Is Motherhood a "Calling"?

My dear friend, Carla, and her co-blogger Caryn over at TheMommyRevolution answer with a robust No!  Money Quote:

It boarders on idolatry. Dave made a statement that
troubles me to no end. It is just the kind of statement that sends a
deeper message to mothers: Dave mentions that a woman’s proper focus is
the family. I’m not sure where he gets that. Well, I know where he gets
it, but I don’t know what biblical basis he has for that statement. As
I said, the gospel doesn’t include specifics about parenting. Jesus
didn’t exempt mothers from participating in God’s work in the world.
And Jesus wasn’t just talking to the men when he told his followers to
feed and clothe and visit the poor and imprisoned. The idea that my
three children are more important than other people goes against
everything the Bible teaches. It makes an idol of my family. So I can’t
justify having tunnel vision about my parenting. I can’t call myself a
Christian and then live a life that centers only on a small, select
group of people-no matter how much I love those people. And I can’t
fathom God giving me gifts and passions and dreams with the intention
that I limit the use of those to the lives of three people. There is a
huge, hurting world out there and mothers-with our heightened
compassion, our deepened sense of justice, our ever-growing longing for
a better world-are uniquely qualified to get out there and work toward
bringing about the kingdom of God. I could go on and on about mothers
who have changed the world, but we’ll save that for another post.

Muchas Gracias, Keith, Carla, and Anthony

My deep, deep thanks to my guest bloggers last week: Keith DeRose, Carla Barnhill, and Anthony Smith.  They may continue to post this week to run out the string on their thoughts.  And I hope to have them back in the future.  If you took last week off from blog reading (as I did), I encourage you to go back and read their posts:

Keith DeRose

Carla Barnhill

Anthony Smith (aka Postmodern Negro)

The Spiritual Lives of Children (Carla)

I’m fairly certain that most of what we attempt in the way of spiritual formation for children gets in the way of what God is doing in the way of spiritual formation for children. Thank you all for your thoughtful and inspiring comments on this issue. Clearly, there is a need and a longing for the emergent conversation to include the faith of children. It sounds like many of you are finding your way through a combination of experimentation, creativity, and the wonderful Ivy Beckwith.

I think what often gets in the way of good ideas taking hold is that there are still wrong-headed ideas about what faith looks like in children. Part of the reason the one-time conversion model is so distasteful to me is that it suggests that anything that came before it was not of God, that there was no faith, no connection with God before that prayer was said. But I need only to look at my own children to know that’s not the case. They ask questions about God that could only come from a built-in desire to know their Creator. They live out a faith that goes far beyond what I could ever teach them.
When our oldest child was in 1st grade, she came home from school and told us that her principal had helped her set up a donation box for shoes that our church could take to Guatemala. We had no idea what she was talking about. It turned out that–on her own volition–she talked to her principal and asked if she could make an announcement during lunch asking kids to bring in shoes they didn’t wear anymore so that our friends from the Porch who were going to Guatemala could bring the shoes to children who have no shoes. She tracked down a big box, made a sign, and collected a huge pile of shoes that ended up on the feet of Guatemalan children a few weeks later. We didn’t intentionally teach her to care for those children. We didn’t make a point of telling her that this is what good Christians do. No, God created her with a spirit of compassion that told her that her friends were the perfect people to clothe the “naked.” If she had asked me about her shoe drive beforehand, I probably would have discouraged her from doing it. I would have been worried that she’d be teased or that no one would donate anything and she’d end up disappointed. She followed God’s urging instead.
The whole “knowledge-before-faith” ideal falls apart when it comes to children. ( I think it falls apart anyway, but that failure is particularly blatant in the case of children.) So if we aren’t teachers in the general sense, what is our role as parents and members of faith communities? Is it to live in such a way that children pick up on what we’re doing and follow suit? Should we be doing anything that sets us up as the interpreters of the faith? Is the reliance on “age-appropriate” experiences really just a way to justify getting kids out of the way so we can have the sort of church experience we want?

What Should We Do With the Kids? (Carla)

I am certain there will be comments about this and that some of them will insinuate I am not a very good mother. Or a very good Christian. But a conversation I had this summer has convinced me that I have truly moved into a new place when it comes to the spiritual lives of my children.

I met a wonderful couple who had read my chapter in The Emergent Manifesto of Hope and wanted to talk to me about spiritual formation. They had both been raised in Christian traditions that emphasize a moment of conversion as the mark of true faith. Their child was only 15 months old, but they were already facing pressure from their parents to start talking to their baby about Jesus. They knew that if they didn’t have a “she-prayed-the-prayer” story to tell grandmas and grandpas soon, they were going to have some ‘splainin’ to do.

They are now invested in the emergent conversation. They are part of a small house church that they love. They feel like they’ve found an expression of faith that is meaningful and sustainable for them. And, like so many new parents, they are trying to figure out how to pass their faith on to their child.

The evangelical model of conversion makes that process easy for parents. You take your child to Sunday school, you read a decent Children’s Bible, you select a devotional or a book or a DVD from the vast collection of resources meant to help parents explain Jesus to their children and wait for that moment when your preschooler says a little prayer and asks Jesus into her heart. But for an increasing number of Christian parents, this model doesn’t fit the kind of faith they are seeking to live. It doesn’t fit with the faith they want for their children. For many, it reflects the very issues that have left them unable to continue participation in the evangelical churches of their youth.

There is a growing need for the emergent conversation to expand to include thoughts about the spiritual formation of children. There are some great models out there that move away from the education framework of spiritual formation and harken instead to experiential learning. But I think many faith communities have a hard time getting parents on board with anything that feels even remotely experimental.

Many emerging churches see families leave when their kids hit preschool age. It’s as though we are perfectly willing to mess around with our own spiritual lives and try out the candles and couches thing. But when we have kids, we don’t want the uncertainty. We don’t want the doubt and the questions and the maybes. We want them to learn the verses and sing the songs and say the prayer. They can rebel later.

I used to think this was just fear talking–and for some parents it might be–but I also think that for couples like the one I met with, the issue is that this conversation simply hasn’t moved far enough yet. They don’t want the old methods, they want new ideas for raising children who love God and desire to follow in the way of Jesus.

We need to talk about what replaces the idea of a one-time conversion in our children. We need to talk about ways to tell the story of our faith without the baggage so many of us have spent years trying to overcome. And we need to start providing families with resources that don’t rely on the educational model to help them create faith-filled homes.

So let’s talk. What are you doing as families, as churches, as communities, that you and your children find meaningful and formative? 

Probably Parenting (Carla Barnhill)

Filling in for Tony this week means I have to charge up a few parts of my brain that have been in sleep mode for about a decade.

I will post a more involved blog later today, but I wanted to get a quick intro up before the week gets away from me (as weeks so often do). 
My guess is that Tony asked me to be part of the fill–in team this week because he knows I’m a sucker for people in need and that I usually say “yes” to requests for help. But I think he also asked because we have known each other for a very long time. We have watched each other shift from seminary students to mainstream ministers in well-known evangelical organizations to participants in the emergent conversation. We are both working to find a voice and make our way in the midst of a faith that we can’t quite get a hold of.
So this week, I will be blogging about what this journey looks like on the family front. I am the mother of three and the wife of one. I work part-time from my house editing books for various Christian publishers. I am deeply involved in my church (Solomon’s Porch in Minneapolis) and   deeply frustrated at how messy this neat little life is when it plays out each day.
Just so you know where I’m coming from, I was raised in the Missouri Synod Lutheran Church, attended a BGC Bible camp every summer until college and then spent 6 summers working for the Baptists. I attended Fuller Seminary and the University of Edinburgh. I worked at Christianity Today, Int’l. for 9 years, 6 of them as Editor of the now defunct Christian Parenting Today magazine. I have edited a ton of books and written a few as well. My book, The Myth of the Perfect Mother, is now out of print, but maybe that will change if people start ordering it again.
I am both a participant in the evangelical world and a bit of an outsider. I wasn’t raised evangelical and for the longest time, I wasn’t really sure what that word meant. Then I jumped on to the mothership and found out just what the evangelical world is all about (or at least what it writes about itself). So I like to think I am able to look at the evangelical world with a mix of affection, understanding, and skepticism. I don’t buy in to the whole package and yet I get why people do and what’s at stake when someone starts poking at it.
And yet I am also one of those doing the poking. Most recently, my friend Caryn and I have been blogging about The Mommy Revolution–our name for the new breed of women who are parenting in ways that look nothing like our own mothers’ methods. We are challenging the assumptions of motherhood and encouraging women (and men) to define it for themselves rather than living with the guilt of not measuring up to someone else’s definition.
So this week, I will be hi-jacking Tony’s blog to talk about what parenthood looks like for today’s moms and dads. If you read my chapter here then you have some idea of where I’m going. If you haven’t, I hope you’ll still join in on a conversation about the changing models of parenting.
I look forward to our week together!

Comment of the Day

Panthera, Larry, Celsus, and others continue to have at on yesterday’s COTD, but it’s Christmas Eve, so I’m going to refrain from re-posting one of theirs here — they’re not particularly gentle.

However, here’s a comment by Panthera on yesterday’s post about Ted Haggard’s return to the spotlight (BTW, be sure to read Patton’s post on this subject).

Take a deep breath, no matter what side of the same sex marriage divide you’re on, and read this (my added italics):

Noted, Lee – my family lives just down the road from Colorado
Springs. I may, perhaps, be forgiven a touch of sourness on mega-church
pastors.

Speaking of which, my dear brother waited until after Christmas was
set for his house to announce that my partner and I would not be
welcome.
True Christians, only.

My parents are feeling about as low as, well, you can just
imagine…knowing this may be their last Christmas with the family, and
now it must be split.

That, Lee, is the type of “Christians” who I must deal with – ones
who can not even set aside their hatred for one single, solitary
afternoon to make their own parents happy. Whoops! Forgot…all that
talk about honoring one’s parents is soooo OT and stuff that
long-haired Jewish guy, what’s his name, well never mind, he was only
the Son of God would find important.

Can you point out any mega-churches which do not preach hatred
towards me as a homosexual? I am not aware of any, tho’, as I mentioned
above, my acquaintance with this American phenomenon is limited to
Colorado.