God made mothers, beautiful, tired, dependent on Him, with humble hearts, a listening ear, a loving hand, a firm hand, sometimes harsh words, repentant hearts, forgiving hearts, messy days, laundry overflows, and sinks too, dirt on the floors, but a smile as she watches her children.
God made mothers, and through Him He has redeemed us, and yes, through the mess we are beautiful once again.
God Made a Mother
(by Ann Voskamp)
God looking down on the Farmer loving
His land and God
needed someone to love the least and the little, into real whole people, and He
knew that to love is to suffer so God made a mother.
That God had
made technicians and programmers and supervisors and salesmen and God had said
–
I need someone
to get up at midnight and scoop the most fragile of humanity close to her
warmth and rock though she can hardly stand and nourish though she’s mostly
sleep-starved and change the diaper and the sheets and the leaked on, leaked
through, and leaked down clothes though she’ll have to change them in the
morning and next week and that won’t change for years.
So God made a Mother.
That God had
said I need somebody with a strong heart.
Strong enough
for toddler tantrums and teenage testing, yet broken enough to fall on her
knees and pray, pray, pray.
Someone who
knows that in every hard place is exactly where you extend grace,
who looks a hopeful child in the eye and says yes, even though she knows every yes means a mess but
this is how you bless,
who has the courage to keep letting go because she’s
holding on to Me.
So God made a mother.
God said I need
somebody who can shape a soul and find shoes on Sunday mornings and get grass
stains out of Levis.
And make dinner
out of nothing and do it again 79, 678 times, and keep kids off the road and
out of the toilet and in clean underwear and mainly alive though she’s mainly
losing her mind and will put in an 80 hour week by Wednesday night and just do
one more load of laundry.
And one more
sink of crusted burnt pots.
And keep on
going another eighty hours because raising generations matters and weaving
families matters and tying heart strings matters and these people here matter.
So God made a mother…
It had to be
somebody who could comb back pigtails and tie up skates just-right tight.
Who could
pretend she remembered algebra and how to get home from here and that really, she was just fine, that it must just be
the silly onions.
Somebody who
would run for the catch, jump on a trampoline and play one fierce game of
soccer and not give a thought to all those labors and her weak pelvic floor.
Somebody who’d stay up late with a science project that never ends, who’d get
up early for the game in the rain, somebody who’d wave at the door until the
taillights were out of sight and still be smiling brave.
So God made a mother.
It had to
be somebody willing to keep loving when it made no sense because that’s
what love does.
Somebody who
knew that patience is a willingness to suffer.
That joy is
always possible because there is always, always something to be thankful for.
And that life is not an emergency but a gift — so just. slow. down. There are children at play here and we
don’t want anyone to get hurt and the hurry makes us hurt.
Somebody willing
to feed and lead, lay down her life and pick up her cross, give of her time
because they have her heart. Someone who knows that we all blow it —
and what matters is what we then do after.
Someone who
could humble herself into the tender sorry that covers a multitude of sins.
And who’d bow
her head at night over the girl asleep with the doll in the crook of her arm —
and thank her Father for this hidden life that’s the turning gear for the whole spinning world.
So God made a mother.
And when the
Farmer rolled over in sleep, there was this deep settling in — I could feel it
— of not getting out of here, but of the grace that we *get* to
be here.
That there was
soil to till and numbed, hard places to break up, and there were seeds to be
planted in the dark and the hope.
And grace to be
cultivated everywhere.
That it was same
down every back road and every side street and we aren’t very different, the
Farmer and the mother and all-the-faithful-that-God-made-everywhere.
All of us people
known to just Farmer on.
(Ann Voskamp)
Happy Mother's Day to my Mother!!!
How are you celebrating your Mother's Day?
What did you do for your mother?
In His Grace,
Jody
3 comments:
Happy Mother's Day, Ma!!!
Love always,
Your Sari <3
Hope you are having a wonderful Mothers Day. We are calling it "Mothers Weekend" since we have celebrated for a few days now. I love what you shared. Is this in her book? Your flowers are beautiful!! See you sometime soon, we all enjoyed our last visit so much!!! Happy Mothers Day!!! Missy
Thanks Sarah! I love you too!
Mom
Thank you Missy! We have had a great day! Took a walk, watching a movie, and just relaxed. No, that is not in Ann's book, or not the 1000 Gifts book anyway. I had read it on her blog in a post.
Our flowers are just lovely right now, and we planted a few more and they are just popping with color! Love it!
We had a wonderful time of fellowship with you as well! We will talk soon!
In His Grace,
Jody
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