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30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Freedom {Day 8}

The beginning is a great place to start! Click here for Day 1.

 

Nothing on this earth scares me more than the mother who has it all figured out.  You know the type.  She lurks in church nurseries, grocery store aisles, and chat rooms and tells everyone how it is.  She looks for opportunities to educate you from her limitless vault of parenting knowledge.  Her expertise includes everything from the benefits of baby Mozart to the dangers of Santa Claus.

The mom who has it all figured out thinks of herself as a superhero, a heroine of safety and a child advocate par excellence.  If she hears your child crying, she will assume it is because you are doing something wrong.  Fear not, incompetent mother!  She will tell you exactly how to fix it.

Have you lived up to my standard today?

This woman asks no questions and takes no prisoners.  In less time than it takes you to diaper a baby the wrong way, she will turn your confidence into self-doubt and guilt, with an extra shot of shame.

The mother who has it all figured out, as well-meaning as she may be, is a prison warden dressed up in high heels and pearls.  The checklist she uses to measure you by is a snare.  It holds you captive to a false gospel that says if you just do everything right, you will be good enough.  She readily provides a formula that doesn’t require any faith or very much love.  It reduces parenting to an external standard by which you can measure yourself and judge others.

Even though you know better, you’ll be tempted to listen to her because you really do want to be a better mother and she sounds like she knows what she’s talking about.  In between all the rules, she has some pretty good advice.  She’s got the books to prove it and all those lists make everything sounds so…safe.

The trouble is, there is no formula.  There is no standard.  Even if you could find one, you’d never be able to measure up to it.  External standards cannot help us because they are based on the every-changing ideas of fickle and faulty humans.  Just as soon as you get one standard under control, someone comes along and changes it.

What’s worse, you will find yourself struggling to stuff yourself into a standard that just doesn’t fit.  It’s worse than trying on swimsuits right after Christmas dinner.  No standard takes into account the uniqueness of individual parents, children, and circumstances.  If you try to measure yourself by it, you will be weighed down with insecurity, guilt, and failure because the only thing an external standard does is make you aware of your need. 

There has to be a better way!

Thankfully, there is.  Not only is it better, it’s much simpler.  It is so astonishingly simple that you will be tempted to think there must be more to it.  You will be tempted to add more to it.  Because you’d think that for all the arguing we do over the rights and wrongs of raising kids, and the viciousness with which we proclaim our opinions or judge other parents, the Bible would have a lot to say on the topic.  But it doesn’t.

In fact, it says very little.  It’s kind of shocking how quiet God is on the whole subject of parenting, especially since raising godly kids is kind of a big deal.  In fact, the whole of God’s parenting advice can be summed up as follows: love God, then love them.

That.  Is.  It.

It is shockingly simple, a little scary, and altogether delightful.

In between those two greatest commandments is a whole bunch of free space to live and move and have your being in your home.  You are free to be you in your parenting and to let your kids be free in their kid-ness.  There is nothing in there about schooling options, organic food, or music choices.  There isn’t!  God figures that if we take care of the love part, and I mean really take care of the love part, everything else will fall into place.

That means that what is in the best eternal interest for your child might not be the same thing that is in the best eternal interest of my child.  In fact, they might be the complete opposites!  What works for my family as far as scheduling and activities might be the very death of your family so we can all come together and stop holding each other to standards that just don’t fit.

We are free! 

The only thing that binds us is love, and that is an altogether freeing thing to be bound by.  Love always seeks to please God.  Love always desires to serve the interests of others before ourselves.  Love asks “What is the very best thing?” not “What is the easiest thing?”  Love is the best and only parenting formula because it is the only one that always fits.  Always.

When love rules, we can appreciate the different methods and ideas of other mothers without being obligated to do them ourselves.  We can figure out what works for our family without making it a standard for everyone else.

Do you feel the joy in that?  This means you can stop parenting for someone else!  You can stop parenting someone else’s way!

The mother who has it all figured out might tell you differently, but this is truth: As long as you put love first, you are free to parent in the way that allows you to enjoy your children the most. 

That is freedom.

 

 

Please join us on Monday for Day 9: Avoidance

 

For further thought

1) If external standards cause us to feel guilty and insecure, why are we so tempted to accept them and put them on others?

2) Not all parenting advice is bad.  In fact, much of it is good.  The problem comes when we take good advice and make it a rule or a standard by which we measure our worth as a parent.  If we don’t measure up, we despair.  Are you trying to live up to a standard set by someone else?  How does the freedom you have in Christ change the way you’ve been trying to parent?

3) Take some time to ask God for wisdom and strength to parent out of love, not external standards.  He promises to give wisdom to those who ask, and He desires that we abound in love!  When you pray to God for the things He desires you to have, He always answers .

 

Parenting 8 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Constancy {Day 7}

Click here to begin at Day 1

It was a cool fall night in Massachusetts.  The northern lights danced as my husband and I sprawled out on an old quilt on a dewy hillside and looked up at the deep night sky.  We had set the alarm and crawled out of bed to look up at the stars.  They hung in the sky the way they had for all the years since the universe was born, brilliant like jewels in the dark of the night.

Suddenly, a star fell out of the sky, like a wish.  Then another, and another.  We watched as one of the most brilliant meteor showers of our lifetime unfolded before our eyes.

It was breathtaking.  The constancy of the stars stood in direct contrast to the spontaneous streaks of the meteors.  It seemed as if the very heavens were coming down to play.

How different the experience would have been without the order and dependability of the stars!  If the entire universe was nothing more than a spinning mass of erratic suns and planets, the meteors would go unnoticed.  Without its constancy, we could not enjoy the spectacular creativity of God and the wonderful diversity of His creation.

Constancy gives us the security we need to enjoy our world.

Even as infants, we cry out for it.  We long to know that we when we are in pain, we will be comforted, when we are hungry, we will be fed.  We feel most secure when we are surrounded by a certain level of sameness.  Order.  Predictability.  It is as if God instilled in us a need for His very character.

And He is the one who fills that need perfectly.  The sculptor of the universe does not change.  He is not unpredictable like meteors but is constant like the stars.  He is a refuge, a rock, and the only place of strength in this world.  Even though the mountains tremble and fall into the sea, He is there.  Constant.

What a comfort that is to me when it seems like everything is falling apart.  I cannot be certain of health, employment, or even the very ground beneath my feet.  But when everything else fails, His love endures.  I never wake up and wonder if God is going to love me today.

I want my children to be able to say the same thing of me.  I want them to feel like this is the one place in the world where they will always be loved, nurtured, and accepted.  This is a place built on a rock, and it will not be blown about by the storms that come.  Inside these four walls, my children are secure in the knowledge that some things will always remain the same: faith, hope and love.

They know that when they wake up in the morning, I will be holding fast to the One constant in this world.  I will look to God to set the standard for my conduct in our home, and I will look to Him to set the standard by which their needs will be met.  When I do this, security and joy fill my home.

From this place of strength, creativity and spontaneity can shine.  Order sets the stage for the beautiful and unexpected.  If my children are secure in my love for them, they will be free to exhibit their own unique personalities without fear of rejection.  As parents, my husband and I will be free to be impulsive or imaginative without fear of degenerating into complete disorder.

But constancy must come first.  If we reverse the order and put creativity first, as I am so tempted to do, it doesn’t work.  Creativity before constancy is chaos.  God ordered the universe before His imagination filled it.  His eternal attributes gave birth to the temporal stuff of this world.  There is something to be learned from that.  Constancy is not the opposite of spontaneity.  It is the basis of it.

Constancy is the foundation of our relationship with God, and it must be the foundation of our relationship with our children.  God planned it that way.  In showing our children constancy, we show them something of God.  We build trust and security in them from which they are able to take on the uncertainties of the world.  I do not do it perfectly, but I do it better the more I keep my eyes fixed on the One who does not change.

And the more focused I am on the constancy of God, the more my children feel secure in my love, and the more I can enjoy their wonderful diversity.

 


Photo credit: NASA

 

Please join us tomorrow for Day 8: Freedom

 

For further thought:

1) Countless times throughout the Bible, God is called our refuge and strength.  Psalm 46:1-3 is one of those places.  How does it help you to know that God is unchangeable?
2) Sometimes, it helps to do a little self-evaluation.  Do you think your children feel secure in your sameness?  Have you created a pattern of trust in your home, or is this something you need to address?  Ask God to help you be more constant in your relationship with your children.

3) If you are creative like I am, you might feel claustrophobic by the words constancy and order.  How does it help to think of constancy as the starting point of creativity?

Parenting 4 Comments

30 Days to Enjoying Your Children More: Discipline {Day 6}

New here? Click on the photo to begin at Day 1.

When we purchased our first home four years ago, we inherited a renegade grapevine that sprawled across an insufficient arbor in the backyard.  It had become wild, consuming the trees along our property line and devouring at least three different fences in neighboring yards.

The grape clusters were sparse and grew so high up in the trees, my husband had to borrow an extension ladder from a neighbor just to reach them.  Worse, the vine was in danger of killing itself.  The roots couldn’t produce enough energy to support the out-of-control branches.  Without drastic intervention, it would slowly die.

This was a shame because the grapes on this vine are particularly tasty.  The person who planted the vine and built the arbor probably knew that.  He had great intentions of harvesting bountiful fruit.  But that’s where his interest in the plant ended.  He did not care to prune or fertilize it, and he never trained its willful vines to grow where they could be strongest.

Whoever planted the vine did not love it enough to help it reach its potential.  As a result, the undisciplined vine was not healthy, productive, or even enjoyable.  In fact, it was downright annoying.  It was growing all over the neighborhood in a tangled mess, and I didn’t know how to begin to bring it under control.

So I did the only reasonable thing: I ignored it and planted two new grape vines.  The first year, the little whips needed little attention.  But the second year, things started to happen and I had to do something.   It had not occurred to me before that I knew nothing about growing grapes.  I searched the Internet, read books, and consulted diagrams.  My shoots don’t look like the diagrams.  So I evaluated each one, looking for strengths and weaknesses.  Finally, I had to clip things that might or might not grow back and tried to compensate with an extra layer of compost.

I began to understand why the first grapevine was left to nature.  Discipline is tricky business.

It is true of grapes, and it is true of children, only more so.  You cannot have truly healthy, productive, and enjoyable children if you do not practice discipline.  Notice, I didn’t say “if you do not practice punishment.”   Discipline and punishment are two different things.   Punishment is one aspect of discipline, but so is praise and encouragement!  Proper discipline includes both.

We are accustomed in our society to interchange the terms discipline and punishment, which is unfortunate.  Because of this, “discipline” often has a negative connotation.  You may even have felt angry, defensive, or anxious when you read the word.

But discipline is anything but negative.  It means to teach or train with the intention of developing or improving a desired character or skill.  Discipline is the process of weeding out weaknesses and encouraging strengths.  It always keeps the best interests of the object in mind.  The result of discipline is that a child is able to become more fully himself.  That’s something you don’t always see in the books on discipline, but it is a vital truth.  

Imagine how different our homes would be if every child was considered a unique and special member of God’s creation.  What would happen if each mother and father looked at each child and thought, “I wonder what treasures God has given you that I can help to polish and cut?  I wonder what kind of light you can shine if I help you?”

And instead of corralling behaviors and doling out punishments and rewards, as necessary as those things are, each parent made it his or her first intention to seek out the gifts and calling of that child so that the child could pursue it, become equipped to do it, and then delight in it for the glory of God?

What a rich and beautiful world it would be!  Instead of rows and rows of perfectly cultivated apple trees growing along perfectly tidy streets, ours would be a world of winding paths through glorious orchards bursting with every kind of exotic specimen ever created.  Each and every plant would be grown and trained to reach its fullest potential, each one disciplined to achieve its best, each one trained to be beautiful and productive.   Not a single tree would be made to fulfill a purpose for which it was not intended.

How delightful it would be to live in a world like that!  How delightful it would be to raise children like that!

If the cultivator of my overgrown grapevine had loved the vine enough to discipline in that way, it would have been pruned so the best vines could strengthen and grow.  Instead of wasting energy on unproductive greenery, the roots could have produced and sustained glorious fruit.  It would have been trained to grow over the arbor where the beauty of the plant and the abundance of the fruit could be enjoyed.   A vine like that would be more fully itself than the one that was left to die in my backyard.

Isn’t the same true of our children?  When we seek to cultivate our children in the way they were created, they are healthier, happier, and more enjoyable for it.  They get to be the best them they can be.

Our world was formed by an infinitely creative God to be rich and varied, and so were our families.  Disciplining our children allows the spectacular individualism of their God-given natures to shine through.   If we fail to train them in the way God intended them to grow, or attempt to train them to be something they are not, they will suffer, and we will miss out on the joy of God’s workmanship.

My grandparents raised eight children.  Four became missionaries or dedicated themselves to full-time ministry.  One became a chiropractor, another a fireman, and another a businessman.  And one became a race car driver.

The last one is not like the others, and that is the fun of it.  If you ever watch my uncle race, you will see that he is most fully himself when he is out on the track or under the hood of a car.  His passions, which have been disciplined into a life-long pursuit, are the part of him that most clearly communicates who he is and what he was made to do.  They are the part that shouts out to God’s infinite creativity.

When we discipline our children to pursue the passions put in their hearts by God, they become more fully who they were intended to be.  They get to be themselves, only better.  And we get to enjoy them as they were meant to be.

Discipline produces good fruit!

Join us tomorrow for Day 7: Constancy 

For further thought

1) How is discipline a loving act toward your children?

2) The Bible says God disciplines those He loves (Hebrews 12:6).  How is God’s discipline of you a loving act?  How does it show His father-heart toward you?

3) Think about each of your children.  Write down the good and godly qualities you see in them.  How can you discipline those things to bear more fruit in their lives?

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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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