1, 2, 3.
Speaker AWelcome to the Rap Report with your host, Andrew Rapaport, where we provide biblical interpretation and application.
Speaker AThis is a ministry of Striving for Eternity and the Christian podcast community.
Speaker AFor more content or to request a.
Speaker BSpeaker for your church, go to Striving.
Speaker AFor eternity dot org.
Speaker BWelcome to another edition of the Rap Report.
Speaker BI'm your host, Andrew Rappaport, the executive director of Striving Fraternity and the Christian Podcast me, of which this podcast is a proud member.
Speaker BWe're here to give you biblical application, interpretations and applications for the Christian life.
Speaker BAnd today we're going to talk about.
Speaker BWell, that, that thing nobody ever struggles with.
Speaker BThere's.
Speaker BThere's no adults that struggle with parenting ever.
Speaker BLike, it's just the easiest thing in the world.
Speaker BMaybe not.
Speaker BBut one thing that sets Christians apart when it comes to our parenting, or at least it should, is viewing our parenting not as a responsibility we have to just raise future adults, but discipleship.
Speaker BThat our children are actually something we are given by God to be stewards of, to disciple them and so that they would know and love God more.
Speaker BWe're going to be talking about that.
Speaker BThe book that we're going to talk about is Parenting against the Culture, Taking back discipleship in your home.
Speaker BAnd I have Pastor Joshua here with me.
Speaker BSo first time you're coming onto the show, Pastor Josh, if you wouldn't mind introducing yourself, a little bit about you, the church you, you serve at, and then how you came about writing this book.
Speaker AYeah, thanks for having me on, Andrew.
Speaker AExcited to get to dive in with you.
Speaker AI have been in the.
Speaker AOn this journey with Jesus really since my early 20s, where I was trying to figure out.
Speaker AFigure out who God was, finally looked at the evidence, gave him all of me.
Speaker AAnd when I did, I was blessed enough to have a group of men walk beside me.
Speaker AOne in particular, actually.
Speaker AThe co author of this book, Matt Nations.
Speaker ADisciple me and spend time with me and pour into me and shepherd my heart.
Speaker AAnd as that was happening, I met my future wife and life kept moving forward.
Speaker ABut the tension that this book was based on, and really the tension that I still feel as a parent today is my kids were born and then I am left trying to figure out what the heck to do.
Speaker AHow much sunlight do they need?
Speaker AHow do I water these guys?
Speaker AWhat do I do?
Speaker AAnd really just trying to do it effectively to the glory of God.
Speaker AWhich means that rather than letting culture, the current of this world, dictate where my kids are going to go, I want to push upstream and I want to shepherd with intent and move in a direction that God has been inviting us into.
Speaker ASo with that was really wrestling with my kiddos being born, trying to figure out how do I lead them to a place that I was never led to myself and my home, which I know is the story of many, many other Christians.
Speaker ASo I started taking, with the council and the support and the help of a ton of other people, started taking advice and wisdom from others who have been further ahead or further upstream than I am even now, asking, hey, what did you do?
Speaker AWhat worked?
Speaker AWhere'd you fail?
Speaker AAnd then I was mostly I contributed.
Speaker AHere's where I failed because I didn't have a lot of experience in the succeeding part of the ministry in my home.
Speaker AAnd yet God over and over again honored that.
Speaker AI started having parents come up to me.
Speaker AI was a student pastor at the time, and they were coming up to me saying, josh, what do we do?
Speaker ALike, how do we.
Speaker ALike, discipleship with adults is thriving in our church, but it's not scaling into the home, which the reality is, like, your home was plan A for discipleship for God.
Speaker ALike, that is the primary place that we are meant to be discipling others, meaning that if it's not scaling into the home, there's a problem.
Speaker AAnd so it started by equipping parents and trainings and a blog, and turned into really this book, Parenting against the Current.
Speaker ALike, we've got a current that we live in, but we need to be moving against it and we shouldn't be moving along.
Speaker BSo where are you pastoring at right now?
Speaker AYeah, I'm in West Hartford, Connecticut.
Speaker AI'm the pastor of 180 Life Church.
Speaker ASo I've been here for about two years.
Speaker AWas the next gen pastor at Cy Life Church in Texas before that.
Speaker AAnd New England is different.
Speaker AWe're still kind of figuring it out.
Speaker AAnd yet we are 100 certain that this is where God has called us.
Speaker ASo we're really blessed to get to be a part of the mission over here.
Speaker BAnd you, you figured, you know, Texas, it's kind of Bible Beltish and you wanted to go to some easy place to shepherd.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker AYou know what?
Speaker AI like the clarity, though.
Speaker ALike, people told me they were like, it's a spiritual graveyard over there.
Speaker AAnd I was like, well, Jesus makes dead things alive, so.
Speaker ABut the tension is in Texas, you have to convince people they're not saved.
Speaker ALike, there's cultural Christianity over there.
Speaker AWhere here, like, man, there is no reason to be a Christian except that it's true here.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker AAnd so to get to be a part of that, where it's like, man, it's clear, and, hey, you're against Jesus.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker ALet's talk about.
Speaker ALet's have a dialogue.
Speaker ALet's have some relationship.
Speaker AI like the clarity.
Speaker AAnd so that's one of the reasons that we're excited to be here.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BI mean, I've always said that with Jersey, it's.
Speaker BPeople don't pretend to be a Christian.
Speaker BSo it's really easy in that sense.
Speaker BYou're not having to deal with, like, convincing someone they're not, because they're.
Speaker BThey're gonna give you a hard time if you say you're a Christian.
Speaker BSo it's like, all right, well, let's go.
Speaker BSo definitely works on your apologetics.
Speaker AOh, amen.
Speaker AI mean, in Texas, like, you want to be a good realtor, be a Christian.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AIt's a strategy there.
Speaker AHere it is.
Speaker AIt has worked against us more than it's worked for.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BAll right, so.
Speaker BSo let's talk about the.
Speaker BThis book, because I think that we have a number of people in the audience who are parents, and the reality is that a lot of people.
Speaker BAnd a lot of people do struggle with parenting.
Speaker BI mean, I joked that it's just so easy, but, you know, like you said, a lot of people don't think about how they're going to parent until all of a sudden the wife is pregnant or the kids are born and they haven't thought of a plan.
Speaker BAnd the reality is, those that thought they had a plan, it goes out the window.
Speaker BOnce that baby is crying its head off and you're like, what do I do with this child?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo I first want to talk about the title, because a very.
Speaker BA very poignant title.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BParenting against the Current, when you say it, what do you see as the current that we have in parenting currently in our culture that you're trying to parent against?
Speaker AYeah, we kept that pretty.
Speaker APretty broad sweeping.
Speaker AAnd the reason is there's so many currents.
Speaker ALike, we have.
Speaker AWe have left the garden where the design and the default matched each other, and now we're in the world where the default of the world does not move in the same same step as the design, which means that the current is anything that is pulling you away from being the disciple maker you were created to be, which means that culture, especially in New England, emphasis on New England, is the current your exhaustion level is the current your job that you say, hey, I'm providing for my family, but it actually requires you not to be able to Be intentional in your home.
Speaker AThat's the current.
Speaker AAnd we need to be pushing.
Speaker ASo it's really anything preventing you from being the disciple maker you were created to be.
Speaker AAnd you even you listed one a minute ago.
Speaker ABecause one of the cultures of today is, I will prepare when the opportunity arises, right?
Speaker ASo, like, I'll prepare to disciple my kids when they come out and I get to hold them.
Speaker AAnd yet, like, really, what we should be doing, if you're looking biblically, like, we're meant to prepare in advance for the time to come, that when your child says, hey, what is this Jesus thing like?
Speaker ALike, what does a relationship with Jesus even mean?
Speaker AWhat is sin?
Speaker AYou've already been preparing for years.
Speaker ALike, they can't talk at first.
Speaker AYou've got plenty of time.
Speaker ALike, you've been preparing for years so that when the time comes, you're ready.
Speaker BAnd the thing is that I know a lot of parents who thought when it comes to discipleship, which I think we're going to speak about a lot in this episode, their thought is, well, I start discipling my children when they're 4, 5, but you really can't really start until 7, 8, 9, because they don't understand these things.
Speaker BWhen should we start discipleship with our children?
Speaker BHow early.
Speaker AEmphasis on before they're born.
Speaker ACan we say that?
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker AAnd it's not so much like the perspective and the goal is going to shift.
Speaker AAnd so obviously you're not shepherding your kid's heart when they're in the womb, but what you are doing, again, you're training, you're preparing.
Speaker ASo I would say those first two to three years, I encourage parents, like, share the gospel with your kid through a random toy in their room one.
Speaker AFirst time you do it, you're going to sound like a doofus.
Speaker ALike, it's not going to sound good.
Speaker AIt's going to be a hot mess.
Speaker AIt's okay.
Speaker AThey won't remember.
Speaker AYou're not going to mess up their theology.
Speaker ABut you do it and you get in the reps, and by the time that they're five or six or in there ready to hear it, they're going to pull out a didgeridoo and you're going to be able to share the gospel through that Australian instrument.
Speaker AYou're going to be ready to go.
Speaker AAnd so preparing in advance, partly it's about discipling them, but the other piece is like, you being the disciple you need to be when they need you to be that.
Speaker AThe other piece, I would say, is there's things that you can do very early on.
Speaker ADiscipleship doesn't start with theology or at least by word of mouth.
Speaker AThe first thing that you're doing as a parent is saying, hey, I'm here to help with your needs.
Speaker AI'm a safe place for you to come to.
Speaker ALike when you're hurt, I will hold you close.
Speaker AAnd in all of that you are a representation, earthly representation of a heavenly father, which means that you have plenty of opportunities right there.
Speaker ABy the time they're two, when my two year old working on complete sentences right now, he's starting to figure it out.
Speaker ABut tell you what, he can sing some worship songs.
Speaker ALike he knows those songs because kids, for whatever reason, a melody just steals them away.
Speaker AAnd so he, without even understanding what he's singing half the time, will sing worship music because that's what he hears in our home.
Speaker AAnd so I would say there are pieces like that where you can start instilling truth at a very early age.
Speaker ANow it needs to shift as they get older.
Speaker AIf you give your teenager baby food, they're going to be very annoyed with you.
Speaker AAnd if you give your infant steak, they're going to choke on it.
Speaker ASo you got to scale up with them.
Speaker AIt's something that I would call needs based parenting.
Speaker AYou don't, you don't parent or disciple based on your specific sweet spot, which is tough because like you'll find an age range and it's starting to click and as soon as it clicks you're like, oh, they're older now.
Speaker ALike I don't want them to be older come back.
Speaker AAnd yet we need a parent based on where they are and what they need.
Speaker ABecause if I know where they are and I know what they need, then I am equipped as a disciple maker to help them take that next step.
Speaker AAnd that's really what it's about.
Speaker BYeah, and the thing is is that we, you and I talked about this earlier, you know, off air some, some weeks ago, but people don't realize how much.
Speaker BWell, for example, my daughter, you know, I have a two year old grandson, so about the age of your, your boy.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker BAnd he does the, he brings his own as his early as he could start walking.
Speaker BHe started, you know, she trained him, she discipled him to bring his laundry to the washing machine.
Speaker BHe does, you know, when she's doing food prep for dinner.
Speaker BSo is he.
Speaker BNow granted, he cuts the zucchinis and it doesn't look really nice, but he's cutting them right.
Speaker BHe, when they, when they Go to bake something.
Speaker BHe's, she basically hands him, she spooks, spoons out the, or takes a, you know, cup of flour, hands it to him, he flips it into the bowl, knocks it in, he'll stir it.
Speaker BGranted, she has to do it afterwards, but he, he helps her with emptying the dishes, right?
Speaker BAll these things.
Speaker BAnd he's been doing that before he was two years old.
Speaker BIt wasn't something where he just does it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut he's growing up knowing, well, Mom's doing this and I do this, I help mom.
Speaker BIt's, it's just part of the discipleship that she does with him.
Speaker BAnd so I think that a lot of people don't even realize that there's, there's things they could be doing in discipling their children.
Speaker BIt's, it's something that is just not, they think, oh, I gotta wait till they're older.
Speaker BI, I there, they can't handle this now.
Speaker BAnd I think one thing that if, if that we can emphasize here is the fact that that's not true.
Speaker BWe could start early on.
Speaker BAnd in fact, I think the earlier the better because then the children know they grow up being that this is, this is norm, you know, this is the norm for them.
Speaker AYeah, I think that that's such an important piece.
Speaker AWe've lost the art of taking our kids with us.
Speaker AThat was a cultural thing back in the day.
Speaker ALike I say back in the day, I don't know how long ago, but there was a time before iPads and TVs were used to pacify our kids because they, if we're being real, Andrew, they're not going to make it easier.
Speaker ALike they're not going to cut the zucchini and make it the way that you want it.
Speaker AAnd they're going to break some dishes when they help you empty the dishwasher.
Speaker AAnd my daughter still is figuring out how to mop a program appropriately.
Speaker AHowever, that's not the, it's not really the point.
Speaker ALike them learning how to do that stuff, well, is secondary, still important, not the primary target.
Speaker AIt's, I want a culture in my home.
Speaker AAnd it sounds like your kids want the same in their home with your grandkids of like, hey, I'm gonna take you with me wherever, wherever I go.
Speaker AWhich means that when my daughter blew out her bicycle tire the other day, it's like, all right, let's repair the tire together.
Speaker AAnd there's certain things that are really hard for a seven year old to do.
Speaker AAnd yet she was there she was handing me the tools.
Speaker AShe now knows what a socket wrench is.
Speaker AAnd she's.
Speaker AShe's learning.
Speaker AAnd even better than the learning is, we are building a deeper and deeper relationship.
Speaker AAnd that is the found relationship is the foundation of discipleship.
Speaker AYou cannot have effective discipleship without strong relationship.
Speaker BAnd I think that part of this, I mean your emphasis, having spoken with you, is very much on discipleship, which is the goal we have here at striving for eternity is and is discipleship.
Speaker BI think that this is like a lost art.
Speaker BThis is something that I find a lot of people when they talk about discipleship.
Speaker BA lot of pastors talk about it as from the pulpit.
Speaker BWhy disciple from the pulpit?
Speaker BI. I think that loses the idea what discipleship is.
Speaker BAnd that's why so many people don't see their parenting as discipleship.
Speaker BWhat.
Speaker BWhat's your understanding view of what discipleship is?
Speaker BAnd let's put aside the parenting at first.
Speaker BHow should we see that in the church?
Speaker BAnd then follow on with, how should we see that in the home?
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AYeah, my buddy Stevo, I was meeting with him this back when I was in Texas, so this is probably seven years ago.
Speaker AAnd I sat down with him.
Speaker AHe was a guy that I felt called to even before we moved.
Speaker AAnd so I asked him, I was like, hey, man, have you ever been discipled before?
Speaker ABecause I'd been praying about it, like, hey, like, hey, I think he's a guy that I need to walk beside and help.
Speaker AHelp raise up as a godly man.
Speaker AAnd so I asked him, hey, have you ever been discipled before?
Speaker AAnd he goes, yeah, Bob disciples me every Sunday.
Speaker AAnd he was talking about the lead pastor.
Speaker AI was like, cool, well, Bob's in his office.
Speaker AGo ask him.
Speaker AAsk him if he's discipling you.
Speaker AAnd obviously he didn't do that because Bob didn't know who he was.
Speaker AAnd that, I think, is what you're describing.
Speaker AI tell my church all the time, like, hey, I'm pouring in, I'm teaching.
Speaker ABut our definition of discipleship, and this is one of the reasons we get into trouble, is we all have different definitions of discipleship.
Speaker AOurs is a personal relationship that has consistency, authenticity, and it's going to lead to spiritual growth.
Speaker ALike, that's the target.
Speaker AIt's not.
Speaker AWe don't do stealth mode discipleship.
Speaker ABecause I don't see Jesus, like three years down the road with people be like, surprise, I've been discipling you this whole time.
Speaker AHe doesn't.
Speaker AHe says, follow me.
Speaker AAnd I will make you fishers of men.
Speaker AThere's no secrecy about it.
Speaker AAnd so I'd say there's a level of intentionality and an intimacy that cannot happen with a crowd.
Speaker ASo I say, Jesus had 12.
Speaker AI'm not Jesus, so I'm probably going to have a lot less.
Speaker AI'm discipling my kids.
Speaker AThere are seasons where I disciple my wife, although she is discipled by other women, and they are crushing it, and she's discipling other women.
Speaker AAnd then I've got several people from my church, and that's my small circle.
Speaker ASome of them I'm even closer with than others.
Speaker AAnd that's.
Speaker AThose are the people that.
Speaker AUntil it's time.
Speaker AAnd there will be a time soon where I'm other than my kids, but the adults.
Speaker AI'm going to raise you up, and I'm going to send you out, and I want you to go make disciples, too.
Speaker AAnd my kids, eventually I'm going to do that, except I get a little bit more time with them, which I'm very grateful for.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo in the home, you bring up a good point that people don't think about some people.
Speaker BSo focus on, well, I got to disciple people in the church.
Speaker BI got to work with people in the church.
Speaker BI got to make time for folks outside of the home.
Speaker BAnd I think that they take for granted the fact that you.
Speaker BYou have your children in your home for a lot longer than that person in your church as far as the time you have to spend with them.
Speaker BAnd I think some people take that for granted to spend time with folks outside the home, forgetting that 19 years or however long they're going to be in your home, it goes really quickly.
Speaker BI mean, I'm saying this as someone who has two adult children that have moved out.
Speaker BAnd I got to tell you, Josh, I used to go crazy when I first had kids, and all these older people would be like, enjoy it.
Speaker BIt goes really quick.
Speaker BAnd, you know, when I was sitting there pulling my hair out, trying to figure, like, how do I stop my son from crying all the time?
Speaker BWhat's he crying about?
Speaker BBecause I don't know.
Speaker BHe doesn't come and tell me why he's crying.
Speaker BLike, what's wrong?
Speaker BYou're trying to figure it out.
Speaker BAnd I never.
Speaker BI'm like, no, I can't wait till.
Speaker BI thinking to myself, like, I can't wait till he's older that I could do things with and communicate with him.
Speaker BAnd now I'm like.
Speaker BI'm saying to my daughter, enjoy it.
Speaker BIt goes really quick, right?
Speaker AI'm actively not thinking about that, Andrew, just so you know, I know it.
Speaker BComes goes quick, but we, we do need to.
Speaker BBecause I think that many men that I've counseled over the years, older men, they took for granted that the kids were in the home.
Speaker BAnd it wasn't until the kids were outside the home or leaving the home that they suddenly realized, oh, I have to disciple them, I gotta, you know, I haven't really spent the time with them to train them well enough.
Speaker BAnd you know, I know a lot of men who have that regret that they were focused so much with others in the church.
Speaker BThey neglected or didn't even see what's right in front of them.
Speaker BSo how important is discipleship within the home and how should that look?
Speaker AYeah, I would say it should be primary.
Speaker ALike it is, it is the design of the home for discipleship to be taking place there first.
Speaker AEven to the extent that I would say, and I've again told this to my church, my first ministry isn't my, the church that I lead, my first ministry is in my home.
Speaker AAnd I will not give my family the leftovers.
Speaker AWhich means that if you text me at 8pm and I'm doing family time and it's not an emergency, if it is, I will help you.
Speaker ABut if it's not, listen, like we can talk about announcements for next Sunday, we can talk about that later on in the week.
Speaker AIn fact, you should probably be talking to somebody else other than me for that.
Speaker AThe point being, like, my family is not going to be a place that I cheat out on.
Speaker AI'm going to let them be primary and not give them my leftovers.
Speaker AAnd that's the design.
Speaker ALike you go back to Deuteronomy 6, like, that's the design.
Speaker ALike you're walking beside your family and when they say, hey, what are those 12 stones about?
Speaker ASay, hey, this is what God did for Israel.
Speaker AThis is what God did for me.
Speaker AIt's another reason that sharing your testimony with your kids in age appropriate ways.
Speaker AI'm 13 years sober, recovered alcoholic.
Speaker AMy daughter knows that dad was a hot mess in college.
Speaker AShe knows that I was a shipwreck and I was apart from Jesus and I was doing my own thing.
Speaker AShe knows that alcoholism still a little bit too big for her to grasp.
Speaker ABut when it's time, when she is old enough, we're going to talk about it.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about the things that I stumbled through and that Jesus redeemed me of.
Speaker AAnd I'm going To talk right now about the things that I am actively messing up in.
Speaker ABecause what I don't want to do is I don't want to set up a standard.
Speaker AAnd I think.
Speaker AI think everybody naturally starts here, where you think adults just have it all figured out.
Speaker ALike, I remember, like, this literally the other day I looked in the mirror and I'm like, dude, you're a lead pastor of the church.
Speaker ALike, what.
Speaker AHow you're still figuring this thing out.
Speaker ABut kids, we naturally think that adults are perfect.
Speaker AAnd my role is anytime you've got a platform, and if you're a parent, you automatically have one, any platform, we need to remind people that we're human, too.
Speaker AYou see that throughout acts, we're just humans like you.
Speaker AAnd if we can model vulnerability and boast in our weakness and seek forgiveness actively, that's discipleship.
Speaker ALike, I want my kids to hear, will you forgive me from me more than anybody else?
Speaker ABecause I'm with them more than most people.
Speaker AAnd if you know me, you know that I mess up all the time, which means I should be modeling a contrite heart and humility and a relationship and walk with Jesus that doesn't need to have me be right all the time.
Speaker AThat's discipleship.
Speaker ABecause modeling this is one of the issues from, I don't know, 50 years ago when it was a saying.
Speaker ABut, like, do as I say, not as I do.
Speaker AIt doesn't work.
Speaker ALike, that's not.
Speaker AThat's not a discipleship strategy.
Speaker ADiscipleship is imitate me as I imitate Christ.
Speaker AWhich means that I'm going to model something beautiful and good back to the design.
Speaker AAnd our kids catch on to that?
Speaker BYeah, they're always watching.
Speaker BAnd the reality is you won't know until they're adults sometimes what they were seeing that you didn't think they were picking up on.
Speaker BAnd they're.
Speaker BThey're sponges.
Speaker BThey're.
Speaker BThey're watching everything you do.
Speaker BThey're mimicking what you're doing.
Speaker BAnd so you can't wait until they get older to start this discipling relationship.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker BYou gotta now saying that you got to start early.
Speaker BYou got to start when they're.
Speaker BWell, as you said before, they're born.
Speaker BFor the parent who's saying, yeah, but my family already is a hot mess.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker BWhat do I do now?
Speaker BPastor Josh?
Speaker AWell, that's the beauty of it is the best time to start discipling your kids was yesterday.
Speaker AThe second best time is right now.
Speaker ALike, do not let shit shame be the lie that prevents you from being the person God created you to be.
Speaker ALike, this is your chance.
Speaker AAnd if you're like, I still don't know what to do.
Speaker AWhat do I do with my hands?
Speaker AWell, here's what you do.
Speaker AGet discipled.
Speaker AFind somebody who is further along in their walk with Jesus.
Speaker ABe discipled by them.
Speaker AHopefully they're a parent, so they can help guide you in that too.
Speaker AAnd then start imitating that.
Speaker ASo they ask you, how's your walk with Jesus?
Speaker AAnd you stumble through an answer.
Speaker AOften you ask your kid, hey, how's your walk with Jesus?
Speaker AAnd they stumble through an an.
Speaker ALike, if you start replicating this stuff in the same way, like, God created a movement with his disciples in the Book of Acts.
Speaker ALike, it was disciples making disciples making disciples.
Speaker AAnd we stand in the wake of that, which means that that's the same model we got to take part in.
Speaker AThe idea that you got to build the plane all on your own while you're flying is.
Speaker AIt's a myth.
Speaker ALike, we've got plenty of people who have also built planes, and they can show you how to do it.
Speaker AI don't know why I'm on a plane metaphor right now, but they can show you how to.
Speaker AHow they parented and where they messed up and the pitfalls and the victories.
Speaker AAnd you get to start flexing those muscles in your home.
Speaker ALike, don't do it alone.
Speaker AI think that that would be a huge miss.
Speaker ABut also, don't allow your not doing it before prevent you from moving forward like you are called to it.
Speaker AAnd even if you didn't do it yesterday, today is a new day.
Speaker ASo let's make it happen.
Speaker BSo we should not be sleeping on this, folks.
Speaker BThis is.
Speaker BThis is something that's very important with parenting.
Speaker BBut if you are going to try to get a good night's sleep, may I encourage you to get yourself a good mypillow.
Speaker BBecause if you're going to take a nap or get a good sleep, for me, it's just a nap for you guys, that kid, eight hours.
Speaker BI don't understand it, but if you're going to do it, at least get yourself a good pillow to go to sleep on.
Speaker BAnd you can get it@mypillow.com use the promo code SFE.
Speaker BIt stands for striving for eternity.
Speaker ASo that.
Speaker BWell, they know that we sent you and they keep supporting us here at the Rap Report podcast, But you can get more than pillows there, by the way.
Speaker BI have their slippers, they have robes, they have.
Speaker BWe have their towels, their bath Towels.
Speaker BOutstanding bath towels.
Speaker BI like really absorbent bath towels.
Speaker BBut to do that you usually have to get these really heavy ones.
Speaker BTheirs are not so heavy, medium weight and yet really absorbent.
Speaker BI love them, but they have, they have more than I can get into.
Speaker BBut the one thing I will tell you could change your sleep maybe more than the pillow.
Speaker BAnd I do travel with my.
Speaker BMyPillow is their mattress topper.
Speaker BThat was like getting a whole new bed.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIf you can't afford to get a bed, just get the mat their 3 inch mattress topper.
Speaker BAnd it's like getting a brand new bed transformed my, my bed for the couple of hours, three or four that I get sleep every night.
Speaker BBut go to MyPillow.com, use the promo code SFE so that you can get yourself a good night's sleep.
Speaker BAnd I know those of you who are not like me and you guys like to sleep, you get yourself a good sleep but you have trouble getting up in the morning.
Speaker BWell, there's a good solution for that and that is Squirrelly Joe's coffee.
Speaker BBecause they're not only are you supporting a good Christian family instead of, well, some woke company, you can be supporting a Christian family that is giving you really good coffee.
Speaker BSo Squirrelly Joe's is, has a whole bunch of different types of coffee that you can get.
Speaker BThey have fun names for them.
Speaker BThe only one, Well, I don't know, Pastor Josh, they call their decaf coffee Honesty.
Speaker BI don't think that's being really honest.
Speaker BI mean you can't call decaf Honesty, right?
Speaker BBecause that's not being honest.
Speaker BThat's not real coffee.
Speaker BThey're, they're, they're half and half is called responsibility, which I don't know.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BIt's not really responsible.
Speaker BSee, I like the, I like, I personally like the, the wisdom.
Speaker BNow you guys could decide whether it's because I need more wisdom or I have the wisdom.
Speaker BYou, you figure that out.
Speaker BBut I, that's what I typically drink is wisdom and their, their integrity.
Speaker BFun names they have for each of their brands.
Speaker BBut what you could do is go to striving for eternity.org coffee that gets you over to Squirrelly Joe's with a special link so that they know you, you went there from us.
Speaker BAnd if you use the promo code SFE on your first order, you either get 20% off your first order or a free bag.
Speaker BI forget which one it is now because I think he had changed it up.
Speaker BBut use that for the first Order.
Speaker BBut do us a favor.
Speaker BEvery time you reorder, go to striving for eternity.org coffee so that they know that you have gone there from us.
Speaker BIt's the only way they know.
Speaker BAnd also if you want to get for your church, they got the five pound bags or if you're just a heavy coffee drinker like I am, I get the five pound bags because, well, I go through a lot of coffee.
Speaker BSo you can get those there and supply your whole church with good Christian may or Christian produced coffee to support fellow brothers and sisters in Christ.
Speaker BSo go to striving for attorney.orgcoffee to get your bag of Squirrelly Joe's coffee today.
Speaker BSo, Pastor Josh, let's, let's talk about your book.
Speaker BThe book is titled Parenting against the Current Taking Back Discipleship in the Home.
Speaker BIt is available on Amazon.
Speaker BWe will have a link at Striving for Eternity in our store for the book.
Speaker BSo talk us through the book.
Speaker BWhat are some of the things that people are going to learn from this book?
Speaker BWho is it meant for?
Speaker AYeah, it's, it's aimed at young, young parents.
Speaker AWhen I say young, it's, it's really parents who are in the faith primarily targeted at Christian parents who are trying to figure it out.
Speaker AAnd that could mean your kid is newly born, you're expecting, or you could have a teenager, but you're trying to figure it out.
Speaker AIt's really aimed at that.
Speaker AI tried to, I'm a storyteller, so tried to be creative, fun as we navigated this dynamic of equipping parents to walk beside their kiddos.
Speaker ASo what you can expect is that the first couple chapters are aimed at you because you can only lead somebody to where you are.
Speaker AMeaning that chapter one is really focused on where's your walk, how are you doing?
Speaker AAre you being fed?
Speaker AAre you growing and maturing?
Speaker AChapter two aims at your marriage.
Speaker AYou might not be married, we cover that as well, but it focuses on how the dynamic in your relationship with your spouse is a mirror of the gospel, or at least it's meant to be.
Speaker AAnd so how are you showing your kids what relationship is meant to look like and what a relationship with Jesus is meant to look like?
Speaker ASo that's chapter two.
Speaker AAnd then chapter three on out is.
Speaker AAll right, let's, let's really get into this.
Speaker AWhat are some tools?
Speaker AWhat are some strategies you need to engage in?
Speaker AIt goes from like all the way just building a connection with your kid because again, discipleship without relationship is not effective.
Speaker AAnd so how do I take them with me, how do I teach them to cut the zucchinis and really risk the dishes in order to pursue what's better?
Speaker AAs well as, like, the next couple chapters.
Speaker AChapter five is it takes a village to raise a parent aiming at community.
Speaker ALike, we need community.
Speaker AAny parents before me, behind me and beside me that are going to help me take kingdom ground in the hearts of my kids, as well as I need to be looking back and helping others do the same.
Speaker AAnd so that's a key ingredient.
Speaker AThere's a chapter called Failing Forward, which is saying, hey, like, you're going to.
Speaker AYou're going to screw up.
Speaker ALike, you're not going to.
Speaker AYou're not going to completely crush it every single time.
Speaker AAnd so when you.
Speaker AWhen you fall, just fall in the right direction.
Speaker AAnd that's like asking for forgiveness.
Speaker AAnother.
Speaker AAnother key phrase, though, that I'd focus on is because our kids and Andrew, we were talking about this last time we spoke, like, our kids ask all kinds of questions, and some of them we might not know the answer to.
Speaker AHeaven forbid.
Speaker AWe don't know all the answers.
Speaker AAnd so what.
Speaker AWhat parents typically would do, they'll say, hey, why?
Speaker AWhy does God do this thing?
Speaker AAnd they'll say, well, God works in mysterious ways, or because the Bible says so, or because I said so.
Speaker AAnd those might be true, but they're not great answers.
Speaker ALike, they're not helpful.
Speaker AAnd so really what we should say when we don't know what to do is, I don't know, but let's find out together.
Speaker ADon't leave it at, I don't know, like, that's not helpful.
Speaker ABut let's find out together is saying, hey, I'm going to take you along on a journey where we're going to find out what's true, good, real, and beautiful.
Speaker AAnd just like that, you're not just giving them a fish and you're not giving them a phrase that's like, God works in mysterious ways.
Speaker AYou're teaching them to fish.
Speaker AYou're teaching them how to seek what's true through scripture and through study and through conversation and through all the different outlets that we actually have access to but often don't feel equipped to invite our kids into.
Speaker AAnd I'll just say discipleship is all about that.
Speaker AIt's walking a journey that you've never walked before and doing it not alone.
Speaker AAnd so chapter by chapter, it's.
Speaker AIt's piece by piece, trying to put together as many puzzle pieces as we can for parents knowing that, like, kids are nuanced and different.
Speaker ALike my two kiddos, like, because God doesn't work in cookie cutters.
Speaker ASo you could say like, okay, no kid is the same.
Speaker AMy kids were made in different factories.
Speaker ALike they're like completely different.
Speaker AMy daughter is gentle and empathetic and if I'm not careful I could just destroy her with a word.
Speaker ALike it's like she's just such a soft human being in the best way.
Speaker AAnd then my son is a. I will climb that tree and we'll see if the branch can hold me when I get to the top.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike we're actively budgeting for er visit.
Speaker AFull on adventure kid.
Speaker ATotally different.
Speaker AMeaning that what the book tries to do throughout is provide guidance on what discipleship can look like and hopefully gives a room, room and space for you to apply some of your creativity.
Speaker AKnowing that your kids aren't going to be my kids and your kids are going to need different things, but all of them need certain things.
Speaker AAnd that's what we really aimed at is what are the things?
Speaker AWhat are the meats and potatoes that our kids are going to need?
Speaker AHow can we put that together in a recipe that's reproducible?
Speaker AAnd then also know that like some of us are going to add a little more salt and some of us are going to add some other things in to make it the right.
Speaker ARight stew.
Speaker AI don't know where I'm going with these metaphors.
Speaker BThe rights to.
Speaker AI don't know how I got here.
Speaker AFor your family to feed them and to help them grow and help them mature that.
Speaker AWe came full circle.
Speaker AWe made it, it was fine.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean one thing I've noticed is that this completely subjective.
Speaker BBut your first two children are always polar opposites and, and any children after that kind of fit in between.
Speaker BIt just seems that way.
Speaker BAnd so there is a, there is an aspect where your kids will ask you questions that you honestly can't answer.
Speaker BAnd when I teach theology, the verse I probably quote more than any other is Deuteronomy 29, 29, which you're going to say, hey, Andrew, that says, you know, we can't know things.
Speaker BAnd didn't Joshua say we shouldn't say that, but let's read it.
Speaker BIt says the secret things belong unto the Lord our God.
Speaker BAnd that sounds like it's the cop out of hey, you just.
Speaker BIt is what God says and we just can't answer further.
Speaker BThere are going to be things that.
Speaker BThat's as far as we could take it.
Speaker BBut we should study and, and work with the to say, okay, let's, let's see if we can understand.
Speaker BOh, you know what, this is getting beyond what we know.
Speaker BBut, but he goes on, Moses goes on and says, the secret things belong unto the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever.
Speaker BThat we may do all the words of this law.
Speaker BYou see, there are things we won't be able to comprehend in our finite minds, but there's a lot in the word of God that we can comprehend, and that is for us.
Speaker BAnd it doesn't stop with us.
Speaker BIt's not only for us, but according to Moses, for our children for a little while, temporarily.
Speaker BNo, forever.
Speaker BSo, so there are going to be things where we can't, we're just not going to know the answers.
Speaker BBut that doesn't mean we just stop and say, I, I don't know, it's, it's beyond my ability to understand.
Speaker BNo, we, we take it as far as we can our thinking with our children.
Speaker BBut when we take them back to scripture so that they know the things that we can understand to, to apply them to our lives, to obey what the Word says, it's not enough just to say, well, hey, I sounded spiritual because I gave the answer, you know, Lord's ways are above our ways.
Speaker BYes, that is true, but he didn't give us things we can't.
Speaker BThe word of God is quite clear in many, many areas and a lot of people pretend as if, well, we can't answer.
Speaker BNow, a key thing folks to listen to is something that Pastor Josh said earlier in the episode.
Speaker BAnd I want to highlight it because you might have missed it and I want to repeat it so that you think back.
Speaker BAge appropriate when children ask you about the Trinity, I don't know how many your children are, you know, eight year olds may be asking, you know, hey dad, what's the, what's the Trinity?
Speaker BWhat's that all mean?
Speaker BHow, how could God be three persons in, in one being?
Speaker BHow's that work?
Speaker BYou might respond different with your 8 year old than your 12 year old.
Speaker BOr you should.
Speaker BNo, for those who think, no, you can't teach an 8 year old a Trinity yet you can, you can teach your children theology.
Speaker BI know that because actually I've done that not just with my kids, but with other people's kids.
Speaker BSo, so Pastor Josh, I don't know if I shared this story with you, but when I first passed started pastoring, I was hired on to a church.
Speaker BBut the church retreat was already set.
Speaker BThey already had a speaker for it.
Speaker BAnd so they wanted me to do some teaching since I just was hired in.
Speaker BAnd I just said, you know what?
Speaker BMy wife and I'll take the kids.
Speaker BYou know, the kids ages, I think were like 8 to 10 year olds.
Speaker BThey're 8 to 12 year olds.
Speaker BAnd I think actually even younger, may have been 6 to 10 year olds.
Speaker BAnd we said, well, we'll, we'll just take them.
Speaker BAnd they were like, well, we don't have any, any program for you.
Speaker BWhat are you going to teach?
Speaker BI said, we'll just teach them the doctrine of the Trinity.
Speaker BAnd they were like, excuse me, these are eight year olds, they can't understand this.
Speaker BI said, just give us three days.
Speaker BAnd so by the end of the third day, what I did was the parents go pick up their kids.
Speaker BAnd I made it where the parent came in by themselves.
Speaker BThe other parents couldn't hear the discussion.
Speaker BThe parents come in and I turn to the parent, I bring the child up and I say, I'm going to ask you two questions and if you need any help, you can ask your children.
Speaker BAnd the parents like, okay, okay.
Speaker BFirst question, can you define the Trinity?
Speaker BSecond question, can you support it in scripture?
Speaker BAnd I'm seeing these adult parents go, and their kid, their 8 year old child is, well, the Trinity is defined as three persons in one God.
Speaker BYou can support that and start rattling off verses whether it's Jesus, baptism, Ananias and Sapphira, and, and the parents are like, my 8 year old is teaching me theology.
Speaker BNow, that had two effects.
Speaker BOne, it made the parents all of a sudden realize that their pastor was going to teach theology.
Speaker BBut the other thing it did, a number of parents came up to me and after that and said, we need help because clearly we should be teaching our children something we didn't think they were ready for.
Speaker BAnd quite frankly, we aren't either.
Speaker BAnd so it was a matter of starting to teach the parents theology so they could teach the children.
Speaker BThey suddenly saw the need for it.
Speaker BBecause part of teaching, or sorry, part of parenting against the culture is the fact, I think you'd agree, Josh, is that we are in a culture that wants to parent our kids.
Speaker BThey don't want the parents doing it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou, you kind of did a play on words with Hillary Clinton's book It Takes a Village.
Speaker BBut what is she saying there?
Speaker BShe thinks it's the village of the school, school and, and all this, that, that raises your children, not you as a parent.
Speaker BYou can't do it alone.
Speaker BYou need the school and you need their, their government systems and all that.
Speaker BThis is the thing that it means to parent against the culture is we need to teach them biblical values because they have, whether it's the media, Hollywood, the video games.
Speaker BAnd by the way, parents do not think that video games are not teaching a morality.
Speaker BYou, you can, you can go and see.
Speaker BYou know, Carl Kirby Jr. A friend of mine, he's got a ministry.
Speaker BIt's not just a Game, I think is the title of his book, but he goes into showing how video games are teaching an anti Christian message.
Speaker BAnd parents think, well, it's just, it's just a racing car game.
Speaker BNo, it's not.
Speaker BThey're teaching messages whether subliminally or not.
Speaker BAnd so there's all these things.
Speaker BThey want to, they want to parent your children, they want to train up your children, disciple your children.
Speaker BJosh, with this as a culture, how, how is your book going to be something that parents can grab to, to parent against all that, against this culture that wants to, from every angle, indoctrinate our children?
Speaker BAnd, and what do you see as the biblical commands for us as parents to teach against it?
Speaker AYeah, I, I, my prayer is that for many of us it's, it's a wake up call and not a wake up call as like, hey, in your face.
Speaker ALike you need, if that's what you need.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker ABut really, like we need to awaken to the things that we're sleeping on.
Speaker AAnd what you are describing is so accurate in the sense that like man, pop culture, their seventh grade best friend, the person on tv, the news, their social media, like they're all trying to disciple your kids.
Speaker AYou're not going to help them be disciples of Jesus, but they're going to try to disciple them somewhere.
Speaker AAnd our role is engaging against that culture and against the currents that exist in the world.
Speaker AOne of the things that we do as a family is we watch, we do tgif.
Speaker ALike, it's something that I missed as a kid.
Speaker AI don't know if you ever did it, but there was like tgif, thank goodness it's Friday was a staple in our home growing up.
Speaker AAnd we would watch Boy Meets World or Sabrina or whatever.
Speaker AAnd so we wanted to have that.
Speaker ABut streaming and like tv, like binge watching, that doesn't exist anymore.
Speaker ASo what we did was we said, hey, Friday nights we're going to watch one show.
Speaker AIt's the only time we watch it.
Speaker AAnd we're going to watch it together as a family.
Speaker AAnd the show that we watch is Boy Meets World.
Speaker ABecause we really enjoy it.
Speaker ABut what we do is because there's a lot of lies in every TV show you watch, like, it doesn't matter.
Speaker AAnd so we play a game called Identify the Lie, which means that if a lie comes up from culture where they're not cool because they don't have the cool clothes or hey, they're going to lie to their parents so that they can get away with this thing or whatever it is, we pause the TV and I ask my daughter, my son, he's in bed at that point, he's not old enough to play the game.
Speaker ABut I asked her, I said, lila, like, what's the lie?
Speaker AAnd she'll tell me what the lie is and then we'll laugh about how untrue that is and we'll hit play again.
Speaker ABecause what we don't need to be is we don't need to be.
Speaker AAnd you don't have to watch TV for this to be true.
Speaker ABut we're not meant to be like distant and hermits and hiding from the culture of the world.
Speaker AWe're just meant to be set apart.
Speaker AWe're meant to stand out in a way that says, hey, the current's going that way, but I'm pushing this way because that's where Jesus is and that's where he invites me to be.
Speaker AAnd so there's, there's little things like that that we can do as parents to say, hey, yeah, like there are things that.
Speaker ABut I would say another piece and I think you were, you were pointing to it with, when you were talking about video games.
Speaker AThere's a really good book.
Speaker AI'm completely unassociated with the author, just the killer book called Raising Tech, Healthy Humans and just wrecked me.
Speaker AAnd it's all about how technology is one of those leading discipleship tools that are being used to delegate the role of parents.
Speaker AAnd so if I want my kid to be quiet, what do I do?
Speaker APut them on the couch?
Speaker AWe're going to watch some tv versus like having the intentional conversations, versus, like having healthy boundaries and limitations, versus really being careful about the things that my kids are ingesting.
Speaker ABecause I'll tell you what, I'll give you an easy example.
Speaker AOur 2 year old, we have very firm limitations on how much TV he's allowed to have at his age.
Speaker ABut there was a show that came on and it seemed like a normal fire truck show.
Speaker AAnd so I was there watching it.
Speaker AJenny was watching it with him a couple weeks ago when they started sharing a lot of stuff that like a Lot of sexual identity stuff that I don't know how it made it into children's tv, but we're like, we cannot watch this show anymore because it's.
Speaker AHe's not old enough to identify the lie.
Speaker AAnd there's a lot of lies being spoken.
Speaker AI can't have our.
Speaker ALike, we got to guard the hearts of our kids and then also, like, we got to start loosening our grips as, as our kids get older.
Speaker ALike, if you try to control your kids and their teenagers, listen, that's going to lead to rebellion.
Speaker AAnd part of it is you're trying to do God's part, which for you is rebellion.
Speaker ALike, we need to trust, we need to create healthy boundaries for our kids to be trusted within knowing they're going to totally botch it sometimes, but you're in a safe place, be a safe place for them to fall.
Speaker AThey're going to fail forward too, in the same way that you've been modeling all these years.
Speaker AAnd together you're going to move closer to Jesus.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd this is the thing that as a parent, you know, I used to do.
Speaker BI didn't, I didn't grow up with a tgif.
Speaker BIt was something though, that I did have.
Speaker BYou know, when I was with my children, I was.
Speaker BFriday nights we would have family night and we, we had some different things we would do to try to teach biblical lessons, but make it fun, make it where it was.
Speaker BWe do an activity to, you know, maybe it was they had to stand in a bucket of ice water to learn what long suffering is.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BDo different things that they would learn biblical lessons, but make it in a fun way that they would remember that was the goal.
Speaker BAnd so this is, this is what I think is lacking, I think in some is that they're like, you're saying the tv, some parents, far too many parents, they're looking for the, the TV to do the parenting.
Speaker BJust here I.
Speaker BIt's the electronic babysitter.
Speaker BAnd, and that becomes problematic.
Speaker BSo again, the, the book folks that encourage you to go out and get.
Speaker BIs parenting against the culture Taking back discipleship in your home.
Speaker BPastor Josh, what.
Speaker BAs we're wrapping up, what kind of things do you want the listeners to know either about the parenting, the book, and anything you want that we haven't had a chance to bring up yet?
Speaker AYeah, really, it's.
Speaker AI want to be a resource where, where people need help.
Speaker AYou can, can reach me or my co author Matt nations at Parenting against the current gmail dot com.
Speaker AAnd again, we just want to be Able to help wherever you need.
Speaker ABut the biggest piece is if you are even wrestling with this question.
Speaker ALike, hey, how do I disciple my kids?
Speaker AHow do I shepherd their hearts?
Speaker AHow do I lead them effectively?
Speaker AYou're in the right place.
Speaker ALike, you're.
Speaker AThat's the right tension to be navigating.
Speaker AI wouldn't say remain there for five years.
Speaker ALike, me trying to get sober.
Speaker AThere were two years in that sobriety process where I was like, I should get sober.
Speaker ALike, I should stop drinking.
Speaker ALike, don't live there.
Speaker ABut, like, that's a great tension to start.
Speaker AAnd I would say even more than that conviction to have.
Speaker AI want to figure this out and get beside other parents who are doing it.
Speaker AGet into community, invite your kids truly into your life, which is so fun.
Speaker ALike, honestly, like, my daughter plays disc golf.
Speaker AI love disco.
Speaker AIt's so nerdy.
Speaker ALike, it's not the coolest thing that I do, but I love it.
Speaker AAt three years old, she would have told you she loves disc golf, but the truth is she didn't.
Speaker AShe didn't know what a par system was.
Speaker AShe didn't know how to play the game.
Speaker AShe just knew it meant time with dad.
Speaker ANow she's several years past that.
Speaker AShe's winning state tournaments, and I get to go be her caddy.
Speaker ALike, that's awesome.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AAnd that's because I took her with me.
Speaker AI got disqualified from multiple tournaments because she had to go to the bathroom halfway through the round.
Speaker AShe didn't make me better.
Speaker ABut, man, that time is something that was special and still is, and we get to have together.
Speaker ASo don't sleep on this.
Speaker ALike, there is an opportunity right now for every single one of us to grow our relationship with our kids and to lead them in their spiritual journey with Jesus.
Speaker ADon't miss it.
Speaker AAnd also, don't.
Speaker ADon't hyper fixate on either one.
Speaker ALike, don't just be a teacher where there's no relationship, and don't just be the friend that never actually shepherds their heart.
Speaker ALike, there's a balance there that we're supposed to have.
Speaker AI see Jesus dining with his disciples.
Speaker AI also see him rebuking them.
Speaker ALike, there's space for both.
Speaker AAnd what we need to do is we need to press into that call, mess up fantastically, and fail for forward for the King.
Speaker BSo again, folks, go out get the book, Parenting against the culture.
Speaker BTaking back discipleship in your home.
Speaker BBefore we wrap up, just to let you know some places, if you want to come to where we are speaking at Striving.
Speaker BFor eternity.
Speaker BI got a couple events coming up.
Speaker BIf you are in the well, if you're north of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, I will be preaching at my home church August 3rd and the 10th.
Speaker BSo I will be there both Sunday's preaching and then that is in Levittown, Pennsylvania.
Speaker BI will be out in Washington, Indiana September 5th to the 7th for the powerhouse Conference.
Speaker BThe Powerhouse is a ministry to high schoolers and they're going to have a conference there.
Speaker BBasically the there it's going to be a very interesting conference.
Speaker BI think this is their, I believe their first, first conference that they're, they've done.
Speaker BAnd so it's going to be a lot of fun there.
Speaker BTC TC Cook, who's the, the president there, executive director of that ministry is, is going to do a great job.
Speaker BNow September 12th and the 13th, I will be at the Road Map to Revival and that is in Tullahoma, Tennessee.
Speaker BMeanwhile, one of our other speakers, Aaron Brewster, will be at my home church.
Speaker BSo if you want to be in Tullahoma, Tennessee, go, go.
Speaker BLook, just type in Roadmap to Revival.
Speaker BYou can get the tickets there if you want to come.
Speaker BIf you're in the Philadelphia area, come to Oxford Valley Chapel.
Speaker BAnd Aaron Brewster is going to be talking about, well, he's going to be talking about our responsibility to God, to church, to others outside the church and to our families.
Speaker BSomething we've been talking about tonight.
Speaker BHe's an excellent speaker.
Speaker BHe's going to basically touch on every area of life.
Speaker BSo whether you're a brand new believer or someone seasoned in the faith, you're going to have something there for that to, to learn from.
Speaker BAlso I'm going to, I will be at the Fight Laugh Feast Conference.
Speaker BAnd I want to mention this is that it is what the title of the conference is what it is those in this audience, you guys would know and I'm probably going to have Gabe on here soon or probably on my apologetics live show for to discuss some, some things he's, he's doing ministry wise.
Speaker BBut they're very different theologically than where I'm at.
Speaker BBut the neat thing about this conference is you can go there, disagree with a lot of the folks and, and fight over it and then have a lot of laughs and then go have dinner.
Speaker BAnd I really appreciate that, that atmosphere that they create where it's not this thing where you're sitting there and you have to, you know, if you don't agree with them, you're gonna, you know, it's gonna be fighting over it and, and that's it.
Speaker BI really found it refreshing the last time.
Speaker BI'll probably be there.
Speaker BThe they're I'm gonna be going with the podcast equipment so we'll probably set up, take some interviews there.
Speaker BBut their topic this year is on homeschooling.
Speaker BSo whether or not you agree or disagree with their theology, especially for the homeschoolers, you know, some of what Pastor Josh was talking about here in this episode is the fact our culture wants to, you know, they want to kind of train up, indoctrinate our children.
Speaker BWell, homeschooling is one way to put a, you know, to, to take back the, the parenting.
Speaker BBut there really is a whole argument of why homeschooling?
Speaker BWhy should we.
Speaker BWhat should be our view when it comes to the, the schooling of our children?
Speaker BAnd so for that that's what the conference is going to be about.
Speaker BI encourage you to go get tickets.
Speaker BI know that their tickets are cheaper when you get them early.
Speaker BSo go out and to fight, Laugh, Feast and look up their, their conference for this year.
Speaker BAnd then lastly, some new news for folks.
Speaker BThose of you in the UK it looks like I will be returning to the UK.
Speaker BIt is the Grace and Power Conference 2025.
Speaker BIt is in Grace Church of Brentwood.
Speaker BSo this is in Brentwood uk.
Speaker BI have not been well, it's been since before COVID that I was in the UK So I'm glad to be able to be returning.
Speaker BSo if you are in that area, you could go togracechurch brentwood.org and they have the events where you can register for that.
Speaker BThey got a number of speakers there in the uk.
Speaker BI will be the keynote there delivering three messages.
Speaker BHave not worked out what those messages are going to be yet, but it looks like I will be there as their inner, their one international speaker.
Speaker BI guess they were really on the bottom of the barrel of finding international speakers.
Speaker BBut so for I know that there's many in the listening listeners who are from the uk I know because.
Speaker BWell, you mentioned it when you email us, but it's been a while since I've been there.
Speaker BSo this is an opportunity to get me to be in your territory.
Speaker BI, I know the UK is not that big.
Speaker BThere's a, there's a thing.
Speaker BYou know Josh, maybe you, you've never heard this but when I was at the UK I learned this phrase that they, they have about the United States because in the UK they the way they like to word it is that, you know, for Americans is that, you know, to the UK 100 miles is, is a big distance.
Speaker BBut to us Americans, we think a hundred years is a long time because they have, they have many centuries of history where we have 250 since we left them.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker BBut in the UK, it's, it's, you're not very far.
Speaker BYou can get there.
Speaker BIt's not, it's not like when I speak in the Philippines and you got to take a boat to a train to walking, you know, and all that, you know, so it's a lot easier in the uk.
Speaker BSo I hope you guys would check that out and they have the details on their website.
Speaker BIf you need more information, call them and, you know, maybe they could get this, the notes up of what the.
Speaker BWhat I'll be speaking on once we work that out.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BPastor Josh, I'm glad that you, you came on.
Speaker BI hope that many people go and get the book Parenting against the the current Taking back discipleship in your home.
Speaker BAnd I'm glad that you came on.
Speaker BI really think it's refreshing for people to have a view of parenting as discipleship.
Speaker BI know you view discipleship as just a way of life.
Speaker BThat's the way we should view it.
Speaker BAnd I'm glad that there's more people out putting books out, you know, to help parents in this area.
Speaker BSo thanks for coming on and I really appreciate it.
Speaker BAppreciate you the work you've done in the book.
Speaker AThanks so much for having me.
Speaker AI enjoyed it.
Speaker BAnd with that, folks, that's a wrap.
Speaker AThis podcast is part of the Striving for Eternity ministry.
Speaker AFor more content or to request a speaker or seminar to your church, go to strivingforeternity.
Speaker AOrg.