We Take Initiative: Our 24 Family Ways #14

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Way #14

We take initiative to do all of our own work without needing to be told.

"For which one of you, when he wants to build a tower, does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if he has enough to complete it?" Luke 14:28

A couple of years ago, our family tackled remodeling our kitchen. Cabinets were torn out, the old stained wood floors were sanded, the walls repainted. Before we could even begin, we had to take everything out of the kitchen--all of my dishes, pots and pans, and silverware were boxed up. Everything was a mess and there was sawdust, splotches of paint, plaster, and all sorts of refuse from the different projects everywhere.

At the end of a long day, we asked one of the builders helping us, a friend much more skillful that we were, to stay for dinner. He replied, "Construction is always such a messy process. If I can take a shower and wash off all of the plaster dust and paint under my nails, I will be more acceptable at the table!”

Little by little, we were amazed at the results and wondered why we had not remodeled our old kitchen long ago. The floors underneath were gorgeous in their natural state and had just faded and discolored over years of stomping feet walking over them. The new cabinets gave a whole new feel and openness to the room. An island gave me much more serving room and the tile and granite I found gave such interesting and beautiful touches to make it look like a gourmet kitchen. It took longer than we thought, created more mess than we could imagine, and cost us more than was expected.

But in the end, we were amazed at how beautiful and functional a room it became. I serve meals to literally hundreds of people every year from this little room, and the work was so worthwhile. The kitchen became so much more functional and beautiful that it makes me happy every day just to be in there!

Building our children into godly human beings is also so much messier and costlier than we ever expected, as well as taking longer than we anticipated. But the end result, like my kitchen remodeling, will be so worthwhile.

These are some lessons from soul building that I have learned.

1. To build something beautiful and functional, a plan is required. Specific plans of architectural design are required in order to build something great. Same with children. The plans determine the outcome. In the case of my children, I had specific plans for what I was building.

*Heart training— I wanted to teach, instruct, invest in the training of my children so their hearts would be captivated with a love for God and a dedication to serving Him. Heart work focuses on attitudes as opposed to behavior. Spiritual training was at the front of so many of my conversations, teaching, and traditions.

*Character training--I wanted my children to grow strong in integrity and virtue; to have the ability to tell the truth, to work hard, to give generously of themselves by learning to serve others. And so our plan (24 Family Ways) helped us to teach, train and instruct them to know how to have a godly character.

*Mental excellence--I wanted my children to be able to think well, to have a love for learning, to have foundations of a Biblical worldview, to know scripture, to read the best artists, writers, musicians, heroes and philosophers so that they would be sharpened to think and write and communicate ideas clearly and boldly.

*Work Ethic--Giving our children practice at working, taking initiative, helping, disciplining their spirits helped them to grow up to become self-motivated in their own arenas of work as adults.

2. Reconstruction requires tearing down of the old and building the new.  To create a soul that shines forth the character of Christ, to do the real construction of  building and shaping--his love, his integrity, his generous spirit, His righteousness, requires a lot of sanding. Sanding is a pressured process that scrubs the grime and stains off of a wood floor to restore it to its original beauty.

Our children were made in the very likeness of God and underneath, there is such potential beauty. But sanding is a pressuring process. Going against the grain of our children's selfish will, working out the rough places of selfishness, getting to the original design is a long term process. So many women I know think that if their children are resisting them, they must be doing something wrong. But to confront the strong selfish will of a child involves resistance, pressure, and sanding their little attitudes and self-centered willfulness. So if you find resistance, it is probably because you are helping shape a new heart, a polished soul. Training, instruction, correcting, disciplining are the forms of sanding the souls of our children so that they can become pure, beautiful, and lovely.

3. Understanding the process. A master-builder, someone who has a lot of experience at building, knows that the process of building something new requires a lot of destruction before the patterns of beauty begin to emerge. My kids drove me crazy at times. The fussing, messes, phases of whining, arguing, being lazy, needy--there seemed at times to be no end to the work of working on their hearts, minds and souls. But as long as I recalled the importance of pacing, working steadily, and keeping my focus on the goal at the end of the process, I was able to keep going because little by little I saw them shaping up to becoming stronger, more mature, more loving, and more engaged in life.

I learned that correcting is a long process of "No, not this, THIS. No, not this, THIS." It is working through the problems, training out the old, destructive, shaping something new where the work of beautifying a heart, mind, and soul takes place. The debris must be dealt with for the beautiful to emerge.

4. Everyone I know who has put up with building a home or remodeling gets sick of it eventually. This is taking so long! It doesn't seem like it will ever be finished! It is such a mess! This is driving me crazy!

We can feel so guilty if we feel this way as mothers--wanting an escape, not enjoying the process, getting sick of the constant work, wondering if we are making progress at all. But this is a part of the building process, too. It is not wrong to "feel" these things. It is kind of like hitting the wall in a marathon.

So many times, I just wanted a break. Sometimes, though I was always committed to loving my children, I did not like them or feel that motherly feeling of delight--far from it. And so, knowing that feelings don't determine whether the work gets finished or not is important. Sometimes my workers would not show up for a couple of days or take a break from the work for a holiday, rain, or just rest.

We need to have a break from all the work at times. Go out with a friend! Go out alone! Go out somewhere fun with your husband, or even do something fun with your children. Too much work without a break makes Jack a dull boy--and so it is with you. This child-shaping takes so much more time and emotional work than can all be tackled at once. Resting from stress and difficulty gives new perspective. But living in false guilt for feeling something that is perfectly normal only destroys and drains.

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