What Does It Mean to “Train Up A Child…”? Scott Pauley

“Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” (Proverbs 22:6) What does this verse really teach?

How can we “train up a child in the way he should go”?

Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6

This proverb has both a principle and a promise. Like so many other verses of Scripture we are quick to claim the promise but give little attention to the principle.  We see it in our children but it has become a part of all of our thinking – everyone wants the product; few want the process.

The hard work is done when our sons and daughters are children. But never in my life did I pray for my kids as I did during their teen years. Never did I feel so inadequate.  When I began preaching as a young man I was given the wise counsel that I should not preach on what I did not know. Simple, but profound. And so, I am not writing to give parenting advice. Yet, the truth of this verse can revolutionize the life of every young person we influence.

Train Up Your Children in the Truth

Does this verse mean, as so many have taught, that if we teach our children the right things they will never get away from them? I have lived long enough to know that is not the case. Good parents, godly people, have often done the best they could to raise their children right, only to see them choose another path. Nothing can substitute for personal responsibility. Our children are real people. (I know that is hard to believe.) They have a conscience. At some point, they must choose for themselves.

All we can do is consistently teach them the truth, live an example, and pray that God works deeply in their heart. I do believe that God’s Word placed in the heart will not return void. Interesting, it is the only thing in the Bible that God promises will not return void. It is the greatest thing we can give our children. I have said for years that the most wonderful thing my mom and dad gave to my sister and me was a home that was thoroughly Christian and happy. They modeled the joy of following Christ. How I hope that my children can say that someday!

Train Up Your Child to Discover God’s Plan for Their Life

So what does this proverb mean? A few years ago I was preaching for a friend in Puerto Rico and he made an off-handed comment to me about this verse. I have thought about it so many times. Now at this stage in my life, ministry, and family it means more than ever.

Train up a child in THE WAY HE SHOULD GO…” God has a way for every life, a path for every person. My job is to help young people find that path. Not every child is to go the same way. Certainly all should be on the path of righteousness. But each has a definite and distinct purpose.

Every Child is Different

It is so easy to try to make every young person fit in the same box. Often our goal becomes to force them into our mold. Is it any wonder then that so many rebel? The life God saved them for brings true fulfillment. Each child is born with certain God-given abilities. Each child of God is given spiritual gifts when they are born again. God has a plan for every life. It is not my job to design the plan. It is my job to guide my children to God and His plan for their life.

God called me to preach as a twelve-year-old boy. Today I had the joy of seeing a thirteen-year-old young man respond in a youth meeting and announce that God had called him to be a preacher. What a joy! Yet I must acknowledge that it is not God’s will that every boy be a preacher, and whatever God has for anther young man’s life will be perfect in every way. Why? Because it will be “the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.”

Starting them Right Helps them Finish Well

Find a man or woman who has faithfully served in their place and are finishing the journey well. That is a person who early on found the way they should go. They don’t want to depart from it. They have discovered why God created them and Jesus saved them. They have realized why God has put them on this earth. Isn’t that what we want for our children? Isn’t that what our Heavenly Father wants for all of us?

I heard my pastor say for years that the greatest thing we can teach our children is their own personal accountability to Jesus Christ. Our world is consumed with individualism. “Let them express themselves” has become the standard. The only way to deal with individuals is to bring them face to face with their individual accountability to God.

Our children are special. They have individual gifts. As every parent can testify, they have individual personalities.  They must realize their individual responsibility to Jesus Christ. It has been often said that a young person is just “trying to find their way.” That will never do. They must find God’s way for them. And we must help.

I am glad so many have done that for me. Now, I pray God allows me to do that for others.


About Scott Pauley

Order your copies of “On Purpose” today! This gospel children’s book explores how God made each child for a purpose and plan.

WATCH: 3 Things to Do With God’s Word


Discover more from Enjoying the Journey

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Post Author

More from similar topics

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Recent Posts

A journey through 1 John reveals our place in the family of God, how we can have assurance, and that our joy is rooted in Christ.

Journey through 1 John

“Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him, and saith of him, Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile! Nathanael saith unto him, Whence knowest thou me? Jesus answered and said unto him, Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee.” (John 1:47-48)

Why the Story of Nathanael Sitting Under the Fig Tree Matters

It also discusses the Four Sermons in Haggai It is in that context that God raises up the prophet Haggai with four sermons in four months. The Word of the Lord comes to Haggai, and he preaches four sermons. Each one of them is dated for us. Each sermon targets a different problem. You can read them in Haggai chapters one and two. In his first sermon (Haggai 1:1-15), Haggai preached on the danger of waiting when we should be working. They were waiting for a sign to build. He said, You don't need a sign, you need to obey God. Haggai's second sermon (Haggai 2:1-9) explained the danger of lamenting the past and missing the present. They were sorrowing over the destruction of the past temple. God said, Build a new one. It was G. Campbell Morgan who said, “It is impossible to unlock the present with the rusty key of the past." Many people are bogged down in their past and miss the present. Keep in mind what is at hand and what is ahead. The third sermon he preached (Haggai 2:10-19) described the danger of seeing only the material and neglecting the supernatural. They could see the work that needed to be done, but they missed the fact that God had resources that would help them get it done. The Lord was behind all of this. The fourth sermon (Haggai 2:20-23) warned against the danger of recognizing who is against us and forgetting who is for us. They were concentrating on the opposition and forgetting that “greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4). A journey through Haggai shows us the importance of performing the work that God has told us to do, and His glory in our obedience. Image leads to an overview of Haggai

Journey through Haggai

How Social Media Shapes Our Heart

How Social Media Shapes Our Hearts

Leave a Reply