Work It Out

As a mom of young kids, one of my “unofficial” roles is being the arbitrator who gets to choose our next activity or whose favorite dinner we are having on a certain night. Unfortunately, my role in these situations sometimes gives my kids the mistaken impression that I will also be the arbitrator of who gets to use what toy, or in administering justice when one of them perceives that they have suffered some slight by the hand of their sibling. Despite repeated attempts to draw me into their disputes, my response is almost always the same. “Work it out” I tell them. And usually, they do.

While some may see my response as insufficient, it’s my default setting for two reasons. The first, and most important, is that I want my children to learn that before they go to others with their frustrations and angst, they need to talk to the person who has offended them[1]. Secondly, I want them to learn how to navigate these situations on their own. Resolving conflict in a healthy way is a critical part of growing up, and I would rather they learn those skills under my tutelage then trying to figure it out when they have a disagreement with their boss.

However, despite my repetitive instructions to my kids, in my own life I find that I am often tempted to do the exact opposite of what I tell them to do. When I am frustrated at someone’s actions or when I believe someone has offended me, it is tempting to want to vent my annoyance to a trusted friend – hoping that they will see things the same way I do. For some reason we have convinced ourselves that sharing our concerns with another person will make things better, but it does not. Instead, under the guise of getting advice or asking for prayer, we invite others to join in our frustration and offense[2]. We win others to our side to validate our angst, and instead of a recipe for resolving the problem quickly, this compounds it, ensuring that relationships will remain fractured and restoration an elusive ideal.

But there is another option. Instead of involving others in our squabbles, we can choose to resolve the issue only with those who are directly involved. Additionally, we might decide that in this case, we are going to overlook the slight against us in order to bring God glory and praise. When we choose either of these paths, at least three things are likely to occur:

We squelch a problem – When natural disasters happen, authorities talk about an impact zone – the area that will be effected by the event. When we gossip about a situation with others, we are growing the impact zone – causing other people to be frustrated or experience angst for a problem that isn’t even of their concern. Conversely, when we deal with the problem directly, we minimize the damage it can cause. This is not only the quickest path to resolution of the issue, it is also the least destructive.

We win a friend – I have never heard of any relationship being strengthened by gossip or disparaging remarks. Conversely, many relationships have been bolstered because someone was willing to speak the truth to them in love and worked to resolve any conflicts directly with the other person. Your relationship with the person who offended you, and your relationship with the person you gossiped to, are both weakened when you invite others into your conflicts. Trust is the basis for relationship growth, and if people know that you will go to them directly with any issues or concerns, they will know that they can trust you – in good times and in difficult ones.

We honor God. –  Last but certainly not least we glorify God when we deal directly with those who offend us. First, this shows love to those who He created, treating them as we would want to be treated. Secondly, we are obeying His instructions, and any time we are willing to sacrifice what we want to do for what God says we should, we are showing our love for Him. We might think that good comes from venting our frustrations to other people, but God says that good comes when we deal with the offending parties themselves. When we trust God enough to do things His way, our lives glorify Him.

Sometimes when conflict occurs, we think that we should just share it with someone else because “it’s not that big of deal” and we don’t want to make a big deal out of it by working to resolve it with the offender. The truth, however, is that if it is a big enough deal to discuss it with someone else, it is a big enough deal to lovingly and respectfully bring our concerns to the person who has caused them. Before we talk to someone else, we should talk to them. But before we talk to anyone, we should talk to God. Only He is able to bend the hearts of kings (Prov. 21:1) and He certainly can go before our conversations to ensure that even amidst conflict and discord, His will is graciously done.

In short, just like we tell our kids to “work it out,” we should make sure that we are doing the same, knowing that as we do so, not only will our relationships with others be strengthened, but God will get glory and praise.


[1] It is worth noting that we also teach our children that there are times when they absolutely should get an adult involved – specifically if someone is harming them or others. For adults, there are also times where governing authorities need to be notified. In this particular discussion, I am not referring to these extraordinary situations.

[2]It is worth noting that we also teach our children that there are times when they absolutely should get an adult involve – specifically if someone is harming them or others. For adults, there are also times where governing authorities need to be notified. In this particular discussion, I am not referring to these extraordinary situations.

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A Different Kind of Back-To-School Prayer

Like many parents I have spent time over the summer praying for my child’s school year. As she enters a new school with all the trepidation associated with making new friends and getting used to new routines, I repeatedly petitioned God to provide her just the right teacher and classmates. My concern for her was understandable; she is growing up quickly but she is still my little girl, and I want this new experience to be a good one for her.

However, a few weeks ago as I was praying that God would give my child the best teacher as well as sweet friends, my heart was pricked with a pain of conviction. My prayers were fixated upon what would be best for her without much thought to the people that she would come into contact with. My child was not only going to a new school with her cares and concerns but she would be interacting with a teacher and with classmates that would have their own burdens to bear. Ostensibly she was going to school to learn, but regardless of the reason she is going somewhere, I want her to see any place that she is in as a place to display God’s love. I was concentrating on with whether the new school year would be a blessing for her – without bringing before God the prayer that she would be a blessing to others.

And so the aim of my prayers shifted. Not because my previous prayers were in error; it certainly makes sense to pray for your child’s well-being. However, if I want my child to develop an eternal mindset, it certainly seems reasonable that my prayers for her reflect the concerns of eternity. I concentrated these re-focused prayers in three areas:

My Kid’s Teacher

The angst that goes into finding out which teacher your child has been assigned is a scenario every parent understands. However, rarely do we think about the process from the teacher’s perspective. In less than 24 hours, names on a page become young people entrusted to their care – with their associated quirks and differences in abilities. A teacher’s job is not easy – and there are many students who make this job harder. Instead of simply praying that my kid would get the teacher that would be the best for her, I started praying that my child would be assigned the teacher to whom she could be the biggest blessing. I prayed that my daughter would be an encouragement and help to a teacher who is likely stressed while balancing a myriad of competing priorities. I asked that God would give my child the teacher who would not only appreciate her intellectual curiosity but who would be blessed by her sweet and caring spirit. My heart’s desire became not that my child would have the teacher with the best instructional methods or greatest classroom environment, but instead to have the teacher that will know Christ more fully because of the year spent interacting with our family.

My Kid’s Friends

As we all know from our own growing up experience, kids can be cruel. Therefore, it is tempting to focus my prayer for my child’s friends solely on whether they will be people who will show kindness and grace to her. However, I also know that there will be people that my child will play with who need the opportunity to laugh at her silly jokes and be blessed by her sensitive heart. In other words, there are kids who will become my kid’s friends not because it is God’s primary purpose that they will be a blessing to her – but because she will be a blessing to them. I pray that God gives me the grace to see who these friends are and that my child will, in her childlike way, show them the love of Christ.

My Kid’s Classmates

Although there will be individuals who my child will naturally get along with, there are some kids that my child might not be friends with but with whom she will come into contact. At every school, and in every classroom, there are kids who sit on the fringes. They may think or behave in ways that kids don’t quite understand, and without knowing any better how to handle it, they may be quickly ostracized, or worse, ridiculed. Instead of praying that my child would not find herself as one of the outcasts, my prayers became that she would find these kids. My petition has been that God would grant my daughter the eyes to see the people that are hurting and that she would reach out to them; that in a world full of sin and pain, she would be a light in their lives. You never know the difference that a smile or gracious word can make to a hurting child, and I pray that my kid would be the one to provide it.

Preparing My Heart

I didn’t know why I experienced the prompting to change the focus of my prayers a few weeks ago, but I now know that it was, at least in part, to prepare my heart. In the last few days we have learned more about what this school year will look like for my daughter, and it wasn’t what I expected. In His kindness, God had already begun the process of shifting my mindset to consider how He may want to use my child to bless others, rather than focusing solely on the blessings He has prepared for her. And even though the school year begins with more uncertainty than I originally anticipated, I can confidently still utter my back-to-school prayer. Because regardless of whether it is a great or challenging year for my kid, I pray that because of her, someone else’s year is blessed.

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