Many parents buy into the use of "benign" deprivation. This parenting advice ultimately refers to saying "no" to children "frequent and often". This is a common attitude amongst American parents. However, the Bible states that saying "no" all of the time can be child abuse.
God's Law on child abuse is spelled out in Colossians 3:21 KJV:
Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.
The Greek root word translated "provoke...to anger" is ερεθιζο (Latin: erethizo) and refers here to offenses or damages, namely the slightest of personal offense perceived by a child, including, but not limited to, the slightest of offensive touch or speech perceived by a child, stemming from entitlement, with this entitlement including any parent anger directed towards a child. The idea behind not abusing your child is to avoid offense in children. Avoiding offense in children is the same as avoiding offense in other adults - be willing to give a meaningful apology whenever you hurt the feeling of another. Usually, all that is necessary is a reassurance of good intent, such as when your child is upset by a set limits. However, if you ever say "no" out of anger or haste, you should apologize for losing your cool as a parent, then with you committing never to ever lose your cool ever again, as losing your cool alone is entitlement, and was seen as entitlement in the Early Church. One thing that hurts children's feelings is the word "no", whether stated calmly or out of haste. The idea behind offense avoidance, apart from apologizing to children, is to avoid hurting your child's feelings by only saying "no" to children when absolutely necessary, meaning almost never. This commandment cross-references the Eighth and the Tenth Commandments, with the Apostle Paul here convicting a group of Greek Christians who brought into the church their pagan parenting customs, which were punitive in nature. Paul, contrary to popular legend, opposed any and all punitive parenting of children. Attachment parenting was banned under Roman law, but the Early Christians did it anyway, obeying God over men.
Under customary law in the Early Church, the word "no" was banned as a general rule. The only exceptions to this rule is if the petitioned requests from children were unsafe, unworkable, and/or immoral. Whenever a child could not accept the word "no", parents apologized to children for saying "no". Even then, parents found nicer-sounding ways to decline a request, such as "that won't work", "that can't happen", or "that isn't possible".
The depraved and entitled parents who provoke their children to anger through punitive parenting will not inherit the Kingdom of God! Let them be cast forever into the lake of fire and burning sulfur, which is the second death prepared for Satan and his accomplices! Let them descend into the abyss which is the ever-burning Hell of fire and torment, suffering God's Wrath day and night forever and ever! Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!