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below is the transcript from an awesome post titled Motherhood as a Mission Field by Rachel Jankovic:
There is a good old saying, perhaps only said by
my Grandfather, that distance adds intrigue. It is certainly true — just think
back to anything that has ever been distant from you that is now near. Your
driver’s license. Marriage. Children. Things that used to seem so fascinating,
but as they draw near become less mystical and more, well, real.
This same principle certainly applies to mission
fields too. The closer you get to home, the less intriguing the work of
sacrifice seems. As someone once said, “Everyone wants to save the world, but
no one wants to help Mom with the dishes.” When you are a mother at home with
your children, the church is not clamoring for monthly ministry updates. When
you talk to other believers, there is not any kind of awe about what you are
sacrificing for the gospel. People are not pressing you for needs you might have,
how they can pray for you. It does not feel intriguing, or glamorous. Your work
is normal, because it is as close to home as you can possibly be. You have
actually gone so far as to become home.
Home: The Headwaters of Mission
If you are a Christian woman who loves the Lord,
the gospel is important to you. It is easy to become discouraged, thinking that
the work you are doing does not matter much. If you were really doing something
for Christ you would be out there, somewhere else, doing it. Even if you have a
great perspective on your role in the kingdom, it is easy to lose sight of it
in the mismatched socks, in the morning sickness, in the dirty dishes. It is
easy to confuse intrigue with value, and begin viewing yourself as the least
valuable part of the Church.
There are a number of ways in which mothers need
to study their own roles, and begin to see them, not as boring and
inconsequential, but as home, the headwaters of missions.
At the very heart of the gospel is sacrifice, and
there is perhaps no occupation in the world so intrinsically sacrificial as
motherhood. Motherhood is a wonderful opportunity to live the gospel. Jim
Elliot famously said, “He is no fool who gives up that which he cannot keep to
gain that which he cannot lose.” Motherhood provides you with an opportunity to
lay down the things that you cannot keep on behalf of the people that you
cannot lose. They are eternal souls, they are your children, they are your
mission field.
Faith Makes the Small Offering Great
If you are like me, then you may be thinking
“What did I ever give up for them? A desk job? Time at the gym? Extra spending
money? My twenty- year- old figure? Some sleep?” Doesn’t seem like much when
you put it next to the work of some of the great missionaries, people who gave
their lives for the gospel.
Think about the feeding of the five thousand when
the disciples went out and rounded up the food that was available. It wasn’t
much. Some loaves. Some fish. Think of some woman pulling her fish out and handing
it to one of the disciples. That had to have felt like a small offering. But
the important thing about those loaves and those fishes was not how big they
were when they were given, it was about whose hands they were given into. In
the hands of the Lord, that offering was sufficient. It was more than
sufficient. There were leftovers. Given in faith, even a small offering becomes
great.
Look at your children in faith, and see how many
people will be ministered to by your ministering to them. How many people will
your children know in their lives? How many grandchildren are represented in
the faces around your table now?
Gain What You Cannot Lose in Them
So, if mothers are strategically situated to
impact missions so greatly, why do we see so little coming from it? I
think the answer to this is quite simple: sin. Discontent, pettiness,
selfishness, resentment. Christians often feel like the right thing to do is to
be ashamed about what we have. We hear that quote of Jim Elliot’s and think
that we ought to sell our homes and move to some place where they need the
gospel.
But I’d like to challenge you to look at it
differently. Giving up what you cannot keep does not mean giving up your home,
or your job so you can go serve somewhere else. It is giving up yourself. Lay
yourself down. Sacrifice yourself here, now. Cheerfully wipe the nose for the
fiftieth time today. Make dinner again for the people who don’t like the green
beans. Laugh when your plans are thwarted by a vomiting child. Lay yourself
down for the people here with you, the people who annoy you, the people who get
in your way, the people who take up so much of your time that you can’t read
anymore. Rejoice in them. Sacrifice for them. Gain that which you cannot
lose in them.
It is easy to think you have a heart for orphans
on the other side of the world, but if you spend your time at home resenting
the imposition your children are on you, you do not. You cannot have a heart
for the gospel and a fussiness about your life at the same time. You will never
make any difference there if you cannot be at peace here.
You cannot have a heart for missions, but not for the people around you. A true
love of the gospel overflows and overpowers. It will be in everything you do,
however drab, however simple, however repetitive.
God loves the little
offerings. Given in faith, that plate of PB&J’s will feed thousands. Given
in faith, those presents on Christmas morning will bring delight to more
children than you can count. Offered with thankfulness, your work at home is
only the beginning. Your laundry pile, selflessly tackled daily, will be used
in the hands of God to clothe many. Do not think that your work does not
matter. In God’s hands, it will be broken, and broken, and broken again, until
all who have need of it have eaten and are satisfied. And even then, there will
be leftovers.

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