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Friday, August 14, 2015

Flying Giving God Your Not Enough by Suzie Eller

We all go through time when we feel that we are not enough or not doing enough. Suzie explains this beautifully. 


Aaron Burden


Giving God Your Not Enough


"As Jesus looked up, he saw the rich putting theirGIFTS into the temple treasury. He also saw a poor widow put in two very small copper coins. ‘Truly I tell you,’ he said, ‘this poor widow has put in more than all the others. All these people gave their gifts out of their wealth; but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on.’" Luke 21:1-4 (NIV)
I put my 2-year-old twins in the back of theSHOPPING CART and my 3-year-old in the front seat. I only needed a few items and didn’t want to drag out the double stroller with the extra seat in back.
Everything was going well until I passed a line of shiny new Big Wheels. I scooped the twins out of the cart and then turned to get Leslie. I thought it would be fun to show them to the kids.
That’s when I heard a whoosh!
Ryan jumped on one Big Wheel. His twin-sister, Melissa, on the other. Like rockets, they blasted off.
While Melissa jetted to the back of theSTORE, Ryan shot toward the front where the double doors opened into a busy parking lot. It took nearly 10 minutes to capture my runaways.
I left the store, overwhelmed.
As a mom of three toddlers, I often experienced feeling "not enough."
Not enough sleep. Not enough hours in the day. Not enough of me to go around. But on that day my "not enough" went deeper. I judged myself far too harshly.
In today’s passage, we meet another woman who has experienced "not enough." She’s clutching two farthings … barely 1/100 of a day’s wages … surrounded by men with overflowing resources, who gave large offerings. Yet Jesus told the disciples herOFFERING was greater.
Why?
The rich men gave out of their excess while the widow gave out of her not enough.
Maybe you’re a mom and there are days you feel as if you give out ofYOUR not enough all day long, or you compare yourself to others.
What does the widow’s example teach us?
She gave all she had.
When it’s all you’ve got, it’s significant. As moms, we bring everything to Jesus — all of it, the good parts and the hard parts. You bring your desire to make a difference. You bring your personality and talents, whether you are the mom who jumps on the bed with her kids, or the mom who makes the tastiest cupcakes ever.
You also bring the harder parts, like your doubts.
When we place our "not enough" like doubt or impatience or lack of knowledge in His hands, itTRANSLATES to trust in Him — believing that He’ll help us fill those gaps.
She willingly gave.
The widow’s two farthings were of great value to her.
Willingly offering your child means that you understand that God has a stake in this, too. He has a plan and a purpose for your child. He loves him or her. He knows your child’s DNA and theNUMBER of hairs on his head.
But it doesn’t stop there. Just as He loves your babies, He treasures you. Don’t hide because you feel like you made a mistake. Willingly walk into His presence and give Him all of you. He’ll meet you there.
She trusted God with herOFFERING.
Parenting is aCONTINUAL process of putting in our two farthings. Trust God for the long-term, friend. You’re parenting every single day, but it all adds up as they become the human beings God created them to be.
If I couldGO BACK to that young mama in the store, I’d wrap my arms around her and say, "The ‘not enough’ you give day in and day out is seen by God and by His grace and power it is more than enough."
Father, today, I give everything I have and everything that I am to You. I joyfully bring my "not enough." In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
TRUTH FOR TODAY:
2 Corinthians 12:9, "But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me." (NIV)

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