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GUEST ARTICLE
The Profile of a Godly Mother
I once came across
an interesting article on motherhood by a man named W.
L. Caldwell written back in 1928. Here's what he said:
Well may we pause
to pay honor to her who after Jesus Christ is God's best
gift to men, mother. It was she who shared her life with
us when as yet our members were unformed, into the valley
of the shadow of death she walked that we might have the
light of life. In her arms was the garner of our food and
the soft couch for our repose. There we nestled in the
hour of pain; there was the playground of our infant glee.
Those same arms
later became our refuge and stronghold. It was she who
taught our baby feet to go and lifted us up over the rough
places. Her blessed hands plied the needle by day and by
night to make our clothes. She put the book under our arm
and started us off for school. But best of all, she taught
our baby lips to lisp the name of Jesus and told us first
the wondrous story of a Savior's love.
Caldwell went on
to say, "The pride of America is its mothers. There
are wicked mothers like Jezebel of old. There are unnatural
mothers who sell their children into sin. There are sin
cursed rum soaked and abandoned mothers to whom their motherhood
is the exposure of their shame. I am glad to believe, however,
that there are comparatively few in this class."
Is that true? Are
there merely a few unfaithful mothers? Maybe that was the
case in 1928, but it's sadly not so today. High rates of
illegitimacy and divorce reveal the contemporary abandonment
of marriage - motherhood's foundation. Annual abortions
number in the millions, which shows the heart of many mothers
has grown cold.
Millions of children
whose mothers allow them to see the light of day cower
in fear under angry abuse. And countless are the mothers
who ignore, neglect, or abandon their children in pursuit
of self-centered "fulfillment" - motherhood is
an inconvenient interruption to their lifestyle.
For better or worse,
mothers are the makers of men; they are the architects
of the next generation. That's why the goal of becoming
a godly mother is the highest and most noble pursuit
of womanhood. God has specially equipped women for that
very purpose, and in Christ, women can experience profound
satisfaction in that divinely ordained pursuit. They can
be who God created them to be.
Ladies, please
pay attention. There are so many who would capture your
interests today, to tear you away from God's high calling
on your life. "Focus on your career," "Buy
more stuff," "Pamper yourself" - you've
heard it all, I'm sure. Don't buy what they’re selling
- it's all a lie.
With that in mind,
I want to encourage you this Mother's Day to consider one
biblical example of motherhood. It's Hannah, the mother
of the prophet Samuel, an emblem of the grace of womanhood.
You can read all about her in 1 Samuel 1 and 2.
Hannah became a
mother by faith. In the opening verses of 1 Samuel, she
is introduced as a childless woman. But God granted her
a precious gift and she became the mother of one of the
greatest men who ever walked the earth. As you follow this
account, you'll see the profile of a godly mother.
Devoted to Her Husband
Contrary to popular
opinion, the most important characteristic of a godly mother
is her relationship, not with her children, but with her
husband. What you communicate to your children through
your marital relationship will stay with them for the rest
of their lives. By watching you and your husband, they
are learning the most fundamental lessons of life - love,
self-sacrifice, integrity, virtue, sin, sympathy, compassion,
understanding, and forgiveness. Whatever you teach them
about those things, right or wrong, is planted deep within
their hearts.
That emphasis on
marriage was very evident between Elkanah and Hannah. They
were dedicated to the faithful worship of God (1:3), and
they were dedicated to loving one another (1:4-8). Their
situation - being unable to have children together - was
like an open wound. But it was an experience that drew
out of Elkanah tender expressions of love for his wife.
At a particularly
low point in Hannah's discouragement, Elkanah comforted
his wife with these words: "Hannah, why do you weep
and why do you not eat and why is your heart sad? Am I
not better to you than ten sons?" (1:8). That may
not seem like a tremendous comfort to you, but he was appealing
to the satisfaction they enjoyed in their marriage. Notice
the effect: Hannah was encouraged - she started to eat
and drink again (1:9), and she went to the temple to seek
the Lord (1:9-11).
That's the kind
of marriage to which a godly mother is devoted - dedication
to loving God, dedication to loving one another. That's
the soil where godly mothers grow and flourish.
Devoted to Her God
Hannah struggled
through acute pain and adversity. She was barren, she had
to share her husband with another woman - one who could produce
children, and she had to endure the pain of that woman's
cruelty (1:6-7). And though Hannah was tempted to despair
(1:8), she received the encouragement of her husband, turned
to the Lord, and poured out her heart to Him in humble
devotion (1:9-18).
Like many women
today, Hannah struggled with the pain of infertility. She
wanted God's best, to be a mother. In her sadness, Hannah
didn't complain to her husband - there was nothing he could
do about it - and she didn't fight back when Peninnah tormented
her. Instead, Hannah trusted God through prayer.
That's a beautiful
characteristic. She understood that God was the source
of children, that God alone could alter her sterility.
Her distinctive virtue was her constant faith. First Samuel
1:12 says, "It came about as she continued praying
before the Lord". Her prayers were constant. She stayed
there praying with a broken heart, pouring out tearful
prayers. Hannah knew where to go with her problems.
Hannah was quite
different from many today who long for children; she wasn't
seeking a child for her own fulfillment. Childless parents
today spend millions on infertility treatments - medications,
special diets, egg-harvesting, even in-vitro fertilization.
They worry and fret and sin in their continued anxiety.
Not Hannah. Hannah
was willing from the start to give the child back to God,
for life (1:11). It wasn't about her. It wasn't about getting
what she wanted. It was about self-sacrifice, giving herself
to that little life to give him back to the Lord. After
coming to that place in her heart, after expressing her
desires to the Lord in prayer, she experienced the peace
of humble devotion to God. She "went her way and ate,
and her face was no longer sad"(1:18).
Devoted to Her Home
According to His
perfect will, God gave Hannah a son-Samuel.
And Elkanah had
relations with Hannah his wife, and the Lord remembered
her. It came about in due time, after Hannah had conceived,
that she gave birth to a son; and she named him Samuel,
saying, "Because I have asked him of the Lord." (1:19-20)
Hannah named her
son in remembrance of God's goodness, and she devoted herself
to her motherly responsibilities—she was fully committed
to her home. The time came for one of the annual trips
to Shiloh, and Elkanah came to Hannah to prepare her for
the trip.
Then the man Elkanah
went up with all his household to offer to the Lord the
yearly sacrifice and pay his vow. But Hannah did not go
up, for she said to her husband, "I will not go up
until the child is weaned; then I will bring him, that
he may appear before the Lord and stay there forever."
When God gave the
child, Hannah dedicated herself to raising him. She would
be devoted to that task for several years, knowing her
time with him was short. That's so different from what
you see today, isn't it? Women have babies, and a couple
of months later they slam the baby in some day care center
and take off for the job.
Not Hannah. She
was totally committed to stay in the home until that little
life was trained. She had important work to do—nursing,
loving cherishing, instructing. Hannah understood how vital
those early years are, when 90 percent of personality is
formed. She prepared him in those formative years for a
lifetime of service to God—such a high calling.
Don't mistake her
devotion to raising Samuel for the modern tendency to make
the child the center of the universe. Hannah discharged
her responsibility as a steward—one day she had to give
Samuel back. It wasn't about fulfilling her deepest needs
through her child. It was about fulfilling her oath to
God. It was about being faithful to her calling to be a
godly mother.
For those of you
who are mothers, think about Hannah this Mother's Day.
Be devoted to your husband; be devoted to your God; and
be devoted to your home in the fear of the Lord. That's
your high calling and your greatest joy.
For those of you
whose mothers are still living, recognize your mother this
Mother's Day for the things she did well. Look in love
beyond any of her shortcomings and honor the one who introduced
you to life.
--John
MacArthur, Adapted from "Hannah: A Godly Mother", © 1987.
All rights reserved. • Grace
to You (Tuesday, November 01, 2005)
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