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Returning to a Full Nest: 4 Gospel Strategies

Returning to a Full Nest: 4 Gospel Strategies

For the first few weeks of quarantine, my friend Lara was delighted that her “babies” had been sent home from college. She enjoyed staying up late talking with her daughter, and she loved cooking her son’s favorite meals. But then weeks turned into months, and while her work continued, her kids’ summer jobs had been canceled or furloughed. As things re-opened, her son and daughter wanted to hang out with friends and sleep the morning away. Now they were finally going back to college, but they would be returning home at Thanksgiving, and staying home until after Christmas. Lara found herself easily irritated and occasionally longing for a return to her empty nest. Like Lara, many parents struggle to navigate the transition back to a full nest. How can we live our faith, hope, and love in this season? Although there are no quick and easy answers, applying four gospel principles will help.

  1. Be kind, patient, and gentle (Ephesians 4:2, 32).

Being kind does not mean allowing our kids to do whatever they wish. It does call us to consider that this transition may be harder on our young adult children than it is on us. In the midst of being stuck at home during a global pandemic with serious concerns about their future, the anxiety young adults already feel may be exacerbated. Our kindness, gentleness, and patience can help to ease this anxiety.

Kindness, gentleness, and patience will help us to consider what our adult children are going through in this uncertain time. Young adults who have lived away from home at college or elsewhere have learned to live on their own, to “adult,” as they call it, cooking, paying bills, working, and going to school. Having to return home can jolt them out of the healthy rhythms they may have developed. While we as parents may be tempted to roll our eyes as we consider the so-called “challenge” of enduring homecooked meals and free rent, we need to recognize how much our kids miss the independence they have gained.

  1. Be humble and respectful (Ephesians 4:2).

Just as Jesus honored the little children, we can honor our young adult children and the ways God uses them to grow us in grace.  Young adults are going through a normal process psychologists call individuation, learning for themselves and developing their own value systems. When they return home, they may reject some of our values and traditions. If we respond with humility and respect, we can discover what the Lord may be teaching us through them.

A pre-Covid example may help to illustrate. When our older daughter arrived home for fall break her sophomore year of college, she no longer wanted to eat our traditional Sunday night meal of grilled hamburgers and homemade French fries. As an exercise science major, she was studying nutrition and pointed out (politely) that it wasn’t the healthiest meal. While it was tempting to take her rejection of our tradition personally, humility and respect led us to consider her point. Good conversation ensued, and she introduced us to the concept of food deserts, explaining that poor people often struggle to obtain healthy food. If we had demanded that she eat the food we prepared, we might have missed an invitation to know our daughter’s heart for the marginalized and to learn how we could better love the marginalized.

  1. Seek wisdom for setting reasonable expectations about potential conflict, and seek to be peacemakers in conflict (James 1:5; Romans 12:10, 18).

When young adult children return to the nest, they may long for the nurture and care they received as children. At first, we may enjoy doing their laundry, cooking all the meals, and shopping for groceries, but that joy can fizzle fast, especially if they are lying around on the couch. After arming ourselves with prayer for wisdom, and with the aim of living peaceably, we can discuss reasonable expectations about household chores, finances, curfews, meals, guests, and other concerns.

Our daughter and her husband, who work in college campus ministry, noted a conflict unique to the coronavirus—concerns about staying-at-home and social distancing. Young adults, by God’s design, enjoy spending time with peers, but parents are concerned about introducing the virus to the household. Complicating matters further, some young adults have returned to a home where parents, grandparents, or siblings are part of the vulnerable population.

Although we as parents have the authority to set the rules, prayerfully listening to our young adult children and respecting their growing wisdom can lead to a more fruitful discussion. We may discover that our young adult children have some creative solutions that address our concerns and allow them to enjoy needed time with friends.

  1. Repent and forgive (1 Timothy 1:15-16; Ephesians 4:32).

In the midst of conflict, we can follow the lead of Paul, who identified himself as the “worst of sinners” (1 Timothy 1:16 NIV). As parents, we should always be examining our own hearts, searching for sin and idolatry. As parents, we should also lead in forgiving, “as God in Christ forgave” (Ephesians 4:32).

Lara’s irritation boiled up into anger, and at one point, she launched into a loud and long tirade against her kids. She’s not alone. Despite seeking to be kind, patient, gentle, humble, and wise, we will fail. Conflicts will arise, and we may not handle them well. And yet, even sin and failure can lead to love if we repent and forgive. Lara went to her son and daughter and apologized, asking their forgiveness. The three had a healthy conversation about expectations, and Lara also forgave her children for the way they had failed to respect her. 

When we lead with repentance and forgiveness, our young adult children will notice. Just as they will always remember this season fraught with fear and friction, they will also remember that their parents showed them how to live into the fullness of their faith, hope, and love. Isn’t that the best end-goal for all of us in this season?

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A Letter to New Moms: What I Wish I Had Known

A Letter to New Moms: What I Wish I Had Known

It’s not May yet, but Mother’s Day is in less than two weeks. For the next three weeks, we’re going to talk about moms. But if you’re not a mom, please don’t leave:

  • Consider sharing with young moms this week’s letter (you might find yourself nodding even if you’re an “old mom” like me);
  • Stay tuned for next week when we talk about how (and why) to tell some of your stories from your mother’s point of view
  • Snap up five quotes for when parenting is hard.

For today, enjoy these musings on the struggles and joys of being a new mom:

New Moms May Struggle for Control and Competence

The bad news: Out (or in) comes the baby—out flies control and competence! 

As a new mom, you will quickly realize that you have lost control and perhaps a sense of competence. In your former life as an English teacher, you knew what you were doing, but with childbirth, your life is flooded with uncertainty.

  • That 6 hour epidural-free labor you planned — how about a 33-hour pitocin induction instead?
  • That 2-year-old you thought would never scream in the super market? Just hand over the gummy vitamins!

The good news: Being a new mom will humble you — I mean — flat-out-on-the-floor humble. 

Being a new mom will literally drive you to your knees, and while you’re down there fetching toys or changing a diaper, you might as well pray: A LOT! You will become, ironically, like a child, clinging to your Abba Father for moment-by-moment mercy.

Being a new mom will literally drive you to your knees—and while you're there, you might as well pray! #momlife #motherhood Click To Tweet

New Moms May Struggle with a Sense of Shame and Failure

THE BAD NEWS: Being a new mom is a daily exercise in not-enoughness.

  • When that baby won’t sleep through the night the way What to Expect 21st C. edition promised it would, you might feel that you are flawed.
  • When you start shouting because your teething toddler won’t stop screaming, you will know you are flawed!

THE GOOD NEWS: It is good to know you are not-enough. You never were. Christ is enough, more than enough. The freedom and hope of the gospel is that our love and patience and kindness for our children grows as we enjoy God’s love and patience and kindness toward us.

You will grow in your understanding that there is no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1), and you will show your child what she most needs to know: in Christ, there is always hope for repentance and forgiveness; we never have to stay in shame or condemnation!

New Moms Don’t Have the Power to Make the Story Go our Way

THE BAD NEWS:  Your parenting story, your child’s story, like the six-hour epidural-free labor you hoped for, will not often turn out the way you imagined it.

As you learn ever so quickly, even if you do things just right, there are no guarantees that what you do is going to “work.”

  • You nurse every two hours, just as the lactation consultant told you, but your milk still isn’t coming in.
  • You teach that 10-month-old-early-walker the word “no,” and you even try to distract her. She pauses long enough to shoot you a look you will see again when she is a teenager. Then she goes ahead and climbs on the kitchen chair.

THE GOOD NEWS: God is writing a better story than we could ever imagine. He is redeeming our hearts as we let go of control and competence, as we humble ourselves and depend on Him, as we rest in his more-than-enough love for us!

From this old mom to all you new moms, take heart. You will likely struggle with some of these heart issues all of your parenting life, but the good news is that God is making all things new, redeeming our hearts and our children’s hearts through the sorrows and the joys.

A Prayer for New Moms

Lord, we bow before you, the only perfect parent. Wrap us, we pray, in your mothering wings, protecting us and nurturing us, even as we seek to nurture these children you have written into our stories. When we think we can’t change one more dirty diaper today or deal with one more toddler tantrum, give us the strength to endure, and the compassion to love. When we feel like complete failures because our kids are disobeying or not working the plan we had written for the day, help us to know your delight in us and our children. As we try to meet our children’s needs, help us to come to you as your children, knowing that you have called all who are weary and heavy-laden. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

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The Ministry of Motherhood: An Unexpected Calling

I’m a stay-at-home part-time working mom — have been for over 25 years. To tell you the truth, this calling has not looked at all the way I thought it would. For many years, I argued with God, “Lord, you picked the wrong woman for this! I was planning to be a full-time working mom who taught English to eighth graders. I have a gift for that!”

After giving birth to our first child who was anything but what I expected when I was expecting (can you say “colic” — we couldn’t back then, nor were we allowed Mylicon drops:-), I quickly realized how much more competent I was as a schoolteacher than a mom. I didn’t like the fact that mothering seemed to spotlight my pervasive sin and reveal my gross insufficiency.

God did not, however, seem to think he had chosen the wrong woman for the job; in fact, he used my own deep doubts to grow a passion for other moms who struggle in this most complex of callings.

Pregnant with my third child, running on a treadmill (where I conceive some of my wildest ideas), I decided I wanted to start a Moms Group. Before you think how wonderful I was, please note that this group was originally designed for me. I wanted some older, wiser women who had three or more children to share their godly counsel. (Or, really, just tell me how to cope with the overwhelming demands.) I asked my pastor’s wife for help — by “help” I meant “you do it” — wise woman that she was and is, she kindly assisted in starting it but encouraged me to continue. I still think she and God were in on this setup together:-)!

Ultimately, this group became a place of “rest and refreshment in the gospel.” We invited the women we met at the playground or preschool, dance recitals or dentist’s offices. And here I was, the mom who struggled with my sin and failures, a coach and encourager to other moms.

In her new book, Running on Empty: The Gospel for Women in Ministry, Barbara Bancroft writes about why God might use us in areas where we feel so ill-equipped:
“Although God regularly uses people who are educated, trained, and experienced to move his kingdom forward, those whose confidence is in their abilities and experience can easily forget their need for Christ in the everyday of ministry. If we rarely question our abilities, it is tempting to rely on them to accomplish our goals instead of relying on the Spirit to work through us.” Loc. 144

She goes on to say, “we will not be ready to do the work God has prepared for us to do until we know how to rely on nothing but the finished work of Christ.”

With children aged 19-25, I am now a veteran mom. I’ve been “educated and trained” — through potty-training, middle school bullying, trophies and tardy slips, deep grief over friends lost to betrayal or death, young adult hopes and dreams crushed and lived….At times I have relied more on my own wits and determination to figure out what to do; others I have spent hours on my knees pleading with God to work powerfully.

Though I forget it every day, I now know that mothering hope is truly in Christ’s finished work. He has died for all mothering sins; he has raised us to new life. He has declared us good, and that is more than enough. Because of his labor of love, we are free from condemnation. Freed to live and love.

A prayer for mothers:

Lord, we pray for mothers everywhere. Whatever we have done or not done today, in our lives, as moms, let us know that you cannot love us more and you cannot love us less. Help us truly understand that it is all up to you. Thank you for your provision — for forgiveness from our sins, for the Holy Spirit who whispers wisdom and hope, for your unrelenting commitment to make us more like Christ. Draw us to rest in your truth; draw us to hope in your grace. In the name of your Precious Son, Jesus, we pray. Amen

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