But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have become convinced of, because you know those from whom you learned it, 15 and how from infancy you have known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. 16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. 2Tim.3:14-17
My 3rd son recently texted me wondering when I would be in town so I could be present when he baptizes his 3 oldest kids at church. This will be 6 of my 11 grandkids getting baptized. The remaining 5 are all under the age of 5 and I look forward to their personal public profession of faith, too. The other 3 that have been baptized are my oldest son's kids who were baptized at the beach by my second son. I don't take this family of faith lightly because all around me I see good families who love Jesus and have had unbelieving children. I look at this passage and see some aids in raising kids that will choose to follow Jesus.
First in verse 14 Paul says to believe it because you know the people you learned it from. We were recently watching a drama on Apple TV where the teenage daughter decides not to go to college because that's what her mom did and her mom's life is so messed up that she doesn't want to follow in her mom's footsteps. So she moves in with her divorced dad who is just as messed up as her mom. As parents, we may raise our kids to believe the Bible but if they don't believe in us, why should they listen to anything we promote? My parents lived what they believed, I saw it, and recognized it to be real and sincere. I knew that it worked in their lives. I trust that my kids have seen us as anything but phonies.
Second in verse 15 Paul says that they have known the scriptures since infancy. I grew up, and so did my kids, in an era of Sunday School. We systematically, not haphazardly, learned the Bible accounts both audibly and visually. We learned the entire Bible, Old Testament and New Testament. Plus, at home I learned growing up, and as parents, we taught the Bible around the dinner table or nighttime devotions. We would have Bible drill and Bible trivia competitions. We would start reading a passage in the Bible and see who would be the first to find it and start reading along. We would have rewards for Bible memorization. We would go around the table saying the books of the Bible, one at a time standing up and whoever failed to say the following book correctly had to sit down and was "out". I remember earning my way to camp by memorizing Colossians 3. The days of Sunday School are regrettably over in some modern churches but teaching the Bible at home from infancy isn't.
Third in verse 16 Paul talks about training in righteousness. You can teach your kids the Bible but unless you teach them that it's applicable to life, it's just head knowledge. The WWJD phenomenon is and was great but somewhat baffling in that the concept to ask, "what would Jesus do in this situation", shouldn't have been an "Aha" moment. This is the point of all scripture training, learning and knowledge is that it effects the way we live out our daily life. We would watch shows on TV with our kids and discuss different choices people made, their consequences, and what choices they should have made from a Biblical worldview. We would read devotionals like "Sticky Situations" which would give you a scenario and then 4 choices of behavior in response and challenge the kids to pick a response and defend it. We would debrief with them on picking them up from school if they had any opportunities to represent Christ or as we would say, "Did you bear fruit today?"
Lastly, verse 17 talks about this learning should lead us to every good work. Demonstrating a life of service, not self-absorption sitting on the couch watching TV all evening but rather getting out and serving others with our free time is vital in the raising of kids. I saw my parents constantly witnessing, holding home Bible studies, working at the church and hopefully my kids saw my wife feeding the homeless, serving at the rescue ministry, teaching Sunday School and myself leading the youth groups and serving medically both locally but around the world. We are saved for good works of service and if we don't model that we will raise "fat babies".
All of these facets are essential, but I would have to say that points one and four are both about modeling a consistent Biblical life to our kids and is of utmost importance. Teaching knowledge and application are a close second and Timothy had the total environment of growth. Are you providing that for your kids?

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