Tag Archives: mom

Dear Perfect Mom,

27 May

june-cleaver1I enjoyed our conversation in the parent pick up line at school.  I apologize for the lack of make-up, messy-bun, and the toddler hanging from my leg.  It seems adult conversation causes an allergic reaction in my young son resulting in spasms, screams and other disruptive behavior.  And no, he does not have turrets.  He just likes to make that sound… over and over again.

You, on the other hand, were well put together as usual.  I commend you on the hand-made ‘Thank You’ card mailed to my daughter last week.  She enjoyed your daughter’s birthday party and has yet to stop talking about the pony rides, homemade icecream and hand-dipped chocolate covered strawberries.  Your daughter looked radiant that day, as she does everyday.  With her clothing perfectly matched, her hair perfectly done and even her front teeth perfectly missing.

Thank you for setting the standard so high for us moms.  Though I try, I don’t think I will likely achieve the level of motherhood you have attained.  I’m still trying to figure out how to keep up with my laundry.  So, rather than wear myself out trying… I raise my chipped, fingerprint covered, fresh-from-the-dishwasher-I’ve-yet-to-run glass to you and take solace in the hope that somewhere in your perfect abode there’s a messy closet.

Sincerely,

Mrs. Reality


Recipe for the Perfect Child

18 May

Dan Scott started a great conversation here about phrases to quit using in kids ministry.  Kenny Conley comments in that conversation about the process we go through as Christ followers.  Here is what Kenny writes.

…I’ve become a lot more comfortable with the idea that becoming a Christ Follower for many people isn’t an alter call experience, but a process. I’ve talked to too many people who can’t tell you when they became a Christ Follower because it was more of a process for them... I’ve had parents get frustrated when their kids “asked Jesus in their heart” and they’d already done it before… Could it be that this is a process? Kids may have made a heart decision, but their mind still hasn’t caught up (they don’t completely comprehend)…

I’ve talked to many parents with teens that have ‘grown up’ in church.  They stand before me confused because their daughter made a mistake and is now pregnant.  Mom/dad look at me and say,

“She accepted Jesus when she was 6, she never missed a Sunday, we volunteered every Wednesday night… now my 16 yr old is pregnant.  What happened?”

Are we offering a checklist?  Are we giving them hoops to jump through?

Don’t miss church.

Bring your kids to our events.

Do this bible study.

Pray this prayer.

We forget sometimes that mom/dad want to do this thing right.  If we throw a perceived ‘recipe for success’ out there, are we inviting parents to assume that following the recipe will produce the perfect child? Or at least a child with no MAJOR issues like teen pregnancy, social drinking, or addiction to 80′s hair band music.

I question our approach often.  I work to explain to mom/dad that choosing Christ is a series of discoveries and decisions.  It begins with discovering what He did for us and why.  Then continues with decisions… the everyday, ordinary decision of choosing what He says is best verses what we think is best.

Is anyone else (parent or Children’s pastor) wrestling this down?

Multiply your Influence

15 Apr

The 5th and final parenting skill… and my favorite of all.  Parenting Skill #5 is…

Multiply your Influence

Pursue strategic relationships for your kids.  As our kids grow older, our influence begins to diminish and the influence of others increases.  You can be strategic about who those influences are.

Though I can demonstrate what it looks like to be a godly mom and a godly wife for my kids, I will always be mom to them.  I want my daughter to be influenced by single young women who love Jesus.  So, I strategically place these Christ-following women in her life that demonstrate what purity and modesty looks like in that phase of life.  I’m selective of the babysitters that I choose and the company she keeps.

You can multiply your influence over your kids by surrounding them with relationships that live out this scripture… “…Love God, your God, with your whole heart: love him with all that’s in you, love him with all you’ve got!