Interruptions Strike Again!

“The great thing, if one can, is to stop regarding all the unpleasant things as interruptions of “one’s own” or real life. The truth is of course that what one calls the interruptions are precisely one’s real life…the life God is sending day by day.”

-C.S. Lewis

It seems I always have more plans, goals and to do lists than I can usually accomplish in a day or week. And instead of expecting that life will be filled with interruptions, sometimes I am still surprised. I was thinking about this great quote yesterday when it just kept snowing and snowing and snowing. I should have expected this because our lives have been stopped by snow countless times over the years.

And then this verse came to mind, “This is the day the Lord has made. I will rejoice and be glad in it.” This day, with all the unexpected interruptions, the calamities, the illness that came upon us as we were traveling, the irritations….. This is life. And the choice that is always right, I will rejoice and be glad in it.”

Yesterday when so many of you friends said, “How beautiful, wonderful, delightful the snow is as a result of seeing the snow scenes from my home.” And of course you helped me to redouble my efforts to correct my attitude to breathe in peace and to seek to enjoy the beauty. Thank you. It really is beautiful.

And then I got tickled. A friend commented, “Who is going to shovel all of that snow?”

Well the servants who take care of the house of course. :)
And so, my co-servant, (Clay) and I spent time outdoors to shovel the long driveway so that we can eventually get out to go to the store. We did miss church. The snow plow for the city, had plowed a tower of 8 feet of snow against our driveway as we live at the end of the street in a cul de sac.

Yes, indeed Mr. Lewis, this is our real life. Snow, interruptions, and the grace to live into the moments.

Praying for grace for you, my friends, for whatever your life brings your way today. May you find joy lurking around the corners.

The Fundamental Mission of Motherhood

I look back to the memories of my childhood, a strong image that comes to my mind is that of my mother's loving hands. I thought they were the most beautiful in the world. In many ways, I still feel that way.

Because I had been a premature baby, I was often sick with a variety of respiratory illnesses, including chronic asthma and occasional bouts with pneumonia. My memories of these illnesses, however, are mostly pleasant, because my mother would gently stroke my brow as she talked softly or told me stories and gave me her full attention. I remember feeling very loved by such focused attention.

At other times, when I fidgeted in church services, I remember my mother's hands massaging my own, pulling and squeezing each of my fingers as she quietly played finger games with me. As a young child, sitting next to her in a big overstuffed chair, I would watch her hands as she read to me from an oversized children's book. Her fingers would point to the enticing, heart-delighting pictures and turn the pages of the large volumes as we leisurely sat together and talked and read.

And during the period when I was having a recurring nightmare—one I still remember!—I especially remember the comfort of my mother's hands when she came to my bedside. She would take my hand in hers as she knelt to pray with me, soothing away my fears and comforting me as she entreated God to take all of my bad thoughts away.

Now, many, many years removed from my mother and a thousand miles away, these memories of my mother's hands are still strong in my heart. Those hands are now old and wrinkled and aching with arthritis, yet still, as an adult, I often wish she were with me to stroke my brow in the midst of illness and exhaustion, to massage away the frustration and boredom of tedious days, to open windows to the world while reading to me in a big old chair, and to take my hand in prayer and cast away all the fears of my life. The touch of a mother's hand and the power of a mother's love indeed has carried me through many moments of my life.

As I look to the needs of children of today, I am convinced they need the same things from their mothers that I needed—and received—from mine. They need not only the gentle touch of a mother's hands, but her focus and her attention on a daily basis. They need a champion and a cheerleader, someone who has the time and energy to give encouragement along life's way and comfort in dark times. They need a directive voice to show them how to live.

These needs are not frivolous demands. They're part of the way God designed children. And meeting those needs is not an option or a sideline for mothers, but part of his design as well. Perhaps because I was fortunate enough to have a mother who met my own needs so beautifully, God has put on my heart a desire to encourage other mothers by showing them the significant role they play in the life of their precious children—and by assuring them that their deep desire to devote time and energy to their families is a vital part of God's call on their life.

For quite a few years now, my husband and I have been privileged to travel all over the United States and to other parts of the world, conducting seminars on the biblical vision of the family. Wherever we travel (usually with our children in tow), I meet mothers from so many stations of life—from stay-at-home moms and homeschoolers to professional career women, from sweet young moms pregnant with their first babies to older mothers trying to reach the hearts of their teenagers. Though the choices and circumstances of these women may be very different, their hearts and desires are basically the same—to do the best job they can at loving and nurturing their children and to bring meaning and continuity to life and relationships in their families. They all want to be the very best parents they can be. They want to do motherhood right.

And yet, increasingly, I find that these women are unsure of what it means to be a good mother. They are confused by a culture that sends them drastically mixed messages about the importance of a mother's influence and what her priorities should be. As a result, so many mothers I meet are baffled and frustrated. They don't know how to reconcile these conflicting messages with the calling of God on their hearts and lives.

What's the cure for this confusion? I believe it lies in a rediscovery of the traditional mission of motherhood, a rediscovery of what God had in mind when he first designed families. That fundamental design is still valid, although its specific shape in a given home may vary widely. And the fundamental mission of motherhood now is the same as it always was: to nurture, protect, and instruct children, to create a home environment that enables them to learn and grow, to help them develop a heart for God and his purposes, and to send them out into the world prepared to live both fully and meaningfully. It's up to us to embrace that mission as our own, trusting God to walk us through the details and to use our willing mothers' hands as instruments of his blessings.

It is my heart's desire to encourage each precious mom who reads this book by affirming the significant role a mother plays in the lives of her children. I hope to remind moms of the value God places upon their lives and to help them respond wholeheartedly to his call on their lives. As we explore together what it means to cultivate a heart for God, a heart for our children, and a heart for our home, I will attempt to create a complete picture of how we are called to live as mothers, so that the integrity of our own lives will reflect the beauty of God's original design.

I do not, however, consider myself to be a perfect mother. My aspirations and what I can idealize oftentimes far exceed my ability to live up to them in reality. Yet it is in being able to visualize the dreams of my heart and the beauty of God's design that I have found a standard of maturity to move toward.

As I reflect on my own life, I feel that I have learned so much—the hard way, by making many mistakes. Many moments of stress and struggle could have been handled so much more easily ifI had had a wiser, older woman to shed light on my stages of life.It was through writers like Edith Schaeffer that I was encouraged and helped along the way. My hope is that in some way, I might be able to provide that same encouragement and inspiration.

But I'm still learning, and the lessons God has taught me as I sought to embrace his mission for motherhood have been truly life-changing—and a source of unbelievable blessing. No matter what our culture tells us, I've discovered, and no matter what directions our own desire may push us, the only way to true joy and peace is God's way.

I hope you’ll join me for the Life With Sally Book Club where you and I will go through The Mission of Motherhood together with exclusive teachings, journals, and downloads to help you implement the ideals of the book! May your heart be warmed, encouraged, and lifted as you read this book, and may God hold you in his own capable hands as you strive to fulfill the mission of motherhood in your own life.

The Small Deeds We Do Will Be Felt For Eternity

Even under the best of circumstances, the work of subduing the domain of the home often goes unappreciated. Children are often oblivious to the fact that they have an important person who is managing so many areas of the home in order to provide them with a stable life and a warm, nurturing home environment. They rarely appreciate the work and toil and emotional drain that mothers are required to pay. Children who live in a stable, well-managed home tend to take that stability for granted.

Yet children who have such a "shepherd" in their homes to oversee, provide for, direct, and protect the life of the home will benefit profoundly. In addition, as mothers establish the work of the home with honor and dignity, our neighborhoods, towns, governments, and institutions will prosper by being filled with wholehearted, secure human beings who have been prepared to live for God's purposes.

By embracing our call to home-making, we are ensuring that these life centers are thriving and well.

Read more about this in The Mission of Motherhood and join the book club on Life with Sally.

Discernment to Understand & See Truth & Beauty

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Discernment to See Truth and Beauty

“I am the root and the descendant of David, the bright morning star.” -Revelation 22:16:b

I am pretty predictable in some areas. Almost every morning, I reluctantly slip out of sleepiness, yet move through the motions of meandering downstairs. I turn on the tea kettle, light candles while I am waiting, choose music and turn on my little speaker, pick a quiet time book. By then, my cup of tea in my china cup is ready to be sipped slowly as I prepare my heart for the day. I ask God to help me remember the kind of woman, mama, I want to be.

Often, we live through daily rhythms and don’t realize that even common moments are shaping the impressions on our children’s hearts. Read below (and listen to Joel’s story) to be reminded how important these moments can be:

The house was cloaked in quiet. The fading shadows of night signaled the coming dawn. I gingerly tiptoed through the living room, aware that the slightest noise could awaken a sleeping child. I quickly slipped on worn, broken in shoes, quietly anticipating the beauty I would find on my private morning walk. It was wildflower season in Texas. I had never seen it so beautiful—clusters of deep-azure bluebonnets blanketing open fields, accented by scarlet splashes of Indian paintbrush. I coaxed open the storm door, managed to stifle its annoying squeak, and sneaked out the final few steps to freedom.

I had barely set foot on the front porch stairs when I heard the soft voice from behind me. "Do you mind if I go with you today, Mom?" It was my gentle-spirited, easy-going middle child, Joel. I almost never had time alone with him, so I quickly adjusted my expectations for a solitary morning walk, happy to have these few moments together with my firstborn son. "Sure, honey! You go get dressed, and I'll wait right here for you." Soon he was back and we headed out into the cool morning.

We made an unexpected memory that shaped our hearts and faith. The rest of the story on my podcast, At Home With Sally today.

Listen to Joel’s memory of this moment, 27 years later, and know that what you are investing now will last for a lifetime. Get Joel’s book:

Dancing To His Music Through Life

Midway through my mothering journey found me weary, discouraged, depleted. I wondered how I was going to make it the rest of my years with ideals and faithfulness. I took a mission trip to speak in several countries, (the Middle East, and Central and Eastern Europe). On this trip, I met many who were also down, discouraged. I was learning that difficulty is a part of the battle for those of us who are seeking to bring His light in a time when there is little support, or help for living out ideals.

On this trip, God put on my heart to write my book, Dancing With My Heavenly Father. I knew there was a way forward. As I rode on trains through countryside, I pondered how to grow more mature in dark times. Dancing became a metaphor for me.

As a wee child, my father, who loved music, would tell me to stand on top of his shoes. He would dance me around the floor holding me firm and stepping to the dance of vibrant music. I realized that this was a metaphor I could see for my relationship with God — He, my dance partner, leading me in my life, and showing me the dance steps to take. I followed His lead.

I came across this quote, “Dance like no one is watching, love like you have never been hurt, sing like no one is listening, Live like its heaven on earth.” (Mark Twain)

I wrote it in my journal. This I wanted to do — to choose to cultivate joy, to practice dancing, loving, singing, living into the reality of “kingdom come” through life in defiance to the darkness.

Then this quote inspired “And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who couldn't hear the music.” (Friedrich Nietzsche)

I prayed, “Jesus, please let me hear your music, let me allow you to lead me in a dance of faith.”

Sometimes I have to remind myself what it means in the waiting, walking through the days of my life. Yet, with every year, I perceive Him more grand, loving, gracious, compassionate, kind. I still my heart to listen to His music that I may dance with all my heart through the days He has laid out for me. The more I practice His dance steps, the more easily I can enact this dance as a way of life, daily, moment by moment.

May He give us grace to follow His lead day after day.

Love Will Shape Our Children Into Beautiful Souls

Our lives as mothers are often filled with hurry driven by chores, lists, and a multitude of responsibilities all clamoring “Do it now!” in our spirits. There are so many ideals we feel we absolutely must live up to: clean houses, ordered lives, and children who accurately know math and Scripture and play their instruments perfectly. In the face of so much urgent need, our “Martha” minds often overpower our “Mary” hearts as we contemplate how to get it all done.

Yet these insistent demands and ideals, the constant busyness and bustle, are not what will actually reach the hearts of our children and shape them into beautiful souls. Our focus as mothers should not just be on making our children behave, but on helping them become.

Christ did not create disciples who, because of their love for Him, were willing to die for Him simply because He gave them an impersonal list of moral rules and commandments for life. What He gave them was the gift of His own very present life. They experienced His love intimately throughout the moments of their days.

He laid down His life, not just in death, but also daily with the souls He was shaping. This is what mothers do as well, laying down our lives for our children in order to create disciples for Christ with deep, rich souls. Paul told us to love “just as Christ also loved you and gave Himself up for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God as a fragrant aroma” (Ephesians 5:2)

When children feel loved and cherished by the parents who brought them into the world, they have enduring stability and a security that provides them with groundwork for understanding the God of the universe who so loves us.

Love is the most important foundation for learning to believe in God. It is the foundation stone of true friendship, marriage, and parenting. As our children are honored with our time, words, caresses, and nurture, life is deposited in their souls. They learn love not only as a personal value, but even more as a tangible experience.

To read more about this, get your copy of Your Mom Walk With God.

Believing & Living in the Goodness of God

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Every once in a while, I spontaneously take a photo of myself, whatever I am doing, to send to my grandchildren. You see, they are always on my mind, in my thoughts. I want them to know that I love them, every day, all the time. I pray for them. I plan for times of fun when we can be together. I pray that their hearts would know and understand the goodness and love of God because they have seen it in me and in their parents and in those around them.

They are storing up a clear picture of God through those of us who are acting out His tangible love and grace in day to day realities in their lives. And hopefully when they are teens and more aware of a fallen, chaotic world, they will remember, “But I have seen, learned, and felt the goodness and love of God throughout my life, and I believe there is light, hope, beauty to be found in this troublesome world.”

Today on my Tea Time Tuesday podcast, I have book recommendations, a recipe, an encounter with police, my experience with pickle ball, and all sorts of ponderings about life and living.

We will talk about what it looks like for us to tangibly live out over a lifetime, a life of devotion to Christ. Looking at those who chose not to believe in the goodness and truth of God (Adam and Eve, the Israelites, the spies who became as grasshoppers!—I do not want my legacy to be a grasshopper! :)). In others, we find warning to resist the temptation of complaining, turning our hearts away from God, to our own downfall. Believing when we cannot see, practicing faithfulness when no one else sees is a long tradition of faithful saints throughout history.

Here is a Middleburg prayer that expresses some of my heart:

Almighty God and most merciful Father… we fall down before your majesty, asking you,f rom the bottom of our hearts, that this seed of your Word, now sown among us, may take such deep root, that neither the burning heat of persecution cause it to wither, nor the thorny cares of life choke it.

More on At Home With Sally. Happy Tuesday to you all.

Home Is To Be A Refuge

Often we open the doors of our home — usually via television or the internet — to ideas and images that can damage our faith, abuse our hearts and minds, sear our psyches, and tear apart our peace. But only the foolish would invite just anyone to enter the door of their home.

Home should be a place where, behind its doors, one should expect to find protection and safety from all the harms of life, including voices that do not speak truth or wisdom.

From The Lifegiving Home.

Living As Mothers With Undivided Hearts

As a woman who has enjoyed a career of teaching, speaking, counseling, and writing, I have had to make many difficult decisions to cut my career opportunities in order to focus on my family priorities.

However, I have come to realize that embracing God's call to the duties of motherhood doesn't diminish my abilities to use my gifts, strength, and training, but fulfills a part of God's design.

If we want to experience the blessing of God and have a sense of wholeness to our lives: we must seek to understand his original design as clearly as possible. We will then have a map by which to travel toward God's destination.

But we need to do more than understand. We also need to commit to living as mothers with undivided hearts—dedicating ourselves fully to the task of building a home and nurturing our children.

As I see my own children now as adults, I am so glad that the Lord gave me the opportunity to understand this commitment in an early part of their lives. The cost has been great, but the sacrifice was well worth it. I can honestly say that my children are my best friends. No, they're not perfect—and neither am I—but we're all growing and blossoming in all areas of life. I see now that the fruit of God's design tastes sweet to my soul. And with that fruit, there are no regrets.

Read more about this in The Mission of Motherhood.

Tea Time Tuesday: Courage to Stay Faithful

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I would have despaired unless I had believed

that I would see the goodness of the LORD

In the land of the living.

Wait for the Lord!

Be strong, and let your heart take courage;

Yes, wait for the LORD.

-Psalm 27: 13-14

Tea Time Tuesday

Many years ago I was visiting the Biltmore Mansion in Asheville, NC for a small vacation with Sarah. I loved hearing the stories of the people (artists, musicians, leaders) who had walked the halls of this historical home. When we came upon the “men’s smoking room,” I happened upon the most intriguing print of a lion!

I immediately knew it was Aslan! Serendipitously, when I ended my tour, I walked through a shop where a replica of Aslan was on a prominent wall at just 50 percent off of the previous price. I purchased Aslan, struggled to get him home. But since that time, Aslan has ruled over our home, reminding us of the abiding presence of God, His constant companionship in our home. We need reminders that He is always faithful and good.

Most of us will go through times of doubt and darkness in our walk with God, seeking to live a faithful story in a chaotic world. We are often ashamed of admitting our doubts, negative feelings when it is difficult to see God’s goodness amidst the challenges. Having a friend who can companion us through dark corridors of doubt, who will listen and pray for us, is so important.

David penned his own version of these doubts. “I would have despaired…” Moses, Elijah, Jesus, and others all expressed such darkness. We are not alone.

Biblical truths have held me and helped me through my own dark clouds, anchoring my thoughts and heart to know and understand the never changing attributes of God and his goodness. These truths, stored up in our minds and our children, will speak to us and carry us through. Over the next months I will be teaching a new series about God’s attributes, in light of the foundational 24 family ways that our own family took to heart. My hope is that as we study and memorize some passages, we will be refreshed in building sure truths that will keep us until we see Him face to face.

Listen to my podcast today to hear about books, music, God's goodness, food, more!