A group of moms from church have been discussing this Christian book on discipline and it has brought up great conversation even if I didn't agree with everything Ginger encourages in the book. There is a focus on redirecting the child's heart towards God's righteousness rather than just focusing on behavior. Drawing out the issues of the heart, such as sinful attitudes, selfishness, and disobedience, is hard work with a long-term view since we are tempted towards sin all of our lives, so she isn't about quick fixes that only target behavior. She discusses why teaching children to obey parents is a way to honor God, so it's a big deal for both the parent and child to work on. She discusses the importance of using Scripture for training and correction and gives a lot of examples (many of them didn't seem realistic or natural to me, but I can see her intention). I liked her tip to role play and have do-overs to practice the right behavior. That's always been helpful for my son, so it was a good reminder to keep doing it. She does a good job of reminding parents not to discipline in anger and for their correction to always point toward's Jesus' redemption rather than only punishment, and gives examples of probing questions to get to the root issues. There was some useful information to glean for me in the first two sections (Reaching the Heart of Your Child and How to Give a Biblical Reproof) even though it was hard for me to connect with her style and her judgmental comments about seeing misbehaving kids in the grocery store were a bit annoying. There was a big focus on telling kids, through Scripture, what their behavior should be in that moment, and I agreed with most of it, but struggled with some of what she expected from children. Absolutely, we have a responsibility to train and point them to God, if we are Christian parents, but it is God through the Holy Spirit that changes hearts, and often times that doesn't happen right away on our timetable or because we follow her Wise Words for Mom pamphlet. Expecting they'll be repentant after a correction/reproof/discipline can end up teaching the child to pretend to be remorseful just to get out of trouble, or if they're naturally rule-followers, they become prideful little Pharisees who think they are very good on their own. Obedience is not the most important thing; the good news of the gospel is. I don't think it was her intention, and probably just my own interpretation, but it was easy for me to read the book and assume she's saying, "good parenting in, good children out". Or, if I use her scripts and follow her instructions, then my child should respond right away, apologize, obey or whatever is expected in that moment. She expects immediate obedience and immediate remorse over a wrongdoing, and I don't think that's always realistic. It takes kids a while to see the gravity of their wrongdoing and as Christian parents, we ultimately have to trust the Holy Spirit to convict their hearts, not our repeated lectures and reproofs and even consequences. Although I believe using Scripture is good, I feel like always reminding them of Bible verses in the heat of the moment can actually close a child's heart to the gospel at times, so I struggled with her examples. While I definitely think sin should be addressed and consequences should be administered where necessary, I think there needs to be an emphasis on telling your child they do not have the ability to obey the way the Bible teaches without God. I can't just say, "have self-control because this Bible verse says it." They don't have the ability on their own, no matter how many Bible verses they memorize to obey. God can help him to do what is right in His eyes even when a child doesn't want to. God can help him have self-control. If they could muster up the willpower to obey on their own, they wouldn't need Jesus or His work on the cross. So reminding and praying with my son about his need for God is an important piece that I wish she spent more time on. She talks about this at times (particularly for moms to remember, but I don't remember a time she gives an example of saying it to a child), but I think as a reader, constantly coming back to this truth will make our parenting less about us and our techniques and more about God's work in us and in our children in His timing. I think it is good to tell your child to obey because the Bible says so, but I definitely add, "I know you can't do it on your own. I know it's hard and you want to do what you want in that moment. But because Jesus died and rose for our sins, you CAN say "no" to disobeying. You can say "yes" to choosing the right path that honors God because God can give you the power to choose." She stands by "delayed obedience is disobedience" and while I think that should be something to discuss with older kids who dawdle, make excuses, etc., I don't think it's super realistic for toddlers who can take several seconds or even a minute to mentally compute what you're asking of them when they're so engaged in play and because of their normal mental development. Sometimes their delay isn't willful disobedience, it's childishness that will grow out with patient reminders and pointing towards the goal of quicker obedience. It's a good ideal to work towards, but there is a lot of room for grace, patience, and realistic expectation for their developmental stage and ability. They aren't robots to program for perfect obedience; they'll struggle just as we as parents struggle with doing the right thing at the right time, so it'll be a long journey that I can't expect him to master at three-years old. Ginger says this at one point, but then it doesn't always match up with her high expectations. The third section (the Biblical Use of the Rod) brought up a lot of good conversation and led me to pray about my own convictions about this area of discipline. For a lot of reasons, I didn't agree with her stance that spanking needs to be used by all Christian parents (and that we who don't spank are doing a disservice to our children by not spanking them), so in a sense these chapters were hard to apply and a bit frustrating, but I still appreciated hearing her opinions and some of the guidelines she encourages surrounding spanking (not to do it in anger, not to do it for a mistake or for expecting something that isn't age-appropriate/result of childishness rather than defiant disobedience, not to do it before having all the facts). There was plenty to think about and leave aside while other things that I did decide to glean and learn from, which is typical for me when I read parenting books because each child and family unit is different. While there can be valuable principles, especially when rooted in Scripture, that can be very helpful for Christian parents in parenting books like this one, we have to follow the Holy Spirit's guiding as well as our own knowledge of our family unit to decide what can be applied to us personally. This book pushed me to pray more for discernment and when I disagreed with something she said, it helped me to process it with my husband and within the community of Christian moms reading the book to evaluate if it was merely a preference of mine or difference in style or personality that Ginger, or whether it was something that I was not willing to obey in the Bible and need to address, pray for a softened heart, and study Scripture surrounding that specific topic.