Sunday, December 13, 2015

Life Training

My wife and I are entering a season of life that has had me thinking about preparing my children for different aspects of their lives. I have been trying to make sure I have taught my daughter all she needs so she will be ready when she leaves for college next year. My son recently turned 15 and I have been teaching him how to drive.

There are many things we are trying to cram into our daughter, since this is the last year she will be living in our house. From talking with my friends, I am not alone in just now discovering some of the things we should have been doing for years. One simple example is getting up in the morning. We have slipped into the bad habit of letting her sometimes fail to extract herself from her bed when her alarm goes off. We then go in 5 or 10 minutes later to get her out of bed. In college, we will not be calling her in the morning to get out of bed. If she keeps this up, she will simply be late for class or miss it altogether. To prepare her, we are letting her know that we will no longer be her snooze alarm. If she fails to get up, she will be late. I know it will happen, and the first time will be quite painful, for her and for us, but it is the only way she will learn to rely on herself instead of on us.

There is a problem with that plan. She currently drives her brother to school. So, do we let her sleep in and cause her brother to be late as well? That is not fair to him. We are currently trying to work out the balance of teaching her versus having her actions affect her brother negatively.

It reminds me of the Biblical principal that you reap what you sow. Even though waking up is not a crucial spiritual matter, the principal still applies. If we let her continue to sow not getting herself out of bed, she will reap being late to classes in college. Not a major thing, but something to be avoided.
Teaching my son to drive falls into a different category. It is not only about teaching him rules and a new skill. There are serious safety factors to consider. Bad choices in driving can have far more devastating impacts than being late to school. It was hard to literally let go of the wheel and let him sit in the driver’s seat, and there have been a couple of times when I had to reach over to grab the wheel and point him in a safer direction. However, he will never learn to drive if I keep my hand on the wheel at all times.

Reflecting back on how I am teaching my kids these things, I cannot help but think about how God teaches us. He often allows us try new things knowing full well we have to learn as we go. He lets us sit in the driver’s seat with Him watching our progress. He knows we will make mistakes. Sometimes those mistakes are only inconveniences. Sometimes they are very painful. Sometimes those mistakes affect people who had no part in making the mistake.

God has to allow us to make those mistakes so we can learn from them and to allow our freewill to function. If God stepped in every time we were about to make a mistake, He would have to control almost every aspect and every decision of our lives. He did not design things that way. He allows us to make our own choices and to enjoy or suffer the consequences of those choices.


I know He sometimes reaches over to grab the wheel and move us out of the path of an oncoming disaster. But He cannot do that too often or we would not have freewill nor would we learn from the choices we make.