Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free. ~John 8:32


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Why I Don’t Do Father’s Day!

Oh Lord, you have examined my heart and know everything about me. Psalms 139:1.

Father’s Day has never been an easy day for me. Hallmark just doesn’t make cards that say, “Happy Father’s day…oh, and thanks for a childhood full of confusion and abuse.” It’s really sad, though. Each year I go through this rant of how I am going to write an honest, appropriate Father’s Day card to him. I say all the things he won’t hear, and I demand that he owns them and repent. But then I never do send it. Some years I send a simple text that states, “Thanks for my life.” Most years I bypass communication altogether.

Unfortunately, my dear husband, who is everything I wish my father had been to me, gets the short end of the stick. We usually are low key on the celebration. I just don’t want to be reminded of what I don’t have. I avoid social media in order not to provoke a “trigger” that takes me weeks to recover from.  But this year I am taking a chance and focusing on my husband, the father of my three—soon to be four—children.

For me, because of the abuse I received from my father, I have a hard time with men in general. I’m guarded and accusatorial when coming in contact with a man I don’t know. When my husband has hurt me or let me down (as people do), it’s catastrophic for me because the betrayals of my father have left deep scars.  I continue to allow the past hurts to hinder all logic and forgiveness when I am betrayed by anyone, especially by my husband.FullSizeRender

But, I want to see this day as an opportunity to celebrate the wonderful fathers that I do have in my life. Two of my three brothers have become fathers in recent years. They are not only exceptional fathers, but they have also shown my husband and me a thing or two about parenting. A few years ago my brother-in-law almost lost his family but he showed us what true repentance is, and I am witness to a true miracle! He is one of the most devoted daddies I have ever met. Then there is my late step father, my second chance daddy, who was taken home recently. He showed me and my siblings something we never saw from our biological dad: authentic, unconditional love for our mother. Last but not least, my favorite daddy, the father of my own children, my husband Anthony who has shown me time and time again what true fatherhood looks like. He shows unconditional love, laying his life aside for the needs of his children and leading by example—from his knees.

Instead of focusing on what I don’t have with my father, I am pledging to focus on what my children do have. Rather than feeling sorry for myself over what I was given by my father, which is a lifetime of hurt, I am going to focus on what he did give me: my life. Finally and most importantly, I’m going to focus on my real Father, the one who shaped me in my mother’s womb (Psalm 139:13-14), for He is my one true Father who has carried and cared for me all my life.

I am going to pledge that when I become overwhelmed with the pain from my childhood and the psychological and sexual abuse my earthly father bestowed upon me, I will remind myself of what my true Abba Father has given me. When I reflect upon the things I have received from both my fathers, Abba has proven time and time again His never failing love, His faithful promises, His abundant grace, and His mounting blessings. Great is the Lord! He is most worthy of praise! No one can measure his greatness! Psalms 145:3.

Happy Father’s Day to Dads everywhere!


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Teaching and Learning

A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.
Proverbs 15:1

I'm not a teacherSeveral years ago, I co-taught a Sunday school class for two- and three-year-old children. The lead teacher, we’ll just call her Helen, had lots of experience and many activities up her sleeve from years of working with children, including homeschooling her own.

One Sunday when it was Helen’s turn to teach the lesson, she taught all of us the above verse complete with hand motions. The children loved whispering “A gentle answer” with their hands cupped around their mouths, they thoroughly enjoyed screwing up their faces and spitting out “a harsh word,” and they wildly stirred for “stirs up.” As for me, even though I had read the verse before, it was as though I was hearing it for the first time.

This brings me to several life lessons I learned from this experience.

  1. Volunteer to teach. You will learn at least as much from your students as they learn from you.
  2. Pay attention to children. Sometimes they speak the unadulterated truth, rather than the edited truth that we learn to speak as adults.
  3. Be brave enough to learn hand motions to Scripture or Scripture put to music. It will help you commit it to memory, the same as it helps children to do so.
  4. Pay attention to the Old Testament, just as you pay attention to the New Testament. Both contain truths that are crucial to our development as mature Christians.
  5. Protect your quiet time with the Lord. Just as He spoke to the writers of Scripture, He will speak to you through Scripture. The catch is that we have to be still and know that He is God. When we allow the world to fill our senses, we cannot hear the important messages that He has for us. So turn off the television, put down the cell phone and yes, even step away from the computer and listen for His voice. He will honor your obedience.

when one teaches, two learnTeaching can be a great source of learning! So the next time they ask for volunteers to teach at your church, step up. The children will benefit and so will you.