Nine-year-old
Al had disobeyed his father who, as a strict disciplinarian, sent him with a
note to a police station in London. When Al came in late after curfew, his
father met him at the door and handed him a note and said, "Take it to the
jailhouse."
Al was terrified.
"The officer, a friend of his
father, opens the note, reads it, and nods,. 'Follow me.' He leads the wide-eyed
youngster to a jail cell, opens the door, and tells him to enter. The officer
clangs the door shut. 'This is what we do to naughty boys,' he explains and
walks away ... The jail sentence lasts only five minutes. But those five minutes
felt like five months. Al never forgot that day. The sound of the clanging door,
he often told people, stayed with him the rest of his life.
"The fear of
losing a father's love exacts a high toll. Al spent the rest of his life hearing
the clanging door. That early taste of terror contributed to his lifelong
devotion to creating the same in others. For Al—Alfred Hitchcock—made a career
out of scaring people."
True, discipline is important, but it always
needs to fit the crime. Some children are impaired for life because of severe
punishment as a child. Others are left terrified if they were beaten severely or
abused. It is imperative that parents never discipline out of anger because that
is punishment, not discipline. Discipline always needs to be in love.
Those whom God loves, he disciplines in love—not punishes in anger. We
need to do the same with our children.
Dear God
thank you that when
you discipline me
it is always out of your love for me and for my
good
Help me
to do the same
when disciplining my children.
May it always be in love and never out of anger.
Thank you for
hearing and answering my prayerz
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