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Weight of Being a Good Mom

Category : life

Guest post by Jenny Dorr

The Weight

Most people simply know me as a wife and a mother.  But what most people don’t know about me is that I am also a skilled weight carrier. You might see me shopping for this week’s groceries, Starbuck’s in one hand and a stack of coupons in the other, while pushing an over-flowing cart containing a crumb-covered baby (seriously, whoever invented the free bakery cookie must have been a mom), a five year-old boy using a loaf of french bread as a light saber, and more frozen pizzas than my family should be eating .  And while I might make it look effortless, I am, in fact, balancing a 900lb weight on my shoulders, as well.

What is this burden that is weighing me down and making it even more difficult to push a “do you need help out to your car?” shopping cart?  It is the weight of being a good mom.

It’s Always There

It’s like the sports scores that run across the bottom of the screen while my husband is watching Sports Center, or the school closings that scroll below the morning talk show that I don’t have time to watch.   It’s that constant. Did my daughter take her homework to school, when did the baby have her last diaper change, who took the end of the toilet paper roll and left it empty, why is there a Polly Pocket in my shoe, will I ever get a chance to vacuum the cobwebs out of the corner of the laundry room, and do I have anything to make for dinner tonight besides frozen pizza?

And that’s just the day-to-day upkeep of life.  What about the deeper responsibilities of motherhood: Have I made the right decision for my kids about schooling?  Did I handle that tantrum in the best way?  Are my kids gaining an understanding of God’s love and grace for them?  Am I listening to them enough?  Have I taught them enough?  Am I showing them love enough?

Lifting Weights

I’ve tried schedules, calendars, organizers, lists and charts to try to lift the weight.  But even on my most organized, successful days – the ones when I wouldn’t care who showed up at my door because I somehow managed to get three kids and myself cleaned, dressed, fed, as well as, make my house look like the cover of Martha Stewart Living – the weight is still there.

The truth is that desiring to be a good mother is not really the weight.  The weight is the fear and worry that come alongside the desire to be a good mother.  And when fear and worry about a good desire start to dominate life and control my thoughts I need to call it what it is: idolatry, plain and simple.  It’s a good thing elevated to a God thing.

What Good Mothers Remember

If I’ve learned anything over the last seven years of mothering, it’s that the only thing that lifts the weight from my shoulders is remembering that Jesus died for good mothers.

The weight of perfectly remembering every detail for each of my kids, as well as, purposefully pouring life into their little souls is more than I can bear.  But there is sweet relief when I confess my own idolatry and rest in Jesus’ promise that His yoke is easy and His burden is light.  No matter how I work at it, I won’t get it all right all the time.  But God gives just as much grace when I stand before my kids as he does when I kneel at the foot of the cross.

My desire to be a good mother will never go away and I will always continue to work hard at it, but the weight to do it perfectly and completely will only be eased as I look to my own perfect Father and trust the Gospel of his grace for me and my family.  And some days that might just mean that we’re having frozen pizza for dinner again.

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Over-Desire

Category : Christian Life

Epithumeia — this is the Greek word usually translated “lust” or “ungodly passions.” It’s an important word to understand. The word literally means “over-desire.” We want too much. A desire becomes a demand. We take a created thing and make it a god.

2 Peter 1:4 says that “corruption is in the world because of ‘epithumeia.” If you have ever asked, “What is wrong with the world?’ Or, even better, “What is wrong with me?” Peter gives you the answer.

Why is this word so important?  Tim Keller, a pastor and scholar, says that this idea is what bridges the gap between the Old and New Testament in regards to the concept of sin.  In the Old Testament the problem is idolatry, the literal fashioning of a god from something created.  In the New Testament “epithumeia” is the equivalent of idolatry.

“Over-desire” is the fashioning of a god from something created as well, it just doesn’t have to be physical. We take a created thing like power or money or recognition or romance and make it the thing we have to have in order to have life.  If we do not get these things we will not be happy.  Therefore, we are willing to be very bad to get these things, which is irreligious.  Or we are willing to be very good to get these things, which is religion.  Either way, these both cause corruption, because the focus is the self.

But in the gospel, the self is replaced with a greater passion, a desire for God Himself.  In light of what Jesus has done, we can no longer ignore God irreligiously, or use God religiously, but we now can get God.  He no longer is marginalized or a means to an end, but the end itself, the desire of our hearts.

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Trust Inspection

Category : Christian Life

One way we can discover what we are really trusting in is to look at what we disparage — or what we tend to despise.

Quick example: if you trust in money for your significance and self-worth you will disparage the poor.  That is why even poor people can justify looking down on lower-class people although they don’t have much themselves.

  • If you trust in your wisdom you will disparage stupid people.  But people are rarely as stupid as we think, they are just not as smart as we think we are!
  • If you find pride in where you live, then you will shame those who don’t live where you live.  People in the city will look down on the suburbs, while those in the suburbs scoff at those in the city.
  • If you gain identity through your beliefs in the role of government, then you will have to look down on the opposite ideology.  (And doesn’t it just sound ridiculous to build a life on what you believe the government should do?)
  • If you think you are quite trendy and “with it,” then you’ll mock and shame those who are backward socially or even with their fashion sense.
  • If you cloak your identity in being right theologically, then you won’t be able to imagine how God could be happy with those you think are wrong.

And when you trust in God you will still disparage things.  Except it won’t be other people, it will be your own sin and self-righteousness.

I am going to stop here because I am starting to feel guilty.

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Hebrews 11:6 Reversed

Category : Christian Life

How do you know if you have stopped seeking God as your first treasure?  For me, I just reverse Hebrews 11:6.

The real verse is this:

“Without faith it is impossible to please God.  For those who would draw near to God must believe that He exists and rewards those who earnestly seek Him.”

But when reversed, I can see what has captured my heart.

“I believe success in ministry exists and it will reward me if I earnestly seek it.”

“I believe that people’s approval exists and it will reward me if I earnestly seek it.”

“I believe money will secure me and it will reward me if I earnestly seek it.”

Maybe for you:

“I believe Mr. Right or Ms. Right exists and will reward me if I earnest seek them.”

“I believe fulfillment through children exists, and it will reward me if I earnestly seek it.”

“I believe I can get God’s favor by my obedience, and my obedience will reward me if I earnestly seek it.”

For the essence of worship is not what we say, but what we seek.

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Twitter as Thermometer

Category : Social Networking, bible

…covetousness is idolatry (Colossians 3:5).

To crave what someone else has is the ultimate form of idolatry.  Because you are bowing down to yourself.  Your wants become the ultimate thing in the universe and everything must come into orbit around you.

And that is the surprise — we can really know when we want to be god.  All we have do is look at how badly we want what other people have.  That’s it.

And that brings me to Twitter.  When you constantly hear what “other people are doing” how can your idolatry not flare up? That doesn’t mean Twitter is bad.  It means it calls for discernment.  Do you find yourself being agitated after a session of reading status updates?  Do you feel sorry for yourself?  Are you condescending and critical about other’s posts?

Twitter is not just a social networking tool, its a thermometer of the soul. Our consumption of tweets and how we react to them will say something about who we worship.  And that is why if you let it, other people’s posts can literally take our energy away.  Not because there is something wrong with their posts, but because there is something wrong with us.  We are self-worshippers.

So let me end this in 140 characters or less: u want 2 b God & ur self-salvation is reflected back 2 u by craving what others have.But Jesus can b greater 4 u by joining “what He is doing”