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Family Guidance

Bringing the Gospel to Covenant Children (Family Guidance) Paperback – January 10, 2011

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This book is packed with practical guidance on how to evangelize covenant children and how, by God's grace, to make the home a nursery for heaven. After showing that Christians today fail to understand the role of the covenant in their children's lives, Joel R. Beeke offers insight on the covenant relationship between God and man, and its implications for home and family. He then teaches parents how to instruct their children in the gospel, with detailed guidelines on how to use prayer, family worship, teaching, conversation, and mentoring to evangelize children. Leading a child to Christ is a lengthy but hopeful journey in which parents must use God's appointed means while depending radically upon the Holy Spirit to produce the desired result. Table of
1. Understanding the Need
2. Teaching the Content of the Gospel
3. Using the Means
4. Concluding Applications
A Loving Encouragement to Flee Worldliness

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About the author

Joel R. Beeke

445 books344 followers
Dr. Joel R. Beeke serves as President and Professor of Systematic Theology, Church History, and Homiletics at Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary. He has been in the ministry since 1978 and has served as a pastor of his current church, Heritage Reformed Congregation, since 1986. He is also editor of the Banner of Sovereign Grace Truth, editorial director of Reformation Heritage Books, president of Inheritance Publishers, and vice-president of the Dutch Reformed Translation Society. He has written, co-authored, or edited fifty books and contributed over fifteen hundred articles to Reformed books, journals, periodicals, and encyclopedias. His Ph.D. (1988) from Westminster Theological Seminary is in Reformation and Post-Reformation Theology. He is frequently called upon to lecture at Reformed seminaries and to speak at conferences around the world. He and his wife, Mary, have three children: Calvin, Esther, and Lydia.

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Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews
Profile Image for William Schrecengost.
907 reviews33 followers
August 7, 2020
It was good. But he approached it from the perspective of needing to evangelize your child who's already baptized and in the covenant. This makes baptism little more than a dedication. I don't like how many covenant theologians divide the covenant where you get an outward part at baptism, but have to make a profession of faith in order to get the other part.
Even so, he does have lots of good advice on family worship and would recommend it for that reason. Looking forward to reading the others in this series
Profile Image for George.
48 reviews3 followers
January 17, 2020
Quite good and practical. The book packs quite a punch even though it is relatively brief.
The only letdown is when the author veers too far into conscience issues such as watching television which the author considers a form of worldliness on account of most TV shows being immoral or even speaking of a 'beat' of music that is worldly.
A better approach would have been to leave it at judging matters on a case by case basis which the author does speak about. After all, the Westminster Confession in chapter 20 teaches that God alone is Lord of the conscience.
Nevertheless, the book overall is a must read for every parent in Reformed and Presbyterian churches. Sunday school teachers will also benefit greatly from it.
I especially appreciated the author highlighting how to go about using the 3 uses of the moral law in instructing children.
Profile Image for Daniel.
223 reviews13 followers
February 2, 2023
While I do not hold to the underlying paedobaptist understanding of covenant children, there is a lot of helpful material here for all Christians. For those who do hold that theological position, Beeke reminds readers that even children born to believing parents need to be evangelized and urged to trust in Christ.

Beeke combines solid biblical and theological reflection on parenting with practical examples of how to lead your children to Christ, trusting the Holy Spirit to use means in His good timing. One of Beeke’s big emphases is the character and holiness of parents, and thus the example we give our children. There are important reminders to flee worldliness (including an appendix devoted to this topic).

It became clearer to me through reading this book how catechesis isn’t only a good idea, but actually directly biblical in its origins. The word in various forms is used in the NT in the sense of instructing one in the essentials of the faith.

One gets the sense through Beeke’s use of the KJV, occasional older language, and some of his illustrations, that Beeke ministers in a very traditional context. That may be off-putting to some, but I do not think it is overly distracting. So many rich reflections to be found in this book.
48 reviews2 followers
February 14, 2022
A very rigorous book. Beeke is uncompromising in how he presents this topic and while he may lack nuance at points, the book is very helpful as an exhortation to great zeal in bringing the gospel to children.
Profile Image for Phil.
128 reviews
February 15, 2022
Practical and theological.

He goes way too far on conscience issues. He condemns certain genres of music and dancing.
Profile Image for Gradon Schaub.
70 reviews2 followers
June 14, 2021
Whether you are paedobaptist or credobaptist, this book is an excellent resource for parents. He packs a lot of sound biblical counsel into this book along with practical application. His standard for godly parents is high and will encourage to rely more and more upon the Spirit and God’s Word in your parenting.
Profile Image for Becky Pliego.
707 reviews591 followers
January 20, 2013
A very practical booklet in which the author explains clearly why it is important to bring the Gospel to our children, how to do it, and what things we should not forget to teach them.

Joel R. Beeke encourages prayer and reminds us to depend on God's grace as we parent our children.

I really enjoyed this book.
Profile Image for Simon Field.
190 reviews2 followers
February 18, 2022
Full of practical wisdom as well as encouragement for the evangelisation as well as the discipleship of children. Beeke sets the bar and challenges parents to take seriously their calling before God. Christian parents should teach their household in the the same way that Abraham taught his household (Gen 18:19).
I liked the emphasis on catechising/instructing children as well as family worship.
There was little discussion over what makes a covenant child vs a child born outside of the covenant apart from the reference to children of at least one believer being holy according to in 1 Cor 7. As someone who belives in one covenant of grace, I would have been interested to understand the reasoning here.
Profile Image for Jason Bray.
74 reviews2 followers
March 11, 2023
There’s a decent amount of good child-rearing advice here, but he seems to have an approach to salvation of children that strikes me as odd. For one, he writes as though he wants you to be extremely uncertain about your child’s spiritual state and to communicate that uncertainty to your children. I can’t imagine a worse approach. It’s literally teaching them not to have faith. Conversion is an invisible action of the Spirit. We should cultivate obedience and the fruit of the Spirit, not obsess over getting them “converted”, which is neither doable by or knowable by us.

That said, if you can shed the fear motivation, I like the catechizing, praying, teaching your kids about the gospel, etc. All excellent advice.
Profile Image for Matt Crawford.
527 reviews10 followers
November 2, 2024
Often times you can read a book and think it did not accomplish what it set out to do. That is not the case here. The only complaints you can really make about this book is that it’s not long enough, but it’s not meant to be. It’s meant to be a short booklet. Less than 100 pages. With the intention of getting your mind in the right place. It could be sun up as more as caught than hot. But it is a call, not to abandon our faith and not to abandon our children as they wander from the faith. We want our children to have the same lessons learned that we do, but we don’t want them to have gone through our experiences in order to have them. That can be awfully discouraging. So Dr. Beeke offers some encouragement.
Profile Image for Jacob London.
181 reviews8 followers
October 27, 2018
If I could give this book ten stars I would. Beeke deals a crushing blow to the presumptive regeneration of Kuyper, showing with boldness that the family is to evangelize their children. Beeke humbly reminds us with scripture of our duties while comforting us with God's grace. Would recommend.
69 reviews3 followers
July 22, 2017
Good encouragement to Christian parents to preach the gospel to their children. A more clear than normal explanation for what it actually means for children to be "in the covenant".
Profile Image for Leanne.
146 reviews15 followers
January 17, 2023
A totally applicable guide to bringing the gospel to covenant children. I will be reaching for this as a quick guide whenever I need a quick motivating reminder. Quick & easy but beneficial read.
Profile Image for Kevin Brown.
160 reviews1 follower
September 22, 2025
A short and helpful book (really a pamphlet) on an important topic. I found it to be convicting and practical.
81 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2024
Purchase a copy of this booklet here! (affiliate link): https://amzn.to/4f8NurF
This little book is a wonderful summary and amendment to some of Beeke's other works on family worship, and on the nature of the gospel. I highly recommend this book to young families and newly married couples. It would even be useful to distribute to nursery volunteers or Sunday school teachers. I found the chapter on "Using the Means" to be the most useful, though his conclusion on avoiding worldliness was just as convicting!
323 reviews10 followers
January 25, 2016
A helpful, short book with practical and specific guidance on passing our faith to our kids. The part I liked the most was the explanation of the relationship between baptized, covenant children and the need for parents to evangelize them and pray for their salvation. It was refreshing to hear an emphasis on both elements of this discussion.
Profile Image for Steve Hemmeke.
650 reviews42 followers
November 26, 2011
Direct, practical instruction on how to raise children in godliness, day by day.
Sometimes, it's a little too pietistic, but overall a very illuminating booklet.
Read, and do. Start in on this with your family!
Profile Image for Josh.
613 reviews
November 12, 2014
Short, clear, practical, helpful. Great little book.
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews

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