Isabel at Awana Awards Night - Her leaders gave her an award for "faith" - they didn't know this, but God has been speaking to Isabel about having faith and trusting Him |
It’s been almost six months since Audrey left. In the days leading up to her moving out,
Matt was struck with the need to steward the time we would spend in the car
after dropping Audrey off in her new home.
We would leave our home with a sister, a daughter, and come back home
feeling that loss deeply. So he reached
out to friends and family, asking them to send a voicemail that would help make
that drive easier. When he compiled
those voicemails, we had well over an hour of messages. As we drove home, we
heard words of encouragement, words of wisdom, words of healing, words that
pointed to the Savior that both calls and releases, that sends and
sustains. Those words were life to us in
those moments. They were a healing balm
on an open wound. Matt downloaded those
messages to the girls’ ipods and they chose to title them “Faith Community” and
I am totally serious when I tell you they listened to those messages every
night before they went to bed for weeks.
They still listen to them from time to time when they are missing
Audrey. And my girls learned what it
means to have a faith community and to need a faith community. I can offer my girls words of comfort, but
what I can not offer them on my own is a web of people who see their hurt, feel
that hurt with them, and point them to the God who heals. We are so blessed to have parents who have
been examples of faith to us, and we value their Godly influence in our children’s lives. We recognize the reality that we are the
first and foremost influence in our children’s lives. But at times, they rebel against that
influence, and we want a fortified line of God-following people acting as a
fence to hem them in should they wander.
We are blessed to call many of those people family, but we are also
blessed to call some of them friends.
And as our children grow in faith and get older, we will continue to
encourage them to find and invest in their own faith community. We encourage them to build relationships with
other kids at church. That means showing
up to church on Sunday, driving them to Awana
on Wednesday, making time for
play dates. We want to send a strong
message that participating in a faith community takes effort and is worth every
bit of that effort.
Sofi at Awana Awards Night Her leaders gave her an award for "wisdom" - not knowing this is what her name means. |
Our children have also been on the other end of being a
faith community – they have helped us make and drop off meals, shop for people
in need, visit a friend who is sick, pray for someone who is hurting. We want our kids to see that a faith
community is a living and acting body of people doing God’s work together. This is a high priority in our home. It supercedes sports and activities and
weekend outings. We don’t just attend
church. We belong to a community. But as important as this value is to me now,
I can’t say that it was always the case.
When the girls were younger, and I was up to my ears in
diapers and snotty noses and cries of “Mommy, up!” I rarely left the house,
except to go to work. Confession: I
missed church more often than I attended.
I had great reasons; a whole list of valid excuses. The work involved in getting 2 toddlers out
the door by myself, the missed naps, the tantrums, the long drive, the
exhaustion that ensued after a busy morning… come Saturday night, I would rehearse
these insurmountable odds in my head and I was beat before I started. The Sundays I did make it out the door, I was
often frustrated and flustered. Our
church offered weekday community groups for women, and I remember thinking that
it would be wonderful to sit with a group of moms, having grown up
conversations and sipping coffee without toddlers grabbing at our ankles. But again with the long list of valid
excuses. So I never went. I grew up in church, I have always valued
having a place to worship and grow in my faith.
But as a young mom, I didn’t grasp the importance of a faith
community.
What is a faith community, you ask? It’s a group of people who share your
faith. And so much more. It’s a lifeline, a support system, a safe
place to land. It’s people who will
notice when you are missing, encourage you when you’re struggling, celebrate
your victories, grieve your losses. It’s
a place where you serve and encourage and come alongside of others on the same
journey. Where you use those gifts that
God planted in you. I could read my
Bible and listen to sermons online and download new worship songs and grow in
my faith without ever leaving my home.
But those things I listed? Those
things happen when I haul myself and my trail of children out the door and show
up to church. To community group. To parenting classes. It takes work, so much work. It takes work to schedule and plan and
prepare and just get the heck into the minivan.
People, I am not even kidding you.
Getting everyone beautified and making sure every baby need imaginable
can be met with the contents of a diaper bag is craziness. Do you know that I leave for church on
Sundays and my community group on Thursdays an HOUR EARLY so Zion can nap in
the car? Because heaven forbid, you drop
the world’s happiest baby off in the nursery or with a sitter having skipped
his nap. That sweet baby will certainly
turn into a childcare provider’s worst nightmare and I will be called out to
come get him. After all that work to get
there. So we leave an hour early.
So much work, but aren't they just lovely? Oh my heart. |
It’s not just the physical work of getting there that you
will have to push through. It’s the
relational work of putting yourself out there and meeting people and connecting
to complete strangers. It’s like dating
all over again, and I did not love dating.
I found a cute boy in middle school and I hung on for dear life until he
proposed. For real. But if you find yourself someone or a group
of someones who will accept you for you and challenge you to be the best
version of you, you had better hang on to them.
I tried community groups I didn’t click with and found one that is worth
driving a sleeping baby around for an hour just to be apart of. This group of women prayed me through my
pregnancy and responded to every text through my 20 hours of labor. They took me out for a day in the city after
Audrey left when I would have been just as happy to crawl into a hole. Every one of them has encouraged me with
Scripture and inspired me with their faith.
My girls are watching this, seeing that I value this faith community,
learning what it means to serve and be served by the body of Christ. Matt and I strongly believe that this value
of faith community is crucial to passing on our faith to our children. I mentioned in my last post that casual
conversations have been called the greatest predictor of faith that will carry
on into adulthood. But belonging to a
faith community – worshipping together; serving and being served by other
believers – comes in as a close second in our book.
I can tell you more great stories and compelling anecdotes,
but the truth is, we should make faith community a priority because it’s what
Scripture instructs us to do. Hebrews
10:24-25 says,
“And let us consider
how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some
are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another – and all the more
as you see the Day approaching.”
These instructions come in a group of exhortations which are
not a list of “thou shalts,” but rather a response to Christ’s sacrifice that
provided a way for us “draw near to God” (v 10). Jesus gave everything so that we could be a
part of God’s family, and as God’s family we are called to come together as an
act of worship and a way to encourage each other on in the faith. This is not just another “requirement;” it is
a gift.
So this is me, spurring you on. This life is hard, and we are meant to do it
together.