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3 Dangers from Exposing Your Students to Spiritual Danger

Guest Post by Tony Richmond

Danger:  Trusting everything a student tells you.  I know most dads want to think the very best about their student.  So, for example, if (insert your student’s name) says that they are reading their Bible, most dads take that for face value.  When what the student really may be saying is that they are spending one minute looking at the Bible so that they can tell their dad they are reading their Bible.

Solution:  Actually engage your student in conversation.  Talk with them.  Ask questions.  Probe the statement they are making.  In every arena.  Not just Bible reading, but talk with about school, and other activities.  Take time to go have Starbucks, cast a line, or go for a drive time and really talk to them.  They need it.  You need it!  This is a form of spiritual protection…knowing about your student.

Danger:  Spiritual health is just another aspect of our busy life.  Corporate worship, Christian fellowship, and Christian accountability are just other items on our long list of things that we do.  In fact, we typically do those things when we don’t have anything else to do (homework, sports practices/games, family trips, attending sporting events, etc…).  Students are taught through this behavior that spiritual health is something that we are ultimately concerned with when we have nothing else to do.

Solution:  Make spiritual health a priority for your family and its members.  Don’t miss corporate worship.  Don’t allow your students to make excuses for missing church (i.e. no one else is going, I have too much homework, I have a game, etc..)  There are certainly occasions when families miss church (which should be rare).  The idea is to promote the importance of Christian fellowship and accountability.  When you are forced to be out of town as a family, find a church to attend on Sunday mornings.  Communicate to your students that they cannot be involved in extracurricular activities that draw you as a family away from church by playing/performing on Sundays.  This reinforces the fact that our spiritual health is the ultimate priority in your family.  This too is spiritual protection!

Danger:  Tell them what they should be doing, but don’t model it in your own life.  They need to see it in you!  When is the last time your students saw you tell yourself “No” to something?  Yes, you tell them no to things (which by the way is, in many cases, the right thing to do), but they never see you telling yourself “no” for the sake of the gospel and glory of the Lord.  In my opinion, this is the greatest exposure to spiritual danger for students.  A hypocrite.  If there is one thing that a student can recognize and see instantly it’s a hypocrite. Satan can use that to either push them totally away from the faith or damage their faith significantly.

Solution:  Students need genuineness.  They need to see you talk a big game and live a big game for Christ.  They need you to be open and honest with them.  They need to know areas in which you struggle and when you mess up (you will!) they need you to man up to your mistakes, ask the Lord and your family for forgiveness, and commit to doing better for the glory of God.  Too many dads either don’t allow their students to see who they really are (which makes them hypocrites in the eyes of their students) or they simply aren’t really who they say they are (which is the definition of a hypocrite).

Tony Richmond is the High School Pastor at First Baptist Church Keller in Keller, Texas.

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Josh Griffin is high school pastor at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, CA. He’s the co-counder of DownloadYouthMinistry.com and host of the Youth Ministry Garage Podcast. He's authored more than 20 youth ministry resources and is the author of "99 Thoughts for Small Group Leaders" with Doug Fields. Josh is a father of 4 who speaks a little, podcasts a little, Twitters a bit, and blogs a lot. You can find him at DownloadYouthMinistry.com!