1. Make sure your faith is only something you live out in public.
Go
to church... at least most of the time. Make sure you agree with what
you hear the preacher say, and affirm on the way home what was said
especially when it has to do with your kids obeying, but let it stop
there. Don’t read your bible at home. The pastor will say everything you
need to hear on Sundays. Don’t engage your children in questions they
have concerning Jesus and God. Live like you want to live during the
week so that your kids can see that duplicity is ok.
2. Pray only in front of people.
The
only times you need to pray are when your family is over, Holiday
meals, when someone is sick, and when you want something. Besides that,
don’t bother. Your kids will see you pray when other people are
watching, no need to do it with them in private.
3. Focus on your morals.
Make
sure you insist your kids be honest with you. Let them know it is the
right thing for them to do, but then feel free to lie in your own life
and disregard the need to tell them and others the truth. Get very angry
with your children when they say words that are “naughty” and “bad”,
but post, read, watch, and say whatever you want on TV, Facebook, and
Twitter. Make sure you focus on being a good person. Be ambiguous about
what this means.
4. Give financially as long as it doesn’t impede your needs.
Make
a big deal out of giving at church. Stress the need to your children
the value of tithing, while not giving sacrificially yourself. Allow
them to see you spend a ton of money on what you want, while negating
your command from scripture to give sacrificially.
5. Make church community a priority. As long as there is nothing else you want to do.
Hey,
you are a church going family, right? I mean, that’s what you tell your
friends and family anyways. Make sure you attend on Sundays. As long as
you didn’t stay up too late Saturday night. Or your family isn’t having
a big bar-b-que. Or the big game isn’t on. Or this week you just don’t
feel like it. Or... I mean, you are church going family so what’s the
big deal?
By: Thomas Weaver
By: Thomas Weaver
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