Want to discover what is holding you back? Take the limits quiz now.
Does your stomach churn with anxiety when you think about the world our kids are growing up in?
In the last year, I can’t count the number of times I’m startled awake by this thought:
It’s real. This is not a bad nightmare. This is not a sci-fi movie where Will Smith is going to kill the aliens and save the day. This is the world we live in now.
The masks.
The virus.
The protests.
The polarization.
The unknown.
When I was a kid, the only thing I had to worry about was if all the giant chocolate chip cookies would be sold out by the time I got through the lunch line.
It doesn’t seem fair for this generation to face such hardships.
Yet when I find myself complaining, God reminds me of all the moms in the Bible who have gone before me. Moms who laid in bed at night—tossing-and-turning—worrying about their children.
Think about Moses’ mom. The Israelites were enslaved by the Egyptians, toiling from sunup to sundown manufacturing bricks. She discovers she is pregnant and prays for nine months it’s a girl. Why? Because Pharaoh has decreed all the first born males to be murdered. Yet what does his mom do? By faith, she swaddles him in a basket, kisses his forehead, and releases her son to float down a river.
How about the prodigal son’s mother? There is no mention of her in the Bible but I can’t fathom how many sleepless nights she endured. Her eldest son demanded his inheritance, hit the road, and squandered all his money on wild living. Yet what does his mom do? By faith, she packs his lunch box, kisses his forehead, and releases her son into the big, scary world.
And we dare not forget Mary, Jesus’ mother. She was honored to carry the Son of God in her womb, but how many worries did she bear in her heart? How often do you think Jesus reminded her he was called to suffer for mankind? How many death threats did she get wind of? Yet what does his mom do? By faith, Mary gathers up her closest friends for support, kisses his forehead, and releases her son to be crucified.
As parents, we want to protect our kids from harm. If we could bubble wrap them from head to toe, we would. Yet what if each trial intended for evil, actually strengthened our children to be all God has called them to be?
What if we are focused on all the wrong things? As moms, we can get so stuck on praying for our kid’s safety, while God is busy plotting and planning their destiny?
“Consider it pure joy…whenever you fall into trials…because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.” (James 1:2-4)
James implores us to celebrate—not if—but when trials knock on our door. Why? It seems God is more concerned with our children’s MATURITY than he is with their SECURITY. And if this is the case, as moms we need to learn to be good at one vital skill:
LETTING GO.
We feel the tension the day our five year old hangs his Paw Patrol book-bag in his cubby. We sense the tearing of our heart strings as we unload the last box and settle our son into his college dorm. We cringe at the thought of the day we will give our daughter away at the altar.
It is an act of war to release our children into the world. Why do you think the Bible calls them arrows? The power of God breaks forth when we pull back on the bow and LET GO.
So, what should we do? By faith, we will fall on our knees, kiss their foreheads, and release our children into the big, scary world believing in our hearts they were born for such a time as this.