Family Devotions: A Spiritual Rhythm That Includes Everyone

I haven’t always been involved in family devotions. It wasn’t for a lack of desire or aspiration; I truly wanted to lead our home in this way. However, we went a long time as a family before finally committing to integrating this spiritual practice into our regular daily rhythm.

We have been doing morning devotions together for over 15 years now—long enough that our children now expect them. It is a long road, as I am finding most things are with young children. Though revival doesn’t break out every morning over eggs and toast, our continued hope and prayer is that these moments build the love and discipline our children need for their future relationship with God’s Word.

Throughout these 15 years, we have experimented with different methods, failed at many, and learned valuable lessons about starting and sustaining this pattern. I hope these insights encourage you to kick off this journey or offer affirmation if you are already in the middle of it.

In my opinion, then, here are 6 things you must have to start a family devotion:

1. Consistency

There’s a pattern to everything, a routine for most every part of life. And any time you disrupt that routine, even for the noblest of reasons, there is going to be backlash. So before you get started, you’ve got to commit to consistency. Decide on the time of day. And keep it at that time.

For us, it’s 6:45 a.m. at breakfast. That still might change in the coming years, but if you don’t pick a consistent time then it’s doubly difficult to keep the practice going.

What’s more, in our experience, the days that feel like discipline to do this far outweigh the days where you feel like the kids are actually engaged and learning something. But then again, isn’t that often the case in our own lives with our own spiritual growth and development? And yet we keep going because we believe in the power of God and the power of His Word.

2. Variety

For us, we try to change things up once a week. Monday through Thursday, we do a Bible study and prayer (probably around 15 minutes), but Friday is different.

On Friday, everyone shares one specific thing they are thankful for that week, and one prayer request. 

For a while, those prayer requests were pretty predictable—that I would have a good day, that I would do well on a test, that I would be kind to friends—that kind of thing. In recent days, we’re tried to bring more variety into those prayer requests as well, asking the kids to share a prayer not for themselves but for someone else, or to share something they’re thankful for that’s not about an activity they get to do that weekend.

3. A Sense of Humor

One of the great things having a family devotion time does for me, as a dad, is helps me not to take myself too seriously. Every once in a while we will be talking through some great truth from the Bible, I’ll be making an incredibly insightful and valuable point in a truly beautiful way … and someone will burp.

Game over. But such is life with kids. And in truth, that’s okay. I can’t help but think it was a pretty undignified scene when the kids were crawling all over each other to try and get into Jesus’ lap, and yet He let them come. Snotty noses and all. Keeping a sense of humor while trying to instill this discipline, in the end, is a helpful reminder that we, as parents, are really stewards of these children. We do the best we can in faith, but ultimately it is only God who convicts of sin and brings our children —any children—to an understanding of the gospel.

So we laugh, and then we go at it again.

4. Tools

It is our of our experience as a family that I’ve written The Whole Story for the Whole Family. It’s a family devotion book that is modeled after our own pattern described above. In a year, you can walk your family through the major storyline of Scripture with an eye on Jesus as the main character. And each daily devotion includes an object lesson or game, a text, a bit of commentary, and some discussion questions—all meant to be done in 15 minutes. This certainly isn’t the only resource you can use. Whatever you do choose, don’t feel like you have to recreate the wheel.

Find something that can help you kickstart the pattern of reading the Bible together as a family.

5. Preparation

I don’t mean preparation in the sense that you have spent two hours studying the devotion you are going to walk through the next morning (though that’s a fine practice if you can manage it). I mean “preparation” more in the sense of creating the environment. In order to make sure we have time before school for devotions, Jana and I have to get up earlier than we used to. We have to be completely ready for the day with breakfast ready by 6:45.

While it often means that I read through the devotion the night before, it also to a greater extent means doing anything we can do to make the morning run more smoothly.

This would be things like making sure lunches are already packed, clothes are laid out, and you haven’t left any lingering homework assignments to be done over the eggs and toast.

6. Faith

There are spiritual moments with your children that are paper thin, and they don’t seem to happen that often. It’s those times when you really sense they are understanding the nature of sin and our great need for forgiveness, and then they’re thinking about Pokemon again. Paper thin moments, but they’re there. I remember several years ago when we were in the book of Joshua talking through the story of Rahab. If you’re unfamiliar with the story, it’s an incredible gospel-laced account of a woman of questionable reputation who was saved from destruction. And how was she saved? Because she put a red rope on her door, marking her house to be spared. And the lights came on for the kids:

“Do you guys remember any other people that put something red on their doors?”

“Yeah. Like when that angel killed people.”

“Correct. It was the Passover. And why was that called the Passover?”

“Because the angel passed over their houses.”

“And what did the Israelite army do to Rahab’s house?”

“They passed over it.”

And so on it went, eventually to remind us that the wrath of God passes over us because our lives are marked with something red—the blood of Jesus. The kids thought this was genuinely exciting, and they felt genuinely smart because they saw how it all fit together.

Every morning isn’t a home run. Sometimes it’s a sacrifice bunt that you believe that God will somehow use in the story of their lives. So we choose, by faith, not to be discouraged, but instead to believe in a God who is drawing our kids’ hearts to himself.

Read more from Michael Kelley »

This article originally appeared on Thinke.org and is reposted here by permission.

Michael Kelley
Michael Kelley

Michael Kelley is director of Discipleship at LifeWay Christian Resources and the author of Growing Down: Unlearning the Patterns of Adulthood that Keep Us from Jesus.

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