By Tom Lane

The Purpose of Discipline

All of us have been in a restaurant, shopping mall, or Wal-Mart and seen a child “out of control” in need of correction and thought, “that would never happen under my watch.” Then as we watched things unfold we may have said something like, “That kid would be toast, why don’t the parents do something!” It’s the equivalence of armchair quarterbacking by grandparents, friends, family and even strangers. It is also true that before we become parents we absolutely know what we would do, or not do, allow and not allow, it is so obvious as we observe a child’s meltdown. However, when we became parents we found it is not as easy as it looks. All sorts of factors come into play… naps, without naps, new environment, hungry, ADD personality…all of a sudden what seemed clear and simple as a spectator is not that clear at all.

Then we become aware of the scriptural mandates related to parenting like “Train up a child in the way he should go, even when he is old he won’t depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6; “He who withholds his rod hates his son, but he who loves him disciplines him diligently.” Proverbs 13:24; “Foolishness is bound up in the heart of a child; the rod of discipline will remove it far from him.” Proverbs 22:15; Or how about this one, “Fathers, do not exasperate your children, so that they will not lose heart.” Colossians 3:21

Add on the foundation of biblical truth, and personal experience, society views that any act of physical correction to a child is abusive and what we find out is this: parenting is difficult and complicated! Doing it well requires God’s assistance. No parent is smart enough to produce God’s best results alone. Understanding our need for heavens assistance will naturally lead us to ask a simple question. What is the purpose of discipline? Is it to satisfy vows we made in response to other peoples out of control children? Is it to save us from public embarrassment because of our own children’s behavior? Noooooo….well then, what is discipline’s purpose?

Discipline has two distinct purposes but a singular focus. The singular focus of discipline is to teach our children how to respond to God by the way we allow them to respond to us. Will they obey His command to stop or will they carry on with the activity of the moment as long as they desire? Will they ignore Him and make Him count to three, while raising His voice before they respond to His commands? Will they respond only to angry threats of punitive action? In actuality, how they respond to God will most likely mirror the way they are responding to us. The focus of discipline is training.

We are our children’s image of God. If we really understand this fact we will carefully craft our response to them knowing that our response is creating in them their impression of God! We must ask, “How does God respond to us?” Is He gracious, kind, understanding, does He raise His voice in frustration, does He give us firm boundaries, does He correct us for disobedience? Are we modeling what God is like in the way we respond for our children to understand? Our goal should be to parent just like He does, knowing that without His help we can’t consistently reflect His nature to our children.

Once we understand that the focus of discipline is to train, we are able to work toward fulfilling the two purposes of discipline. The first purpose of discipline is to teach an obedient response to our voice so that as adults they will make the transition to respond to God’s inner voice as He speaks to them. And the second purpose is to teach them to embrace boundaries as good and necessary in their life so that when they are adults they will embrace God’s boundaries and live under His blessing.

As good teachers we respond to our children’s behavior, both good and bad, to reinforce, establish, and correct them in order to fulfill these two purposes. To accomplish this work of parenting it takes diligent effort and the assistance of the Holy Spirit. I have good news! The Holy Spirit will help our parenting effort if we will ask. However, be aware that when you ask you will become the learner even as you act as the teacher. We must learn God’s ways to impart them in our responses to our children.

If you’re not a parent yet, no worries, it is a good time to check your own response to discipline issues both past and present before you have the blessing of children and the responsibility of parenting. The discipline you have received in your life may not have been as purposeful as I have described. Maybe your parents didn’t know any better. Maybe they disciplined you the way their parents disciplined them. The Bible tells us that we suffer because of a lack of knowledge (Hosea 4:6). The discipline you received may have been harsh or even punitive or it could have been neglectful and nonexistent. Allow God to heal your past hurts and embrace His love and discipline in your life right now. No matter what you’ve experienced God is ready to become your father and His discipline is always loving and redemptive.

May God bless all your efforts to reflect Him and His greatness! May discipline fulfill its God ordained purpose in your life, as well as your children’s, and may you enjoy parenting in partnership with God!!

Marilyn Wedige

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT AND COORDINATOR

Marilyn Wedige serves as the Executive Assistant to Tom Lane and Coordinator for the Executive Leadership Institute. She and her husband Mike moved to Texas in 2013. She has served as Pastor Tom’s assistant since 2017. Marilyn is honored to serve in assisting the ELI to help leaders develop a: healthy lifestyle, enriched spiritual walk, and tools to increase their success and influence.

Marilyn was blessed in being raised in a godly Christian home and church. She graduated from Oral Roberts University with a double major in mathematics and computer science. Due to her husband Mike’s advancement in corporate management, they have had the privilege of serving in many churches across the United States and in New Zealand. Together they have led many small groups as well as served in prayer and youth ministries. Marilyn has led and taught in women’s and youth Bible studies as well as volunteered and tutored in her children’s schools.

Marilyn and Mike have been happily married since 1985 and together they have 3 children of which 2 are married, and 2 grandchildren. One of Marilyn’s greatest joys is serving her family.

Todd Lane

Chief Executive Officer

Todd Lane began his business career with a multi-national corporation who provided outsourced customer services. He developed through corporate management while moving across the United States and New Zealand. During his tenure in the corporate sector, he also served in several churches in the areas of youth ministry, worship, and small groups.

He transitioned to vocational ministry in 2002 as the first Business Administrator of Gateway Church. Over the following 20 years of ministry, he has led the development of business operations, new ministry launches, the methodology behind extension campuses, and guided overall staff alignment and implementation of the church vision. He has led small groups, taught classes, and has spoken at various churches, conferences, seminars, and events. He has also served as an elder of the church.

Todd holds a business administration degree in finance from Baylor University. He and his wife, Blynda have been married since 1995, and have three young adult children: Olivia, Harrison, and Evelyn.

Tom Lane

Founder & Chief Content Officer

Tom Lane began his career in business. He spent five years working in a residential Plumbing, Heating & Cooling business owned by his father-in-law. He then worked for seven years as a regional sales Representative for his dad’s wholesale paper distribution company based in the mid-west with 13 locations from Montana to Texas.

In 1982, he made a shift to vocational ministry and served as executive senior pastor both at Trinity Fellowship Church in Amarillo, Texas (22 years), and Gateway Church (18 years) in Southlake, Texas. Throughout his more than 40 years of vocational ministry he has held many different roles including: business administrator, administrative pastor, executive pastor, executive senior pastor, senior pastor, and executive director.

Whether leading in business, ministry, or in his family Tom has lived his life to be the greatest influence for God and to impact people. He has always known that influence affects leadership at home or work.

Tom has written many leadership books including Tested and Approved, Heritage: A Father’s Influence to the Generations, Influence of a Father, Healthy Church Government, He Still Speaks, He Still Speaks to Kids, Strong Women and the Men Who Love Them, and Letters from a Dad to a Graduate. He has also written articles for Ministry Today. Tom and his
 wife, Jan, have been happily married since 1972 and have 4 married children and 15 grandchildren.

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Step 1 of 7

This assessment is intended to give you an understanding of the emotional and spiritual health of your life. First think through each question and determine a quick placement on Health Indicator Scale (ranging from Never to Always.) This assessment is only as credible as the authenticity of the answers. Your first instinct is usually the most honest and accurate response. Most leaders are inclined to post the “best answer” but we want honest, raw, and vulnerable responses to these questions.

In the box to the right place the number from 1-5 that best describes your feeling today. Tally each section and place the numeric score on the total line for each category. Add the tallied scores from each section to get the overall total score.

Health Indicator Scale (HIS):

Select the appropriate answer for each question.

Each answer has a numeric value from 1-5 based on these indicators:

1 - Never    2- Seldom    3 - Ocassionally    4 - Often    5 - Always