The Kingdom of God is at hand--in the face of my sweet daughter

This weekend, we hosted our yearly MomHeart Conference in Dallas. How wonderful to look out on this sea of women and know that we have all met together to be with the Lord, with like-minded women and to celebrate the divine design of motherhood.

There is a lot that goes on behind the scenes to make it a time of frenzy for Clay and me and my precious children and those wonderful families who help us. We are blessed indeed to be able to be a part of what the Spirit it doing in this world at this time to help moms love and disciple their children and to cultivate faithfulness to their husbands. It is exciting and grand and hundreds of people flittering around and basking together in ideas. There was a wonderful tea with possibilities of sharing life with so many other moms.

But......

When I come home and can sit on my child's bedside and hear her heart desires and thoughts and dreams;

When I can soothe a brow and speak comfort into the life of a weary friend or make Clay a warm meal and welcome him home;

when Sarah comes downstairs, and gives me gracious words and gentles down my weary soul;

and Joy in her pj's reading us idealistic poems she has been pondering in bed with a cup of tea;

then I experience the Kingdom of God, because Jesus is here with us.

It is in the taking a cup of cold water to one who is thirsty, clasping a real hand, looking deeply into the eyes of one so close and seeing love--this is personal, real, life-touching, giving of self. This is where the kingdom of God is--where Jesus can be real.

Jesus chose to stay in one place and to model for all of eternity that touching, taking children in His arms, giving gracious forgiveness to a woman scorned by so many men after being used, touching lepers who had longed for touch for so long, laughing, rollicking, eating with a gang of twelve rough-edged men-- this was His reflection to us, the essence of the kingdom of God--right here, right now.

Ministry is personal and deep into the real lives of those in our midst. And so I find peace and joy here in my home where the Kingdom of God is at hand and real to me and to those I love. I am so much more comfortable in my home, away from crowds, just being a normal mom to my kids. It is the place of life and where profound things are really happening--the weaving of faith, goodness, beauty and miracles are all possible as we share in Him together.

It is to a woman's honor to overlook a sin

There are people in the world who will hurt you, offend you, disappoint you. The natural response is to become offended, to develop bitterness, to fight back. But I have always said to my children, it is natural to hate or react, it is supernatural to love, forgive, give grace and control your own spirit.

A woman has such a capacity to bring a spirit of grace and beauty into the world if she focuses on the beautiful--the Lord Jesus who did not revile in return. If you want to leave a legacy of grace, beauty and love, you must choose to walk in graciousness and become more gracious. You do not need to capitulate to the error of the irrational people, but you must discipline what goes on in your heart. The outcome of cultivating love is growing in love and eventually having a legacy of righteousness by your obedience to God.

The beautiful spirit of a woman has a tremendous capacity to bring redemption and strength and beauty to the world.

I need someone who understands my life!

Clay and I were sitting in our living room one evening after we had put our children to bed and I said, "I didn't know this was going to be so hard!" Giving, giving all day long, with nary a day off and then getting to 9 at night and having the smart, older children say, "Mommy, is there a God in the universe?"

Frankly, at that moment of the day, I found myself more concerned with getting into my own bed than answering a profound question.

And so I was baring my heart to Clay and said, He said, "What would help you?"

"I wish I had more friends who had my life, who shared my ideals, who agreed how demanding it is to be an intentional mother. I need someone who understands my life."

"I wish there would be a retreat or conference where I could sleep on a bed with clean sheets, be an adult for a couple of days, be inspired, eat chocolate, share my issues with like-minded women, have a nice luncheon, speakers who would encourage, but not give guilt--just a place to be renewed."

And, so my idealistic, visionary husband said, "Maybe we should do a conference like that."

And so 14 years ago, we rented a hotel, and the Whole Hearted Mom or now the Mom Heart conferences started right here in Texas where we were living.

And now I am even more convinced than every, after seeing my children into adulthood, that moms need mentors, encouragers, companions, prayer buddies, women who can support them along the way. Without a spiritually encouraging friend and companion, many women will give up their ideals.

And so we are meeting today, with God in our midst to celebrate this wonderful, amazing role of motherhood. Afterall, as mothers go, so goes to world. So, this morning, I am excited to greet my day with all of you who are gathering with us here in Dallas. May God be lifted up and praised and may sweet women be encouraged to stay strong and to celebrate life with their children so that eternity will be different for their servant leadership and loving, giving hearts. Bless all of you in your labor of love today.

Beautiful eyes, lips, ........beautiful woman

“For Attractive lips, speak words of kindness. For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people. For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. For beautiful hair, let a child run their fingers through it once a day. For poise, walk with the knowledge that you never walk alone. People, more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed. Remember, if you ever need a helping hand, you will find one at the end of each of your arms. As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands, one for helping yourself and the other for helping others.”
Audrey Hepburn

Last night, after visiting my sweet, frail mother, for possibly the last time, I was pondering her life and what it has meant to me and to my siblings.

Joy and I went to the jacuzzi at our hotel and entered into a surprisingly meaningful conversation. We moved outside, covered in towels under the 65 degree, weather and sat in gentle breezes pondering life and values and goals.

We each came up with 5 adjectives that we hoped would characterize our own lives. More on that later as I will be sharing some this weekend. But it has given me new soul food to ponder and new goals for my life. She had different adjectives--all worthy, but she also shared this quote with me.

A great quote from a woman who, though a Hollywood actress, seemed to get to some of the true values of life. I have savored these words today as I am busy in Dallas getting ready for this wonderful weekend.

Ponder........

Shortbread Valentines Cookies and Lots of Love

The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread. ~Mother Teresa

Everyone longs for love, is pre-wired to need love, yearns to be known and still loved. The only one-word definition in scripture about God is: God is love. Jesus tells us in his last prayer, the high priestly prayer, that God has loved Him since the foundation of the world.

But true love initiates.

Take time today to send love emails, love phone calls, to leave love cards under pillows, to fill someone's cup of their heart with love that they so need to hear. You will be God's hands, his voice, His touch today when you seek to give love.

These are easy cookies you can also make to give to someone with your love cards!

Easy Shortbread Cookies

Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups of flour (measure exactly or your cookie dough will be too dry)

1 stick or (1/2 cup butter)

1/4 cup powder sugar

1/2 teaspoon almond extract or 1/2 -1 teaspoon of vanilla extract, depending on your preference!

A dash of salt

Optional: If dough is too dry to handle, put a table spoon of half and half, cream or milk, one at a time and mix well before adding another if needed. Dough will be quite dry and you can shape it with your hands.

Step by Step:

The first thing to do is to combine the flour and salt in a bowl. In a separate bowl or food processor combine the butter, almond extract and sugar. The consistency should be creamy in appearance. Make sure it has a whipped up look and appearance. The final stage requires you to gradually add the flour and salt mixture into the creamy mixture. As you add in the dry mixture, make sure you are thoroughly mixing in the ingredients. As the consistency seems to thickens up, use your hands to essentially kneed the mixture.

After you have kneaded the mixture, place it on a flour surface. The next step requires a rolling pin or you may use your hand to flatten it out in the shape of a large circle or square. The flattened out mixture should be about 1/4 inches thick. Use a cookie cutter in the shape of a heart or a round cookie cutter than you can modify in the shape of a heart.

Sprinkle the cookies before you bake them and press the red sugar into the dough so it won't roll off.

Bake at 350 for 12-14 minutes, but don't over-bake.

A Happy Valentine's Day to you all--with lots of love memories all day long.

Sunday Pondering ~ Love

Love is patient, love is kind, and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered, does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails. I Corinthians 13:4-8a

When I graduated from college, I worked on the staff of Campus Crusade for 2 years at the University of Texas and then I moved to Eastern Europe to travel in Communist countries as a missionary. I had the illusion that because I had a committed heart, I was mature.

But since the Lord is a good parent, and He wanted me to grow into the likeness of Christ, and he saw that I was quite young, immature, self-centered and full of pride, he knew I needed more practice and training to become more like Christ.

So he gave me a husband and children, so that I could really find out what sacrificial love was all about. It has not been easy to pull out the weeds of expectations; to fight the storms of giving up my rights; to endure the drought of feelings that did not always match up to what I thought a loving wife and mother should feel in a happy home. But, I kept holding on to Him, pondering His life and seeking to be loyal through faith in His reality and presence, even though I could not always see Him.

Now, though still growing, I have learned so much more about true love, self-sacrifice, commitment. long-suffering--and it has all made me love Him more because I see how much of my life has required that of Him--as I have tested Him, misbehaved, thrown tantrums, and pulled away at times. But still He loves me and still He sacrificed for us while we were yet sinners.

Love, like the beautiful rose garden at Glen Eyrie Castle above, must grow over years and years to become mature. It must be cultivated and watered and nurtured and protected and worked again.

Thank you, sweet Lord, that you showed me the way and went before me to model real love.

"Greater love has no one than this, that a man lay down His life for His friends."

Love slowly dawns on my soul as I watch you  throughout my life, and I am humbled and brought to worship of you, the great Lover.

Today, I am.......

Sitting in my living room with candles lit and fire blazing, reading my Celtic Daily Prayer book and some passages from Daily Light and drinking my Yorkshire Gold tea out of a china cup my friend Deb gave me for Christmas--and it is blue, my favorite color. Yesterday I made shortbread cookies and cut them with heart cookie cutters and sprinkled them with red sugar crystals and hosted some of Joy's friends for pizza and fun. I will finish making the dough into cookies for today when we sit down for a cup of tea. I love butter cookies with vanilla and almond.

Yesterday, Joy and I met for our once a week intensive discipleship training. She drove all the way downtown on the freeway to a little French cafe where I take her for strong French coffee. It is a great place to be adults together as they play classical music and have a little flower on each table--a rare place in this frontier town of Colorado Springs. She  made it all the way without a glitch, even driving beside semis and in crowded traffic. I am thankful she is doing well and thankful she is my last child I have to teach to drive! :)

I read her a passage from Donald Miller's book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years. It was about all the youth that are growing up without fathers in Portland, Oregon. Also, the story of a man who grew up with 2 alcoholic parents who would leave him in the car while they stayed late at bars, and how he rose up above his wounded past and started a mentor program to youth who had no adult to help them reach adulthood in a healthy way. Tears streamed from her sweet face. "That breaks my heart, Mom. I want to do something with my life to help."

Nathan called twice while we were together to talk about a job interview and then about how it went and if he should take it or another job. Joy grimaced and said, "He always seems to call lately when we are talking." :) always interruptions in life with a family.

Shopping at Sam's for flowers and fruit and stuff we always seem to be running out of.......

Wearing my two favorite silver bracelets--one that says Expect Miracles, and the other that says, "The peace of God will guard your heart," given to me by precious friends. Somehow I think by wearing them, they speak to my brain and heart.

Meeting with Sarah in a little while for our coffee and Saturday morning walk downtown amongst the old Victorian houses.

Planning and pulling together pretty little plates and napkins for our Dallas Possibilitea. Chocolates, tea, coffee, fruit, goodies, ............

Reading a little today from a George MacDonald novel just for my pleasure. (The Musician's Quest)

Washing my clothes for wearing at the Dallas/Ft. Worth conference next week and packing the three outfits I wear at every conference so that I never have to think about clothes when I travel.

Looking at some beautiful red roses that I bought myself the other day just for beauty. I love roses.

Thanking God that He loved us before the foundation of the world.

Mom Heart Conferences Dallas/Ft. Worth Raleigh

Sweet ones,

Texas is filling up quickly. Please register if you intend on coming as we must know how many tables to set and how many meals to order and how many notebooks to have printed. If you wait until after Wednesday, we cannot guarantee meals and notebooks. Help us by registering ahead of time, as it will make it much easier for us. We have quite a full house and I can't wait to see so many of you there.

Off to my weekend. I wish you a great one. Looking so forward to the conferences! Praying for you.

No one can be holy for you

It is in the secret places of your life, the times when you are alone in your bedroom, that holiness is determined. You have to be the one who decides priorities, commitments, faith. God is with you in that place, as we read in Psalm 139, even the darkness is not dark to him but the night is as bright as the day. But if we say we want to worship Him and serve Him all the days of our lives, then when our heart is tempted to doubt, and we choose faith, He sees. When we choose to seek Him every day and arrange our lives so that we can hear from Him and read His word, He sees. No one else really knows our personal integrity, but God who sees in secret, will see and will reward.

It is a lifetime of taking one holy step at a time, day by day, moment by moment, choice by choice, that gives one a "set apart" life. It is the secret life, not the public life, that creates this eternal service of worship. Yet, after years of such holy choosing, the spirit of Christ reflects more and more so that all who come to the soul of one so committed will be fed  and such a soul will naturally produce what it has been sowing and it will ultimately give and pour out Him.

Valuing Traditions

Last weekend, I had the privilege of having all  of my children with me in California. They are a blessing and I do want to say, they are mostly happy with each other and get along and are a blessing--your children will grow up and they are listening to you!

Many moms asked, "What did you do to cultivate your children into best friends? How did you help them learn to enjoy each other? I think one way is that I purposed time that we would all spend together, even as they got older. There were some non-negotiable times when everyone had to be home--sometimes it was a Saturday night pizza movie, most times we were always home on Sunday afternoon tea times, or Sunday morning feasts. Of course when they were little all time was family time and that is when you are really securing tight relationships.

I found this older post from 4 years ago. Joy is now almost 16, but I hope you might enjoy this post of yesteryear! Every May about this time, I find myself wondering how we started so many birthday traditions so that the expectations of each birthday child is so high. I am a little worn out by this time and my mind ponders, "Now why am I doing this? Does it really make a difference?As I have pondered this the past couple of days, I have realized again, that traditions force us to take time to celebrate life.

Pausing, as a family, in the midst of the busyness of life, communicates that we are more important to each other as a family than all the activities that are swirling around in our lives that separate us from each other. In our case, twelve year old Joy doesn't often have the full attention of her siblings, who are quite a bit older than her. They are always running here and there to a job, to classes or to meet friends. Yet, on this day, everyone takes a break from their other commitments---even Clay stays home the mornings of birthday breakfasts--and says to the birthday child, "You are beloved in this family and we are here to celebrate your life!"

Joy turned 12 today. I have to admit, that in spite of all the work, I think I can see that the traditions have deeply filled my children's hearts with affirmation, validation, memories, confidence and blessings that they will draw from for years to come. Today was especially bittersweet, as I imagine that by next May's birthday, probably only Clay, Joy and I will celebrate her birthday as a family! We will have to import new friends as family.

Each birthday morning, the person we are celebrating, has to wait expectantly in their bedroom. They are allowed something to sip--hot chocolate or tea---and then must wait patiently for the other siblings to come to deliver them to our breakfast table. Usually, I have made my whole-wheat cinnamon rolls--the expected favorites--and I make my own special scrambled eggs---with cheese, sour cream, ham or bacon bits. Strong Austrian coffee is dripping through the filter, while one child is setting the table with the ceramic tea set usually used for all birthdays. (The set was bought over several years at a second's shop in Austria. By now, several of the dishes are chipped or cracked, but, as we cannot buy anymore here in the States, we are happy that the dishes aren't broken.)

We are all a part of a team seeking to throw things together as quickly as possible, since often, presents are wrapped and cards are written at the last minute. One child throws the gifts into very familiar bags--many of which we have kept for years. As a matter of fact, the kids all discussed which bags were their favorites and warned me never to give them away to anyone else with a present in it, because it is family tradition! (Winnie the Pooh and a pre-Raphealite bag tied for the favorites!) We put every gift, however small, in it's own bag. Even if something was purchased for a song at Good Will or at the dollar store, it gets fully wrapped. Consequently, each year, it looks as though the birthday child is getting a zillion presents, even though the ultimate value may not be much at all--it is all part of the sparkle and fun of the morning. (Once, a child received a pacakage of ball point pens--each in its own bag!)Life is a flurry as one sets the table, one lights the candle and puts coffee cream out, another is wrapping and putting on music to set the mood and Clay is always looking for the camera and batteries since he is the official photographer.

Finally, at least a couple of kids, go to the birthday child's room to blind-fold their eyes, so that they have to stumble into the room with no peaking. What a funny sight this year as 6'5" Joel and 6'3" Nathan still willingly participated in leading Joy down the steps for her surprise day.

Seems the conversation never varies from year to year---I think your cinnamon rolls are the best, Mom. Yeah, we have never tasted any that even compared. (Of course this is so I will keep making them from year to year and yes, it does encourage me to keep up the work---even the 5th time this month!)

After breakfast is appropriately enjoyed, the birthday child begins opening gifts one at a time--to be marvelled, commented on and appreciated. Then come the cards---each child and parent usually creates a card and message for the birthday child to read and save in a special box.

Humor always adorns every meal we share, whether it is our somewhat retarded golden retriever who almost knocked down the table to get to the leftover eggs, or some extravagant comment. Today did not disappoint us. I was reading a Jane Austen quote outloud from a card Joy received, "It is much easier to kill realities than phantoms!" At which exact moment, the front door mysteriously blew open--and we all looked for the phantoms who must have entered at precisely on time for a great effect! (Maybe you had to be here--but the timing was perfect and made us all giggle!)

Finally, the pinnacle of the morning is when all of us at the table share with the birthday child what they have meant to us and how we appreciate them and how they have grown. I am still astounded that at 23, 20, 18 and 12, my children take this ritual so seriously. I thought when they were young, they would surely giggle and make sarcastic comments and find it difficult to finish the time. Yet, I am truly amazed that they have vested lots of love and thoughtfulness in these times and I can farely observe the heart of the birthday child being watered and refreshed enough to last for months.

Nathan started this year. "I have been amazed at how confidently and professioally you have been performing--through your Youth Performing Arts choir and through the musicals you were in. You have quite a voice and your are so poised and confident. At the last concert, I got my whole row of friends to yell your name at the teen concert. They all said they wish they had a sister like you. I prayed you into the world and I am very proud to have you as my sister!"

Followed by his generous comments, came Joel's, Sarah's, Clay's and mine. "You have really grown in your commitment to the Lord this year and you have such intelligent things to say in our discussions." "You have really developed in your personality this year. The way you decorate your room is amazing, your writing is very expressive, you're learning to read music so well on the piano, and you are passing all of us up in your many abilities!" "You have been a real friend to me and you always have such interesting things to say in the car when I pick you up from classes. It is obvious that you are reading and learning a lot. You have also been a lot of fun for me." And on it goes. I see before me, these children who have learned to love each other in spite of the personality differences, the various immature and hormonal and argumentative stages of life. I am amazed and grateful. How did this happen---these children who threaten to undo me from time to time with their whining, silly fusses, immaturity and friction. Yet, here they are in their right minds, enjoying each other, laughing at each other's jokes, discussing issues loudly, and participating in family bonding--willingly, generously. What a gift to me, Lord, to see this picture of watching Joy's heart fill with emotioal health, before her brothers and sister venture to the far winds-Sarah and Joel to Cambridge, then to Seattle in the fall, Nathan to his classes in another state.

But when everyone goes their way, I see that there will be hundreds of memories shared, loved communicated, prayers offered at our table over the years of celebrations--because we took time to invest in tying our heartstring to each other. These foundations of emotional mental and spiritual health will serve to stabilize and give hope to each of us long after we are separated by miles. Now I see, all the effort and cooking and washing of dishes and wrapping of presents did matter because they provided the frame around which a life of love was painted on the souls of each of my precious children. Ok, move over---I will finish the dishes this morning!