Archive for the 'Bible Studies for Life' Category

Bible Studies for Life – Live Webcast Today, 4:45PM

bsfl-hero-logoFriends, this week I am in Houston, Texas, for the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention, and today, Tuesday, June 11, at 4:45pm CST, Dr. Eric Geiger and I will be presenting Bible Studies for Life to the entire assembly, casting a vision for how this series can help churches who want to connect the unconnected, strengthen families, and disciple people with wisdom.  If you are at the annual meeting, I hope you will come to the assembly hall at 4:45pm on Tuesday and be a part of the presentation.  And while you are there, stop by the Bible Studies for Life booth in the Exhibit Hall and learn even more.

If you’re not joining us in Houston, you can still view the presentation online through the live stream of the SBC’s annual meeting.  You can find the link to the live stream here.  I hope you will join us today at 4:45pm CST and I hope Bible Studies for Life can be helpful in your church’s disciple-making ministry.

Resolving family conflict

conflict_333153951The Bible is filled with stories of family conflict. Beginning with Cain’s murder of Abel, through Jacob’s trickery involving Esau, and Naomi’s daughters-in-law we see that relationships do not always function in the way God intended.

This has not changed — as we all know. Today, families are in as much turmoil as they have ever been. Advancing down the road of time does not always remove the problems faced in the past; sometimes it just emphasizes them.

Conflict by the Numbers

Soon-to-be released data from LifeWay Research and Bible Studies for Life will show numerous sources of conflict identified by those surveyed. “People with opposing political views,” “boss or co-workers,” “friends,” and “former friends” were all mentioned as relationships with the greatest number of conflict points.

The two greatest sources of conflict identified, however, were “your spouse or former spouse” (18%) and “other family or in-laws” (14%). Simply put, between 10 and 20 percent of Americans are dealing with some kind of family conflict.

Syncing Personalities, Preferences, and Habits

Spousal conflict is nothing new, as anyone married for longer than about 20 minutes can tell you. Syncing two people with different personalities, preferences, habits, and expectations is difficult. Communication breakdowns and differences between the genders are also sources of conflict.

Think about how many times spousal conflict has broken out as the family was preparing for Sunday worship. Or the conflict that seems inherent in making decisions related to child rearing. Now think about those types of conflicts without the context of a supportive faith family.

Extended family members and in-laws can up the conflict ante as well. Manipulative parents like Laban in the Book of Genesis who lied to Jacob about marrying his daughter, Rachel, still exist. Mothers-in-law who try to insert themselves into every decision and fathers-in-law who can never be pleased by their daughters’ new husbands are sources of tension. Holiday festivities can become nightmares attempting to please everyone at every turn.

Taking Action to Resolve Conflict

We all think resolving conflict is easy, but often it is not. What are some steps to take? Here are four ideas:

1. Be immediate: Do not let offenses and conflicts fester for days, weeks, months, or years. They are like open sores.

2. Be humble: Do not approach conflict resolution with the assumption that you have done no wrong yourself. Even if unintended, we sometimes cause a reaction we were not expecting. We need to be prepared for that possibility.

3. Be honest: It does absolutely no good to lie about the depth of offense, nor to act as if a surface wound is a heart transplant! Be completely honest about your perception of the offense, the issues it has caused, and how you think it can be resolved.

4. Be flexible: It may take more than one meeting or discussion to reconcile. It may take a face-to-face discussion over coffee rather than a phone call.

Scripture implores us to live peacefully with everyone as much as possible. When the peace is broken we must attempt, as much as possible, to restore it.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Senior Pastor, Cross Church Northwest Arkansas
General Editor, Bible Studies for Life