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  1. Thank you!
    I was desperately asking the Lord for the answer to MY defiant child, one that didn’t look like me raising the stakes and escalating the situation and proving I am more powerful. One that spoke GRACE to the hearer.

    I am in tears, 1. because this is just what I needed to hear, and 2. because I haven’t been doing it ALL wrong everytime, I have actually implemented this very same methodology, and I am relieved to hear that someone else has heard the same thing, and strives to exemplify grace not condemnation. Thank you.

    BTW, my defiant child is only 5. The other day she slammed her bedroom door into the wall repeatedly, breaking the drywall behind the door. I thought I would lose my mind. I was totally helpless, because nothing I could think of was a godly answer. I wish I had remembered THIS advice at that time.

    Thanks again!

    1. Oh girl, I hear ya. It is so hard in the moment not to lose your cool. I find myself apologizing to my kids all of the time! Praying for you as you walk through this. Know that it gets better. When my girl was 5, I thought we might not make it. Yet, just last night I was holding her in my arms and telling her that those things we struggle with are the very things that God will use to make us amazingly useful in His kingdom. His strength is made perfect in our weakness!

      1. Well, we put this into practice, and I haven’t seen things escalating like they were. Been few weeks of relative peace with her! Thanks!

  2. Yes, there are some days I am screaming in my mind “I don’t know how she is going to survive living in this house! For that matter how will *I* survive her??!!” LOL… She’s alot less trouble when Daddy isn’t travelling. He is due to be gone for a 90 day stint soon though… not going to be fun.

    She also comes across as super sweet to everyone but ME. I sometimes wonder why I get to see this side of her, that no one else sees. My husband thinks I must be letting her get away with too many things, but I don’t see that…

    I have also recently had my eyes opened about grace in general… and have been looking at my parenting through that lens lately. So this article was very timely for me. Thanks again.

    1. They act that way because they know you will be there no matter what. You are her saftey net, she can let out her frustration, anger, sadness, everything because she know you love her unconditionally.

  3. Well, I do like hearing that others have mouthy kids like I do. I guess misery loves company(as it’s said). I end up feeling like a failure when my kids ignore and/or defy me. I don’t understand why it’s become OK to mouth parents. And, I’m not sure how to break the cycle or encourage my kids to break the cycle. Please pray for me. thx

  4. The timing on this is incredible. I have a ten year old son who is a very good, God-loving kid in many ways, but he’s been making some foolish choices when it comes to self-control and obedience. Almost always having to do with his schoolwork and getting it done in a timely manner. I did a wonderful job of shaming him yesterday for his foolish behavior. We both felt horrible, and I had to apologize for things I said to him. I’m so ready to try this approach. I have actually done it a few times, without realizing it’s what I was doing, and he softens very quickly and I can see how much he really desires to follow and please God. I, too, worry a lot about him growing up and deciding it’s not worth the constant feeling of failure when it comes to trying so hard to please God, yet failing constantly. I’m very ready to try a different approach. Thank you!

  5. I was literally just looking up godly parenting advice last night as I was at the end of my rope on how to handle certain situations. Knowing that the way I have been handling them is not the best I could be doing for my child. I just got online and found the link to this post in my inbox. I love how the Lord does things like that! I love this post and I am thankful that you have taken the time to write it and share it with us all. Thank you!

  6. This is a very wise post! I have a question. How do you handle defiance in a special-needs child? My 14 year old has Down syndrome and we are dealing with this issue. Any help would be appreciated!

    1. Thank you for your sweet words. Honestly, I don’t think I could even begin to answer your question. Although I’ve worked with special needs children back when I was a teacher, I have not parented one in my home. I do know that the rule of thumb is to treat them according to their developmental age. So if your 14 year old is functioning as a 7 year old, then it’s reasonable to talk to them in a manner similar to what I used. If he/she is functioning more like a 5 year old, this kind of conversation would be much more difficult and likely unreasonable. I’m praying for wisdom for you! Wish I could offer more help!

      I would recommend this blog as a wealth of information and help for parents of special needs children. Jennifer is a friend and a strong Christian. I think you may find some good help there! http://jenniferajanes.com/

  7. Thank you for writing this. My middle child and I are at odds more then not with school starting. Do you have any other recommendations books other posts etc on how to deal godly with defiant children. I’ll be re reading this trying to internalize it!

    1. Hi Colleen,
      Thank you for your question. If you will scroll back up to the bottom of this post, I have added image links to all of my discipline related posts. Thank you for inspiring me to do this. I know it can be hard to navigate blogs sometimes! I pray that you find something there to help you!

  8. I have a preteen boy who is struggling with obedience and when I use this approach he simply feels, “Great. Not only have I let you down, but I have also let God down.” It doesn’t motivate him to change, he just feels worse. We are working very hard to impart to him the grace of God and the gift of forgiveness by modeling it through our parenting. But still, he has a hard time snapping out of it because he can’t forgive himself. How do you break into the cycle of “I messed up . . . I feel bad . . . I’m no good . . . why try . . (so therefore I mess up again)”? I’ts kind of like Paul in Romans 7 when he talks about trying to do good but failing miserably.Only Christ can save us from ourselves. Any thoughts/ideas would be appreciated.

    1. As my daughter gets older, I’m seeing more of this as well. I generally say something like this: “You’re right. You messed up and you can’t do this right on your own. Aren’t you glad that God has given you the holy spirit to help you?” Then I would try and share some way that you have messed up and fallen short, so he can see that all of us do this. All God requires of us is that we keep trying to please Him. The only way to truly fail is to give up trying!

      I would also spend some time talking about how we can be proactive to help ourselves to do more right than wrong. We do this by spending time in the Word, time in prayer, and studying the Bible in places like Church. remind your son how important these activities are for helping us to have the strength to keep trying.

      I hope that helps!

  9. My 5-year old was just diagnosed with ODD. It started at 11 months when he started walking and I couldn’t believe that a child could be born that “hard wired” towards defiance. He was my 6th child. After 4 years of struggle, I finally, last week, saw our pediatrician and he was diagnosed with ODD. I love your conversation with your child, but not sure that he is to that point yet. Do you have any tips for dealing with a younger child?

    1. I used to work quite a bit with children who were diagnosed with ODD. Especially at his age, I don’t know that I would focus on discussion. As a classroom teacher, the best strategy with children like this to make a list of what battles you are going to fight. What is REALLY important to you and what is not. Sometimes as parents we nit-pick our kids behavior to death. Try and look at his most troublesome issues and decide if it’s really that bad. If it is, then you need to work on some strategies for changing the behavior. If not, I would let that go and look more closely at those that do really matter.

  10. Love the ideas here. Have haphazardly implemented something similar but had forgotten. And have grown more frustrated at times–although it has been a little better. I am wondering, though, what you do in those moments that your child continues to make the wrong choice. For example, when you told her to go to her room and she said no. But decided to obey. How do you respond in those moments that she won’t? It seems like to just let it go is doing a disservice and teaching the wrong thing. But other than somehow FORCING our child to obey, I often feel at a loss. I don’t like where “forcing” goes, but need some tips (obvious though they may be) on what to do in THOSE moments. Would LOVE any input.

    1. Well, again, I can’t physically force her. She is too large. And she doesn’t always chose the right thing in this moment. But I wouldn’t say that she gets away with it. She will suffer the consequences of her disobedience at some point. That might not be in the moment that I chose, but eventually it will happen. If she refuses to listen to wise counsel in that moment, I remind her that there will be consequences for that choice. That might be the loss of her screen time for the day or longer. It might be the loss of an activity that she was looking forward to. I try to tailor it to what I think will have an affect her behavior in the future.

  11. Boy…you hit the nail on the head for my week. But I’m starting to have trouble at age 7! She is already fighting back, yelling…and now the three year old is copying the same behavior. I’ve started taking things away…but sometimes that doesn’t always work. I love your strategy…I will have to use it this week.

    I have read excerpts from Ken Ham’s book…so far so good. After I get through a couple of other bible studies, I will have to pick up a copy.

    Love this post…and I’ll keep following your blog. God Bless! AH

  12. Pingback: 5 on the Fifth: March 2015
  13. Thank you!! I have a four-year-old son (our only boy) who is described to a T in this post! I have found this as a result of a search, since I was desperate. I have prayed and prayed that God would teach me to be the mother this child needs. I do realize I try to control the situation too much, and my husband always tells me that I micro manage the children (we have four). I am so thankful to know that other moms have been/are going through this. And I thank you for your wise words. The toddler stage is more difficult, but I see hope for the future too. Thank you!

    Mama J

  14. So may I ask what you did in those instances when this didn’t work? That’s when things go wrong for us, when I try to do it like this and she still is defiant. Is there a next step here or are we just stuck?

    1. Pray for you child. When they do come out of the defiance, they still suffer the consequence, only worse. Keep instilling and discipling. That’s truthfully the only thing you can do!

  15. Thank you a lot for all your posts, for all your ideas about… to be close with your children. I am from Russia. I am mom of two monkeys :)) and my children need to know about God and His word. Your blog helps me to understand how I can help to my children

  16. I love this post, but I have a question. What do you when the child chooses not to go to their room, to not obey, even after you have gone through the questions? How do respond and what are the consequences?

    1. They still get those consequences, just after they have calmed down. I have found that if I can be patient, they often come around much quicker than I would expect.

  17. I’m curious what to do when my daughter refuses to listen. Im new to the grace thing and want to parent that way, but I have a hard time seeing how or what is a consequence that is lasting and Loving. Like if in your story your daughter had refused to go to her room what would you do or say? Or what have you done? I am very frustrated with my daughter’s outbursts the last two weeks. I like that your setting her up for the future and leaving it up to her. I have definitely errored on the side of permissive and way to many chances. Please let me know your thoughts. Thanks

  18. A thought worth pursuing – sometimes the defiance can be from a food intolerance causing a chemically imbalanced brain. Or unbalanced hormones. I had preteens who were beginning to get really defiant. For a completely unrelated issue I put them on a wheat free, sugar free (even sugary fruit-free), colours-, flavours- and preservative-free eating plan.. And after 3 weeks the defiance dropped off. It isn’t just artificial colours and flavours, but some natural ones too. Interestingly, wheat and sugar are more likely to cause defiance with one of mine than colours or preservatives. but the colours and additives cause anxiety, which contribute to arguments.

    I also noticed a difference with wild yam extract cream, helping their hormones balance.

    I had tried not doing artificial colours before hand, but didn’t notice a difference. It needed to be all of it, and permanently.. Not haphazard and for one week.

  19. I came across your blog because of a link in my GEMS monthly newsletter. They had your blog as a link for how to patiently deal with a defiant child. Since I currently have a very sassy child in my class at GEMS, I thought I’d check this out. 😉 I really like what you had to say. It gives the child the reason to think beyond themselves and their own needs. Thanks for the helpful, and godly advice! I’ll be checking back here often as you have many other posts that I’d like to read.

  20. The parent is unable and therefor the child is threatened with displeasing God. It gets scared and listens. The parent is happy and the child learns a fear of God instead of a love for him. Is learned by the parents to see God as someone evil who is angry and easily displeased. I understand many teens wanting the leave the church if their idea of God is equal to anger, threats and punishment instead of love and forgiveness.

  21. When you encountered those times that your child did not listen and go to their room, even after you acknowledged you couldn’t make them and asked who they were pleasing, related to them, but still did not get the desired obedience result, what’s the next step you took? I fear I’ll get to that point and then just stand there silly not knowing what to do next. The silent awkwardness of my blank stare might prompt them to go into their room just to escape. Lol

  22. Any advice or recommendations for the defiant child at 13? My son was diagnosed at 5 also and will outright refuse. Example: I’m not going to VBS! If I didn’t make him, he wouldn’t do a good many things. But he already has questioned the existence of God so I pray for the way God directs. Yet the way he treats me sometimes is so hard to bear without losing it, which I have before, so currently my goal is to model remaining calm.

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