Adia Peterson
Founder, KingdomFive! Student Ministries Prophetic kids are extremely intuitive! Get them engaged in what will challenge and provoke them to critically think. Promote activities that empower teamwork and collaboration. The goal is to stretch their perspective outside their own world and help them appreciate another's point of view because prophets are opinionated by nature and tend to be lone rangers! Teach them objectivity and help them learn how to put their personal biases in check. This goes for every child really, and not solely prophetic ones, but seek out hobbies that are well-rounded and support their emotional growth and maturity. Prophetic kids have intense emotions and convictions and it's good for them to learn to balance wisdom against how they feel and partner with the Lord in filtering their sentiments with His point of view. Help them Focus! Put them in active, thoughtful projects that cause them to ask smart questions and form their own unique answers. Sports and the arts are great for the young prophetic mind as they are generally dreamers, energetic and passionate! Discipline and commitment are a few of the big advantages to sports and participating in the arts hones creativity, A Few Take-Aways: 1. Note the types of activities they gravitate towards without any prodding or provoking. What are they naturally interested in? 2. Challenge them to try new things. Don't allow complacency. Work on broadening their horizons. 3. Don't let them quit! If they start something, challenge them to see it all the way through to the end of that specified season or year, even if they have lost interest.
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Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it. Proverbs 22:6 Adia Peterson
Founder, KingdomFive! Student Ministries When I was a kid my house was filled with worship. My mother worked nights at the hospital so when we were coming home from school, she was preparing to head out for work. This scene was common when I would go into the kitchen for an after-school snack: open bible on the table, flooded with her notes and underlines; and Hosanna, Integrity, Larnelle Harris or some other worship in the tape player. On Sunday mornings, I woke up to the sounds of breakfast cooking and my mom singing to her choir practice tracks in the background. Worship was a staple in our house. In service, what was the norm at home became our public practice. I believed as a child that to love God was to worship Him. I don't recall being told to sing or raise my hands in service; I observed from how my mom lived at home that worship was the way we expressed relationship and closeness with the Lord. It never occurred to me that worship was optional. Many parents ask me, how can I get my kids to understand the importance of worship? It's a valid question but I think it may be a little cart-before-horse. Worship is an outcome, a product. The importance of worship starts not with mechanics, such as learning not to be embarrassed to raise your hands or to sing in public; but rather with motive and purpose. Where there is genuine relationship, there is unprovoked and sincere worship. It is not taught as much as it is ignited and awakened by our love for God and our belief in who He is. So how then, can you impart the significance of worship in your young one? Begin by illustrating and demonstrating the importance of relationship. When they know Him, they will worship without being told. Raising a Worshipper: Three Must-Do's
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