Rebekah, 6 weeks old
Sunday in Relief Society at church, we had a lesson called "Advancing the Work of the Lord." It was about how it is necessary for us each of us to do the work of the Lord and carry forth the gospel. Our teacher noted that sometimes we feel that sharing the gospel can be one more thing on our checklist of things to do as members of the church. Our callings, missionary work, temple work, genealogy, so on and so on... Sometimes it can be overwhelming. So she posed the question, "What does advancing the work of the Lord mean for each of us?" I've often thought about this. I was reminded of a time when I felt overwhelmed. About three and a half years ago, Aubrey was a baby and I had just started babysitting to help make ends meet when Aaron was unemployed. I was frustrated with how little time I had for myself during the day and the expectations placed on me as a Latter-day Saint mother. I'm suppose to teach my children the gospel, care for my family and home which should be beautifully decorated, make healthy beautiful meals made from scratch, grow a garden, build up my food storage, make my children's clothes, read the scriptures by myself and with my family, write in my journal, have family prayer and family home evening, do genealogy, share the gospel, go to the temple, as well as be crafty and blog about it all. All accompanied by beautiful photographs taken by me, arranged into neat little scrapbooks.. I can't remember where or when but I heard the scripture Ecclesiastes 3:1. "To every thing there is a aseason, and a btime to every purpose under the heaven."
This was an "aha" moment for me. I wasn't expected to do it all right now. To each thing, there was a time and a season. While I was expected to do these things (and some of them were just my own expectations), I wasn't expected to do them all at this moment in my life. There will be a time when I can do each thing or even many of them at once. It was important for me to do what matters most and at this time in my life that meant the things that revolved around my family.
Pondering this, I was reminded of a previous lesson about doing our part in the gospel, and remembered this quote by President George Albert Smith, "It is not only our mission to teach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and live it, but it is our mission to send into the world our sons and daughters as they are called upon from time to time to labor in the ministry of the Church. As they go they should have been so trained that they would be adamant against the temptations of the adversary; they should be as pure and virtuous and righteous in their lives as it is possible to be, and then the influence of their very presence will be felt by those whom they contact. The Spirit of God will not dwell in unclean tabernacles, but his Spirit will dwell with those who keep themselves clean and sweet. Therefore, let us [rear] our boys and girls under the influence of the Spirit of God."
This reminded me of another time in my life. When I was 19, all of my friends who were guys were preparing for or were currently serving as missionaries for two years. I wanted nothing more than to also serve a mission and share the gospel but girls are not allowed to do that until they are 21. I went to visit and attend the wedding of a friend in Oregon. I was at her reception talking to the mother of another friend. I mentioned to her that my plan was to go to college until I could leave on my mission. She acknowledged that it was a very worthy goal, but cautioned me to not get upset if the Lord had other plans for me. I still remember her saying, "If you end up getting married before you can serve a mission, your mission has just changed to raising missionaries." She was right. Little did either of us know that less than a year later I would be married. However, I did make Aaron promise me that when our children were grown we would serve a mission as senior missionaries.
To everything there is a time and season.This is a lesson that apparently the Lord keeps teaching me. I recently was feeling frustrated with how little I can get done in the day, because all my time is spent taking care of Rebekah. I was thinking about how nice it will be when Rebekah can just sit on the floor and play. Or that if Seth were a few years older, he could babysit so that I could go to the store by myself. Even that it will be nice when summer is over and the kids are back in school. Then we had this lesson on Sunday and the Lord reminded me that this is the season of my life. Rebekah and all my children will grow up and in hindsight it will have gone quickly. Seth only has a few more years before he's a teenager and is he ready to take on the teenage world. And sadly we only have two weeks of summer vacation before life gets busy again. Am I doing everything I can to teach my children and enjoy their childhood now before it's gone? Enjoy it while it lasts because tomorrow will be a different day with different challenges and requirements. Right now my responsibility is my family, to love them and teach them to follow Jesus Christ and be strong and faithful. By doing that, I'm advancing the work of the Lord and preparing my children to "arise and shine forth."
Whenever I start to feel overwhelmed, I love to watch the following video. It always inspires me to be thankful for what I have and share the gospel with those around me.
This is my life right now and it is good.
1 comment:
Great post! Very insightful and very true. I don't know any woman who hasn't felt these things. You are an awesome mom.
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