In Praise of Long-Haul Love

Long-Haul-Love by Renee Sanford

 

EDITOR’S NOTE: …Renée told me, “I first contemplated long-haul love when my first daughter was a toddler. Our first three children are grown and married with children of their own, and our two youngest children now are teenagers. My husband and I are reaping the rewards of grandchildren and facing the storms of guiding two teens into adulthood.” I hope you enjoy her article!

 

It was going to be a short night as it was, so I felt like crying the second time the three-year-old tried to crawl in bed with us. The baby had been up earlier, too. How does the saying go? “Lord, give me patience, and give it to me now!”

I remember my mother used to tease that she prayed for patience and God sent her my little brother—a child with endless curiosity and energy and little need for sleep. So I don’t ask for patience. I know it isn’t given—it’s earned.

Instant patience is a contradiction—and an impossibility. Because patience is not a fast-acting pill to pop when situations get tight and my temper stretches thin. It’s more than just not yelling at the kids.

What is patience? Where does it come from? And what does patience have to do with love?

Long-Haul-Long-picture_edit

Patience comes with perspective. It is love committed to the long-haul.

I am one of those perhaps strange and rare women who would keep having children simply to experience the thrill of childbirth. Those hours of physical pain and emotional intimacy as my husband and I push and coax a new person into the world are rewarded by euphoric delight as I meet my new child. She seems to gaze at me with recognition, and then nuzzles eagerly at my breast. I relish those quiet moments when everyone has gone home and I am left alone to curl up around my new baby.

I love children. Between birthing four, fostering two and adopting one—I’ve had a houseful of them. They are a gift, a reward, a joy, a bouquet of blessings.

For just as after every wedding comes a marriage, so after every birth comes a life. A life that came forth from the love and union of two people—a life that will continue to demand everything from them. Drawing at least l8 years from our time and energy. Drawing a lifetime from our hearts.

Then how can I rave about parenthood to that young couple knowing…the sleepless nights that will leave them ragged…the isolation from a winter’s worth of colds and ear infections…the constant struggle to control not just the two-year-old’s temper but their own unanticipated anger? What about the ten-year-olds sullenness and the teenager’s withdrawal? How do I keep parenting when I know I’ve blown it so many times?


Because of long-haul love. Love that is not patiently passive, but love that is as patient as God is—willing to wait for the rewards of love. Rewards even beyond those first steps, first words, sloppy kisses and angelic sleeping faces.

My little boy wraps his small arms around my neck, looks intently into my eyes, and declares, “I love YOU, Mommy,” with the emphasis on the YOU. My heart is rewarded. Perhaps I am doing something right after all. Yet what I really want is to hear those words from a young man with whom I have developed a real relationship.

Fast forward twenty years and my son still says, “I love you.” He also tells me he wants to let me into his life—his hurts, heart, his story. I realize I have not parented perfectly, but I am experiencing the reward of long-haul love. And I look forward to hearing them from a middle-aged man who himself has walked the privileged road of parenthood. Pictures of tomorrow’s hopes give me strength to choose love today.

When I manage to discipline my children calmly, it’s not because I’ve counted to 10 first, but because I’m doing it with one eye down the road 10 and 20 years. I’m committed to seeing them through. Any particular situation isn’t the end of the line, it’s only one in thousands. That’s why love is patient. It’s not a Band-Aid but a commitment.

That’s why I continue to say, “Go for it! It’s worth it!” to hesitant young couples and “you’ll make it!” to weary parents of newborn. So much lies ahead for these little ones.

I remember tucking my oldest daughter into bed and realizing, “Elizabeth isn’t a little girl anymore. She’s already halfway to driving and dating. She stays awake nearly as late as I do at night and is blossoming into a young lady before my eyes.”

I snuggled beside her in bed for a minute, more conscious than ever that her legs stretched almost as far toward the end of the bed as mine did! We laughed about her baby days and joked about whom she might marry when she grows up tomorrow. Neither of us knew that, just a few years around the corner, she would find me aggravating and set off on her adult life ready and able—but coolly distant for several years.

Last week I returned from a week visiting Elizabeth and her husband and children. I soaked up mom and daughter talking time. I immersed myself in hugs and kisses and snuggles from her children—and watched her parent with love and patience.

Yes, Love will still be around when it’s finally happened. When sleepless nights are but a vague memory. When the four-year-old is finally potty trained. When the stacking cups and big wheels are replaced by basketballs and scooters and 10-speed bikes. When the opportunities and choices in raising a toddler become the challenge and adventures of guiding a teen. When my children are parenting their own children.

At every stage, I will pray, “Lord, give me love for the long-haul.”

 

Renee SanfordAbout Renée Sanford

Renée has been married to her high school sweetheart, David, for 30 years. They are the parents of three grown and married children and two teens and blessed with six grandkids. Renée has a passion for encouraging mothers at every stage—in an article, at a conference, or over a cup of coffee or tea. Renée is the co-author (with David) of How to Read Your Bible and the notes for the Living Faith Bible.

Grasshopper Craft for Kids

Grasshopper

Last week our kiddos learned about John the Baptist and Jesus’ baptism in their Sunday School classes. To help reinforce the lesson,  we made some egg carton locusts or grasshoppers. Now they all remember what John the Baptist ate. (Adult supervision needed with exacto knife and glue gun)

Materials:

Egg carton
Tempera paint
Pipe cleaners or chenille stem
Wiggly eyes
Glue
Exacto knife or other sharp object for poking holes
Hole puncher (optional)
Glue gun (optional)

Instructions:

1. Cut a 3-cup strip from a paper-type egg carton, paint it green and let dry. It’s better to have a little “ledge” on each side of the egg cartons for attaching the legs.2. Bend pipe cleaners to form the grasshopper legs. There’s a couple of ways to attache the legs. You can either hot glue them down or use a hole puncher to punch four holes and stick the pipe cleaners through the holes and twist them in place.

3.Now cut two holes (I cut two “X”) in the head and poke a pipe cleaner through for the antennae.

egg carton grasshoppers egg carton locust

Painting the grasshoppers.

John the Baptist egg carton grasshopper craft locust craft

Painted grasshoppers set aside for drying.

John the Baptist grasshopper craft for kids

Enjoy!

I got this idea from Pinterest: Motherhood on a Dime.

Jesus’ Escape to Egypt

Jesus' flight to Egypt

 

In Sunday School this week, I taught the kids about Joseph, Mary and Boy Jesus’ flight to Egypt and God’s protection from Matthew 2. I also did a craft with my kids that I know many readers will want to do with their kids.  You can read the full account at BibleGateWay, a site dedicated to free Bible resources. Here are some activities to help reinforce this lesson that your kiddos are learning.

 

Memory Verse:

If God is for us, who can be against us? Romans 8:31b

 

  • Printable Map of Mary and Joseph’s Journeys from BibleWise.

 

  • Mary and Joseph Escape to Egypt Craft from ChristianEdWarehouse. See picture above for completed craft.

 

 

  • Read or listen to this devotional story, “Stormy Weather” from Keys for Kids.

 

 

 

 

 

The Baby God

Nativity scene

 

Now that Christmas is over, the Christmas tree is gone, the nativity scene is stored away, and the decorations are back to normal…or so…I thought…

One morning soon after Christmas day, as we were working on our morning devotion together from Keys for Kids, my three-year-old used the name “The Baby God,” in reference to Jesus. To MeiMei, she probably didn’t think much of the term, just connecting what she knows about Jesus and his birth.  For me, I pondered on this term that day, and thought, wow, there’s profound theology packed into these three little words.

Without diving into a deep theology discussion about the terms, because I am not a theologian. My heart cries out to the fact that Jesus, in his humble state, stepped down into humanity, vulnerable and helpless to do something for me that I could never do for myself.  This “Baby God” probably cried when he was hungry. Mary, his mom probably had to change and wash a lot of dirty diapers.  My boys giggled as they said, “He cried when he needed a diaper change.” That’s so true.

I think that God could have used other ways to relate to his creation (it’s his prerogative after all), but He chose the most personal way to identify with us, he became a baby.  A baby who grew up to give his life as a payment for us so that we may be forgiven and experience a new life in God.  2 Corinthians 5:17 says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!” (NIV)

As you pursue a sense of newness in your life this new year, I hope you’ll discover something new in “The Baby God”.  May “The Baby God” bless you this holiday season and the whole year through!  Have a Happy New Year!

Happy Birthday, Jesus!

Happy Birthday Jesus

One of our Christmas traditions is to make a birthday cake for Jesus. You can make it as fancy as you want or a simple homemade one with your kids. Over here, we like to make a birthday cake for Jesus with the Wordless Book colors. If you’re new to this site, check out my post, The Wordless Book, on how to use the Wordless Book to share the gospel message, and now incorporate these colors into your birthday cake for Jesus. What a fun way to share Jesus with kids this Christmas. See note below on how the manger and baby Jesus were made.

The kids and Bubba made this cake together and we used things that have the Wordless Book colors, black, red, white, gold and green to decorate the cake. As the kids are decorating the cake, we talked about what each color represented.

Here’s a recap of the Wordless Book colors: For a full explanation of these five colors, click The Wordless Book.

Black: Reminds us of the the darkness of sin.
Red: Reminds us of the blood of Jesus Christ.
White: Reminds us that we can have a clean heart when we ask Jesus to forgive us of our sins.
Gold: Reminds us of heaven.
Green: Reminds us of things that grow. It’s importance to grow in Jesus after we put our trust in Him.

After going over the colors, we would sing Happy Birthday to Jesus and enjoy the cake together. This is a blast for kids of all ages and even adults too. Try it and you’ll be amazed at the responses. Have a Christ filled Christmas!

Christmas birthday-cake-for-Jesus

 

Note: The manger was made with graham crackers, “glued” together with white frosting. Baby Jesus was borrowed from our modeling clay nativity scene.