SISTER WISDOM

build a better life. start today.

To Parent Like God the Father 2

Over the last few days, I’ve been skimming through Dr. Kevin Leman’s Becoming the Parent God Wants You to Be.
I picked it up from the church library after one of those weeks when I figured my fertility must have been oversight on God’s part. “Oh no, Annie had kids? That wasn’t supposed to happen…”

Yeah, yeah, one of those. And after one of those conversations in which a recently-returned-to-town friend casually threw out the, “So, what are you guys up to? What’s been going on with you lately?” bomb-of-a-question.

Eh? I wanted to say, Do you see these small people following me? They are what has been going on lately, and as far as I can tell, they are what will be going on for the next ten or fifteen or (dear God please help me) twenty years. That’s what I’m up to.

I held my tongue and said something vague and more appropriate. One of these days, though…

Anyway, on to the point, which I have now forgotten. Oh, yes, the book. The book that I brought home and which subsequently sat on my desk until another one of those weeks went by, at which point I pulled it out and thought, Maybe this would be more helpful if I read it.

Indeed.

“…godly parenting means treating your children the way God treats us, His children. He lovingly helps us make wise decisions about the realities of life.” (p. 21)

The line “treating your children the way God treats us” made me stop and think. God is not a taskmaster. God is not set on vengeance. God is not offended by our failures. God is not demanding our perfection. God is available. God is listening. God is speaking in ways I can understand, over and over again until I get it. God is not interested in the outward appearance, but in the heart. God is understanding, loving, gentle, kind, and merciful. God is truthful, firm, strong, and secure. God is happy: the joy of the Lord is my strength. How can He give me joy if He doesn’t have it Himself?

Ready for the obvious translation?

I should not be a taskmaster over my children. I should not be set on vengeance toward myself, for failing, or toward anyone else. I should not be offended my my children’s failures. I should not be demanding their perfection. I should be available. I should be listening, aware, watching. I should be speaking in ways that my children can understand, over and over again until they get it. I should not be so interested in how they look and should be completely interested in their little hearts. I should be understanding, loving, gentle, kind, and merciful. I should be truthful, firm, strong, and secure. (Not wavering. Not a pendulum.) I should be happy, too. It’s good to be happy.

I say “should be” not to pour guilt on myself or anyone else but to show us all what is possible.
Of course, with man these things are impossible. They are too high, too wide, too deep for my narrowness. But with God… with God…
all things are possible.

Parenting 101: Teaching the Value of Work Comments Off

Alternate Title: When I Was Your Age, I Had to Get Up at 4 a.m. to Milk the Cows

“Children are thoroughly human and if all their needs are provided for, with little effort on their parts they fall into habits of inertia and moral flabbiness as surely as their elders do under similar conditions. What we parents need to realize is that ordinary modern conditions more and more tend to put children in a passive, receptive mental attitude, and not in an active and masterful one; and further that we can not better this condition without taking a great deal of very intelligent thought” (1).

A lovely woman by the name of Dorothy Canfield Fisher wrote that back in 1916, which I personally didn’t realize was such a time of modern convenience. Comparative, I guess, to 1816 or thereabouts, I guess things had gotten significantly easier.
Wonder what she would have thought about video games? Talk about a passive, receptive mental attitude. continue reading…

Parenting 101: The Deadly Art of Comparing 2

We do need to compare, we just need to compare ourselves to the right person. We need to look unto Jesus, the Author and Finisher of our faith. But that’s not what I do, most of the time. I look at somebody a little more, oh, down to earth. Somebody not perfect. Somebody I can find fault with.

Two things can happen when we compare ourselves to others. Either we will find somebody who is struggling in the areas in which we are strong, and we will mentally pat ourselves on the back and think something like, “Well I’ve got nothing to worry about… I’m way ahead of that person…” And we feel self-satisfied and we become prideful and we are headed for a fall.

Or we find somebody who is very strong in the areas in which we struggle, and we mentally berate ourselves and see only our failure and think something like, “Well I’ll never even come close to that… I might as well give up…” And we feel discouraged and we become disheartened and we are already falling.

Neither scenario is the way Jesus wants us to live. Comparing ourselves to others is deadly, and when we start extending that bad habit to how we parent, we bring our children into a situation without any good options. This is not of Christ, my dear sisters. This is not freedom. This is not truth. This is not joy.

I have three antidotes to offer, ones I’m learning to apply in my life as I try to drop this comparing habit and start living the way God wants me to live.

1. Quit demanding too little of yourself.

Okay, so I’ll just be honest here. I feel best about how I’m doing as a parent after a trip to the mall, or Chuck E. Cheese, or even the grocery store. If I get the privilege of watching another family whose children are clearly out of control, I walk away feeling pretty confident about my own parenting skills. After all, my kid didn’t shove that little girl off the slide in the play area. My kid didn’t scream and refuse to eat because the pizza had pepperoni on it. My kid didn’t grab boxes of Mac’n'Cheese and launch them across the aisle…

But my kids do other things that require my vigilance, attention, and loving discipline. My bad habit of comparing makes me apathetic to those other things.

Colossians 1:10 tells me to “walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work.” That’s my standard. That’s where I need to look and see how I measure up. Am I walking worthy of the Lord who gave me these children? Am I being fruitful in every good work as I raise them? Hmm.

2. Quit following the blind.

You’ve heard the adage about the blind leading the blind, haven’t you? That’s what I do when I base my values and decisions on what other Mommies are doing. They may have clear leading from the Holy Spirit, they may have based their decisions on Biblical principles… but I don’t know that. And what if they didn’t? What if they, like me, are often just stumbling along, looking around, and making random decisions based on what other people are doing? Is that really the foundation I want for the way I raise my children?

No, it isn’t. And even if the woman I am watching is following Jesus, what He directs her to do may not be what He directs me to do. God is very personal.

Colossians 2:2-3 tells me that it is in God that I will find “all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” Colossians 2:8 tells me that I should “beware lest any man spoil [me]… after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.” People may not mean to mislead me, but they might anyway. Why would I take chances when I can go to the source of perfect wisdom?

3. Quit feeling inadequate.

It is such a temptation to just wander into the forest of self-pity and stay there for days at a time. I can get lost there so completely that I lose my vision, I lose my joy, I lose the knowledge of who I am in Jesus Christ.
It’s the first step we need to avoid, and it usually starts when I start looking around at other women. Then I ask myself impossible questions: “What does she have that I don’t? Why is God blessing her finances/work/relationships/ministry and not mine? Why doesn’t my house look that good? How does she have it so together? She has so much more. She has better this and that. She has an easier situation. I can never get there…”

I allow the frustration to make me feel inadequate, unable, defeated, and then I just settle into this swamp of selfish self-pity. What a horrible way to spend my precious days!

Colossians 2:10 tells me that I am “complete in Him, who is the head of all principality and power.” Colossians 3:9-10 tells me that I have “put off the old man with his deeds. And have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him who created him…” I never see the complete picture of another Mommy’s life; that’s why I shouldn’t try to compare myself with the part I do see. My vision is imperfect; that’s why I look to Jesus, who has perfect vision.

Don’t fall into the comparison trap. No one else looks like you because no one else is supposed to.
-
This post is linked up with Steady Mom’s 30-Minute Blogging Challenge. 24 minutes to write.

Parenting 101: An Orderly Day 2

The elements of an orderly day are (in no particular order)…
1. A Plan
2. A Routine
3. A Limit
(or lots of them, as the case may be) continue reading…

Parenting 101: New Mom Survival 1

I’ve been a new Mom three times in the last 4 years, so I feel like I should know something about this. Actually, I thought that when my third baby was born it would be almost a non-event. “Oh, look, another one! He’s cute… well, throw him in crib…” Okay. I exaggerate. It was definitely an event, hours worth, with a 10 pound 10 ounce blue baby at the end of it. Blue, yes, because he had the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck twice. He has since recovered nicely and no longer looks like a Smurf. We are thankful, though we would love him anyway… continue reading…

Uses wordpress plugins developed by www.wpdevelop.com