Casting
Away Stones – Ecclesiastes 3
Week
9 – Conclusion
Day
One: The great conundrum – Mama life v. Work life
Day
Two: On having it all...finding happy
Day
Three: Eternity in my heart and the “also-s” of faith
Day
Four: Time management v. time stewardship
Day
Five: Rising up from the dust
Heart
verse:
For now
we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part;
then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.
1
Corinthians 13:12
Day
1 – The great conundrum – Mama life v. Work life
Wife,
mother, daughter, deaconess, friend, pastor's wife, social worker,
therapist. My many vocations, on this particular day were getting the
best of me. I dropped my kids off at school and drove down the
highway struggling with what was most important. Where was the
balance? How do other women magically find it?
My
oldest daughter's parting words to me, as I kissed her goodbye at
school were, “You just don't care anymore. You're always working.
Work matters more to you.” My heart entered my stomach. I knew her
words were fueled by the argument we just had, the chores she didn't
want to do, the challenge of growing into one's own body and life at
her given age. The question I always ask myself as a parent however
is...Is there any truth in it? Even a morsel?
Am
I casting aside my family, my children, my husband, those whom I
love...for my work? I wanted desperately to run back to the school
and hash out this conversation with my beautiful daughter. I wanted
to yell back, “I'm trying my best! I love you. I love my work. I
love Jesus. I'm trying to mash them all together in a life that is
going to be less than perfect.” I settled for crying in my parked
van, waiting for the Aldi to open. In that moment, my distorted
picture said to me in flashing marquee letters that I had failed...at
everything...again.
After
walking around Aldi, putting items in my cart and praying to God for
forgiveness, I sat down at the coffee shop to work on Bible study.
Sisters, God is more clever than we give Him credit for. I sat down
and what was my given study concept for the day? Vocation. I love how
He works like that- weaving pieces of His Word into the moments of
our lives. Living, breathing, and active Word.
The
problem that I encountered was that most writings on vocation,
Luther's included, simply affirm any work as “working for the Lord”
(Colossians 3:17). What we do gives glory to Him. Luther's primary
concern was that church work not be elevated to superstar status in
the church and also that Christians find joy and contentment in their
daily duties, as good gifts from the Father above.
This
was not my problem though. I find joy in the washing of the dishes,
the packing of lunches, the parenting, the wife-ing, the cooking, and
in the leading, the writing, and the teaching I do for my deaconess
call. Contentment in my callings was not an issue for me. Desiring to
serve my neighbor, in my household and around the world, not the
issue. Knowing that each and every piece of it glorified God, not the
issue.Feeling like I was incapable of actually doing any of it to the
best of my ability...that's my issue.
Sorting
what to give time to each day, in a practical sense...just plain
hard. I know I'm not alone. I know many a wife and mom and worker
feels paralyzed out there by a seeming inability to balance all the
parts of life that work together. To find pleasure, not in just the
work, but in the knowledge that they have chosen well on this earth.
Ecclesiastes
to the rescue! Ecclesiastes 3:9-11 -
"What gain
has the worker from his toil? 10 I
have seen the business that God has given to the children
of man to be busy with. 11 He
has made everything beautiful in its time. Also, he has put
eternity into man's heart, yet so that he cannot find out what
God has done from the beginning to the end."
I
want gain from my toil. I want success and whatever that looks like
in my worldly little mind. I want my children perfectly healthy and
well and happy with me. I want my work to be excessively well done
and reach and touch every single life around me. I want my husband to
think I'm a rockstar.
This,
however, is not my reality. Ecclesiastes urges me to tone down my
expectations. The Lord wants me to do it well, but doing it well
means doing it with an eternal perspective. I am convinced that
on this earth there will never be a moment where I find the perfect
balance. There will be times that are more out of balance than
others, and God can help me readjust, shift priorities around, but
most of the time “He has made everything beautiful in its
time.” means that this world feels confusing, as I try to work
within the element of time. There are many tasks to do, and not
enough time to do them. He has given us joy for our work, but not
perfection, and for some reason I'm constantly aiming for perfection.
Is it ok to settle for good instead of “success”? Yes! This is an
important part of the doctrine of vocation to hash out.
God
doesn't say “Whatever you do, do it perfectly for the Lord, and in
your amazing-ness they will see Jesus.”
God
does say, “And whatever
you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord
Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.”
It
sounds so Ecclesiastes-ish. Do everything in Jesus name. That is our
fulfillment of vocation. My children see Jesus in me far better when
I seek Him in all of it...in my uncertainty, in my insecurity, in my
much less than perfect, forgiveness needing self. They see Him, when
I pray with them after the argument, “God help us figure all this
out.”
If
I have learned anything from Ecclesiastes, it is this...
God
makes everything beautiful. It takes time. It takes struggle. There
is beauty in the figuring it out. And often, there is more beauty in
the middle of figuring it out, than in the solution. His name is
written all over my walk of figuring it out. His name is in the
journey, as much as in the eternal destination. He values the walking
alongside.
Half
of the struggle with my daughter is that we are still in the
transition. I have only been doing this working mom thing for a short
time, really, and we all need time to adjust, time to transition,
time to talk it out. We won't ever get it perfect. But figuring it
out together- I'm gonna call that very good.
Father,
thank you for our families. Thank you for our work. Thank you for our
homes, and our fridges filled with food to cook, and our living rooms
filled with things to pick up. Lord, help us to enjoy the journey in
you. Help us to lay down everything before you. Guide and direct our
days, let us eat the fruit of Your mercy and goodness in the joy of
the everyday. Make all of our struggles beautiful in Your time. In
Jesus name, Amen.
Discussion
questions:
What
work in your daily life has God given you in your present season?
List
some of your current vocations. Pray over 2 of them and ask God to
guide you in that work.
What
aspects of your life do you have the hardest time balancing
currently?
*I asked my daughter's permission to share this story. In no way is it intended to shame her. We are all figuring it out together! :)
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