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March7 -> RE: My daughters choice (8/9/2008 2:33:51 PM)
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I'm a "first-generation" Christian (i.e., my parents weren't Christians), and I became a Christian at 20. (My husband has a similar background.) We've prayerfully raised our kiddoes to follow after the Lord and then rested in Him for His work in their hearts. Our son, now 16, informed me (I was in the kitchen cooking or something) when he was three that he'd just asked Jesus into his heart all by himself. At eight, he wanted to be baptized and was. At ten, he wasn't so sure about his faith, so he asked lots of questions and we had lots of good discussions over a couple of years (and still do, of course). By twelve, his hand was in Jesus' again. The change in his heart for Christ has been obvious in his attitudes and actions. For the last couple-three years, he's been growing in his faith through the thick and thin of life and has gathered himself a group of godly friends his age. Our daughter, now 13, deliberately asked me to help her pray to Jesus for salvation when she was four. She'd overheard a conversation about Jesus and the two men on crosses next to Him, and something about what she heard concerned her. She asked, "Do you mean that even if I'm good I might not be in heaven?" So, that question led to her wanting salvation. She's grown in her quiet way, and near her 13th birthday greatly desired to be baptized and was. The fruits of the Spirit are evident in her life, and she also has gathered about herself a group of godly friends her age. I'm just so thankful to the Lord...'cause as a first-generation Christian I have no idea what it's like to grow up in a Christian home. It's all new to me! So, we still keep praying for their faith to mature and still keep coming alongside them in loving guidance and training, of course. Following the Lord can be a bumpy ride for anyone, particularly a teen. It's all in God's hands.
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