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“The 1st Mother’s Day After My Mom Died, I Received Texts. Then I Stopped Hearing from These People”: Grieving Daughter Says ‘It’s Been a While, But I Still Need Your Support’

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“Something that has been really hard to wrap my head around during the years since my mom died, is how little people understand about how a big loss affects the entire rest of your life. Even though people don’t always say things as harsh as ‘get over it,’ it becomes apparent in their actions, and even the way they talk about other people and things – they don’t understand why this is so hard to ‘get over.’

We all know how quickly people start to disappear. Our mom died. The food came rolling in. The cards. The visitors. The calls and texts. People bombard you. Too much even. But everyone wants to ‘be there for you.’

But the frustrating part? Everyone wants to be there, all at once, at the beginning, and then they all leave – go and carry on with their own lives, all at once, as well.

Healing through Grief with Christie Lynn

People have a way of thinking that a few weeks after someone died, everything is fine and your life goes back to normal. Everyone who has experienced a loss of this magnitude can understand that is not the case. However, for someone who has never been there, I guess they don’t know any better.

The first holiday you receive texts. The first Mother’s Day. The first anniversary. And then suddenly you stop hearing from these people. The next Mother’s Day comes, and you wonder why the people in your life didn’t think to reach out to you. You wonder how people can be so selfish and not think of you. You wonder why nobody understands that this is such a terrible day and that you need all the support you can get.

Because for someone who hasn’t lived this, they think you have gotten over it. It isn’t fresh and new anymore and to many other people that means you do not need the support. Other people have gone back to their own lives and for some crazy reason, they think you have moved forward with yours.

So yes, my mom did die. And no, I WON’T get over it.

Yes, it’s been awhile. But, I still NEED your support.”

Healing through Grief with Christie Lynn

**This story was written by Christie Lynn and originally appeared on Love What Matters. Follow her grief journey on her blogFacebook and Instagram

“They Hated [Jesus], Too”—Chris Pratt Responds to Backlash Over His Faith With Scripture, Says Criticism is “Nothing New”

“Guardians of the Galaxy” star Chris Pratt was asked about the criticism he has received from people for being outspoken about his faith in Jesus. Pratt fielded the question at a recent Cinema Society screening for “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3,” which opened in theaters on May 5.

During an interview at the screening, Page Six reporter, Nicki Gostin, told Pratt that she admired him for being open about his faith. She then used some colorful language to describe criticism Pratt has received and asked him if it’s “a hard thing to do”—remaining faithful to his beliefs despite the naysayers.

“Oh, yes, I sure do, but it’s nothing new,” the blockbuster actor replied. “If I was of this world they would love me just like that.”

Pratt told the reporter, “But as it is, I’ve chosen out of this world. That’s John 15:18-20.”

The passage Pratt cited was the account of Jesus warning the disciples that the world would hate them for following him because they hated him first:

If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. Remember the word that I said to you: “A servant is not greater than his master.” If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they kept my word, they will also keep yours.

He continued, “That’s the way it is, nothing new — 2,000 years ago, they hated [Jesus], too.”

The 43-year-old actor explained how he handles those who object to his faith, among other challenges, saying, “Oh, just how you deal with anything,” he said. “Like a rhino, stick your head down, you keep driving forward, you have thick skin…”

Pratt made headlines for his acceptance award speech at the 2018 MTV Movie TV Awards because he gave the audience and those watching the broadcast throughout the world “9 Rules for Life.” Two of those rules were “God is real. God loves you. He wants the best for you. Believe that. I do,” and “Learn to pray. It’s easy, and it’s so good for your soul.”

It was in that same year that Pratt met his wife, Katherine Schwarzenegger, in church while he was in the process of finalizing his divorce from his then-wife, Anna Faris.

“I was in the front row of church—which is like, you kind of don’t want to be like, ‘Woah, who’s that?’ at church. You know what I mean?” Pratt jokingly said while on The Drew Barrymore Show earlier this year. “But I was sneaking some glances and wondering, ‘Who is that? Anyway, what am I doing? Come on, I’m broken, help me. But who’s that?’”

Although the two didn’t start dating when they met, Pratt said that when they did everything “just made sense.”

“God has a fast-forward button, you know,” he said. “When it’s right—boom!—you’re hit. You fall in love, you get married. Now we have two beautiful daughters to add to my family, and it feels really great.”

Pratt credited his marriage to Schwarzenegger to God’s timing and perfect plan. “It’s all about timing,” Pratt said. “There’s a perfect plan out there for you. And I think you have to have faith. The minute you have faith, it falls into place.”

He and Schwarzenegger were married in June 2019 and have two daughters. Pratt also shares a son with Faris.

When A Mom’s Addiction Raged, Her Boyfriend Stepped In to Raise Her Kids

TikTok might not seem like the most natural platform on which to honor your parent’s sacrifice, but for Jordan Benewiat, it worked in a manner far beyond her wildest dreams. She took to the popular app to tell the story of her rocky childhood, and her video and its amazing, redeeming twist has racked up over 9 million TikTok views. The reason? Jordan’s adoptive dad, Steve Benewiat.

It all started when Steve came into her and her brother Jarred’s life when Jordan was just seven. He began dating their mom, but soon her battles with addiction left her unfit to parent or be in a romantic relationship. On Jordan’s 8th birthday, her mother got drunk and violent and ransacked their house. When Steve came home from out of town and saw what had happened, he immediately called the police. He could no longer see Jordan and Jarred in danger.

The kids were placed in foster care, but this was not what Steve Benewiat wanted for them. Despite having no familial connection to them, he wanted to raise Jordan and Jarred as his own and make sure they had a loving, stable upbringing. But the road to getting there wasn’t easy.

“The first time I saw my dad cry was the day he thought we were being taken by the state,” Jordan told Love What Matters. “I had no idea why he was crying in the courtroom but when he explained it to me I burst into tears and he just hugged me until we had to leave. Luckily by divine intervention, he was given emergency foster rights.”

After three years of fostering, Steve was finally able to officially able to adopt Jordan and Jarred. From the moment they came into his care, their lives changed for the better and they began to heal from the unstable, traumatic life they had lived with their mom.

“My dad gave me stability and safety I had never known before. Before I met him as far back as I can remember I was scared and worried. My brother and I had to worry about whether we would eat, if we would go to school if our mom would die from drinking too much,” Jordan said.

With Steve as their dad, she continued, she and her brother were able to do the normal childhood things that many of us took for granted as kids.

“He showed up every time we needed him to,” she recalled. “He gave me back the second half of my childhood. I was finally able to ride my bike, go to school, play sports, and never worry about dinner. He gave me someone you want to call when my life feels like it’s falling apart. He gave me the safety I had never known. My life wouldn’t look at all like it does without him.”

For her part, Jordan is ecstatic that her TikTok about her dad’s sacrifice has reached so many.

“For the world to stop and say ‘hey man thank you for being a good man’ is something I never thought I’d see,” says Jordan. “All I want to do in this life is to repay and be worthy of the sacrifices he made for two kids who had nothing left. So for so so so many people to pour that love back into him has made us feel like he’s finally getting the recognition he’s deserved his whole life.”

@jordan.elise truly my hero since the day he came into my life ❤️ #worldsbestdad #myhero #adoption #fyp ♬ paradise – favsoundds

I must say, this kind of story restores my faith in humanity, in unselfishness, and in the ability to heal from some really hard things. Maybe, just maybe, Steve’s story will inspire a younger generation of men and women to step up for some kids in need in their lives someday.

“I Had My Mind Made Up. My Boyfriend Was Cheating on Me”: Mom’s Abortion Story Turned Miracle Proves God Can Redeem ANY Situation

What do you do when you’re a single mom with three small kiddos, a cheating boyfriend and a positive pregnancy test? For Kimberly Henderson, the only thing to do was seek help at an abortion clinic.

She couldn’t bear to face people, and the world, as a single mother with FOUR children.

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Photo/Kimberly Henderson

Kimberly spent seven hours in the waiting room of an abortion clinic, trying to convince herself that she was OK with what was about to happen.

“I sat in the abortion clinic for nearly 7 hours. I remember wearing a pink t-shirt that was soaking wet from crying.”

There’s no doubt that Kimberly knew she was making a terrible mistake. God says He has better plans for us though, and this sweet mama is living proof of that.

“Today I was at the abortion clinic. I had my mind made up. My boyfriend was cheating on me. I have small kids, what will people think?? I kept telling myself I’m all alone I need to do this. Sitting there..I could hardly make out anyone or anything through the tears. People were eating fast food around me, laughing, texting. I on the other hand was a wreck. I kept my face down, my face was drenched in tears. I kept telling and giving myself every reason to go through with this even though I did not believe in it. I kept saying I’m on birth control this could not happen..I kept trying to justify it. But my heart was heavy. I felt like I was about to make a horrible horrible decision and God was giving me signs to not do it.”

God was literally throwing roadblocks at Kimberly all day. Everything from a sick kiddo, finding a babysitter, getting lost and missing her appointment were the signs she knew God was giving her.

“I woke up this morning, my daughter was sick I had to find a sitter, I got lost, my car broke down for about 15 mins and I got here late but they still got me in. I prayed God would stop and give me a sign, give me the strength to get up and walk out of here..

The lady called me to the desk. Last step before you go back. I fumbled through my wallet to find my drivers license and out fell a card a couple left on the table Saturday night when I was working… It had their church name on it.. On the back was a common verse…

‘Don’t be afraid, for I am with you. Don’t be discouraged, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you. I will hold you up with my victorious right hand.’ Isaiah 41:10
I knew God was speaking to me.”

Not only was God giving her signs, but also angels!

“Two of my best friends called me just in time and said the most comforting things. ‘I will be there for you..There’s a reason God gave you that gift.’”

Kimberly had made up her mind and was ready to leave the clinic, and was reminded one more time that she was 100 percent making the right decision by keeping this beautiful little blessing.

 

“I told the lady I changed my mind. As I was about to walk out. A young girl no older than probably 19 says to me..”Are you going to do it?” I told her I couldn’t.. She said..”I wish I could be brave like you..” I told her she was brave and she could do the same thing. She said she had to do it because of some serious circumstances.. As I turned around she said..”When you see your baby’s face for the first time you’re gonna be so glad you walked out of here today.”

Pouring tears I walked out and felt a huge weight off my shoulders. No matter what your circumstances are God doesn’t make mistakes and he is here for you.”

Kimberly’s testimony is one that speaks volumes about God’s love for all of His children. She says that the Lord’s guidance that day truly changed her life.

10157302_1038562239499507_1477908241443304314_nPhoto/Kimberly Henderson

“Most of all I remember the enormous amount of relief and strength I felt when I walked out those doors. No guilt. No shame. No regrets. I remember feeling that this all… This all has to mean something one day. My daughter Vaida Everly has a purpose. Her name means beautiful life. And lord she is just that.. A beautiful life. After a scary pregnancy, and after countless weak moments thinking I just could not do this by myself.. September 12, 2013, I welcomed my beautiful Vaida Everly into this world with both my best friends by my side.”

That beautiful baby girl, along with the other three incredible children that Kimberly has the privilege of being a mommy to, are her entire world.

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Photo/Kimberly Henderson

“I remember seeing her for the first time and bursting into tears. And engraved in my head were the words that girl told me before leaving the clinic that day. “When you see your baby’s face for the first time you are going to be so happy you walked out of here today..” She was beyond right. 6lbs 4oz of pure perfection and no matter what pain I felt physically and emotionally… She gave me a feeling of joy that I can’t even explain. A kind of joy that if a war was going on outside I wouldn’t even know it. I am so in love.

My once tiny 6lb baby is now 18lbs. Full of life. Full of energy. Loves to laugh. Loves to smile.”

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Photo/Kimberly Henderson

“And last but not least she is that beautiful baby girl I was singing to at midnight in the kitchen. The video that has touched millions of people all over the world. Singing to her in our kitchen for a memory keep sake is the reason our entire life is about to change. For the good. For the better. She was meant to be here.

I’m so lucky. ? “

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFdjQP-5y7w

Motherhood Is Not The Highest Calling

“Being a mother is the highest calling a woman can ever receive.”

I’ve heard this said before. That parenting and being called Mom is the highest calling one could ever receive from God.

But we have been lied to.

And it is driving me nuts. I see women diminishing or suppressing other areas of their life because God has called them to motherhood.

Okay — don’t get me wrong. If motherhood is really what God is calling you to focus on, I think that is great. Fabulous, even. I commend you for the ability to accurately discern that calling on your life — it’s so awesome. I’m a mother who mainly writes about motherhood, both here and over at Memphis Moms Blog, so I get it and I hear it too.

But our culture has whispered to us that something good and high and magnificent — motherhood — is the most good and high and magnificent calling a woman can hear for her life.

But it’s not true.

I’m not proclaiming this as a sort of anthem to support the [childless].
Nor am I proclaiming this as an “out” from the immense pressure of raising humans.

I’m proclaiming this because every call is high. Because every call comes from our High God.

LISTEN TO ME. EVERY CALL FROM GOD IS A HIGH CALLING.

He does not rank them.

Nowhere in the Bible does it say this.

Sure, motherhood is incredible and many women are blessed to be mothers. It is also a high call that so many women wish they would hear. And I do believe our families should be our first, Earthly priority.

However…

God doesn’t call every person to be a parent … but He does call every person.

And each individual call is just as high and good and magnificent as motherhood.

Now, do I believe in seasons of life where there are louder callings than others? Yes. Motherhood could very well be that one for you right now. But maybe it’s not.

I would probably describe it as the most prominent urge on my life right now. Motherhood envelops and consumes me in this Season of Littles.

But that doesn’t mean it will always be this way.

Yes, I’ll always be a mother, but it won’t be the most prominent, daily call I must answer. Maybe it will be work … or maybe it will be volunteering … or mission work … or grandparenting … or whatever …

I’m afraid that if we become consumed with cultural ideas of what our calling is — or should be — we may miss part of our actual call. We may miss God’s whisper to look over in a new direction because we are so focused on the motherhood thing.

And there’s nothing I want more than the be in-tune with every aspect of what I’m supposed to do through Jesus Christ.

But maybe your calling doesn’t look like what our culture says it should.

Maybe you are supposed to work outside the home.

Maybe you are supposed to work inside the home.

Maybe you are supposed to not work at all.

Maybe you are supposed to care for others, but have someone else help care for your own family.

The list goes on…

Our God is big and creative, so we can rest assured that if God has pressed something into our lives that isn’t motherhood, whether we are moms or not, He will make it work out for good. We can move forward in it, even if we are looking over our shoulder at our kids, or another fertility treatment, or maybe even feelings of not wanting kids at all.

So do I think motherhood is a high calling?

Absolutely. Because God called.

But no, motherhood is not the highest calling.

Because God makes every call.

May We All Raise Dollar Tree Children

May we all raise Dollar Tree children.

I think that statement alone is gonna garner a plethora of reactions, which will probably run the gamut of “Heck yes!” to “Uh, heck no.”

Still, I’m gonna lead with it ’cause it’s a bit brazen, just like spending a dollar on something when you could spend $4 on the same dang thing elsewhere.

You rebel, you.

And may you be raising little kind, budget-conscious hellions who, like you, see the value (see what I did there) in being financially prudent and less name-brand obsessed.

I’d be lying if I said that I don’t shop other places like the holy land known as Target or Publix, where shopping is a pleasure. Still, when I’m not paying out my biscuit for gluten-free, vegan cookies, my favorite peanut butter protein bites, my high-waisted leggings or vintage-style graphic tees, I’m taking my arse along with my three extra appendages to dollar heaven when we can spend a little more liberally and feel a little less bad about it.

While I’m not the biggest fan of DT toilet paper, I do enjoy not having to spend upwards of $6 on a greeting card, water bottle, solid color t-shirt, coloring book, birthday balloons, or even plate and drinkware.

Listen, I ain’t fancy.

 

I like my purses from Walmart, my sandwiches from Subway, and my clothes from consignment.

That being said, I like my boots high, just like their price tag, and like my wine to be a red blend, which I have yet to come across at any nearby DT store.

But, for all of your more simple needs and less sensitive parts, Dollar Tree is the place be.

I’m raising a Dollar Tree princess, who moonlights as Batman, likes to smell like Barbie, brush her teeth with ninja turtles, rock sunglasses of every color of the rainbow, buy bandaids like they are going out of style and break rubber bands like it’s her job.

She could get expensive.

I’m gonna raise a Dollar Tree kid for as long as I possibly can, and perhaps you should too.

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This post originally appeared at jthreeNMe, published with permission. Check out Nicole’s new book, MISTAEKS HAPPEN: Embracing the Messiness of Modern-day Motherhoodavailable now.

Mattel’s Barbie With Down Syndrome Doesn’t Talk, Yet Says It All

Last week Mattel made a huge reveal in its storied Barbie doll line: a new Barbie with Down Syndrome. Since there are thousands of children in the United States with Down Syndrome, the most common chromosomal disorder, the new Barbie offers these kiddos an opportunity to “see themselves in Barbie, as well as have Barbie reflect the world around them,” Mattel said in a press release. Another benefit of this new doll is that kids without Down Syndrome can add this Barbie to their collection and make her a valuable part of their play community, just as people with Down Syndrome are a valuable part of the community at large.

Mattel worked closely with the National Down Syndrome Society to create this new Barbie. Like most with Down Syndrome, she is shorter in stature, has a longer torso, smaller ears, a rounder facial shape, a flat nasal bridge and “almond shaped” eyes. She also features leg braces, which many children with Down Syndrome wear at some point growing up.

“Some children with Down syndrome use orthotics to support their feet and ankles, and NDSS provided a box of orthotics to serve as real-life inspiration for the ones this Barbie Fashionista is wearing, matched to her outfit and the bright colors in her design,” Mattel’s press release said.

Even Barbie’s wardrobe makes a statement: her dress is blue and yellow, the colors of Down Syndrome awareness.

Like most Barbies, the Barbie with Down Syndrome doesn’t talk, allowing kids to make up their own dialogue as they play. And yet, I think she says a whole lot with her design, no words necessary! For example, when first looking at the Barbie with Down Syndrome, I thought to myself, “She doesn’t look that different from a typical Barbie.” Immediately after I had that thought, another one hit me: “I guess that is the point! People with Down Syndrome are more alike to the rest of us than they are different.” Since I know several wonderful people with Down Syndrome, I have to say that my own experiences have proved my observations to be true.

Mattel isn’t just representing people with Down Syndrome, however. This new Barbie is part of their 2023 Fashionista line. This line is a collection of dolls with different abilities, hair types, skin colors, and body types, aimed at representing all children who play with Barbies. Mattel says the Fashionista line features “35 skin tones, 97 hair styles, 9 body types and counting.”

I for one am pretty pleased with Mattel’s inclusive move here. I surely wish I’d had a more diverse set of dolls when I was a child to help me see that not everyone was just like me, and that there is so much beauty and value in all the many variations of humans that God has created in His image. Kudos to the toy brand and to the National Down Syndrome Society for this amazing joint effort.

To the Mom Who’s Shaming Your Kid on Facebook

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I fell asleep last night with peace in my heart and a bit of pride for the fact that my son was smiling as he kissed me goodnight, even though he had been crying when we first laid down to say our bedtime prayers. I mean, I knew the Holy Spirit had a lot to do with his change in demeanor, especially following our heartfelt intercession, but yeah, a lot of me felt good for myself too. I felt like a good mom. Which was awesome, since I feel like I fail at it on the daily!

A large majority of the commentary you’ll see about parenting teens and preteens champions tough love. It states that kids today need to toughen up, that they need more discipline, and that they need to face the harsh realities of this world so they can be high-functioning, productive adults. I get it. I am a Gen-X’er, after all. A latch key kid. The generation that had zero hand-holding while we transversed the neighborhood or woods without supervision. I’m tough! I also thank God I’m alive when I think back at the stupid stuff I did that almost got me killed, that my parents were clueless about. But alas, this isn’t a blog about the pros and/or cons of helicopter parenting. It’s about being a good parent. So what is that exactly?

Yes, it’s discipline. It’s teaching your children to respect authority, to listen, and to learn from their mistakes. To work hard earn their reward. It’s provision and meeting their physical needs. Yet, it’s so much more. If I had to sum it up with one word it would be pretty easy. I’d base it upon the best role model father I know. God, My Father. So, who is God?

God is so many attributes rolled into one, but the one that stands out to me as His daughter is love. And that’s what I thought of last night after holding my twelve year old.

The Lord said, “it matters to you because it matters to him. That’s how I love you.”

My son had been working for days on a digital art project, and as he neared completion his program screamed for more storage capacity. In a rush to delete the unwanted stuff and make room, he accidentally deleted his project. He had not saved it. It was gone forever. Even The Cloud couldn’t help. He tried to put on a brave face, but I could tell he was disappointed to have lost all that time and effort because of a mistake.

I was at a crossroads. I could say, “I bet you learned your lesson about hitting save!”

I could state what was obvious to me. “It’s just a drawing. Get over it! Do another!”

Or, I could walk in the fruits of the Spirit, the model my Father in Heaven gave through His Son. Patience, kindness, gentleness, love. I could allow him to cry, to let it out. I could hold him, listen, offer advice, and love him through the disappointment that was a big deal to him at the time.

Or, I could post a picture of him crying and upload it to Facebook, talking about how this generation needs to grow a backbone, learn responsibility, and work hard for the things they want!

Maybe I’m being a little over the top with my particular scenario, but sadly I see pretty similar stuff a bit too often for my taste. I see it over and over, these posts where a mom shames their child publicly on social media, toting the virtues of making your kid learn the hard way. I just don’t believe that’s the way.

A majority of the time it is parents who claim Christianity as a basis of their life that are the promoters of tough love, but I don’t see that Christ walked that way. God certainly isn’t up there punishing us for our missteps. He allows us to fall to the consequences of our own stupid actions, but He never puts us to shame. That’s the other guy. He’s the one who forgives us, the Dad who picks us up, kisses the booboo, and holds us tight, counting our tears. He’s the one who took all our mistakes on His own back, paying for them in blood, and certainly didn’t put ‘em up on a sign in the public square to get likes and shares from the angels.

When your child messes up, you can lovingly guide them to the truth, the consequences of their actions, and the way back to the goal at hand, or you can let them learn their lesson on their own. Sadly, years down the road, the lesson they may have learned is a skewed version of what a father/mother should be. They’ll carry that version into many aspects of their life, such as how they see the Father Heart of God, how they parent themselves, and how they deal with shame and self-doubt when they fail as an adult.

I want my children to learn grace! I want them to know loving kindness, compassion, mercy, and confidence that they can move forward in imperfection, growing as they go. They can learn from mistakes (because they will, without an “I told you so”), but not feel like those mistakes define them. But most of all, I want to model the love I see in Him. And I just don’t think social media shaming is it.

***

This post originally appeared at briegowen.com, published with permission.

How To Raise Kids Who Won’t Walk Away From Church

Hardly a day goes by in which we are not reminded by some major news source that “atheist” and unaffiliated” religious categories are growing among Millennials. For those of us trying to raise children who walk in the truth, the odds aren’t in our favor.

According to Barna Group, 70% of kids raised in Christian homes will walk away from the church after high school. So many of our children these days end up becoming like that third seed in Matthew 13, who fell among thorns that grew up and choked out the tender plants.

So what’s a parent who loves the Lord supposed to do?

While there’s no recipe or magic formula that will guarantee our kids keep the faith, it’s not a total crap shoot either. There are some environments that are more conducive to growing godly offspring than others.

And though we realize that God is completely sovereign over the results, a decent environment is important for outcome.

Here are 6 Ways to Raise Kids Who Wont Walk Away from Church

1. Give them reasons to believe outside of themselves

Most teenagers are woefully unprepared for the onslaught of challenges to their faith they’ll receive when they go off to college. They’ve been brought up to love the Lord with all their hearts, without also loving Him with all their minds.

They may have experienced the saving power of the Gospel but cannot actually articulate why they believe, and that lightweight faith is being carried away by the wind of skepticism on college campuses across America.

Our kids need hard answers to why Christianity is not only logical, but also reasonable. A firm foundation of apologetics will help prepare them to give a defense for their faith (1 Peter 3:15), and evaluate claims of other worldviews.

There are a wealth of apologetics resources for children, starting as young as age four. Purchase some and go through them together with your kids.

Waiting until they’re old enough to attend a worldview seminar or camp won’t be nearly as affective.

2. Include your kids in worship services

Children are usually segregated in modern day churches from their parents and grandparents into their own age- specific programs. As a result, the strength that comes by generational connection and a culture of honor is dissipating and with it, the Church.

Kids are used to having programs tailored to their needs, complete with lots of entertainment and unfortunately very little substance. When they try to reintegrate into services as adults, they find it difficult because they have been disconnected from the larger Body of Christ for the past 18 years.

They also expect the church to serve them, instead of the other way around.

There’s something even more important to the salvation of our children than parental discipleship, and it’s not Sunday School or midweek activities, or even youth programs. It’s the hearing of God’s Word.

For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart. – Hebrews 4:12

It’s through the powerful preaching of Scripture that God chooses to work on the hearts of our children. Much of what the pastor says may appear to go right over our kids’ heads, but they will absorb what is learned and seeds will be planted that have long lasting effects.

Children in church also learn to sing to the Lord, share compassion and concern for others, and pray corporately.

3. Limit worldly influences

Cross-cultural or “third culture” kids are children raised in a culture other than the one they were born into. When they come back to the country of their origin, they do not assimilate into its culture because they are so rooted in their expatriate culture. While they live in one place, they’re really citizens of another.

The truth is that as Christians, we are foreigners and strangers in this world (1 Peter 2:11). Though we live here in this fallen world, our citizenship is in Heaven. Simply put, this world is not our home and we should not live as if it is.

Our children are saturated in pop culture, and it is shaping their thoughts and actions. Greed, sexual immorality, romanticism, vow-breaking, materialism, abortion, entitlement, relativism, etc. are increasingly celebrated rather than fought in popular movies, books, and music.

Instead of letting our kids consume a steady diet of today’s mass culture for the sake of being relatable, we should be creating a counter culture in our homes that promotes the respect of God and centers around His Word.

Obviously, it’s impractical to isolate ourselves completely from the world around us, and our kids need to learn how to exercise self-control. We can, however, help our children evaluate media they watch, read, and listen to by asking questions like:

  • does this encourage the breaking of God’s laws?
  • is this full of sexual content, immodesty, violence, language, or disrespect?
  • does this portray elements of the occult that includes magic, fortune telling, casting spells, and witches or vampires cast as “good”?
  • does it play more on emotions than engage the mind?

Third Culture kids are described as spokespeople, bridge builders and natural change agents. They aren’t only advocates for the ethnicities they’ve become acquainted with, but have developed a unique ability to transfer their cultural intelligence to brand new places.

Likewise, our kids shouldn’t be so assimilated (conformed) to the pop culture that they lose their ability to be ambassadors for Christ.

4. Provide a Christian education

This is the “elephant in the room” with respect to the lack of a biblical worldview among youth growing up in Christian homes, and why the Church is losing the culture war. An increasingly secularized education system will always produce an increasingly secularized society.

If Christian influence in the culture has dissipated over the last 100 years, it isn’t for lack of Christian evangelism and Christian churches. Each successive generation is discipled in the schools by teachers who were discipled in secularized public or Christian universities.

After spending 10,000 hours in these secular classrooms, of course children will be affected by what they see and hear. Children may love Jesus with their hearts, but they are being trained to think secularly.

What you pour into a child’s mind determines what she thinks, and what she thinks determines how she acts, regardless of her heart-filled faith. The one thing that can overrule a person’s heart is their mind!

5. Teach your kids in Jesus alone

Like anything else, Satan takes something good and tempts us with a counterfeit. I believe all the people who are “shouting their deconversion” are actually railing against this, but they’re doing it in a faulty way. Instead of realizing and admitting that they never truly trusted Christ and now submitting to Him, they turn to the world for the answers that religiosity didn’t provide.

It’s clear that their hope this whole time was in something other than the saving power and work of Jesus.

We can’t just raise our kids in a culture permeated by Christian music, movies, education, youth groups, lingo, etc. and then expect that that’s going to insulate them from the harsh realities of the world. Or equip them to stand strong in their faith.

What happens when they turn 18 and leave the comfort of that culture? What happens when their friends say they no longer believe?

As Sally Clarkson put it so well: “Christian activities and interests do not make a home Christian. A Christian home is never defined by what the children are doing; it is defined by what the parents are doing.”

We need to be in our Bibles and committed to prayer. We have to guard against moralism posing as Christianity and good works masquerading as the Gospel.

Most of all, we have to teach our kids to put their hope in Christ alone. Read with them the hard stories in Scripture of Job, Daniel, and the apostles in Acts. Read the biographies of missionaries who, while they despaired of life itself at times, continued to put their trust in God.

Don’t divorce pain and hardship from the Christian life. Jesus never promised us a care-free, prosperous experience if we follow Him. It’s more like “take up your cross daily”.

That’s what our kids need to hear. That while this life may be full of disappointments, struggles, and harsh realities, they have a Redeemer and Savior who walks with them through it all until they reach the finish line and enter into glory.

6. Model authentic faith

There is a saying that more is caught than taught. While it’s important that we teach our kids what the Bible says, it’s crucial that they see our life and our doctrine match up. Otherwise, they may have an appearance of godliness, but deny its power (2 Timothy 3:5).

The Gen2 survey conducted by Generations found that the child who abandoned his faith was almost 600% more likely to refer to his parents’ hypocrisy as a reason. If we give way to idolatry, our children will usually follow in our footsteps with their own choice of idols.

Kids get the message loud and clear as they watch us prioritize other things over their relationship with the Lord. They’ll know whether Christ is merely a spoke on your family’s wheel instead of the hub.

Parents who don’t walk in accordance with their beliefs are communicating that their faith isn’t relevant. Authenticity, humility, confession of sin, and true faith really matter, if the next generation is going to walk with God.

***

This post originally appeared at Called to Mothering, published with permission.

When Did We Stop Letting Kids Be Kids?

I know I’m not the first person to have taken notice of how much the education system has changed over the past 15-20 years. Most people within my age bracket, who grew up in the 1970s and 1980s, can see a huge shift from how things were when they were little compared to how they are now. I can recall being in kindergarten in California very well. I got out at noon, and I learned how to tie my shoes. We took naps and played with clay. We got to have fun, be creative, and learn how to treat others. We were allowed to be normal five-year-olds. My question is, is that changing?

I’ll be the first to admit I’m no expert on the public school system at this current time. I do not have my children enrolled in the public school system, so I can not rely on personal experiences. What I can rely on is observation of friends whose children are. So this isn’t written from any expert platform, but rather simply an opinion based on interactions with my parenting peers. It’s also not a dig at the public school system in particular. This is actually my concerns over public mindset nowadays. When did we stop allowing kids to be kids? And when did we start expecting more from children than they are developmentally capable of achieving?

Over the past five years or so, and since becoming a parent myself over seven years ago, I’ve noticed the concerns voiced by other mothers around me. I see their questions, their searching for camaraderie and advice, their fears over if they’re doing it right, doing right by their children, and making certain their child can measure up to the standards set by the tribe at large.

I see and hear conversations like:

“Does anyone know what my preschooler needs to know before they start school?”

“My daughter never went to pre-K! Is she going to be terribly far behind?!”

“Looking for a good learning app for my 2-year-old. What do you recommend?”

“Is ABC Mouse worth the money per month?”

“What kind of books can I buy for my 4-year-old to get him ready for school?”

“My 5-year-old can’t read! What are we gonna do? Are they gonna hold her back?!”

“What’s the best pre-k program out there? Who do you recommend?”

“I can’t seem to get my daughter to do her homework!”

And you know the kid is five.

“My son can’t be still in class! I think he has ADHD!”

And you know the kid is five. Or six, for that matter.

I see so many concerns over reading fair projects (that the parent totally completes), mediocre grades, worries over too many sick days taken, and so much more. I see moms cry when their 5-year-old gets on the school bus far too early, without enough sleep, for a nine hour day, that most of the time no longer allows a nap midday.

I see friends worried over their second grader’s math scores, and I wonder if we’re perhaps a bit too concerned? Now, I’m all about [for] education. I hold a higher degree, and because of that, I have chances in my career I would not have had otherwise. I love to read, and I think an extensive vocabulary and proper grammar is a positive attribute to hold. But I wonder if we’re taking it too far, too soon?

For example, in some westernized countries children do not begin formal education until age seven, and I can totally see why. Four, five, and six years olds are still deeply discovering the world around them. They’re learning to deal with their emotions and interact with others. They’re creating relational characteristics that will help lay the foundation for the kind of adult they will be. They don’t need adult stress; they have enough to deal with in the way of child stress. There are so many unknowns, lessons, and daily discoveries they are making. We really don’t need to impede on that too much.

For young children, learning should be mostly about play. They should be seeing that learning is fun, that discovery is adventure, and that it’s not a race to achieve, a box to check, or a test to complete. Reading should be for pleasure, not a painstaking chore, and this is something I had to understand early on in the education of my own children at home.

“He Asked if I Would Snuggle With Him”: Nurse Climbs into Bed With 5-Year-Old, Leaves Mom Crying Tears of Joy

5-year-old Slade Thompson has had a pretty rough year for a kindergartener, after undergoing two surgeries within the last few months.

His most recent hospital visit was to have his tonsils removed, a painful and scary procedure for such a young boy.

“He’s been through a lot this last year,” said Slade’s mom, Layla Thompson. “We had been in a children’s hospital, so we were kind of nervous to go to just a hospital to have it done.”

But to the concerned mother’s pleasant surprise, her son couldn’t have been placed in better hands at the UPMC Susquehanna hospital in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

As she nervously waited for Slade to wake up from his anesthesia in the patient waiting room, an unexpected blessing arose in the form of nurse Annie Hager.

A team of nurses had to go check on the boy before Layla was allowed to see her son, but the frightened 5-year-old recovering from his surgery simply couldn’t wait to be consoled.

“When I told him mom couldn’t be there, he asked if I would snuggle him,” said Hager.

Without hesitation, the empathetic nurse replied, “Sure will,” before hopping into bed with Slade to hold him in her arms and dry his tears.

“You want somebody to treat your child the way that you would treat them, and so whenever I turned the corner and I saw them, I looked at my fiancé and said ‘awwwww,’ and we both started getting a little teary-eyed,” recalled Layla.

The touched mama snapped a picture of the endearing moment, and the photo has since gone viral.

Proud of the act of compassion carried out by Hager, UPMC Susquehanna sang praises on social media for the hero in blue scrubs:

“When Slade Thompson of Renovo woke up from tonsil surgery, all he wanted was to be snuggled and cared for. Not thinking twice, Annie Hager, RN, climbed right into the bed and snuggled the little boy. As a nurse, providing care is one thing, but making sure our patients are calm and comfortable matters just as much. It’s nurses like Annie – who show true compassion – that keep our patients happy. We thank our nurses for taking time to make personal connections with patients. Annie’s connection with Slade was so real that he brought her flowers at his follow up appointment.”

“I cried,” said Hager of the unexpected visit and gift. “It’s humbling.”

But according to her, she was just doing what any one of her colleagues would have done if put in the same situation.

“I’m sure anyone that works up there would have done exactly the same thing.”

The Day My Husband Told Me “This Isn’t the Body I Fell in Love With”

From the countless magazine covers plastered with waif models to web ads oozing with the next revolutionary weight-loss hack, it’s hard to get away from the cultural narrative that screams “skinny is BETTER” especially when you are dealing with a postpartum body.

Reportedly, “a total of 75 percent of all American women endorse some unhealthy thoughts, feelings or behaviors related to food or their bodies”…and those are just the ones who admitted to it in a survey.

If we’re being honest with ourselves, we’ve ALL probably had those thoughts at some point in our lives.

In the era of Photoshopped thighs and girls contracting every-eating-disorder-under-the-sun, it’s become quite the trend to champion body-positive thoughts and self-acceptance through social media.

We’ve ALL seen the memes.

“I’m so Flaw-some”…

And “Imperfection is beauty”…

Those quotes look all adorable when packaged in their Pinterest-perfect graphics, but to what degree do we actually believe them?

Particularly after having children, it’s not uncommon for a woman’s body confidence to plummet to an all-time low.

Your tight abs are replaced with post-baby flab and your once supple skin now bears the marks of tiger-striped stretch marks.

How’s that for feeling attractive?… Particularly when it comes to pleasing the man who fell in love with the once-upon-a-Barbie-bod version of you.

Well for Mum on the Run, Laura Mazza, that’s something she’s finally starting to be at peace with after warring for years over her fading looks. But what’s most beautiful is her husband’s response to her insecurities about “the body he didn’t fall in love with.”

In a viral Facebook post, Laura bares her heart about the wonderful man who looks past her postpartum body full of stretch marks and straight into the soul of the mother who bore his babies:

“This isn’t the body you fell in love with.”

I said to him.

Facebook

The body he fell in love with was toned, it had muscles, there were no stretch marks on my belly, none on my boobs, no gut from muscle separation.

The body he fell in love with fit into tight jeans, could walk into a shop and grab any size and walk out, knowing it fit.

This body now couldn’t shop at those stores, and mostly wears leggings. His body stayed the same, but mine changed in every way. It isn’t fair…

I stood in front of him, exhausted and broken, the tears welled in my eyes, “this isn’t the body you fell in love with.” Then he said, “You’re right. It isn’t the body I fell in love with.

Instead it’s a body that grew our children, it fed our children, it comforted our children, it made life. Your body is the one I fall in love with every day.

I didn’t know what love was until I saw this body and found out all it could do, so thank you.”

Do not be ashamed of what you have, or what your mum body looks like, there’s plenty of time to give up cake in the future, for now, enjoy the moments you have, and enjoy the fact that you have made something that is worth every stretch mark and every dimple.

If you needed a reminder, this is it, this body you have now, its worth every bit of love and more.

Laura’s words of encouragement are a powerful reminder that the body we have IS worth loving… And moreover, it is NOT infused with the kind of beauty that lasts.

“Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting; but a woman who fears the LORD is to be praised.” –Proverbs 31:30

Share this inspiring message with a woman who needs to hear these wise words today. I know I did. ❤️