Which of the following are similar to the ways you've served Christ in your family? [check all that apply]
Taught your kids to see God's glory in nature
Washed the dishes without being asked
Played a board game with your kids
Encouraged your wife to finish her master's degree
Attended a child's open house at school
Worked fewer hours to be with your family
Set an example of a godly prayer life for your children
Held a crying child
Swung on the tire swing with your daughter
Told your wife why you're still in love with her
Told your son he's got what it takes
Coached soccer
Let you child correct you now and then
Fixed the vacuum cleaner
Taught your sons to ride a bike
Listened patiently to a complaint of your wife
Taped your child's artwork to your office wall
Admitted to your kids that you were wrong
Told your children how Christ entered your life
Cleaned up vomit
Taught your children to love books
Been romantic without expecting sex
Told your daughter she's smart/beautiful
Set standards for your kids and stuck to them
Dealt graciously with a busybody neighbor
Peeled carrots
Watched movies together
How Dad Reached Out Theme of the Week: The Reaching-out Risk Sunday, September 26, 2004
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Men of IntegritySeptember/October 2004How Dad Reached OutTheme of the Week: The Reaching-out RiskSunday, September 2675Who Said It
Mark Buchanan pastors New Life Community Baptist Church on Canada's Vancouver Island. He is also an author who majored in creative writing at the University of British Columbia. His latest book is The Holy Wild.
Mark enjoys gardening and woodworking at their Duncan home, plus fishing and cycling. With his wife, Cheryl, and their three children, he can often be found swimming in Vancouver Island's clean, clear, warm rivers.
What He Said
In the early '70s, many Pakistani refugees fled the war between India and Pakistan and came to Canada. Bureaucrats in Ottawa distributed them throughout the country. Ours was a hard-fisted northern mill town where the resentment of many toward them ran deep.
One winter evening my father was driving home from work, trailing a public bus. The temperature was at least 40 below zero. Around the curve of road, he saw a dark-skinned man standing at the bus stop, shivering in a thin windbreaker. He was in clear view. The bus driver sailed straight past him.
Dad stopped, swung open the passenger door, and invited him in. The man was confused. Dad—holding up traffic—had to get out of his car and, with gestures and tone, convince the man to get in. It took another half hour to figure out where the man lived. Thus began a friendship that took hold and widened to include our family and his. They introduced us to curry. We helped them learn English.
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