How to Create a Kingdom Culture in Your Home
By Steve DeWitt
Talking to our family members happens naturally. Having spiritual content to those conversations doesn’t. God knew this and made it a command in Israel. We can talk about the weather all we want, but bring up something spiritual and you get…crickets. Kingdom culture requires kingdom conversations. Not only is it an opportunity to teach our children, but the conversation itself elevates the culture of the home toward the things of God.
How often do you talk about spiritual things? Talk about what God’s doing in your life or our church? How often did you talk about it this past week?
By Steve DeWitt
Talk about the King (spiritual conversations)
“And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.” (Deuteronomy 6:6-9 ESV)
Talking to our family members happens naturally. Having spiritual content to those conversations doesn’t. God knew this and made it a command in Israel. We can talk about the weather all we want, but bring up something spiritual and you get…crickets. Kingdom culture requires kingdom conversations. Not only is it an opportunity to teach our children, but the conversation itself elevates the culture of the home toward the things of God.
How often do you talk about spiritual things? Talk about what God’s doing in your life or our church? How often did you talk about it this past week?
Use The Deuteronomy Drip Principle. Most of us don’t feel qualified to carry on an hour-long conversation on justification or missions in Africa. What Deuteronomy encourages is the drip principle. Drip. Drip. Drip. Everywhere you go, whenever possible, drip spiritual content into your daily conversations. Pray. Make God and God-talk as easy and normal as Cubs fans talk about the Cubs, and even more. Regularly asking each other questions that get to spiritual conversation is important. Here are some examples:
Has God been teaching you anything new lately?
What is one thing you prayed about today?
What do you hope to do or learn this year?
How did you help someone today, and how did someone help you?
What’s the biggest thing you are trusting God for right now?[1]
What was your takeaway from the Sunday sermon?
Get the ball rolling with each other by asking questions that take everyday conversations into spiritual categories.
Here’s another Old Testament tip: have spiritual mementos around the house and make them legendary. “And he said to the people of Israel, ‘When your children ask their fathers in times to come, ‘What do these stones mean?’ then you shall let your children know, ‘Israel passed over this Jordan on dry ground.’” (Joshua 4:21-22)
Let me give you an example of this. I have had a large, flat, smooth rock in my home office for many years. One day, Kiralee comes in and she says, “What’s this rock for?” I said, “Well, sweetheart, some years ago, Daddy was very, very discouraged and was questioning lots of things in his life. And I was walking along Lake Michigan and I saw this very smooth stone and I picked it up and the thought came to me, how did this stone get so smooth? For thousands of years there were many, many collisions and it made the stone really smooth and I thought, that’s what God is doing in this trial in my life right now. So I kept the rock, sweetheart.”
She loves this rock. In fact, yesterday I said, “Sweetheart, can you go get Daddy’s stone?” (She keeps it in her bedroom now.) And she said, “Maybe when you’re done, I can borrow it again?” She probably asks me every other day, “What does the stone mean?”
So in your home have things around that act as prompters of truth like a picture of you getting baptized or a picture of someone who discipled you on the fridge or things that prompt you to say, “Sweetheart, Daddy was a sinner but he came to Jesus and he is so glad that he did.” You want to make Jesus the central reference point of your home. Does everybody in your home know how you became a Christian? How God has worked in your life and whom he used to do it? Make God’s work in your life legendary. It makes Jesus the hero of your story and home.
[1] Recommended in http://www.focusonthefamily.ca/parenting/mealtime-questions
Scripture quotations are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
© 2021 by Steve DeWitt. You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that: (1) you credit the author, (2) any modifications are clearly marked, (3) you do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction, (4) you include The Journey (theJourney.fm) or Bethel Church (www.bethelweb.org) website address on the copied resource.
Steve DeWitt is senior pastor of Bethel Church in Northwest Indiana, Founder and Teaching Pastor for the media/radio ministry The Journey, and a Council member of The Gospel Coalition. He is also the author of Eyes Wide Open: Enjoying God in Everything. He and his wife, Jennifer, have two girls.
Family Math: Division
By Steve DeWitt
What do we bear with for the sake of peace? The little daily annoyances, personality traits, and preference matters. They don’t rise to the level of calling for a peace summit. When we make a big stink out of an insignificant thing we come across as petty, which only makes actual peace harder. What should we do with the non-sin idiosyncrasies everybody has?….
By Steve DeWitt
The Stages of Peacemaking
Bear with it
“Bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive.” (Colossians 3:13 ESV)
What do we bear with for the sake of peace? The little daily annoyances, personality traits, and preference matters. They don’t rise to the level of calling for a peace summit. When we make a big stink out of an insignificant thing we come across as petty, which only makes actual peace harder. What should we do with the non-sin idiosyncrasies everybody has? Do to others as you would have them do to you. Do you want peace summit level inquisition about your quirks? Every single person has qualities that require the people around them to simply bear with them. Bearing in love is good, especially when people bear with us.
Sometimes in conflict or disagreement, this requires us to just agree to disagree. Bear with their opinion or preference. It’s a broken world. We don’t all agree. Let’s go on for Jesus.
Cover it
“Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins.” (1 Peter 4:8)
Now we are on the level of actual sin or more serious offense. Wrongs done to us. If we have to confront and reconcile every sin we notice in anyone, we will be full-time sin inspectors. Yet Jesus said if we want to be inspecting sin full-time, we should inspect our own sin full-time.
“You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.” (Matthew 7:5)
I have called this stretchy love; the kind of love that stretches and can cover in the sense that it has a posture of grace toward the failures of others. God is gracious toward my sin. When I see a selfish spirit in a family member, OK, my posture toward that sin is to cover it with grace and leave it to God. This calls us to be slow to anger. Slow to annoyance.
When should I cover it and when should I confront it? Is this offense hindering our relationship? Am I able to place it in a mental category where I’m free to love and share with this person? If not, then it calls for the next step in peacemaking.
Confront it
This is active peacemaking. Passive aggressiveness kicks in and our instinct is to withdraw when what we really need to do is engage. Time doesn’t allow an exposition of Matthew 18 and what Jesus says. “If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother.” (Matthew 18:15)
We unfortunately see that as a church discipline text when 99% of the time it’s a guide to peacemaking in relationships. Go to the person and point out the fault. Obviously, this is not permission to be obnoxious or holier than thou. We go to make peace. Peacemaking is both an attitude and an action. We go to reconcile the relationship by reconciling the offense.
This requires winsomeness and wisdom, but don’t let that keep you from doing it. We all should realize that when someone comes to us to be a peacemaker they are showing how important our relationship is. Passive aggressive demeans the value by being unwilling to do the hard work peace requires.
If this is relational conflict, it’s rare that one person bears 100% of the fault. In reconciling, own up and confess your part, even if it’s only 1% contribution. Confess the 1% before talking about their 99%. It makes it safer for the other person to own their percentage.
Tone and timing are hugely helpful. I know this is your wedding day, but can we talk about the swirly you gave me in 3rd grade? That’s an example in the extreme. The goal is to win them back. To restore relational warmth. When and how we say what we say is so important. Pray and ask God to help you. Let’s not ignore the role of prayer in reconciliation.
Choose to not remember it/hold it against
This is the final step. What does it mean to reconcile and forgive? I wish we could eliminate “forgive and forget” from our vernacular. That’s helpful as it insinuates moving on, which is a great quality to have. However, God doesn’t forget our sins. He is all-knowing. What does God do? He chooses not to remember them. He chooses not to hold them against us anymore.
When we say, I forgive you, we are saying three things:
I will not hold this against you anymore
I will not hold it against you to others
I will not hold it against you in my heart anymore.
To get to this, we have to frame this as forgiveness, not just “I’m sorry.” Peacemaking requires the offending party to ask, “Will you forgive me?” and the offended party to express, “I do forgive you.” Now the stinger is out, and healing can begin.
Things happen that you’ll never technically forget. What can happen is, over time, I choose daily not to dwell on it against you. Eventually, it’s not the first thing or the second thing I think about when I see you or think about you. The negative can be replaced with the positive. That’s a great key to overcoming offenses—consciously remind yourself of positive experiences and positive qualities the person has. This creates gratitude and eventually appreciation for the person.
Too many times conflict is viewed as something that will always define the relationship. I’ll never get over this. This will always be a thing between us. Hear me. Only if you choose to. The gospel applied horizontally allows for the worst offenses to be forgiven and peace to be restored.
Here it is winter in Northwest Indiana. Potholes are appearing everywhere. What’s the difference between a pothole and the Grand Canyon? In Northwest Indiana, not that much. Actually, the answer is obvious. Both are holes. One you drive over and you go on. The other you drive into and you never get out.
By God’s grace, conflict in families can be potholes; bumps in the road if we follow these biblical principles of peacemaking. Are you a peace-faker or a peacemaker? Remember, you’re a sinner in a family of sinners. Keep the bar of expectation realistic and see others through the lens of the gospel. Christian, it is the lens of grace and peace through which God has promised to look at you forever.
Scripture quotations are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Permanent Text Edition® (2016). Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
© 2021 by Steve DeWitt. You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that: (1) you credit the author, (2) any modifications are clearly marked, (3) you do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction, (4) you include The Journey (theJourney.fm) or Bethel Church (www.bethelweb.org) website address on the copied resource.
Steve DeWitt is senior pastor of Bethel Church in Northwest Indiana, Founder and Teaching Pastor for the media/radio ministry The Journey, and a Council member of The Gospel Coalition. He is also the author of Eyes Wide Open: Enjoying God in Everything. He and his wife, Jennifer, have two girls.