What are you sowing? And, consequently, what do you hope to reap?

Screen Shot 2014-10-07 at 8.52.35 PM Slouched down in my leather seat in a crowded railway car, I was being gently rocked to sleep by the rhythmic swaying back and forth of the old train clattering across the Polish countryside. Returning from a student conference in the mountains where I had been teaching and counseling with college students all weekend had left me a bit weary, lonely and  depleted. Working through translators for each message was a slow, tedious process.

As an American woman, I felt the cultural distance between me and these youth who had grown up under a supressive, Communist government. The religious freedom I had taken so for granted, made these students eager to know about God, about Jesus, about a kingdom in heaven where they would be free and blessed by the God who made them. Exhaustion tended to exagerate cultural differences and made me feel somewhat isolated as a 24 year old, struggling to understand even a portion of the things that were spoken to me. I remember riding along in the car wondering if I would ever not feel lonely.

Suddenly, the train took a small bend and in front of me were fields of thousands upon thousands of bright red poppies, gently swaying in the wind. Fields of poppies, obviously growing wild, spread over miles of the countryside. I was mesmerized by the beauty and found myself wondering how long it had taken for these beautiful flowers to be planted over the years so that there would be so many everywhere.

I began to imagine the invisible hand of God intentionally spreading seed generously over the many fields, so that in a country where there had been so much division, war and darkness for so many generations, that there would still be a picture of His beauty, creation and life to comfort those who would see it. That it would draw their thoughts and hearts, like it did mine, to thoughts of Him who was the artist of such beauty.

This has become to me a sort of picture of my place in the world. Jesus often talked about sowing seed in many of His parables. The people of His time were tied more closely to farming, sowing, reaping because their very lives depended on the well-being of the crops as their source of food.

James 3:18 says, "The seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace." I desire that there be a harvest of righteousness in and through my life as big and expansive as the poppy fields of my memory. This verse would indicate that righteousness is sown by peacemakers. Jesus communicated to His disciples in Matthew 5:  "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they  shall be called the sons of God."  Jesus himself, gave His life so that we might have peace with God. His whole being is focussed on redeeming, buying back that which was lost, bringing life where there is death.

Those who sow with tears will reap with joy.

I am most like Him when I, too, become a peacemaker, a redeemer, bringing peace where there was hostility, life where there is death. But the reason I so like the verse in James is that it brings us a picture of what we must do to bring this harvest of righteousness about--we must sow the seeds of righteousness, seed by seed, so that our harvest will be plentiful. We must sow seeds daily---weekly--for our whole lives, that there will be remnants of His beauty, peace, redemption, everywhere we go, every day that we live. If we sow peace and not anger in our home, there will be a legacy of peace. If we sow anger, a legacy of anger and death. It is a choice we make, every day, every hour, as to what we are sowing and what we will reap.

The seeds I sow are in relationship to people in my life every day. I must make a decision in my heart to sow a seed of peace where there is strife--to choose to be a peace-maker and to sow God's love and redemption. I must sow seeds of encouragement and faith through my words and through my writing to bring others to the point of peace in their own lives. Seed by seed, choice by choice, I have the ability to bring about a great harvest that will be ready for reaping in the final day when I meet Jesus face to face.  But in order for a farmer to have a harvest, he must plan on what he will sow, he must plan the seeds he will plant---it doesn't happen by chance. So I must choose what crop I will sow, how I will sow it, and choose to sow it in each situation and in each relationship that God brings my way. Peace and redemption also do not just happen by chance in my own life. There had to be an intentional plan.

There are times when I get letters from people---sometimes even hostile letters--that criticize my Pollyanna approach to life. Recently, a weary mom wrote, "I am sick of hearing about your perfect children! I am unsubscribing from your newsletter."

Now, I always take emails that I receive to heart. It seems that the meaning behind this letter, was that I only see and report the positive things about my family---and that I put forth only those things which I think are perfect. I hope that I never give the impression that I am perfect, or that my children are perfect or that my marriage is perfect, or anything else is perfect. I would hate to impose guilt on anyone, because of creating false standards through the stories of my articles, that someone else feels they can't immulate. I hope instead to always point my sweet friends to the One who has so befriended me. As a matter of fact, I have only made it this far because I so depend on God's grace and when I feel inadequate or like a failure, which I think all women do from time to time, there is a place I have trained myself to go--where Jesus is. I tell Him how I am feeling and then by faith, I acknowledge how grateful I am that He has made me adequate in Himself, by His strength, through His love and for His glory. I seek to rest there, as staying and simmering and swimming in the sea of guilt is destructive and heart-killing.

I have discovered that  no matter how hard I  try, I often fall short of my own expectations---let alone the expectations of others.  If this is true of me, that I fail--even when trying--then I must understand that even the best and most mature person I know, will also fail herself and me! So, my choice in my writing and in my life, is to give a picture of ideals for which I strive, in the context of the messy world in which I live. I want to sow a picture of beauty, a field of hope, and pattern of unconditional love in the midst of fields of life where there are weeds, rocks and untilled ground.

I have had a history of people very close to me who live in anger and criticism. This sowing of strife has left a string of broken relationships, deep hurt, alienation. Sometimes I am afraid to be around these people because no matter how hard I try or what I say or do, I know that eventually I will do something to arouse their criticism again. (I am choosing not to name these people as they are very close to me and I don't want to unnecessarily hurt them.) I used to think that if I just tried hard enough or did enough, eventually I would  receive the acceptance I was looking for.

But it took many years, to realize that their anger and criticism had nothing to do with me and no matter how hard I tried, I would never be acceptable to them, because the problem was in their own dark and hurting heart. But in order to have in my heart a harvest of peace, and not bitterness or anger; and a harvest of love and not hate and retaliation, I had to seek to plant seeds of God's righteousness, in order that my heart would truly bear a harvest of His making. This required that I pondered what it meant to be like God, to understand through His word, that love covers a multitude of sin; to learn that Jesus Himself, when He was being crucified, "while being reviled, did not revile in return, but kept trusting Himself to God who judges righteously."  (I Peter 2:23) He became my model--that I would choose not to revile those who were angry or negative, but that I, like Jesus, would keep trusting myself to God---to place my issues in His file cabinets and to let Him deal with my difficulties, and then to close the drawer once these issues were safe in His hands.

Instead of hoping that those near me would love me in such a way as to make me feel good about myself, I just kept reading the word everyday----seeking to know my God better, pondering the stories of Jesus, thinking about His communication to me through how He lived and what He said. Now, as I am getting older, I find His love to be deeply satisfying. After literally thousands of hours in His presence over the years, I have been influenced by being in the company of someone so compassionate, loving and strong. I have made peace with Him and appreciate Him. In doing so, I learned that I could give that peace more easily to others, because I didn't have as many expectations of them and I wasn't as dependent on how they responded to me,  in order to feel good about myself.

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What you sow, you will reap.

However, I see a lot of people wasting time, effort and energy in being critical of others close to themselves. There is a lot of anger, disappointment, jealousy, hate and bitterness floating around in the lives of people, that color their view of life, suck the energy out of them, and cause them to wonder where God has gone. It is so easy to be critical of  a family member or of our husbands and wallow in unmet expectations, or friends who have forsaken us, or in a child who has gone astray or is just immature or has a personality flaw that drives us crazy, or a parent who has abused or rejected us for our values.

James also spoke to this in the same passage where he taught about sowing peace. His words, "For where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, (getting our own way), there is dis-order and every evil thing! But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering and without hypocrisy. And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is  sown in peace by those who make peace." (James 3:13-18)

It starts with a choice--to allow the Holy Spirit to be Lord of our lives, even in the midst of strife; to decide ahead of time to imagine what it looks like to bring peace and redemption to each moment of life; to choose to sow righteousness into our relationships, because He chose to sow righteousness and peace into our lives, even at great cost to Himself. I believe that if thousands of His followers chose to sow this way each day, on all of the fields of life, there would be such a great crop of righteousness, visible beauty of His life, even in a place where so much darkness exists, that many hearts would be open to Him and to His ways, because of the overwhelming crop of righteousness present before their eyes. But it all begins with a choice in my heart and a plan to sow today, this day, in these fields where I find myself.

Whoever it is that brings so much emotional disappointment can keep us from the comforting love of God if we never make it to the point of forgiveness and acceptance of the person and circumstances. I know how deeply it can hurt to be rejected or ignored or treated unjustly. I have shed many tears over many years.

Yet, I can honestly say, that it has been these difficulties that have brought me to a place of freedom and joy. I have desperately needed the grace of God and in so seeking it, I have found it to be deeper than even I could imagine. He has shown me how deep His love is for me and how much He wants me to give as deeply to those in my life, who like me, don't deserve it, but need it all the same.

Love this community! Thanks for letting me hear from you! Come to the Mom Heart Conference!

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The Autumn Sky on a walk with Joel tonight. (We walk every night until it gets too cold!)

A wonderful closing to our day.

Thanks soooo much for everyone who wrote me yesterday or left a comment. You Mamas are truly the best! :)

If you missed the Mentoring Article, be sure to go HERE for the article I am referencing about all of us being a little crazy and hardly anyone normal!

My heart went out to each of you and I have been praying for you all day! I wish I could have you all over for an afternoon of sharing our stories. I would love to hear the details of your life. I have been thinking today how much I would love to gather some of you together at the mom's conference so we could talk about these issues--maybe we can figure out a room to meet in, to talk about some of these issues, your stories and then pray for each other. If only I had free airline tickets to give out!

Just in case some of you can come, I know that some of the hearts of the speakers I have been talking to understand the issues of the out of the box child and their stories are similar to yours. But no matter what, thought I would share about them with you. Each of these sweet women who are speaking have had disappointments, difficulties and issues but have messages about how God has met them in their point of need. Oh how I love these women and love to share them with you.

I have been getting messages from our speakers and am excited about what you will hear at the mom heart conference this year.

Our Speakers

I am so delighted to have so many wonderful speakers join me this year for the Mom Heart Conferences. Each of these remarkable women who will share their hearts and stories with you is a dear friend to me, and someone I consider a partner in ministry. We all share a heart for encouraging and helping Christian moms follow God wholeheartedly. They are truly “mom-hearted” women. The profiles below give only a small glimpse of the women you will hear at this year’s conferences. You will be blessed.

Sally Clarkson (CO, CA, TX)

Sally Clarkson is the mother of four wholehearted, grown-up, home-educated children, a conference speaker, and author of numerous books, including The Mission of Motherhood, The Ministry of Motherhood, Seasons of a Mother’s Heart, and The Mom Walk, Desperate (with Sarah Mae), Love God Greatly (with Angela Perritt), and 10 Gifts of Wisdom. She blogs regularly on SallyClarkson.com (formerly ITakeJoy.com). After college, Sally served with Campus Crusade for Christ (now Cru) in Communist Poland, and continued in ministry to women and families after her marriage to Clay in 1981. In 1994, they started Whole Heart Ministries to encourage and equip Christian parents through books, conferences, and online ministries. Since 1998, Sally has ministered to thousands of mothers through her Mom Heart Conferences and online ministries.

Find Sally atSallyClarkson.com | MomHeart.com

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Chrystal Hurst (CO)

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Chrystal Hurst once sought success in the corporate world, but found her greatest fulfillment in the world of church and family. She is a Christian writer, speaker, and worship leader, but more than that a fulfilled wife and mother of five, and the chief operating officer in her home. She is a self-proclaimed bibliovore who is actively seeking help for her addiction to Starbucks, sweet tea, and chocolate chip cookies. Chrystal co-authored the recent bestseller, Kingdom Woman, and blogs regularly at Chrystal’s Chronicles (chystalevanshurst.com/blog) reflecting on her faith and daily life. Chrystal firmly believes God’s promise in Jeremiah 29:11 and desires to help others believe and apply that truth to their lives.

Find Chrystal atChrystal’s Chronicles | ChrystalEvansHurst.com

 

Sarah Mae (CO)

Sarah Mae 3Sarah Mae is the wife of Jesse and mother of three spunky, beautiful children. She is the co-author with Sally Clarkson of Desperate: Hope for the Mom Who Needs to Breathe, and an ebook author with The UnWired Mom and 31 Days to Clean. Sarah Mae has influenced thousands of women worldwide through her blogs about faith, motherhood, and living a soul-full and cross-worn life. She founded the Allume Social conference, and is a contributing writer to DaySpring, (a division of Hallmark). Sarah Mae spends her days homemaking, home educating, writing, reading, and drinking salted caramel mochas. Her family embraces life in the beautiful Amish countryside of Pennsylvania.

Find Sarah Mae atSarahMae.com | DesperateMom.comSarahMaeWrites

 

Angela Perritt (CA, TX)

Angela is the wife to her high school sweetheart and mom to her three adorable little girls. Some of Angela’s favorite things in life are dancing with her daughters, laughing with her husband, and loving her Lord with the amazing life He has given her. You can find Angela at LoveGodGreatly.com where she encourages women around the world, in fourteen lanugages, to be in God’s Word on a daily basis through tech accountability groups and original Bible study materials. In spring 2014 Angela released her first Bible study book, You Are Loved (co-written with Sally), which stayed in the top ten on Amazon for over a week. Angela’s goal in life is to inspire her children and others to love God greatly with their lives one day at a time.

Find Angela atLoveGodGreatly.com

 

Heidi St. John (CA)

Heidi St. John is “The Busy Mom.” She and Jay, married since 1989, have seven children ranging from toddler to young married adult. Heidi recently became a grandmother and is enjoying this new season, calling it “all the newborn and none of the nightshift!” As a popular author and conference speaker, Heidi brings a refreshing mix of information and inspiration to listeners on the radio, in person, and through the written word. Her transparency and honesty are like a breath of fresh air in a world where too many speakers seem to have all the answers. Her ability to be real with her listeners and readers allows them to identify with her at a deep level which in turn allows Heidi to gently lead her audience toward the Savior who actually DOES have all the answers.

Find Heidi atHeidiStJohn.comFirmlyPlantedFamily.org

 

Ruth Schwenk (TX)

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Like you, Ruth wears many hats! She loves being the wife of a pastor, who is also her love and friend, and is a grateful homeschooling mom of four beautiful children on earth, and five miscarried babies in heaven. Ruth is a graduate of The Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, IL. On August 1st, 2011, Ruth launched TheBetterMom.com, a site dedicated to becoming a better moms by sharing life and learning together, to the glory of God. In September 2013, she launched FortheFamily.org, dedicated to helping Christian families, and is currently under contract with Tyndale House Publishers as co-author of two upcoming books. Ruth’s passions include, loving God, leading worship, and inspiring others to have a God honoring family.

Find Ruth atTheBetterMom.com | ForTheFamily.org

 

Kat Lee (TX)

Kat Lee is a writer, speaker, blogger, and the reigning Candy Land champion in her home. She blogs at InspiredtoAction.com where she helps overwhelmed moms become focused and purposeful. She has traveled with and writes for Compassion International. Her ebook, Maximize Your Mornings, has been downloaded over 15,000 times. Kat and her husband Jimmy live in Texas with their three children. She loves running, God, and Tex-Mex food, not necessarily in that order.

Find Kat atInspiredtoAction.com | Twitter, Facebook

And remember, we have a special offer for all of you who sign up in October.

OCTOBER REGISTRATION BONUS!
 

Register in October and receive a $10.00 Gift Certificate to use at the conference book tables. And, you'll be entered in a drawing for a free registration. Save $20 off of the regular price by getting the early registration. Promotion ends 11:59:59 PM 10/31/2015. Register Now!

Tell your friends to come with you and have your own private retreat as you enjoy it together.

See you there. (and for those who will not be able to make it, we will try to have an online conference later in the spring when we work out all the details.)

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Many of us are a little bit crazy, and hardly anyone is perfectly normal Mentoring Monday

"The best way out is always through." Robert Frost

"He is mindful that we are but dust." Psalm 103

Funny how many people say to me, "Oh, it was easy for you, Sally. Your children were just naturally intelligent or naturally submissive. That's why your children have turned out so well, so healthy and strong."

How far from the truth, if anyone could have seen the inner-workings of our daily lives. 

(Stay tuned for a very long post--you can take several days to read it--but it is my article of the week!)

If you are living in this fallen world, then I already know your life isn't perfect. If you are a mama, I know your children have brought issues and responsibilities into your life that are accompanied with stress, more work, puzzlement, and challenge--and push all your buttons.. Almost everyone I know feels that they have a "difficult" child, the one who is the source of challenge, and requires a lot of attention and time--whatever the reason. No matter what your issues with your child, there is a need to know others feel like you do and that there is hope in the years ahead. I am now in a place to give you great hope, as I am amazed at how faithfully God turned some impossible moments and years into strength in the lives of my children. He was faithful, it was not as impossible as it felt and my sweet ones have responded to the years of investing in their lives. Take courage and hope!

As I look back on the unique puzzle God allowed me to have with the make-up of my own four, I can tell you it was a constant challenge, filled with difficulty and fraught with passages of darkness. Yet, I see that walking this path with Him and holding His hand through each turn in the road, has been life-shaping. My longing for heaven, my understanding that this is the "broken" place, and my appreciation that He will make all things new has grown deeply in my own heart. And my love for Jesus is now so very seasoned in a deeper understanding of what it cost for Him to serve and redeem His children--and he was my model as I learned the cost of a parent's love from His love and sacrifice for me.

And yet, the joy of seeing His faithfulness, His amazing work of grace in the life of our family has brought deep satisfaction, to know that my labor, my dark nights clinging to Him, my putting one foot in front of the other has been a labor of co-creating life and light in our home with God as my constant companion.

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The Beginnings

Rolling around on the floor and screaming and hitting my hand away, my little 17 month old boy, was exhibiting such profoundly disruptive behavior that I really didn't know what to do. Even nursing had been difficult.  My first two had been easier at that age and through loving, consistent training and relationship, they had fallen into a predictable pattern expected for toddlers when they had been this age. Though I did not know that even then, one of them was exhibiting behavior that should have given me clues of what was ahead. Darkness surrounded my thoughts and nurtured defeat, puzzlement, fear, insecurity.

One day, I stumbled upon putting these shoes on Nathan, that had caused us so many stressful moments, a possible solution to his tantrums.  By accident, I tied his shoe laces exactly the same length and pulled them evenly across the top of his toes. He sighed deeply and patted my arm and said, "Tank you, mommy," and looked so very relieved. Surely tying his shoestrings perfectly even was not the issue that was tearing my little boy apart.

But, when I tried it again the next day, he was calm, patted me again and said thank you, again. This behavior puzzled me because I had never heard of obsessive compulsive behavior before, nor did I have a clue what mental illness was, or know that it could reveal itself at such a young age. I just knew I had a vague sense that something was ticking inside of Nathan that made him so different and uncomfortable at times that he could hardly function. And then it began with another child and eventually another. Other compulsions seemed to drive moments of our children's life.

This was only a tiny example of his "out of the box" behavior over the years. And then I had two other children that were clinically diagnosed with similar issues. One had over-arching irrational fears of leaving us for fear someone would die. I am not speaking of a nightmare or two or fear during a period of childhood that passes. I am speaking of compulsive, irrational thoughts, panic attacks, irrational behavior, constant fears that drive even young adults to despair, darkness over the tiniest of separations. Knowing it is irrational is one thing, but making it go away is another.

Constant hand-washing, nose wiping, countless showers, confessing, anger, weeping, irrational behavior accompanied these patterns at times that differed with each child. Learning issues also invaded our lives. Daily, it seemed, we dealt with a variety of challenges. Often I dreaded the nightly dinner table because I never knew when some havoc, anger or irrationality would erupt and create conflict, again!  Especially in the teen, growing, hormonal years, every malady was exaggerated. Coming to understand these years, that this was to be expected, made it easier for me with each child, as I knew the level of frantic behavior would calm a bit after the hormonal years. I was a novice learning each season from all the new challenges that came our way.

Compulsive behavior, clinical fears, irrationality, hours upon hours of seeking to figure out just how to deal with the many alarming behaviors of my otherwise wonderful children, had me in and out of insecurity, pulling my hair out, trying to decide if it had to do with my discipline philosophy, wondering if I was a failure as a mother and just being plain stumped at the varied and mysterious behavior of several of my children. There were learning issues that required an educated understanding of how to help them grow to become their best self, how to help them cope with their disabilities, how to cause them to flourish and believe that God had a great plan for their lives.

Clay and I are not in any way perfect but generally loving, devoted, fairly constant, stable people in most ways and this unusual behavior was difficult for us to understand. The problems our children suffered were not a result of our own behavior as parents, but they were internal issues that came with the children when they were born. This understanding helped us accept the limitations of our family and to learn to take one day at a time and to yield our burdens into God's hands. We began to understand that our children could grow stronger, could mature, but they would never totally change--their stripes would be the same their whole lives, even as with us as adults.

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Loving my girls for who they were on the inside, as God had shaped their unique personalities.

Own Your Authority, subdue your world

But the starting point toward health for the children and for us,  was when I decided that God had made Clay and me the parents of our children and we had the freedom  and authority to train, love, pray for and figure them out without having to follow formulas or expectations of others. Faith, education about their issues, lots of love and grace, perseverance and patience--old fashioned virtues were the keys to our ultimate favorable influence over our children's lives.

Formulas would never have worked with my children, because each of them was extremely different and they had different weaknesses, strengths and a variety of neurosis. Healthy relationships, predictable rhythms of life, love covering a multitude of sin, forward speaking into the great people they would become and a watering each day of their hearts with the word of God, as well as  their minds memorizing His truth. Then prayers over them every day, out-loud, cherished before the throne of heaven together went deep into their souls.

Many of my friends said,"You just aren't spanking enough!" "Oh, that child is normal--they are just having a hard day. it's all in your mind."

"That is perfectly normal behavior--they are just tired today." "You are just tired today." "It can't be that hard."

Very few people wanted to listen to my queries or questions or when I asked them about the erratic behavior of my children--longing for guidance or insight of any kind. Some acted embarrassed when I was vulnerable, some blew it off as though I was just an overly sensitive mama. And the words emotional or  mental illness made everyone uncomfortable. Loneliness is a part of the pathway when God has allowed us to have children who are a little bit more mysterious. But in the loneliness, I grew deep roots.

Some people communicated shame to me at the thought that my children had these issues. Demon possessed, I heard more than once, from sincere supposed Christian friends.

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Accepting my boys, as they were, their antics, noise, issues, testosterone--that made them wild boy types, believing they would grow up to become heroes..

But I knew in my mama intuitive heart that it was something else. Turns out, these many years later and years of becoming a student of some emotional and mental illness issues, that I have come to understand my children, and myself.  I  have lived long enough to see that, even though some of their personal behavioral issues were quite extreme, and their maladies were real, they all function now, most of the time, with responsibility, love, a good work ethic and have grown up to love God. And yet they live within the limitations of themselves and still deal with issues. But now we have come to understand more, to be patient, to not overreact, and always to learn more and always to seek new research of what will help long term.

It comforted Sarah when she read something from Madeleine L'engle about all artists being a little mentally ill. Maybe that was it--these problems were there with all who were creative.

Watching "Beautiful Mind" comforted my children, that others shared their strange darkness. Reading the stories of others who had their issue, helped them to have hope that they would live a productive life.

Getting Rid of  False Standards

So many women I know want their children to fit into the "normal" expectations of what they think that children should be--

*that they would learn to have controlled behavior in public,

*that they would perform up to a certain standard  on exams,

*that they would be able to do age appropriate work at exactly the time the "experts" say they should.

*That their children would not embarrass them or misbehave in front of others.

*That they would not be so quiet, or loud, or active or dull or big or little or fat or thin or precocious or dull,

*That they would walk with God in the same traditions and ways they had lived as parents.

That they would just fit in.

And when they do not fit in, mamas can feel ashamed, embarrassed, like they are a failure.

Don't they know, "Man looks at the outward appearance, God looks at the heart."

But the voices inside of us sometimes accuse:

"It is my fault that they aren't achieving," "I am failing, I am not doing enough, I can't do enough, I don't know how to do enough."

Or what's wrong with this child? Why can't they just be ____________? 

All of these thoughts lies, false expectations, worldly values. We must understand, we are never in control of the wild, free spirit inside of our children. That is why we must live, daily, yielding their lives into the hands of the one who knows them and has designed them for His own good work.

The Gift of Unconditional, Devoted Love

God made children in all shapes and sizes, all sorts of personalities, all sorts of skills and potential and differing levels of health--emotionally, physically, mentally. There is no standard "right" kind of child or adult, except in our false worldly standards. Why do we attempt to make all of our children "fit in" when God created all of us to be different?

And then there is the fall--creation has been damaged by sin and there is no perfect person, not even you. The capacity for being damaged goods is great. Not only are we fragile physiologically, but often the scars of our lives make us fragile.

All of have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

Jesus said, "In this world you have tribulation, (trials)."

Some are blind, some have hearing problems, digestive, diabetes, physical deformities, cancer, seizures. Some are angry, fearful, sad, depressed, incapable in some way. There is no promise, no guarantee that in this world, we or our children will have lives without pain or calamity.

If this is true, then why do we strive so much to conform, to fit the norm, to pretend that anyone should ever expect all of their children to be without issues or problems--or differences.

I found out that the mental illness in our family was hereditary and will probably be in every generation. My own family tried to stuff the problems below the surface so no one would notice. "Ignore it and maybe it will go away," was their philosophy.

Clay's mom had a clinical sort of compulsion. My brother was bi-polar, angry, not all together at peace with his life, until he died.

Was it Clay's fault or mine that we had 3 children who had compulsive, mental, emotional issues, and the 4th was borderline?--well, Clay of course! (not really--probably both of us! :))

We all need to be able to live gracefully in our realities with ourselves and with our children. We need each other's help and compassion, not fearing condemnation or criticism for what we might be doing wrong.

"It was for freedom that Christ set us free, therefore, keep standing firm and do not be subject to a yoke of slavery." Galatians 5

But it is time to agree that we need freedom to live within the limitations of our own personality, abilities, behavior, maturity and seek to make peace with who God has allowed us and our children to be in this broken world.

Only as you accept limitations as a part of life, only as you accept your puzzle as a place God can bring glory, that it is your place of spiritual worship, can you begin to breathe His grace to take you through all the days--difficult and blessed. Challenging and so very joyful.

Give the gift that parents are called to give!

One of the best gifts you can give to your children is to love them as they are, to speak words of acceptance and appreciation for them exactly as God has made them. Words of "I believe in you--your dreams, your potential." "I am so blessed to be your parent. You are a gift to me, a kiss from God." "I will always be here for you, no matter what each of your days hold, you can count on me to support you and to help you. And God is on your side--He loves you so very much. You are very precious to Him."

The way our children will believe that God loves them is by having us be His unconditional love--His hands, His voice, His blessing, His patience, His call on their lives every day.

Join me today in my video as I share my own journey through mental illness and learning disabilities with my own children.

Be sure to register for the 2015 Mom Heart Conference! We can't do without you!

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The Goals of Disciplining our Children

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 10.00.42 PM Training our children to learn to listen to our instruction and to obey our requests is such a challenging goal for us as parents. It requires that we understand the goal of our instruction and the way to secure that goal.

Paul said, "But the goal of our instruction is love from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith." I Timothy 1:5

This summarized some of the over-arching goals of our training and discipline---a loving heart that is pure and a sincere valid faith in God.  It helped me to realize, though, that our training was a two part emphasis--First to teach our children to learn to submit to our requests=obedience. But then our real goal was to cultivate tender hearts inside our children so that they would learn to obey us with honor, out of having learned to respect us.

If we want our children to grow up to become those adults who listen to God's voice and obey His will, then they must learn how to listen to our voice and to obey our will. Relationship is the key to helping them learn to want to submit to our own ways. When we lovingly serve them, invest in them, teach them wisdom and show them a life of obedience to God, then they will follow our pattern in their own lives.

(Oh, my goodness, listening to yourself is always interesting!--where did I get that southern accent? Who is that lady? :))

1997 HomeEducation Tapes: The Importance of Obedience. Go HERE for the tape sets.

Don't forget to register for the Mom Heart conference! HERE October discount, drawing 1 free registration from those who register early and a $10 coupon at the book table.

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From Weariness to Rest, Hope and Friendship! Heart-filling 2015 Mom Heart Conferences

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Paul Matthey

Almost 20 years ago, I had just put all 4 of the kids to bed, barely dragging through the, "I love you. Let's pray. Stay in bed," routine and fell full into a comfy chair weary to the bone. Constant laundry, dishes, messes, fusses, and then all over again. I glanced over at Clay and whispered,

"This is the hardest thing I have ever done! Sometimes I just don't think I will make it. I feel so alone at times."

As we talked, he said, "What would help you?"

I wish there was a fun conference in a hotel. There would be clean sheets that no one else had slept in, chocolates, friends and a tea or luncheon to make me feel special and speakers who would inspire me, but without gult,  to remember why I am doing this idealistic life."

I longed for validation, hope, rest, fun, adults and encouragement but didn't know where to get it.

"Well, you know, we could start a conference like that!" Clay said. 

Not exactly what I had in mind, but it captured my imagination.

And the rest is history. 18 years ago we hosted our first Mom Heart (Whole Hearted Mom) conference, hoping for 300 and we had 650 with 50 turned away. Evidently, I was not the only one who needed a break.

Each year, I feel more deeply the need for sweet moms who pour themselves out constantly to have such a break. But now, after all of these years, I know they are a blast as well as a lifeline to so many moms over the years.

I am so excited to announce that registration is now open for our conferences this year. I believe they will be the best one yet, as I have talked to our speakers about their messages, their heart for God and their love for motherhood and they are spilling over with encouragement, even as the past speakers have been. Below is the letter I have written to all of the moms who have attended before. I hope you will find yourselves amongst these words! This year's conference will be all about a new book I am launching in January about the secret to Owning Your Personal Life and leaving a lasting legacy through the story you live out in the places you live. I am so excited to share this book and these messages with you! Read my heart!

Dear Sweet Mom,

Like you, I love being with my children. It is always a delight when I can spend time with them, draw them out, encourage them, and help them. In this new season of my life, it is so fulfilling to see what God is doing in their young lives. They truly are the reward and blessing of parenthood that God promises. In many ways I feel that I live for my children, and yet I know instinctively that my children are not my life. God wants me to reach for more–to leave a legacy of faith not just through my children, but through the life He has given me to live. I believe He is calling me to own my life for His glory.

After over forty years of serving Christ, and over thirty years of marriage and parenting, I feel like I can understand Paul’s words to the Philippian church, “But one thing I do … I press on toward the goal for the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” Paul knew that he had to choose to own his life for the sake of Christ–he had one chance to live the one life he was given for God. It is a choice I made in my early twenties after reading Philippians 3:7-14 and have lived by ever since as a woman, wife, and mother. When Tyndale Publishing House asked me to write my new book, Own Your Life, I took it as a challenge not only to look back at my life of walking with God, but also as an opportunity to encourage Christian women.

So this year, I want to talk about how you, as a mom, can own your life. Don’t worry, that doesn’t mean doing more than you’re already doing, as though activity is the mark of ownership. Guilt is not on the agenda! Rather, I want every mother to leave our conferences this year with a renewed and refreshed conviction that you can say with Paul: “I press on so that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus.” I want you to see that what you are doing as a mother is part of that “one thing” that He has for your life. I want you to find deep, rich, and meaningful fulfillment in the life of faith you are giving for your children and living for God.

Each year, I am reminded afresh that our weary world needs a restoration of biblical motherhood–women who have chosen to own their lives for God’s glory. Mary, when told by the angel Gabriel that she would be the mother of the Son of God, responded with faith: “I am the Lord’s servant … May it be done to me as you have said” (Luke 1:38). She owned the life God was giving her. She embraced the legacy He had for her. This Mom Heart Conference is just one way I can partner with the Spirit of God to encourage and equip a generation of mothers to be ready and willing to serve God no matter what. We all can live a legacy of faith.

This will be my 18th year of ministering to moms in these conferences, and I continue to be energized and excited about what God is doing through mothers in this generation. I hope you will join me this year as we reach out together to take hold of all God has for us as mothers.

In his heart,

Sally Clarkson

Stay tuned for more in the coming weeks. For all of you who register this month, we are giving a special early rate  discount for the conference as well as a $10 gift certificate to use at the conference book tables. And at the end of the month, we will draw from all of the moms who have registered and give one of the moms a free conference and a full refund to the conference of her choice! Hope you can join us! Share with your friends and have a retreat together! We so appreciate your helping us get the word out! Hope you can come. And let me know some of the messages you hope to hear!

For more information, go HERE and you will find registration! Share the button in your sidebar to let others know!

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Life-Giving Moment about Marriage

Life-Giving Moment on Marriage  

Above all, keep fervent in your love for one another, because love covers a multitude of sins.

I Peter 4:8

Today, I am sharing a part of a conference tape with you that was made many years ago. Clay and I had an interesting love story as we were both in our late 20's when we started dating, after knowing each other for 8 years. My parents thought I would never get married! Here is a part of the story!

(Soooo crazy to listen to this after all these years! I must have had a little bit of a southern accent when I lived in Texas. It is no longer here!:))

[audio mp3="http://sallyclarkson.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/MH-141112_mixdown.mp3"][/audio]

You can find this full audio series: Renew My Heart Oh God 1998

What is your secret to having a good marriage?

Mentoring Monday Developing a Vision that Comprises a Whole Life to Complete!

Vision for Building Godly Generations

Today, I will be sending Sarah off to Oxford where she and Joy will both be studying this year. Joy is in a semester program from Biola University, and had to achieve a high grade point to attend there. It was through lots and lots of hard work that she was able to make it. Sarah will be in a longer program and she had to procure admission as a full time student through a very complicated application process. Both girls learned to work hard as a part of our normal family life and this and God's grace has forwarded their opportunities.

As a young mama, I never dreamed my girls would be able to get into Oxford, let alone have the academic excellence to flourish there. But I see over and over again how God took my fish and loaves and made it enough--He was faithful beyond my expectations to answer prayer and to work beyond my own capability.His strength perfected in my weakness.

But, I have to say, that having sweet, grown adult children who are my best friends, who are standing on my shoulders in life and accomplishment, is a very sweet and worthwhile fruit that tastes so very sweet to my heart and soul.

I never finished all of the educational goals I had with my children, not even one year. We had too many ear infections, moves, break down of washing machines, you know the story! I wasn't as patient as I thought I should be, and I was tempted so many times to give up ideals. But then would have one more quiet time, and pray one more day and God would whisper in my ear, "Keep going, Keep trusting, keep building one day, one brick at a time. This is holy work that will have eternal results." Most of the great or wonderful results we eventually see in the lives of our children, as they embrace God's call on their lives, were built in thousands of mundane moments--pick up your dish, you may not talk to your brother that way--how do you say that more kindly? Go back to bed and mama will tuck you in! Sure, I will stay up and listen to you one more time! Let's read our Bible story today and talk about it."

I was sooo very sincere and devoted and kept going, one day after another as well as I knew how. Many days were weary ones and at all stages along the way, I found challenges. But I felt that the Holy Spirit would fill in the cracks and that if I obeyed His call, He would make my work more than the sum of all of my efforts, because I had trusted Him to raise my children through me.

Yet, what had captivated my imagination to be able to commit myself to this work, was that God has placed precious human beings into my hands with the call to shape their souls with the values of Jesus and His kingdom, to be a steward of their minds and expose them to the best writers, artists, musicians and classical stories, and to train them to love, serve and relate the love of God to those He brought into their lives.

When the imagination of a woman is captured by the thought that God has called her to build  a whole, spiritually and emotionally healthy family, a history, a legacy of believers who will have an impact for godliness in the world, she will have a work to pursue, a vision to inspire her soul, that will last for a lifetime. If you say you are a committed Christian, then you have to obey God in His design and call on your life as a mama. It is not a choice, it is a stewardship.

But when you follow God and seek to live out your story in faithfulness to His vision, you can trust Him to complete your work and rest in His ability to give grace. He gave me grace upon grace, little by little-and He is the one who faithfully provides the strength for each day.

A wise woman knows that to build a house for God that will last generations, she must have a detailed plan. Proverbs tells us that the foolish woman does not build, but tears down her home.When a woman does not understand or have a long range idea of what she is supposed to build, there is no  opportunity to build foundations that will hold the souls and lives of her children for generations to come--and so there is very little of a long term heritage or home that will be built.

A woman can build a large, long lasting legacy of a home--that is, generations beyond her that will understand the message of loving and serving God, building moral character, learning a work ethic, learning to love well, etc.  The grand estate of influence, will obviously take much more work and planning, many more years to accomplish, but will accommodate literally thousands of people for generations. It just depends on the scope of her vision.

This house building will require hours and hours of blood sweat and tears. To be built well, it requires a detailed and artistic plan, and the plan will need to be reworked and adjusted and corrected along the way. Simply put, the building of  grand estate of righteousness will require her whole life and diligence and sacrifice for all of her days. And yet, so many just want it to be simple or over because they never knew or understood the scope and requirements.

Consequently, the foolish woman tears down her own home, not intentionally, but often, because she is not building, shaping the hearts and lives of her children--and so culture will naturally step in and shape the hearts, minds and souls of her children because she was absent or passive, but not intentional. Most women do not mean to leave a legacy of broken children with scars of anger, lack of training and purpose. But I meet adults all the time who carry scars and wounds from their childhood into adulthood because their parents never planned to leave a legacy of health and strength. But they never knew how to build and were not willing to do what it took to build, because they were side swiped by the storm of it all. And honestly many children grow into broken adults because their parents were passive and gave their children over to the voices and temptations of culture.

But, let us understand, the foolish women tears down her opportunity to build, and will be held accountable by God, for what she built as he entrusted precious, eternal human beings into her hands, to shape for His kingdom and to learn His love and ways.

The problem with motherhood and the need for women to build godly estates of godly leaders in their homes, through multiple children that a woman will invest her life into, is that most women had no training, preparation or education of what it would take or how much it would cost them. Most just got married with the hope that someone would love them and take care of them and provide security and affirmation, and then babies came, and overwhelmed them.  They had never been trained for the job, never seen it modeled when they grew up,  never had a vision for how powerful a house (family) for God could be or how much work it would take.

So, life came along and so did the babies,  and overwhelmed and sweet women who have never had the opportunity to build a vision with a plan, find themselves up to their eyeballs in details and duties and the caring of babies without the support or input, accountability or help from experienced women who have built godly legacies. The greatest job in the world, that will indeed influence what our nation becomes, as the children of now become the legacy of adults for the next generation--and yet, no time or effort has been invested to educate or prepare these precious and significant leaders, moms, how to do it. And our churches ignore this important, Biblical call, and it just fades into nothingness in the priority the focus of woman's ministries in our generation. Satan would love nothing more than for us to minimize the importance of deeply investing our time and lives into the minds, hearts, souls and training of our children, because he knows they are essential to bringing the kingdom of God to bear in their generation.

For most moms, it is like facing a tornado and storms of life  or a battlefield for souls,  with no skills, preparation or resources or protection or help--the tornado of the present demands and the battles just takes over.

I have also observed that sweet mamas want an immediate fix for this moment right now, the present emergencies of life, instead of understanding that this is a very long term project and much care must be given to the broad range of building.

Planning must not be based on the emergency and immediate need, in the midst of a crisis, but on the long term building and work and endurance until the project is completed.

Planning is the key to what will be built and planning requires thought and time.

Today, this week, step aside from life and check what you are building.

Simplify your plan,

create the essentials, the rhythms that need to be established to get the work done,

cut out the unnecessary expenditures of time and energy and money that are not necessary to the overall building and

be sure to plan in rest and refreshment every week along the way.

If you understand and embrace the idea that God has created each mom to leave a legacy of righteousness, that each mama has been given her children as a work of her faith and worship, and that the training and discipline of children will shape her life and heart more into the image of Christ, then she will have the supernatural stamina and strength to keep going, as she keeps her vision and plan fresh and as the grid through which she sees life.

Take some time this week to sit alone and breathe. Write down what your long term vision is for your family. What do you want the end results to be? How are you building character? What do you need to do to get training or help? What would help you endure longer? Plan it into your days in a very specific way.

May God bless your planning and vision, for without a plan, nothing great can be built.

A New Narnian Experience and a lot of fun!

photo Michael ward  

 

Me, Dr. Michael Ward, and Sarah

"He who walks with the wise will grow wise."Proverbs 13:20

Mentoring Mondays seem to sneak upon me so quickly. I had such great intentions this week to write about one of the many ideas that has been bubbling up in my thoughts. But tonight, instead of writing a new blog, I spent the evening in the delightful company of our friend, Dr. Michael Ward, the author of Planet Narnia.

When Sarah was a student in Oxford, Dr. Ward was her favorite professor and taught her a tutorial on the writings of C.S. Lewis. The rigorous discussions and inspiring input helped Sarah to grow leaps and bounds in her skills as a writer and as a thinker.

We had the privilege of hosting Dr. Ward at our church tonight where he spoke on the subject of Imagination and the Christian Life including the views of  C.S. Lewis on the role of imagination. How I love being in the presence of someone who causes me to either love God more or think of Him more profoundly. The   lecture did just that! We had such fun engaging with many people about the ideas shared. Yet, the most fun, of course, was sitting in our den, with bowls of ice cream and fudge brownies discussing, sharing stories, ideas, laughing together and talking late into the night. Consequently, my new blog post was never written.

One of the truths I have followed for many years is that I will always enrich my life and the lives of my children when I seek the company of wise people. Dr. Ward is one of the most noted scholars on C.S. Lewis in the world, and to share a weekend together with him has been a real blessing to our whole family.

He has written several books, that give new meaning and insight into the Narnia chronicles.

Two of the books he authored are amongst the favorites of Sarah and Joel. Joel found his books and purchased them for Sarah for Christmas a few years ago, and so Sarah was quite sure he was the one she would enjoy as her professor. Now our whole family has delighted in our friendship with him. You can find his books HERE and HERE.

 

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as well as,

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Now, I am off to bed, to dream of kingdoms where lions are noble and rule, and children become kings and queens.

 

Peace in the Chaos: One thing at a time

candle

"My purpose in organizing my household is not to live up to some external value system but to make life easier and more peaceful for the whole family.  I have learned that I can reduce the anxiety we feel by reducing the stressors, at the same time knowing that they will never totally go away - because, after all, stress is a part of life.  Learning to live with the tension of never getting all of our work done and still being content is a worthwhile attitudinal goal as we serve our children. The three primary and constant sources of stress in my home life have always been "stuff," information, and time." -The Mission of Motherhood

As a mother, finding balance is crucial to healthy, sane living. God does not call the home to be perfect, but peaceful. While there will probably never come a day that is completely free from stress or have-to's, we can find ways to better live in the tension of work and rest, striving and contentment. Once, a friend of mine said that when dust was on top of every table top and her home looked messy, she dimmed the lights and lit candles and it made it all sparkly and acceptable. Maybe that is why I like candles--they give grace and beauty all at once.

Some of the elements that helped keep our home peaceful were: -Clear, communicated expectations -Designated quiet time -Lists/chore charts -Goals -Making tasks enjoyable (listening to music while cleaning, lighting candles or baking afterward as a reward)

Remember that God is a god of order, and also a god of peace. He should set the standards for our home, not our own worries and anxieties. Life is all about balance, and no matter how hard we try, we simply cannot do everything in every day. When it comes to "stuff", organize one thing at a time. Look at the task at hand, not the long-term, 1-year plan of organization. With information, the same rules apply: take in one moment at a time, not overwhelming your mind with 100 details all at once. Find peace in the chaos today by resting in God's grace, and knowing that even with the best of intentions, our anxious attitudes will not serve our children.

 Take a moment today to complete the reflection and application below with scripture and questions to ponder.

"When anxiety was great within me, your consolation brought joy to my soul." -Psalm 94:19

"My people will abide in a peaceful habitation, in secure dwellings, and in quiet resting places." -Isaiah 32:18

"For I, the Lord your God, hold your right hand; it is I who say to you, “Fear not, I am the one who helps you." -Isaiah 41:13

-What are the three primary and constant sources of stress in your home life? -How can you better manage your time and energy this week to refocus your priorities and eliminate stress? -Who is setting the standards for your home? (Pinterest? Better Homes Magazine? Comparing your home to a friend's?) Remember that God never called us to perfection.

Homeschooling is a matter of the heart--not the curriculum!

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"Greater love has no mom than this, that she lay down her life for her child."

All homeschooling mamas have moments of insecurity:

Can I really do this? Am I adequate? Will I cover all the bases and fill in all the holes? Will I pick the right curriculum? Am I doing enough? These are normal questions as educating our children at home are important issues.

Yet, a truly educated person, one who can think and reason, who loves to learn, who is engaged in ideas, books and has a love for learning is not that way because of a perfect educational experience. Motivation and a love from learning all start in the heart-the place where dreams are made, inspiration is given, an affection grows between the child and teacher. Understanding how to motivate the heart must be the goal for the mom who wants to truly influence her child.

Touching the Heart with home schoolingfrom the CD The Whole Hearted Child workshop

[audio mp3="http://sallyclarkson.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/WH140925_mixdown-1.mp3"][/audio]

How can you use story and books to reach your child's heart to want to learn?

What motivates or interests your child?

How can you be encouraging to your child in the areas where they struggle? How can you make learning more fun and interesting to your children?

Do your children feel as though you find it a privilege to homeschool them because you are enjoying it? If you are happy teaching them, they will be more likely to want to learn what you have to teach.

Educational influence is a matter of the heart connection and perceived integrity of the person who is extending the opportunity to love learning and to enjoy being challenged.