A few Sundays ago, during the worship service, during one of
the songs that my 4-year old son Caleb was familiar with (it was a previous
“song of the month”), I saw something that made me smile. I saw him sing… with his eyes closed. His head even swayed a little from side to
side. I smiled, because I knew what he
was doing. He was imitating his daddy;
that’s how I sing my songs of praise to God (when I know the lyrics by heart).
I didn’t tell him to do that; he just did it on his
own. He learned by observing his
daddy. That’s how I sing at home during
our family worship, and that’s how I sing at church in corporate worship. Like it or not, my son imitates me… as he
should. And that is a very weighty
responsibility.
Dear parents, how do you worship God? What’s your attitude in and during
worship? What’s your posture? By how you worship, do your children sense
that you value and cherish worship, or do they sense that it is something you
do out of mere duty? If you’re mentally
“checked out” during worship and preoccupied with other things, if you can’t
wait to be done with worship to get to more important things, if you show up
for worship in a hurry and with no preparation, if worship is something you
“endure” rather than “enjoy”… well, like it or not, you will see that attitude reflected
in your children and in their worship of God.
It’s not enough to just take them to church, or even to have
them sit quietly with you in worship. They need to see you worship; they need
to see that you value and treasure Christ in your worship. That’s how they are
going to learn to worship. When it comes to worshipping God, your personal
example will go much further and have more impact than your instruction and
exhortation ever will.
Be very careful about what you model before your kids. They will imitate you; they will love what
you love, and they will care about what you care about. They are watching you- not only at home, but
also at church. Our children watch us... even as we worship. May God, by His powerful Spirit, make us the kind of
worshippers that we earnestly and prayerfully want our children to be.
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