Just For Dads: Be A Positive Christian Role ModelExemplo
Could I please have a receipt on that?
In the mid-1970s, I got my first job in sales. In addition to my getting a good product to sell and a territory to sell it in, I received a travel expense budget. My boss explained the procedures for reporting money that I spent on the road. “Here’s the form you fill out when you get back,” he said, “and by the way, the Internal Revenue Service does not require receipts for expenses less than 25 dollars.”
In a few days, I was sitting on an airplane, headed for the West Coast. I remember thinking, Let’s see. If I put a few less-than – 20-dollar expenses in my reports for money I don’t actually spend, this could really add up. After all, I’m working night and day for this company, and I’m not getting paid for all this extra time.
Over the next few weeks, I discovered an interesting fact. And although this dawned on me a long time ago, it’s as fresh as if it had dashed across my mind last week. Here’s the truth: You are who you are when no one’s checking up on you.
Josiah the king had given his secretary Shaphan an assignment. The king had asked him to tell the high priest to take the donations that had been made at the temple and give them to the construction supervisors for parceling out to the workers. Then Josiah adds an interesting postscript. He tells Shaphan that the supervisors do not need to fill out expense reports. Josiah reminds his secretary that the supervisors don’t need to account for the money because they are “acting faithfully.”
The thing that ought to capture us about this story is the remarkable trust that King Josiah placed in his supervisors. I wonder how the high priest told them that Josiah was not requiring any receipts for their expenditures. I wonder if any of these men were tempted to slip a few shekels in their waistbands when they discovered that they weren’t going to be audited. I imagine that he simply said to these managers, “Spend the money carefully but don’t be concerned with keeping records. Our king trusts you, even when no one is checking up on you.”
Can you imagine how motivating this would have been to these supervisors? “Wow, the king trusts us with this money,” they may have said to each other. “How could we do anything but be trustworthy?”
There are lots of different ways to motivate your children to do the right thing when you’re not around. You can read them a list of consequences if they mess up. You can sit them down and interrogate them when they come home. Or you can tell them that you trust them to be honest, trustworthy and faithful.
Which of these options do you suppose will get you the best results? I do, too.
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This devotional Bible reading plan for Dad's includes 21 readings that help you to be a positive Christian role model for your family. These readings will cover topics such as self-discipline, love, patience and much more. This devotional plan will help in your day-to-day life to show your children what it truly means to be a role model and follower of Christ in every sense.
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