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Close Up: Michelle Anthony Print Email
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Friday, 07 May 2010 11:24 AM America/New_York

MichelleAnthonyLatest project: Spiritual Parenting: An Awakening for Today’s Families (David C. Cook).

Resides in: Costa Mesa, Calif.

Currently reading: Shaped by the Word by Robert Mulholland (Upper Room Books) and Brennan Manning’s The Furious Longing of God (David C. Cook).

What is the theme behind Spiritual Parenting?

“Oftentimes when people hear ‘spiritual parenting,’ they think of maybe perfect parenting, but I really wanted to get back to the root of what spiritual parenting is. Things that are spiritual are things that are eternal, so I like to say that spiritual parenting isn’t perfect parenting—it’s parenting from a spiritual or eternal perspective. I feel that oftentimes we can immerse ourselves with good parenting techniques that are really not eternal. They just help us get through the day. Those things are needed and those things are essential. But I really felt like there was a void out there to the things that mattered most to me when I was raising my children and that was really getting at the heart, and I longed for a place to discuss those things and a place where we could be inspired.”

What are some of the practical ways of spiritual parenting?

“There’s nothing magical about it. God was really calling me away from just trying to manage their behavior so they would look clean and shiny on the outside, that I wouldn’t be embarrassed as a parent and people would think we did this job well. And also out of fear—as God was pulling me away from managing my children’s behavior, He inspired me to do something bigger and more, which is to create environments in my home where the Holy Spirit would be the person that’s involved in my child’s life. He would do that when and as He chose. I couldn’t control that. In that moment I wanted that bad behavior to stop, although I could do it for that moment, I couldn’t really heal what was in the heart of my child. And so I didn’t want a false security that I was just dealing with the outside and there wasn’t a transformation on the inside. It really came down to: What’s my part? If God’s part is to transform, then my part is to create environments in my home where He can freely be at work. The book talks about faith in the beginning and how that has to be our goal, but then it untucks 10 environments that have practical life stories, how I messed up, how I just so needed to depend on God and what my children’s experiences were in those environments.”

How do you approach people about their own parenting techniques?

“I don’t espouse a technique, but ask parents to surrender themselves and their techniques. ... When I encounter parents from all different kinds of techniques and backgrounds, I think it’s something freeing about this for them. We just pile guilt on ourselves. We pile a lot of pressure that God never intended. There’s something freeing about releasing that.”