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Kristen Anne Glover

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30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Strength {Day 17}

Just joining us?  You will find Day 1 of the series here.

Just joining us? You will find Day 1 of the series here.

“Through all the world there goes one long cry from the heart of the artist:

Give me leave to do my utmost.”

—Karen von Blixen-Finecke,  Babette’s Feast

Daniel was a slight, dark-haired young man with heavy-rimmed glasses and an apologetic slouch.  He had an easy but awkward smile, unusual mannerisms, and odd outbursts of energy.  He was quirky and artistic, two qualities that sometimes endeared him to people, and sometimes didn’t.

Daniel was a music major, a pianist, I thought, but I had never heard him play.  It was likely he had some talent because the music program was rigorous and extremely competitive.   But he had none of the confidence of a man with talent.  He had the rumpled look of a guy who ate cereal for dinner and didn’t bother to match his socks.  Whenever I saw him plowing his way across campus alone with a bag of music slung across his shoulder, I felt a pang of pity.  He was a really nice guy.  It just didn’t show.

As part of his graduation requirements, Daniel had to give a concert during his senior year.  It was going to be held in the chapel, and the entire student body was invited.  It was Daniel’s job to promote his own concert, so I made it a point to attend along with a group of our mutual friends.  We were going to be his fan club.  If anyone needed a fan club, Daniel did.

The lights in the auditorium were dim when Daniel walked out on stage.  It was not exactly a grand entrance.  Even a tuxedo could not hide the fact that Daniel was not at home in the spotlight.  He wouldn’t even look at the audience but kept his head down and his arms held rigidly at his sides as he walked to the baby grand at center stage.  It hurt to watch.

Daniel attached himself to the piano bench and ran his fingers quietly over the keys like he was reminding himself that he had seen them before.  I couldn’t breathe.

Then Daniel lifted his hands and the notes filled the room.  No one had told me that Daniel couldn’t play the piano.

He commanded it.

The entire auditorium resounded with the music of a master.  His body rocked back and forth over the keys, his own flesh owning the music.  Daniel’s stiff, clammy fingers came alive like they had been waiting, dormant, for just that moment.  They flew fast and hard, radiating scores of memorized Rachmaninoff until his fingers began to bleed.  Daniel paused to wrap them in bright white tissues and continued to play as if he was unconscious of the hindrance or the sacrifice.

When the music stopped and the roar of cheers rose up to the roof, Daniel stood, laughing an awkward laugh, and fidgeting with his now-useless fingers.  His face radiated glory.  Those of us who knew and cared about him were overcome.  It was as if we had just met Daniel for the very first time, as if, for a brief moment, we were allowed to see him as he was created to be.  It was glorious.

When I became a mother, I felt awkward and insecure, like Daniel walking around a campus where he was always out of place.  I saw other mothers thriving in their role while I languished.  I felt like God had misunderstood the clay that I am and had shaped me into the wrong vessel.  Every day, it was all of weakness.  Every day, it was hard.

It was not all terrible, of course, but I felt like an expatriate in a foreign country.  Some of the scenery was beautiful and I came to love my new home, but even as the years passed, it was pretty obvious I wasn’t a native.

Then one day, when the twins were just over a year old, my husband asked me to make a costume for an event at the school where he taught.  It was such a simple thing, a costume.  But to me, it was  profound.  I had complete creative license.  I could do whatever I wanted, whatever I could think of.  It was such a gift, to be able to create.  In the chaos that was the first year with twins, I had not had the time to think, much less create.  I felt like I was coming home, like I was standing on a stage with an instrument that could communicate my soul.  I felt like myself for the first time in what seemed like forever.

For many of us, the process of becoming a mother means laying aside some of the things we are most capable of and taking on a whole bunch of weakness.   It is beautiful to be weak.  But it is also exhausting and discouraging because we were not made only for weakness.  We were made also to be strong.  It sounds like an impossible juxtaposition, but it is not.  It is a mystery.  It is the mystery of God and man in one.  In our weakness, we identify with Christ in His humanity.  In our strength, we identify with Him in His deity.  The two things, weakness and strength, work together in us to complete the incredible privilege of being ambassadors of Christ in this world.

By virtue of being human, each one of us has the awesome privilege and responsibility of being image-bearers of God.  We carry about in our being something of the face of God.  This is seen in our desire to create and be creative, to rule and tame, to subdue and to solve.  In every single one of us, God has given slivers of glory in the form of gifts and abilities that are meant to reflect His greater perfection. The more we use our gifts with godly excellence, the more clearly we reflect Him.

It is a false humility to think that we cannot use our strengths for God, or that we should somehow restrain them.  Not only are those gifts meant to be used, they must be used in the most excellent way possible.  They are the things that build up our family, complete the body of Christ, and fulfill us.  We were meant to do the things God made us to do, and when we are given the opportunity to do those things unbounded we feel a sense of deep satisfaction and contentment. 

The turning point in my mothering came when I embraced the fact that my strengths were meant to be used in conjunction with my weakness.  I had put my gifts on hold, so to speak, because I was so consumed with the struggle of motherhood.  It did not occur to me that the most excellent way to use my gifts was by pouring them into the home where God had placed me, in the most excellent calling of loving my children and husband.

When I unbound myself of how I thought God was going to use my strengths and began to use my strengths where God had actually called me, I found joy. 

This ministry does not look like I thought it would.  It is a lot stickier, and a lot more glorious, than that.  Because what I thought God would do was only glory.  It was only strength.  But here, in this home where strength and weakness meet, the glory is very clearly not my own.  My profound awkwardness testifies to the fact that any strength I have is simply a gift of God.

Amazingly, when I use my strengths to the glory of God, I get to share in the glory too.  I get to stand at center stage and enjoy the opportunity to be who I was created to be.  It is like having the privilege of speaking my native tongue in a foreign land.  It is the enjoyment of strength in weakness.

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Please join us Monday for Day 18!

For further thought:

1) Read Romans 12:6.  What are we supposed to do with the gifts God has given us?

2) Ephesians 2:10 reminds us that we are God’s workmanship, created to do the good works which He ordained for us to do.  Why is it sometimes hard to embrace your strengths and do the things you are best at?

3) When I am feeling most discouraged as a mother, it is usually an opportunity for strength and weakness to work.  If you are having trouble enjoying your children today, first pray and seek God’s help.  Then, think of ways to serve your children through your strengths.  Perhaps you are good at planning activities, inventing a game, baking cookies or building a blanket fort.  Do what you are good at and watch how God encourages your heart.

Decorating, Parenting 8 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Weakness {Day 16}

Looking for Day 1? Find it here.

It all started because the kids wanted flashlights so they could read in bed.  I was hesitant at first.  Sure, flashlights are fun and reading is commendable, but I balked at the idea of giving my kids anything that required batteries.  I knew what would happen.  They would forget to turn the lights off before falling asleep and the batteries would be dead by morning.  I imagined ourselves going through dozens of coppertops in the first week alone.

Then I found a solution: hand-crank flashlights.  It was a brilliant concept.  The batteries were kid-powered.  All the kid had to do was use some of his boundless energy to turn a handle on the flashlight and the light would come on.  No batteries required!

We added them to the kids’ Christmas lists.

On Christmas morning, both Faith and Jonathan received flashlights.  But someone had read the memo wrong because Faith’s flashlight did not have a crank.  It was solar-powered.

A solar flashlight?  Hadn’t we heard jokes about solar flashlights?  I took it out of the package and placed it in the dim light of a cloudy windowsill to charge.  I didn’t expect much.  There is no sun in Seattle.  There’s just high cloud cover.  It would be a miracle if the thing charged.  I hoped she wouldn’t be too disappointed.

That night, we could hear Jonathan frantically winding his flashlight.  When he pushed a button, a soft light came out.  It was nice.  But it didn’t last very long because he was too little to turn the handle fast enough or long enough to power up the battery.  Pretty soon, he was trotting upstairs to ask for help.  Daddy gave it a whirl.  So did I.  We wound that thing until our arms hurt.  The light was brilliant then, but it lasted less than half-an-hour before it slowly dimmed to nothing.

Faith took her flashlight off the windowsill, pushed the button, and BAM!  Her room was filled with a radiant light that lasted far into the night.  I couldn’t believe it!  She snuggled into bed, happy as could be.  Hours later, when I went in to check on her, the flashlight was still shining strong beside her while she slept.

We discovered that even on the cloudy days, the brightness of the sun was able to permeate the atmosphere and charge that little flashlight.  On the sunny days, the battery got super-charged and lasted for days.  All Faith had to do was remember to put her flashlight on her windowsill and every night, she had light.

No matter how hard Jonathan cranked his flashlight, he simply could not compete with Faith.  He gave it a valiant effort but eventually, the crank broke off.  The flashlight couldn’t be charged without the crank, so we had to throw it away.

The weakness of Faith’s flashlight was that it was completely dependent on the sun to operate.  The weakness of Jonathan’s was that it was completely dependent on human strength to operate.  At first, we thought Faith’s flashlight was the weaker of the two, but its dependency on the sun turned out to be its greatest strength.  The other’s dependency on human power ended up being its greatest downfall.

As mothers, we are like lights in our home.  Our ministry is that of shining the light of the gospel so those around us can see the face of Christ.  The question is, which kind of light are we?

Too often, I am like the hand-powered flashlight.  I get up in the morning and I do my best to power through my day because I somehow think that my dim little light can offer something to the sun.  I think it is more commendable if I can do it myself. 

I go about my day, whirling away at that incompetent handle trying to get enough energy to do the dishes and the laundry.  Heaven help me if someone needs extra help with math because I’ll have to crank a little longer to get through that.  I know I should be brighter and my light should shine farther, especially on the days when my kids are sick or things don’t go well, so I crank all the harder.  But all I get is exhaustion.  Life as a crank flashlight is not enjoyable.

It is also not a picture of the gospel.  That kind of light is not the light of Christ.  It is the light of Kristen, and it is dim by comparison.   It is a gospel of works, which is no gospel at all.  When I behave that way, I am showing my children that when life gets hard or overwhelming, the thing to do is to power through on your own strength, to strive for perfectionism whatever the cost, and to “Keep calm and carry on!”

Even if you have to ditch the calm part, at least carry on.

What a different thing it is when I am more like the solar flashlight, when the kids come down and find me reading my Bible even though there’s a pile of dishes in the sink and I haven’t gotten out of my sweats.  What a difference it would be if, instead of powering through a math lesson, I said, “You know what?  I’m getting frustrated.  Let me take a few minutes to pray.”  What if, when I am sad or overwhelmed, I don’t plaster a fake smile on my face but I let my kids see that the thing to do in situations like that is to tap into the power I have available to me in Christ.

What a beautiful, powerful light that would be!  They would see that their mother is nothing but an empty vessel, filled up with Christ.  I am like a solar flashlight.  I have no power on my own.  I have no light apart from the Son.

That is what my children need to see and hear from me because that is truth.  If I try to minister to them out of strength, I am selling them the lie of self-sufficiency.  The truth of the matter is that my children do not need to see that I can get it all done and keep it all together.  What my children need to see more than anything is that I can’t.  And neither can they.

Weakness is going to be their lot in life, just as much as it is mine.   Not one of my children will ever reach perfection.  Ever!  The best they can hope for is to be somewhat successful.  But even if they are successful by the world’s standards, their lives will be marked with failure.  Clay is weak, and we are clay.  They will be discouraged, overwhelmed, frustrated, defeated, and a myriad of other things that can’t be powered through by human strength.

When I depend on Christ, my kids get to see the solution to all the weaknesses they’ll have to face in their lives.  They will be witness to the fact that the only source of strength is Christ alone.  In that truth, I can rest and enjoy my children, confident of the fact that the very smallest amount of Christ’s work on my behalf is worth far more than I could ever do on my own.  If I have done nothing more than been a weak vessel for His glorious light to shine through, I have done enough.  May we all choose to be that kind of vessel today.

Please join us tomorrow for Day 17: Strength

For further thought

1) Read 2 Corinthians 4:5-7.  Are you preaching yourself to your children, or Christ?

2) Based on the passage above, why is it so important to embrace weakness?  What can we show in our weakness that is impossible to show in our strength?

3) Be intentional about sharing your weaknesses with your children today, but only if you are committed to allowing Christ to fill up what is lacking in you.  Take the time to pray when frustrated, read the Bible when you are tired, or praise when you feel afflicted.  Let your children see how powerful weakness can be!

Parenting 16 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Fear {Day 15}

Welcome to our series! Find Day 1 here.

“We are brave of all scary.”—Paul, age 4

 

This past week, I sat with three different women who had faced some of the deepest fears I could ever imagine.  One of them is a dear friend who is facing single parenthood after the man she loved and trusted confessed a sin that left her breathless.  She is forced to answer questions she never thought would be asked by a son she never thought she’d have to raise alone.

Another woman told me how she struggles this time of year because it brings up the memory of the day she came home from work to find out her eighth grade son had never made it on the school bus.  Just minutes after Judy kissed him good-bye, he had been attacked and murdered by someone who wanted the things they would have given away for nothing.  They found their youngest child dead on the floor near their bed where he was trying to hide.

The third discovered she and her husband had incompatible genes.  Together, they had a 1 in 4 chance of creating a child with an incurable and excruciating disorder.  But they did not know it until an ultrasound of their first child showed it.  It took a little baby being born into a hopeless situation to learn what lingered in their DNA.  By then it was too late to help him: a little baby was born into a life of pain, and a woman was born into motherhood by a child she could not keep.  This friend had to give her son back to heaven five years after he had been given to her on earth.

These are the stories that seize my heart as a mother.  I listen, watching the faces of these women, and I wonder how they ever survived, how they are surviving.  They embody everything I fear as a mother: losing a child, illness, disease, betrayal, abandonment, and more.

I realize I am a fearful person, a fearful mother.  The traumatic events of my life—real or imagined—have left me quick to flinch, and I respond with the classic fight-or-flight impulse.  I respond in anger or I retreat into avoidance.  I control or I over-protect.  I accuse or I suspect.  Fear is the catalyst of all sorts of actions that are not love.  It keeps me from loving and enjoying my children because it binds up my heart and doesn’t leave it free to beat the way it should.  I cannot truly love them when I am fearful.

In fact, it seems to me that love is the opposite of fear.  When Adam and Eve disobeyed God, it was not hate they felt first, but fear.  As soon as that awful choice was made, their hearts began to quiver, and they cowered at the familiar sound of their Lord walking in the garden.  Everything that was beautiful and lovely now cast shadows and harbored danger.  They knew the most lovely thing was the most dangerous of all.

Our children are the most lovely things we have been allowed to create.  But because they are so lovely, they are the most dangerous of all.  We fear losing them.  We fear hurting them and being hurt by them.  We fear not being able to control them and being embarrassed by them.  We fear failure at not parenting them well.

All that fear rushes into the places where love should reign and deceives us into thinking we are really loving our children when in fact, we are acting out of fear.  We are coating them in hand-sanitizer and telling them they can’t date until they’re thirty and calling them fifteen times a night to ask them where they are–not because we love them but because we fear what might happen to them.  We get angry when they jump off of things they shouldn’t or run across the street without looking because we fear they will break.

We know we live in a broken world, and we must walk amongst the shards.  We know we will get cut but we don’t know how deep, and that is the fear.  So we respond the only way we know how, by instinct rather than faith, in the hopes of getting out with as little damage as possible.  We allow fear to reign where love longs to dwell.

If only we understood that love is more powerful than fear!  It is the original beautiful thing, and fear is but a broken shard, no longer beautiful, and no longer good.  Fear does not have the same beauty and it does not hold the same power.  The words of truth confirm it.  “There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear.”  (1 John 4:18)

There is no fear in love.  How I want that to be true!  I want to love my husband so perfectly, I never fear for his loyalty.  I want to love my children so perfectly, I never try to guard their freedom or control their actions.

But I cannot love perfectly.  That part of the verse does not apply to me at all.  It applies only to Christ, whose perfect love stepped into my world of shadows and laid His life over the shards.  Into the midst of all my fear, Christ has come.  Christ is.   

In the midst of the very real and dangerous moments, I find Him abiding.  There, the sweetness of Christ demonstrates real love and allows me the freedom to let go of fear.  I have never been in a situation in my life, even the most fearful moments, where I did not find Christ.

But I have found this to be true: I have had less fear in the actual traumatic events in my life than I have had in the imagined events that never came to pass.  How I worry and fret and fear for things that God never ordained for me!  How many times have I feared because my husband had to drive home in the snow?  How many times have I planned his funeral because he was two hours late?  How many times have I diagnosed my child’s cough as pneumonia and allowed my mind to bind me up with terror?

That is when I must turn to faith instead of fear.  Fear does not have the power to change the course of events.  It only keeps me from fulfilling my purposes in the time and space God has ordained for me.  It keeps me from enjoying my children and cherishing my husband.

Instead of giving in to fear, I must cling to this truth: Christ’s love is greater than anything I could imagine.  He is sufficient for this moment, and He will be sufficient for whatever comes to pass.  His love will abide wherever He chooses to lead.

Where Christ abides, I am free to love and enjoy my children without fear.

In a world of shadows, Christ abides.

Please join us tomorrow for Day 16: Weakness

For further thought:

1) Are you living under the weight of fear?  My friend gave me this suggestion: think of your fear and imagine Christ in the midst of it.  Can you see Him there?  Can you trust Him to love you through it?

2) When I am afraid, I love to meditate on Psalm 23.  You may know it by heart.  When you are struggling through difficult situations or facing future fears, read it over and over again.  Let the words sink deep into your heart.  Hold onto the fact that Christ will permeate any future hardships.

3)  2 Corinthians 10:5 talks about taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.  Are you allowing your fearful thoughts to control you, or are you taking them captive to the truth that Christ will be sufficient in all things?  Ask God to help you discipline your mind toward faith.

Parenting 10 Comments

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I believe you can find grace for the mother you are and help to become the mother you long to be—a mom who has the freedom to choose the better things and enjoy her kids right now.

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