A little teasing doesn’t hurt anyone,
right? Wrong! Think for a moment about why children (or adults) tease. To get
attention? To impress others? Are they trying to feel important by cutting down
someone else? Most of the motivation for teasing is selfish: getting what one
wants at the expense of someone else’s feelings. That’s why it is important to
make sure children understand why teasing is hurtful. Shawn and His Amazing Shrinking
Sister: A Book About Teasing, written by Ginger Hubbard and Al
Roland, gives parents guidance for ending teasing while
teaching children how to build one another up instead of tearing one another
down.
Shawn and Annie are excited for a
family camping trip, but trouble awaits! Mom and Dad tease each other, and soon
Shawn follows their lead and starts teasing Annie. But every time Shawn is
unkind and teases her, Annie gets a little bit smaller. As Annie shrinks, the
whole family learns how teasing can be hurtful to others and how it dishonors
God.
Welcome to my blog, Ginger. Please introduce us to your series, Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely. What inspired you and your coauthor, Al Roland, to create the series? As a conference speaker, I have listened to parents all over the country express heartache over their inability to help their children get a handle on tongue-related offences such as whining, lying, and teasing. So many children today are in bondage to enslaving addictions of the tongue, which stem from enslaving sins of the heart. Parents are looking for ways to uproot these issues, address them from a biblical perspective, and point their children to Jesus—who is our only hope for change.
I’ve written parenting books to help
parents do that, but my coauthor and I wanted to write children’s books to help
them grasp these same concepts in fun ways. My co-author, Al Roland, had some
creative story ideas to help us do that.
What are the most common forms of
teasing between children? Why is teasing harmful? Teasing can manifest in many ways,
such as mocking (imitating someone for the purpose of making them appear and
feel stupid, silly, or ridiculous) or insulting (verbally ridiculing or
belittling someone for the purpose of making them appear and feel inadequate or
less significant).
Whether the teaser is criticizing,
belittling, or making fun in a joking way, biblically, teasing falls under the
category of “unwholesome talk” that fails to benefit the listener. In fact,
unwholesome talk does just the opposite. It tears down the person being teased,
which is a direct violation of God’s commands to love others (John 13:34) and
build them up (Ephesians 4:29).
How
can parents identify the heart motives behind their children’s teasing? There
are at least three motives behind children teasing: to get attention, to
entertain, and to verbalize what you truly mean. The latter typically loses the
merit of truth when “just kidding” is quickly added after the so-called teasing
remark. All three motives are selfish in nature, as they bring a form of
satisfaction to the teaser at the expense of hurting someone else.
If there is an audience, the motive
is most likely geared toward receiving attention and entertaining. There is
selfish motive when getting attention or getting a laugh takes precedence over
the feelings of others. Desiring attention at the expense of someone else
violates God’s command to value the interests of others over our own
(Philippians 2:4).
What is the problem with children using
teasing as a means to express how they really feel? It’s
deceitful to verbalize what is true in the heart and then play it off as
teasing. Proverbs 26:18-19 clearly addresses this issue: “Like a
maniac shooting flaming arrows of death is one who deceives their neighbor and
says, ‘I was only joking!’” Matthew 5:37 commands that we let our yes be yes and our no
be no. We are to say what we mean and mean what we say. That verse also warns
that “anything beyond this comes from the evil one.”
Biblical
and unselfish communication involves speaking truth in love and encompasses the
motive to bring good, not harm. According to Ephesians 4:15, it is through this
sort of communication that
believers grow in maturity in Christ: “Speaking the truth in love, we will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who
is the head, that is, Christ.”
Where
in Scripture can we find examples of teasing to better understand why God takes
this offense so seriously? Second Kings 2 tells the story of a gang of boys (42 boys to
be exact) who were teasing the prophet Elisha about his bald head. When Elisha
called down a curse on the boys in the name of the Lord, two bears came out of
the woods and mauled the whole gang.
The
moral of the story was that to ridicule Elisha was to ridicule the Lord. God
created Elisha’s bald head, just as he created us all with different personalities, characteristics, appearances, and
interests. To make fun of any aspect of the unique qualities of God’s creation
is to criticize the creator himself. Proverbs 17:5 says, “Whoever mocks the
poor shows contempt for their maker.” The severe
consequences the boys in the story suffered as a result of teasing were God’s
warning to all who criticize God’s creation.
What is your three-step strategy to help
children overcome the bad habit of teasing and learn how to treat others in a
way that builds others up rather than tearing them down? Step One: Ask
Heart-Probing Questions.
Asking questions helps children take ownership of the sin in their
heart, which will help them recognize their need for Jesus. You might ask,
“Could it be that you are putting your needs (to get attention or entertain)
above the feelings of the person you are teasing? Are your words showing love
by building up, or are they tearing down?
Step Two: Reprove Your Child for Teasing.
You could use wisdom from Matthew 7:12 by saying something
such as, “We are told in Matthew that we should treat others the way that we
would want them to treat us. Would you want to be treated this way? When you
tease, you are using unwholesome talk that dishonors God and hurts others. The
first part of Ephesians 4:29 warns, ‘Do not let any unwholesome talk come out
of your mouth.’”
Step Three: Train Your Child to Edify Others. You
might say, “The second part of Ephesians 4:29 tells us to speak ‘only what is
helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit
those who listen.’ Your words are not benefiting others. They are hurting
others. However, the good news is that when God gives us commands, he also
enables us through his spirit to follow those commands. I encourage you to pray
and ask God to help you to only speak words that will benefit and build up.”
In the story,
Shawn has picked up on teasing from his mom and dad. As parents, when our
children struggle with an issue, should we look inward to examine our own
hearts to see if we might be struggling too? When we recognize our own sin, how
do we acknowledge it with our children? Yes, we
are told in Matthew 7:5 that we should remove the plank in our own eye and then
we can see clearly to remove the speck from someone else’s eye. There is one
thing we all have in common with our kids. We are sinners in need of a Savior
just as much as they are. We need God’s rescuing grace and help as much as they
do, and it’s encouraging for them to know that.
As parents, we need to be honest with our kids about our own struggles
at age-appropriate levels.
When we admit our
own sin and our own need for Jesus to our kids, it encourages them to do the
same.
What
other books are available in the Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely
series? There are two other books that
released last year, Sam and the Sticky Situation and Chloe and the Closet
of Secrets.
In Sam and the Sticky
Situation: A Book About Whining, Sam has figured out a
way to get what he wants when he wants it—he whines. In fact, it works so well
that he’s started whining more and more to get his way. Not only does Sam’s
mother give into his whining very quickly—he learned how to whine from her. But
Sam finds himself in quite the sticky situation when his whining leads him to
being covered with cotton candy and stuck on the top of a Ferris wheel!
In Chloe and the Closet of Secrets: A Book About Lying, Chloe has a sneaky
habit of making up stories. She thinks it’s no big deal, but one day crazy
little fluffs appear every time she tells a lie. Chloe starts stuffing the
fluffs in her closet, but soon it’s almost ready to burst. Not only that, she
realizes that her lies are sinful and are hurting her relationships. But after
her father confesses his own lie and asks God for forgiveness, Chloe gains the
courage to let out all of her secrets.
What
tools for parents are included in each book of the series after the story
itself? At
the end of each book in the series, there is a resource page for parents and
caregivers that supplies biblical content and practical strategies for the
problem at hand.
Each
book is written in a rhyming style. Do you find that helps keep children’s
attention and retain the message better than if the story were simply
narrative? It is easier for kids (and adults)
to remember words that are written in rhyme, which is why we are able to listen
to a song just two or three times and then know the lyrics by heart. I could recite
several Dr. Suess stories to my kids without even opening the books. The
rhyming words were catchy and easy to remember, so after just a few reads, they
were in my heart. Nothing against Dr. Suess, but it’s far more beneficial for
words based on the truths of the Bible to be in our hearts and the hearts of
our children.
Thank you, Ginger, for
sharing this book with my blog readers an me. I’m eager to share it with my
great-grandchildren.
Readers, here’s a link to the book.
Leave a comment for a chance to win
a free copy of the book. You must follow these instructions to be in the
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3 comments:
This series sounds great! I’m gonna mention it to my mom, she may like to have them for my little sisters (6 and 8), who love reading!
Elly -Indiana-
Sounds like a fun book for my granddaughter. Thanks for sharing.
Connie from Kentucky
cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com
Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
Nichols SC.
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