Turning the Hearts of the Fathers to the Children

July 14, 2009

Dear Demetrius,

In last night’s Bible study, several men were asking about ideas to write to their children. Since your children are about the ages of my five grandchildren I’ll just put on paper some of the ideas I have used to write to my grandkids. I’ve already shared a few of these with you. Feel free to use any, all, or none of them. My motive is only to help dads be better dads while they are locked up (or even if they are not)!

The last verse of the Old Testament talks about turning the hearts of the fathers to the children. If there was ever a time in world history when that needs to be done, I would say it is now! So many fathers are locked away from their kids or deployed in the military far away or too busy working trying to keep food on the table that the need for some simple advice seems to be now as well.

Almost every culture on earth passes down values to the next generation with stories, parables, legends, or fables. There are many life lessons that kids need to get from dad. Stories are a great way to pass these along.

While you are locked up, I advise that you stay away from things that steal your time like the TV room. Your children are lots more important than seeing who throws a ball through a hoop or knocks a ball into a hole in the dirt. Use this precious prison time to develop new skills for yourself, learn new trades, and influence your children. Getting a letter from dad will mean more to them than you can imagine. This applies to all ages! My children are 30, 31, 32 and they still love it when I write them. I doubt anyone ever outgrows this need.

Before I give specific ideas let me share with you a few basic things I try to get across to them no matter what format the story takes. When they are done reading I want them to know that I love them, I pray for them, I want them to always love Jesus and to love studying His amazing creation. I want them to know that I love to learn new things – ending school better not end learning! I want them to understand that we all make mistakes, but the door is always open to come back into fellowship.

I can’t always get every item into every story, but these are the general goals I shoot for. The Bible contains scores of stories of all types. There are heroes to love and villains to hate. You can study the lives of these Bible characters for the rest of your life and never empty that well!

Since my five grandchildren are ages 3-6 at this time, I try to make my stories age appropriate. I have written several hundred stories since I have been locked up. Here are a few of the ideas I have used:

1) The Dear God series of stories contain about 200 stories of imaginary conversations between myself and God, myself and a Bible or historical character, or just a letter to God or the character. These are due out in book form very soon. They appeal to older kids or adults. Many are posted on cseblogs.com.

To do these stories I will think of a topic that concerns me at the time, select a character that went through the same thing I am going through, study all I can find out about them, and then “knee-mail” them. I try to understand what they were probably thinking and how God would respond based on what He has revealed to us in His Word. We can let the mind of Christ dwell in us (Phil. 2:5).

For example, when I get discouraged because of being away from my family, I think about some of the many Bible characters who faced this same situation. Joseph was sold by his brothers and taken as a slave to Egypt. What did he do? Read all about him and then “talk with him.” It becomes an amazing way to study God’s Word and try to understand the mind of the Lord.

2) As I get mail from all over the world, I will send my grandkids the stamps. They have a stamp collection book where they keep the stamp and the story I send about the country. Since we live in Florida, I try to make as many comparisons between the country and Florida as I can. I will look up the numbers in the encyclopedia. For example, if I got a letter from Portugal I would say, “Portugal is about 2/3 as big as Florida and has about 2/3 as many people. They have 10 million.” I then tell them a few basic things about the country, what the people do for work and if they have mountains, beaches, farms, or points of interest. Then I point out that many people in that country don’t know Jesus as their Savior and say, “Maybe we can go visit Portugal some day and tell them how to go to Heaven. While we are there we will go see where Christopher Columbus sailed from.” I encourage their parents to help them learn to find the countries on a globe – not a map – and to look it up on the internet as well. I have about 50 stories like this that I have sent them. If you can’t type it up just write it out and see if someone there can type it up and even add pictures from the internet. If you don’t get stamps, do the story with pictures copied from the encyclopedia.

I also did several stories about the globe, the world, continents, oceans, and islands to explain what they are. We hope to put these in book form soon as well.

3) One of the favorite series of stories for the kids is called, “When I was a Boy.” We start off in the car, or van, or bus, and they ask, “Hey, Grandpa,” what’s that green button on the dash for?” “Oh you don’t want to push that! It will take us all back in time!” “It will?! Can we go visit when you were a boy,” they all ask excitedly? “OK, but you can’t tell young Kent who you really are. He would never understand that you are really his grandkids from the future. We will just tell him we are visiting from Florida.” So we push the button and go back to various scenes in my childhood where I learned something (sometimes the hard way)! You can teach lessons about honesty, loyalty to family and God, peer pressure, being helpful by helping neighbor Jones pull weeds, etc. Make a list of good character traits you want them to get and incorporate them into a story. This series will preserve some of my “roots” for them as well. Kids need to know their heritage. It helps give them an inner moral compass when storms of life come up. It’s amazing how little things like “Hovinds don’t quit,” “Hovinds are always kind,” “Hovinds love to learn about God’s world,” or “Hovinds love to teach others about things,” etc., will make them want to live up to their family name. Build character in them – even if it wasn’t done well in you. If your childhood was “less than ideal” change it for the next generation.

4) Another series of stories is called “When your Daddy was a Boy.” This does the same thing, but we go visit their daddy (or mom) as a child. Kids need to know who their parents are and were as kids. You could title this, “When I was your age…” Let them know about times you were scared, excited, saw new things, learned lessons, got hurt, how you got that scar, etc. Maybe even have a section, “Boy, that was stupid,” or “Things not to do!”

If you feel you are not a good writer, you are probably right. Neither am I. Just get started. Even if your stories don’t win a Pulitzer Prize it will help them, and you will get better at it.

5) A similar series could be “When You were Little.” Preserve their heritage for them.

6) To help build memories in my grandkids when I read to them, I would start every story – no matter what it really was about – the same way. They would hand me a book to read and I would open it and say, “This is the story of the Three Bears,” and they would giggle and say, “No, Grandpa! This is not the Three Bears!” So, I actually wrote a series of stories called, “The Adventures of the Three Bears.” They live in a house in the woods and love to go study God’s creation. They go meet and talk with various plants and animals who then tell them how amazing God is to make them the way He did. The cactus tells how he knows to save water for when dry times come (lesson for kids – save up for hard times in your life too and you will make it). Each plant or animal can teach us and our children amazing lessons! The three bears can go anywhere. Often I will find pictures of an animal in a magazine that someone is throwing away and cut it out to include in the story. The picture itself can prompt the story. I will often start out by saying, “I saw this picture of… and it reminded me to pray for you. I want you to be like this…in these ways…or to NOT to do…” The sky is the limit with these stories.

7) Another good idea is to tell “The Endless Story” with them. You tell the first part like this: “Once upon a time we were walking down the street and found a wallet with some money and pictures in it. It also had the man’s name and address. So we…”And let them tell the next part of the story and send it back to you. Each person adds to the story. Don’t criticize them for their story parts, but use it as a teaching time. If they send the wallet story back saying they went to the store and spent the money, you can say, “after a few minutes we felt bad inside. We knew this was not right to do. So we went to visit the man whose name was in the wallet and…” You can steer the story to cover things you want like, “answer sweetly,” “do your homework,” “clean up after yourself,” “show gratitude,” “help others,” etc.

Many adventure series like The Sugar Creek Gang or The Hardy Boys follow a group of kids as they encounter various challenges in life. Make up a gang of kids and include your kids name in the book. Maybe have a boy or girl who always seems to make bad choices and ends up getting hurt or in trouble be part of the gang. Kids can learn what to do – or not to do – vicariously through the lives and adventures of others.

Pray about what your kids need at this stage in their life and get started. It’s only paper at this point and you can always redo it or throw it away. It may make the difference in their life for years to come. Hollywood knows how life changing stories can be! It is a shame they don’t use their power to effect positive values in lives. They seem to be bent on making evil look good and good look evil!

Feel free to copy and modify any of my stories and ideas. Don’t hesitate to ask me any questions and let me know if you want me to proofread any of the stories you write. Set a lot of good heroes and examples before them and help them choose God’s way in this wicked world.

Kent Hovind
Room 240

10 Responses to “Turning the Hearts of the Fathers to the Children”

  1. Dr. Kent E. Hovind is currently at the Edgefield Federal Correctional Institution in South Carolina. Please send postcards and letters to:

    Kent E. Hovind #06452-017
    FPC Edgefield D-2
    P.O. BOX 725
    Edgefield, SC 29824

    Feel free to send Dr. Hovind a letter or postcard. Please understand he is not able to answer every letter he receives, but he certainly appreciates any support and encouragement. He can also receive new books, but only directly from bookstores. And no hardcover books are allowed. No DVDs, CDs, or anything hard or sharp such as staples, etc (no tracts with staples in them). Do not send more than one tract at a time, as all gifts containing more than one tract will not be allowed. Do not put “Dr.” on his name, or it may be discarded by the guards. They do not always return postal items that are not delivered to inmates, so you may want to save a copy before mailing, so that you might try again in the event that he was recently moved for example.

    Please write with the understanding that whatever you write could be subject to monitoring by the guards. Please do not write politically-charged or tax-related comments, etc. In the event that Dr. Hovind is moved to another facility, one can always check for his current address by using the Inmate Locator on the Bureau of Prisons website:

    http://www.bop.gov/

    Encouraging comments on this blog are greatly appreciated, and Dr. Hovind does read all approved comments.

    From the CSE team,
    Thank you for your continued support.

  2. Chrisatlanta says:

    Dear Kent,
    I was praying for you and your family before God allowed you to be abused by evil agents of the Devil, and I still do by name almost everyday.I have been studying your work and the work of others in Creation Science Evangelism for longer than I can remember and still learn stuff all the time. Your Debate 18 I watched last week.This latest CSEblog is just another way you continue teach me to always trust in the Lord and be ready to witness and teach His Word and encourage others in my life and my family’s life. I look foward to fellowshipping.
    Your Friend in Christ,
    Chrisatlanta

  3. Bunker says:

    Valuable thoughts and advices. I read your topic with great interest.

  4. Ekkman says:

    Kent,
    Very well thought out and written. My wife is keeping our children from me. It has been over 3 1/2 years since I have seen or talked to them. I raised them mostly by myself the first 5 and 6 years of their life. They were 5 and 6 when I was deceived into getting out of the house. Now they are 9 and 10. I miss them so very, very much. I cry every time I talk about them to others. I still love my wife but she is “enjoying” the world now, drinking, partying, etc. Keep me in prayer as I will you. Thanks again for the stand you are taking for the truth.

    Ekkman

  5. for Jesus' Name:PhillipGeorge ©1974-2009 says:

    br Kent,

    did Eve “add” to the Word of God? She seems to have said that “touching” the fruit of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil would kill!

    To such an extent was the Devil “within his rights” to say, “ye shall not surely die”?

    “Yet Michael the archangel, when contending with the devil he disputed about the body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, but said, The Lord rebuke thee.” [from the book of Jude] This implies that we should be very careful in what we accuse the Devil of – even while Jesus told us “He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.”

    Jesus called the Devil a murder and liar but is it for us to say what his first lie was or who his first victim was?

    I have had it suggested to me that whether intentionally or not, Satan acts as a defender of the Holiness of the Throne of God in his capacity of Accuser. The suggestion being that he is one level of barrier to prevent anything unclean from entering in.

    It seems that for a time God is going to give this world to Satan. This world becomes the prison planet – Babylon: a prison for every unclean spirit. [rev18]

    To such a extent is this a vindication of the Word of God? Those who have rejected the Biblical Eden get to see another one.

    We know that God esteems His Word above his own name. Psalm 138. “for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name”.

    It seems that to hand the recalcitrant, the unrepentant over to Satan for the destruction of their flesh is one level of vindication of the Word of God.

    Adam and Eve fell. Jesus offers Restoration. If people reject that offer what is there left for them, but that which the Bible has promised. Had Eve esteemed the Word highly enough to not change it in any way; either adding to it or taking away from it?

    It seems, pending review, that when people stand on the Word of God, even Satan is servant or defence of them.

  6. Dear Brother Hovind,
    thank you for this post. It’s excellent! I know some grandparents who won’t try to interact with their grandson because they think that he should seek them out first. The grandson is not quite as outgoing as the grandparents are, and because they live so far away, he only sees them once every few years. They are complete strangers to him. You would think that the grandparents would be mature enough to realize that, but apparently they aren’t. Instead, to their own hurt, they have a haughty attitude. They aren’t Believers. If they were Believers, God would convict their hearts that the order of things is that the hearts of the Fathers are turned to the children, and not the other way around.

    When I was growing up, I had 4 sets of grandparents, as my parent’s parents divorced & all remarried except for one. As far as I was concerned, they were all my grandparents; however, the ones who had the most impact on my life was my Dad’s Mom & step Dad. They made a point of reaching out to every single one of their grandkids. I still remember the stories that my grandmother read to us. Later when we moved to Australia, they would write to us kids. They made things interesting, similar to some of the things you talked about in your post. Instead of being lost in their own little environment, their eyes were wide open to the interesting things in life all around them.

    When I grew up & came back to the States, they continued to have an impact on my life, even though they were unsaved & of a different political persuasion. They continued to seek ways to get me up & running as a young adult. There were times when I offended them greatly, as young people tend to do to the older generation, but they didn’t give up.

    I am still not a grandmother, but for the past 31 years I have been an aunt/grandma type person in our family [due to some unusual circumstances] & I leaned how to be such from my Dad’s Mom. I learned how because of the impact that she had on my life. Her impact is still going on to my great grandnieces & nephews. It’s kind of like dropping a rock in a pool of water & watching the circle of waves travel completely to the edge.

    God didn’t give up on her either. [& that’s been a really good lesson for me.] All during her life, God always saw to it that somebody was witnessing to her about the LORD; however, she had some ‘smoke-screens’ that prevented her from putting her trust in Christ. Nevertheless, God didn’t give up. During the last couple of years of her life she got Alzheimer’s disease. My aunt & uncle [Believers] put her in a Lutheran Rest Home. When Lutherans get together for church, one of the things they always do is recite the Apostles’ Creed (which is a presentation of the Gospel from start to finish.) Sometime during my Grandmother’s stay at that place, she put her trust in the LORD. The next thing that happened is that she started copying out hymns. She had a pillow case pinned to the front of her walker, & when ever my Aunt would go visit her, she would find several pages of hymns in this pillowcase that Grandma had copied out of the hymn book in her own hand writing. Only the Spirit of God could do that kind of work in her heart. By the grace of God, someday I will see her when we get home.

    Alright, different subject: I have a dear friend up here who is a representative of Voice of the Martyrs. Usually he takes those from the persecuted church from other countries around to local churches in the North West. This coming Sunday, Lord willing, he will be speaking in 3 different churches, only this time, instead of taking Brothers from outside our country, he’s going to be doing the presentation himself, & his subject is on persecution in America, & you & your situation is going to be the Brother in his presentation.

  7. Andrea says:

    Hi, Mr Hovind,

    Just dropping you a line to let you know that I have just recently been given some dvd’s on your creation series. I have enjoyed them and have come to respect your stand on Creation. I have really learned alot from the series and I look at the world in a whole new light. I think you have done a great job of breaking things down when it comes to creation and the age of the earth.

    I am sorry to hear you did not get a fair trial, I don’t beleive you are guilty of the charges.

    My friend Ruby and I will continue to pray for you, My pastor is praying for you as well. We hope for a miracle on your behalf. With God all things are possible.

    P.S. Thanks for the good advice on Turning the hearts of the Fathers to the children.

  8. Ron says:

    Bro Kent,
    I havent heard much about your wife. How is coping with you in prison? I havent heard much about your appeal either, will it be heard? We continue to pray for you.

    Bro Ron

  9. Pete Kingman says:

    Dear Dr Hovind, I met you 10 years ago at a teacher’s convention in Orlando. I purchased all your tapes and have been showing them to my seventh graders for years and still do. Our trails make us stronger. God bless you and yours. Your brother in Christ Pete. PS I started a website call BibleStoryEvangelism.org

  10. Geno says:

    For information only:

    Kent Hovind’s appeal to the Supreme Court was denied.

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