The woman leaned in and said, “But my mother is so demanding. She has to get exactly the right thing or she won’t be happy.”
I reached for another card in the Mother’s Day section of the store and gave my fellow shopper my sympathies. I’d just met the woman, but in a few minutes I already had a clear picture of her 82-year-old mother who was so dissatisfied and exacting with her children that her sixty-something daughter approached Mother’s Day card shopping with the fear of a turkey in November.
The underlying issues that led to the mother’s dreadful behavior are likely many, among them probably pride, perfectionism run rampant, self-centeredness, and bitterness. But it’s equally safe to say that she likely has issues with the flipsides of those problems—insecurity, guilt, and the companion of these, fear.
Her behavior could be the result of her fear that her children don’t love her. Her fear that they resent her for mistakes she may have made in their upbringing. Her fear that if she loses control over them and her life, the worst that she fears will happen. Her fear that she has become useless and unimportant. Her fear that her life has no significance. Her fear of death.
Because this mother lets fear dictate her behavior, she’s negatively affecting the lives of her children and probably grandchildren, as well. From the way her daughter speaks of her mother to a perfect stranger, one thing is clear: this mother is leaving a legacy of fear.
My mom, on the other hand, has the courage of a pioneer. She left her childhood home to become the first in her family to graduate from college. She went on to a doctoral program and chose the one in which women, at the time, were extremely scarce. She was rejected from one school because the institution didn’t allow women in that program, and she ended up being one of only five females in the program at her state’s university.
She excelled in the program and, after graduation, moved far away from her family to start a new business from the ground-up. She began the business with her husband (my dad) and, when their portions outgrew each other, she opened her own practice in her specialty.
After some years building a successful practice, she didn’t balk when the pioneer call sounded once again. She sold her practice and went to work as a full-time mom and teacher to her four children. At that time, home schooling was not at all the common and more accepted choice that it is now. My mom had to deal with worried grandparents, doubting friends, and critical peers.
But she didn’t hesitate to sacrifice her own plans and desires to step out into the unknown, to forge a path that led to, as she says herself, greater satisfaction and value than her previous aspirations would have ever given her. The result of her efforts was four well-adjusted and rather accomplished adult children (myself excepted, of course). Most importantly, all of those children are passionate followers of Jesus Christ.
How did my mom have the courage to live as such a pioneer? She must be fearless. But, no, I know she isn’t. Like the rest of us, my mom struggles with fear.
So what makes my mom so different from the mother that shopper described to me in the store? My mom fights the battle every day to be directed by faith instead of fear.
She left her hometown and loved ones to embark on new territory because she knew God went with her. She bravely turned aside from her career plan and dreams because she knew God had called her to walk a different path.
As a mother, especially when she had children of impressionable ages, my mom was careful not to pass down her fears. Instead, she was intentional about passing down her faith in the God Who overcomes and conquers our fears.
She taught me that God holds our past, present, and future in His hands. She taught me that He is good. She taught me that I can be safe in my Father’s arms for all eternity if I repented of my sins and asked to be granted His free gift of salvation. She taught me to go to my heavenly Father whenever I’m afraid, and He will protect and comfort me.
My mom is leaving a legacy of faith.
As Proverbs 31:28-29 says of the ideal mom:
Her children rise up and call her blessed;
her husband also, and he praises her:
“Many women have done excellently,
but you surpass them all.”
This is my mom. But here’s the thing: all of us, even those who aren’t mothers, are leaving a legacy.
Whether you have nieces and nephews, godchildren, or teach Sunday School. Even if you only interact with adult friends, family, or strangers. Your sphere of impact and influence is much larger than you think.
Will you leave a legacy of fear or a legacy of faith?
This following verse from Proverbs 31 may refer to a woman, but for my guy readers out there, don’t think you’re exempt from this. You, too, are leaving a powerful legacy in the way you live your life. If the only kind of fear you have is the fear of the Lord, your legacy will be one of faith.
Charm is deceitful, and beauty is vain,
but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised. – Proverbs 31:30
What kind of legacy did your parents leave you? What steps are you taking to ensure you leave a legacy of faith? Please share!
Comments 4
Truth! The constant battle between fear and faith leaves a legacy for our children and others in our where of influence long after we’re gone. Which way we go depends on our daily, deliberate choices. And those choices greatly affect the trajectory of our lives and those of our kids. Thank you for this reminder.
Author
Well said, Cheyenne! Sounds like you already have a working game plan for how to influence those around you to choose faith over fear. Thanks for joining the conversation today!
The story about the Mother’s Day card really makes me think about what kind of person I want to be when I am older. I know the formation of that person starts now. Thanks, Jerusha!
Author
Such a great point, Katie. How do we want people to talk or think about us when we’re older…or even when we’re gone? Thanks for that insight!