I’m the gate. If anyone enters through me, he will be saved. He’ll come in and go out and find pasture ~ John 10:9
“Jump a Fence
Climb a Tree
Homespun, he is Free”
from Blackberry Roland, by Blue Cotton Memory
From little feet puddle jumping to muscles and cleats sliding through mud and rain-soaked tackle, these boys of mine don’t always choose the neat, tidy paths and gateways.
God placed within their tiny hearts before they were born – a desire for freedom, a frontier-kind of spirit that would lead them out of bondage, through a parting sea – and into a new land, a land where the banner of Shaddai flies high for all to see, where children are taught with their first steps that Jehovah-Rohi shepherds them through the gate, hand-in-hand with the Savior.
Through the gate – it sounds so simple. Forging new paths, to discover new ideas – like Ford with automobiles or Charles Best who discovered insulin – or Neil Armstrong walking on the moon – fence jumping sure seems a quicker way to get there. Their toes almost itch to jump fences – from the time they learn to walk.
These boys to men seem designed to avoid gates.
I see it in their desire to debate – just for the sake of debate – chewing (sometimes it seems like gnawing) their logical teeth on challenging authority or the status quo.
How many times have I said, “Don’t outsmart your common sense.”
The oldest, he taught them all the longest word in the dictionary: Antidisestablishmentarianism – and, to him, it meant not taking establishment ideas at face value. At first glance, the gate looks like establishment ideas.
Some shun the gate because their parents walked through. The gate seems to have always been there. It seems so ordinary, so every day, so already done. These boys to men don’t just go through the gate because it’s there – it often seems like a life motto they’ve worn emblazoned inside.
“I am the Gate for the Sheep,” Jesus tells us (John 10:7)
These boys to men – they gotta have Him – there’s no other way – no other way to be delivered from all that life will throw at them – from the liars, cheats, and thieves who aim to steal more than their wallets, identity or cell phones.
The gate isn’t religion. It isn’t rules. It isn’t an activity list of things we do. The gate is relationship. Relationship releases the gate latch – relationship with the one who designed you, the one who died to save you.
Real relationship. You cannot get there by fence jumping (fulfilling the bucket-list of Christian-expected behavior but not relationship) – or digging under it.
I imagine that if you wanted to spend time with Him debating – I imagine He would welcome that as the beginning of relationship. You might not be through the gate – but at least you’re at the gate with Him.
A few years ago, I hosted a an unofficial small group with some parents of teens, friends of my sons still at home – and we read Sticky Faith together, trying to figure out how to get these boys to men who have walked through that gate when they were little – to continue living through the gate – in His pasture where they live “saved from sin, the dominion of it, the guilt and condemning power of it, and at last from the being of it; and from the law, its curse and condemnation, and from wrath to come, and from every evil, and every enemy”(Gill’s Exposition, Bible Hub).
Some were frontier parenting – this was their first foray into the teen years. Others, like us, had older children who entered through the gate or were fence jumpers or tried digging under it, trying any way to avoid the actual relationship required to go through the gate. We needed fresh eyes to break battle-fatigue habits, to re-equip, re-adjust, re-train for the next 6 years.
Sitting across the table, breaking bread – (getting ready for them to start the teen book while we went over the parent’s book) – learning ways to intentionally open the clogged conversational arteries with our children, how our spiritual gifts communicate with each other (not part of the book, but part of what we are doing) – and how to encourage real relationship with the one who created them, who loves them – who died to save them.
One of the things I loved about this group is that it included some of their inner circle of friends. As one teen filled a bowl of soup, a parent asked,”Who influences you most now – your parents or your peers?”
We were not looking for a right answer – We were looking for his answer.
“My peers,” he answered. Another answered, “My parents.” Each gave valid reasons, truthful reasons.
Maybe by pulling them to the table, bowl by bowl – with friend’s parents who they tease includes their “favorite mom” – maybe, just maybe we can mentor faith that sticks: real, life relationship faith.
How can we as parents encourage relationship building of these sons with their Savior? Real relationship building – We asked our sons to define what it meant to be a Christian?
Sometimes there was a disconnect between the logos “right” answer and the rhema (the aliveness) of their answer in their every day. They knew the right answer but their actions weren’t always in tandem with the right answer. Both were still fusing together.
Over the bowls of soup, I also wanted to ask, “Who is influencing your gate relationship with Christ?”
“What does that gate relationship consist of?”
What does it mean to pass through the gate to the pasture?
Or are you just fence jumping?”
Today, about 2 years later, those mentoring relationships are making a positive difference. Other moms and dads interacting, having real conversation – not scared-to-intrude conversation have created peers who reflect that interaction into their peer relationships.
I’ve seen hard decisions made by these young men who prayed first and put self second.
I’ve seen young iron sharpening young iron because of real relationships with other moms and dads showed them how in breaking-bread, over-the-counter real conversation.
They’re pausing at the temptation to fence jump – and instead making the decision to hang out at the gate, take ownership of that relationship found there. In the ownership, they’re discovering it’s not an establishment relationship. It’s a real, personal, one-on-one relationship – a grafting together kind of relationship.
Going through the gate? Or fence jumping?
(updated, September 9, 2015)
All gate photos except for last were taken at Colonial Williamsburg, Fall 2013
wow! This makes me think! It is so true when they are little they will go right thru the gate and as they get older they try to find other ways to get thru. It is painful to watch at times. I pray my babes will always have he heart the hunger to get thru.
You are so right……I am battle fatigued. I need to keep my energy up to get all my children through the gate. This post is a great conversation starter for my 16 year old and I. He still needs me; he just doesn’t know it. He is so busy forging his own path. I just wish he would still hold my hand so we could walk together.
Lovely! We can never give up telling our children (and now for me; grandchildren!) that there is a gate that allows us to enter into God’s family, into the warmth of the house of God, of communion with Him. And gate is never closed, it is always open and open to everyone! 🙂
Beautiful pictures!!
Blessings!
Denise
Wonderful devotion about the true Gate that keeps us safe and blessed. Thank you.
my children are grown-ups now and I tried my best to teach them to enter the gate of life. But there is a battle and prayer must be always there.
Dropping by from Spiritual Sundays. My entry: Home again
I have an 18 year old son, and I really want to know how “maybe, just maybe we can mentor faith that sticks, real, life relationship faith.” I am blessed that my family belongs to a covenant community that helps us grow our children. My sisters and their families are a part of it, and so my son (I only have one child) is surrounded by many Godly people and we are helping bring our children to a realationship with God. Oh, that was a mistake, but I’ll leave it like that!!! God bless you! Patsy from HeARTworks
I firmly believe that actions speaks volumes and much louder than words. As I walk with our Lord Jesus daily, trusting Him for everything, refusing to bow my knee to religion, or organized churchianity, my sons have learned to do the same. They have seen so often how our Pappa has provided for us where there was no hope or rational possibility that I can joyfully thank our Pappa for the glorious gift of faith He has blessed my sons with! I know that you are a great example for your sons as well.
Blessings XX
Mia
Praying that God will bless your group and the desire to nurture a love for Him within the hearts of your children!
What a season you’re wading through! Opportunity, fear, laughter, hope, waiting, wondering, loving through the endless days and the long nights. I remember those days, and it causes me to lift you up in prayer. Right now!
What a wonderful time/moment on your beautiful to ponder where we are in these difficult, but exhilarating years. Our boys are especially trying, but when I stand back and let the Lord increase (I must decrease), I can see His mighty hand at work! Thank you so much for this 🙂
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[…] started reading Sticky Faith – and our unofficial small group started getting together (read here) – my eyes opened to how I needed to change the conversation. How I needed to break bad […]
[…] in, He sent me out to buy Sticky Faith. I needed to break ineffective communication patterns (see Going Through the Gate or Fence Jumping). You’d think that would be enough – but God and I, we were just warming up. Sometimes, […]
Your posts are always worth taking time to read… full of depth, substance, and insight. I also loved your gate photos taken in Colonial Williamsburg of Fall 2013. I was in that very place in September of that year, when Fall was just beginning. A beautiful place… so beautiful. America is such a beautiful country. Thanks for the time. Wish we were neighbors, ML… I so value your blog friendship with me. Love Lidia