PARENTING
		
		Pat Williams: Building Character in Our Kids
		
		By Pat Williams
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
          Pat  Williams of the Orlando Magic is challenging parents to help their children develop  integrity. 
              In  his new book, Souls of Steel: How to Build Character in Ourselves and Our  Kids (Faithwords), Williams  argues that parents should not just “talk to kids about sex, smoking, and drunk  driving,” but also talk to kids about the importance of integrity and how it  will play a vital part in where and how far they will go in life.   
              Williams  believes that “character is not what you do in front of people, but what you do  when you think no one is watching.”  In a generation he believes can get  everything “with one click of the mouse,” anything from test answers and  pre-written essays, to pornographic images, Williams says that children need to  be taught that cheating on tests and illegally downloading music are matters of  integrity that shouldn’t be swept under the rug.
               
          As a father of 19, Williams has developed the  ultimate parenting skills for raising honest and trustworthy children in a  dishonest and scandalous society.  Through his book he presents the importance of building  what he calls “souls of steel,” in our children.  
              The following is an excerpt from his book. 
              * * *  
              People Who Stand Firm 
              In February 2006, my son Bobby and I flew to Houston for the NBA All-Star   Weekend. On Thursday the sixteenth, the day before the festivities, Bobby and I   went for a jog. Returning to our hotel, we noticed a flurry of activity in front   of an office building a block away—reporters, TV cameras, and boom mikes. 
              We jogged to the corner and saw a man and woman emerge from the jostling mass   of reporters and walk to the corner across from us. When the light changed, the   couple started across the street—and I recognized the man. "Bobby," I said,   "that's Ken Lay!" It was indeed the former CEO of Enron, who was two weeks into   a federal trial for securities fraud and related charges. He was walking   straight toward us. 
              I thought, What do you say to a guy who's facing up to twenty-five years   in prison? I knew Ken Lay once lived in Winter Park, Florida, where I now   live—though he moved to Texas long before I came to Florida. And I knew he   talked openly about having trusted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. I   wondered how this preacher's son, who claimed to live his life on Christian   principles, could have ended up embroiled in the biggest corporate scandal in   American history. 
              As Ken Lay and his wife stepped up on the curb beside us, I put out my hand   and said, "Mr. Lay, I'm Pat Williams with the Orlando Magic. I understand you   used to live in Winter Park, where I now live." 
              He took my hand, smiled warmly, and introduced his wife, Linda. We chatted   for a few moments about Central Florida before I said, "Ken, I want you to know   we're praying for you." 
              "I appreciate that," he said. 
              "And I'm standing with him all the way," Linda added. 
              We said good-bye, and Ken and Linda Lay continued toward the parking   garage. 
              "Dad," Bobby said, "he's really a nice guy." 
              Yes, he certainly seemed to be. And I couldn't help wondering what went   wrong. Did Ken Lay succumb to pressure from stockholders? Was he duped? Did he   yield to materialism and the arrogance of power? After all, he was a friend to   presidents and one of the highest-paid CEOs in the world. In the fall of 2001,   he reaped millions more by selling Enron stock while urging his employees to buy   more of the very stock he was unloading. Enron's collapse cost thousands of   employees their jobs and life savings. It wiped out a billion dollars in pension   funds and at least twenty-five billion dollars in investor holdings. Clearly,   someone made some very bad decisions at Enron. 
              I did pray for Ken Lay throughout the weeks of his trial. I was even pulling   for him, hoping he would produce some piece of evidence out of his hat to prove   himself innocent. But on May 25 of that year, Ken Lay was convicted of   defrauding employees and investors. Sentencing was scheduled for October 23.   After being convicted, he said, "We believe God is in fact in control and indeed   He does work all things for good for those who love the Lord." 
              On July 5,   while he and his family were vacationing in Old Snowmass, Colorado, Ken Lay   suffered a massive heart attack and died. 
              Who was Ken Lay? He was the son of a Baptist minister and a devoutly   Christian mother. He made a profession of faith and was baptized at age twelve.   His parents took him to church every Sunday, and he was active in Sunday school   and the church youth group.  
              To this day, I don't know what to make of Ken Lay—and I'm not going to pass   judgment on him. A federal jury had the job of passing judgment on Ken Lay, and   after looking at the evidence, they voted unanimously to convict. After the   verdicts were announced, one of the jurors said of Ken Lay (and co-defendant   Jeffrey Skilling), "I wanted very badly to believe what they were saying, but   there were places in the testimony where I felt their character was   questionable." 
              Sometimes people excuse themselves for a moral failure by saying, "It was out   of character for me to do that! I was under pressure! The temptation was just   too great!" But whatever we do, we do "in character." If I steal, lie, or cheat,   I can't say, "That was out of character," because I did it. That means something in my character allowed me to do it. 
              We can't excuse ourselves on the basis that we were under pressure or the   temptation was too great, because those are the times when character counts the   most. You don't need strong character when everything is easy. Good character is   the strength to make good decisions even in the crucible of pressure and   temptation. A person of good character is honest even when the truth will cost   him everything. A person of good character keeps going even when he's ready to   collapse. A person of good character is courageous even when defeat seems   inevitable. 
              As the Old Testament tells us, "When the storm has swept by, the wicked are   gone, but the righteous stand firm forever" (Prov. 10:25). We live in a world of   stormy adversity. Authentic character enables us to stand firm amid the storms   of opposition, pressure, and temptation. 
              Where will the people of character come from? Who's training and equipping   them? Who's motivating and inspiring them? Who's setting an example of character   for young people to follow? There's no question about it: character doesn't just   happen. Character must be taught, modeled, and constructed anew in every   generation. Where are the people of character? It's our responsibility to be the people of character, and to raise up people of   character for generations to come. 
              I have conducted literally hundreds of interviews with people across the   country who are engaged in character-building in one form or another. I have   gathered their insights and stories— stories of how the steel rod of character   came to be embedded in their flesh. The wisdom they have generously shared with   me has changed my life and my outlook as a father, grandfather, leader, teacher,   coach, and mentor—and I believe this book will have a profound impact on your   life as well. 
              That's the mission of this book: together, you and I are going to learn how   to build the steel rod of character into ourselves, our kids, and the young   people we teach, coach, and mentor. 
              Together, we are going to discover how to forge souls of steel. 
              Purchase your copy of Souls of Steel: How to Build Character in Ourselves and Our Kids 
              More marriage and parenting articles 
               
              Copyright © 2008 Pat Williams. Excerpt taken from Souls of Steel: How to Build Character in Ourselves and Our Kids, published by Faithwords. Used by permission.  
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