Pip: Drink of Jesus has been doing something quietly ambitious lately — building what amounts to a field manual for fathers, one post at a time, rooted entirely in Scripture.
Mara: That’s exactly the territory we’re covering today. The posts move through what faithful fatherhood actually looks like in practice — leading with faith, disciplining with wisdom, and loving with the kind of compassion that mirrors God’s own heart toward His children.
Pip: Three angles, one through-line. Let’s start with what it means to lead a family by following God first.
Mara: The central question running through these posts is this: what does it actually mean to be a godly father, not a perfect one?
Pip: And A Father After God’s Own Heart answers that directly. The post holds up King David — a man of genuine failures — as the model, because he kept returning to God.
Mara: The post draws on Joshua as its anchor: “But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.” What the post emphasizes is that Joshua didn’t leave his family’s spiritual direction to chance — it was a deliberate, personal commitment before it was a household one.
Pip: So the upshot is that godly fatherhood starts with a private decision, not a public declaration. You have to follow before you can lead.
Mara: The Importance of a Dad’s Faith in Family Leadership makes exactly that point. It argues that a father’s walk with God is the foundation his family builds its faith upon — and that children learn far more from what they see than from what they hear.
Pip: Which is a quietly demanding standard. Your life is the curriculum.
Mara: A Father Who Stands Strong in Faith extends this further, addressing what happens when circumstances get hard. It says standing firm in faith doesn’t mean being perfect — it means continually turning to God for strength, so that a father’s trust in God becomes an anchor for the whole family.
Pip: The legacy piece matters here too. The post on fatherhood notes that money and achievements fade, but a spiritual legacy planted through prayer and biblical truth can bear fruit for generations.
Mara: And that connects directly to the next question — how a father actually shapes character day to day.
Pip: Discipline is where the theology of fatherhood meets the Tuesday afternoon reality of it — and Nurturing Through Discipline: God’s Wisdom for Fathers doesn’t flinch from that.
Mara: It opens with this: “Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.” Ephesians 6:4. The post’s argument is that discipline is guidance, not control — and that the model is God’s own discipline toward His children, which is always motivated by love.
Pip: So discipline driven by anger risks wounding a child’s spirit. Discipline guided by love shapes character. The difference isn’t the correction — it’s the motive behind it.
Mara: Right. And the post says a godly father corrects behavior while preserving the relationship — teaching truth, modeling forgiveness, pointing toward God’s standards rather than just enforcing rules.
Pip: A Father Who Leads with Wisdom picks up the other side of this — the decisions a father faces that aren’t about correction at all, but about direction.
Mara: That post leans on Proverbs 3:5-6: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.” The point is that wise fathers know they don’t have all the answers — and that dependence on God models for children exactly where wisdom comes from.
Pip: Humility as leadership. Not a bad lesson to demonstrate before they’re old enough to notice you’re teaching it.
Mara: And that kind of love — patient, grace-filled, consistent — is what the next segment is really about.
Pip: A Father Who Loves Like God makes a claim that’s simple on the surface and genuinely demanding underneath: that a dad’s love for his children is meant to reflect God’s love for His.
Mara: The post anchors on a short verse with a wide reach: “Do everything in love.” 1 Corinthians 16:14. And it unpacks that by saying children don’t only need provision — they need affection, encouragement, and the knowledge that they are, in the post’s own words, valued, treasured, prized, and cherished.
Pip: What this means in practice is that a father’s words and actions are forming a child’s first picture of what God’s love looks or feels like. That’s a significant weight to carry.
Mara: The post names it directly — a loving father creates an environment where children feel secure and accepted, and through that, they gain a better understanding of God’s heart toward them.
Pip: The thread running through all of this — the faith, the discipline, the love — is that none of it is about performance. It’s about proximity to God.
Mara: Which is where the next episode picks up. These questions don’t stay inside the home.
Pip: Follow God, lead with wisdom, love like He loves. Simpler to say than to live — which is probably why there’s more to explore.
Mara: There is. We’ll keep going.
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