Saturday, October 30, 2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
a NeW FaMiLy FuN GaMe!
Hey Dad, here is a new family game that is sure to make the entire gang laugh, think, and grow together! It’s called the 5 Cents Game and here’s how it works:
Place one empty cup or bowl in the middle of the group. Then give each player 5 pennies.
One person (the Moderator) will need a blank sheet of paper and a pen to record the answers. Note: The Moderator can participate in the game as well.
Here are the questions the Moderator will ask the group:
1. What is your favorite thing to smell? Anyone that wants to share their answer will have to put one of their cents into the cup or bowl. They will then share with the group their answer. The moderator will not move to the next question until everyone has placed a penny in the cup and gives an answer to this question. After everyone has had their turn answering the above question, the moderator will then ask the next question.
2. What is your favorite thing to taste? The group will then repeat the same steps as above.
3. What is your favorite thing to hear? Repeat the same process as above.
4. What is your favorite thing to touch? Repeat the same process as above.
5. What is your favorite thing to see? By the time the Moderator asks this last question every player should have one penny left in his possession.
After all questions have been answered, the moderator can start the game over by redistributing the pennies and asking a new set of questions: What is your worst thing to smell, taste, hear, touch, and see?
We played this as a family and we had a blast! We have a three year-old that used the word “snake” as his answer on every single question, which made for many laughs. It was interesting to learn of my wife's favorite things to smell, hear, and touch. It was also a great educational tool for our children in relating how they use their own five senses; they really had to think of practical ways in how they use and experience these senses. I also took the opportunity at the end of this game to speak to our children about God granting humans the ability to experience His creation in so many different ways. It was a great time of sharing and relating God's purposes for our senses.
This game is easy to play, costs just pennies, and makes for a great time of family fun! Try it out tonight with your family!
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Funny of the Week: Man Babies!
Hey Dad, have you ever wondered what it would look like to swap heads with your child? Me neither! But in case you do feel the hunger for such a Photoshop experience, you can check out tons of hysterical pics over at ManBabies.com
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
The Art of Spiritual Drafting
Today a co-worker and I went for a quick jog during our lunch break. Since he is a faster runner, within the first quarter mile I fell in behind him and tried my best to keep stride for stride. With it being a windy day, I instantly felt the lack of wind resistance when I aligned myself directly behind my friend’s body. In that moment of non-resistance I felt like an Olympic sprinter! We were hurdling potholes, dodging small dogs, and passing light poles as if they were pages being thumbed through in a book. It was great!
However, after mile marker 2 my running partner kicked his pace into a higher gear; a gear I evidently do not possess. As I tried my best to keep up, the wind slowly began to push on my chest resulting in my friend running on in victory and me eventually walking while faking a leg cramp for the passersby.
While comical, this is a great lesson for dads. Each dad has been blessed with a family that is designed by God to run behind his spiritual pace. Dad, you are the spiritual pacesetter of your home! Your child may need to run behind you because she is not spiritually mature enough to run beside you. This spiritual pacesetting is not the church’s primary job but yours as a dad. By following behind you, your family can avoid the winds of doubt, loneliness, and spiritual ignorance that would otherwise slow them down.
This pace requires a dad to stay spiritually conditioned and one step ahead of his family. The more spiritually grounded and mature Dad is, the easier it is for his family to draft behind. Spiritual drafting allows the family to share in the thrills of loving and serving God at a healthy pace.
So Dad, lace up those spiritual shoes! And run the best race of your Christian life so powerfully that any family could easily draft behind.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Chat Live with NFL Running Back Shaun Alexander!
This Thursday night, October 21st, at 5pm central time you will have the opportunity to chat live with Shaun Alexander thanks to WaterBrook Multnomah Publishers! Shaun will be discussing his new book The Walk: Clear Direction and Spiritual Power for Your Life and answering your questions. You can participate in this chat right from our website! Don't miss out on this exciting opportunity to chat live with NFL Running Back Shaun Alexander this Thursday night!
waterbrookmultnomah on livestream.com. Broadcast Live Free
Monday, October 18, 2010
Don't stiff-arm your child!
One weekend my family and I were at our local park when I noticed a father throwing ball with his son. As we got closer to this father and son, I could hear the dad giving instructions to his son on how to throw a curveball. The young boy was listening intently with both ears poking out from under the rim of his loose ball cap. The boy’s glove was visibly new and you could sense this would be his first season of playing organized baseball.
The dad instructed the boy on how to properly hold the ball in his hand, where to place his fingers to give the correct rotation and spin, what type of speed to project, and how to perform a flawless rocker-step. It was a good lesson. I learned a lot about how to throw a curveball.
After the dad was done instructing his child he said, “Now, let me show you how to do it!” The boy and father walked several paces away from each other, reminding me of an old western gunfight. The boy squatted down to play the hind catcher and the dad took the imaginary mound. After such good instructions from the dad, I had to watch the performance.
The dad threw the first pitch, which missed his boy’s glove by 20 feet! After the second pitch I started looking for my wife and children in fear of them being hit. After the third pitch I wanted to move my car! This was comical to me as a dad. This man had given great and proper instructions to his son but could not perform the act himself.
Then the Lord spoke to my heart. I thought about how many times I have given clear Biblical instructions to my children and yet I could not perform the act myself because of my spiritual weakness.
Dads, many of us are great at giving Biblical instructions and can teach amazing classes on how to throw spiritual curveballs but can we perform per our own instructions?
We parents need to stop spiritually stiff-arming our children with an instruction-only lifestyle! Let us actively show them how to live by the Bible and only when necessary, should we use words!
Friday, October 15, 2010
And the Winner is?
Congratulations to Trey Brunson of Jacksonville, FL! He is the first winner of our Book Giveaway!
Our second winner is Rebecca Ingram Powell of Nashville, TN!
A special thank-you to all who participated in this event. Be looking for our next big giveaway starting soon!
Our second winner is Rebecca Ingram Powell of Nashville, TN!
A special thank-you to all who participated in this event. Be looking for our next big giveaway starting soon!
Monday, October 11, 2010
The Man Drawer. Do you have one?
In our kitchen we have one drawer that is labeled as the Man Drawer. To me, this drawer is the most handy part of the kitchen. I utilize this drawer to store basic tools needed around the house (tape measure, allen wrench set, screwdrivers). This drawer keeps me from having to rummage through the garage just to find a screw or wire pliers. If you don't have a Man Drawer you need to apply for one today!
Needing to mend a broken toy for my daughter, I opened the Man Drawer to grab a pair of pliers. It had been some time since needing to use this drawer and to my surprise all I could see was junk! Junk everywhere! There were old batteries, bent paperclips, crumbled-up paper, broken crayons, scattered thumbtacks, and several items that I was unsure of their origin. What had happened to my neat and organized Man Drawer?! Two words: WO-man. I fussed, grumbled, and declared the blame while digging for my pliers. Almost instantly, the Lord reveled the true source of the problem.
The truths of the matter are this:
1. It was a Man Drawer and not a Woman Drawer. Therefore, I am responsible for the way this drawer is kept or not kept. That was the agreement when I acquired this drawer. This is also true with a man's family. The Bible makes evident that God will hold the man of the family accountable for the order and organization of that family. This was the agreement when you acquired your family.
2. It had been too long since the Man Drawer had been opened. If I would have regularly kept check on this drawer I would have been able to address the issue when it had little junk. Now it gathered much junk. Dad, when was the last time you opened up your family and evaluated its condition, its order, its structure? We men as the head of the home, should always keep our ears on the spiritual tracks of our family before it's too late!
3. It took much time and pain to clean up the junk. I couldn't stand to see my Man Drawer in this condition, so I began to tediously clean out the drawer. As I previously wrote, there were thumbtacks dumped all throughout the drawer. Every time I would try to remove an item a tack would prick my finger. The same needs to be a warning to the way you lead your family. Cleaning out the junk in your family's life will be painful and very time consuming if you wait until it gets too full of trash.
Men, I pray we will open and look inside the lives of our families and start throwing out the junk before it piles too high!
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Is Your Calendar Sick?
Hey Dad, in case you didn't know: Your time is important! You only have a limited amount to use for yourself and to share with others. Your daily job duties are vital to your family's survival and prosperity. Weeks in advance, your commitments to family and friends often fill those empty white boxes of your calendar. Your children have practices, doctor visits, award ceremonies, and rehearsals. By the time all these appointments and plans are completed, Monday strikes at your heels like the neighbor's pet chihuahua! All the while your asking, "Why do I never have enough time?" Dad, it could be that your calendar is sick.
As a husband, father, minister, student, writer, and yard trimmer I found myself circling in this revolving door of not having enough time left at the end of each week. There was little to no time nor energy to spare for my wife and children. I came to the hard realization that I was giving my family the rest of my time instead of the best of my time. Then one crazy day, I jumped out of that revolving door of busyness, turned, and looked through the glass in hopes to critique my own time management flaws.
Since we all have the same amount of time in a day, I wondered how other dads seemed to have good quality time with their children, while many of them had more of a time-demanding job than I.
What did I find out?
Thursday, October 7, 2010
The Worst Daddy Duty?
What is the worst Dad job? Take our poll on the right side of this page! --> -->
What is your worst Daddy Duty? --> -->
Win a FREE Book for DAD!
With the launch of TheDaddyDisciple this month, let's kick things off with a Free Book! All you have to do to enter the drawing is click the "Follow" button on this site or simply leave a comment on any of the recent posts (including this one). The first 20 people will be entered into the drawing. On OCTOBER 15th we will reveal the winner! What book are we giving away? We will let you pick!
You have five choices:
1. Point Man by Steve Farrar
2. Every Man's Battle by Arterburn, Stoeker, and Yorkey
3. Family Driven Faith by Voddie Baucham
4. Raising Godly Children in an Ungodly World by Ken and Steve Ham
5. Already Gone by Ken Ham and Britt Beemer
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
A New Family Tradition
Recently, my wife and I decided to start a new family tradition at our house. I personally love family traditions. I'm not talking about the family traditions Hank Williams Jr. sings about. I'm talking about the traditions that you loved as a kid. Family traditions are some of my sweetest memories as a child. It was always something good I could depend on happening. It was one of the few things in my life as a child that was constant and unchanging when many things seemed to change for me and my family (new homes, towns, schools, and even step-parents). Now, as my wife and I strive to bring parental solidity to our children, family traditions are a great way to make memories last forever.
Here's a new tradition for you and your family: Each day, during the family mealtime (for us it's dinner) and after our family prayer, one child or adult (yes Dad, you have to participate) is responsible to verbally recite from memory a Bible verse of their choice. For this tradition to happen notice what must be in place first: 1) you must have a meal with your family daily [unless traveling without them] 2) you must pray together daily as a family. You may have heard the true saying, "A Family that prays together, stays together."
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
A Great Dad Moment
As a dad, have you ever had one of those moments? A great parenting moment you wish you could freeze in the canister of time? A moment of parenting you keep replaying in your mind, as if you had it recorded on a DVD?
Most great dad-moments are created when your manhood and fatherhood finds an equilibrium. As men, it is easy to fall into the John Wayne mentality of putting up our guard in defense of our Manhood. But who are we actually fighting? Who is invading our Man-territory? Could the invaders we are battling be our own children?!
Let me share a personal story in hopes of being relative to this post: I believe it was one of those "dad moments".
A late-night lighting storm can place great fears in the hearts of small children. I remember my three year-old son being horrified at the sounds and flashes one late night. He did not want to lay down with me in my bed. Instead, he wanted me to stand and hold him. As a father, this was a great opportunity to display my protective, man-of-the-house abilities. Yet after awhile, I got tired of walking him around and decided to sit down. He was wide awake and showed no signs of drifting off to sleep.
Then it happened...
Books for Dads - You mean I'm Supposed to READ?!
Hey Dads,
Here is a quick list of good family shaping books designed to help parents be better parents. These 3 books are sure to press issues and realizations like no other books dare.
Family Driven Faith by Voddie Baucham: Published by Crossway Books
This is, hands-down, the best read of the year for dads [and we read many books in a year's time]. As a dad, this book will challenge like no other book has before. Within the first chapter dads will find numerous ways to change mannerisms and motives in raising children. We don't want to reveal too much in this post! If we at TheDaddyDisciple had to chose between buying this book and eating lunch, we would be starving right now! Don't pass this book up.
Raising Godly Children in an Ungodly World by Ken Ham and Steve Ham: Published by Master Books.
During your journey through this book you will learn:
1. Ways for your family to survive our current culture.
2. How to educate children with Biblical guidance.
3. Tips for raising them up spiritually healthy.
4. Solutions to the root cause of dysfunctional families.
5. How to cultivate Biblical authority as a parent.
6. Ways to discipline your child.
Already Gone by Ken Ham and Britt Beemer: Published by Master Books.
This book reveals the hard and cold facts of young teenagers learning to become young adults and losing God along the way. The facts, as you will find in this book, give way to the realization of our failure as dads. Fathers should be the primary Biblical teachers of their own children. Ouch! But true....
Here just one statistic from this book: 89% of children that have grown up in a church will leave their religion by their Sophomore year of college. 89%! What has happened? This book will reveal the answer to this question.
We are currently reading and will be posting our reviews of these books within the next couple of months, but we tell you: We've been wounded already by the deep lacerations contained within the pages of these books! While awaiting the reviews, run on out, pick them up off the shelves, grab a large spoon, and dig in. You will not be disappointed!
Friday, October 1, 2010
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