Me: I don’t know, it would be nice if there parents were there.
Prodigal: Yes, that would be a good support.
This is from the book Bringing up Boys by Dr. James Dobson
If character training is a primary goal of parenting, and I believe it is, then the best way to instill it is through the demeanor and behavior of a father. Identification with him is a far more efficient teacher than lecturing, scolding, punishing, bribing, and cajoling. Boys watch their dads intently, noting every minor detail of behavior and values. It is probably true in your home, too. Your sons will imitate much of what you do. If you blow up regularly and insult your wife, your boys will treat their mother and other females disrespectfully. If you drink to excess, your kids will be at risk for chemical substance abuse. If you curse or smoke for fight with your coworkers, your boys will probably follow suit. If you are selfish or mean or angry, you’ll see those characteristics displayed in the next generation.
Fortunately, the converse is also true. If you are honest, trustworthy, caring, loving, self-disciplined, and God-fearing, your boys will be influenced by those traits as they age. If you are deeply committed to Jesus Christ and live by biblical principles, your children will probably follow in your footsteps. So much depends on what they observe in you, for better or worse.
Mark 2:41
And Jesus, moved with compassion, put forth his hand, and touched him, and saith unto him, I will; be thou clean.
Prodigal: I am just checking if any gifts have found there way in yet.
Me: Might bit too early for that.
This is from the book Reclaiming Your Heart by Denise Hildreth Jones
Can I share something with you? There may always be people who don’t think you are worth much. They may see only your failures, only your sins, only the wrong things you have done. They may even determine that you have nothing of value to offer them. But that is about their hearts, not yours. It doesn’t have anything to do with what God sees when he looks at you.
The Lord sees you. He knows you. What does He feel? He feels love toward you. Even with what people have said about you today, focus on what the Lord says to your spirit.
Psalm 95:1-5
The heights of the hills are His also.
The sea is His, for He made it; And His hands formed the dry land.
Me: Yes, there is nothing like a good sermon filled with meat for the spirit.
Prodigal: I think I need one of those today.
Sermons should have real teaching in them, and their doctrine should be solid, substantial, and abundant. We do not enter the pulpit to talk for talk’s sake; we have instructions to convey important to the last degree, and we cannot afford to utter petty nothings. Our range of subjects is all but boundless, and we cannot, therefore, be excused if our discourses are threadbare and devoid of substance. If we speak as ambassadors for God, we need never complain of want of matter, for our message is full to overflowing. The entire gospel must be presented from the pulpit; the whole faith once delivered to the saints must be proclaimed by us. The truth as it is in Jesus must be instructively declared so that the people may not merely hear, but know, the joyful sound….Nothing can compensate for the absence of teaching.
Charles Spurgeon
A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.
Me: Well that’s mighty nice of you, to bring others round today.
Prodigal: It is the season to remember service to others.
Me: That is something we can all try to do.
This is from the book Joy in Christ’s Presence by Charles Spurgeon
I suppose that we sometimes get nearer to Christ when we think we are at a distance than we do when we imagine we are near Him, for we are not always exactly the best judges of our own spiritual states. We may be very close to the Master, and yet we may be so anxious to get closer that we feel dissatisfied with the measure of grace that we have already received. To be satisfied with self is not a sign of grace, but to long for more grace is often a far better evidence of the healthy state of the soul.
As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you (John 15:9)