Showing posts with label Mom Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mom Heart. Show all posts

Sit in on the Mom Heart Conference With Me!

I am at the lovely Las Colinas Marriott in Irving Texas today!

The fabulous Sally Clarkson is hosting her annual Texas getaway for moms, from 3:00pm CST today Friday afternoon (2/16/12) until 4:30 CST Saturday (2/17/12).



Last year I shared many of Sally's points and how they intersected with our life:



This year the moms' bible study I lead is reading through Sally's book The Mission of Motherhood and studying related scriptures to each chapter's topic. Since none of my dear friends from the group could join me, I am going to be tweeting throughout the conference.

If you would like to follow along, please join me on Twitter!

Taking the Time to Choose People Over Things ~ Mom Heart Thoughts, Part 2

My favorite people in the whole world, plus me.  :-)


In my notes from the recent Mom Heart Conference in Texas, I have written Sally Clarkson's observation: "You can not pass on passion without a relationship."

All weekend long I kept thinking about relationships.  About how Christianity is unique in that it is a relational religion.  Our progress in our faith is founded quite simply on a growing relationship with  Jesus Christ.

As I thought about this I realized it underscores everything in how I interact with the world.  The two greatest commandments...

Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it:  ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”  Matthew 22:37-40

Both about relationships.

If I want to be a good Christian?  Have to focus on the relationship.

If I want to be a good wife and mother?  I have to nurture my relationships with my husband and each child.

This seems like a no-brainer, doesn't it?  Patently obvious?  And yet in the course of our days, how much time are we focusing on things, on tasks, instead of on people?

I know we all have lots to do, and yes, the dishes do have to get washed.  But is there a way we can think about our lives differently, and let those pebble tasks fill in the spots left after we focus on the big rocks... the people in our lives?

What if my to do list looked like this:

~ spend time in loving conversation with Jesus, through reading my bible, journaling, praying, singing
~ look deeply into my husband's eyes and tell him something I love about him; ask him how I can help him today and be cheerful about it
~ be silly and playful with my teenager even when he is gloomy
~ be patient with my intensely emotional daughter and help her redirect her outward response to her inward feelings
~ spend as much time as it takes with my four year old to gently bring him to an understanding of his wrongdoing and lovingly restore him

These things take time.  Lots and lots of time.

If you have been reading this blog for a while, you'll have read about a woman in our community who is in a very difficult situation, and whom I have been trying to help since last year.  I have had only a modicum of success.  She has suffered so severely that she has shut down in many ways.  She is a person who seems almost incapable of relationships.

I have shared the joy of discovering that she responds to children, and how that has impacted me.  But we had sort of come to a stand-still.  I was thinking and praying about her recently and realized that our entire relationship had been built around me doing things for her.

When I would talk with her she would pretty much just give me a long list of her woes and what she needed help with.  She rarely initiates a conversation or asks me personal questions, and when I ask her about anything other than her physical needs, she finds a way to return the conversation there.

I realized we needed to become friends.

So the day I returned from the Mom Heart conference I sat down with her, and said "You know, I really don't know that much about you.  If we are going to be friends I need to know more about you!"  Then I started telling her what I did know.  As I went on, she started to smile.  I think she was genuinely surprised that I remembered all the tiny details I have gleaned over the past few months.  I asked her a few new questions, which she answered, then as usual she turned the conversation back to her troubles.

Praying silently, I said, in a light but firm tone, "You are in a tough place right now.  Things are very hard for you and we talk about that a lot.  But life is full of blessings, so every time we talk I want you to tell me one great thing in your life. What is something you're thankful for from last week?"  To my surprise she got a huge smile on her face, looked me in the eye, and told me how a man from our church had fixed her refrigerator.

She made eye contact.  She was not talking about children.  She smiled.

In that little moment, our relationship deepened.  It made me want to be her friend more.

At the conference, Sally told us that she had been taught, as a young Campus Crusade for Christ leader, "You can not build a successful ministry without time."

If we think about relationships as ministry, which they should be, we have to give them the gift of time.  Not only time spent with one another instead of doing yet another chore, but also simply the passage of days and years.

My relationship with my husband is so much stronger now, after twenty years of knowing each other.  My relationships with my children grow deeper and more rich over time, especially when I take the time to hear their hearts.  And without doubt my relationship with Jesus (His ministry to me) has grown extraordinarily over the years. 

All this takes perseverance.  Perseverance is my theme word for 2011.  I am seeing it in almost every aspect of my life.

And with my troubled new friend I see it again.  Through relationship, with a commitment to persevere, my ability to love her and serve her is growing in a meaningful way.

I have to be intentional about my relationships, or the distractions of the world will overwhelm them.  I have to choose to spend the time to love the people in my life as they need, despite the obstacles, taking the long view.

And boy am I thankful that Jesus takes the long view with me!


Have you found growth  and joy in changing your focus from tasks to people?  Is there a relationship that you need encouragement to persevere in?  I would be privileged to pray for you!

Discipleship and Family Ministry ~ Mom Heart Thoughts, Part 1

With Sally Clarkson at the morning tea. Can you tell I was happy?

I had the privilege of attending a Mom Heart Conference in Irving, TX this past weekend.  Mom Heart is part of Whole Heart Ministries, an organization run by the incredibly gifted Sally and Clay Clarkson and their family.

This was the fourth conference I have attended put on by Whole Heart Ministries, and it was just as inspiring as all the rest, if not more so.  My mind and heart were overflowing as I left, and my rekindled passion for my life as a mother continues to feel strong and fresh today.  I do encourage you to attend a Mom Heart conference if ever you are able.

For the past few days I have pondered how on earth I could possibly distill such a rich two days into one blog post.  I have given up!  You will be seeing quite a few posts from me that are the fruit of new ideas kindled or old ideas fanned into flame this past weekend.

Today I want to talk about discipleship.  One of the things that I took away from the conference was the desire for a family ministry.  Because we homeschool we are blessed to be able to cultivate the relationships within our family intensively each day.  Yet even in a homeschool setting it is easy for each of us to be going our separate ways. 

I have watched the Clarksons over the years, and how they have involved their children in their ministry.  The children do a lot of the back-end work and each of the Clarkson children in attendance is expected to stand up and share something.  Often they speak, sometimes they perform music.  I strongly believe that part of the reason their family bond is so strong is the fact that Whole Heart Ministries is not just Sally and Clay's vision, it is a family vision.  Most of their children are now adults, and yet they still continue to attend, to help and to enjoy one another.

Sally talked about how Jesus ministered intensively to his disciples, and how the disciples in turn went out into the world and ministered.  Think about it... Jesus didn't sit down and write the gospels while He was on earth in bodily form.  It is because of His disciples and people to whom they witnessed and ministered that we have the New Testament.  And it is because of their faithfulness in writing that countless people over millennia have come to know Jesus Christ.  This practice of disciples making disciples is God's good design!

Isn't this just what we as parents are called to?  We minister to our children, to teach and strengthen them to go forth and minister to others.  In the season of life with young ones under our roofs it really is the most pressing ministry we have!

There are many aspects to the how-to's of this, of course, but the one that is most on my heart right now is a family vision, a family ministry.  What is our family's message to the world, and how can we live and share it together?  There is so much need, and we have hearts for service... how much better for it to be service together!

I fervently believe that this will greatly equip our children to be warriors in a dark world.  I don't believe God calls Christians to hide away from the world, but rather to be light-bearers... hope-bringers to hurting people.

Now, to be clear, there is a time for everything.  Our littlest ones need shelter.  Like chicks under a mama hen's wing they need nurturing and peace to grow strong foundations.  But as they grow, it is our privilege and responsibility to prepare them for service in this world and increasingly expose them to it.

Sally reminded us that our youth are called to be as Daniel in Babylon.  That they are in the world with a purpose and a calling.  They are to influence the world, not be influenced by the world.

Does it sound scary?  Are you afraid to allow your teen into the world?  I completely understand; I struggle myself.  A mother's tender heart wants to protect her child.  Yet as Sally reminded us, if you only try to do what you can do yourself, you are living in works.  Live by faith, not by fear!

The fact is, you can't protect your children from the evil in the world.  So equip them!  How much better it will be for them to face worldly challenges with your loving guidance as they grow, than to be sheltered until adulthood and thrust out into the world unprepared.

The Clarkson's youngest daughter, Joy, who is almost 16, shared a beautiful song she had written, as well as this message: Trust your teen.

Our children will face struggles and suffering no matter what.  Deepening our relationships with them and speaking truth and hope into their lives is the model Jesus gave us for making disciples.

Through openness and humility with my children I seek to grow a relationship built on love and trust.  I want them to know that for the rest of their lives, they can turn to me for love and encouragement.  I want to always point them toward Jesus.  Not only when they are small and think that I am the Queen of Everything (oh how I love those days!) but also when they are towering over me and struggling with the world.

I am not sure where God will lead us as we seek Him for a family vision and ministry.  But I believe it will be an amazing journey.  As Sally said, "God is only limited by our faith."

Do you have a family vision or ministry?  I would love to hear how your family seeks to be Daniels in Babylon!
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