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About Brenda

June 18, 2010

Live as God’s Girl: Confidence to Live Whatever God Calls You To.

Do You Discriminate?

The church lobby was packed with parents and their teens checking in for camp. It’s a great time to catch up with folks I normally don’t run into.

Such was the case when I spotted precious Jill. She’s one of those women I wish I had opportunity to talk with more often. She excitedly told me about the new conference she was organizing and asked if I would like to help in any way. My face must have revealed more than my mumble.

“Oh, I know you’re terribly busy,” Jill quickly replied.

“I’m so sorry, Jill. I hate that I give that impression. I certainly don’t want to,” I pleaded.

“No, it’s not that. You are life-busy as we all are. One thing I really appreciate about you is that you are discriminating with your time.”

I embraced her. “Thank you so much for understanding me!” What a gift to be understood and not judged.

Jill went on, “I appreciate that fact that you chose wisely what you are going to invest your time in.”

She earned another hug. “Thank you so much.”

When I got home I emailed to follow up regarding how she wanted me to help on the conference. Then I prayerfully considered the opportunity and checked my calendar.

When we are living out our priorities we may appear busy to others. But in today’s culture almost everyone is busy. I think what others see in us is purposefulness and intentionality. It gives them pause before they include us. That’s ok. It means we are living what we say we value.

But we also want to be a part of the community around us, so we will need to reach out to others. Invite friends to lunch or over for dinner. Volunteer in way that in line with your priorities and doesn’t take a lot of time. Make having fun a priority as well.

I talked with Jill and yes, there is a way for me to help that works with my schedule and my priorities!

How have you learned to discriminate with your time?

June 9, 2010

He’s Your Man! ~~ Confidence to Live Your Calling as His Wife

This is the beginning of a new series of blogs. Mondays are for moms–”It’s Monday again, Mom: Confidence to Live Your Calling as a Mom.”
Wednesday is about marriage–”He’s Your Man!: Confidence to Live Your Calling as His Wife.”
Friday is for all us girls–”Live as God’s Girl: Confidence to Live Whatever God Calls You To.”
My goal is to come along side you as a friend with encouragement and practical help for where you are in life.
I look forward to getting to know you better.

I’m A Big Girl

This morning I received an email regarding a ministry event that needed my decision promptly. My mind was blank. I couldn’t decide the best way to reply. I’ll think it over for awhile and see what comes to me. (Call Gene, whispered my little voice. I ignored it.)
I did breakfast dishes and returned other emails. Thirty minutes later nothing was coming. (Ask Gene. My little voice was back. I ignored it.)
I’ll let it simmer a while longer. I did my workout. Still nothing. (Call Gene. He will know how to respond.) My little voice—the Holy Spirit—would not be ignored this time.
I gave up ignoring my not-so-little voice and immediately called his number.
“Hey, hon, I got this email. What do you think I should do?” That didn’t even hurt.
“Well, what are you thinking?”
“I was thinking. . .”
“That’s what I was going to say, too.”
Peace. I was calmed by overall peace where only a few minutes before I was in confusion.
Sometimes I act like such a little child, thinking I have to do everything on my own. Sure, I ask Gene to help with the “man stuff”—hang a picture, take the dog out at night, take down the light fixture so I can wash it. But the stuff that’s my size, I try to do all by myself, because I’m a big girl and I can handle it. Right? Well, yes, I suppose I can, but do I have to handle everything I can by myself?
Of course not. When we married, God made Gene and I one. We are here for each other. I help him and he helps me. He would do it more often if I would just swallow my pride, listen to my little voice, and ask. Guys have perspective that we don’t. Ask for his thoughts on a dealing with a difficult friend, how to handle a situation at work, or if you should say yes to the latest desperate request for your help.
Even big girls ask for help.
What do you need to ask your man to help you with or give his opinion regarding?

May 24, 2010

The Gatekeeper of Our Dreams

“And don’t think we are the gatekeepers of your dream.”
Well, they are,” I whispered to my friend sitting next to me, holding back the urge to jump up and yell Blasphemy!
My friend and I were at a writers’ conference sitting in on a panel of book editors. The editors were discussing the type of material they were looking for and what they wanted writers to know about their publishing houses.
Our strong reaction to his disclaimer (my friend had nodded in agreement) was brought on by our wrong belief that if the editors would just look at our material they would realize how amazing it was and publish our books and our dreams would come true. But after his comment, we felt rejected before he even looked at our work. Rejection is something a writer must deal with if she is going to be a professional writer.
Actors the same way. Yesterday one of my daughters learned she did not get the part she had hoped for. She worked hard to prepare. She has proven herself by doing the small roles with excellence. Surely, this was her year. The role went to someone less experienced. The rejection hurt and disillusioned her.
Rejection is a part of life. Everyone experiences it. Who hasn’t felt the pierce of rejection
• by a breakup/divorce?
• from children?
• from parents?
• from job loss?
• of not getting the job?
• from friends who don’t stay true?
What do we do when the one we think is the gatekeeper of our dreams locks us out? Our answer determines the kind of person we become and the direction of our life. Here are a few truths to help you with your answer:
1. Don’t take every rejection personally. Unless you have been grossly rude, irresponsible, immoral, or illegal, very often it’s more about them than you. The other person is just that—another person. They have limited knowledge and judgment. They have their own issues. It’s impossible to know why you were overlooked when you seemed to be the perfect one for the job, role, friendship, opportunity, etc.
I tried to give my daughter perspective—This is the opinion of one high school teacher. I’m not disrespecting the teacher or her position, but I wanted my daughter to gain perspective. There will be other roles and other directors.
Own whatever part you may have played in the rejection—real not perceived. Then know that not even Jesus pleased everyone all the time. How can we expect to?
2. Let this rejection grow you. Reflect and decide what you can do better next time. My first book, Queen Mom, was rejected several times before it was published. Each time the editors who rejected it gave me helpful advice to make it better. I listened and used their advice. Three years later it was published.
3. Consider redirection. Maybe this rejection is about you—not personally, but maybe God is trying to get your attention to try something else. My first attempt at writing was a novel. One of my friends has one of those can’t-believe-this-really-happened life stories. I thought God was directing me to turn her story into a based-on-real-life novel. I interviewed her once a week for several months. I wrote my proposal and went to a writers’ conference. A gracious editor from a well-known Christian fiction publisher looked over my work and asked me, “Where do you see the story going?” It was the next logical question, but I was speechless. At that moment God made it very clear that I am not a fiction writer. I went home and started working on Queen Mom.
4. Bottom Line—We are always in God’s hands and whatever comes to us is only through His permission (i.e. Job—as in “The Book of”). Through all my rejections (and there have been many) I rest in the fact that if God wanted me there I would be there and no one could prevent it. This doesn’t take away from my responsibility to work hard, prepare, learn, grow, and be a person of excellence and integrity. But, as we discussed last week, the results are always God’s.

Are you feeling the sting of rejection or maybe rejection knocked the wind out of you this time? Lick your wounds. Then decide, What is the truth in this situation? Now move forward accordingly. Sometimes we can’t make sense of the nonsense, so don’t hesitate to talk with someone wiser.
I would love to hear what you are doing with rejection.

May 4, 2010

Bible Study Tuesday–Really the Last One

This week was my answers to your questions. In the notes below I answer two questions. However, a third question came in at the last minute and I discussed it without notes. Let me know if you would like the information we discussed on difficult relationships and I will work it up for next week.

The Journey

Both of the questions I received this week can be answered in a discussion on “The Journey.” That’s what you are about to begin. You have finished Princess Unaware and hopefully you have lots to think about and put into practice in your years to come—in your journey. So I want to discuss a few things to encourage you and help you persevere on your journey.
First, I’m not sure if we discussed what I mean by “your calling.” Your calling is the fabulous life God planned for you. It is the family you have, your spiritual gifts, your talents, maybe a career, your ministry—anything God brings to into your life for you to do. He also gives us a passion. Is there something or a group of someone’s that you want to help? A cause or ministry that you are dying to contribute to? The answer to those questions is your passion.
One question I received asked if our callings could change. Depending on how you define calling I would say yes. God can do whatever He likes in our lives. I do believe our gifts are pretty much ours for life. I have been very much who I am today all my life. It has taken many years for me to acknowledge and embrace that though. My passion is for women to know God’s truth and for them to live fabulous lives as a result of living in that truth. Sometimes I am passionate about moms of little ones, or moms of teens, or women in general.
Now we can discuss our journey. The details will look different for everyone, but it will be much the same for everyone.
I began my journey when I married Gene. I didn’t know it then, but the man he is and the life we have lived together has perfectly prepared and launched me in the journey God planned for me. As I shared before, many years ago, before Kerry was born God put in me a desire to speak God’s truth to women. It started small and I didn’t know what I was feeling at first. Over the months it grew and because it seemed to impossible and not at all “my style” I ignored it like a package delivered to the wrong address but with no return address. What do I do with it? It’s here and it’s not going anywhere.
The desire grew and finally I had the nerve to share it with Gene. After more months of frustration because I had this thing in me and I didn’t know what to do with it or how to quiet it, Gene urged me to do the only thing we knew to do—I had a friend whose sister-in-law was a writer. So I talked with her then with the sister-in-law. Nothing happened from those conversations, but that was then God started moving events along.
God: Solution
Let’s look briefly at another hero of mine—Caleb. Joshua 14. Caleb has a great story about his journey. Back Story in Numbers 14. Start reading Joshua 14:6.
Verse 7—Caleb was 40 when he was given his big mission. 40. Caleb spent those 40 years becoming the man we see in Numbers 14. You girls are so young. You are in the years of laying your foundation and of taking your roots deep in the Lord. Do it well. You are going to need all the strength and wisdom of the Lord to raise your families.
Verse 8—Read it. Which of these will we be—will we cause others’ faith to fail or will we “follow the LORD my God wholeheartedly.” The NASB reads, “I followed the LORD my God fully.”
Verse 9 goes on to quote Moses commending Caleb and promising him the land he spied out because “you have followed the LORD my God fully.”
Verse 10—Caleb “followed the LORD fully” for 45 more years. That’s a lifetime of dedication and focus on living for God.
Verse11—I believe because of this Caleb states, “I am still as strong today as I was in the day Moses sent me; as my strength was then, so my strength is now, for war and for going out and coming in.”
Verse 12—He asks for the hill country with the giants and fortified cities. He believes God for big things as God promised.
Verse 14—Hebron became Caleb’s, but he had to fight for it. And he did because “he followed the LORD fully.”
You: Application
What can we learn about our journey from Caleb and his amazing journey?
• Follow God fully all our days.
• This is a lifelong assignment. Discuss the hazards of today’s society to make an idol out of everyone making it seem they are the norm.
• Keep your blinders on. Don’t compare. Everyone’s assignment is different.
• God is not in a hurry. Caleb was 85 years old before he took his promised territory! Why are we in such a hurry? We have all the life God has given us and He doesn’t intend on wasting a minute of it.
• Stay strong physically, emotionally, spiritually, and mentally. And get your house in order—literally. The organizing you do today will make your ability to move when God says move possible and immediate because you won’t be looking for the car keys, unpacking the suitcases from last summer’s vacation, or trying to pay the overdue bills.
• Believe and live the truth—As long as you are alive, God has a plan and mission for you. Nowhere in the Bible does God promise retirement.

Congratulations, you are the strong confident princesses. Live it well!

April 27, 2010

Bible Study Tuesday–Princess Unaware–A Few One More Things

This is the last of the notes for Princess Unaware. Next week I will have questions and answers from the Bible study group.

I am famous for my “one more things.” After a conversation I have been known to call back with “one more thing.” With the gals I have mentored I have been known to email “one more thing.” My mind isn’t as quick as I would like and often after I’ve had a chance to think things through I come up with “one more thing” I would like to add.
So today as we finish this study I want to give you “a few one more things” that I want you to take and never forget and live out—things that we discussed that are important and things that we didn’t get a chance to talk enough about.

Here we go:
~God is crazy about you. Never ever forget and constantly remind yourself that God loves you. He wants a relationship with you—stuff and all. Visual aid with wagon full of stuff.
~Live a life worthy of the Lord. Colossians 1:10. Sure we all have stuff, but let’s give it to God and not wallow in it. No more making excuses for the way we are. What not to be—2 Timothy 3:6-7. Take what we have learned and live like God’s princesses.
~Throw off the fear. We’ve talked about this often this study. Fear makes us ineffective and it’s not God’s plan for us. 2 Timothy 1:7. A fearful attitude is not from God. This leads to the next one. . .
~Live with confidence—in your relationships; your marriage, your parenting, your ministry. We can because the last half of 2 Timothy 1:7 says, but a spirit “of power and love and discipline.”
• Power–We have the Holy Spirit in us and thru us. Our obedience with the Holy Spirit’s power accomplishes great things in our lives. Keep your accounts short with God and others. Then yield to what God wants, what He shows us next to do no matter how small. His Spirit then works through us to accomplish His plan and what we couldn’t do otherwise.
• Love –what is best for the other person. Let this definition guide you in your relationships.
• Discipline—woman up. Our lives are too important to waste on things that don’t matter. Take care of yourselves, your homes, your families, grow your relationship with the Lord, step out in faith to the next exciting thing He has for you.
~Get a mentor. I cannot tell you the depth my life has been changed by my mentor. Also, I cannot tell you how I have been blessed by the women I have mentored. Prayerfully consider who God would have you to ask. Your life will never be the same. When choosing my mentor I looked to a woman who was where I wanted to be when I was her age. Also consider being a mentor.
~When you don’t know what to do next, find out. Ask God or your mentor or someone who knows. James 1:5.
~Keep your mouths shut. Don’t say anything about anyone that you don’t want them to know you said. It will get back to them. James 3:3-12. I have sinned in this area and been caught and called on in it. People were hurt. It’s easy to avoid. Just don’t say anything about anybody. You will be surprised at the new depths your conversations go and at the freedom of not worrying if anything will be repeated.
~Quit caring about others’ opinions of you and your family. Matthew 15:1-14. Read v. 12-13. If you live the fabulous life God has for you, you will become a target for others to offer their opinions of how you are doing life all wrong. Go back through each of these points and live them. That is where your fabulous life is—not trying to keep others happy.
~Life is hard. God is faithful. Judges 6:1-16. Read 1-10. The Israelites were suffering because of their own disobedience.
Read v. 11-13. You may now be living the consequences of others’ sins and wondering why God abandoned you.
Read v. 14. “Go in the strength you have.” Do what you can do and then a little more (we all have a little more when pressed). Go back to the above instructions—get godly counsel. Don’t hide out in the winepress. Get in the game.
~”Am I not sending you?” Have you heard these words from God. Staying in the winepress, hiding from life is not an option. Yes, life is hard, but I have never done passed what I thought I could ever do and known God more than when I was facing an impossible-beyond-me situation and He said to me, “Am I not sending you?”
Read v. 15. I, too, responded as Gideon in v. 15, “But Lord, how can I? You know my background, my insecurities. I am not the best one for the job.”
Read v. 16. God has always been faithful to equip me, help me, put words in my mouth and strength in my legs as I stand and say what He wanted me to say.
Why do we look at others and think they have it all together so God is using them powerfully? Instead why don’t we look at others doing what God called them to and praise God for working mightily in them and through them? He will do the same for us.
You, precious warrior Princesses of the Lord’s, have so much of your fabulous life ahead of you. Wear your crown well.

I would love your comments or questions from this study. I will answer them next week.

March 9, 2010

Bible Study Tuesday–Life as a Believer 101

Story from book of being in Target with girls. I know the impression I give doesn’t always say follower of Christ.

What about you when you’re out and about?
• Do you drive crazy even with the fish symbol on your car?
• Are you kind and thoughtful in public? (story of Jill’s experience at bookstore)
• Do you smile at others?
• Do you merge politely or drive bumper-to-bumper so no one can get in front of you?
• Do you include others or let them stay on the sidelines lonely and uncomfortable?

How we live our lives both in public and private are part of our testimony—what we are saying about Jesus to others.

God feels pretty strongly about our testimonies—about how we live our daily lives.
“Only conduct yourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ.” Philippians 1:27.
Wow. Think about it. “Worthy of the gospel of Christ.” There is no way we will ever live in a way that is worthy of the gospel of Christ. But it is our goal, our call, our job description.
Let’s see if we can begin to get our minds around this call.
First what is the gospel of Christ?
• We are all sinners. Romans 3:23. No one is perfect. Even the slightest imperfection/sin disqualifies us.
• The penalty for sin is death. Romans 6:23. The consequences of our sin is death—spiritual death—not ceasing to exist, but eternity separated from God in hell.
• Jesus, God’s perfect, holy Son—equally God, equally man—came to earth, lived the perfect life and then gave Himself totally (all God and all man) to pay the penalty for our sins. We are made right and perfect to God and we enjoy relationship with Him as a precious child of His. Romans 5:6-11, 21.

That’s it. That’s the Gospel of Christ—totally awesome Son of God gives His life for totally unworthy slugs (and sinners) so we can have a totally awesome life here and forever with God and Jesus.

So how do we live a life worthy of the Gospel of Christ? What does God want from us? Let’s take a look at a verse I like to call “Life as a Believer 101.” I like things boiled down. Let’s get to the heart of the issue. Say what you mean and mean what you say. Don’t assume I can or will understand your innuendoes. I will most likely miss it altogether.
The text for our “Life as a Believer 101” class is Micah 6:8.
“He has showed you, O man, what is good.
And what does the LORD require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8

Require—to seek or ask, specifically to worship. The three “requirements” of God are part of our worship of Him. Our purpose on earth is to glorify God and have relationship with Him–worship. So living out this verse is an extension of our worship and to be woven into every area of our lives. “Living as a Believer 101.” Things we are to do every day, all day.

~Act justly—a verdict; formal decree.
The first “requirement” in our life of worship is to be fair and just to everyone. No preference. This totally throws out treating some people with more respect than others. Everyone deserves our smile and kindness.

~To Love Mercy—
• Love—affection
• Mercy—kindness, favor, good deed.
The next way we worship God is to have an affection for others and to be kind, showing favor to others (not over others, but ourselves). Philippians 2:3-4, “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves. Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.”
Do you let the other person go ahead of you, even if you were there a split second first? Treat your kids as patiently as you treat your husband, your best friend, the pastor.
~Thoughtfulness.
~Words of encouragement/compliments.
~Be the first to speak to others.

~Walk Humbly with your God.
• Walk means walk. Literally walk with God. Keep in step with Him. Go where He goes at the speed He goes. No lagging behind or rabbit trails.
• Humbly—lowly. It’s an attitude that says “I know You are God and I am not, therefore, I will trust you with my life and not think I know better than You.”

The third requirement is to keep in step with God in humility. Example of Riley on leash pulling me her direction, her speed, stopping to sniff all road kill, barking at other loser dogs who are in an electric fence. She does not walk with me and she definitely is not humble in any way. She is out of the house and she is going to do her best to have her fun her way.

But when I put the harness on her, her attitude changes. She is unable to pull me or zigzag or jump. She must walk humbly with me. We have a great walk then. We stay on the road. We stay in step and both of us benefit from a good workout—no waste of time chasing rabbit trails (literally). She doesn’t get her nose filthy with roadkill germs.

When we walk humbly with God we are going where He says when He says. We benefit by accomplishing God’s plan for us. We have great fellowship with Him. We avoid the feelings of defeat or uselessness that comes with doing our own thing.

There are so many distractions in life and we have only so much time. We cannot stretch the hours in our day. We must make the most of what God has given us and the way we do that is by staying in step with God.

Again, I will pick on Facebook. Facebook is for this generation what the soap opera was to my mom’s generation—a huge waste of time wrapped in the packaging that read “harmless diversion.” It’s not all bad, but we must be careful.

What is keeping you from walking humbly with your God? Where have you thought you knew better than God? Over-extended budget? Going against your husband’s word? Time on Facebook with an old male friend?
As we have said before—walking humbly with God is one seemingly small yes at a time.

Now What?

How do we live this out? Pay attention to the little (there are no little things) in your life.

~First, are you a believer, a follower of Christ? If not think about the gospel of Christ. Do you believe you are a sinner—you have done/thought anything not pleasing to God—gone against God? Hey, we are all sinners. Don’t let your pride keep you from God. Like I’ve said before—we’re all in this boat together—no one better, no one worse.
If you’re not a follower, you can pray along with me silently in our three minutes of quiet time. (if you’re reading this you don’t need me. talk to you right where you are.)

~If you are a follower of Christ, do you get the gospel? I mean do you really get what God has done for you and does that drive you to sit at His feet, to know Him better, to let go of everything you think you must have in order to pursue everything He wants for you?

~If you are crazy in love with Christ and you are pursuing what He has for you, are you doing it in a way that makes the world notice? Not because you are advertising, but because you are so radical that your light shines in their darkness? Do you—
• Share a smile and kindness with everyone?
• Send a card of encouragement or bake a chocolate cake for someone struggling?
• Ask God what is important to Him today and then walk with Him? It may be cleaning the house or building a fort. It may be taking the whole gang on a walk and cleaning the house tomorrow (wrap the kids is old towel, spray them with Pledge and let them go nuts!). Lay down your agenda.

Inspiration
I dream of the day when I walk into the grocery store and every Christian woman is smiling back at me, when I hear the clerks whisper to each other “What are they on? I want some!” I dream of the day when a car with a fish on it does not speed around me to get to the church parking lot first and almost run over an elderly person trying to get the last parking spot. I dream of the day when we all will
• Act justly
• Love mercy
• Walk humbly with our God.

It’s Life as a Believer 101.

March 2, 2010

Bible Study Tuesday-When Our Kids Make Decisions We Don't Agree With

Today was one of those days we took a break from Princess Unaware. I spoke on “When Our Kids Make Choices We Don’t Agree With.” I’m passionate about parents learning to do well relationship with their kids, especially when. . .well, you see in the notes. After you’re done reading I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Were you ever the child making the decision your parent didn’t agree with? How did your parent respond? In a way that continued the relationship or in a way that started to build a wall in the relationship or made the situation worse?

How will you respond when your child who is talented in a sport/activity decides she no longer wants to pursue it and then quits? And you watch the imagined scholarship offers disappear. Doesn’t she realize what she is throwing away?

How will you respond when your child announces her decision to get a tattoo? Or maybe your son wants to get a piercing (or multiple piercings). What will the people at church think?

How will you respond when your child wants to pursue the career that she is passionate about, but that falls short of your dreams for her? She is capable of so much more.

How will you respond when devises a plan that has stupid written all over it and she won’t listen to any amount of reasoning? Why won’t she listen? I certainly know more than she does.

Or maybe your child will choose a path that is, according to God’s Word, sin. Maybe your son will want to move in with a girlfriend or will take illegal drugs. How will respond to your child? Will this decision define your relationship to your child?

Josh McDowell has estimated that somewhere between 60-90% of today’s Christian kids will walk away from the church after they graduate high school. I don’t see that trend changing any time soon. Think about it–if you have 3 kids, the statistics suggest that only one of those kids will be in church of their own free will after high school. You need to decide now how you will respond when your child makes decisions you don’t agree with.

And the zinger here is your child’s decision doesn’t need to be foolish, immoral, or illegal for you to not like it. It might just be a preference. Maybe your precious #3 child who is still walking with the Lord wants to walk with the Lord all the way to Africa or China. Then how will you respond?

Currently how do you respond when your 5-year-old decides grandpa has bad breath and she doesn’t want to kiss or hug him anymore? (He really does have bad breath.) Or when your darling, five year-old Sarah picks out well-worn blue jeans and an oversized tee shirt for her school pictures because they make her “feel happy”?

This is the time of life to prepare your response for when your child makes choices you don’t agree with. Not only is your relationship with your child at stake, but your child’s relationship with God. Kids (big and little) get their vision of God from their parents. How we do relationship with them determines how they see God doing relationship with them. We need to know God and the truth of how He sees and interacts with us.

God’s Solution

We are in excellent company. God is the perfect parent and His kids fall short of his dreams for them all the time and they choose paths that go against His Word (that includes you and me). Let’s look at how God reacts when one of His kids chooses unwisely.

Luke 15:11-12. Don’t we do this for our kids—give them our best for them to benefit? However the father in the parable knew he needed to let his son make his own choice and he did.

Many times parents don’t want to give their kids the opportunity to make their own choices. We want to protect them from negative consequences or failure. Or we don’t want others to think badly of us or our kids.

Wisdom for young moms: Give your kids room to make a few decisions on their own and let the natural consequences help. If your sweetie wants to wear only pink, let it pile up in the laundry. Then she will need to choose something else from her closet that is not pink. It’s just life.

Luke 15:13—This son didn’t wisely invest his money in a new business or education. He “squandered it on loose living.” All his father had saved for him, he wasted.

Luke 15:14-17. The son’s living conditions became so bad that “he came to his senses.” Our kids must come to their senses on their own. We cannot take them there. We can help the process by not rescuing them from the natural consequences of their own bad choices and actions.

Luke 15:18-19. The son repents. He admits his wrongness and his sorry state. Often we make the mistake of again rushing into rescue when there has been no admission of wrong, only crying for help because they are uncomfortable. Even at your child’s young age, don’t start rescuing them. If they misbehave in school, let them take the consequences. If you give the consequences for poor behavior, don’t cut it short. Don’t undermine Dad’s decision. They will figure you out and you will be the cause of the beginning of poor character in your child.

Luke 15:20-24. The son knew he was wrong and had wronged his father. He knew home was better than doing life his way. He came home and when his father saw him coming towards him his heart overflowed with love and compassion for his son and he ran to meet him. God is always ready for relationship with us. He is always standing with open arms for us and our kids. Notice how the father did not embrace the sin, but he embraced his child.

Now What?  How do we respond when our kids make decisions we don’t agree with? How will you respond to your child?

  1. First we need new perspective. I’m sorry to say, but I haven’t seen much grace or love extended to kids (or their parents) when a child makes a poor choice. We must adjust our perspective in light of God’s Word.

Answering a few questions will help realign our perspective.

  1. What’s the Deal? Identify the Choice.
  2. Is the choice a preference? If you read my first book Queen Mom, you learned how I made a big deal out of everything and the disastrous consequences in my relationship with my daughter. Who cares if she stripes her hair purple! Who cares if your 5-year old wears all pink every day? Your teen wants to go to Honduras for a mission trip this summer. Responsible leadership is going, but you just don’t want her to go. It’s a preference that you don’t prefer.
  3. Is this choice foolishness? Has she promised “I’ve got everything under control” but you see a crash-and-burn before she gets down the road?
  4. Is this choice immoral?
  5. Is this choice illegal?
    1. Is this issue worth losing my child over?

Our quick, angry words may severe our relationship with our child and it may take years to rebuild it. We think our kids won’t walk away from us, but if we don’t give them a reason to stay, they will leave or at least relationally disconnect from us.

  1. What’s more important—for you to be right or for you to grow your relationship with your child so you will be there to help him out along the way?

Because without relationship you have nothing—no influence, no say, no opportunity to help. This includes giving/living out an accurate representation of God to our kids. They might not go to church (as statistics support) and they probably have tuned out all talk about God, but they are learning about God in you—in your responses, your words, your actions and how you do life when no one is looking. You truly are the Word of God to them.

You may need to make a decision of the will before the heart follows.

Is your goal in raising and releasing your child to raise a plastic kid that makes all the right choices all the time?

If you have younger kids, now is the time to decide your goal for your parenting. Is your goal to always get the “right” response from your kids? Or do you want your child to build his relationship with God and you? When we try to push kids into a mold, they may cooperate for a while, but as they grow into the person they are, they will seep out of the mold and do their own thing. Wouldn’t it be better if our parenting focused on relationship instead of rules and appearances? This includes building relationship by being available to our kids and then helping them grow in relationship with God by our example.

If you choose to parent with the focus on relationships, you will be teaching your child to grow a deep relationship with the Lord and makes his decisions based on that relationship. Only then will his choices be in the Lord’s will. And even then we may not agree with them.  This type of relationship cannot be grown in a petri dish. It must be grown in the real world. Give your child room to grow this relationship.

  1. Look at yourself, if you dare. Have you made all perfect choices? Were you the girl your future mother-in-law wanted her son to avoid? What have you learned from your mistakes? Depth of character comes from going through hard times with the Lord. We must give our kids room for God to get their attention and not rescue them.
  2. Are you another issue for your child to deal with?

As with all parenting this is not about you—not about how you feel, how embarrassed you are, how put out you are, etc. Keep this about your child and be ready to reconcile and help when your prodigal comes home. Don’t be an issue for your child to deal with. That is one sure way to build relationship, because without relationship you have nothing.

  1. Actions to Match Your New Perspective
    1. Pursue relationship with your child.

God has gone out of His way to have relationship with us. Listen, moms, parenting is all about relationship. Without relationship you have nothing.

We have relationship with our child the same way by knowing our kids will never be perfect. Certain ones will try us more than others. But we must never give up on pursuing relationship with them.

  1. What speaks love to your child? [Tell gum story.]
  1. Bake his favorite cookies or have a frozen pizza, hot from the oven, waiting for when he gets home.
  1. Praise whatever good you see in your child.
  2. Show interest in their lives and friends.
  3. Help where you can without enabling or rescuing.
  4. Be available.
  5. God speaks love to us. Speak love to your child. Lose the I-told-you-so, lecture-cocked-and-ready-to-fire tone. Don’t bring up the past or use phrases like
  • You always
  • You never
  • If only you would

What do you have now? Nothing. Write on the back ways to show love to your child.  Remember without relationship you have nothing.

January 22, 2010

Time for a Haircut, Color, and New Clothes!

Yesterday a dear friend called, “You’ll never guess what just happened!” (We never will guess so why not just tell us!)

“I took the kids to school, did a quick errand in the school and then asked the school secretary if they needed substitute teachers. Before I knew it I was in the principal’s office talking about a job! I didn’t look great either–very little makeup and my hair in a pony tail.”

The crazy thing here is that my friend is not a teacher (unnecessary in our state) and this impromtu interview was not on her list of things-to-do today. She has been fervently looking for work that will bring in extra income, but not interfere with her family life. But so far–nothing. So yesterday on a whim she stopped in to see if there might be an opening.

My friend is scared silly. She left the corporate world ten years ago. She has been a stay-at-home mom to their twins and the administrative assistant, bookkeeper, etc. for her husband’s construction business. She has been working hard but not in the marketplace.

As we talked she started to imagine herself there. “If I do this I’m going to need a major (hair) cut and color–and new clothes.”

I chide in, ”You go, girl! And I’ll take you shopping!”

We talked through updating her resume and the areas of the job she felt secure in and where she felt not ready. Of course, in my true shoot-from-the-hip fashion I infused her insecurities with truth and encouragement. I didn’t let her linger too long in the dark shadows of the unknown.

When God shows us what is next for us there will always been the unknown. The unknown is God’s business. Our part is to ready ourselves and give our best. God called Abraham out of his homeland, Ur (Acts 7:2; Genesis 15:7). In Genesis 12: 1 God tells Abraham, “Leave your country, your people and your father’s household and go to the land I will show you.” Hebrews 11:8 gives us further insight into Abraham’s situation, “By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going” (NIV).

Most of us would be saying, “God, I”m ready to obey, I just need to know where I’m heading. I can’t just follow You if I don’t know where all this is headed.” God gave Abraham enough direction to proceed. God told him, “the land where I will show you” (emphasis mine). He also told Abraham to proceed and He would direct him along the way. And God will give us what we need to follow Him, too.

That’s what my friend is trusting God to do for her. She is proceeding. She is updating her resume, making a hair appointment, and going shopping–all in preparation for her official interview. (Imagine interviewing for a job in the outfit you take the kids to school in, minimal makeup, and hair in a pony tail!) Yes, she is a bit shaky concerning this new adventure and most unexpected way God may have for her to supplement their income. But she is stepping out, leaving Ur, and heading for the “land she does not know.”

Is God calling you to a “land you do not know”? Is He asking you to leave the familiar so He can do amazing things in you and through you? I’d love to hear how you are letting God give you confidence to live your calling.

January 8, 2010

No Resolutions. But Intentionality.

I don’t know about you, but I do not want to start this year by making it an extension of last year. I finished the last month or so of 2009 like a marathon runner finishing the race–one foot in front of the other, pushing toward the big finish. I left a trail of unattended to details and work. I just got through.

The load of guilt and regret was heavy and haunting by January 1. I don’t want to live like that any longer. I won’t live like that any longer. It steals the joy of life that God desires for me. I am not the blessing to my family and friends like I could be. My life could be full of vibrant color, but instead it is muddied with shades of gray.

How will I change? All of our lives are so full, even for those of us who live by our priorities. Being alive in the twenty-first comes with stress and pressures and deadlines and to-do lists that doesn’t compare to anything any culture before us has experienced. Since I have my priorities established I will look to how I am loading myself down and robbing my life of joy.

  • No more defeatist thinking. “I have so much to do.” ”I’ll never get it done.” “I hate doing paperwork.” “I won’t be ready or good enough.” The Bible teaches, “For as he thinks within himself, so he is” (Proverbs 23:7, NASB). My negative thoughts reveal that I am not trusting God in my life.
  • Change defeatist thinking to faith-filled thinking. Focusing (meditating) on God’s Word is a sure way to renew my mind and transform myself (Romans 12:2).
  • No more comparing me or any part of my life to others.  When I compare I either come out better or worse than someone else. That is definitely how God wants me to think about the rest of His precious children. (1 Peter 1:22)
  • Do tasks right the first time. Take time to file the paper, put away the clean dishes and load the dishwasher, return the email or phone call promptly. That way the list of to-do’s does not get heavy.
  • No complaining or grumbling. It also grays the bright colors of my personality. Paul really gets to the heart of this in Philippians 2:14-15. “Do all things without grumbling or disputing; so that you will prove yourselves to be blameless and innocent, children of God above reproach in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom you appear as lights in the world.” I want to shine for God.  The negative thing does not need to be said. Just keep my mouth shut until I can think of something better to share. “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen” (Philippians 4:29).
  • No dreading anything. I know life is full of hard things. When I start to dread an upcoming event, meeting, conversation, etc. I will take it to God, ask for Him to meet my need in the situation, and confidently leave it with Him. It’s called walking by faith. “Be on the alert, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong” (I Corinthians 16:13, NASB).

This should keep me busy for a while. What about you? Where do you need to apply intentionality? Did any of my suggestions inspire or challenge you? Do you have any of your own? I would love to hear your story.

December 16, 2009

Leave It All on the Stage, Dawg!

“Leave it all on the stage, dawg!” I encouraged Kerry with Randy Jackson’s immortal wisdom as she nervously got out of the van. She is auditioning for a role in her high school’s musical “The Wizard of Oz.”

Oh, the agony of being the mom waiting in the parking lot. What I really want to do is have coffee with the directors (teachers) and awaken them to the facts of why Kerry would be the perfect girl for the role of Dorothy or Glinda. Not only does Kerry have the perfect hair (check out our family picture), but she has a great voice without being showy and. . . well, you get the idea.

Our high school, like most other high schools, has more talent than roles. Some kids will be disappointed. Does that mean Gene and I should discourage Kerry from trying? I’ve heard parents argue yes. Don’t set them up for failure. Why try if they probably won’t make it? They’re just going to be upset.

But no! Who knows if she will make it or not? There’s only one way to find out—to prepare, to work hard, then to “leave it all on the stage.”

When I was in seventh grade I tried out for cheerleader. Go ahead and laugh. I am not cheerleader material. Of course, I didn’t make it. My score was probably one of the lowest. Unfortunately that failure burrowed deep into my spirit and unconsciously I made the decision to not try for anything out of my realm of possibility. I told myself I would not take risks.

Many years later I married a wonderful man who encourages me to take risks. He not only encourages me, but he applauds me—my successes and my failures. He gives me room to try and fail—with no regrets.

If I didn’t fear boring you to tears (or worse–cause you to check out a different blog), I would list my successes and also the much longer list—my failures. It’s been a wild ride. Many times I am left shaking my head and asking God what in the world are You up to? But no matter if I fail or succeed, it’s a rich life. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

But my poor kids! I always encourage them in their next challenge. I’ll listen to their whining for a while, but then I tell them that I know how hard it is. I tell them that anything worthwhile will be hard. Then I quote another wise man—Denzel Washington’s dad. When his kids were getting down and wanted to quit, he challenged them, “Do what you gotta do, so you can do what you want to do.” School is hard. Preparing for a tryout is hard. Writing books is hard. And the outcome of all our efforts is unsure. It’s risky to go for something.

Who needs your encouragement to take a risk? To give their best and” leave it all on the stage?” To keep doing what they “gotta do so they can do what they want to do?”

Maybe your child.

Maybe your spouse.

Maybe a parent.

Maybe a friend.

Maybe you.

Kerry’s back in the van now. She’s winded, like she just outran a monster—the adrenaline monster.

I asked her, “Did you leave it all on the stage?”

“I did my best!”

That’s all anyone can do.

If she makes it, great! If she doesn’t make it, she is better prepared for the next time she wants pursue a dream and take a risk. She learned to work hard, prepare, and leave it all on the stage, dawg!

Would you encourage us with your experience of doing your best?

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