2014-05-11 A Mother's Day, and Night, and Everything In-between
John 17 1-11
Mother's Day
A reading from the Revised Mother's Version. Johanna 17:1-11
After all these things, she looks up to heaven and sighs.
Instead of having authority over all people, she has authority over two or three.
Two of them are too small to safely sit in a front seat, and one of them hasn't even transitioned to a booster seat.
Thing 1 and Thing 2: They take time.
Endless time.
Day time.
Night time.
All the in-between time.
All the time after time after everyone else in the civilized world has gone to bed.
Time to fold the underwear.
Time to pick up the motion-sensitive action figures that scream, "Hey! Wrestle this!" and shock her out of her skin at midnight.
They take the time that it takes to bake three dozenchocolate chip cookies for tomorrow's school party that she found out about at bedtime.
The other over whom she has authority is two years older than she is.
Thing #3 thinks the world revolves around his job, his cell phone, and Tennessee football.
He comes home and flops on the couch and drops his stinking feet on the coffee table that she's spent half an hour excavating from beneath mail, Barbie shoes and countless unread magazines.
What this Thing doesn't know is that without her authority he would cease to exist, devolving back into a belching shell of a college sophomore with underarm stains and wrinkled slacks and socks that don't come close to matching, funny how she didn't notice any of that at the time.
---
She knows this is not eternal life. It just feels endless.
Always unfinished.
And she knows that after a few hours of sleep with ears that always stay awake, she's going to get up and resume the work that has been given her to do,
that at some point she must have chosen to do out of love or something like it.
She is not the Father, not the Son.
She is not completely the daughter, although she hears her own mother's voice coming out of her mouth, especially when she sees the ghost of her previous self sneering at her through her daughter.
Not the Father, nor the Son, nor the daughter - She is the mother.
And from her all life proceeds and to her all life shall return, in need of a bath or a ride to a soccer game.
She would love to be glorious.
She would love to be glamorous.
She would love for someone to glorify her in their presence, like they did in the years B.C. (Before Children).
Not that she doesn't love her world.
Not that she would choose to be anywhere or anyone else.
She doesn't do it for the glory.
But for the life of her she can't remember why she does do it.
Except that maybe someday she will be glorified in those whom she has been given.
As long as she has breath, as long as she has influence, she will see that they will be protected.
If she has anything to say about it, they will be one.
She is the Mother.
Today is her day.
Tonight is her night.
And as she looks up to heaven and sighs, heaven sighs right back.
God the Father, God the Son --
God the worrier, God the provider --
God the protector, God the listener --
God the mother --
wants exactly no more and no less than she does for her family:
A kingdom come where no more will need to be done.
Completion.
Peace.
Safety.
Love.
She is the mother.
And today is her day.
---
There are three Sundays out of 52 that we can count on having a crowd at church: Christmas Eve, Easter... and Mother's Day.
The Holy Trinity of Church Attendance.
Christmas and Easter are in the Bible. But Mother's Day?
And yet, there are times when God, times when Jesus, sounds just like your mom.
"I have made your name known to those whom you gave me. They were yours, and you gave them to me. Now they know that everything you have given me is from you; for the words that you gave to me I have have given to them."
"I am asking on their behalf; I am not asking on behalf of the world, but on behalf of those whom you gave me, because they are yours. All mine are yours, and all yours are mine."
That's Jesus talking about his disciples, but it could've come from a mother who has done her best to instill something of God in the children she's been given.
---
All mothers are different. *ALL* mothers are different.
Some mothers have the patience of Job.
And some mothers have the rage of Goliath.
Some mothers bring home a paycheck.
Some mothers are doctors, some are teachers, some are clerks, or accountants, or soldiers, or police officers.
Some moms are strictly non-profit.
They administrate a home and volunteer in about five different organizations.
Some mothers can bake a dozen cookies and sew on a button at the same time and with both their eyes closed.
Some mothers are better at car maintenance and lawn care.
Some mothers can recall every minute of the birthing process in excruciating 256-color detail.
Some mothers can describe the excruciating wait and red tape of the adoption process.
Some mothers have a man around the house.
Some mothers do all the parenting themselves.
Some mothers are stepmothers.
Some mothers live in nursing homes.
Some mothers are grandmothers.
And some mothers aren't so grand. They just didn't get the gene for nurturing and good sense.
Some mothers live with Jesus in heaven.
All mothers are different.
---
But mothers are also the same.
Good or bad, grand or grim, they tend to compare themselves to each other, and worry that something critical has been left undone.
They feel the burden of having a child that is theirs and yet isn't.
Some days the kids are a gift from God, and some days they're the spawn of Satan.
All mothers would like a little more time, whether it's time to call their own, or time to correct some past mistake, or time to catch up on the thirty-thousand other things waiting on the list.
And whether they are mothers by birth, by adoption, by marriage, or by association, mothers love.
They love in times of poetry and fingerpaints.
And they love despite.
They love in spite.
---
In spite of the ways they had and would disappoint, Jesus loved his disciples.
In spite of the times when the poetry of God's presence went straight over their heads, Jesus prayed for his disciples.
He called them his own.
He called them his children.
And in spite of their failings, he lived to instill in them something of what had been given to him.
Was he successful?
Some days more than others, as the world judges success.
In our own lives, some days more than others Jesus is judged successful at making his glory known.
And so even now, he lifts his eyes to heaven, and sighs, and prays for his children.
I would think he prays for his mothers, too.
"And now I am no longer in the world, but they (these moms) are in the world.... Holy Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one, as we are one.... so that they may have my joy made complete in themselves."
May we all have a glorious Mother's Day.
And may we all have the glory of Christ, the Glory of God, in all that we are and all that we do.
Sent from Mailbox
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