7 Keys to Loving and Leading Our Kids as Pastors and Church Leaders

By Mark Hallock

Many of us have heard nightmare stories of “Preacher Kids” growing up in the church just to rebel and turn their backs on God when they get older. In my experience, these cases are far more often the exception than the rule. In fact, I have seen countless children of pastors and church leaders grow up to love Jesus and the church, often becoming leaders in a congregation themselves when they get older.

I truly believe this: Raising our kids in the church should not be a threat to their wellbeing but a huge opportunity to help them grow in their love for God and their love for the body of Christ. But how does that happen?

While there is not a magic bullet, let me share seven keys I’ve observed to loving and leading our kids well in the church.

1. Give your children a God-saturated vision of the world

Our kids need to see the reality that all of life is about and for God, and that is the joy of being a Christian. We aren’t just going through the motions on Sunday morning. This isn’t just the job where dad collects his paycheck. This is our life. We serve as an overflow and an expression of our love for God, who is everywhere. We want our kids to be amazed at God, and if they are going to be amazed, then He is going to use us to show them just what is so amazing about Him.

How are we connecting our kids to God? In everything we do as parents – when we talk over dinner or watch TV – do we pause and use that as a teachable moment? What do they think about what they are seeing? What does that teach us about our image and about God? All of life needs to be about connecting our kids to God.

When we’re in the car together, when we’re listening to music, when we pass a car accident, how can we use that as a time to pray for people? In the way we spend our free time and our money, in the car we drive and the house we live in, in the clothes we wear, the furniture we buy, the way we talk about others – all these are teachable moments we need to be mindful of. They offer opportunities to connect our kids with the reality of a good, loving, sovereign God.

The question my wife and I continually visit is this: “Do our kids see our desire to live out 1 Corinthians 10:31: ‘So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God?’” That was the first verse our family memorized, and my kids still say it all the time, because ultimately that’s what we want to be about. By God’s grace, we want to be a family that seeks to bring glory to God in all that we do.

2. Do all you can to show your kids you love them more than the church

We need to help them to see we love them more than our churches, because it’s not always obvious. Many times when a pastor’s family is struggling with rebellious kids, it is because they have failed in this area. The children feel neglected. Our children should never feel like they are in competition with the church. They need to feel your heart saying, “I’ll lay the church down for you, my son/daughter. I’ll lay it all down for you. You’re my kid. There is no competition. And if I have let you feel that way, forgive me. I don’t want you to feel that way because that’s not the truth.”

We are called to shepherd our kids first, before the church, and they need to know that. They need to believe that. In fact, 1 Timothy 3:4-5 says caring for your kids and leading your children is a qualification for eldership. If we can’t lead our kids well, we have no business caring for the church of God.

3. Teach your children to pray by praying with them and for them

The most powerful impact you can have on your kids is to pray with and for them. From the time they are little, they should never go to sleep without us putting our hands on them and praying for them, hearing that they are loved. Even if your children are older and you think you’ve missed the boat, it’s not too late. Start now. Your kids may think it’s weird. So what? Start shepherding your children, now. Pray for them and pray with them. Teach them how to pray for others by asking them to pray for you. That’s a powerful way to humble ourselves and show our kids that we need prayer too.

Augustus Strong, who was a Baptist seminary president at the end of the 19th century, told this story:

One of the earliest things I remember is my mother taking me into a dimly lighted closet every Saturday afternoon, after the day’s work was done, and kneeling with me beside a chest while she taught me how to pray. I remember her suggesting to me the thoughts, and when I could not command the words, her putting into my mouth the very words of prayer. I shall never forget how one day, as I had succeeded in uttering some poor words of my own, I was surprised by drops falling upon my face. They were my mother’s tears. My mother’s teaching me how to pray has given me ever since my best illustration of the Holy Spirit’s influence in prayer. When we know not what to pray for as we ought, he, with more than a mother’s skill and sympathy, helps our infirmities and makes intercession within us, while Christ makes intercession for us before the throne.¹

What a beautifully intimate picture of a mother praying! Those are the kind of parents we want to be, by God’s grace.

4. Develop a culture of God-centered praise and worship in your family

What kinds of praise and worship are our kids catching from us? Our kids need to see that we love God, that we are worshipers in our home and that we love to praise Jesus together. Passionate praise and worship are more caught than taught. Not only is it caught during Sunday morning worship gatherings, although that is part of it, but it is caught in our homes and cars. If we want our kids to be passionate worshipers, we have to be passionate worshipers ourselves.

5. Intentionally seek to cultivate fun, goofy times with our children—laugh together a lot!

One of my mentors has been a pastor for 40 years. He has four adult children, who all love Jesus. I asked him “How did you do it? I dream of my kids loving the Lord and loving people that way.” He replied, “You know what the biggest thing was? I pursued a relationship with each of them, and we had a lot of fun together. And we never stopped having fun, from the time they were little.”

Sometimes parents are good about having fun with their kids when they are little, but as they get older they lose that. Don’t lose it. We need to have fun – to laugh. Our kids need to see joy in us. They need to see that we relish them, that we love them and that we love to be with them. Kids can tell whether they are a joy to their parents or just a chore. As dads, we need to communicate that we cherish them and can’t wait to spend time with them.

6. Give your kids regular, undivided attention

They want your attention. They need your time. Your kids look up to you more than anybody else. What they need from us is our undivided attention. This means we need to intentionally put our phones away and limit our screen time, among other things. What do you need to put aside in order to give more undivided time and attention to your kids?

7. Hug them and encourage them consistently and continually

May our kids never know a day that they weren’t hugged and encouraged by their mom and dad. They need to hear our words and feel our touch. Consistently. Continually. What a privilege it is to love our kids with the love of Christ!This post originally appeared on Mark’s blog, Preach Lead Love.

¹John Piper, Sermon, “Raising Children Who Hope in the Triumph of God,” desiringgod.org, May 8, 1988, https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/raising-children-who-hope-in-the-triumph-of-god, (accessed January 24, 2022).

 


Published February 24, 2022

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Mark Hallock

Mark Hallock serves as the lead pastor of Calvary Church in Englewood, Colorado. He also serves as president of the Calvary Family of Churches, a group committed to planting and replanting churches for the glory of God (thecalvary.org). His great desire is to see the gospel transform lives and neighborhoods through the planting of new congregations, along with the revitalization of declining congregations, throughout the city of Denver and beyond. Mark’s favorite hobby is hanging out with his wife, Jenna, and their two kids, Zoe and Eli.