Otter vs. Crocodile

Check out this video.  Sorry about the music…get’s a little interesting near the end.  Never the less the interaction between the Croc & the Otter family is pretty cool!


Last night the boys, Katie, and I were watching one of my favorite DVD’s, Planet Earth (the Fresh Water episode) and I saw one of the most interesting encounters I have seen in a long time.  A family of otters took on an 11 foot crocodile…and the crocodile backed down!

Have you ever watched otters?  They are not the most threatening creature in the animal kingdom, but when it comes to standing up against a giant predator, they seem to have no fear.  I was really impressed with this…it sort of gave me a little more sense of pride for being high on the “otter scale” on John Trent’s Leading From Your Strengths assessment…but that’s not the point.

Anyway, what really intrigued me (as someone who spends a great deal of time thinking about family, parenting, and what the next generation will look like) was the power of a united family of otters.  As a group, they had power and authority.  As a family, they had confidence to take on the hostile environment around them.

Forgive me for offending (sometimes the truth can be hurtful for all of us…I know it can be for me), but I see far too many Christian families who are just going through the motions, doing little to nothing intentional to raise up spiritual champions for Christ.  If we are not intentional about helping our kids see a clear division between what is going on in our culture and the kingdom that is in the next world, then we stand a great chance of losing them.  How can we expect our families to stay tight and united in Christ when we do little to nothing to disciple our children at home?  If parents are not leading their kids spiritually at home (conversations, talks, teachable moments, faith breakthroughs, spiritual milestones…a whole mixed bag of opportunities to impress Christ on the hearts of our kids), then why should we expect them to be passionate about following Christ as an adult?  What do they see in you? Why would they follow you if it’s not important enough to you to take time to talk about your relationship with God at home?  Why would they grow up to be a Christ follower if it’s not important enough to you to plan time to invest in them spiritually at home?  This is the breeding ground for lukewarm/nominal Christianity.

I know what I see in me.  I see a whole lot of failures.  I am not the parent nor the person I need to be…growing in Grace, but not who I want to be as of this very moment.  Thankfully I am on a journey.  However, the journey does require responsibility out of me.  It requires me to have a plan.  It requires thought and action.

I am writing this because I feel a huge amount of responsibility. I have read a decent amount in the last two years about this stuff.  I have had many conversations with some people in this area who know their stuff, and what they are saying is essentially “our generation of parents must show our kids a clear distinction between the ways of the world and the love and hope of God because the messages of the world are so loud, strong, and dominating, that without a plan of action on the part of parents, we are very likely to loose our children to the world.”  I know that sounds so harsh, but I keep seeing it all the time.  It manifests itself in the way that we spend our time, the things we watch, the entertainment we consume, the lack of compassion for others.  It appears from my perspective that mainstream Christianity has become so consumed with the world, and less consumed with Christ.  Perhaps that is why Barna’s book Think Like Jesus says that only 9% of evangelicals have a true Christian worldview.

Again, I am sooooo far from being a perfect parent.  I stink really badly some days in my role as a father…just ask Katie.  However, we do have a loose plan.  We do faith talks/teachable moments with our boys.  We take them on dates to talk about eternal matters.  We read the Bible as a family and at breakfast.  We read “Bible books” most nights before bed.  We have car talks about life truths and challenges.   We talk about choices and how choices have consequences. We have mapped out spiritual milestones that have been and will be celebrated and memorable.

I do not know if my boys will own faith in Christ as their own when they are flying solo.  I hope they will.  Katie and I pray about this nearly every day.  Ultimately the choice will be theirs to follow Christ and to walk with him.  But in the mean time, I will continue to build out a plan based on Deuteronomy 6:5-7 which is my commandment.  Note: commandment not suggestion.

Do you have a plan?  Are you working on one?  Building one?  If not, today is your day to begin…there is too much at stake.  Sit down tonight and based on God’s word, map out what you want your children to look like (inner character…not job, career, or performance).  Once you know what your goal is, what is it going to take to get there?  What changes do you need to make in your life to raise up a champion for Christ? What can you do differently in your family to implement good interaction with your kids?

No family is perfect.  There is no perfect model because all families are made up of imperfect people.  God wants to work with your family where you are now.

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