Month: February 2018

Get Out of the Way

Get Out of the Way

Are we getting in the way of the Church? If you study any type of church history, you will find that it is and has always been messy. People are involved. People are complicated. If people are complicated and people are what make up the 

Pointing Fingers

Pointing Fingers

Have you ever gotten out of bed in the morning, walked into the bathroom, quickly looked at your reflection as you passed by, and gasped because you didn’t recognize the person staring back at you? Or, you flip to your camera app on your phone 

Flashback Friday: Ministry in the Mommyhood

Flashback Friday: Ministry in the Mommyhood

Anyone struggle in the parenting realm? I wish I had the hand-raising emoji. I have a feeling we would all be raising our hands. Like any mom, I struggle in all the things motherhood. Just name a day of the week and I can tell you a struggle. We all struggle as moms. Even if we have our mom-game down, we still have our moments.

I could write a ten-page blog about all my struggles. But, for the sake of time, I will only chat about one. When I got pregnant with my first-born, I was getting my Masters degree. I thought I would work forever. I had always worked and liked the feeling of contributing to society and financially to our home. I remember talking to a friend when I was about seven months pregnant. He told me I was going to want to quit after I had the baby. In that moment, I knew for certain he was wrong. And then, my baby was born.

I had quite a bit of time off with the way my schedule landed, so I didn’t go back to work until he was five months old. I was dreading it (as any mom does), but thought I would adapt just fine. Wrong. I was a hot mess. I hit two parked cars on two separate days in all my emotional frenzy. I would cry almost every day. It was horrible. My husband finally told me that we couldn’t do this anymore and that something needed to change. So, I quit my job and we moved to Texas.

I remember the relief I felt when I knew the only focus I had was my son. I felt like a million pounds had been lifted. I had no idea what I was in for with the new title of “Stay-at-home” mom. I had wonderful people around me giving me really good advice but I needed to live it.

Everything was going good in my new role, not without struggles, but good with one exception: feeling valuable.

In case you didn’t know, motherhood doesn’t pay. Well, not in the traditional form of a paycheck. I knew and valued success partly by my paycheck and partly through how my students responded to my teaching. Every time I finished some credits for my Masters, I ticked up on the pay scale. That felt good. When my kindergartners left at the end of the year reading when they came to me not speaking a lick of English, I felt accomplished. When my sixth graders started believing in themselves when no one else did because of what we were doing in class, I felt a tinge of pride.

Now, I found myself at home with a kiddo who couldn’t tell me I was doing a good job and didn’t have the means to pay me. My husband would leave everyday to his job where he was praised for his wins and successes. He paid all the bills and I spent all the money. His money.

What I didn’t realize in those early years, and still struggle with today, is that motherhood IS a ministry. Just like any other job title, motherhood IS valuable. Without mothers, our world would collapse. I believe this with all my heart.

We are told all the time that motherhood is the hardest job on the planet. We are told that without us mamas, all would be lost. And I completely agree. But, it is hard to live feeling valued when your toddler is mad at you because you gave him lunch on the wrong plate. Or, you cannot, for the life of you, keep up with all the laundry. The toys are strewn all over the playroom spilling into the hallway. Shoes are on the stairs. There are clothes in heaps in strange places as if your kid evaporated. You feel ragged, worn-out, worn-down, and useless. Let me free you from the anxiety of trying to keep it all together: our value doesn’t lie in this space.

Motherhood is an explainable conundrum. You do a million and one things during the day to serve these petite humans with no thank you, no paycheck, no good job, or gold star. Most days, you seem to go unnoticed. Yet, that does not decrease your value.

Our value does not lie in a paycheck. It doesn’t come in a compliment. We don’t lose our value when we don’t get all the chores done or the house is a disaster. Our ministry in the mommyhood is powered by sweet little hands around our necks giving us a hug. Our value is felt in sloppy baby kisses and goodnight stares while rocking them to sleep. It comes when your kindergarten brings home their first writing and it is about their mommy. Ministry in the mommyhood is felt when your middle schooler still wants you to walk him out to the bus and wants you to hear about their day and your grown child calls for advice. This is our payment.

We place value on things that don’t matter like mommyhood does. We forget to see that the daily trenches of motherhood are our ministry and we aren’t paid because no amount of money could come close to paying us our worth.

I am standing beside you on these mommyhood front lines telling you, telling me, that we are valuable. Our ministry: the laundry, the cleaning, the cleaning again, and again, the homework battles, the diaper changes, the cooking and feeding and cooking and feeding, the boo boo kissing, the tear wiping, the Lego and Barbie playing ALL MATTERS. EVERY. SINGLE. BIT.

The ministry of the mommyhood is one of the most treasured and valuable things on earth. Don’t ever question your worth for you are far more precious than diamonds.

Love & Blessings,
Meg

Spotlight

Spotlight

Have you ever felt like life is a black hole? Life is so hard and seems so dark that it is going to swallow you up. We beg and plead with God in our prayers only to hear nothing from him. We feel lost, alone, 

Sleep

Sleep

I love my sleep. I may not be good at resting, but sleeping is my jam. I love the feeling of getting into my bed after the day is done. I always have to get into a made bed. I cannot get comfortable in a 

Flashback Friday: Nothing to Prove

Flashback Friday: Nothing to Prove

“How sweet is your name, Lord, how good You are
Love to sing in the name of the Lord, love to sing for you all?
Death could not hold You, the veil tore before You
You silenced the boast, of sin and grave
The heavens are roaring, the praise of Your glory
For You are raised to life again”
<b>What a Beautiful Name
Hillsong Worship</b>

Have you ever felt the need to prove yourself? That’s probably a silly question. We all doubt ourselves at some point. But, I have to ask, because many of us live out each day trying to prove something to someone without even realizing we are doing it. We get stuck in the endless cycle of not-good-enough and fall into the trap of striving towards the unattainable and that which was not meant for us.

Have you ever…
-felt like an outcast
-doubted your ability
-convinced yourself there was no way you could do something
-felt unworthy
-felt too fat, too skinny, too shy, too loud, too dumb, too smart, too ugly
-felt like you don’t fit the mold so you must not fit in
-seen someone else achieve the dream you have crushing all your hopes
-felt like you will never measure up

I have felt all those things and more. I am a pretty competitive person. Tell me I can’t do something and that usually ignites a fire inside me to prove you wrong. Not to shove it in your face that I can do what you say I cannot. Rather, it’s to prove to myself that I can; that I am stronger than I think I am. However, this does not limit me from not feeling good enough; from skirting the constant desire to prove myself.

Most of us Christians know in our heads that our value and worth do not lie in this world. Society and culture do not dictate our confidence. Yet, so many of us, most of us, live like we believe Christ as our confidence. We live in a constant state of proving and it’s time we are done.

I love the song, “What a Beautiful Name,” by Hillsong Worship. It is a simple, yet powerful, message of the glory of God. One portion of the song pierced my soul deep. The lyrics say, “You silenced the boast, of sin and grave.” This right here about did me in.

I know Easter has passed, but give me a moment to head back there and talk for a minute about Good Friday and Resurrection Sunday. You see, we have church on Friday remembering the sacrifice Jesus made on the cross. It’s usually a somber service recalling the death our Savior experienced for each of us. Then, come Sunday, we celebrate jubilantly praising God for raising Jesus on that third day. We forget about Saturday. The silence of Saturday must have been deafening.

Whenever I think about that Saturday, I can’t help but wonder what the world was doing, how they were reacting, on that day. Were Jesus’ enemies rejoicing gloating over their victory? Where his followers curled up in each others homes crying and completely somber? Would there be disciples who made a fuss trying to prove that Jesus is actually who he says he is even though his body lay in a tomb? How much proving was going on from Jesus’ followers? How many of them cried out and fought to prove Jesus was the Messiah? I wonder.

This song, however, states that he silenced death and he did it without proof. Let me explain. Jesus didn’t have to resurrect on Saturday in order to hurry up and prove himself because the proof was already there: in the silence. He knew, and I believe his followers knew as well, that the silence of the grave on that Saturday only strengthened the proof of Jesus’ power. And this is where we need to live.

We are already proven. Our value, our worth, our purpose solidified. We have nothing to prove because all has already been proven thru Christ. You are good enough, worthy enough, smart enough, valuable because of Jesus. Period. No need to strive to prove how beneficial you are. You matter to the One who silenced the boast of the grave. You matter more than you could ever fathom. It’s about time we lay all the proving down and live like it.

And, when we feel like we aren’t good enough (because that is going to happen more often than not), we let him fill in the gaps like only he can. If the One who had everything to lose if he didn’t prove himself remained silent on that Saturday, than we don’t have to shout our value from the mountaintops. Let him speak for you. Let him fill in the gaps. You have nothing to prove.

Love & Blessings,
Meg

What’s Happened to Us

What’s Happened to Us

I was sitting outside watching my kids enjoy the first warm day in a long time when I received a text. The message informed me of another school shooting. I told my friend that I was so happy I didn’t watch the news. I had 

Deserving

Deserving

You love Jesus. But, do you let Jesus love you? Yikes. That’s a tough question. It hits to the core, doesn’t it? We say we love Jesus but do we allow Jesus in to love us? I don’t think many of us have stopped to 

Chasing Viral

Chasing Viral

We chase things. Like running after a busy toddler, we chase after dreams, hopes, and aspirations. We long for affirmation and often search for it in the wrong place. We strive instead of do. We hustle instead of rest. We are chasing viral.

We long for the followers; hunger for that attention. We chase after the wrong beast and it swallows us whole. Soon, we lose sight of our initial goal and lose a sense of ourselves. We wonder how we got here; where we went wrong.

We were chasing viral instead of chasing Jesus.

When we choose to chase Jesus, affirmation follows. The attention we long for is fulfilled in an immeasurable security in who we are and who we were created to be.

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;  your works are wonderful, I know that full well. Psalm 139:14

You are worthy beyond your following. You are worthy even when the affirmation never seems to come.

You.

Are.

Worthy.

Stop striving and start doing. Stop chasing viral and start running after Jesus. Do the little things because they matter even though they seem to go unnoticed. Your Father in heaven sees. That is where your true value lies.

Chasing viral will leave you empty, frustrated, and depressed. Running after Jesus will leave you filled and energized in the depths of your soul. We are going to find out that all those little things we did that went unnoticed where actually the big things that mattered.

Stop chasing viral.

Run after Jesus.

Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.  Consider him who endured such opposition from sinners, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart. Hebrews 12:1-3

Love & Blessings,

Meg

Flashback Friday: 15

Flashback Friday: 15

Fifteen years. Seems like a lifetime. Seems like a blink of an eye. Scott and I were married 15 years ago. We had a six year dating adventure before we walked down the aisle. While I feel like we have been together for a lifetime