They    think   that    if  their   child   would   get saved,  all the problems    of
living  would   be  solved. Sometimes   parents feel    this    way because,    in
their   own experience, getting saved   was a   spiritual   watershed.  They
want    their   child   to  have    that    experience  too.
(^) This    is  a   sensitive   issue   that    must    be  tempered    by  two facts:  1)
You can never   know    with    absolute    certainty   whether your    child   is
saved.  Many    passages    such    as  the “Lord,  Lord”   passage at  the end of
the Sermon  on  the Mount   (Matthew    7:21–23)    indicate    that    false   faith
can carry   someone a   long    way.    The heart   can even    deceive itself.
Thus,   the Bible   warns   about   the dangers of  being   self-deceived   and
exhorts you to  test    yourself    to  see whether you are in  the faith.  2)  A
child’s profession  of  faith   in  Christ  does    not change  the basic   issues
of  childrearing.   The parent’s    goals   are the same.   The things  the child
is  called  to  are the same.   He  requires    the same    training    he  required
before.  He  will    have    times   of  tenderness  and     times   of  spiritual
coldness.   The parent’s    task    does    not change  when    the child   makes   a
decision.
(^) There   are many    passages    that    teach   the need    to  shepherd,   to  train,
to  instruct,   and to  discipline  your    children.   None    of  these   passages    has
getting a   child   to  pray    the “sinner’s   prayer” as  its focus.
Family  Worship
(^) Some    parents are persuaded   that    the family  that    prays   together
stays   together,   so  they    determine   to  have    daily   Bible   reading times.
Each    family  member  must    be  present.    They    are conscientious   about
the need    for daily   devotions.  But,    as  valuable    as  family  worship is, it
is  no  substitute  for true    spirituality.
(^) I   know    a   family  that    never   missed  family  worship.    They    read    the
Bible   and prayed  each    day.    But in  family  living  and family  values
there   was no  connection  between the family  worship routine and life.
(^) While    family  worship     is  valuable,   the     family  worship     of  the
family  described   above   reflected   a   defective   spirituality.