Playing the Holy Spirit in Our Children's Lives

This is how I do NOT want my children to see me! 

 There are so many burdens we can take on as mothers. Wanting to lead our children in the right direction; to help them learn the ways of God and love Him, to teach them how to best respond to and treat other people ... our list of things we ought to be doing grows long. And sometimes that means we start hovering, watching every move they make, worrying lest we miss an opportunity to correct them or give advice about something happening in their lives.

It's good to take our responsibility seriously. Yet especially as a young mom, I found I could sometimes go overboard! When I mixed worry with my good intentions, the end result was often needless distress. And if I was also worrying about what others might be thinking about me, I found myself experiencing the "fear of man" that "bringeth a snare"! Thankfully, after many years of walking with the Lord and noticing the way He gently guides my own steps,  I learned to relax and trust His leading in their lives, too.

"Sometimes we feel that we need to play the role of the Holy Spirit in our children's lives and impose great guilt on them so they will be hesitant to sin anymore. But I don't see this in the life of Jesus. Yes, Jesus always called His disciples and followers to the highest standards. He taught that He came to fulfill the law and that all the commandments of God were of utmost importance (Matthew 5:17-20). And yet, wherever He went, Jesus proclaimed forgiveness and extended His gracious forgiveness to all who sought Him--including tax collectors, prostitutes, and even a thief on the cross. He maintained this same attitude of gentle and gracious forgiveness toward the disciples even as they abandoned Him at the cross. Jesus took the time to personally talk to them about sin and to offer them grace. And it was this gracious forgiveness, I believe, that opened their hearts so that they "loved much."

Our children need the same kind of gentle graciousness from us if they are to learn to share their vulnerability, to confess their own sins, and to be free to love. If they fear our strong condemnation and possible rejection, they will hide their sins, perhaps even deceive themselves about the nature of it. They will definitely not avail themselves of our mature direction in their lives."~ The Ministry of Motherhood

Reminding myself of God's gracious, tender love toward me helps me extend that same graciousness to my children. Take a moment and rest in His great love for you, sweet mom! He will guide your steps, and your children's, too.

My last weekend with 30 wonderful moms..... our intensive!

This is what I was doing last weekend.......And it all happened with friends at my home and the home of my dear friend, Deb!
Mom Heart Leaders Intensive
by Kristen Kill

Mom Heart Leaders Intensive

"Lady Wisdom prepares her home, prepares beauty and good food and then invites others in.

Wisdom encompasses a whole life of living and building on the purposes, design and messages of God. Wisdom extends itself through relationships, our influence, the practical ways we live life, the values we hold, the art we create, the influence we have, the legacy we leave."

-Sally Clarkson

Mom Heart Writers and Leadership on Sally's Staircase

Mom Heart Writers and Leadership on Sally's Staircase

Do you remember a time when someone prepared a place for you? When there was a sense of beauty and place and care that cried out to your heart that there was celebration in your coming? When your heart was opened over a simple cup of tea or by the light of a flickering candle, when you felt love, deep at your core and knew you were valued and accepted by another person?

"To say that you are loved is one thing, but to feel loved is quite another entirely." -Sally Clarkson

Some of the beauty prepared for our time together

Some of the beauty prepared for our time together

This weekend, the leadership of Mom Heart were welcomed in, gathered together, to grow and learn and to be loved on in the homes of our leadership in Colorado. It was a time of deep refreshing and teaching, but most of all, experiencing the love and beauty and fullness of life and home that God extends to each of our hearts and that we long to extend to you in our online home. We hope you enjoy some pictures of our time together, of the real life of  these women who are so honored to share words and community with you here. Some wisdom from our teaching time is peppered throughout as well. I hope it soaks deep into your heart today, friends. You are so, so loved.

Enjoying lunch among the pines

Enjoying lunch among the pines

"Beauty is spiritually significant. It is at the center of how God makes himself known to us and beauty is central to how we share God with others." - Sarah Clarkson

Makaela and Shelly- makers of our feasts and part of the local Colorado Springs Mom Heart Leadership

Makaela and Shelly- makers of our feasts and part of the local Colorado Springs Mom Heart Leadership

We can not know God fully without experiencing the fullness of creation. We can not separate ourselves from beauty and nature and fellowship and good food and sacred music and ideas and poetry." -Sarah Clarkson

Phyllis Stanley, teaching us how to make amazing bear claws to celebrate life at home

Phyllis Stanley, teaching us how to make amazing bear claws to celebrate life at home

"There is no neutrality in Christian living. Either you are flourishing and growing or you are slowly dying."

Our gracious hosts and ministry founders, Clay and Sally Clarkson

Our gracious hosts and ministry founders, Clay and Sally Clarkson

Your Mom Heart Online Leadership, Kristen Kill, Sally Clarkson and Misty Krasawski

Your Mom Heart Online Leadership, Kristen Kill, Sally Clarkson and Misty Krasawski

"We must realize the importance of serving an incarnate God and being incarnate to others."

Enjoying the coziness of company and a delicious meal at Sally's.

Enjoying the coziness of company and a delicious meal at Sally's.

A wise woman takes responsibility for her own well-being, because she knows it is her well-spring of life.

-Sally Clarkson

The real side of your leadership, ladies! Sarah Mae, Katy Rose and Stacy Buck, representing our goofiness!

The real side of your leadership, ladies! Sarah Mae, Katy Rose and Stacy Buck, representing our goofiness!

"There is a tendency to put God in a box, to live by rules and maxims and to know more about rules than the wild and untame Lion that He is."

-Sally Clarkson

Joel Clarkson, aka The Composer, blessing us with his beautiful music!

Joel Clarkson, aka The Composer, blessing us with his beautiful music!

" You have an obligation to pour out the hope that is in you!"

Some delicious quiche, Sally's famous recipe.

Some delicious quiche, Sally's famous recipe.

 

"God created women to be truth-bearers, light bearers- civilizers- but so many miss the beauty of God's design for femininity." -Sally Clarkson

Sandra Maddox, Jeanna Young and Sally at tea time

Sandra Maddox, Jeanna Young and Sally at tea time

"In the absence of Biblical wisdom, we will speak and write and live from a worldly opinion instead of the truth and knowledge of God." -Sally Clarkson

Sally teaching  in one of our sessions about guarding our hearts.

Sally teaching  in one of our sessions about guarding our hearts.

"If you don't have a foundation, you will take everything as truth, and then you will live by the premises of other people." -Sally Clarkson

Kat and Kristen Habermehl

Kat and Kristen Habermehl

"When a generation is not fed and trained and filled with excellence, they will simply reflect the culture." -Sally Clarkson

Which of these reflections stands out the most to you today, mama?

**used blog 9/24/2020God's Timing

What a lovely picture. The light in it is caught so beautifully, and I can just imagine the sound this lady's dress makes as she swooshes down her hallways.

Have you ever watched a grandfather clock as this little one does here? The pendulum swings back and forth, causing gears inside to move ... tick, tock; tick, tock. I wonder sometimes if we've lost something (else) with our digital timepieces--the ability to watch time go by, physically. The workings of a clock like that are almost mesmerizing. Watching a number "magically" change on your wrist or in your hand doesn't quite have the same effect!

How often I've felt like this girl, watching the workings of the clock and wondering at the passage of time. I wonder if she's in a hurry for the bells to ring, denoting the passing of another hour. She's got her hands clasped as if in anticipation. Perhaps she's waiting for her father to return home, or anxious to leave on her own trip. Maybe she's just ready for dinner! She watches the time go by with every swing of that shiny pendulum. And yet ... no noise! Why isn't the bell ringing?

She sees the movement, but that's all she can see. She's too short to look at the actual clock face! And in that, she's a bit like us. Because while she's in a hurry, anxious for the chimes to ring, watching moments go ticking by ... she can't see what time it actually is.

"The Bible is our direct source for perceiving God's attributes, noticing how He dealt with people in the past, and learning what is important to Him. Our whole Christian life isn't primarily about being good or doing the right thing. Our lives are to be about a personal relationship--a love cultivated between Creator and creature, Father and child.

By spending time in His Word, we come to know His heart. God longs for relationship with us and honors those who love Him and search for Him. Reading Scripture in such a way as to know Him better and look for clues as to how He interacts with human beings has given me a better understanding of how to please Him. I have learned how He deals with others so that I can better understand His work in my own life.

For instance, as I read and ponder the stories of the Bible--the lives of Abraham, Sarah, Moses, Joseph, and David, I see that they all had to wait for many years to see their promise from God fulfilled. It gives me a pattern for being mature. Apparently some things take a long time. I can see that God's timing and ways in the lives of those He has used are different than the ways of this world. In this world, I want immediate gratification--Answer my prayer now! Yet I see that those who were godly had to wait in faith for years, trusting that they would see the faithful hand of God in His time." ~from The Mom Walk

Ahhhh ... waiting. It is common to God's people. "There is nothing new under the sun," as Ecclesiastes 1:9 tells us.

Will I rest in His timing? Knowing that the clock really belongs to my Father, and He can see what time it is, though all I see is the moving of gears? Will I trust that He knows all and that when the time has fully arrived, He will surely cause the song to ring out, heralding the change I'm eagerly awaiting?

Spending time in His word reminds me that He will be faithful, though I wait long.

Are you waiting, too, today?

Like Apples of Gold: Encouraging Words

Doesn't this group look like they're having a good time? I wish I could eavesdrop on their conversations. I wonder what Renoir heard the day he painted this particular view?

Our words are powerful. As it reads in Proverbs ...

A soothing tongue is a tree of life." Prov. 15:4

A man has joy in an apt answer, and how delightful is a timely word! Prov. 15:23

Like apples of gold in settings of silver is a word spoken in right circumstances." Prov. 25:11

"Encouraging and affirming words--words of life, as I like to call them--have the power to give hope, to strengthen others to keep growing in righteousness. And if I, a grown woman, need them to keep me going through hard time, my children need them even more. Positive words act as water and sunshine to our souls to help them grow strong. Yet I have found that very few people really take the time to say those words that all of us, and especially our children, long to hear.

I love and appreciate you!

Your friendship means a lot to me!

I believe in you and in what God is doing in your life!

You are special to the Lord and to me, and I am praying for you.

Thinking good thoughts about someone doesn't really bless that person. We have to take the initiative actually to say the words--in person, through a card or email, or even though a phone call.

As I look to the life of Jesus, I see that He constantly blessed people with His words. He often spoke encouragement and affirmation directly to those around Him, or affirmed them before others." ~from The Ministry of Motherhood

And so I must learn to do the same. When a child or friend has a bad day, am I quick to point out how they've caused their issues? Impatient with listening if it seems I've heard them say something similar before? Am I longsuffering and kind to my husband? Do I feel the need to boast of my accomplishments when I am around other people who work in my field?

Sometimes encouraging words aren't said simply because I forget how important they are. And yet just a few moments of thought back to the last person who spoke affirming words to me brings a smile, renewed courage and strength for the tasks at hand.

May we all be encouragers--givers of courage!

 

Make it your ambition

"Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life." I Thess. 4:11

Savory soups bubbling on the stove and warm bread with butter and strong cures of cheese, accompanied  by homemade applesauce.

Long walks in the woods and mountains, taking in the art of leaves, chill wind, color and reminder that life is always changing, and always to be cherished-- with my most precious ones.

Fireplaces blazing with tea or coffee or cider and stories being read.

Real conversations that take lots of time, face to face without my eyes on a machine or phone--but real listening, touching, sharing hearts, giving words of encouragement and life--which require time and focus.

Long quiet times, seeking Him and His values and His ways for myself and my family.

Filling my mind with story, encouragement, inspiration, rest, so that I actually have something left in my soul to offer to those who would draw from there.

Rest and Sabbath times--quiet, away, undistracted, peaceful.

This is my hope for autumn.

**used blog 9/17/2020 Choosing To Find Beauty

When life is extra busy and demands for your time stack up like firewood against an expected long winter ...

When pressures from without and within build greater than you think you can bear ...

When it seems there's just not enough you to meet every need ...

What's your response? Do you retreat? Lash out? Do less, in a wild effort to retain some sort of energy for yourself?

Perhaps that's not the best way. All of those are my natural reactions, too. But something Sarah said one day gave me pause. As I wrote in The Mom Walk ...

"One day, during some heavy, depleting financial issues in our family's life, I decided to get up before everyone else. I made homemade pecan-apple pancakes, lit candles, put on soothing instrumental music, and had a lovely table set when the kids and Clay arose. We all enjoyed the breakfast surprise together. After we finished, Sarah was sitting next to me on the couch. She kissed my cheek and said, 'You know, Mom, when you act happy and bring joy to our life, I feel secure and that all is well. But when you are upset and down, I feel guilty, like we have done something wrong and it makes me feel like brooding. Thanks for making the effort. I feel happy this morning.'

I realized that one of the roles God wants me to play in my children's lives is a conductor of joy, happiness, and celebration. After all, God designed our need for these things into our very hearts. We were made to enjoy life and our Creator, and we were meant to choose to live in His beauty and provision.

This doesn't mean I won't have difficulties or times of depression. But I do have choices I can make as a mom that will determine the environment in my home. When I choose to notice, every day, the beauty of my children instead of the duties my children bring my way, I am worshiping God. When I choose to notice the gorgeous sunsets and the spring flowers in the midst of busy days, I am teaching my children to dance, so to speak, through their days. When I choose to believe in the goodness of God and verbalize my love for Him, and make an effort to provide delightful food, thoughtful cards, and moments of fun, I am showing my children a God they will be willing to serve-- a God who delights in filling their deep desires for intimacy, happiness, purpose, and beauty."~ from The Mom Walk

 The Lord understands our weariness! And He is also able to give us the grace to deal with the stresses and personality conflicts and disappointments and burdens of life. He gives us puppies to laugh over and spicy foods to enjoy and beautiful music to delight our ears even in the midst of crazy days. Today, what loveliness can you find to share with your family, to show them the wooing grace of the Father?

First Time Obedience, really? Another view into the process

My own sweet children--the ones trusted into our hands to love and raise for Him!

I am reprinting an article because of many requests. In one article, it is impossible to cover all the bases. So, obviously, there are sides of this issue that I cannot adequately address in one short article. Did we seek to have our children obey us? Of course--through training, instruction, patience, love and guidance. By God's grace, our precious children, my best friends, and wonderful adults, love us, love the Lord and are engaged in seeking to be responsible in their lives. It is the greatest earthly blessing in my life to be at this place where they all "work" in different places, but where even this week, as I have 3 of them home, agree, that the best place is home because we all belong together. So, I share this article with the heart desire to bless and encourage--but not to cause undue response or consternation. Again, I give to you:

First time obedience, really?

My own children, on whom many philosophies of child discipline were practiced. And yet God's grace covered our mistakes and they grew into healthy loving human beings by His grace!

Often, the subject of child discipline comes up as I am working with young parents. I do not have the time to answer all of my email or comments as I must stay focussed on my own family and I will not be able to answer all the questions this article will raise, so please understand my time limitations. But I do offer this as some of my own thoughts on childhood discipline and hope that in some way, it may be of encouragement. My blog below is a mish-mash of some of my thoughts--but hope you can make some sense of it!

A Need for Guidance

Well-meaning parents all over the world have tried throughout the centuries to try to figure out the right formula or wisdom to use in raising up a godly, responsible, emotionally and spiritually healthy child. It is right to desire to find a way to love, educate, train and discipline a child to help him become mature.

However, in our culture, so many young couples do not live around their parents, do not have good models of what a healthy family looks like, and so they look to "authorities" to find their answers--people who speak or write books. (Scary thought, since that is what Clay and I do!)

Formulas do not work!

And, I believe, most parents are looking for a formula--a one easy step guide to instantly raising up an obedient child, a one size fits all.

But, over the years, I have heard so many extreme talks about child training and I have also seen many young immature parents follow rigid, formulaic parenting philosophies and I have lived to see many children rebel, leave all the training of their parents and even turn their hearts away from God.

The parents wring their hands saying, "I don't understand. I followed all the books and did it just like they said!"

Thinking Biblically

However, when we learn to think Biblically, we must learn to live by faith and in wisdom in the raising of our children. If God had wanted us to follow a formula, He would have given one and made it clear so that we could use the ten easy rules to pop out perfect children. But He made each person with a different personality, different maturity level, different ability.

Scripture is much more long term about maturity than we usually want to understand. "Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old, he will not fall away."

"The path of the righteous is like the light of dawn, which shines brighter and brighter until the full day." A path of life parenting that allows for more and more light to show forth with each passing year.

In Hebrews we read about the mature and immature--about babes who are still drinking milk and not yet ready for solid food--and here the context is of a young Christian and a mature one--allowing for growth.

I tend to look at my children through this lens, "It is the kindness and mercy of the Lord that leads to repentance." Romans

An Issue of the Heart

First, we must understand that all discipline should be focussed on the heart--not the behavior. Over 800 times in scripture, God talks about the heart--Love the Lord with all of your heart. God searches to and fro for a heart that is completely his. Man looks at the outward appearance, but God looks at the heart. and so on. And yet I see many extraverts being disciplined for being louder and more talkative (not rebellion--a personality issue--or boys for being boys--moms who want them to behave like a little lady, etc.)

But God is concerned with our desire to love and obey Him, he already knows we are immature and that we take time to understand His ways. Jesus was patient with Peter and said, "Satan has desired to sift you like wheat," He predicted that Peter would fall--and Jesus was totally supportive of his disobedient, immature disciple---He said, "I have prayed for you, and after you have returned, strengthen the brethren." In other words, "I know you will blow it, but I will be with you, I will pray for you, I will still use you."

And so, when we discipline our children, we must learn to look at their hearts. Is their heart rebellious? Are they being willful? Am I expecting too much for them--their age, their level of over-stimulation, the circumstances, their maturity level, their abilities? A child should not be punished for being exhausted, immature, a boy, or for making a mistake. I make mistakes all the time, again and again. And yet scripture teaches in the new testament and the old that maturity is as a result of training, time, growth, heart and will.

I just have to state at the beginning of this article that my goal was to have my children learn to obey me and to honor me quickly, from a heart that had been trained and nurtured to respond, to want to please me as a parent and to have a heart that wants to please God. Sometimes this means exerting my authority immediately to help them learn that they must learn to listen to mama. Often it meant picking them up into my arms as toddlers to quickly stop the wrong behavior and to whisper, talk to them about my expectation as their mother that they would obey. Grace-based parenting is not equal to permissiveness and lack of training or responsibility for children.

I read constantly when my children were little to learn about how they were made. I remember that I read an article that said that the average 2 year old took between 30 seconds and a minute to have some messages sink in if they were engaged in their brain somewhere else. And so often, I see moms being very strict with their children and being harsh when sometimes the child has not even understood yet just what he is doing wrong. Harshness does not win over a child. Neither does wanting a 2 year old to be more mature than he can be and so punishing him for being 2. We must use wisdom and discretion to understand the situation, the heart of a child, and how to best train him according to our wisdom, faith and training of the child. It is the kindness and mercy of God that leads to repentance. Child discipline should always be based on a relationship between a mature, benevolent, loving parent who is seeking to lead his child to maturity, to train his child to think in the direction of righteousness and to train his behavior little by little.

The mature parent should consider the state of the child, his emotional needs, physical needs before meting out harsh discipline.

Formulas like "First Time Obedience" do not necessarily reach the heart!

I was speaking at a conference once and the speaker before me was plying the audience with all sorts of guilt. This speaker said, "If you don't require first time obedience every time from your children, then you are disobeying God and you will be responsible for losing your child's heart and tempting him to rebel against God!" Many men in the audience cheered loudly and clapped. I could just see the harshness that would follow in their homes because a speaker had given them permission to be harsh and demanding, every time with children, without ever teaching these parents sympathy, wisdom, skill and understanding with their children, their ages, their paths of life.

But Really? Can you cite me verse and give context that says God always requires first time obedience without mercy? I am thankful that He is much more patient with me than that in my own life. I have made so many mistakes over the years and done such foolish things, and still He is there loving me, instructing me, showing me his compassion and gently leading me daily to better understand His holy and righteous standard for me.

I have seen no Biblical evidence that this is a true "rule." Of course I believe in training our children to obedience and to teach them to have the highest of standards, and often it meant training them to learn to obey us as we requested something of them, by training them to obey quickly.

But I believe the reason Deuteronomy 6-8 talks about us speaking to our children morning, noon, night and presenting truth and the gospel to our children every moment of the day, is that training is to be a whole-life passing on of values and obedience and wisdom, a morning, noon and night---let's live together in fellowship and relationship and you will see that I have your best in mind and I will teach and train you how to be mature, wise and excellent.

It is a process of love, consistency, patience, and repeating over and over and over and it takes many years for a child to become mature. Maturity and integrity are also issues of the heart and motivation that comes from responding to the teaching and instruction given in love and mutual respect.

Ignorance produces harshness

The unfortunate thing is that many parents, in the name of faithful discipline, do not understand the differences between babies or toddlers or young children or even teens with all of their hormones,  and they exhibit  anger and harshness toward  their children, act in a demeaning way, while neglecting the cues of the child at each stage. These parents  have no perspective for the children themselves--they use  a  rule and formula no matter what--and often wonder why their children to not respond to them.

But, this kind of one rule discipline neglects the child's basic well being. If children are exhausted or overstimulated by television or other children, they are naturally more hostile or out of control. A wise parent will tend to his child's need for rest, quiet, rhythm, balanced blood sugars and understand hormones or emotions, and personality. Often I see children disciplined for things the parent has neglected--their physical and emotional needs---when the child's behavior is often a direct message to the parent of a basic need that has been neglected.

I believe that Biblical discipline must take a long time to secure the heart--many years of constant loving training and instruction. We had very high standards for our children, but our discipline was always viewed through a lens of relationship as the strong basis of our discipleship of our children. Without a close relationship, discipline is quite unproductive.

I am also convinced that a parent must live by faith, trust in God, wisdom, and patience. I spent many hours on my knees praying, seeking God, learning new ways of His parenting with me as I parented my children. It was a process of growing in wisdom. My children are all very different in personality and ability, and yet, by God's grace, all have come to love us and do deeply love the Lord. But we had to raise each of them up in love, by faith and treat them according to their own personality bent. And the basis of our home was God's unconditional love and grace.

Lack of Basic Knowledge

I have also observed often, lately, precious moms who do not even know how to treat little ones. I was walking down the hallway of a hotel several months ago and a sweet, young, exhausted mom was exasperated and shaking her 4 month old baby, saying, "Go to sleep, go to sleep!" At which point the exhausted baby cried louder and louder.

I offered to hold the baby for a few minutes and to give the mom a break. She quickly gave the baby to me. I held the baby tightly in my arms and held it against my cheek and gently rubbed its head while singing softly into his little ear, and swaying gently back and forth. Immediately the little one relaxed its stiff body and listened to my voice and within 5 minutes was soundly asleep.

She just had not been taught how to be gentle, affectionate, or personal. It scared me a little to think of the future of this little child.

I also observed that my very introverted, creative child took longer, even as a baby to focus on me. I learned to work with his personality and to get on his eye level, gently get his attention and clearly state what my expectations were. He was happy to comply, but he did not always hear me the  first time. (He now my absent-minded professor who composes music and still has a great heart to obey and to please me.)

My third son, I eventually learned, was adhd, and ocd and a few other letters. But being harsh never, never made his more mature or able to change his behavior. I learned that the more I poured into his life--affection, time, listening, talking, the more able he was to obey. I learned that if I was patient and gentle and helped him--holding his hand, using words of encouragement, gentleness, I could lead him in obedience.

My husband, Clay, wrote an excellent book, called Heartfelt Discipline and many have said that it changed their lives. It will be back in print next summer.

When babies are touched and loved and sung to and talked to and have regular routines and regular, healthy diets, they are much more happy all the time and responsive to instruction. However, when a child has not received these basic needs, the only means of a child letting his parents know he is not happy or comfortable with his life is to whine or cry. When I am around generally healthy children whose needs have been met, it is obvious because they seem more content with life. All children are immature and will misbehave, and pages and pages could be written about the subject, but these are just a few of my thoughts.

My last thoughts on this today and then I must run to my day. Jesus'  life is my example. There was a lost world because His children rebelled against Him--no first time obedience. But His love and compassion was so much a part of His character and being, He was compelled to come to save us. He fellowshipped with His disciples, loved them, listened to them, confronted them, corrected them, fed them, taught them, and laid down His life for them. Because of their relationship with Him, and their love for them, they were willing to lay down their life for Him and His kingdom.

His love compelled them--it was a long-term process, this one of securing their obedience and hearts, but their hearts wanted to please Him and obey Him because of what He had meant to them. And so I did write Ministry of Motherhood, reflections on Jesus' method to secure the hearts of His twelve. It has been a study over many years. And today, from my quiet time, I am again humbled and blessed by His active, redeeming, sacrificial love that redeemed me.

His model to me as a parent, "Greater love has no one than this, that He lay down His life for his friend."

** used blog 9/3/2020 The Servant Leadership of Jesus

Nicolaes Maes

Now before the Feast of the Passover, Jesus knowing that His hour had come that He would depart out of this world to the Father, having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them to the end. During supper, the devil having already put into the heart of Judas Iscariot, the son of Simon, to betray Him, Jesus,knowing that the Father had given all things into His hands, and that He had come forth from God and was going back to God, got up from supper, and laid aside His garments; and taking a towel, He girded Himself.

Then He poured water into the basin, and began to wash the disciples’ feet and to wipe them with the towel with which He was girded." ~John 13:1-5

Though it was a holiday and a break from work for many, plenty of mamas around the United States spent yesterday much like any other--cooking meals, cleaning up messes, wiping faces, washing laundry. Sometimes it seems a holiday only guarantees there will be more work when the party is over! And yet what a gift it is, every time we are given the opportunity to have a few extra hours to gather with friends and relax with family.

In order for anyone to enjoy life at all, someone has to do some work! How could we enjoy a fun picnic if no one packed it? And lets' not imagine the way our children's bedrooms would look were all the moms to cease their labor!

I am grateful for the example of Jesus, who shows us over and over again as we read of the way He interacted with His disciples that these little things ... these unending, sometimes tiresome tasks moms face day after day ... they can become holy actions as we offer them to Him. Every time we serve our children, we invest in them, building bridges from our hearts to theirs, helping their souls understand the love and grace of God.

"Jesus spent His last night on earth with His disciples in service to them. How powerful their memories of that night must have been--the King of the whole universe touching and rubbing their dusty feet and gently drying them with a towel. Their Lord and Master breaking the loaf of bread and serving each of them for the celebrated feast of the Passover.

Jesus' example of servant leadership sets Him apart from so many historical religious leaders. He was not a God who lorded it over His followers and demanded they follow Him or coerced their obedience through authoritarianism and fear. Instead, He called them to the excellence of holiness and yet lovingly served them in order to win their hearts and show them the means of reaching others' hearts as well.

As I look to the hearts of my own children, even as adults, and seek to teach them about the grace of God, I realize my love and service to them must come before any of my great words, my teaching and training. My time--staying up late at night for conversations, watching movies and discussing them, my attention, my "soft-tickling", laying in bed with my sweet ones, listening to their hearts when I would rather be in bed--even when I am tired or have other "important" things on my mind--is what builds our relationship and prepares them to listen to what I have to say. Only then, once the wells of their need are filled with the grace of being loved, will my words to them about God's grace finally make sense."                               ~ from The Ministry of Motherhood

I want my children to understand God's goodness and love. And while demonstrating patience and service to them isn't always easy, it is always my privilege.

Even on a holiday!

How about you? What kind of weekend did you have? 

Sarah brought a little bit of Scotland home with her to me......

As I continue to live through redoing my kitchen, replacing our deck, moving Joel to Denver, continuing working on aspects of our new book, Desperate, having Nathan home, and skyping Joy, I still seek the "Sabbath Rest" in the midst of such a busy life. I am so very blessed and finding peace, quiet and wisdom as I take more baby steps to reclaim it here and there. 

And so, having my daughter, Sarah, freshly back from a research trip for a book in Scotland, Sarah brought home with her new ideals about securing and holding fast to a quiet-heart life. And so I give you this beautiful pondering of her heart as she waited for her home-coming plane in Heathrow airport in London yesterday. Here is my Sarah with her writing that is like soft music, a comfort to the depths of my soul.

My Skye

Posted by  on Sep 1, 2012

I write this from a seat in the waiting area of Heathrow Airport. My flight is delayed. I find it best to take these things sitting down, with a cup of coffee, and some means of writing. Pret-A-Manget supplied a cappuccino, my faithful little laptop the means to write, and here I am with you until my gate finally opens.

The post that I’m burning to write is the one (or three) I have all ablaze in my mind about my days on the Isle of Skye. But I pause as I begin, struck by the vast differences between the utterly remote reaches of Skye, and the place in which I find myself at present. Here, countless faces bob round me in a waiting room, accents and loudly-spoken annoyances swirl and ebb, the flight screens blink their constant departures. I’m solidly back in the indoor realm of modern day travel, with its swift flow of talk and time. You might think that in here, my two short days in the wildlands of Skye would seem almost not to have occurred. Or at very least, rather irrelevant.

But au contraire. Right here, right in this skinny airport seat of navy vinyl, with pop music thrumming in the shop nearby, I can still taste Skye. Breath its calm. Get a bit giddy at thought of the walk down to the shore. For Skye, my friends, is now a place of its own at center of my heart.

Once in a long, rare while, I encounter a place, and a time within that place, whose splendor carves out a presence within me. It makes a room in my soul that is both memory and at the same time, a concentrated presence. Places such as these – a nook in the heart of the mountains, a strip of certain shore by a northern sea, or even a well-known, weathered old home- come to me with a physical presence so vivid I am able to know it as I would a friend.

In Skye, I found that friendship. And I think a great part of it was the rightness of it all, the way the lines and colors of the sea and moors feel almost unspoilt by sin. The way the hills lift their shoulders and closed-eye faces in such unflinching solemnity, while the sea is a sprite around them, restless, merry, and never the same mood twice. The quiet of the air is perfect. The wind is an ever-changing chorus of song. The beauty requires so very much seeing, such a focus of eye and mind that time suddenly expands. It’s almost like slipping out of chronos for a day or two’s sojourn in a long-houred world of tea in the mornings and long, long walks throughout the day, and the wind wuthering (isn’t that a lovely word?) around the eaves.

I stayed in a room with one window gazing down to the sea, and one up the long fields to the row of farmer’s homes. And that room was in the home a woman who went quite swiftly from hostess to friend. Her home and grace and friendship were the foundation of my time. Just look at that tea and shortbread for greeting.

for the end of this lovely article, go to: thoroughlyalive.com

Now, I am dreaming of a trip to the Isle of Sky---anyone else?

IF you give me a mere 45 minutes alone, I get inspired!

"Above all, guard your heart, for from it flow the springs of life!" Proverbs

One of the reasons I am pulling back from the blog and otherwise most of my social media is because I just cannot give up the time with my family, talks with the kids, meals, my local discipleship group and my dear inner circle friends and then keeping my life together with healthy, home-cooked meals, walking for my health, reading at least a tiny bit for my brain and then there is a whole tangle and whirlwind of ministry responsibilities.

But last week, I had 45 minutes to breathe--to myself--that had no other commitment on it--and low and behold, the inspired juices started to flow again. The Lord began to fill my heart with all sorts of inspiration, ideas, faith, beauty, .....!!!!!!

It reminded me that I have not lost myself--the Lord and me are still there--but I have to provide time, sabbath rest time, to be able to have the God-energy--given by Him, vision spoken quietly and bubbling over into my heart--in order to thrive.

No matter what, heart integrity is so important to fight for--because that is what the life flows out of and the messages of our mouths come from what is within.

So, I am excited about messages ahead and life ahead--but I am finding them in my solitude, one 45 minutes at a time. And I am committed to stay in the circle of His heart and His voice and His will and I know that with Him, I always come out inspired and at peace.

Have a great weekend! and be blessed!