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Desiring God - Ask Pastor John, How did you do family devotions when your kids were real little?

How did you do family devotions when your kids were real little?

We wanted to get our children trained in personal devotions from the beginning, as well as family devotions.

1) From the family standpoint there would always be a time to meet. It was at the breakfast table in those early days. So you have a child who is now rested—at least it's the way it worked for our boys and Talitha—they were rested and had a full tummy. So they were relatively happy.

And at that moment Daddy gets out a big book. And he reads from it, a paragraph maybe. This little child doesn't understand anything I'm saying. He's six months old, or nine months, or a year. He doesn't understand anything I'm saying, but he's learning big time what is going on here: he's watching daddy take leadership; he's noticing a book; he's hearing reading; he's watching them pray afterwards; and he's learning massively important things before he understands a word that is going on here. So he is included in family devotions. He is being trained in devoting himself to God through his word.

Then, as the child becomes verbal and you can tell that he can say some things, you take wherever he is and you find something in the Bible and you try to match that with his level. And at each level you're trying to build truth into that little brain. You're not demanding faith from this little pagan, because he's not ready even to come to those terms. You're doing teaching: you're building and your exulting and your praying and your asking, and he's watching all this happen as you build that into his life. Now that's the family pattern in the early days. 2) The individual pattern is, back in the days when they had cassette tapes, we had these indestructible child cassette players. I presume they still have them. You could throw it across the room and it wouldn't be destroyed. It had big wide red buttons.

And so here's our 18-month old listening to Bible stories on his own. "You have devotions now. This is your time. You take your big machine over there, you push your red button, and you listen to your story and say, 'Thank you, Jesus.'" So, we trained them in personal devotions and in family devotions.

Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsBibleVersion = "ESV"; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsLinksOpenNewWindow = true; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsLibronixLinkIcon = "dark"; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsNoSearchTagNames = [ "h1", "h2", "h3" ]; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsCssOverride = true; Logos.ReferenceTagging.tag(); By John Piper. © 2009 Desiring God. Website: desiringGod.org

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How did you do family devotions when your kids were real little?

We wanted to get our children trained in personal devotions from the beginning, as well as family devotions.

1) From the family standpoint there would always be a time to meet. It was at the breakfast table in those early days. So you have a child who is now rested—at least it's the way it worked for our boys and Talitha—they were rested and had a full tummy. So they were relatively happy.

And at that moment Daddy gets out a big book. And he reads from it, a paragraph maybe. This little child doesn't understand anything I'm saying. He's six months old, or nine months, or a year.

He doesn't understand anything I'm saying, but he's learning big time what is going on here: he's watching daddy take leadership; he's noticing a book; he's hearing reading; he's watching them pray afterwards; and he's learning massively important things before he understands a word that is going on here.

So he is included in family devotions. He is being trained in devoting himself to God through his word.

Then, as the child becomes verbal and you can tell that he can say some things, you take wherever he is and you find something in the Bible and you try to match that with his level. And at each level you're trying to build truth into that little brain.

You're not demanding faith from this little pagan, because he's not ready even to come to those terms. You're doing teaching: you're building and your exulting and your praying and your asking, and he's watching all this happen as you build that into his life.

Now that's the family pattern in the early days.

2) The individual pattern is, back in the days when they had cassette tapes, we had these indestructible child cassette players. I presume they still have them. You could throw it across the room and it wouldn't be destroyed. It had big wide red buttons.

And so here's our 18-month old listening to Bible stories on his own. "You have devotions now. This is your time. You take your big machine over there, you push your red button, and you listen to your story and say, 'Thank you, Jesus.'"

So, we trained them in personal devotions and in family devotions.

Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsBibleVersion = "ESV"; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsLinksOpenNewWindow = true; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsLibronixLinkIcon = "dark"; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsNoSearchTagNames = [ "h1", "h2", "h3" ]; Logos.ReferenceTagging.lbsCssOverride = true; Logos.ReferenceTagging.tag();  By John Piper. © 2009 Desiring God. Website: desiringGod.org