Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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31 Days of Servant Leadership: Youth Part 1

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October 9, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 14 Comments

Welcome back to 31 Days of Servant Leadership.

How do you encourage youth to be leaders?

adolescent-myth.jpg

I’m pretty disgusted by all the hype that it’s normal to have kids with that “tween/teen” angst and stinky attitude. It’s normal?!

It saddens me that Christians buy into this normality as well as everyone else.

I hear and read things like this all the time:

“She’s just going through a phase.”

“That’s just her age.”

“She’ll grow out of it.”

“Those hormones are just acting up.”

Why must it be normal?

It’s unacceptable to have an ungrateful, selfish, pouty, sinful attitude.

I won’t allow it in my home. I won’t allow my daughter to act that way anywhere.

I won’t allow it in a toddler, child, tween, teen, or adult. There is no excuse.

Parents compromise on too much.

If we don’t disciple our kids from babyhood to adulthood, who will?

The world.

And the world says it’s normal for tweens and teens to look like adults and act like adults. It’s normal to look out for #1, and have tantrums if she doesn’t get what she wants.

I say it’s not normal. My expectations for my kids are much higher than the norm. I expect them to behave and be respectful of others regardless of how they feel. It’s part of their training.

When we fail? (Because even I fail and have a stinky attitude sometimes.) We pray, ask forgiveness, and carry on. We try to learn and do better. We learn triggers and try to avoid them. Planning and scheduling helps.

Read my post about our ideal day here.

Keeping communication open is key. Helping our kids and youth communicate their feelings, confusions, experiences. Narration about their day is important. Take time to listen.

The hormone part? There are remedies for that. We use essential oils, exercise, whole foods, supplements, plenty rest, and downtime to relieve stress and make sure we are in optimal health. Check your health if you’re always grumpy.

But as parents, we must have grace for our children. They are learning how to be people. We are guides and coaches to help them learn how to manage their emotions, reactions, relationships.

There are no excuses.

Read this series from The REBELution.

Read this article from Christianity Today.

Read Part 2.

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Filed Under: Leadership Tagged With: high school, teen

31 Days of Servant Leadership: Fun?

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October 8, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Welcome back to 31 Days of Servant Leadership.

Is it fun being a leader?

I should say not.

fun.jpg

Often, I sit back and let others make the mistakes and pave the way while I sit back and observe.

Then do it right.

So, how do we teach our kids that it’s ok to have fun and have downtime sometimes?

All work and no play means a dull life.

Good leaders have a sense of humor and they know how to play hard and word hard. They know how and when to have fun. {Tweet That!}

I’m a poor example. I’m too serious, too stressed. Too responsible.

I often have to force myself to be all motherly – affectionate, fun, patient, kind.

Motherhood is not natural for me.

It’s easy to bark orders and check off the boxes on the list.

Not so easy to make everything fun.

But why can’t it be more fun?

It’s not about easy. It’s all about balance. Trying not to get overwhelmed in the responsibility of all the things, but to try to make time for fun too.

Being a Yes Mom to ice cream for lunch. Leaving the dishes to push a swing. Getting down on the floor to play cards for math time.

Doing art class and calling it a day.

I pray to be more fun. I want my kids to have fun memories.

Balance.

Should we focus on fun?

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Bible Studies for Kids

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October 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I have a really hard time finding good Bible study resources for kids!

I seldom liked the way Sunday School was taught to my young children, so we stoped going.

Most materials for kids’ Bible studies are geared for large groups like Sunday School or Christian school classrooms. Not much is available for individuals or homeschool use.

I tried to gather resources for Scripture memorization, Bible study, and character development, as well as handwriting practice, letter recognition, and more for my small kids to learn about the Bible.

Write Through the Bible by Luke and Trisha Gilkerson

Exodus, Psalms, Proverbs, Philippians, Prayers, and Creeds. Luke & Trisha’s Write Through the Bible program provides 131 days of handwriting, copywork and dictation practice along with Scripture memorization, and this set includes both the cursive and manuscript versions of the workbook.

The Dig by Patrick Schwenk

The Dig for Kids is a simple and easy way for parents to study the Bible with their children. The Dig takes the guesswork out of teaching with one-page lessons that consist of: The Map, an overview of each lesson; The Dig, the main passage of the Bible you will be reading and three or four questions that will help with discussion and review; The Treasure, the big idea of the passage being studied; and The Display, to help your child live out what he or she has just learned. Luke Volumes 1 and 2, Proverbs, and James.

Bible Study Guide

The Bible Study Guide was born in 1980 after Mary Baker, a mom of four children, couldn’t find a curriculum she felt would help her kids, and her church’s Bible class, learn and understand the Bible.

My kids liked working on the Bible timeline and fun activities.

Grapevine Studies

Fact-based Bible curriculum for kids to stick figure through the Bible with a clear teaching plan.

  • Esther
  • Ruth
  • Old Testament Survey
  • Epiphany
  • Birth of Jesus
  • Resurrection

What’s your favorite Bible study for kids?

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31 Days of Servant Leadership: Humility

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October 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

It is better to humble yourself than to be humbled.

humility

When Aaron and I took our turn for the lawn maintenance ministry at our Hawaii church almost five years ago, we were gung-ho excited and had a great vision for making it lovely, with incredible curb appeal.

No one else shared that vision.

I doubt God smiled upon our vision.

That particular church was not known for gratitude, but we also didn’t have a humble attitude.

We just wanted a “thank you” or tiny compliment for our efforts.

We only received negativity from the staff and leaders.

So we left.

We didn’t attend a church for about six months.

While it wasn’t as simple as the lawn care issue, it really was just mostly our sinful attitude rather than the church’s leaders’ micromanagement and lack of gratitude.

Nobody’s perfect.

Like spoiled children, we didn’t like the way they played, so we didn’t want to play anymore. We took our toys and left.

After realizing what damage we were doing to our girls by not attending church, I wanted to go back.

But that was embarrassing.

It was a confusing time for us. The church was gracious to accept us without asking too many questions. It was uncomfortable.

Our girls transitioned back well.

We learned a lesson in humility.

Leaders are humble. They accept responsibility for the good and the bad. Leaders admit mistakes and do whatever it takes to make things right. They don’t demand thanks. They don’t care who receives the credit.

To God be the glory.

Be examples of servant leaders to your children. They’re watching and listening. Always.

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31 Days of Servant Leadership: Resources for Littles

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October 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

It is so helpful to start young. The younger the better. It’s always more difficult to undo worldly ideals than to begin with a blank slate and build them up to look only to Jesus. Here is my list of resources for little for Bible, heart training, discipleship, beginning training in servant leadership.

resources-for-littles.jpg

*contains affiliate links

These are some of our favorite resources to begin with our kids when they’re really young to build a solid foundation.

  • Child Training Bible (also Virtue Training Bible available!)

Spread the Word

You get these cards and you place colored tabs and highlight verses for easy reference. My girls know when they misbehave and we find the topic together and read the verses and pray. Educating them about living for Christ is so much better than punishment.

Buy

  • Glow in the Dark Fish

Now a family favorite. I wish I’d found this book years ago! The whole family loves this one. It doesn’t mince words or dumb down lessons. There’s something to interest everyone and there are extras for deeper learning.

We love this book and all my girls read it over and over again. The book’s theme is about purity for girls, but it can applied to all integrity.

We read this last year as part of our history studies with Tapestry of Grace Year 2. Just delightful. Great for girls as well as boys. Encourages keeping a pure heart despite temptation.

My kids and I love We Choose Virtues. Through coloring pages, posters, sticker charts, and simple lessons, we learn core Christian values to improve our spiritual lives. Lots of options to design a package your family will use and love.


From Catechism studies to tracing and stick figuring through the books of the Bible, Grapevine Bible Studies has something for the whole family to learn together – at different levels all at the same time. Kids need to learn the basics before they can apply it to their lives.

For meatier curricula, my girls completed (and my son is now working through)

  • Songs for Saplings

Songs for Saplings

Corresponding Printables for Songs for Saplings!

We love that these lessons use Susan Hunt Books as a base.

  • Raising Rock Stars Preschool

  • Raising Rock Stars Kindergarten

[RRSK-150-x15010.jpg]

Stay tuned for more servant leadership resources each week!

{I will not be blogging on Sundays.}

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31 Days of Servant Leadership: Leaders Listen

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October 4, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I am not an aural learner and if I listen to something, I do better if I’m able to read along or see visuals to help understanding.

We all have a fundamental need to be heard.

Leaders listen.

Let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak… James 1:19b

leaders-listen.jpg

This. why I’m writing this post at 9 PM the night before it’s due.

Alex demanded for about half an hour for me to lay with him and watch a show on the iPad. So, I rushed through helping Tori organize her cold weather clothes in her drawers so I could oblige.

He snuggles up and lays his head on my squishy tummy. He strokes the back of my hand. Then he pinches my knuckle, which means I’m supposed to rub his back. He puckers up for a kiss, all while watching his show on the iPad.

I realize that these moments are fleeting.

While I formulate in my mind what I need to write, review, plan, clean, organize…I need to be present with my baby boy.

Right. Now.

That is servant leadership. The dishes can wait. The books and Netflix DVDs on my desk aren’t that important. Social media will not blow up without my being there to share.

After a few minutes, I had two cats and two daughters in the room too. They long to be near. After cleaning up the garden (since it’s due to frost tonight), my husband joined us.

It was beautiful. I felt God smile.

Shouldn’t we long to be close to our Daddy God too? Like our children long to be in our presence, shouldn’t we seek His? And by drawing nearer to Him, we draw our children closer to Him.

I need to set the example for my children. Where I lead, they will follow. Do I want to lead them down a trail of busyness and worthless pursuits? Or do I want to lead them in paths of righteousness?

We have a Siamese cat. She still looks like a kitten after two years. She is darling. When I first acquired her, she was skittish and unfriendly. She didn’t seem to hear well and seldom allowed us to pet her for very long.

For the first 6-9 months, she would wet my bed. My lovely comforter is raggedy and has a hole in a corner from so many washings. We couldn’t figure out her triggers. The litter boxes were spotless. I was diligent with clean water and plenty of food. The vet was no help without catheterizing her since she wouldn’t urinate on command for a sample.

I think she was stressed by the noise of four children and our adult cat. It was a very different environment for her. She is naturally shy and perhaps she wasn’t treated so well before we adopted her. I think she was the runt.

I am ashamed to say that we considered finding a new home for her.

I prayed. For my cat. Yes, I did. I prayed that God would help. That He would give me answers. Selfishly, that He would save my bed comforter.

Then, miraculously, it stopped. Either she outgrew it or suddenly got comfortable in her surroundings or learned to trust us…or God answered my prayer…it just ended. She became a happy, loving, talkative cat. She now seeks us out and demands attention.

Now, how often do we get frustrated with our children’s behaviors? How often do we lash out in anger at our children – simply for acting like kids? Don’t we punish instead of instructing in love, instead of heart training, taking the time to disciple so our children learn The Way instead of The World.

What if we thought of our kids as an ill-trained runt of an animal? But, don’t you sometimes think that way? I’m ashamed that I have.

Do we pray for and with our kids as often as we should? More than the meal time recitations and the bedtime “Now I lay me down to sleeps”?

How often do I push my kids away because I’m “busy” instead of reaching to bring them in close and smell them and show them how much they’re worth to me? I need to show them that they’re worth more than the empty words on a computer screen.

I need to listen.

I need to listen to what they’re really saying. Their words, actions, heartcries for attention. Instead of just hearing defiance in a tone, I need to listen to the hurt in my daughter’s voice that I didn’t fill her love tank in the way that made her feel loved. Instead of reacting to the tantrum my son has, I need to listen to his desire for food or a hug. Instead of hearing the disrespect in my daughters’ flippant comment, I need to listen to their confusion over a math problem or multi-step instruction.

I pray that I listen and not react. I pray that I am present. I pray that my heart is open to their needs and I am a servant to my family. I pray that I disciple them and train their hearts to seek after Jesus despite the crashing cymbals of the world’s temptations and even the compromises of the church.

What do I want them to remember? Do I want Kate to remember that I dropped everything to play Uno with her? Do I want Alex to remember that I dropped everything to see him dance? Do I want Tori to remember that I dropped everything to watch her ride her bike? Do I want Liz to remember that I dropped everything to listen to her read a funny quote from a book she’s reading?

Yes.

I don’t want their memories of childhood to be that their mama sat at a computer day in and day out, too busy to see or listen to them being who God meant them to be.

I want them to look back and remember a mama who was present and fun and prayed and laughed and played games and took time to be silly. A mama who listened.

shhhh. Listen. Do you hear it?

That’s the sound of God smiling.

Children are not cats.

But wouldn’t it be nice if children could be toilet-trained at 6 weeks like kittens are trained to litter boxes? That would sure simplify life!

Tweetables:

We all have a fundamental need to be heard. Leaders listen.

I pray that I disciple them and train their hearts to seek after Jesus despite the crashing cymbals of the world’s temptations and even the compromises of the church.

Don’t we punish instead of instructing in love, instead of heart training, taking the time to disciple so our children learn The Way instead of The World.

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Filed Under: Leadership Tagged With: 31Days, Christ, honor, leadership, parenting

31 Days of Servant Leadership: What is Honor?

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Please see my suggested resources.

October 3, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

Welcome back to 31 Days of Servant Leadership!

Today we discuss honor.

What is honor?

High respect, esteem, a privilege.

1. honesty, fairness, or integrity in one’s beliefs and actions

2. a source of credit or distinction

3. high respect, as for worth, merit, or rank

4. such respect manifested

5. high public esteem; fame; glory

“Honor your father and your mother, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you. Exodus 20:12

This is the first commandment with a promise.

But, as parents, do we deserve honor just because we’re parents? So many abuse this power. How often do you irritate your children with expectations that are unreasonable? Do you expect them to complete tasks without training them properly?

Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. “Honor your father and mother”—which is the first commandment with a promise— “so that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.” Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord. Ephesians 6:1-4

Mamas, I know we’re only human and we expect a lot from our kids, especially our older kids and teens. We often forget that we demand them to be responsible for too much sometimes.

We need to serve our families well by training and having our kids work alongside us. We need to be leaders by leading our daughters in the chores and training our kids how to do them well.

We lead by example.

Sure, we must teach our children to be respectful, but we also must be worthy of that respect. I know there are lots of books and articles out there exhorting us to do what we should do – love or respect – without waiting for the other to show it. But I’m talking about kids here. We must teach them by showing them. How else will they know how when they grow up?

As a military wife, it’s common and known that many officers are “honored” or respected just because of that eagle or star or leaf on their collars. They don’t deserve any honor because they don’t lead well, but troops respect the rank. I get it. We need to teach respect for authority even if they don’t deserve it.

There are so many differences between being a boss and a leader.

Leaders are inspirational. They guide, encourage, work with their people.

Bosses sit back and bark orders, take all the credit, and none of the blame.

What about rules? It depends on how they’re framed.

This is one of my favorite books and an incredible quote. Quit whining about credit! And teach the kids not to worry about it as long as the job gets done well.

“Real leaders don’t care [about receiving credit]. If it’s about your mission, about spreading the faith, about seeing something happen, not only do you not care about credit, you actually want other people to take credit…There’s no record of Martin Luther King, Jr. or Gandhi whining about credit. Credit isn’t the point. Change is.”

― Seth Godin, Tribes: We Need You to Lead Us

And this has always been a favorite quote, being an Army brat and Air Force wife.

“Always do everything you ask of those you command.”

– George S. Patton

Instead of barking orders at your kids – work with them, show them how to fold the laundry and pray for each family member as you tuck in socks and roll up towels.

Instead of nagging your children – help make the chores go faster by helping load the dishwasher and then play a game together.

Instead of constantly lecturing, stop to listen to your babies. They have lots to say. They can teach us so much about the world, about God, about love and forgiveness.

How to compose a successful critical commentary:

  1. You should attempt to re-express your target’s position so clearly, vividly, and fairly that your target says, “Thanks, I wish I’d thought of putting it that way.
  2. You should list any points of agreement (especially if they are not matters of general or widespread agreement).
  3. You should mention anything you have learned from your target.
  4. Only then are you permitted to say so much as a word of rebuttal or criticism.

Be a parent. Enjoy your children. Look at them and listen to them. Show them what leadership is. {Tweet This!}

I’m guilty of this too. I like my alone time and being with the kids all day long every day can be exhausting, but they long for downtime with me – no school lessons, no chores, no lecturing. I need to be intentional and present.

Be honorable. Show honor. That is true leadership.

Resources:

  • In the Name of Jesus: Reflections on Christian Leadership by Henri J. M. Nouwen
  • Canoeing the Mountains: Christian Leadership in Uncharted Territory by Tod Bolsinger
  • Lead Your Family Like Jesus: Powerful Parenting Principles from the Creator of Families by Ken Blanchard, Phil Hodges, and Tricia Goyer
  • The 21 Indispensable Qualities of a Leader by John C. Maxwell
  • The Servant Leader’s Manifesto by Omar L. Harris
  • Leaders Eat Last: Why Some Teams Pull Together and Others Don’t by Simon Sinek
  • Servant Leadership Roadmap: Master the 12 Core Competencies of Management Success with Leadership Qualities and Interpersonal Skills by Cara H. Bramlett
  • How to Talk So People Will Listen by Steve Brown
  • Trust and Inspire: How Truly Great Leaders Unleash Greatness in Others by Stephen M.R. Covey
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31 Days of Servant Leadership: What is Chivalry?

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October 2, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

Welcome back to 31 Days of Servant Leadership!

chivalry.jpg

What is chivalry?

The word’s first use is from the 14th century. It derived from the French term chevalerie, meaning horse culture. Now, I don’t know about you, but I immediately think of the Dothraki, and that’s not my idea of anything chivalrous. They had rules and customs though. Rather unpleasant ones. Since we’re not in feudal times, in the Middle Ages, most think that chivalry is dead.

Chivalry originally meant courage, training, and service. Over time, it became more refined to mean honor and courtesy, and less martial.

The idea of chivalry brings to mind an ideal. A standard to weight all others.

Chivalry was duty. Three standards: Duty to God. Duty to women. Duty to countrymen and/or fellow Christians.

We have many historians and works of literature to thank that gave us a well-rounded view of what chivalry was and should be. Charlemagne. The Arthurian legends. Leon Gautier. Philip III, the Duke of Burgundy.

In the 14th century, the Duke of Burgundy defined for the Order of the Golden Fleece the knight’s twelve chivalric virtues as ~

faith, charity, justice, sagacity, prudence, temperance, resolution, truth, liberality, diligence, hope and valor.

Isn’t that rather similar to Philippians 4:8?

I found one definition that says “polite, honest, and kind.” I like that one! Don’t we all want our children to be that way? How do we teach our kids to be “polite, honest, and kind”?

We need Jesus.

We need to pray. Constantly, unceasingly, specifically. Who do you want your children to be for Jesus?

Raise your sons to be knights and your daughters to be princesses. We are all royal – princes and princesses of the One True King. Act nobly. {Tweet that!}

Teach them to be strong. Teach them to be polite, honest, and kind. Teach them to love.

It’s easy to be a lazy parent and not be consistent. But if you’re lazy, you can’t get mad at your kids for being children, for having poor manners, for not knowing any better. You have to actively teach them, remind them in love, and guide them by example. Every single day, every single time they do an undesirable behavior. It will pay off.

You can’t be a “do what I say, not what I do” kind of parent. That’s not leadership. {Tweet that!}

This parenting thing. I know. It’s not easy. There are no breaks. It’s a constant erosion of our energy, a wearing down of us spiritually, a tearing of our hearts, a searing of our souls.

We must get our own fill at the Well of Life. We must pray, read our Bibles, ask Jesus for help.

He was the ultimate servant leader.

Are you a servant leader?

You need to be to raise up your children as servant leaders.

Join me as we learn how we can be servant leaders and examples to our children as we follow Jesus and point our families to Him.

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What is Servant Leadership?

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October 1, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Welcome to the first official day of the 31 Days series. Happy October! There are some amazing series going on. Be sure to check them out!

I’m writing a parenting series about servant leadership. How do we raise our children to be godly leaders in this fallen world?

Subscribe do you can follow along.

Follow along with hashtag #RaisingServantLeaders

servant-leadership.jpg

When God spoke to me recently – about my family, blog, dreams, and direction…He gave me the idea for this series. I wasn’t sure how I was supposed to present it. Then someone mentioned this 31 Day Challenge. Voilà! Amazing how God can work out something so creatively over such a long period of time.

I didn’t realize, eight years ago, that my blog name would be so powerful to me. And, yes, it’s taken that long for me to culminate the vision I had as a teeny tiny seed then. So, be patient. I could never have written then like I can write now. I was in a very different place. And there’s still so much growth. So much forward.

So, what is servant leadership?

Servant
1. a person employed by another, especially to perform domestic duties.
2. a person in the service of another.
3. a person employed by the government: a public servant. (dictionary.com)
 
Leadership
1. to go before or with to show the way; conduct or escort
2. to conduct by holding and guiding
3. to influence or induce; cause
4. to guide in direction, course, action, opinion, etc.; bring
5. to conduct or bring (water, wire, etc.) in a particular course.

This is the verse I’m standing on. The verse God spoke to me about my children.

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. ~Philippians 4:8

God didn’t stop there. He also spoke to me at length – about royalty. chivalry. nobility. A theme arose in my heart and mind.

What is noble these days? Is chivalry and courtesy dead?

And so I went back and researched noble and chivalry and compared it to our ideas today. They’re interesting concepts. Not entirely un-Christian, but there’s a fine line with some of it.

Don’t we all walk a fine line? Do we want our children to ever waver to the other side of that line? By raising servant leaders in this world, we must be diligent. We cannot compromise. We must choose to be servants of Christ or followers of the world.

And we must disciple our children. If we don’t, the world will. {Tweet that!}

We must be diligent with training our children the way they should go. Pray for what your family’s goals are. What is your idea of success for your children? And I’m not talking about a corner office or a bunch of letters after his name. For the Kingdom of God. What does that success look like?

Like me, you may focus on what you don’t want for your kids. I know I don’t want them to be promiscuous, experiment with drugs, lack honor or integrity.

Work backwards from your ultimate goal of Kingdom success for your family. How do you get there? We’re going to discuss that this month.

I found a couple relevant posts:

  • Today’s Code of Chivalry
  • Parents as Servant Leaders

Join me this week as I discuss the Code of Chivalry and compare it to Philippians 4:8.


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31 Days of Servant Leadership

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September 30, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

Are you ready?

We’re spending a month discussing Servant Leadership.

Raising Royal Little Lambs.

Follow along: #RaisingServantLeaders

31 Days of Servant Leadership

Jesus came to be a servant.

Our Bible lesson hit home for me – and the girls really understood this one. And they understand that this is different than the way of the world. And it’s hard.

“Being a servant means not just looking at your own wants or desires, but looking to help others.” ~The Dig for Kids, Volume 2

The greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves. For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But I am among you as one who serves. Luke 22:26-27

Read all of Luke 22.

So, we’re looking for ways to serve, to help others. Even the smallest overlooked things can be so appreciated. I just want my kids to be courteous and thoughtful.

I want our family to be lights for Jesus.

Being counter-cultural is hard.

So, I let go and let God. It’s amazing what my kids do on their own without my nagging them. They’re serving joyfully.

List of posts in this series:

  1. What is Servant Leadership?

  2. Chivalry

  3. Honor

  4. Leaders Listen

  5. Heart Training Resources for Littles

  6. Sunday-no post

  7. Humility and Bible Studies for Kids

  8. Fun

  9. Youth part 1

  10. Youth part 2

  11. Seeking Counsel

  12. Prayer Resources

  13. Sunday-no post

  14. Fear

  15. Comparison

  16. Noble

  17. Truth

  18. Parent Resources

  19. Girl Resources

  20. Sunday-no post

  21. Admirable

  22. Lovely

  23. What is Right?

  24. The Purpose of Church

  25. Praiseworthy

  26. Excellent

  27. Sunday-no post

  28. Boy Resources

  29. Valor

  30. Heart Training Resources

  31. What is Purity?

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Filed Under: Leadership Tagged With: leadership, parenting

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