Site icon Kids Bible Lessons

Connecting Church & Home: Opening Questions

The conference began with lunch and panel discussion. It was a fast moving session with much more going on than I could write down. Instead, I will list some of the takeaways from my notes.
Definition: The family equipping model seeks to reorient existing ministry programs so that parents are better trained, equipped, and acknowledge for their role in the discipleship of their children.
This whole process is about conversation and soul searching. No one group has figured out the perfect way to connect church and home. Even the panel speakers continue to transition and seek to do a better job with family equipping ministry.
This transition begins with attitudes and a new mindset. This is true for both parents and ministry leaders. It begins with taking the Bible seriously in passages like Deuteronomy 6,  Psalm 78, and Matthew 28. It is not about programs but about a culture within the church that affirms the role of the home.

For more coverage of the 2010 Connecting Church & Home Conference visit our summary page. You can listen to audio from this conference on the Southern Seminary website.

Dr. Timothy Paul Jones shares some research. Most parents admit they are responsible for the discipleship of their kids but fail to do anything about it. Almost none of these parents were given help or training by their church. There are two facts that help us understand when parents are spiritually disengaged. First, they have never been told or trained. Second, they don’t feel they have the time.
Steve Wright shared about families living on mission. This is a response to the concern about this being an inward focused ministry paradigm.  He listed the following:

Several on the panel offered ideas for encouraging dads. The idea was to give them ‘wins’ to help them achieve forward progress and take ownership of family discipleship.

Exit mobile version