Families, communities, and nations are strengthened by parents who follow appropriate parenting principles and practices. The family is the core unit of society and central to Heavenly Father’s plan for our happiness. Satan knows that the family is vital to salvation, so he does everything possible to destroy families. Heavenly Father put us in families to help us reach our full potential. He also gave us the remedy for the attacks of Satan: “I have commanded you to bring up your children in light and truth” (D&C 93:40).
Society has several attitudes about
parenting that are not appropriate or good for children. Some people believe
that children are innately evil because of the Fall of Adam and Eve. Some parents
with this belief think that they must “beat the devil” out of their children.
Some people believe that children are
innately good and well-motivated, but they are corrupted by adult society. Parents
with this belief allow their children to learn from experience and to follow
their own inclinations. This or similar beliefs were held by French philosopher
Jean-Jacques Rousseau as well as humanistic psychologists Carl Rogers, and
Abraham Maslow.
Some people believe that children are like
a blank slate and neither bad nor good. John Locke believed that children are
shaped by their experiences. John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner agreed with Locke,
and they asserted that children can be conditioned or molded by controlling and
altering their environment.
Some people believe that children are more
than a blank state at birth and that early differences between individuals can
be explained to a degree by biological factors. This idea diminishes the role
of individual agency.
Some people believe that individuals have
the ability to interpret – or even to construct – their environment. This
belief recognizes agency and suggests that individuals can modify the effect of
biological and environmental influences.
Most or all of the listed attitudes
contain some truth. It is true that children are born pure and innocent into a
fallen world. It is also true that we are all affected by our environment,
biology, and personal agency. However, none of these perspectives offers stable
guidelines for moral behavior, but the gospel of Jesus Christ does. The scriptures
tell us that children are pure and innocent because of the Atonement of Christ,
and prophets teach us about the age of accountability and about our dual nature
– spiritual and natural.
We know that each child is
individual and unique in both genetic composition and individual interests,
talents, personality, desires, and abilities. We know that parents, siblings,
and other people influence the development of each child. We also know that
scientific research suggests biological characteristics affect the dispositions
and temperaments of children.
Social scientists have discovered
that parenting techniques fall into four general approaches: authoritarian,
permissive, authoritative, and uninvolved/neglectful. Authoritarian parents try
to control and shape the behavior of their children. They show firm control but
little warmth. Snowplow parents, helicopter parents, drill sergeant parents,
tiger mothers, and stage mothers may all fall within the authoritarian
approach.
Permissive parents usually show warmth and
love toward their children but offer little guidance or direction. They allow
their children to regulate their own activities, avoid the exercise of control,
and do not insist on obedience to external standards. This approach has little
or no control as well as little guidance and teaching. Free-range parents may
fit into this approach.
Authoritative
parents, like authoritarian parents, expect much from their children. However, authoritative
parents show a high degree of warmth and responsiveness. They are loving and
supportive, but they guide their children and exert firm control as needed. Authoritative
parenting is most consistent with the scriptures and gospel teachings.
Uninvolved/Neglectful: Uninvolved or
neglectful parenting is characterized by few demands, low responsiveness, and
little communication.
In
1995, the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints published a document titled “The Family –
A Proclamation to the World.” They stated the following in their proclamation: “Successful
marriages and families are established and maintained on principles of faith,
prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome
recreational activities.” The authoritative parenting approach encourages
parents to adopt and live these principles.
Parenting
is difficult, but the rewards of good parenting are worthwhile. Parents do not
need to be perfect, but they should be good-enough parents. Prophetic counsel
tells parents “to do the best they can in their own family circumstances,”
(James E. Faust) and “you fail only if you fail to keep trying” (Spencer W.
Kimball).
Parenting
is the most important work that we can do, and God will hold us accountable for
how we parent our children. However, He will look at all aspects of the
situation. When parents do their best to rear their children in love and
righteousness, they can strengthen their family, community, and nation.
Ideas
for this post come from the manual for a parenting class, Strengthening the
Family, published by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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