A letter for parents of prodigals

My husband and I have experienced the reality of knowing, “I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth” 3 John 4 Our two daughters professed Christ at an early age, witnessed in their schools, traveled on mission trips, and embarked into adult life with a passion for Christ. Our family life has been built around joy and laughter; and even through the teen years, we enjoyed close family times backpacking and ministering together here and abroad. The girls have been characterized as leaders, constantly encouraging and challenging those around them to live their Christian beliefs.

It always brought us great joy knowing that our children were walking in the truth. Then one bought into a lie. Now we see the flip side to the above verse; there is no greater sorrow than seeing your children walk in a lie. Since our daughter’s ungodly choices, we have grieved for the loss of our close family relationships, for our witness in our community and family, over the eventual consequences of her decisions, and even grieved that God would allow this to happen.

Our joy, peace, energy, and focus have been drained and replaced with despair, anger, fatigue and distraction. We have been plagued by questions. How could this happen? What should we do? What would influence her? How should we respond? Our close family was thrown into crisis; joy turned to sorrow, and lies twisted truth. The parable of the prodigal son has become a real and personal journey with a precious, yet prodigal, daughter.

At one point in this heavy journey, I had a mental picture of us facing our prodigal daughter, she standing with her back to us. We were pleading and begging for her to turn around, listen to God’s Word, and recognize the lies. Then the focus shifted and God was standing behind me, my back turned to Him, and He was calling me to turn around and to recognize the lies. God was trying to get my attention while I was trying to get my daughter’s attention. Her lies were different from mine, but nonetheless I had also been ensnared by lies. God was pleading with me to recognize and accept His truth in my own life.

God’s truth needs to be sorted from the enemy’s lies.

I cannot allow my daughter’s actions to define me, but I can, through God’s help, allow them to refine me. Through godly counsel and His Word, the truth is being sifted from the enemy’s subtle and pervasive lies. The refinement process is not complete, but I have identified, examined, and discarded the following lies:

Lie #1: What if?

The enemy loves to get us into the “what if” or blame game. What if I had been more persuasive? What if I had counseled her with more studied words? What if I had been more discerning? What if I had just been a better mom? I was consumed with analyzing every nuance over the past years, reviewing my interactions, and questioning my role as both mother and wife.

My analytical thoughts became paralyzing and I spiraled downward into a pit of remorse and inadequacy. Slowly through the slime, I began to see that it is not all about me. My eloquence or lack of it, my parenting skills or lack of them, will not ultimately change a heart. That is the Holy Spirit’s job. I can be obedient to God’s direction. I can do the best I can in parenting and counseling. But the ultimate work is God’s. My pleas will not bring a prodigal into right thinking, right living, or right decisions.

Our daughter made this choice in spite of Scripture, godly models, and counsel, and she will also reap the consequences of her choice. Ezekiel 18:20 reminds us that “…the son will not share the guilt of the father, nor will the father share the guilt of the son. The righteousness of the righteous man will be credited to him, and the wickedness of the wicked will be charged against him.” I can neither accept the blame nor take the credit. The “what ifs” must cease because they are not from God.

Lie #2: If you parent well enough, your child will not make ungodly choices.

When my daughter turned away from her firm foundation, I questioned how this could happen to my family. Subconsciously and incorrectly, I presumed that Proverbs 22:6, “Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it” guaranteed a child’s godly choices. The Lord showed me, through my own heartache, that I have wrongly judged others and their parenting ability. I thought if someone had a child not walking with the Lord, it was always a direct reflection on their parenting skills. Now on the other side with a wayward daughter, I realize the lie and repent of my judgment of others. Godly parenting does not guarantee a godly child.

Lie #3: My prodigal adult child disqualifies me for ministry.

One of the qualifications listed in 1 Tim. 3:4 for an overseer is to “manage his own family well and see that his children obey him with proper respect.” This does not refer to adult children. But Satan wants to fuel our insecurities, have us focus on our inadequacies, and cripple our ministries. Instead of stepping out of ministry, we should step up to be used by God. The more open and transparent we are in our parenting journey, the more dependent we are on Him for strength, and the more opportunities there will be for us to minister.

During the painful times of answering concerned inquires about our daughter, has emerged a new openness for those sharing similar burdens. One embarrassing instance of addressing pointed questions at a neighborhood party resulted in a phenomenal opportunity to share God’s truth. Leadership is not about being perfect individuals. It is about being humbly obedient and available. Transparency and vulnerability can make us better servant ministers.

Lie #4: God is powerless to intervene.

Somewhere in this extended battle, I crossed the line from believing God would not act to believing God could not act. I fell prey to the lie that God could not change our daughter’s mind or way. My personal systematic theology had me spinning in circles around God’s sovereignty and the free will of man. The Lord had chosen to not answer my fervent prayers to radically intervene in our daughter’s life. Since faith and hope are intricately entwined, I was hopeless.

My view of God was too small. I do not understand how God’s sovereignty and free will work, but I have become convinced that God is so much bigger than we can ever imagine. He can and will intervene if He so chooses. This mom needs to trust more, worry less, and stop trying to figure everything out. He is God and I am not! My God, our God, is a God of hope that fills us with all joy and peace as we trust in Him (Rom. 15:13), and He is more than able to do great things.

This mother’s journey in parenting a prodigal is far from over. The hurt and sadness are still very real and close. But as the Lord has revealed the insidiousness of the enemy’s lies, the burden has become more manageable. Now I can focus on what I am learning and not on what my daughter should be learning. This was reiterated during a recent visit. We were scheduled to rendezvous with our precious prodigal after church.

The sermon was unexpectedly all too relevant: “Grace Demands a Death.” The pastor pointed out that if we are to extend grace, as Christ did, we must also experience death. As parents, we need to die to our dreams, our desires, and our expectations for our children. We need to love them unconditionally, expecting nothing in return. Still stirred from this poignant message, we exited the church building and saw our daughter standing on the far side of the parking lot.

My husband ran to our cold, stiff daughter, standing sullenly by the car, and wrapped her in a warm, loving hug. That was our best visit to date! My hope has been renewed; He is restoring my soul. Like Habakkuk, I will wait and keep watch from the ramparts to see what the Lord will do. God is in control and He loves us and our prodigals dearly. author unknown

I didn't write this article, but as a mother of a prodigal, I found this article very truthful and helpful. To all parents of prodigals I say, "Don't look inward, behind or forward- just keep looking up! And remember that Jesus loves your child as much as you do!"

Blessings, Glenys

“Bear one another burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ” Galatians 6:2

27 comments:

  1. Yup. Been there. The prodigal came home, thank God. And, yes, I agree with your points.

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    1. Praise the LORD, Ellie Rae! I actually had two prodigal sons... but one came home... still praying for the other one! Blessings!

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  2. Keep praying for the prodigal. Mine took more than twenty years and lived with much pain before finding the reality of God's grace. Never give up praying.

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    1. Praising God with you, Phyllis! My returned prodigal told me he could sense that I was praying for him... we musn't give up on them and as you wisely said, we must pray for them always!

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  3. I know all about the prodigal daughter, I was one of these myself, sadly it resulted in a marriage to a man who is not a Christ, but I leave that in the Lords hands. My choices were in rebellion of what I was taught, i didn't want to be the good daughter any more, I wanted to be "free" and at 19 what did I really know. My advice to parents - never stop loving your children or showing them that love, even if you don't like their choices.

    My dad told me the story of Jesus and the lost sheep so many times as a child, perhaps he knew how important those verses would be later in my life, I was the sheep the Lord carried home in his tender arms.

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    1. Joluise, thank you for sharing that... I know it will be of great comfort to parents of prodigals...

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  4. Bless your heart. I'll be praying for your daughter. This is an excellent article. I'll be bookmarking it for use in my ministry.

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  5. May God comfort you and turn the heart of your child to Himself.
    I understand these lies.
    I have lived them with my son.
    God finally showed me that I'd been repenting over and over for the same things that He'd already forgiven.
    I have more peace now.

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    1. I am glad you have more peace now, Laura Lane! Blessings and thanks for sharing tea with me!

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  6. Your right that we need to overcome the whispers (or screams) of the enemy telling us that it's our fault or there is something we could do... I like the quote, "Don't look inward, behind or forward- just keep looking up!"
    ~Kristen @ Trial & Error Homemaking

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  7. Glenys, as the parent of a prodigal, I understand. But the passage that stands out to me is the Proverbs one and I have come see that it doesn't refer to our parenting so much as God's promise. We do what we can and He does what only He can. Our children return to us not because we have been good parents, but because God says He will bring them. It is my constant prayer and heart's cry, too.

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  8. You just wrote my story! Except my son is the prodigal. This is why I started my blog almost 2 years ago, writing off and on about our experience, my feelins of this 6 year ordeal. I understand everything you said!
    I will pray for you and your daughter. I now have a running list of about 35 I pray for. If you would like to leave her name, you can e-mail me.
    I understand completely. We will stand together :)
    Thank you for sharing your story.

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    1. Hi Kristin, I did not write this article, but it expressed how I felt so well that I posted it to share with other parents of prodigals. My 2 sons were prodigals... one has returned and the other I am praying for and waiting for... it is a long road. My prodigal son is Mark. I will certainly pray for your daughter... By the way, if you read some of the comments here, you will see that a long-time blogger friend called Joluise was a prodigal daughter who came back home- that is an amazing testimony of God's love for both the prodigal and those who love them! Thanks for sharing a cuppa with me today. Blessings!

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    2. Beautiful post. At first I thought that YOU wrote it but then saw "author unknown."

      I love this quote: ""I cannot allow my daughter's actions to define me, but I can, through God’s help, allow them to REFINE me."

      Thanks for sharing this post and thanks for linking up to Making Your Home Sing Monday!

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    3. I did not write this article, but it expressed how I felt so well that I posted it to share with other parents of prodigals. My 2 sons were prodigals... one has returned and the other I am praying for and waiting for... it is a long road. Thanks for sharing a cuppa with me today, Momstheword!

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  9. Glenys...what a reassurance to those who have prodigal children. I have a son who is struggling with his faith but I am on my knees for him. He hasn't walked away from it but is feeling discouraged. Thank you for sharing this at WJIM sweet friend. It is a comfort to me and great encouragement.

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    1. Naomi, sometimes a struggle with or questioning one's faith can actually be a healthy thing. We work things out and usually the result is a strengthening of that faith. With your prayers and guidance, I believe your son will come through this crisis. I will pray for him too! Blessings!

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  10. Thank you for sharing this letter. I feel your pain more than you know. Although I'm not a parent, I do know someone going through this. The questions, the pain, the anger that crops up when a child and/or loved one professes Christ at an early age then turns around and makes horrendous choices. The best thing to do now is try to be as compassionate as possible but let them know you don't like their choices and pray, pray and pray some pray some more. He will answer your prayers in His time. I'm still in the pray and wait stage right now.
    Best of Luck to you and God's Speed.
    Crystal

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    1. I did not write this article, but it expressed how I felt so well that I posted it to share with other parents of prodigals. My 2 sons were prodigals... one has returned and the other I am praying for and waiting for... it is a long road. Thanks for sharing a cuppa with me today, Glenys

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  11. Thank you for sharing this article. It is filled with such wonderful, reassuring truths.

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    1. Not only does prayer help the prodigals, but it gives us hope as we pray in faith. The peace that passes all understanding keeps one sane while waiting for God to work in the prodigals' life. Blessings and thanks for sharing a cuppa with me today.

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  12. This is a wonderful article. Thanks for posting. Still waiting in the wings...
    Michele

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    1. It is a wonderful article. Praying for your prodigal to return.

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Thank you for visiting with me today. I love to hear from you. I may not always be able to reply right away, but I will respond to every comment you leave. Blessings and comfort, Glenys