Where is my treasure?

"Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant seeking fine pearls,

and upon finding one pearl of great value, he went and sold all that he had and bought it. Matthew 13:45-46

Today, I want to make room for you, my precious Jesus, to lay on the altar the busy-ness, the works, the duties. I do not want to have lived my whole life being an American Christian, doing what is expected, but having a cold heart to eternal issues, people in need of compassion, in need of my time, in need of my touch or word. Please, Lord, restore to me the joy of my salvation. Let my worship of you be fresh, new, filled with adoration and delight in you as a baby delights in the mother who nurses her.

Let your heart be filled today with pleasure at those who treasure you, see you, look for you above all else that occupies our minutes. Let my heart please you as I look at all of my life today through the grid of seeing and loving you. You are my pearl of great price. Let me give up all else to cherish you.

 

 

Celebrating 27 years of motherhood-Sarah eased me into it!

Happy Birthday, wonderful Sarah.

After 26 hours of labor, Sarah Elizabeth Clarkson, was born into my arms and made me a first time mother. I don't know what I was expecting, but I was so surprised when a real live baby came out of my body into my arms. I was amazed and fell in love.

I had never changed a diaper, never nursed a baby and didn't know what to do. But God had compassion on me and gave me a lovely, gentle, responsive first child to ease me into life.

Precious Sarah, we celebrate you today as one of the deepest, graceful, faithful, loving, gentle, intelligent, beautiful women I have ever known. I count you as a gift from God, a blessing beyond what I would ever have imagined. I thank you for serving us. loving us anyway, and being such a close friend who has personally invested so much in my life.

I pray this will be the best year in your life and that you will find the touch of God in surprising places, His loving fingertips in every place of your life.

I adore you and enjoy you and thankful. You bring smiles to me whenever I think of you.

Have a grand day!

I've had a religious experience

Just got back from the mac store. We are all in need of new phones--a variety of old phones now in our hands--some you have to shake to get them to work, some have no screens, some are hard to hear--all because we get those 2 year plans that save you something when you have 6 people on a plan. (With 6 drivers in our home, and all of them need money and want to eat fairly regularly and wear new clothes at least once in a while, we always look for the deals to try to afford our life.) But our plan is now up and we can get new phones.

So, Joel took me to a Mac store. I perused all the phone options. Pretty great and much better than our current phones.

But then, I looked at an ipad. Now, because of our conferences and places I speak, I have to travel a lot and our children create more travel because of where they live. I think I have a permanent dent in my shoulder from carrying heavy shoulder bags with books, Bible, computer, and make up in a ziplock bag.

But when I started looking at all the features of the ipad--oh, my! So light and thin----I could probably put it in a purse. I could actually find out where I am going when I get lost in a city--and even I could work it out. Just the book reader alone would save me headaches--magazines, books, Bible, aps, movies, the ability to work in airports, games, and more all on one thin, light piece! (And this one had no fingerprints, dings or scratches.)

OH, OH, OH, OH---I got more excited with each new feature. I love these. I think I need one, don't you?

When I walked out to the car with Joel, justifying to him how much I would love to get one and how much I needed one,  he said, "Mom, I just read a CNN article that said that there is a new study out that says that Apple fans have the same kind of neurological response to Mac products as religious people do in their religious experiences."

"Oh, no!" I've been converted! :)

"And just think of the great articles I could  write for all these moms on my new ipad if I got one!" giggle giggle

 

 

Surrounding yourself with wise people

"He who walks with the wise will be wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm." (painting, Edouard Manet) For years, when I was young and idealistic and had the energy, Clay and I sought to feed the minds, hearts and souls of my children on all that was wise, excellent, thoughtful, Biblical, eternal. As I have often said, we filled the treasure chest of their souls with the best, so that when they needed to draw from their souls the rest of their life, they would have treasure there--wisdom, depth, knowledge.

This was intentional--to establish the foundations of our children on wisdom. Consequently, this worthy goal set our own minds to find wisdom and to share wisdom. The very owning of our stewardship of our children's minds sharpened our own minds. It was a grid from which we lived life--to share, teach, instruct, read, think, cultivate and nurture wisdom.

I see the principle again of, what one sows, he reaps.

Lately, nightly, our family has been gathering and just talking, being friends, discussing life and ideas as we always have. Yet, now, mostly as peers and close friends, and not just as parent and child.

So, when pondering aloud to my family, how to make life more simple, how to set boundaries, how to continually restore and refresh so that I can have something in my own soul from which others may draw, my son shared this quote that he has been pondering from his own reading:

"To allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to surrender to too many demands, to commit oneself to too many projects, to want to help everyone in everything, is to succumb to the violence of our times." — Thomas Merton

Not only have I been taking this quotation to heart, and trying to figure out just what it meant in my own life, but I have also seen how much my children are a channel of wisdom for me. They gained the habit of thinking, reading, pondering, gathering  wisdom in contrast to the voices of the world which surround them--and now they have become counselors to me. Their minds feed my mind now. Their deep thoughts guide me.

And  so, sowing wisdom and seeking to surround the very air we breathed with wisdom for so many years, not only fed my soul, but educated those who would become my own counselors.

Now, I am really evaluating--How have I allowed myself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to surrender to too many demands, to want to help everyone in everything, to commit to too many projects............so, how have I succumbed to my times--the violence of overcommitment?

And so, daily, still, I seek the wisdom of counselors who can help guide my life, and now, it ends up, they live in my very own home.

Thoughts on these ideas, anyone?

What goes up must come down

My three jewels currently living at home--Joy, Joel, and Sarah. (at least for these weeks.)

I have learned to have a healthy respect and fear of Mondays! And today gave me more fuel for the fire.

Somehow a demon snuck into our home and stirred up everyone and created a crisis mentality in our home. One child and I had so many issues, tears, discussions and issues again, that I was so exhausted by 5, I just wanted to go to bed then, and was tempted to wonder why I had ever written about being a good mother.

But, when I consider, we were in Boston for 5 days, had graduation parties for 4 nights with Joel. Then home,  graduation practice or visiting out of town friends, church, people and kids over for dinner and finally our own personal family Clarkson graduation and dedication last night, I should have known that all of the adrenalin in everyone's bodies would be quite low.

So today, just simple things like emptying the dishwasher, or making a normal comment became  a big deal. Everything was exaggerated--every response more extreme than usual. Seemed everything became a big deal.

When my children were little, because we spent all day on Sundays at church, (Clay was a pastor), Mondays were always a challenge--exhausted children, whining, irritation, etc. It was the beginning of learning my lesson that I could not abuse their bodies without paying for it--in other words, if they didn't get naps, ate too much sugar, had too much overstimulation, then I always paid for it. They always told me they had had too much by how they behaved. Still the same, even with reasonably healthy, strong adults in our home now.

These times taught me wisdom and patience--still seem to need to learn more about it. It's where I learned to camp on the verse, "A gentle answer turns away wrath."

How quickly I forget this--my children don't need a lecture when they are tired, they need patience and gentleness until they can get some rest again. Like me, mostly, everyone needs more sleep. What goes up, must come  down.Celebration and stauing up too late for too long, means a price of exhaustion eventually will take its toll.

So, I am quite relieved this day is over. We watched a fun hour of a a favorite series, "Larkrise to Candleford." The story was about everyone getting mad at each other, then realizing the issues they battled over were ridiculous and they all apologized.

And so my child looked back at me--I guess we were making a big deal out of nothing, right?

So, finally, this day is about to come at an end and I am grateful and as I have said many times before, I just love my bed. It is my friend.

I am sitting in my reclining chair in my robe and jammies watching my 16 year old studying for her college entrance Algebra test she has to take tomorrow to qualify for college in the fall. Joel is sitting next to her, patiently teaching her, showing her how to do it, whispering in her ear, "God has it all in His hands, Joy. You can't imagine how much I have sweat through entrance exams, tests, papers, concerts, and performances. But, Joy, God was always with me and showed me that He would be faithful every step of the way. No sweat--you are smart. I know you can do this."

At the end of a day, we finally have peace again, and I think I am glad that I am a mom after all and able to see the goodness. It is sweet to see them helping each other. Reminds me of when they were all much smaller, Joel taught Nathan how to ride a bike, how tie his shoes, and so much more. Sarah made dinner tonight while I took a bath.

There are these great moments when you get perspective. The ups and downs, the ins and outs, the bumps and smooth places, all a part of a normal life in a family.  But always, I am probably most thankful for the normal days, the rhythms of life that give stability and strength. Glad to have celebrated. Glad to be back to normal.

Thank you, Lord, for grace that covers a multitude of sins. The grace to come back to peace and rest one more time.

Seeking simplicity

A cloudy, misty Sunday morning

Seems that no matter where I am in life, there is always the illusive--God hiding Himself and His wisdom in some area of my life, in which I have to seek, pursue and grasp for His guidance to figure out answers to my life questions.

Even as the mists hide the mountains, so God chooses to hide answers from me at times.

I have been deeply pondering the balance in this hectic life of modern culture. What really matters. What must be done. What does God want me to put aside?

A culture separated from God's wisdom over the centuries must surely provide lures that will destroy and distract from Him, from what is eternal, from what is true. Yet, to throw away those things which are not necessary, I must constantly be straining my ear to His voice and not to the voice of those who would draw me to vanity or more strife of busyness. And so I am planning a getaway to find some answers to my life's cry for simplicity and peace, in the midst of the whirlwind of life.

And these are some of the thoughts passing the corridors of my mind today:

The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak. ~Hans Hofmann

Everything we possess that is not necessary for  life or happiness becomes a burden, and scarcely a day passes that we do not add to it. Robert Brault

Peace of the Lord to you this day.

My favorite moment of the day

Graduation this morning. Some very wonderful people had worked and decorated and prepared and organized--fine, fine parents who served the several hundred that were there. There was pomp and circumstance, picture posters of memories and awards and lots of people and talking and crying and sharing with other moms and dads whose children graduated.

But I was thinking, if you could take away all the external performance, and fancy dresses and desire to live up to expectations and see hearts,

and the years of love shared and burdens born and prayers lifted up and birthdays celebrated  and tears comforted for all the years of  all the kids who graduated, you would see love and faith and sacrifice and big mother and father hearts---the real things that matter.

My favorite moment of the day was sitting on Joy's bed with her, sharing dreams and hearts and secrets after we got home from lunch and before we go to a friend's graduation party--seeing my beautiful, gentle, grown up daughter and hearing her heart and sharing mine. This was my favorite moment. Time alone together. Being close. Sharing love.

This is what I will miss--sharing life--the other stuff is just frosting on the cake but not the real meat of life.

Off to celebrate at another party.

Our God is out of the box.......

 

Austrian pastry and chocolate----yummmmmmmm!

"Mom, I am so glad our God is out of the box!"

"What do you mean, honey?"

"Well, some moms seem like they are always sad and ready to say no and that God is a law to be obeyed and a rule to be kept."

"But, our God is out of the box--we can't even contain Him--he made chile peppers to spice up Mexican food, puppies for cuddling and laughing at, chocolate to melt in your mouth, stars to camp under and shiver in the cold mountain air together, Celtic music to dance to, you know; feasting and talking around our table--sharing great stories by firelight---all the things that make us happy and give scope to our lives. Those things that give us hope in the hard times."

"That's what I mean--he is out of the box, unpredictable and created a lot of stuff and color just to give us joy.That's the only kind of God I would want to worship!"

"I think those kids who grow up in a "rules" home but don't have much fun,  won't want to follow a God like that."

This, a famous conversation with one of my children when we were brewing a cup of tea in the kitchen--and it was a boy! :)

And so, this graduation weekend, for my sweet Joy, we are feasting, celebrating with friends, and pouring words of love and beauty into her life, and enjoying all the beautiful things God made for us to enjoy--before we send her out in the world to live her story for the Lord.

Our God is indeed out of the box--and by the way, calories can't even be measured or felt  on feast days, when we celebrate life--they all disappear!

That's the only kind of God I would want to worship!"

By the way, Happy Birthday, Rachael!

Love starved

Charles W. Bartlett

An aching, longing pulses beneath, where no one can see. As the body requires food to stay alive, so the depths of a child hungers for love in order to stay alive. Love that embraces, validates, affirms, whispers, "Just as you are, I adore you. You delight me. I think about you, I cherish the day your were born. You are my beloved and always will be, no matter what."

Each of us was crafted with soul container that would be filled with love. Though no one can see from the outside whether ours is empty, desolate or full to overflowing, each of us has the capacity to fill up another's cavern with words, touch, sacrifice, generous gifts. When full, we are most likely to understand and worship God.

Without that filling, we will search for it all of our lives, even in the wrong places--places that promise to give love and fill hearts, but steal and destroy instead.

But a mother's love is the most constant resource of God's love that can sustain, strengthen, heal and restore a child.

Over 500 times, He speaks to us of love.....

God is love.

Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God, and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.

The love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit.

If you have not love, you have become a noisy gong or a clanging symbol.

They will know you are my disciples by your love for one another.

Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.

Let us remember,

Love moves, inspires, shapes the dreams, gives hope, holds us for eternity--for heaven.

Every child, every grown child, needs, exists well when love is given.

It is our heritage, our duty, our service of gratitude. Love keeps us alive.

When we by faith invest love in others, our own souls become full of His love--we pour out, He pours in.

Why do I focus on God's love and grace so much? Because Love is the source of all life, it is Him reincarnated through us. Love fuels faith and hope and inspires to overcome..

I have read the introductions to two books this week. Two grown men, famous in their own arenas. Both wrote of the anger of their father, that still stings, still holds them in bondage, still darkens the memory of childhood soul. It ought not to be the legacy we leave.

Love covers a multitude of sin. it is to a man's honor to overlook a sin. Love is the perfect bond of unity.

And so I speak of love--the acting out of love which brings light to darkness, satisfaction to a starving heart, comfort to a lonely soul, sympathy to hurt feelings, Love never fails. May our love muscles grow stronger and stronger until we see Him, Love incarnate, face to face.

If only I didn't have any children.......

I could get so much more done--I could spend hours upon hours writing books and articles and blogs about how to raise great children. :) Consequently, I may never actually get to writing all the answers to the questions all of you posted, because you see, the lives of my children keep me so busy.

In the past 24 hours, I took Joy to work and picked her up twice (4 trips--can't wait till the license is finalized in 3 weeks!)

Spent 2 1/2 hours grocery shopping and gathering food and then an hour and half putting it all away as there was some straightening that needed to be done! (cleaning out the fridge and freezer)

Throwing old flowers away and cutting, arranging and putting new flowers all around my house to celebrate the kids being home, making it beautiful and to honor  Joy  and Joel graduating.

Had lunch with Joel who just came home, to rehash all that is happening and has happened.

Driving Joy to her auditions for a new play.

Made 5  different meals (two breakfasts for those who got up at different times!) one by candlelight for everyone!

Unpacked my bags

Wrote a recommendation for a Christian camp and request for a scholarship another child is seeking, filling out forms for classes in the University for the fall for Joy as she begins in a couple of months.

Gave a half-hour phone interview recommendation for a job for one of my children

Addressed graduation announcements with 2 different children;

Spent three different half hours talking in the bedrooms of my children who needed counsel and "Mom alone" time

Spent 2 different times with Clay  morning and evening, planning ministry stuff and talking about our children (an hour apiece)

Attended a graduation practice for 2 1/2 hours for our homeschool group (40 kids).........

not to mention emails, phone calls, graduation gifts to buy, ministry correspondence............

and that is just since yesterday at 4:00.

As I said, I could get a whole lot done if I just didn't have children and a family to care for--but then I would have nothing to write about if I did have time.  And I would be oh so very lonely and bored.

Off to make myself a cup of tea. Make dinner, ............. Grace to you today.