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Cultivating a Servant's Heart in Your Children: Part 3

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The Boyer Blog: Cultivating a Servant's Heart in Your Children: Part 3

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Cultivating a Servant's Heart in Your Children: Part 3

Opening Doors for Service

To really teach your children to develop a servant’s heart, you must take them by the hand and lead them, showing them how to do it.

When our daughter Laura was about 10 years old, I began taking her to visit an elderly couple from our church who were retired missionaries. At first she was shy and didn’t talk much, but as time went on, she would ask him to tell his stories. He had been a missionary in Germany and remembered being present at a Hitler rally. He would tell of how he came to the Lord as a boy in Canada and how the Lord led him to life a life of faith, going out to serve Him and how the Lord would always provide for his needs.

I would tell Laura to listen for little hints of things “Uncle Jim and Aunt Lillie” liked. He has diabetes and couldn’t eat much sugar, but he was delighted to receive those little packets of jam and jelly you get in restaurants. She would ask the waitress if she could take a couple extra home for her Uncle Jim. She learned that Aunt Lillie loved the color purple, Cadbury candy bars and certain types of flowers. That way she learned to plan little gifts to bring to them when we would visit. They didn’t get out much and just to watch their faces light up when we would visit was a delight.

Sometimes, we would take them to a local restaurant for lunch. We would think of things happening at church or in our family that we could tell them about, bring them pictures to look at or books to read. Laura tells how Mom did this to train her how to have a servant’s heart, but she says she feels she was the greater beneficiary of blessing.

Once when we thought Uncle Jim was close to death and we visited him in the hospital, he was on pain meds and confused, but he related to Laura how he had been to China that day. A lady kept begging him to come and share the gospel and persisted so much that he had gone that day to share the gospel with her. It made such a huge impression on Laura, that as he lay close to death, the gospel of Christ was foremost on his mind, not his own suffering. He lived to the ripe age of 100, and Laura and I visited him just days before he died at which time he clearly prayed for us. Laura not only learned how to serve others but how God blesses one for obedience to Him and gives you a double blessing for being willing to obey.

We looked for other opportunities to be a blessing to others, new moms in our church or family, widows, families moving or just needing a break…. the opportunities for service are endless. The key is to become alert to seeking out needs in others and then plunging in to meet those needs when possible. I remember when our son Rick installed motion detector lights for a newly widowed lady in our church to surprise her and ask what he could do to help her, things like taking out the outside furniture in the spring or cleaning her gutters- things her husband used to do for her. Another son would slip a hundred dollar bill to a family in need or go rake leaves for an elderly couple, pump their gas, etc.

Your job is just to get your kids thinking this way and take them along with you as you reach out to others, and it will soon become a way of life for them. We have seen the benefits over and over again in the lives of our kids even as they have grown up. Instead of seeking pleasure for themselves, train your kids to be alert to the many needs around them. Maybe they can’t meet every one, but find some they can meet. Lead them to pray for needs they can’t meet.

About a year ago, I was talking with my youngest daughter, Kasey, and told her to find an older couple in church to try to be a blessing to. She thought, "well, what can I do?" I suggested she just have a ministry of hugs. Find an elderly person or couple, purpose to go up and hug them and give them a cheery hello every Sunday morning. She did that and now has two couples and a widower she looks for every week who we often will go visit. They ask for her, love to receive those hugs and think she’s a pretty special little girl. She, on the other hand gets the blessing of hearing the stories of their lives, (some are veterans of World War II) and learning from the wisdom of lives well lived. God honors the mixing of age groups- all benefit from the contacts made. Consider asking people into your home who have lived godly lives. Serve them and see what blessings God will bring about in the lives of your family members.

next week- part 4- A glimpse into the lives of kids raised this way.

~Marilyn

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4 Comments:

Blogger Healthy said...

Dear Marilyn,

I'm Polish living in Poland. Reading your blog I'm blessd. I'd like to share what I read with my friends in Poland. Would you mind if I translate some of your posts and put it into my blog? Not all, because not everything suits to our situation in Poland. Not all suits to my situation as well - I'm a mother of only two child, and only one (the youngest - 13 years old) is homeschooled. Of course I'll link the translation, so my readers will be able to find your blog.

So if your agree, please send me your "yes" to my e-mail: wyspaskarbow1@o2.pl

greetings
Halina

January 21, 2011 at 5:20 AM  
Anonymous Marilyn said...

Sure thing. Please use anything you would find helpful.
Blessings,
Marilyn

January 25, 2011 at 3:50 PM  
Blogger Healthy said...

Thank you very much for you agreement. I will start from "Home schooling high schoolers" - because my daughter is 13, and here there are only a few children in her age are homeschooled in Poland. So very often I have doubts if my decision to keep her home is right You posts about high schoolers resolve my doubts.

Blessings
Halina

February 5, 2011 at 6:46 PM  
Blogger Healthy said...

Thank you.
Halina

February 5, 2011 at 6:48 PM  

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