Passionate Homemaking

Living simply in order to give generously

Mission of Motherhood: Storing up Treasures!

book club, motherhood Add comments

Today we con­tinue our book study on The Mis­sion of Moth­er­hood by Sally Clark­son with chap­ter 3: The Undi­vided Heart. Please join us! Here are just a few points that really stood out to me while read­ing this chap­ter.

Matthew 6:20-21
“Lay up for your­selves trea­sures in heaven, where nei­ther moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal; for where your trea­sure is, there will your heart be also.”

The com­mand in this pas­sage of Scrip­ture is for us to set our hearts on choices that have eter­nal results, rather than tem­po­ral sig­nif­i­cance. I have always con­sid­ered this pas­sage to only be refer­ring to stor­ing up trea­sures in heaven, chal­leng­ing us to be gen­er­ous, to tithe, to serve, and send our resources on ahead of us. What struck me in this chap­ter was Sally’s insight­ful point with this ques­tion: Have you con­sid­ered that your chil­dren are eter­nal souls that will last for eternity?

“My chil­dren are eter­nal human beings whose lives and souls will last through­out all of eternity…God has given them into my husband’s and my hands to pro­tect and lead and shep­herd them through this life on earth; in his sight, they are my first pri­or­ity. Com­mit­ting myself to ful­fill­ing God’s design falls under the admo­ni­tion to seek first his king­dom - the king­dom of heaven where we will live for all eter­nity. The king­dom of this world and all of its plea­sures last only for a time. My chil­dren will become trea­sures in heaven if they indeed learn to love God and serve him with their whole hearts. This is eter­nal work - to train the hearts, minds, and con­sciences in right­eous­ness.

This is our eter­nal work as par­ents - to invest in build­ing a strong gen­er­a­tion of chil­dren, through build­ing their moral, emo­tional, mental, and spir­i­tual well being, so they might func­tion as respon­si­ble adults for the rest of their lives. This is my pri­mary mis­sion field - the souls of my children!

One day I will stand before the Judg­ment seat, and the Lord will ask me to give an account to him for the pre­cious souls that he entrusted into my hands. Oh that I might be found faithful!

“Children do not acci­den­tally become right­eous lead­ers or emo­tion­ally healthy and pro­duc­tive adults - any more than seeds thrown ran­domly to the wind grow to be part of a thriv­ing garden. Simply throw­ing chil­dren into a cul­tural tor­nado and hoping for the best gives them little chance of living up to their poten­tial or coming out unharmed.”

There is a need for some­one to take respon­si­bil­ity to invest in their nur­ture, pro­tec­tion, nour­ish­ment, intel­lec­tual devel­op­ment, man­ners, recre­ation, per­sonal needs, and spir­i­tual devel­op­ment. Who is will­ing to invest the time and energy needed to accom­plish such a task? Should we leave it to others, the world around us, the “professionals”? A wise God has pro­vided such a person in His per­fect ordered plan for cre­ation - and that person is a mother, work­ing in part­ner­ship with her hus­band, to accom­plish such a task!

What stood out to you in this chap­ter? Please feel free to share a quote, or any­thing that the Lord has been chal­leng­ing you with thus far.


Related Posts

4 Responses to “Mission of Motherhood: Storing up Treasures!”

  1. Steph Garvey says:

    I love that quote, “Children do not acci­den­tally become right­eous lead­ers or emo­tion­ally healthy and pro­duc­tive adults”, it is so true and said so well.

    I also appre­ci­ated her point that, “If a mother who gave her chil­dren life is not will­ing to do what it takes to pro­vide secu­rity, love, pro­tec­tion, instruc­tion and sta­bil­ity for her own chil­dren, then who will be will­ing to do so?”

    Convicting…

  2. DeAnna says:

    The thing that stood out to me the most was the thought that when I serve my family, I am serv­ing Jesus Christ. This was very con­vict­ing to me. I won­dered how I might do things dif­fer­ently if I really thought of it that way, every day!! Some­thing I am def­i­nitely going to strive to do!

  3. Just found your blog today, and am LOVING it! This is a won­der­ful book. I have imple­mented many of Sally’s things over the last decade of home school­ing.

  4. Willow says:

    I loved this chap­ter. I feel like God has been urging me lately to eval­u­ate closely what I have come to believe so easily about moth­er­hood, my walk with Him, mar­riage, because He knows that many of it is rooted in the worlds lies.

    The “undivided” heart. What a pow­er­ful image and what a con­vict­ing phrase. I am reas­sured and chal­lenged by the fact that God intends for me to focus on my hus­band and chil­dren during this time and that I have not been given too much to handle but rather exactly what I need. I also loved the fact that she has reminded us that when we are serv­ing our chil­dren we are serv­ing Jesus Christ. The world will tell us that our job is mun­dane and that others could easily do it. Many of us have bought into that lie and decided to allow others the time and oppur­tu­nity to be our children’s pri­mary care­giver. Others of us have are just miss­ing out on our God-​given oppur­tu­nity to teach our chil­dren.

    I think it all needs to come back to the heart and with each of us asking these VERY impor­tant ques­tion: “Is this what God has intended for my life? Is the way I am con­duct­ing myself during the day, the way I have struc­tured our week and our family life what God meant for our family? Or have we some­how cor­rupted his per­fect plan for our family?”

    For me, although I won’t say we’ve reached per­fec­tion, but rather have become more inten­tional about cre­at­ing a life which allows God’s plan for our family to be made a real­ity, these are some of the deci­sions we have made:

    -Live by this verse: “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step by the Spirit.”
    -Stay home more during the day with my chil­dren. Always being busy going out and about was caus­ing me to miss out on many oppur­tu­ni­ties to teach and dis­ci­ple my chil­dren.
    -Get my par­ent­ing advice ONLY from the bible. Accept advice ONLY that is rooted in the Word. (not super nanny or love and logic or a cute baby center post….)
    -Use scrip­ture for encour­age­ment and discipline…constantly address heart issues in my chil­dren rather than merely their sur­face behav­ior.
    -Homeschool. For our chil­dren, we feel called by God to home­school, mainly because we feel our goal of train­ing in right­eous­ness would be too dif­fi­cult if we only had a couple of hours in the evening to do it.
    -Find a church where we can be encour­aged, taught, AND held account­able.
    -Share. Share. Share. Tell others what God is doing in our lives and in doing so we have been so blessed and we are start­ing to real­ize that to look dif­fer­ent is just the begin­ning to living out God’s pur­pose for our lives.

    I real­ize this looks dif­fer­ent for every person but I do think that as Chris­tians we forget to “ask” God where we may have gone astray and often feel that because we are sim­i­lar to our other Chris­t­ian friends that we are on track. If there is one thing I have learned as of late it is this: We need only com­pare our­selves to Christ to assess how far we have to go, or com­pare our­selves to what we used to be to gauge how far we have come.

Leave a Reply