Christian Theology

August 20, 2007

The Rod of Correction

The Rod of Correction
There seems to be plenty of debate today concerning the proper form of discipline that parents should exercise with unruly children. Most of the support for spanking (at least in the western world) is limited to those who believe in the inerrancy of scripture and is met with hearty disapproval from the scholastic community as well as the government. Most child psychologists, religious liberals, secularists, and others now oppose spanking. They have turned to studies that have concluded that even a minor amount off spanking increases the likelihood of children growing up into adults with problems of alcoholism, drug abuse, anxiety and depression.
One of the more prevalent ideas about spanking is that it teaches children that it is acceptable for the bigger, stronger individual to perpetrate violence on the weaker in order to get their way. Victims of spankings will in turn act out in violent ways now and in the future, and most likely continue the cycle of violence with their children. Spanking has been classified as abuse and in many states outlawed. There appears to be devastating evidence against those who champion spanking with case studies like the 1987 Mauer-Wallerstein study which concluded that “there appears to be a linear association between the frequency of slapping and spanking during childhood and a lifetime prevalence of anxiety disorder, alcohol abuse or dependence and externalizing problems.” If you are hoping that your children become well adjusted adults, the last thing you would want to practice in your home is spanking. It appears that Solomon, moved by God, had it wrong.
Why even the Methodist church would agree with the prevailing secular take on the issue. On 2004-MAY-31 the United Methodist Church’s General Conference passed two anti-spanking resolutions — each by an overwhelming vote. In doing so, they repudiated the teachings of their founder, John Wesley, who believed in the corporal punishment of infants and children was necessary “to break their rebellious wills and save their souls.” They concluded that: • Whereas, corporal punishment models aggressive behavior as a solution to conflict, • Whereas, some research has associated corporal punishment with increased aggression in children and adults, increased substance abuse, increased risk of crime and violence, low self-esteem, and chronic depression, • Whereas it is difficult to imagine Jesus of Nazareth condoning any action that is intended to hurt children physically or psychologically, • Whereas, time outs and deprivation of privileges are as effective as corporal punishment in stopping undesirable behavior, • Whereas, the effectiveness of corporal punishment decreases with subsequent use and therefore leads caretakers to hit children more severely, • Whereas, children must eventually develop their own conscience and self discipline, which are fostered by a home environment of love, respect and trust,Therefore, be it resolved that the United Methodist Church encourages its members to adopt discipline methods that do not include corporal punishment of their children. And be it further resolved that the United Methodist Church encourages congregations to offer opportunities for dialogue and education on effective discipline of children.
In their last bullet point they state that a home should be an environment of love, respect and trust. The implication is that in a home where corporal punishment is rendered, these aspects of the relationship between parent and child are destroyed. A child cannot feel loved or respected and he will distrust his parents if he is ever struck. Still Proverbs 13:24 boldly asserts “He who spares his rod hates his son, but he who loves him disciplines him promptly”, and “Foolishness is bound up in the heart of a child; The rod of correction will drive it far from him” Proverbs 22:15, and again “Do not withhold correction from a child, for if you beat him with a rod, he will not die. You shall beat him with a rod, and deliver his soul from hell.” Proverbs 23:13-14. From the hand of King Solomon whom God had given wisdom and whom the Holy Spirit inspired to write these words, we see a different view. To hold to the secular and Methodist view, would be, as God states, to hate your son. It is the exact opposite of what the Methodist bullet point asserts. Administering the rod of correction to your children is in fact, loving, and as John Wesley rightly quoted it is used “to break their rebellious wills and save their souls.“ Those who refuse to administer the rod, leave their children dangling over the pit of hell where folly, bound up in their hearts has led them.
It is after all, the heart that directs behavior; and discipline should be directed at the heart and not behavior alone. Ted Tripp writes in his book “Shepherding a Childs Heart”, “bad behavior represents a failure to obey and is, therefore, the occasion for correction—but the focal point of correction is not behavior. The focal point is the heart of the child that is called to submission to God’s authority. The goal of correction is not simply to modify behavior, but to bring the child to sweet, harmonious, and humble heart submission to God’s will that he obey Mom and Dad. The heart is the battleground. The spanking comes only because it is God’s method of driving foolishness far from your child’s heart.” To reach the level of the heart, one must use the rod of correction, and bring the child back from the brink that folly and foolishness leads them to. They are too impressionable to be left exclusively to other forms of discipline, which fails to shake them loose from their sin. God has instructed that a loving, firm hand will turn them towards Him.
The experts seem rather convincing on the surface; they have case studies, powerful organizations, the government and the Methodist church on their side. Yet how much credence should we give to studies that will not even admit to the ultimate cause of all unsavory behavior, namely, the lack of conformity to the revealed will of God, or in other words sin, and man’s rebellious nature? Their conclusions are defective. All of their papers, case studies, endorsements, and laws, are in the end nothing but dust, but the word of God, through the writings of Solomon and through the faithfulness of those who believe and obey, will produce a harvest worthy to be called children of God from generation to generation.

15 Comments »

  1. I am a pentecostal pastor, I believe in the inerrancy of God’s word, and I spank. My kids understand that the spankings are for their benefit, we talk before and after they get spanked. It’s unfortunate that the church is more moved by the world than by the bible.

    -Jeff-

    Comment by Jeff Graham — August 23, 2007 @ 10:02 pm | Reply

  2. Hi Jeff,

    I am glad to hear that you talk to your children before and after, that truly gives the child every opportunity to understand the violation, to understand the means by which God has commanded us to administer discipline for the violation, to understand the promise God has made to those who honor mother and father and the opportunity for the child to repent and enter once again into God’s circle of protection.

    To help a child to change their heart from one of defiance to one of submission to God’s command is truly a blessing.

    God bless you,

    Clay

    Comment by Clay Atkinson — August 24, 2007 @ 3:38 pm | Reply

  3. My late-wife and I successfully raised two daughters as Biblical principles were the basis and foundation within our family unit. Discipline was administered along spiritual concepts within the framework of Hebrews 12:11, 2nd Timothy 3:16 and several verses in Proverbs as the Rod of Correction was not withheld regarding Direct Disobedience, Disrespect and/or Dishonesty.

    There was discussion before and after the discipline was administered while noting the feelings and thoughts surrounding the event are as important as the event itself.

    A Proud Parent
    Lonny

    Comment by Lonny — March 15, 2008 @ 9:16 pm | Reply

  4. I was spanked plenty growing up. I thank God that my parents stayed on top of me that way because I was a rebellious child. I shudder to think where I would be today had it not been for the discipline my parents used on me. They told me later in life that they would spank me and I would cry, but then they would go hide out and cry too. They didn’t do it to be mean, they did it to get me to go the right way. I don’t know where these people come up with the idea that it damages a child’s psyche to spank them…If it is done in the right spirit, it will not hurt them psychologically. On the contrary it will communicate, “I love you and want to teach you to do what is right.” I see far more kids who have behavior issues and mental issue who were spoiled as kids and never disciplined than I do those who had loving discipline.
    I wonder if those who cry, “foul!” on those who spank perhaps have had spankings from parents who were doing it out of sheer anger and for the wrong reasons and now they are messed up in their thinking. I also wonder how their kids have turned out or are turning out? I would love to see a study done on that.
    Marsha

    Comment by Marsha — April 19, 2008 @ 1:34 am | Reply

  5. Hi Marsha,

    Remarkable, isn’t it, how man thinks he is so smart and clever. The creature is going to determine what is best, and call what the Creator has prescribed as violent and harmful. Sadly, the church seems to be following the incompetent fools into their folly and we are now reaping what we have sowed.

    Comment by Clay — April 22, 2008 @ 4:16 am | Reply

  6. I agree that a spanking does not harm a child if given in a loving home. The Bible should be our guide in every thing we do as parents. If we follow It’s teaching we can raise children that are loving, law abiding, respectful, and obeying to God. Our goal should always be to correct not punish, after all that is what God does to us when misbehave. I raised my children with this principle and have 3 adult children with their own children that do not have the problems so many today have.

    Thank you for a very well written blog

    Comment by jim — May 22, 2008 @ 2:58 pm | Reply

  7. Too many parents today are thinking that it´s fruitless to spank their children. Those parents spoil their children and give them the opportunity to become uncontrollable tyrants. I know it from my own childhood. I was such a strong-willed rebel but only for a short time. I remember my last temper-tantrum when I was 5 and rather willing to die than to submit, I stamped and yelled for not getting my way. In this situation my dad calmly grasped me, pulled down my trousers and spanked me consistently and persistently until my defiance was broken. I felt the agony of defeat with my red swallen butt, it was an unforgettable experience of total surrender and submission that changed my heart forever. I never had a temper-tantrum again in my life. I was the good, obedient son of my parents who followed the rules, respecting their authority. I never was violent as a youngster or adult. Chastisment makes humble and peaceful, it´s the best discourage to become violent. Dear parents, never give up to chastise your children with love until their mind and heart are changed and they´re ready to obey. That´s your god given right and duty. Love and spanking don´t excluse they´re involving each other.

    Comment by Andrew — June 15, 2008 @ 10:09 am | Reply

  8. Hi my friends. Unfortunately I couldn’t disagree with you more on this. I was spanked rather violently as a child, to the point of almost abuse and it led almost to my loss of Faith in God. When I saw the violence in my mother’s heart, I thought I saw the Violence of God. The Bible is indeed inspired of God but it is not the Verbatim translation of His/Her Thoughts. It is just an inspiration to teach us how to love. By all means discipline a child and give him/her correction, but spanking and physical discipline can also lead many Out of God. I am one who was also an alcoholic for years because of this spanking. Teach your children by valuing them and explaining to them why they need correction, not by shouting or hitting. I believe that is where the Word of God is going. It is an ongoing Revelation, not one ensconced in old texts such as Proverbs that have value only when they remind us to LOVE. Furthermore, this violence can lead to greater violence in the future, it is the violence that you teach by spanking. Hard to say this as you all mean well and want to do the Will of God, but His/Her Loving Will has been overtaken by too many discussions on the Letter of the Scripture, and Less on the Divine Revelation which is Now. Also has caused much pain to see gay people mistreated in the Name of God. To see wars fought in the Name of God. His Divine Name only wants peace and love. I know this seems like giberrish, but this is what speaking in tongues means. It is the Holy Spirit still manifest through love and our connections to one another. Peace.

    Comment by Aly Wane — December 16, 2008 @ 6:59 pm | Reply

    • I must say that I do believe the bible is accurate indeed, and that it tells us what happens to Solomon: He falls from grace and he is still answerable to a religious authority and to God. This would tell me that he was not the ultimate of ultimate authority on God. The bible also goes on to tell us of the squabbles of his sons Rehaboam and Jeraboam. They rent his kingdom asunder. If we are to judge a doctrine, religion, or prophet by his fruits, this tells us Solomon may have been wise in the ways of the world at his time, but not particularly in the ways of God. Next, the bible tells us of how Rehaboam’s people revolted and he lost his father’s kingdom because he failed to show them mercy, instead he threatened to whip them with stingers (whips with chips of rock in them) instead of just whips.

      So, if the bible is inerrant and tells us that Solomon’s sons warred with each other and one grew up to be a merciless tyrant who lost the kingdom, what does that tell us about Solomon’s child rearing?

      Comment by Derak — May 1, 2009 @ 2:20 pm | Reply

  9. Any man or woman who chastise a child should be punished severe and utterly. Eternal condemnation lies upon them.

    Comment by Anonymous — June 22, 2009 @ 1:02 pm | Reply

  10. Anonymous,

    A rather bold assertion, care to back it up?

    Comment by Clay — June 23, 2009 @ 1:54 pm | Reply

  11. In repsonse to ALY WAYNE:

    I’m sorry you were abused in a Christian home, I was too. This is of course irrelevant to whether spanking is itself abuse. The question is then, can physical punishment be justified in light of God’s instruction and is it valuable. I will defer to others on that point. I think it is justifiable, valuable and probably mandated…just like the death penalty for murder, rape, adultry, witchcraft and sodomy. But I digress.

    ALY WAYNE said: “The Bible is indeed inspired of God but it is not the Verbatim translation of His/Her Thoughts. It is just an inspiration to teach us how to love.”

    First, the Bible nowhere refers to itself as “an inspiration to teach us how to love.” The Bible does tell us what love is and what is unloving. We know that love of God and of our fellow man is demonstrated, in part, by obedience to the “law and the prophets”…so there is a law keeping element to love. The Bible also teaches us through examples of love. It is odd to reduce all the concrete examples, advise and commands in the Bible to “inspiration”.

    Second, God is not a him/her…he is either…non-gender in the case of the Holy Spirit…I don’t think gender is a part of “its” person. The other two persons in the Godhead are distinctly male…i.e. Jesus (the Son) and the Father.

    Last, ummmm…the Bible is not a verbatum translation of God’s thoughts? What is the point of a statement like that? Since all of the Bible is the Word of God, it is all authoritative over your life. Making a statement like that smacks of a person who wants to disregard portions of the Bible that they don’t personally agree with. That’s fine, just don’t call yourself a Christian…call yourself “GOD”…or is it “GODDESS”?

    Comment by Will-I-Am — June 24, 2009 @ 3:37 pm | Reply

  12. MORE FOR YOU ALY WAYNE:

    YOU SAID: “It is an ongoing Revelation, not one ensconced in old texts such as Proverbs that have value only when they remind us to LOVE.”
    AND
    “His/Her Loving Will has been overtaken by too many discussions on the Letter of the Scripture, and Less on the Divine Revelation which is Now.”

    I SAY: I believe that the Canon is close, but that is not really what this is about. You are denigrating God’s Word; calling Proverbs “old texts”…as though you could dismiss them. God does not stutter, he does not fail to get his point across and he certainly does not contradict himself. So, if there was revelation today from God, it would not contradict a single passage in the “old texts”.

    You have determined for yourself that some of the Scriptures are only valuable under the conditions that you set. I repeat…you are claiming to be a law unto yourself and you do no recognize the authority of Christ, nor the Law of Moses. Therefore, you are under condemnation and I beseech you to repent while there is still time.

    Comment by Will-I-Am — June 24, 2009 @ 3:48 pm | Reply

  13. ALY WAYNE: on the gay thing…how have sodomites been mistreated in the name of God? Seriously, they should really consider themselves lucky to be walking around free given their open commission of capital crimes.

    The church has made overtures for them to convert and turn away from their abominations; what else should the church be doing for them?

    Now the problem is with the gay community because they attack the church and Jesus Christ mercilessly. Why? Because the Word of God condemns their wickedness. The worst of it is when a former gay person comes to faith, the gay community is right there trying destroy them too.

    The genuine hope of every Christian is that ever sinner will repent and receive forgiveness. We glory in the forgiveness and joy that comes to another person through knowing our Lord. We rejoice over the conversion of sodomites, physical abusers, alcoholics, adulterers, whores, even murders and child molesters …when they turn from the world and put faith in Christ. Christians know that many of us were once captive to those sins and were at war with God…we all know that we are not morally better.

    Comment by Will-I-Am — June 24, 2009 @ 3:58 pm | Reply

  14. DEREK SAID: “If we are to judge a doctrine, religion, or prophet by his fruits, this tells us Solomon may have been wise in the ways of the world at his time, but not particularly in the ways of God. ” AND “So, if the bible is inerrant and tells us that Solomon’s sons warred with each other and one grew up to be a merciless tyrant who lost the kingdom, what does that tell us about Solomon’s child rearing?”

    Derek: Solomon was both wise and foolish, righteous and corrupt. The Bible is inerrant…it nowhere instructs us to follow in the folly of Solomon, but we know it was folly because it did not accord with God’s Law. His actions were inconsistent with the divinely inspired writings he penned. Does that clear it up?

    I also don’t think that the Bible says to judge a religion by its fruit. Still, even if you tried the approach there would be no worldview to judge the religion by. If I judge Christianity by Christianity, I have to accept Christianity to make the judgment. If you say that Christianity is internally incoherent, then that is perhaps a step deeper, but all the more troubling since you’d then have to show how logical coherence is the method of determining truth or religious truth. But I disgress.

    Comment by Will-I-Am — June 24, 2009 @ 4:10 pm | Reply


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