Behold, children are a heritage from the LORD, the fruit of the womb is a reward. Psalm 127:3

Who is running things here?

March 13th, 2009

“I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.”   Galations 2:20

I was listening to my favorite Southern Gospel radio station in the car today, when I heard a new song that really got me to thinking.

I Quit
I’ve tried and tried and I can’t try again
To make it on my own, so why pretend?
My best laid plans slipped through my hands
And crashed upon the floor.
Now I’m just too tired to fight it anymore.

I quit, I give up, I give everything to you, Lord.
Take my heart and do what You and You alone can do.
I’m ready to surrender and I’m willing to admit
I cannot begin again until I quit.

For me to truly live, I first must die
And know that I am crucified with Christ.
Then live each day by simple faith
In the power of the cross
And count my every earthly gain but loss.

I quit, I give up, I give everything to You, Lord.
Take my heart and do what You and You alone can do.
I’m ready to surrender and I’m willing to admit
I cannot begin again until I quit.

I cannot begin again until I quit.

(Written by Ann Downing, Marty Funderburk, and Jeff Silvey, copyright 2001.)

Then there was another song I heard that seemed to go along with it.  I can’t find all of the lyrics right now, but the chorus says

“Change me, Lord, I’m tired of who I am,
All my strength is gone, I need Yours to help me stand,
I don’t want to give my life to You, then take it back again,
I just want to be like you, so change me, Lord.”


I need to think along these lines more often, rather than my usual self-reliance!  Even though it is Christ living in me, I tend to run the show far too often.

Tyranny of the Urgent

March 12th, 2009

“I have finished the work which You have given Me to do.”  John 17:4

I’m involved in a discipleship Bible study with an “older woman” using the book,  Growing Strong in God’s Family .  (This lady is not THAT much older than I am, but she does have some grown children in addition to the ones she still has at home.)  Today, we were discussing an excerpt from Tyranny of the Urgent by Charles Hummel.  I really enjoyed one thought in particular from that excerpt:

“On the night before He died, Jesus made an astonishing claim.  In the great prayer of John 17 he said, “I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do” (verse 4).

…on that last night, with many useful tasks undone and urgent human needs unmet, the Lord had peace; He knew He had finished God’s work.

…Jesus’ prayerful waiting for God’s instructions freed Him from the tyranny of the urgent.  It gave Him a sense of direction, set a steady pace, and enabled Him to do every task God assigned.  And on the last night He could say, “I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do.”

How many days do I dispair over things left undone at the beginning of the day – important things?  Yet I was bombarded with one “urgency” over another during the day and couldn’t get to all of those important things.  A friend has shared that the Lord pointed out to her one morning that all of the things on her “to do” list were HER priorities, not His.  If I can learn to focus on the things that the Lord wants me doing, all of the truly important things will get done!

Why “Mother by Design”? part 2

March 11th, 2009

“The older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things—  that they admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be blasphemed.”  Titus 2:3-5

(Part 1 can be read here.)

Now that I have established my premise that all women were designed with a built-in mothering application, I’ll move on to the other aspect of mothering on which I’ve been reflecting.  That second premise is that motherhood is not just something that lasts for 18+ years (or as long as a woman has children in the home), but is a lifetime occupation.

Any older mother can tell you that, even once all of the children have flown the nest, she never really stops worrying about her children.  Recently, I read a cute story about a young wife who had just become a new mother.  The first night that she had the baby home, she hardly slept as she was wakened by every sound that the little one made.   As she stumbled out of the bedroom the next morning, she was greeted by her own mother who had come to help with the newborn baby.  The young mother was just about to ask how long it would be before she wouldn’t hear every sound the baby made when the older woman asked, “Are you coming down with a cold, Dear?  I thought I heard you coughing during the night.”

We smile at the story, but  I am very thankful that my mom still worries about her children – it means that she prays for us!  I am sure that many others feel the same way about their own mothers.  Before she died, my grandma got to the point where she had difficulty communicating with anyone and spent much of her day seemingly unaware of what was going on around her.  Yet, her mind was still active, and she spent time praying for her family and friends.  I miss knowing that she is praying for me.

I don’t believe that praying for (and worrying about!) her grown children is the only way in which a woman is to fulfill that inborn need to mother in her later years.  When a woman’s children get older and leave the nest, it means that she has more time to pursue things that she just couldn’t get to when her children were young.  One of the ways that I believe that the Lord wants us to spend that time is in mentoring younger women, as directed in the verses above.  I know a dear ladywho has often been heard to lament that there had never been any “older women” in her life to encourage her.   She is now in her eighties and still hasn’t found any!  It does seem that the Titus 2 concept was largely ignored for many years in the 20th century.  Thankfully, I think that the idea of fulfilling that Biblical mandate is gaining ground and there is more teaching on it.  I had the blessing of being involved in a ladies’ Sunday School class last fall where we studied the book,  Becoming a Titus 2 Woman, by Martha Peace, and found it to be very encouraging and challenging.

Yet, while there is a growing awareness of the need for “Titus 2 Women”, it can be a real struggle to balance that with the tendency to view those empty nest years as a time when I can finally do what I want to do.  The retirement mentality, the idea a person “deserves” to spend their “golden years” for themselves, is really an unbiblical idea that has thoroughly permeated the church.  Even ministries that I typically think of as being solid ministries, like Focus on the Family or Family Life Today, will often promote these ideas.  For instance, a series of broadcasts was aired last fall on Family Life Today dealing with women and the empty nest.  While I listen to the Family Life program on a daily basis and usually find their broadcasts to be encouraging, I was actually discouraged by that particular series.  Why?  Here they were encouraging women to finally go out and do all of those things they’d always wanted to do and fill their lives now that the children were grown.  Furthermore, the implication to those of us with young children still at home was that we just need to hold on for a few more years, and then it will be our turn to do all of the things we’re missing out on now.

Wait a minute.  Based on that thought, I could grump that I’ve been “putting life on hold” now  for almost 19 years, and have at least another 18 years to go.  I choose to believe instead that I am living the life that the Lord has given me to live!  But one of the things that we discussed in our Sunday School class last fall was that it is still the norm for women to fill their lives with “personal fulfillment” activities when their children are gone, leaving no time (or thought) for mentoring younger women.  Instead of the older ladies teaching the children’s Sunday School classes while the young mothers have an opportunity to study the Word of God without the distraction of small children, it is the young mothers who are filling that role.  Instead of older women setting aside time to spend with a younger woman encouraging her and teaching her how to be a good wife, mother, and homemaker, they are filling their social calendars and taking painting classes.

Okay, I’m stereotyping and generalizing here to make a point.   I really have no problem at all with a woman having more time for social engagements or taking painting classes.  I hope to some day have time for those things myself.  But please rebuke me if I fill my time with so many of those things that  I don’t have time for mentoring younger women as I have been instructed to do.  Better yet, encourage me to include a younger woman in these activities so that she can enjoy them, too!

I don’t want to come across as thinking that there aren’t any Titus 2 women today – I personally know several.  Sometimes it isn’t even big things that make a difference in a younger woman’s life.  When my oldest daughter was between 8 and 10 years old, there was a very dear older lady who took an interest in  her and encouraged her in growing up to be a godly young lady.  My mother-in-law used to pass along housekeeping shortcuts.  I know of older women who have set aside time to care for a young mother’s children for a couple of hours so that the younger woman could run some errands.  And my own mother has been a tremendous encouragement in my life and the lives of other young women.

My purpose is not to point fingers, but just to detail some things that have been the subject of a lot of reflection.  I have too long been guilty of thinking that I was just biding my time before my mothering responsibilities are over, rather than embracing and enjoying the calling for which I was designed.  I truly was designed to be a mother, and trust that my life gives evidence to that!

Why “Mother by Design”?

March 10th, 2009

“So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.”  Gen 1:27

I have had several people comment on or ask me about my choice of a site/blog name.  Rather than answer each person individually, I’m going to answer everyone at once!  ;-)  This answer is based on a lot of reflection that I have been doing ever since I found out that I was carrying our eighth child.

When the Lord created male and female, He was creating the image of two distinct sides to His character.  As a woman, I am blessed to have the opportunity of reflecting His nurturing side, imperfect though that reflection might be!

I believe that the Lord planned that all women would be born with the built-in capability of being a mother.  It is very natural to see a little girl “mothering” her dolls.  My 5 year old daughter has a seemingly endless supply of dolls, and she loves each one of them.  When she is not mothering her dolls, she is “mothering” (bossing!) her 7 and 2 year old brothers.  (Yes, I have discovered that the instinct to mother … er boss … is not limited to the OLDEST daughter.)  Lately, she has been telling me that she simply cannot WAIT to get married, so that she can be a mommy.

Sometimes it is not dolls that a young girl is mothering, but an endless stream of animals – stuffed or otherwise.  It may be all of the injured or broken creatures or toys that grab at her heartstrings.  Whatever the object of her affection, the mothering instinct is evident in most little girls.

Because I believe that the mothering role is built in, I also believe that all women can fulfill that role. I don’t think that its fulfillment depends upon whether or not they ever marry or have children of their own.  In one of the cities that we lived in, the Lord gave me a very dear friend who was only able to have one child, even though she and her husband had desired a large family.  She shared with me that she felt that the Lord only gave her one child so that she would have the time, energy, and ability to help other women mother their children.  The dear lady was a huge help to me during a time when I very much needed help mothering my own children, and I know that she was a help to other mothers at the same time.  Furthermore, she trained her daughter to be a help, giving that daughter a very good foundation for being a mother herself.

I also know of several single and/or childless women who are finding outlets for their inborn tendency to mother.  A single young woman of 30 is a regular helper in the 2 and 3 year-olds’ class where my son goes during Sunday School on Sunday morning.  She is planning to go on a one-year mission trip to Africa in a few months, and we were just enjoying the prayer card that she sent us picturing her surrounded by several of the children that she got to know on her last trip to that country.  I have also had the opportunity several times of watching unmarried nurses interacting with babies or young children.

Even in our culture that promotes feminism and careers for women, we can see signs of this built in mothering tendency.  According to the US Census Bureau, about 71% of all teachers are women.  79% of elementary and middle school teachers are women, 87% of all special educations teachers are women, and 98% of all preschool teachers are women.  [1]  Furthermore, according to the National Center for Education Information, the number of teachers who are women is growing.  Among teachers with 5 years of experience or fewer, 84% of them were women as of 2005, up from 74% in 1996 and 69% in 1986. [2]    Similar statistics can be seen in other “nurturing” careers, such as nursing.   Somehow those numbers don’t surprise me.  As women are increasingly choosing to delay or forgo motherhood, are they instinctually turning toward careers which will allow them an outlet for the mothering bent within them?

This post has gotten long enough for today, methinks.  Lord willing, I’ll put up part 2 tomorrow.  If you have stuck with me through my reflections this far, I welcome any feedback!

You can see Why “Mother by Design” Part 2 here.

1.  http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/facts_for_features_special_editions/001737.html
2.  http://www.ncei.com/POT05PRESSREL3.htm

A New Venture

March 9th, 2009

“To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven.”  Ecclesiastes 3:1

As a busy full-time, homeschooling mom of 7.5, I have long wished that I had time to do some writing.  Well, the time has finally come to start!  I have several thoughts bubbling up of where I am going to go with this blog, but my ultimate goal is to glorify my Lord.  I don’t plan to put a lot of pictures of my family here, nor will it be a daily log of what goes on in our house.  I will probably relay some incidents from our family life, but I don’t intend for this to just be a blog about us.   The desire of my heart is to be an encouragement to other moms.  My focus will be homeschooling mothers of several children, but I hope that a mom in any stage of life will be able to find encouragement here I as pass along encouragement I receive my own motherhood.

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