parents.    They    are suffering   under   the cruelty of  their   parents’    harsh
words.  Any  instruction     is  lost    to  a   wounded     spirit  and     deepening
alienation.
(^) “A   wise    man’s   heart   guides  his     mouth,  and     his     lips    promote
instruction”    (Proverbs   16:23).
(^) In  all your    interaction,    your    focus   is  to  see your    teenagers   find
comfort and strength    in  knowing God.
(^) Teenagers   experience  frequent    failure.    As  Christian   parents,    you
must     become  adept   at  taking  your    child   to  the     Cross   to  find
forgiveness and power   to  live.   You do  your    children    great   disservice
if  you strip   away    all the excuses for failure and force   them    to  see their
sin as  it  is, without giving  them    well-worn   paths   to  the Cross.  No
wonder  Christian   teens   often   have    such    a    poor    self-concept!   They
have    been    taught  to  see through all their   false   mechanisms  for dealing
with    guilt,  but have    not been    taught  adequately  where   to  go  with    it.
(^) Even    your    times   of  warning must    have    a   positive    thrust. You have
a   good    pattern in  the book    of  Hebrews.    In  Hebrews 6,  after   giving
very     straightforward     warning,    the     writer  adds    these   words:  “Even
though  we  speak   like    this,   dear    friends,    we  are confident   of  better
things  in  your    case    ....”   (Hebrews    6:19).
Developing  an  Adult   Relationship
(^) A   good    metaphor    for the parent  and teenage child   relationship    is
the relationship    adults  would   have    with    one another.    There   are several
elements    to  an  adult   relationship    that    parallel    your    relationship    with
your    teen.   This    does    not signal  the child’s moving  out from    under
parental     oversight;  rather,     it  marks   the     parent’s    sensitivity     to  the
child’s ascent  into    adulthood.
(^) Think   of  your    relationship    to  your    child   in  these   terms.  In  your
nurturing    relationships   with    adult   friends,    how     would   you     try     to
pursue  that    friendship? What    are some    of  the “dos”   and “don’ts”    of
adult   relationship?
