâand especially when weâre young, because Dennis and I were this way tooâI think we were trying to learn how to walk with God.
5:00
We didnât really know what that meant; so it was real easy to feel likeâif we went to church, and we were in a Bible study, or we read our Bible occasionallyâthat was accomplishing that. Thereâs nothing wrong with any of those thingsâyou have to start there.
But I think what weâre saying in the book, and what weâre saying to you, who are listening, is that: âWhat you really need isâyou really need a heart that is surrendered to Christ and is totally dependent on Him.â Because, as we learned in raising our kids, it wasnât just enough to take our kids to Sunday school. It wasnât just enough to have them memorize a verse here and there. What they really needed isâthey really needed to see a mom and dad, who are completely dependent on Christ, as individualsânot just talking about itâbecause, if you just talk about it, your kids are going to rebel. But if they s...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
What Do You Want Your Kids to Be?
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: Art of Parenting: What Every Parent Needs (Day 2 of 3)
Bob: Do you and your spouse have the same set of parenting priorities as you raise your children? Barbara Rainey remembers when she and her husband, Dennis, sat down and compared notes.
Barbara: What was surprising to me was how different our lists were. I shouldnât have been surprised, because we had been flashing over this; but nonetheless, I think, when you get married, you think, âOh, we have so much in common,ââ and thenâafter a few years or maybe after the kids come alongâyou realize, âWell, maybe weâre operating off of two different sets of instructions.â
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, October 30th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. What can you do, as parents, to make sure youâre on the same page and that your values are in sync together as you raise your children? Weâll spend time talking to Dennis and Barbara Rainey about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Weâre spending some time this week doing some pre-parenting counseling. We talked about the fact that a lot of couples get premarital counseling; and a lot of couples, when theyâre expecting a baby, go to birthing classes; but nobodyâs doing parenting classes. Well, weâre doing parenting classes now with the Art of Parentingâą video series and with your new book, The Art of Parenting, that is now available. Your goal with that book, and our goal with the series, is to equip moms and dads to have a big-picture perspective on what Godâs calling them to do.
Dennis: Exactly. Weâre joined again on FamilyLife Today with Barbara. Welcome back to the broadcast, Sweetheart.
Barbara: Thank you much! Glad to be here.
Dennis: Hereâs the thing about childrenâI think most of us look at our children way too simplistically.
2:00
Let me depart from a conversation about children at this point and just talk about the Weekend to RememberÂź marriage getaway. One of the things we do at the getaway isâwe cast marriage in the grand scheme of thingsâof what God is up to on planet earth. We say to couples: âYour marriage isnât just about two people trying to get their needs met. Your marriage is supposed to demonstrate who God is to a fallen planet. There are angels looking onto the planetâtheyâre in the audience, watching how you two handle your conflict.â
Well, you know what? The same thing is true about children. Itâs not just a little personâyouâre talking about an eternal being. In the Art of Parenting video series, which we just launched, weâve got a number of marriage and family experts in there, one of whom is Tim Kimmel. Tim and Darcy have been on the Weekend to Remember speaker team for a number of years.
3:00
One of the things that he said in this series on the art of parenting wasâhe said, âI know how long children live. Theyâre eternal! They last forever.â That means, Bob, that they are worth so much more than any of us ever imagine at a point in time.
I think itâs why we need to go back to the Bookâback to the Bibleâand just read and see how children are described. Iâm going to go to, I think, a classic passage in the Old TestamentâPsalm 127, verses 3-5, that describes children. It says: âBehold! Children are a heritage from the Lord. The fruit of the womb is a reward,âânot a curse, but a benefit/a rewardââLike arrows in the hand of a warrior are the children of oneâs youth. Blessed is the man who fills his quiver with them.â
The picture hereâI want every parent to imagine this with meâ
4:00
âGod could have chosen any metaphor in existence to describe children, but he chose arrows. He pictures a warrior: âLike arrows in the hand of a warrior.â Whatâs the warrior doing? Heâs engaged in battle. What are you, as a parent, doing? You are engaged in a battle over the soulâthe moral condition and the development of your childâto be used by God in his generation.
So the question is: âAre you viewing your assignment as a sacred assignment?âchildren being a heritageâa reward/a blessing. Iâm sorry to get so intense here, at the beginning of the broadcast here, Bob; but I just think thereâs a lot of really lazy thinking about children. We forgetâitâs so easy, in the midst of the battleâwe arenât raising rug rats. Weâre raising image-bearers, who reflect who God is, and will carry on in the next generation.
5:00
Bob: If you were sitting down with a couple, who were about to begin that journeyâBarbara, one of the things I know you would tell them is: âYou need to begin your parenting journey with the end in mind. Rather than thinking about the first six months, think about a 20-year-old, who is ready to be launched. Start now, thinking: âWhat do we want that 20-year-old to be shaped by? What do we want the influences in that 20-year-oldâs life to look like?â so that all the choices youâre making, along the way, are choices that support that vision.
Barbara: Exactly. I think a lot of parents donât think about that. They are trying to survive today. [Laughter] They might be worried about whatâs happening tomorrow, because theyâve got a to-do list longer than their arm; but theyâre not thinking about what the outcome is for their kids, when theyâre 18, 20, or 21. Theyâre thinking about surviving the immediate future.
We all know, if we can think ahead to what we want something to become, then weâre going to make decisions today that will help achieve that outcome.
6:00
Parenting is really no different: âWhat do you want your kids to be like when they leave your influence?âwhen they leave for college, or go into the military, or get married, or whatever?â âWhat characteristicsâwhat qualities/what attributesâdo you want to invest in your children to see grow and determine who your kids become?â
Bob: And I think, with us, we were pretty nebulous. We kind of knew, in a general way, what we wanted for our kids; but I donât think we put words, or even values, to it.
Barbara: Yes.
Bob: So if you had said to me, when my child was two years old, âWhatâs your hope or dream?â Well, you know, I would have said: âI want them to love the Lord. I want them to have a good work...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
The Team Approach
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: Art of Parenting: What Every Parent Needs (Day 3 of 3)
Bob: As parents, itâs important that you continue to grow in your relationship with the Lord and in your understanding of Scripture, because Barbara Rainey says you never know when your kids are going to ask you a question thatâs a stumper.
Barbara: Iâll never forgetâmy grandson said to our daughterâhe said, âMom, why do I need to tell God what I did when He already knows?â Those are the kinds of things that parents run into. Youâve got to teach your childrenâwhat it means to forgive; why you need to confess your sin to Godâbecause kids are smart, and theyâre going to start thinking about that stuff. Theyâre going to press you on it. You have to know why youâre going where youâre going with your kids.
This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, October 31st. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. As parents, we donât have to have all the answers to the questions our kids ask us; but we need to know where to find the answers. Weâll talk more about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. Weâve been spending time this week talking about: âWhatâs at the heart of parenting?ââwhat parents need to be thinking about and processing, together, as they raise their children.
Iâm thinking back to when you first started working through what the Bible has to say about parentingâthis was more that a quarter of a century agoâ
Barbara: Gosh, thatâs sounds forever.
Bob: I know. It does; doesnât it? [Laughter] Right in the middle ofâ
Dennis: I think it is forever. [Laughter]
Bob: âin the middle of raising your kids, you took an extended season of time and dug into the Scriptures, and talked to a lot of pastors, and Bible teachers, theology professors.
Dennis: âmen and women.
Bob: You got a lot of input. What is in your book, The Art of Parenting, is a lot of the fruit that came from those conversations, back years ago.
2:00
The thing I love about that is the fact that itâs still as relevant today as it was then, because weâre talking about things that are eternalânot things that are temporal.
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: This was created in 1990 and â91, prior to radio. Because once radio startedâitâs dailyâI wasnât able to get the time away to be able to do the fresh thinking that I took over a 12-18-month period. But I looked to see if I could condense down: âWhatâs the essence of parenting? What does God want us to do?ââand I found four things.
I think He wants us to teach relationships to our childrenâhow to relate to God / how to relate to another sinful, selfish human being. Weâre preparing our children, someday, probably for marriage. But our kids need to know how to love God and love one another.
Secondly, we are establishing and building their character. Weâre shaping a child, whoâs wise and not a foolâwho knows whatâs right and whatâs wrongâhow to choose one and not the other.
3:00
Character development is something that God works, over time, in our lives to create. The Bible is full of all kinds of illustrations of this. In fact, I think we take a whole chapter in the book, talking about how God develops character in us. I think we could take a page out of âHow God Does Thatâ and apply that to us, as parents; and we do that.
Third is the issue of identity. Keep in mind this was developed in 1990 and â91. We talked about how God created us with a spiritual identity: âWho are we?â âWhat are we to be about?â âDo we have value?â âDo we have purpose?â The answer is: âYes.â Also, sexual identity. One of the first descriptions of manâin Genesis, Chapter 1, verses 26-28, was that He identified them as male and female. He says that definition three times in a matter of three verses.
4:00
Our sexual and spiritual identity, I believe today, are on the line as never before.
Finally, the fourth area is mission: âWhy are we here?â âWhatâs our purpose?â These arrows were not designed to stay in the quiver. Children were made to be pulled back on a bow and let go and released to fulfill Godâs mission for their lives.
Bob: Your wife Barbara is joining us this week as we talk about what parents need to keep in mind as we raise the next generation. Barbara, weâve talked about the big pictureâhaving the end in mind as you raise your kids. But parents need to also have kind of a working strategic plan for what theyâre doing.
Dennis: Yes.
Bob: In fact, this is really the heart of you book. You help parents come up with a short-term strategic plan that needs to be reviewed and updated throughout the parenting years so that youâre always thinking: âIn the next 12 months, what are the priorities?â
5:00
Barbara: Yes; right.
Bob: âIn the next 24 months, what are the priorities?â Then come backârevisit that/readdress thatâso that youâre being intentional as you raise your kids.
Barbara: Yes; and thatâs a big word for us. Dennis and I have always wanted to be very intentional with our kids, and with our marriage, and with our lives; because we think that is what God has called us to do. He hasnât called us just to exist and have fun. He has created us that we would glorify Him, and that we would raise godly children, and that we would have a marriage that would honor Him. That takes intentionality; it isnât going to happen accidently. Itâs not going to happen just by doing life. You have to make decisions that cause that to happen. As we talk about parenting, you have to begin with the end in mind.
In our book, we write and try to create a visionâtry to help parents see the big pictureâhelp them see the wonderful calling it is to be a parent, because itâs so easy to get caught up in the messiness of being a parent.
6:00
We are constantly casting that vision; but weâre also trying to be very practical and helpâyou know: âHow to make decisions,â âHow to work together as a team,â âHow to be intentional,â âHow to have the right values govern your everyday life, as a mom and a dad,ââso itâs both, togeth...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Emotional Identity
Guest: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Identity (Day 1 of 3)
Bob: When our kids act outâand they doâas parents, we want their behavior to change. But, as Barbara Rainey says, ultimately we want something that goes deeper than thatâwe want to get to their hearts.
Barbara: The side that Dennis and I erred on as parents is that we were focused on what we call behavior modification. Itâs changing how our child behaves, rather than helping them understand, âFeeling angry at your brother because he took your toy is normal. Itâs okay that you feel that way. But how can you learn to express that in a way thatâs helpful and not harmful?â
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, January 28th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine.
Helping our children identify and know how to deal with their emotionsâthatâs a big part of our assignment as parents, and weâll talk about that today. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us.
Dennis: I canât lie, Bob.
Bob: No, thatâs not true.
Dennis: I canât lie. [Laughter]
Bob: Iâve heard you lie before. [Laughter]
Dennis: Well, I canât lie about my grandkids, okay?
Bob: Okay. Tell me about your grandkids.
Dennis: Last Christmas Barbara and I went to Memphis and we held our new grandson.
Bob: Yes, number 20â
Barbara: âfour.
Dennis: Lincoln Timothy.
Bob: Twenty-four. Wow.
Dennis: Lincoln Timothyâand what a cutie! Whatâd you think, sweetheart?
Barbara: Oh, cutest baby ever!
Dennis: Ever!
Bob: Donât tell the other 23.
Barbara: No. No, no, no.
Dennis: And he was born on the day that Lincoln gave the Gettysburg Address?
Bob: Is that why he is named Lincoln?
Dennis: No, not at all.
Barbara: Itâs purely coincidental, because they thought it was going to be a girl, soâ
Dennis: The OB docâas she was delivering this little boyâthe OB doc said, âOh, and by the way, whatâs his name?â So, Laura told her what the name was, and she said, âWell, you know this is the anniversary of the Gettysburg Address.â
Bob: And they had no idea.
Dennis: They had no idea.
Bob: There we go!
2:00
Dennis: So, weâre talking about parenting todayâthis is very relevant stuff here.
Bob: Weâre going to be talking about something this week thatâif you went to parents and said, âGive me your list of your top 20 felt needs of things you need to know how to do as a parent,ââI donât know that this concept would be on that list of top 20 felt needs. This is one of those things that, as youâve taught about it and as Iâve thought more about it, this is one of those important but not necessarily urgent parenting needs.
Dennis: Well, weâre talking aboutâjust so our listeners understand hereâweâre talking about the four pillars of parenting. Barbara and I studied the Scriptures over the past 30 years andâfirst of all for our own benefit, but now for the benefit of listenersâwe have come up with four areas. Weâre going to talk about the third one today.
The first one is relationshipâhelping your child develop a relationship with God and training them in knowing how to relate to one another.
3:00
Okay? Second one is character. Thatâs doing whatâs right and not wrongâthatâs living out the book of Proverbsâwhich is wisdom.
This third one weâre going to talk about today is the issue of identity. You said people wouldnât list that. Bob, Iâm afraid I might disagree with you.
Bob: Really?
Dennis: I think we are in a major identity crisis today in our country as we raise the next generation of boys and girls.
Bob: Well, certainly by the time a child is in middle school there are questions about gender identity today that werenât there 20 years ago. But you expand this, not just around gender identityâyou want to talk about all aspects of a childâs identity.
Thisâby the wayâis from the book that the two of you have written called The Art of Parenting. We didnât get to the fourth of the four pillarsâwhich is missionâweâll talk about that another time.
Barbara, this issue of identityâwere you conscious of the fact thatâas you were raising your kidsâyou were helping themâ
4:00
âunderstand and discover and feel comfortable with who they were?
Barbara: Well, I wasâon some levelâbut I think the level that Dennis and I understood, when we were actually raising our kidsâwas their gifts and talents, which is a part of a personâs identity. I think we were aware of looking for, âWhat does this child gravitate toward? What does this child like? What are they good at? What are they not good at?â That is a piece of identity.
The part that I was not aware ofâI donât think either one of us were really aware of intentionallyâwas that we all have an emotional identity. Thatâs because we were made in the image of God. We donât think of God as being an emotional being necessarilyâwe may think of Him as being aloof, we may think of Him as being even unfeeling because of His distance from usâbut we are made in His image. It says in Genesisâin the creation storyâthat God made Adam and Eve, man and woman, âin His likenessââlike Him.
5:00
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Spiritual Identity
Guest: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Identity (Day 2 of 3)
Bob: Your child is a complete personâbody, soul, spirit. As parents, we need to be addressing every dimension of our childâs life including the spiritual dimension. Barbara Rainey says to help shape a childâs spiritual identity, we need to introduce them to the God who created them.
Barbara: Helping them understand that God is good, and that God has great plans and purposes for you, and that He loves you. I mean, what a privilege for a mom and a dad to be able to communicate those wonderful truths about God to your children. Because it helps them see Him as He really isâbut it also helps them begin to feel good about who God made them to beâand thatâs a part of developing a healthy identity.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, January 29th. Our host is Dennis Rainey. I'm Bob Lepine. Helping to shape and mold a childâs spiritual identity is one of the great responsibilities and one of the great privileges we have as parents.
1:00
Weâll explore that today. Stay with us.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us.
Weâre talking this week about an aspect of parenting thatâI think parents recognize as weâre in the process of raising our kidsâwe recognize that this is something that is important. I just donât know that weâthat I ever put a label on it. That I am helping to shape my childâs identity as they growâhelping them get a sense of selfâa good understanding of who they are.
Although I have to tell youâand thereâs some parents who are just going to be mortified by thisâbut when our daughter Amy was bornâwhen she was still a little baby before she could speak,
2:00
I would take her up in my lap and I would talk to her. I would bounce her on my lap and I would say âYouâre so cute. You know youâre so cute.â And then Iâd say âYouâre also depraved. You are totally depraved.â [Laughter] âYouâre a wicked sinner.â Iâd do that as I bounced her, and sheâd smile and giggle and laugh while Iâd talk about it.
Dennis: We should call Amy and find out how thatâ
Barbara: âdamaged her.
Bob: âscarred her for life? Well thereâsâI have to tell you another story real quick. She likes telling the story. We were driving home from summer camp and she was asking a question about herâher virtueâlike her good works. I donât know how the conversation came along but the dialogue was that no matter how good her best works were on any day they would always be tainted with the reality of sin. Well somehow in her 11-12-year-old heart, that was terrible newsâ [Laughter] âthat she could never have a good work that would be a 100% pure.
Dennis: PleasingâPleasing to God, yes.
3:00
Bob: Right. She shared this story with some of her friends who think I was a terrible parent for telling a 12-year-old that their works would always be tainted by sin. I thought I was just being biblically accurate as I was raising my kids but helping them understand their identity. A big part of that is helping them understand their spiritual identityâwho they are apart from Christ, who they are in Christ, and how all of that plays out for them.
Dennis: Iâm tempted to run a straw pollâfrom our listenersâabout how many think Bobâ
Bob: âthink Bob was cruel. [Laughter]
Dennis: âwas cruel by doing that.
Bob: I donât want to know.
Dennis: I donât really want to know either. Hereâs the thing. Our identityâwho we areâdetermines what we become. Iâll give you an illustration of this.
By the way, we havenât introduced BarbaraâBarbara, my bride for now 46 plus years, joins us again on FamilyLife Today. Welcome back.
Barbara: Thanks. Glad to be here as always. Itâs fun.
4:00
Dennis: Great mom of sixâGramma of 24. Weâre in the thick of this thing called ânext generationâ right here.
Anyway, I was going to tell you a story about what happened to me when I was a senior in high school. I was in a magazine subscription contest. We were raising money to go on a senior trip. So, the subscriptions back then for Outdoor Life or Time magazineâall the magazines were only two or three dollarsâso it wasnât exactly a big-time ticket item for somebody to buy them.
I started off going to this small town called Ozark, Missouriâwhere I grew upâa town of 1300 people. I went door to door and I made a couple of sales, but I didnât do quite well. I thought, âThis is not cutting it so Iâm going to the farmers. Iâm going out in the sticks where thereâs people out there whoâmaybe theyâve got common sense and theyâll buy these magazines subscriptions from me.â
5:00
So I started going door to door. The first oneâI just happened on it that the lady answered the door and I said âHi, Iâm Dennis Rainey. Iâm Hook Raineyâs son.â âOh, Hook Raineyâs son. Come on in. Have some cookies and milk. What have you got there? Subscriptions. Oh, weâd like two or three of those subscriptions, of course.â I thought, âWhoa, that was pretty good.â I went to the bank on my dadâsâon my dadâs brand out in the countyâthis Christian county believe it or not.
I set a school record for most number of stuffed animals that I wonâmost subscriptions. It was a huge number because of my dadâs identityâHook Rainey. By the way, they called him Hook because he had a wicked curve ball. It was the only thing wicked about him. Now, Bob, I know youâd say heâs still wicked but [Laughter] âanyway, Hook Rainey had a name that was as good as gold in the communityâlived his whole life there.
6:00
But I went to the bank on his identity because I was his son.
Now hereâs the deal as you raise your children. First of allâif youâve trusted in Christâyou are a child of the King. You have royal blood in your veinsâas a listenerâif you know Christ. As you introduce your children to Jesus Christ and help them begin their spiritual walk with Him, they too can be a royal. They can be one of the members of the royal familyâthe King of Kings and Lord of Lords. This thing called spiritual identityâI think, Bob, is one of the most important components of help...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Gender Identity
Guest: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Identity (Day 3 of 3)
Bob: Men and women are created by God with equal value and equal worth but, as Barbara Rainey points out, there are some things women can do that men will never be able to do.
Barbara: Only women are designed by God to conceive and bear children and that sets them apart from men. Theyâre life-givers, but theyâre also nurturers. Women are prone to nurturing life in other people or in other things. Itâs not that men donât do thatâthere are a lot of men who are pastors who nurture life in their congregationâbut itâs a unique calling in a womanâs life to be made to give life and to nurture that life after itâs born.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, January 30th. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. As parents, we have to help our children understand that when God created them as either boys or girls, He had more than just biological function in mind. Thatâs controversial, but weâre going to talk about it today.
1:00
Stay with us.
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us.
If you were sitting down with a group of parents today and you were saying. âOne of the issues youâre going to have to address as you raise your kids is the issue of their identity.â I think what weâre going to talk about today is where they would go immediately because, in our culture the issue of gender identityâsexual identityâthatâs right at the heart of how we think about ourselves in this new century.
Dennis: And you better know how to help your child address the issueânot after it happensâbut before it happens. Barbara Raineyâmy wife of 46 yearsâItâs been all great sweetheartâ
Barbara: Really.
Dennis: Every year better than the previous one.
Barbara: Yes, they are getting better.
Dennis: You hear that announced here on the radio, didnât you? [Laughter]
Barbara: Yes.
Dennis: You wrote about it in your book, Letters to My Daughters.
Barbara: I know I did.
Dennis: I told you that you should have made me look better in there, but you didnât.
Barbara: I didnât.
2:00
Dennis: Weâre talking about another new book weâve written called The Art of Parenting. Weâre covering one of the four major areas that the book is built around. We believe that parenting Biblically has four Biblical components: Oneâteaching your child how to relate to God and to one another. Itâs the great commandment: Love God with all your heart and love your neighbor.
Number twoâthe second componentâis that of character. Thatâs choosing right and not wrong. Itâs the book of Proverbsâliving a wise life and not a foolish one.
Third area weâre talking about today and have been all this week so far, is the area of identityâand today weâre going to talk about sexual identity.
The last component of parenting is one weâll talk about here in a few weeks, which is teaching you child how to have a sense of mission and purposeâto be about what God has for him or her all their lives.
3:00
But I want to come back to this idea of sexual identity and I want to read a story by Jackie Hill Perry. She is a spoken word artist.
Bob: Sheâs going to be a guest on FamilyLife Today coming up in a few weeks.
Dennis: Thatâs right. She told a story that is a present tense story about her own struggle growing up around her own sexual identity. Rather than tell it, I want to read her words.
She says, âI understand how it feels to be in love with a womanâto want nothing more that to be with her foreverâfeeling as if the universe has played a cruel joke on your heart by allowing you to fall into the hands of a creature that looks just like you.â She goes on, âAt the age of seventeen I finally made the decision to pursue these desires. I enjoyed these relationships and loved these women a lot, and it came to the point that I was willing to forsake all, including my soul to enjoy their love on earth.â
4:00
âAt the age of 19, my superficial reality was shaken up by a deeper love, one from the outsideâone that Iâd heard of before, but never experienced. My eyes were opened and I began to believe everything God says in His Word. I began to believe that what He says about sin, death and hell were completely true.â She concludes with this, âGod put this impression on my heart. He said, âJackie, you have to believe that My Word is true even if it contradicts how you feel.ââ
âWow!â she writes, âThis is right. Either I trust in His Word or I trust my own feelings. Either I look to Him for the pleasure my soul craves or I search for it in lesser things.
5:00
Either I walk in obedience to what He says or I reject His truth as if it were a lie.â
Bob, I think she nails it because I think we have a generation that is living life according to their feelings. They really donât know what they believe and what theyâre committed to from the Scriptures. This is why parents have to listen up. You all need to take your assignment about educating, training and equipping your sons and daughters to know how to navigate one of the most treacherous subjects theyâre ever going to face on the planetâthe issue of sexual identity.
It all begins at birth. Itâs not long thereafter, thatâs when sex education begins.
Bob: Iâm thinkingâback a generation agoâwhen we were talking about helping boys understand what it means to be a boy and girls understand what it means to be a girl.
6:00
Back decades ago, it was a very different conversation than the one parents are dealing with today. In part, Barbara, because there were some gender stereotyping going on back then that was not healthyâwhere we said, âThis is how boys should act or think, and this is how girls should act and think.â
We got a little too compartmentalized and a little too boxy and put some artificial, arbitrary markers around those things. But today, we are q...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Thinking Biblically about Mission
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Mission and Releasing (Day 1 of 2)
Bob: Dennis Rainey has a provocative, engaging question for parents to ask their children.
Dennis: âIf you could do anything in the world and couldnât fail, what would you do and why?â And then maybe toss this one out at the dinner tableâitâs by A.W. TozerââGod is looking for people through whom He can do the impossible. What a pity we plan to do the things we can only do by ourselves.â Kids need to realize that if God is their God, they need to make their plans large.
Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, February 21st. Our host is Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine. Are your children setting big goals? Do they have big dreams about how God might use them in the future? Weâre going to talk today about how you stir that up in your childâs heart. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. We have spent a lot of time over the last six/seven months talking about parentingâactually, for the last year. Iâm going all the way back to when our movie, Like Arrows, came out in theaters a year agoâ
Dennis: Thatâs right.
Bob: âand then the video series for the Art of Parentingâą came out shortly after that. Your book, The Art of Parenting, was released in September. Weâve been talking about parenting quite a bit; and of course, this is something youâve been studying and reflecting on for decades.
Dennis: This is a passion of both Barbaraâs and mine; and by the way, she joins us again on FamilyLife Today. Welcome back.
Barbara: Thank you much; glad to be here.
Dennis: For a little while longer, at least, welcome back.
Barbara: A little while longer. [Laughter]
Bob: A little while longerâyes; we shared with listeners earlier this week about the change that is coming.
Dennis: Thatâs right! Dave and Ann Wilson are going to be stepping into our shoes, and they are going to become the hosts of FamilyLife Today.
2:00
Weâve been at this for almost 26-and-a-half years, not quite.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: But weâve had the privilege of doing over 6,000 broadcasts that listeners have paid attention to dutifully and have been listening to what weâve said here. Hopefully, we have helped you in your most important relationships in life. Itâs kind of fitting, Bob, I think, that Barbara and I are here talking about this final pillar of raising kids, which is giving your child a mission and releasing them.
Something like FamilyLife Today canât die with my hands or Barbaraâs hands tightly gripped around the microphone saying: âNo, no, no! You canât have someone else lead this!â Weâre all meant to pass it onâto pass the baton. Weâre excited to be able to do that. Dave and Ann Wilson have been in ministry for a number of years, and I think our listeners are going to love them.
3:00
I believe, for FamilyLife Today and FamilyLifeÂź, the best is yet to be. Bob Lepine is still going to be at the microphone, so Iâm excited. What about you, sweetheart?
Barbara: I am too. Weâve known Dave and Ann for years. We love their enthusiasm; we love their energy. They are both very biblically-anchored, and they will just do a fabulous job. In fact, I think theyâll do a better job, in many ways, than we didâ
Dennis: I think youâre right.
Barbara: âbecause theyâre justâtheyâre great people, and everybodyâs going to love them.
Bob: Weâve heard from them already this week. Weâre going to hear from them again next week. It is nice when you can make a handoff to friends and people who you admire and respect; and thatâs the case with Dave and Ann.
Dennis: Kindred spirit friends.
By the way, just a transition to todayâs broadcastâbecause I want to get on with thatâweâve been talking, as you mentioned, Bob, for a number of months about the essence of raising children. We talked about how the Scriptures really break it down into four categories.
4:00
The first one is the Great Commandment, which is teaching your child how to have a relationship with God and with others. The second area of parenting is that of building character into your childrenâteaching them to be wise and not be a fool; teaching them right from wrong; how to choose whatâs right; obey Godâthatâs what the Book of Proverbs is about. A little earlier this year, we talked about the third area, which is the issue of identityâemotional, spiritual, and sexual identity. The Bible speaks clearly to all of those areas.
This last one that weâre talking about today is really something that Barbara and I will probably fight one another for the microphone, because we both feel strongly about this; and thatâs giving your child a sense of missionâhelping them discover why God put them here, on the planet, in the first place. Itâs really spoken of in one of my favorite verses that Iâve quoted many, many times, here, on FamilyLife TodayâEphesians, Chapter 2, verse 10:
5:00
âFor we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.â Did you hear what Paul was saying there? He was saying we are Godâs work of art. Your child is Godâs work of art. He has prepared that child for an assignment that is unique to him.
In doing research for this book, we found out that, way back in the 18th century, there was a doctor who discovered fingerprints. He was the guy who discovered that each person has a unique fingerprint on every one of their fingers and thumbs. I think itâs a statement of how God has a unique assignment/a unique ability built into every child. What your assignment is, as a parentâlisten to meâyour assignment is, as a pair of parents, or as a single parent, or as a blended familyâ
6:00
âyou have to help your child discover who he or she is and cheer them on in the race of life, cheering them on to become all that God called them to be.
Bob: When we were working on the Art o...
-
FamilyLife TodayÂź Radio Transcript
References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.
Releasing Your Children
Guests: Dennis and Barbara Rainey
From the series: The Art of Parenting: Mission and Releasing (Day 2 of 2)
Bob: There is a moment that arrives in our parenting journey when things change/things transition; and as parents, we have to let our children go. Hereâs Barbara Rainey.
Barbara: In the end, are any of our kids really ready to go, in our opinion?âprobably not. Thereâs always more we could teach / always more that we wish we had said. Yet, at some point, we have to trust that God is bigger than our mistakes. He is able to catch them if they fall, and we need to let them go and let them learn on their own.Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Friday, February 22nd. Our host is Dennis Rainey; Iâm Bob Lepine. Are you ready, as moms and dads, to release your children?âand have you prepared them to do life on their own? Weâll talk more about that today with Dennis and Barbara Rainey. Stay with us.
1:00
And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. So, can we just say it right up front? Weâre going to talk about the worst part of parenting today; donât you think?âreleasing?âthatâs not the worst part of parenting?
Dennis: Oh, no. [Laughter] Oh, no. I mean, itâs bittersweetâletâs all agree on thisâ
Bob: Okay.
Dennis: âbut there is life after children.Bob: Okay.
Dennis: Your marriage was built to outlast your kids. Iâm going to tell youâitâs a bonus, Bob, when you can have a smile on your face and you can let your arrow fly.2:00
Bob: Okay.
Dennis: You can weep with them and cry with them; huh?
Bob: Youâre right.
Barbara: Heâs nodding; heâs nodding.
Bob: Iâm rethinking my statement. Iâm remembering changing diapers, and releasing was not that bad. [Laughter] I think sleeping through the night and releasing your childâthere are some benefits to that.
Dennis: Spoiling the grandkidsâitâs wonderful.
Barbara joins us again on FamilyLife Today. Welcome back, sweetheart, while we are still in the saddle, hosting FamilyLife Today.
Barbara: Thatâs right.Bob: Thatâs what we call the victory lap; okay? Weâre in thatâ
Barbara: Thatâs right.
Bob: âweâre in that.
Barbara: It is the victory lap.
Bob: This is the last time around the track.
Dennis: We get to peel out like Earnhardt does when he winsâ[Laughter]
Barbara: Are you going to wave the checkered flag?
Dennis: âburn the tires. I think Iâm going to get out in the FamilyLifeÂź parking lotâ
Barbara: âand do donuts? [Laughter]
Dennis: âand have them take a video when weâre done here and just do a donut out there. I donât know if I can do it, though. I donât know if Iâve got a car thatâs got that much power.
Barbara: We donât have a car that would do that. [Laughter]
Bob: We shared with listeners, earlier this week, that a transition is on the way.
3:00
On March 4th, we will have new hosts stepping in to FamilyLife Today. Dave and Ann Wilson are going to be serving as the new hosts, and you guys willâyouâll be back from time to time, I hope/I trust.
Dennis: We will, and we willâweâre not riding off into the sunset to clip coupons and be retired. Iâve got to tell youâI justâI wish people would stop asking me: âWell, howâs retirement?!â
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: âbecause we are not retired.
Dennis: Weâre not retired. [Laughter]
Bob: Youâre as busy as youâve ever been.
Dennis: We are re-firing,â
Barbara: We are.
Bob: Yes.
Dennis: âand recalibrating, and resetting our goals to make the most of what Godâs given us for the next decade. After that decade, the next one after that, if God gives the health, soundness of mind, and strength.
Bob: I know you guys have thought about this and talked about it, but part of the stage of life that youâre in is a stage where you model to the next generation what grace looks like as we get older.4:00
Weâre not disengaged. We still have use for the Kingdom; but life changes, and we have to adjust.
Dennis: Well, just like what weâre going to be talking about, here, on the broadcast today. We believeâin our book, we talked about thisâThe Art of Parentingâwe believe that children were meant to be received, raised, and then released.
I think ministries are not unlike that. You help build them. Barbara and I have been here for over 42 years, and weâve been building this ministryâhelping it be effective in more than 100 countries around the world. Itâs time for a younger leader, who is more relevant to the next generation, to take over and lead this to the next generation and to the next growth spurt over the next decade thatâs ahead.
Bob: David Robbins has been in that role for a year now.
Dennis: Thatâs rightâdoing a great job.
Bob: Then, with Dave and Ann Wilson stepping in to the broadcast, you guys will beâyouâll be free from the daily responsibilities of producing a radio program like thisâ
5:00
âbut not free from a Kingdom calling on your life.
Dennis: Thatâs exactly right.
Bob: Yes.
Barbara: I just totally agree. In some ways, weâre more excited about the fut...