One Mom’s Look at Tedd Tripp’s Book: Shepherding a Child’s Heart
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(Today and Thursday, we’ll be posting two perspectives on Christian parenting. Anne Sokol’s focuses on Tedd Tripp’s popular book on parenting. In tomorrow’s article, Aaron Blumer writes on “The Simplicity of Biblical Parenting.”)
For brevity, I focus here on my disagreements with Shepherding a Child’s Heart—its application of some Scriptures and its overall emphasis. My main concerns are these:
- The book’s focus on requiring obedience as the primary component of the parent/child relationship and emphasis on parental authority as the right to require obedience.
- Tripp’s teaching that spanking is the means the parent must use in order to bring a child back into “the circle of blessing.”
- Tripp’s interpretation that the “rod” in Proverbs equals spanking, that spanking is even for young children, that spanking is the God-ordained means of discipline (which parents must obey) and that use of the rod saves a child’s soul from death.
- His portrayal of any other style or method of parenting in a derogatory manner and training parents’ consciences that failure to discipline as his book teaches is disobedience to God.
These points are the heart of Tripp’s teaching, and while his book contains many truths, it does not communicate the full truth of gospel-oriented parenting, as he claims it does.
1. Is obedience the primary component of the parent-child relationship, and is it right for parents to mainly exercise their authority as the right to require obedience?
For several reasons, I see the obedience emphasis as a frustrating, and even false, paradigm for the parent/child relationship. The truth of the gospel is that my child will never obey me or God perfectly while on the earth. I, an adult, will never obey God perfectly on this earth. The essence of the gospel is that perfect obedience to God’s standards is only achieved by Christ—and in Him, we are free from this exacting burden.
So emphasizing obedience as the primary component of the family relationship, as Tripp does, distorts the gospel and puts our focus on ourselves and our sinfulness—not only because we will always fail, but also because our works are not praiseworthy; they are only acceptable insomuch as they are the Spirit’s work. The gospel focuses us on Christ’s obedience and His complete sufficiency for us. And the deeper we understand and accept that truth, the more we are transformed into His image (i.e., the more we obey). Obedience is the fruit, not the object. Obedience is our joyful freedom, not our punishable law.
Martin Luther wrote:
Therefore the first care of every Christian ought to be to lay aside all reliance on works, and strengthen his faith alone more and more, and by it grow in the knowledge, not of works, but of Christ Jesus, who has suffered and risen again for him, as Peter teaches (1 Peter v.) when he makes no other work to be a Christian one….
Then comes in that other part of Scripture, the promises of God, which declare the glory of God, and say, “If you wish to fulfil [sic] the law, and, as the law requires, not to covet, lo! believe in Christ, in whom are promised to you grace, justification, peace, and liberty.” All these things you shall have, if you believe, and shall be without them if you do not believe. For what is impossible for you by all the works of the law, which are many and yet useless, you shall fulfil [sic] in an easy and summary way through faith, because God the Father has made everything to depend on faith….
Now, since these promises of God are words of holiness, truth, righteousness, liberty, and peace, and are full of universal goodness, the soul, which cleaves to them with a firm faith, is so united to them, nay, thoroughly absorbed by them, that it not only partakes in, but is penetrated and saturated by, all their virtues.1
A better rubric for parenting is developing a loving relationship (which does entail teaching obedience) which prayerfully prepares a child’s heart so that it is favorable to receive the good seed of the gospel. Again, teaching obedience is one part of this. Tripp’s emphasis is wrong and his methods are limited—he claims that communication and the rod are the only “biblical” methods of discipline.
Second, on the subject of authority as the right to require obedience, Tripp writes:
Authority best describes the parent’s relationship to the child. (p. xix)
When your child is old enough to resist your directives, he is old enough to be disciplined. When he is resisting you, he is disobeying…. Rebellion can be something as simple as an infant struggling against a diaper change or stiffening out his body when you want him to sit in your lap. (p. 154)
Yes, loving parenting authority does require obedience, but the extent to which Tripp emphasizes this is mistaken. Though he mentions other aspects of servanthood in authority, his main thrust is authority as requiring obedience, and he goes to great lengths to teach parents exactly how to exercise authority in this manner. Tripp’s book makes this the main factor in the parent/child relationship in a manner that is not consistent with Scripture.
For example, God’s relationship with us as His children is characterized by many things other than His right to demand obedience from us. He emphasizes lovingkindness, rejoicing, longsuffering, compassion, and sacrifice. He meets our true needs, helps us to will and to do His good pleasure, has compassion on us, blesses us—and much more. Tripp gives little attention to how these apply to parenting.
We want to model the entire nature of God—not mainly God’s exercise of authority over us to command obedience. Communicating to my child that God can be trusted because He always is acting in wisdom, righteousness and truth toward us is the more godly path to obedience.
Again, Martin Luther understands:
This also is an office of faith: that it honours with the utmost veneration and the highest reputation Him in whom it believes, inasmuch as it holds Him to be truthful and worthy of belief…. What higher credit can we attribute to any one than truth and righteousness, and absolute goodness?
Thus the soul, in firmly believing the promises of God, holds Him to be true and righteous…. In doing this the soul shows itself prepared to do His whole will; in doing this it hallows His name, and gives itself up to be dealt with as it may please God. For it cleaves to His promises, and never doubts that He is true, just, and wise, and will do, dispose, and provide for all things in the best way. Is not such a soul, in this its faith, most obedient to God in all things?
In His dealings with us as His children, God does nothing like reaching down and spanking us each time we disobey. Sin has natural consequences, but God bears them with us, redeems them, and works in the secret places of our hearts transforming our beliefs and understanding about Him. Greater obedience results. His graciousness is not permissive, but it is very patient—training yet not demanding.
2. Does spanking bring a child back into the “circle of blessing”?
Shepherding a Child’s Heart connects spanking with blessing:
The rod returns the child to the place of blessing…. The rod of correction returns him to the place of submission to parents in which God has promised blessing. (p. 115)
The disobedient child has moved outside the place of covenant blessing. The parent must quickly restore the child to the proper relationship with God and the parent. As the child returns to the circle of blessing, things go well for him. He enjoys long life. (p. 135-136)
The Bible does not support Tripp’s teaching that spanking brings a child back into the “circle of blessing.” Spanking is not endued by God with such spiritual power, nor, in fact, is a parent endued with the power to restore the child. Biblically, confession and repentance restore our fellowship with God and others. Let’s cling to this promise: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (NASB, 1 John 1:9). Tripp’s made-up “circle of blessing” teaching goes beyond what God says.
Also, the command to obey was given to the child. Just as husbands are not told to make their wives submit and wives are not told to make their husbands love them, parents are not told to make their children obey.
I taught my daughters to obey—starting when they were small—because I wanted their hearts to be sensitive and trained in the things of God. But teaching obedience is only one facet of my parenting.
3. Has Tedd Tripp correctly interpreted the “rod” passages?
Tripp teaches that the “rod” in Proverbs equals spanking, that spanking is even for young children, that spanking is the God-ordained means of discipline (which parents must obey) and that use of the rod saves a child’s soul from death.
God has commanded the use of the rod in discipline and correction of children. It is not the only thing you do, but it must be used. He has told you that there are needs within your children that require use of the rod. If you are going to rescue your children from death, if you are going to root out the folly that is bound up in their hearts, if you are going to impart wisdom, you must use the rod. (p. SACH, 108)
The rod … is the parent, as God’s representative, undertaking on God’s behalf what God has called him to do. He is not on his own errand, but fulfilling God’s. (p. SACH, 109)
Tripp’s use of Proverbs 23:14 (NIV: “Punish him [a child] with the rod and save his soul from death”) is faulty. Only the grace of God saves us from death and from our sinfulness. It is unbiblical to assert that spanking is God’s “means of grace” for saving children in any way. We diligently teach our children to obey, but spanking them is not salvific in nature. In fact, it is usually unnecessary. There are many godly ways we can teach our children to obey: by our example, by physically helping them fulfill our instructions, by meeting their internal and external needs, by teaching that choices have consequences, etc. God does these things for us as His children.2
The book refers several times to this conversation:
Father: “I must spank you. If I don’t, then I would be disobeying God.” (p. 31)
And again, “Dear, you know what Mommy said and you did not obey Mommy. And now I’ll have to spank you.” (p. 103)
In reference to the mother’s actions, Tripp explains that “the issues of correction transcend the present. All earthly punishment presupposes the great day when destinies are eternally fixed” (p. 103).
The conversation Tripp describes suggests parents who are controlled by a parenting formula rather than by the Holy Spirit: “I must spank you.” And linking earthly punishment to the day of judgment is a distortion of God’s relationship to us. As His child, my eternal destiny was decided already, because He punished His Son, not me.
As His children, He does not consistently punish us when we sin. He trains and disciplines us consistently but He is not obligated to punish us. By teaching parents that they are required to spank, Tripp teaches children (and their parents) that—contrary to the gospel—God does punish us consistently for our sins. Because Christ was punished for us, God is free to use whatever methods of discipline He wishes in order to train us and bring us closer to Himself.
Luther’s words are helpful once again:
When I say, such a Person [Christ], by the wedding-ring of faith, takes a share in the sins, death, and hell of His wife, nay, makes them His own, and deals with them no otherwise than as if they were His, and as if He Himself had sinned…. Thus the believing soul, by the pledge of its faith in Christ, becomes free from all sin, fearless of death, safe from hell, and endowed with the eternal righteousness, life, and salvation of its Husband Christ.
Tripp errs gravely in asserting that spanking is God-ordained, that God’s methods of discipline are limited to communication and spanking, and that parents must spank or they are sinning.
The book also lacks adequate attention to age differences and stages of development—a great aid in child-rearing. On this point, Sally Clarkson writes:
The unfortunate thing is that many parents, in the name of faithful discipline, do not understand the differences between babies or toddlers or young children or even teens with all of their hormones, and they exhibit anger and harshness toward their children, act in a demeaning way, while neglecting the cues of the child at each stage. These parents have no perspective for the children themselves–they use a rule and formula no matter what–and often wonder why their children do not respond to them.3
4. Is Tripp correct that any other methods of parenting are ineffective and disobedient?
Finally, Tripp consistently describes other methods or styles of parenting or discipline as ineffective and undesirable. This is a weakness in his argument because other godly methods of biblical training do exist and have been used effectively for many years.
For example, a daughter of Puritan parents, Mary Fish (1736-1818) writes: “They were very watchful over us in all our ways, and they had such a happy mode of governing that they would even govern us with an eye, and they never used severity with us at all.”4
These summarize several of the major errors in teaching and emphases that I have found in Shepherding a Child’s Heart. The book includes several good teachings, but the overarching errors concern me to the point that I do not recommend the book to parents. Those considering promoting this book and its teachings seriously should give these topics a lot of thought.
Notes
1 All Luther excerpts here are from Concerning Christian Liberty, Part 2.
2 According to Clay Clarkson, Heartfelt Discipline, Prov. 23:14 is probably referring to the use of an actual rod on the back of a young man (p. 56).
3 http://www.itakejoy.com/first-time-obedience-really/
4 Joy Day Buel and Richard J. Buel, Jr. The Way of Duty: A Woman and Her Family in Revolutionary America, p. 7
Anne Sokol Bio
Vitaliy and Anne Sokol are missionaries in Kiev, Ukraine. Anne is a graduate of Bob Jones University. She is a doula, childbirth educator, and midwifery student. She blogs at www.birthinukraine.wordpress.com. They have two daughters, Skyla & Victoria.
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[DavidO] I don’t think Tripp makes it (God’s authority) the main thing. I think he says it’s foundational, though, and that’s hard to argue with.I dont’ think God’s authority (meaning, the right to require obedience, as Tripp means) is the “foundational” way God deals with us. God is, in essesnce, our authority, He governs us. It’s not a debatable point. But He doesn’t go about His plan of salvation/relationship making this foundational, iykwim. Tripp is really, really big on this.
Authority (parental) is better just assumed instead proven, exercised, extracted, etc., as his book mainly communicates. I’m not knocking teaching a child to obey. It should be a “happy habit” to obey (a little Charlotte Mason there). And it is a lot of work for a parent to do this! Doing this while growing in intimacy and closeness to your child.
[DavidO] The greek word often translated believe is more like exercise faith, if I understand correctly, and includes a submission to God’s authority.Reading the book of John, Jesus says often something like “do what I command” and then He is at the same time talking about faith. His command is to believe in Him. It changes everything in one’s life.
[DavidO]A lot of people :D Perhaps even God Himself, if we’d listen.[Anne Sokol] and it’s not to be “taught” the way Tripp says it’s to be taught.Says …?
[Anne Sokol]Anne,[dmicah] Anne,I dont’ really want to focus this thread on spanking/not. The Bible does not speak directly to spanking small children.
are you saying spanking is unbiblical? wrong?
or are you saying Tripp exaggerated its effectiveness and its biblical mandate?
mp
Please go back and read my points again. Don’t just skim. Tripp says spanking and communication are the only methods of childrearing. He is wrong. He is wrong about other emphases too.
To be clear, i read your article.
I asked questions to clarify, not loaded questions. I didn’t make comments or tear apart your points. I was trying to understand fully your position.
The reason i asked is b/c only in your first point do you give any personal alternative to Tripp’s points. 2-4, you basically say, “He’s wrong”. Much of your support comes from others, i.e. Luther, Clarkson. I was simply requesting more info on your personal thoughts related to spanking and a suitable alternative.
For instance, you mentioned that you trained your daughters when they were young. How did you train them to obey at 6 months, 16 months and then 4 years? What tools did you employee?
regards,
mp
Punitive:
SACH, 37, “Discipline: Corrective, Not Punitive
“If correction orbits around the parent who has been offended, then the focus will be venting anger, or perhaps, taking vengeance. The function is punitive. If, however, correction orbits around God as the one offended, then the focus is restoration. The function is remedial. It is designed to move a child who has disobeyed God back to the path of obedience. It is corrective.”
Do you see how he rides you down his logic road? He says it’s punitive if it’s angry or vengeful, not if it’s corrective, remedial, restoring. But that’s wrong, really. Punitive simply means “inflicting, concerned with, or directed toward punishment” or “inflicting punishment; “punitive justice”; “punitive damages.” (google search “define: punitive”) Spanking is punitive, regardless of the motive.
Behaviorism…it’s a page or so, but basically, i would argue that his method is pretty behavioristic:
“When does a child need a spanking? When you have given a directive that he has heard and is within his capacity to understand and he has not obeyed without challenge, without excuse or without delay, he needs a spanking. If you fail to spank, you fail to take God’s Word seriously. You are saying you do not believe what the Bible teaches about the import of these issues… . If obedience is to be absolutely mandatory for him, you cannot tolerate disobedience” (149).
Deuteronomy 21:18-21 “If any man has a stubborn and rebellious son who will not obey his father or his mother, and when they chastise him, he will not even listen to them, then his father and mother shall seize him, and bring him out to the elders of his city at the gateway of his home town. “And they shall say to the elders of his city, ‘This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious, he will not obey us, he is a glutton and a drunkard.’ “Then all the men of his city shall stone him to death; so you shall remove the evil from your midst, and all Israel shall hear of it and fear.
[dmicah] Anne,I’ll give a short and a long answer here.
To be clear, i read your article.
I asked questions to clarify, not loaded questions. I didn’t make comments or tear apart your points. I was trying to understand fully your position.
The reason i asked is b/c only in your first point do you give any personal alternative to Tripp’s points. 2-4, you basically say, “He’s wrong”. Much of your support comes from others, i.e. Luther, Clarkson. I was simply requesting more info on your personal thoughts related to spanking and a suitable alternative.
For instance, you mentioned that you trained your daughters when they were young. How did you train them to obey at 6 months, 16 months and then 4 years? What tools did you employee?
regards,
mp
the short answer is that there are a lot of parenting skills that help teach obedience. I’d recommend goybparenting.com and parentingfreedom.com, itakejoy.com and googling “gentle discipline.” It’s a journey, so give yourself time. Books: Anything by Ross Campbell, Clay Clarkson, Danny Silk (not read him personally though), and child development series by Louise Bates Ames (Gesell Institute of Human Development).
oh, here are some other stuff:
http://www.steadymom.com/2011/02/positive-discipline-5-tips.html
http://www.itakejoy.com/first-time-obedience-really/
Here’s the long answer, and I basically had to limit the article to my objections to this book. I want to say, also, there are good things in the book. I don’t think it’s all terrible. there is just not space to sift out the bad from the good in the article, nor would i hand the book to a parent assuming they could sift out the bad from the good.
When my first child was 2, I was a frustrated, spanking parent. Spanking was basically the ONLY parenting skill I had available to myself and our relationship. I was expressing my discipline frustrations to an acquaintance, and she amazingly packed up a box with a billion “gracious” parenting books and mailed them to me here in Kiev. They were not all anti-spanking. In fact, Ross Campbell’s Relational Parenting (hands-down the #1 book I would recommend to parents of small kids), does advise spanking on some occasions, but he has a LOT of things to do that are positive ways of “compliance training” (ha ha). I did a lot of reading, a LOT of learning other parenting skills, ways to help my child obey that were not punishing in nature. It took me several months of transition time, a HUGE mental change from “I MUST teach you to obey me.” to, “how can I come along side my child and help her learn obedience in a way that my manner is Christlike?” … It took me time to wean away from spanking, from threatening spanking, from going from spanking to yelling for control … to learning patient ways to teach obedience.
So, my kids are wonderfully imperfect, and they are quite obedient! certainly not robots and I’m not a perfect mom in a long shot (I think this whole parenting thing is more about who we become as people/parents in one way). But anyway, like I said, i think parents are so different in their personalities and they really need to develop their own “parenting style” that is consistent with the Bible. I have no formulas to offer, just growing :D
I don’t want to repeat everything I said there, but I’ll summarize: faith is obedience but it is not “works.” So the question—in relation to parenting—becomes “What role does obedience/works have in the growth of those who are regenerate?” In other words, it’s very much a question of how someone understands sanctification.
My personal belief is that many nowadays (most?) underrate the role of “works” in sanctification. I believe the indwelling of the Spirit, our union with Christ, our new birth, etc., profoundly change what “works” or obedience means compared to the works of a person who is trying to obtain peace with God apart from or instead of faith.
(Galatians is a favorite text of today’s “let go, let God” crowd—which has both Keswick and Reformed editions—but I think Galatians has been misapplied in many cases.)
Lots about that here… http://sharperiron.org/forum/poll-how-important-it-for-christian-parent…
As for parenting technique… at our house we have been passionate believers in “first time obedience.” I wish I could say we have been stunningly successful implementers of first-time obedience! Not even close. :)
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
So, my kids are wonderfully imperfect, and they are quite obedient! certainly not robots and I’m not a perfect mom in a long shot (I think this whole parenting thing is more about who we become as people/parents in one way). But anyway, like I said, i think parents are so different in their personalities and they really need to develop their own “parenting style” that is consistent with the Bible. I have no formulas to offer, just growingthanks for the detailed response.
My wife and I are doing our best with three sons, 8, 6 & 3. Each with their own personality which requires discipline tweaks. We only use spanking for outright, rebellious “testing the limits” behavior. Where i tend to side with Tripp’s philosophy on authority is that children from the moment of birth strive for autonomy. It’s the way of sin. So based upon age and development, mild and temporary pain is an option for attitude correction and a very physical reminder of who is in charge. So where i can agree with you is that it is not necessarily a biblical mandate, but biblically acceptable. But we definitely keep a lot of tools in the tool belt; if you don’t, you can’t take them in public. :-)
Favorite parenting story to date: Last year when my two oldest were 7 & 5, i sat them on the couch and delivered a fantastic “Dad” speech about their poor behavior. Not yelling, not scolding, not threatening. Just five minutes of inspirational locker room coaching; prepping them to listen better, stop fighting, behave and obey Mom and Dad. At the end, I joined them on the couch, hoping to hear a “Sorry, Dad” or “We’ll do better.” The five year old finally spoke and said, “Dad….you’re new name is Waster.” “Why is that son?” “Because you’ve wasted my time.” All i could do was roll to the floor laughing…
[Aaron Blumer] faith is obedience but it is not “works.” … nowadays (most?) underrate the role of “works” in sanctification.Agreed, and I hope what I was saying sounded like what you say above (if not, that’s my fault) which is why I don’t have much of an argument with Tripp. Although I probably need not spend more time trying to express why I think what we agree on and what he is saying are congruent. His book is not that expensive for anyone who wants to see for themselves.
[dmicah] Where i tend to side with Tripp’s philosophy on authority is that children from the moment of birth strive for autonomy. It’s the way of sin. So based upon age and development, mild and temporary pain is an option for attitude correction and a very physical reminder of who is in charge. So where i can agree with you is that it is not necessarily a biblical mandate, but biblically acceptable. But we definitely keep a lot of tools in the tool belt; if you don’t, you can’t take them in public. :-)I really dont see them that way. I think God made children very dependently-natured on us parents, emotionally, physically, etc. God makes our children very, very open to us parents in many ways. So winning their hearts and talking about our faith and truths is very easy. A diaper-change struggle is not rebellion ;)
Maybe I don’t look at “disobedience” the way you do. Usually disobedience is a signal that something is wrong in our relationship. Not always, but often. And I like first-time obedience. I don’t go about it the way Tripp does, but I do work toward and usually have pretty immediate happy obedience.
Also, using something like natural consequences can be a lot more “painful” in some ways, and lot more effective for kids. I have a “don’t work, don’t eat” you’re-part-of-a-family policy, and I have only had to enforce it once. They love togetherness.
[Anne Sokol]You take issue with Tripp’s position on spanking. It is clear from several statements that you disagree with spanking young children and opt for other methods that are more relational. My question to you is this: Is that not communication? What other tools are there apart from physical and verbal correction (perhaps deprivation of privileges)? By rejecting physical correction, all one is left with is communication, and that is even more limited! I think Tripp’s explanation of communication in the context of training a child is quite good and his approach is biblically balanced on the whole.Tripp’s emphasis is wrong and his methods are limited—he claims that communication and the rod are the only “biblical” methods of discipline.
The problem is, you don’t have any BOYS! 8-)
By rejecting physical correction, all one is left with is communication, and that is even more limited!In the above, I believe the word “punishment” is what is meant rather than correction.
I correct my children physically by *making* them obey (moving their bodies, moving their hands, removing items from them) when they are unable to make themselves obey. I do not, however, physically punish them. I do not at all feel limited by no longer using physical punishments. As a matter of fact, when I stopped spanking I found that I was MUCH LESS LIMITED in my responses. A whole new world of teaching and correcting was opened up to me when I no longer relied on spanking to do everything.
I agree with Anne’s assessment of Tripp’s materials. Tripp would tell me that I’m sinning because I no longer spank my children. My question to him would be: If my children are being well-taught without spanking them, why MUST it be used?
Have you read any of the Tripps’ (both Tedd and Paul) other books? Such as War of Words or Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands? I don’t know how anyone could argue that they are anything other than Gospel-centered. It is not about “making” a child obey, as if we could do that on our own, but getting to the heart of the matter and using the Gospel to bring about repentence.
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Greg Long, Ed.D. (SBTS)
Pastor of Adult Ministries
Grace Church, Des Moines, IA
Adjunct Instructor
School of Divinity
Liberty University
Do you believe that spanking is REQUIRED of Christian parents?
[RyanS] You take issue with Tripp’s position on spanking. It is clear from several statements that you disagree with spanking young children and opt for other methods that are more relational. My question to you is this: Is that not communication? What other tools are there apart from physical and verbal correction (perhaps deprivation of privileges)? By rejecting physical correction, all one is left with is communication, and that is even more limited! I think Tripp’s explanation of communication in the context of training a child is quite good and his approach is biblically balanced on the whole.You know, my best stand-by parenting skill when one of my kids balks at obeying is this: taking her in my lap, talking to her, giving her a hug, just a few things like that for about 2-3 minutes—filling the emotional tank—and then I make the exact same request, and she bounces off happily to obey.
There are so many, many ways to reach a child’s heart. So many ways to help them learn obedience, many things that God does for us. It’s really not limited at all.
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