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Back to the Future // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 5

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Release Date: 09/05/2025

Enough to Go Around // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 5 show art Enough to Go Around // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 5

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

One of the greatest things in life is when you sow a good seed and one day you get to reap a good harvest.  That’s probably why so many cultures have harvest festivals.  But – what do we do with that harvest? What we get out of life depends pretty much on what we put into it. It's a self-evident piece of blindingly, glimpsingly obvious wisdom isn't it? That’s why this week we've been looking at the whole idea of sowing and reaping in our lives. We're confronted by a tough or a difficult situation and if, instead of running away or kicking and screaming, we actually sow some...

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Waiting, Waiting, Waiting // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 4 show art Waiting, Waiting, Waiting // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 4

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

We pretty much know that to reap a good harvest, we have to sow a good seed – but I’ll tell you sometimes it’s a long way between sowing and reaping – waiting, waiting, waiting…. I'm not a farmer but I've often imagined what it must be like, you know you spend the money, you buy the seed, you prepare the soil, you plant the seed and then you wait. So many things can go wrong, too much rain, not enough rain or it rains at the wrong time and pests and disease and fire and hail. Sometimes it can be a different one each year but eventually after some hard work, the investment and the...

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Weathering the Storm // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 3 show art Weathering the Storm // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 3

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Have you ever noticed – when you take a good decision to plant some good seed in difficult soil – all of a sudden, a dirty great storm whips up.  Hey, I’m trying to do the right thing – God what’s going on? We all like sunshine and warm weather. You know when the weather forecaster comes on and says it's going to be cold and wet tomorrow, we go, "Augh yuck," but of course without the rain we'd all be dead. It's as simple as that, and sometimes it comes down in torrents, storms blow, the rain pelts down. Have you ever noticed the plants and the trees and the bushes in all that?...

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Watering the Dirt // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 2 show art Watering the Dirt // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 2

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Sometimes, when we go through a bit of a rough patch, instead of running away (which is always our first instinct) instead, we make a good choice and decide to plant a good seed in that place. But then for a while, it feels like nothing’s happening. Have you ever planted a seed into some dirt? There’s something that, well frankly, is unnerving about this simple transaction. You take the seed and invariably it costs you something, you put it into the dirt and you cover it up and it's gone. There's a little kid inside each of us who wants to sit there and say, "Ok, well. I planted you, I...

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Planting the Seed // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 1 show art Planting the Seed // Reaping God's Harvest in My Life, Part 1

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Sometimes when you’re going through a bad patch – all you want is for it to get better. But actually, sometimes, what we need to do is to plant a good seed while we’re waiting. Can I ask you, what do you want to get out of life? I mean when you stand back and survey the landscape called, “your life”, the highs and the lows, what are some of the things that you’d love to see there? Relationships, achievements, family, career, money, a promotion, holiday? We’re all different, but basically my hunch is that we kind of want the same sorts of things in life. We want health and...

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Back to the Future // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 5 show art Back to the Future // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 5

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

One of the things that nobody ever really tells you when you’re a teenager, is that the tough lessons you learn now are going to be so important later on in life. Is that really true? There's a great film that was produced back in 1984 called, “The Karate Kid”. It's about a teenage boy who had just lost his father and who ends up studying karate under an older Japanese man called, Mr Miagi. And for the first few months, all Mr Miagi does is to get this young Daniel Laruso to do menial chores – polish the car, paint the fence, sand the deck and after months Daniel has had enough. He...

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The Marque of Maturity // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 4 show art The Marque of Maturity // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 4

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

One of the things I did when I was a teenager is that I wanted to act like a child and yet, to be treated like an adult. So what are parents looking for in their teenagers as key indicators that they’re actually growing up? Can I ask you a question? How would you define maturity? I mean, you look at two people, similar ages, similar backgrounds and you think that one, well she definitely has it but that other one over there, he just needs to grow up. So what’s the difference between the two? What sets them apart? What makes one person mature and the other one immature? Interesting. We...

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God's Plan for Honour // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 3 show art God's Plan for Honour // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 3

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

It’s an amazing thing – but God places a very high premium on children honouring their parents. And that’s not always easy. I mean for starters – what does “honour” actually mean here in the 21st century, mm? I asked my 16 year old daughter Melissa, the other day what she thought the word “honour” means. She immediately responded, "It means obedience." "Mmm," I said, “That's part of it but not the whole lot." "What do you mean?" She asked, "Well," I said, "Your Mum and I honour you, don't we?" She hadn't quite thought of it that way. She looked around the room and said,...

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Rebel Without a Cause // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 2 show art Rebel Without a Cause // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 2

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

It seems par for the course that at some point, teenagers want to rebel. I know I did. So, why is that? What’s going on in their hearts when they get this urge to rebel? Now I remember when I was a teenager it was a time of anger and tension and conflict with my parents. You see, I knew that I knew everything and I knew that they knew nothing; I mean they were so old fashioned. They made me have my hair cut short when all my friends had long hair. They made me clean my room every Saturday morning, I mean come on! All my friends were allowed to have messy rooms. I had to learn the piano...

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Just Grow Up // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 1 show art Just Grow Up // How to Get More Out of Your Parents, Part 1

A Different Perspective Official Podcast

Growing up isn’t easy. That whole journey from being a little baby to a well-adjusted young adult is tough. So – what’s growing up all about? What happens along the way? You know, I think that one of the hardest things in life is just growing up. You start of life as this helpless little baby; can’t do anything for yourself. And the somehow 20 or 25 years later you're supposed to be this well-balanced mature young adult capable of taking on the world. But along the way there are lots of growing pains. I don’t know how you found it, but for me I think growing up was hard. There are...

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One of the things that nobody ever really tells you when you’re a teenager, is that the tough lessons you learn now are going to be so important later on in life. Is that really true?

There's a great film that was produced back in 1984 called, “The Karate Kid”. It's about a teenage boy who had just lost his father and who ends up studying karate under an older Japanese man called, Mr Miagi. And for the first few months, all Mr Miagi does is to get this young Daniel Laruso to do menial chores – polish the car, paint the fence, sand the deck and after months Daniel has had enough. He feels that he's been taken advantage of and has a go at Mr Miagi.

But what he discovers, all of a sudden, is that the constant repetitious boring motions of polishing the car in round motions, wipe on/wipe off and the up and down motions of painting the fence, those things have drummed into him the very reflexes he needs for his karate moves not to mention the self discipline.

I think that “The Karate Kid” is one of the movies that all families should watch together because it explains something important to the impatient teenager.

The other day on the program we talked about that saying, "you can't put old head on young shoulders." In other words you can't expect a teenager to understand the bigger picture; they won't until they grow up. Well, in part that’s true, I mean I never really appreciated my parents until I had my own children but at the same time I don't think we talk enough about the future with our kids. All they've ever known is home and school and home and school and home and school. What they really want to know is, what is life going to like after school? How will it be?

I had this idealised picture of this most amazing freedom and sure it was great finally to finish high school. But I could never have anticipated the struggles and the issues ahead of me probably because we never talked about that stuff. And like Daniel Laruso in The Karate Kid, I simply never appreciated that the boring mundane chores and boundaries that my parents put into my life were such an important learning foundation for growing up into an effective adult.

When you look at our children, they are a wondrous creation, you watch them grow up and develop. You know the time I enjoy most is when they develop a sense of humour and you can banter with them and start talking to them more as adults than kids, that's a great time.

It's amazing but parents know that there are things that they have to learn, discipline, self motivation, dealing with the routine and the humdrum and the pressures and the unfairness of life. So what parents do is we put things into place that causes them to learn those things. Problem is, as a teenager, I couldn't see that because no-one ever explained it to me and what teenagers do, because they don't understand, is they rebel.

We looked at this passage the other day; it comes from Hebrews, chapter 5 listen to it:

During the days of Jesus' life on earth, He offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could have saved Him from death and He was heard because of His reverent submission. Although He was the Son He learned obedience from what He suffered and once made perfect He became the source of eternal salvation for all who believed.

Jesus learned obedience from what He suffered. Obedience and suffering are linked, they always are and there's only one way to learn self discipline, it's the hard way and here's the thing, different parents use different approaches but they all have one thing in common. If we parents are doing our jobs properly we put certain non negotiable boundaries in place.

In our home it looks something like this for our daughter Melissa who is 16 years old. Every night, no matter what, she cleans up the kitchen after dinner. Every week by midday on Saturday, no matter what, her room has to be cleaned top to bottom otherwise she loses her internet access for a week and that, I have to tell you, is devastating for a teenager. Another boundary is, she will not answer back or argue with me or with her mother. And when she moves from schooling into work in a few years time, she will pay board to cover some of her costs at home.

Now there are others, about her social life and stuff, why do we do this? Because these are bottom lines and they are absolutely non negotiables and having some non negotiables in your life when you’re growing up as a teenager, is critical in the development of the teenager. If you don't have the boundaries the child will grow up without basic skills that he or she needs for adulthood. Is it fun for her to lose a week’s internet? Well, no it's not. Is it fun for her, every night, to have to clean up the kitchen? No it's not. But these are the things that teach our children the skills that they need later in life.

If you're a teenager, because you actually can't see into the future, in a sense you have to accept this on trust. I mean, when you leave school it brings challenges and responsibilities and ultimately setting up your own home. You have to pay the rent, you have to pay the electricity bill, you have to pay the car registration, you have to front up to work on time every day. So these seemingly restrictive and mundane and boring and horrible things that parents do to ruin a teenager’s social life turn out to be amongst the most critical things in building a solid foundation for adulthood.

This is God's idea. Listen to what He says in Hebrews, chapter 12:

My son, do not make light of the Lords discipline and do not lose heart when He rebukes you because the Lord disciplines those whom He loves and He punishes everyone whom He accepts as a son. Endure hardship as discipline; God is treating you as sons. For what son is not disciplined by his father. If you are not disciplined (and everyone undergoes discipline), then you are illegitimate children and not true sons.

Moreover, we have all had human fathers who disciplined us and we respected them for it. How much more should we submit to the Father of our spirits and live! Our fathers disciplined us for a little while as they thought best; but God disciplines us for our good, that we may share in His holiness. No discipline ...

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No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.

This is God’s word, this is God’s wisdom. God’s talking about how He disciplines all of us but He also brings in the parents discipline of their children. This is God’s plan and none of us likes being disciplined, it's never fun but unless we learn through the discipline of our parents we are not going to be equipped to be effective adults and in turn parents ourselves.

I want to encourage you in your family whether you're a parent or a child or a grandparent or a friend of people who have teenagers, where ever you fit in, to talk about this constantly. Without this discipline the boundaries and the chores and all that stuff, a child simply won't become an effective adult, it's just the way it is, it's the God thing.

Parents naturally want to bless their children. If you're a teenager and if you're a child, if you want to walk in the blessing, the abundant blessing of your parents:

Honour your father and your mother so that you may live long in the land that the Lord has given to you.