Wondering How to Pray with Wisdom for Your Adult Children?

Wondering How to Pray with Wisdom for Your Adult Children?


Roots and wings are the gifts Christian parents pass on to our children. We establish rules, give them responsibilities that build confidence and skill, and water those deep roots with lots of love and prayer, knowing that strengthening wings will soon carry our children away from home, out of reach of our influence and our protection. In my family, my four children are now full-fledged adults walking around with jobs and adult wives and busy lives.

In my prayers for the four young men who are so close to my heart, I’m taking my cues from the book of Philippians. Writing from a Roman prison, Paul the missionary church planter tips his hand and opens his heart to reveal Paul the spiritual father. His prayers for new believers and leaders in faraway fledgling churches have fueled my own prayer life as, one by one, my sons leave the nest to make independent lives and decisions in a world very different from the one I encountered at their age.

Prayers for strong marriages, safety on the job, or wisdom in college selection are all good requests from the heart of a Christian mum, but Paul’s three-verse, single-sentence outpouring to God challenges me to lift my sights to motivation and to pray about the drive behind my adult children’s following lives — and to take a careful look at my own.

1. God, please guide their loves.

It is my prayer that your love may abound more and more, with knowledge and all discernment . . . (Philippians 1:9)

When Paul prayed for knowledge and discernment for the church in Philippi, he may have been concerned about false teachers (Philippians 3:2) or even about the pull of civic pride that could have influenced these Roman citizens to settle for the glory of Rome over the glory of God. He desired that their growing love would be anchored in truth and focused Godward.

While he was in their presence, Paul would have filled them up with knowledge about the nature of God as revealed in Jesus Christ; he would have put on display Christ’s humble obedience (Philippians 2:8). Paul had been a model citizen of heaven (Philippians 3:17–214:9), but now they were on their own. It was time to trust that the knowledge he had shared with them would be transformed into discernment in the hearts and minds of newly minted Christ-followers.

Likewise, twenty-first-century distractions from holy living abound, and our adult children need knowledge and discernment to guide their hearts. Agape, the unique love of God, is wild and deep, but it is not vague or sentimental. Discerning love submits to the mind’s critical faculties and the Spirit’s guidance, for, as Stuart Briscoe quipped, “Love may be blind, but agape has twenty-twenty vision.”

As we pray for our children’s love to grow, we must also pray that God would guide them toward worthy objects of love so they will, for example, persevere in loving their wives more than they love their hobbies, and value time with their children more than time with their colleagues. We trust God to give our adult children eyes to see the truth about their own hearts’ affections.

2. God, please guard their integrity.

. . . so that you may approve what is excellent, and so be pure and blameless for the day of Christ . . . (Philippians 1:10)

Since the word approve in Greek culture was associated with the purification of precious metals or the verification of currency, Paul’s idea of approval would likely have been shaped by thoughts of authenticity. He yearned for believers who were pure, unmixed, and without alloy — whose lives were exactly as they appeared to be. This integrity of inward motive and outward manner echoes David’s ponderings about holiness in Psalm 24:3–4:

Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord?
     And who shall stand in his holy place?
He who has clean hands and a pure heart,
     who does not lift up his soul to what is false
     and does not swear deceitfully.

Lifting our souls in worship to what is false includes a pervasive idolatry of image that was not even possible in previous generations. In a culture shaped by social media, perhaps we should pray that our adult children will find grace to live in such a way that their real stories and their Instagram stories might be one and the same.

In a culture shaped by social media, perhaps we should pray that our adult children will find grace to live in such a way that their real stories and their Instagram stories might be one and the same.

As a parent to adult children, my own integrity is also a concern — and therefore a matter of prayer. Sadly, I am a member of a parental generation that will change its politics, ethics, and even biblical worldview to “stay friends” with our children, demonstrating that we are more concerned about our relationship with our kids than our kids’ relationship with God. When our adult children make bad choices, it will be tempting to strike out onto “the gentle slope, soft underfoot” that C.S. Lewis’s Screwtape recommended as the “safest road to Hell” (The Screwtape Letters, 61). “Well, I think the Bible’s pretty harsh on that one,” we might think. “We really can’t be dogmatic.”

Instead, it is our job to hold fast to our own integrity of belief, no matter how much we long for family harmony. We must leave room for God to work, and pray he will awaken our son’s or daughter’s conscience, trusting that he has not suddenly taken a position on the sidelines of their lives. If we undercut his voice, we get in the Spirit’s way — and sabotage our own pure and blameless walk in the process.

3. God, please grant them fruitful lives for your glory.

. . . filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of God. (Philippians 1:11)

The fruit that righteousness produces may be quite visible. In Paul’s case, fruitfulness looked like a long list of new converts, churches sprouting all along his path throughout Europe and Asia Minor, and mentoring relationships that spawned leaders and teachers sufficient for the task of carrying the gospel forward for another generation.

While our own sons and daughters may not be called to lead churches or movements, by the power of the Holy Spirit, they are responsible and well able to produce the fruit of spiritual attitudes and righteous actions. Holding fast to what is good and refusing to sell themselves to what is false, our adult children will “shine as lights in the world” (Philippians 2:15), putting on display the humility and moral excellence Christ himself demonstrated. As parents, our rubric for measuring success in our children’s lives must also be subject to this same filter of Christlikeness, as we trust for grace to resist the temptation to adopt cultural definitions of success based on income or influence.

Paul prayed that the lives of his spiritual children would be characterized by right choices and pure motives fueled by an abounding love for God and steeped in sincerity that looks nothing like sentimentality. As my prayers are shaped by the apostle’s, I also want to be one with him in motivation, for while our adult children have great potential to bring joy to a parent’s heart and great fulfillment to our days, the ultimate goal of their lives, as with our own, is “the glory and praise of God.”

As parents who are continually being shaped and stretched by our prayer life, may we join with Paul, with our much-loved children, and with other believers throughout the ages in bringing glory to God through a fruitful life that flows from a heart of love.

Roots and wings are the gifts Christian parents pass on to our children. While our adult children have great potential to bring joy to our hearts and great fulfillment to our days, the goal of their lives is the glory and praise of God

And Now Let’s Talk Books…

Beginnings and endings are hard. Even the memory of middle school writing assignments confirms that getting started and then crafting a solid finish were the hardest parts of the process. Now, in our real, lived stories we lean toward the same overthinking and second-guessing. We avoid change because it requires an ending and a new beginning—both of which require energy and involve risk.

Emily P. Freeman brings her calm, spiritual director voice to the complex questions that accompany our comings and our goings.

Freeman portrays our commitments, roles, and relationships as rooms, and sometimes, in the business of living, we manage to pass from room to room without incident. Other times, however, we get stuck, or maybe we are evicted from a “room” before we are ready to leave! Sometimes we leave one room and find ourselves in a hallway between rooms looking for clarity and closure.

How to Walk into a Room resists providing simple answers, and it gives the reader permission to ask the hard questions. What we think we want is a detailed floor plan, but maybe what we really need is a hand to hold and solid reassurance that we’re not alone in our wondering.

I found this to be a challenging read because it forced me to look directly at the temptation for parents to adjust our theology to bring it in line with the choices our children make when they become adults. As humans, we’re listening to the Bible with one ear and the culture with the other ear, and it’s up to us to adjust the volume, to decide which voice will be loudest inside our heads.

As parents and as members of a faith community, we are commanded to act from a position of love, mercy, and humility. Where we disagree with others, we are required to be more concerned with our own sin tendencies than with calling out sin in others. A failure of mercy on our part will never lead to repentance or reconciliation.

Augustine spoke wisely about “rightly ordering” our loves, and it’s clear that this is the key to discerning whether we leave one room and enter another based on our children’s decisions. It’s only when we love God first and most that we can truly love our children well. Deeply rooted in God’s love, we trust for discernment—for staying put or for walking into new and different rooms.

Holding you in the light,

In #HowtoWalkintoaRoom @emilypfreeman brings her calm, spiritual director voice to the complex questions that accompany our comings and our goings. @HarperOne

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Three Ways to Pray for Adult Children” appeared first at Desiring God in 2019.

Many thanks to HarperOne and NetGalley for providing a copy of this book to facilitate my review, which is, of course, offered freely and with honesty.

14 thoughts on “Wondering How to Pray with Wisdom for Your Adult Children?”

  1. Thank you, friend. I appreciate your wisdom so much. I may have mentioned this before, but my parents set an example of unconditional love while also adhering to biblical truth. I think of them often when I read stories of today’s parents who adjust their theology to affirm their children. It’s a hard road, but God is faithful. And now I need to go add Philippians 1:9-11 to my prayer journal. 🙂

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    1. You were indeed blessed by your parents!
      And I have so much compassion for parents whose kids have gone off the rails theologically or in some other harmful choice. It’s not a small thing to be at sixes and sevens with a dear family member. Stewarding our loves is not a game for the faint of heart, and we need supernatural strength, courage, and wisdom for the job when it comes to us.

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    2. You were indeed blessed by your parents!
      And I have so much compassion for parents whose kids have gone off the rails theologically or in some other harmful choice. It’s not a small thing to be at sixes and sevens with a dear family member. Stewarding our loves is not a game for the faint of heart, and we need supernatural strength, courage, and wisdom for the job when it comes to us.

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  2. Michele, I so appreciated this prayer as a mom of adult children. Just today I shared that I think I pray more for them now than ever. And I pray our generation remains faithful to the faith and to the Word of God.

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  3. Thank you Michele for this much needed post. I believe one of the hardest things for a parent of adult children is when they make unwise choices. We want to step in rather than allowing the Holy Spirit to work in their hearts.

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  4. Thank you, Michele, for this wise word from Philippians. You’ve provided worthy suggestions for another card for my prayer box, as I pray for our adult children, their spouses, and now grandchildren. Lord, guide their loves, guard their integrity, and grant them fruitful lives for your glory!

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  5. So beautifully spoken. I pray fervently daily for my adult children. I am encouraged by your words today.

    Visiting today from Joanne’s

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