Faith Filled Family Magazine July 2016 | Page 26

ple’s hearts; and as husbands and wives we know that sharing concerns gives a healthier perspective. Asking God’s direction enables us to make decisions with confidence, knowing He directs our paths. Shouldn’t we therefore give our teenagers the same opportunity? As a Dad I love it when my children ask me my opinion or advice, I feel honoured that they trust me. Sometimes I give them too much advice, but I am learning to listen more and talk less, as their openness to share is often about wanting a sounding board, not a solution; that is for them to arrive at. Then encourage them to ‘go for it’ and support the process with whatever they need. The more they feel loved and that when they make mistakes, even bad ones, we don’t reject them or humiliate them, allows them to express remorse and a desire to rectify the mistake They will know we may be angry or hurt, disappointed etc., but if God forgives our sins, should we not forgive our own children? The way Jesus lived is our best example, as we walk in the love and power of the Holy Spirit, our children will be attracted to Him. Being a teen is a rollercoaster ex-perience for many, but it does not always have be a battle ground, that leaves them scarred and alienated from their parents or from Jesus. Transitioning from teenager to adult is not an easy process, but it can be a joyful and exciting one. Our role is to believe the best through faith in Christ, and be wary of false expecta-tions, we do not allow what we may see as failure as a disappointment. We, like our children, mostly learn from the mistakes we make ourselves, as God picks us up when we fall, we too must learn to be like Christ who says: Ephesians 2:8 ‘For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God.’ Clive McLaren I am 64 and married to an amazing lady called Chrissie, we are proud parents of four daughter’s aged eighteen to twenty-six, one of whom is studying at St Olaf College in Minnesota and a son who is 27. We live on the Northwest coast of England opposite North Wales. I divide most of my time between writing and being involved in commu-nity projects that befriend and support people with mental-health issues and addic-tions. I give all the credit to our amazing God who has given us this parenting privi-lege and through His grace and many interventions we have a strong, loving family with children who adore each other.