Habits of a Gospel-Centered Household - Pt. 4

Written by Pete Schemm
[This concludes Pete Schemm’s piece from the previous three weeks]
Pt. 1, Pt. 2, Pt. 3]

6. Table-talk 

Perhaps the most underrated means to forming one another in Christ is the daily meal. Sharing a meal together as a family has fallen on hard times. Everything from baseball practice to dance lessons, television to video games, has made missing a meal together a foregone conclusion for many families. We do not make time for it, and we are suffering the consequences. I suggest that we recover one of the most basic, most ancient ways of sharing life together—eating together daily—as a means of spiritual formation in the Christian household. 

Encouraged by Martin Luther’s example, I refer to meaningful conversation over a meal as “table-talk.” The value of table-talk to form the gospel in us builds on the idea that we enjoy talking about what matters to us at mealtime. God created us, as relational creatures, to eat together and to talk to one another; some of the most important conversations we ever have come at meal times. It is not coincidental that some of the most important conversations that Jesus had about the significance of his death were around a table—looking at one another, eye to eye, and eating together (Matt. 26:17-29; Mark 14:12-26: Luke 22:7-23; 24:13-35; see also Exod. 12; Deut. 16; Rev.19).

Our conversation in table-talk may vary from the mundane to the profound. It is appropriate to talk about the weather and the big game and other shared interests. It is also appropriate to talk about the gospel and repentance and God’s faithfulness to us as a family. It should not seem awkward or out of place when we talk about weighty and substantive things. If it does seem awkward, that probably reflects the absence of regular, meaningful conversations. These, and other questions like them, can prompt gospel-centered conversations that help us to reflect meaningfully on the daily evidences of God’s grace toward us. 

  • What was your day like? 

  • What were the highlights of the day? 

  • How did God provide for us today? 

  • Have we honored one another today? 

  • How can I serve you tomorrow? 

The Goal of the Christian Household 

I want to conclude with a reminder of the ultimate goal of the Christian household. We practice these habits together because we long for gospel-centered relationships where the grace of God is rehearsed in our households. Home is the place where we are most often our true selves— whether in gladness or anger, honesty or deceit, love or ill will. It is by God’s design, then, that learning and living the gospel at home brings a depth to spiritual formation that is otherwise unlikely if not impossible. 

And yet a well-ordered Christian household is not our ultimate goal! The Christian household is arguably the most foundational of all Christian communities but it is not the most important or ultimate Christian community. As we seek to bring life and doctrine together, we must think rightly about both the family and the church. The family and the church each has a unique and distinct role in God’s economy.

The Christian household, while important, must never become more important to us than the church or the kingdom of Christ. Such a belief would undermine the primacy of the gospel of Christ and oppose the plain teaching of Jesus: “Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me” (Matt. 10:37).

The Christian household is where we live now, but it is not our ultimate home. Our ultimate home is with the family of God in the new heavens and the new earth. This is our ultimate hope and goal. This is why we take seriously our responsibilities in our families and in the church, in accordance with the gospel, because we long for Jesus. We long to go home, and we recognize that one day God himself will be our home (Rev. 21:3).

Habits of a Gospel-Centered Household - Pt. 2

Written by Pete Schemm
[This continues Pete’s piece from last week.]


2. Reading Scripture Together 

Holy Scripture is the most important source for training in the Christian household. Scripture alone is sufficient to form our understanding of salvation and every aspect of Christian living (see 2 Tim. 3:10-17; Pss. 1, 19, 119). Jesus taught that God’s Word is sufficient when he said, “It is written, ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God’” (Matt 4:4). 

Scripture is not our only source for improving our understanding of God and Christian doctrine, but it is our only perfect and ultimate source. Every other resource we might employ is subject to the authority of Scripture. Because Scripture is the ultimate source of authority in all matters of life and doctrine, we see Scripture as the primary means for Christian formation. 

How to Read the Bible in the Christian Household 

The important thing to note about our second habit is simplicity. Reading Scripture together is not a Bible study or a lesson. It is quite simply a time to read the Bible together and listen to it—to read and learn as a family. Read Scripture regularly—not necessarily daily but consistently. It has been my experience, mostly with fathers, that a daily goal is counterproductive. They fail to meet this goal and then give up altogether. A better goal for the habit of Scripture reading is “life together under the Word.” Reading consistently as a family, along with faithful participation in a local church, can accomplish this goal. 

Read Scripture appropriately. Dietrich Bonhoeffer suggested that we ought to read the Bible more like novices. Those who are familiar with the Bible often take on the character of the person who is speaking— whether God or a human being. In so doing, they tend to distort the reading of Scripture. Readers become “rhetorical, emotional, sentimental, or coercive” and direct the listeners’ attention to themselves instead of toward God’s Word. Ironically, it becomes difficult to hear God speak from his own Word. When the Bible is read appropriately, in humility, our families have a better chance of hearing from God. 

Read Scripture in unity. I recommend the same Bible translation for everyone, children and parents. Bible story books may be helpful at times, but in the end our families ought to learn the Word of God using the same grammar. Of course your seven-year-old is unlikely to grasp the significance of the word justification as it is used in Paul’s letter to the Romans—but that’s not the point. Honestly, who among us understood justification the first time we read it? It is our responsibility, as parents, to build a grammar of faith. And we hope to do so in a manner consistent with our belief in the gospel. 

3. Rehearsing Truth Together 

Our third habit centers on truth and doctrine. How can we help our children discover sound doctrine? How can we help them be ready “to make a defense to anyone who asks” for a reason for the hope we have in Christ (1 Peter 3:15)? And to do so with the allure of gentleness? Well, the good news is that we don’t have to reinvent the wheel of Christian doctrine. 

I recommend using a catechism to rehearse the time-tested truths of Christianity. What is a catechism? A catechism is a summary of Christian belief put in the form of questions and answers. It is a tool designed for personal interaction. It may be used at the breakfast table, on a car ride, or at bed time. 

We found that the habit of asking a question or two each week naturally opened gospel-oriented conversations with our children. In addition to that, it naturally stocks your child’s warehouse of biblical and theological concepts. It is one of the most effective means I know of to be “trained in the words of the faith” (1 Tim 4:6). 

There are several good catechisms available. For years our family used A Catechism of Bible Teaching (1892) written by John A. Broadus. It is written from a distinctively Baptist perspective. These days we use a more recently published catechism—The New City Catechism. We like it because it comes in full-color, digital format. Download the app and check it out (www.newcitycatechism.com). As Baptists, we may find the need to tweak an answer or two but don’t let that keep you from the value of the entire catechism. It stands squarely in Christian orthodoxy. 

Here is a sample question from The New City Catechism to give you an idea of how this works: 

Question 1: What is our only hope in life and death? 

Answer: That we are not our own but belong, body and soul, both in life and death, to God and to our Savior Jesus Christ. 

[Continued next week.]

Habits of a Gospel-Centered Household

Written by Pete Schemm
[This booklet was originally published in Trained in the Fear of God.] 

Introduction: The Spirit of the Christian Household

I once thought that the defining mark of a Christian home was “family worship” in the living room every evening. I would not have put it that way at the time, of course. Yet I have since realized that I was far too invested in performing the act of family worship as a measure of my success as a father. I possessed the spirit of a Pharisee—and few attitudes are more unhelpful to the gospel of Jesus than such a spirit. It is the spirit of one who works to impress God and others through religious achievements. It is the spirit of self-justification. It is not the spirit of a Christian household. 

By the spirit of the Christian household, I mean something closer to what Dallas Willard suggests in his book The Spirit of the Disciplines. He says,

 “The spirit of the disciplines—that which moves us to them and moves through them to prevent them from becoming a new bondage and to deepen constantly our union with the heart and mind of God—is [our] love of Jesus, with its steadfast longing and resolute will to be like him.

Spiritual habits and disciplines are hollow apart from a genuine love and affection for Jesus Christ. They tend to take on a “new bondage” and become a means to seek an evil and enslaving endpoint instead. 

The spirit of the Christian household is inspired by the love of God whom “we love because he first loved us” (1 John 4:19). It is a disposition that consistently reflects God’s love through grace and forgiveness. This disposition moves us to and through the habits proposed below. Our habits and disciplines, founded on the love of God, become a good means to a greater end. They form and transform our families into redemptive communities. These habits and disciplines train not only children but also fathers and mothers, to repent of specific things such as anger and demanding expectations. Paul Tripp describes it this way: “As we—parents and children alike—face our need as sinners, the family becomes a truly redemptive community where the themes of grace, forgiveness, deliverance from sin, reconciliation, new life in Christ, and hope become the central themes of family life.” In a word, the spirit of the Christian household is a spirit of redemption. 

Habits of a Gospel-Centered Household 

What habits, then, should be practiced in the context of this redemptive community? The following six habits help us to learn, remember, and practice the gospel regularly. They are intentionally theological and reflect a rich heritage that ties us to the Christians of previous generations. They are simple habits that require no advanced training. And they are helpful at every stage of life—for children and young adults, for parents and grandparents alike. 

1. Reciting the Apostles’ Creed Together 

I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth. I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord. He was conceived by the Holy Spirit, and born of the Virgin Mary. He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. He descended to the dead. On the third day he rose again. He ascended into heaven. and is seated at the right hand of God, the Father Almighty. He will come again to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy universal church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.

Christians have historically recited many creeds to express their faith. My favorite is the Apostles’ Creed. It is the oldest creed in common use among Christian churches today. Its trinitarian structure, following the pattern of Father, Son, and Spirit, as well as its detailed summary of the gospel of Jesus Christ explain why it has served the church so well for over 1,500 years. 

Confessional Value of the Creed 

The English word creed is related to the Latin word credo, meaning “I believe.” The Apostles’ Creed begins this way because it summarizes the faith, or belief, of the apostles who followed Jesus. That same faith—according to the specificity of each line of the Creed—has been once for all delivered to the saints. We join with all who have made this confession of faith in Christ by saying, “I believe.” So when recited as a true expression of one’s heart and mind, the Creed serves well as a confession of faith in Christ. 

It would be a mistake, however, to assume that the Creed is only for those who presently possess faith in Christ. It also serves well to cultivate faith. In other words, learning from an early age to say “I believe” in the triune God and his gospel cultivates a grammar of faith that may one day be invested with genuine, saving faith. And, in addition to preparing one for faith in Christ, it serves to sustain and deepen genuine faith. Christians are as frail and forgetful as anyone. The Creed reminds us all, young or old, to live in accordance with the gospel of God. We never mature beyond saying “I believe.” 

Historical and Communal Value of the Creed 

There is also a historical value in the use of the Creed. Retrieving the tradition of the apostles, through the Creed, enriches our understanding of the gospel. It is well suited to form a “transgenerational” understanding of the gospel because it situates our faith in a rich and lasting heritage. It helps us to realize that ours is an ancient faith, a time-tested faith that crosses geographical and cultural boundaries. All over the world, others believed the gospel long before we did. 

This rich sense of heritage and tradition serves to correct the “Me” generation’s radical individualism and deep-seated sense of entitlement. The Creed helps us to redeem the fallen self through a sense of holy community. It provides a context of community for the individual, so that the “I” of faith is no longer detached but embedded in the common “I believe” of “the communion of saints.” This is the language of a shared tradition.

The way the Creed helps us to think about the gospel is all the more significant when we realize that it combines an economy of words with faithfulness to the biblical text. Every line of the Creed was crafted around biblical language. Other than Scripture itself, I know of no better summary of the gospel with which to train our children. 

Working the Apostles’ Creed into the Life of Your Family 

1. Memorize the first of the Creed’s three main parts. 

2. Recite the first part as a statement of your faith at the beginning or end of a meal-time prayer. 

3. A week later, add the second part of the Creed a few phrases at a time. 

4. A week or two later, add part three.

[Continued next week.]