The phrase learning
Christ appears only once in the New Testament. Paul uses this phrase when
he contrasts the church and the world. In Ephesians 4:17-19, he describes what
people naturally learn because of the
desires of their hardened hearts that follow the world (Ephesians 2:1-3). Then,
in Ephesians 4:20, he says that the Ephesians did not come learn Christ
that way. In the context of verse 20, those who are alienated, separated from
the life of God--in other words, the world--learn darkness, not Christ. Thus, sensitivity becomes
impossible. That darkness produces futile thinking. Those who think and live
like the world are dominated by darkness, futility and sensuality. So Paul says
that this is not the way they learned Christ.
Let's be clear. Paul says there
are only two ways of living or thinking. One way is to follow the natural path
of darkness that all men were born with (Ephesians 2:1-3). The other way is to
learn Christ. This is the point that must not be missed. Paul wants the
Ephesians to put off the dark ways of their birth and to put on the way of
light, that is, the person of Christ. Man's schemes and plans, no matter
whether they appear to be noble and practical or licentious and foolish, are
rooted in darkness. Without Christ, they are still pathways to futility and
darkness. They are deceptive. They can never satisfy. For the person who is not
a Christians, having a good marriage for the sake of having a good marriage
leads to darkness and, ultimately, to sadness and bitterness, because Christ is
not learned this way. For the non-Christian, having children who please him is
a futile goal that leads to heartbreak, because Christ is not learned this way.
Merely raising children to avoid things that are distasteful to parents is futile;
it will only encourage sensuality to
take deep root in their hearts. Your goals may seem noble. You may earnestly
desire that your children will avoid the pitfalls of this world. You can
structure your lifestyle in order to keep your children from evil things. But
if that is all you have done, and you have not taught them Christ, you have
taught them futility and darkness. Avoiding evil is not the same as learning
Christ.
Likewise, when it comes to
the sins of lust and desire, planning how to avoid them is not enough. When you
find your teenagers engaging in pornography or others sins of desire, a
response in terms of lost privileges and consequences, without learning Christ,
is not enough. It will only lead to more enslavement for your children and more
futility in parenting for you (Colossians 2:20-23).
Someone might be thinking -
but I am not sure that my child knows Christ, so I have to rely on
punishment and consequences. I understand your concern, but that thinking
will also lead to more problems. What your children need is the gospel - they
must learn Christ! That is the point. Severe consequences may yield a change in
behavior, but darkness will still rule in the heart. You must bring the person
of Christ to your parenting. Depending upon consequences and restrictions to
keep your teenagers from the power of lust and sensuality will only encourage
these sins (Colossians 2:23). Remember,
sin is not logical. One who is enslaved by lust is like the person on the way
of evil in Proverbs 4:19 - they do not know what makes them stumble. Christ
alone must be the answer that you give them. This is scary for us as parents.
We are uncomfortable leaving things in God's hands this way. But as long as
parents cling to rules and consequences as the means to control their children,
they cannot offer Christ. I am not saying that you allow your children to view
pornography, nor that you do nothing in response to their sin. Rather, I am
saying that if you yourself are not gripped by the power of the gospel, and if you
do not bring the person of Christ into this situation, you are not teaching
Christ - unwittingly, you are teaching darkness.
That is why the father in
the last post responded the way that he did. He started with the cross. He
realized that modifying his child's behavior would not address the unquenchable
fires of lust. This dad became vulnerable, trusted Christ to help him, and
offered Christ to his son. By breaking through the barrier of defensiveness,
this father positioned himself to explain why lust is so powerful and why
learning Christ is the answer. He offered the way of light, not darkness. He
offered Christ, not consequences.
Please let me know your
thoughts about this series. These issues are plaguing many families. Learning
Christ is the only way to turn from living like the world. The next post will
be the last in the series unless you have additional thoughts or questions.
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Jay, thanks for posting this series on a topic that is probably uncomfortable for most parents to address with their kids. But if we don't help them deal with it we are leading them further in to darkness. Thank God for the power of the cross!
Thank you soo much, excellent teaching! May i post this on facebook and put your link?