A book of common sense delivered in a well-argued, condensed, humorous and practical manner and deeply rooted in the biblical narrative. It stung. It clarified. It uplifted. Love it!
My first encounter with Douglas Wilson. I’ve immediately began another of his books, Future Men.
Some of the well-dealt ideas in the book: the centrality of imitation in both our growth & our children’s, the necessity of sacrificing WITH singing/thanksgiving, the differences between legalism, licence and liberty, between discipline and punishment, the concept of Christian paideia, the importance of enjoying your kids in every stage etc.
And here are three quotes:
“Jesus literally sang as He was preparing to go to the cross. So, the sacrifices that you will make for your children should be something you can sing over. If there is not a song in it, it is not a biblical sacrifice. Without a song, it is a poor-me, look-at-the-martyr-go sacrifice, and those kinds of sacrifices have a very poor return. You are not just supposed to sing over your children when they are being adorable, asleep in their bed, and you can be at peace with them since they are not misbehaving at the moment. Life is messier than that, and the whole thing—including the mess—should be met with a song. The delight that we are imitating is not an unrealistic delight. This kind of delight takes account of the world as it is, and even so, it rejoices. You sing over your children when you are sacrificing for them, when you are taking the hit for them, and when they have no idea what you are giving up for them.”
“When you have a home filled with grace, it is not without standards. You are not introducing moral anarchy. Grace is not an amorphous, gelatinous mass. Grace has a backbone. However, when the standards are broken, the heaviest sacrifices in the work of restoration are made by the guardians of grace, not by enforcers of law, finger-pointers, parental accusers, or people who correct in a nasal tone of self-pity. "
“No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but the glory of discipline is found in the harvest (Heb. 12:11). Discipline and fruition occupy time, just like your children do. Bringing children up is not abstract bookkeeping, but is rather a story—from planting to harvest. Hardship in a story is grace. Hardship without a story is just pain.
Childrearing is the opportunity that you have to love your children in preparation for a harvest, but that means you need to have the harvest in mind.”