The Curries

The Curries
Keith and Patricia

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

INTEGRITY: First things First

As Judith neared her fourth birthday, she became feverish and lethargic. We took her to the doctor on Tuesday. He didn’t seem overly concerned, and we went home. Wednesday was a little worse; but on Thursday, her birthday, she seemed better. We had a little party.

Friday, she was worse again; and Saturday, her color was gray. We spent most of that day in the emergency room trying to find out what was going on. Again, they could find nothing out of the ordinary and were ready to send us home when another doctor was brought in for his opinion. He recommended a spinal tap, explained how it worked, and proceeded with our permission. In short, Judith was at death’s door with spinal meningitis. Admitted immediately, she spent the next ten days in the hospital fighting for her life. I spent the next few days crying for God’s mercy and coming face to face with this truth: Judith did not belong to me; she belonged to God. I had to answer this question within my own heart, “Will I trust God even if she dies?”

Sometime in that few days, I gave Judith to the Lord. Mercifully, He gave her back to us.

A few years later, my oldest daughter was leaving to live in Costa Rica. As we were worshipping at a conference, we were singing “Blessed be the Name of the Lord.” When we reached that part that says, “He gives and takes away,” I sensed God asking me if I would trust him with Anna. I confessed that she belonged to him . . . and wept.

God is a jealous God,

And he will not allow us to worship our kids.

Gen. 22:1 Some time later God tested Abraham. He said to him, "Abraham!"

"Here I am," he replied.

2 Then God said, "Take your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains I will tell you about."

3 Early the next morning Abraham got up and saddled his donkey.

God promised Abraham a son when he was seventy-five years old. When Abraham was one hundred, Isaac was born. A few years later, God tested him to demonstrate whom he loved most: God or Isaac. It is amazing to me that Abraham did not hesitate but early the next morning got up and obeyed. He went as far as taking the knife in hand before God sent an angel to stop him. Then God said this to him, “. . . because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your only son . . . through your offspring all nations on earth will be blessed, because you have obeyed me."

God is amazingly clear on this point.

HE MUST BE FIRST, ABSOLUTELY FIRST.

Substitute anything or anyone else,

and the world will not be blessed.

Loving our children more than we love God is idolatry and idolatry is destructive. Psalm 115: 8 “Those who make them (idols) will be like them, and so will all who trust in them.”

We will become like what we worship. I realized that if I worshipped my kids, I would become like them, just a big kid. If I worshipped God, I would become like him. Our kids need their parents to be more like God than like kids. We need to be moved by what is righteous instead of by what we want.

We cannot please God and please our kids.

We cannot be ruled by God and ruled by our kids.

If we fear God first, that is, if we are attentive, receptive, and responsive to him above all else, then we will respond rightly to our children. But if we are attentive, receptive, and responsive to our children first, we will miss God entirely. Which comes first is the issue. Compromising on this issue will poison our sons and daughters and their children, too.

Putting Jesus first will bless

our sons,

our daughters,

their children,

and the world.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

LONG-RANGE VISION: Short-term actions

"I will make you into a great nation”

"Look up at the heavens and count the stars--if indeed you can count them." Then he said to him, "So shall your offspring be."

“You . . .will greatly increase your numbers."

“You will be the father of many nations.”

“I will establish my covenant as an everlasting covenant between me and you and your descendants after you for the generations to come, to be your God and the God of your descendants after you.”

These words that God spoke to Abraham are quite astounding! He was revealing to Abraham the impact of his fatherhood, its sway over generations yet unborn, his lasting influence that would be passed down from one generation to the next. And the Bible says this, “Abraham believed God. . .”

God wants all of us to see past our own moment in time and to see the legacy that we leave in our children for generations to come. Abraham caught that glimpse, saw himself as a father, received his responsibilities, and walked them out.

Seeing long-range is vital to being a parent.

When a father loses the long-range vision, he begins to live selfishly, worshipping his own leisure or maybe losing himself in his work. When a mother loses the long-range vision, she begins to want time for herself, and becomes resentful at the demands placed upon her by the children. She begins to live for the moments she can “get away.” Jesus suffered for the joy set before Him. We all are called to live for the moments yet to come.

Our greatest effect on the future will be through our children!

Abraham took this grand vision that Father God showed him and walked it out specifically. Listen to this next verse by reading it out loud to yourself:

Gen. 18:19 For I have chosen him, so that he will direct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the LORD by doing what is right and just, so that the LORD will bring about for Abraham what he has promised him."

The grand vision that God had promised to Abraham about his descendants being as the stars of heaven, becoming a great nation, and holding to an everlasting covenant depended on Abraham doing his part. And this is true for us.

1) We must direct our children. Engaged, involved parents direct their children. They are in charge for a larger purpose. Only the parents can see it. The children cannot catch the vision until much later.

2) The focus of our direction is the way of the Lord. Children learn faith and they will practice that faith as they see their parents intentionally walk out their own discipleship to Jesus. The “way of the Lord” concerns the heart of God more than the rules of God. As parents, we ask God to give us his heart toward our children, knowing this: God’s kind of love fulfills the law.

3) We teach right and wrong by our example and we enforce it justly. Parents and children are to live by God’s ways, not just the kids. We are all accountable. The children are accountable to us, but we are accountable to God. Doing what is right and just becomes our family practice.

Faithfulness in these simple things will open the door for God to bring about what He has promised.

Father, grant us the vision to see the generations yet to come.

Cause us to be faithful in our generation

so that we may pass on to our children

your eternal covenant.