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My husband and I had been happily married (most
of the time) for five years but hadn't been blessed with a baby. I
decided to do some serious praying and promised God that if he would
give us a child, I would be a perfect mother, love it with all my
heart and raise it with His word as my guide.
God answered my prayers and blessed us with a
son.
The next year God blessed us with another son.
The following year, He blessed us with yet
another son.
The year after that we were blessed with a
daughter.
My husband thought we'd been blessed right into
poverty. We now had four children, and the oldest was only four years
old.
I learned never to ask God for anything unless I
meant it. As a minister once told me, "If you pray for rain make sure
you carry an umbrella."
I began reading a few verses of the Bible to the
children each day as they lay in their cribs. I was off to a good
start. God had entrusted me with four children and I didn't want to
disappoint Him.
I tried to be patient the day the children
smashed two dozen eggs on the kitchen floor searching for baby chicks.
I tried to be understanding... when they started
a hotel for homeless frogs in the spare bedroom although it took me
nearly two hours catch all twenty-three frogs.
When my daughter poured ketchup all over herself
and rolled up in a blanket to see how it felt to be a hot dog, I tried
to see the humor rather than the mess.
In spite of changing over twenty-five thousand
diapers, never eating a hot meal and never sleeping for more than
thirty minutes at a time, I still thank God daily for my children.
While I couldn't keep my promise to be a perfect
mother - I didn't even come close... I did keep my promise to raise
them in the Word of God. I knew I was missing the mark just a little
when I told my daughter we were going to church to worship God, and
she wanted to bring a bar of soap along to "wash up" Jesus, too.
Something was lost in the translation when I
explained that God gave us everlasting life, and my son thought it was
generous of God to give us his "last wife."
My proudest moment came during the children's
Christmas pageant. My daughter was playing Mary, two of my sons were
shepherds and my youngest son was a wise man. This was their moment to
shine.
My five-year-old shepherd had practiced his line,
"We found the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes." But he was nervous
and said, "The baby was wrapped in wrinkled clothes."
My four-year-old "Mary" said, "That's not
'wrinkled clothes,' silly. That's dirty, rotten clothes."
A wrestling match broke out between Mary and the
shepherd and was stopped by an angel, who bent her halo and lost her
left wing.
I slouched a little lower in my seat when Mary
dropped the doll representing Baby Jesus, and it bounced down the
aisle crying, “Mama-mama.” Mary grabbed the doll, wrapped it back up
and held it tightly as the wise men arrived.
My other son stepped forward wearing a bathrobe
and a paper crown, knelt at the manger and announced, "We are the
three wise men, and we are bringing gifts of gold, common sense and
fur."
The congregation dissolved into laughter, and the
pageant got a standing ovation.
"I've never enjoyed a Christmas program as much
as this one," laughed the pastor, wiping tears from his eyes. "For
the rest of my life, I'll never hear the Christmas story without
thinking of gold, common sense and fur."
"My children are my pride and my joy and my
greatest blessing," I said as I dug through my purse for an aspirin. |