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Christmas Cookie Shame
In a season rife with pressures and expectation, the gospel gives us freedom from shame and a secure identity in Christ.
Facing the False Guilt of Infertility
Because Christ has taken our shame to the cross, we can live free from condemnation—even when childlessness seems to define or isolate us.
When Your Past Comes Calling: Healing from an Abortion
When the shame of a past abortion confronts us anew, we find a sure hope and comfort in the blood of Jesus.
Worst Mom Award: Receiving God’s Grace in Motherhood
In motherhood, God gives us the opportunity not only to give his grace to our children but also to receive it from them.
When Your Kids Call You Out: The Privilege of Turning to God in Our Weakness
Sometimes our kids can be the flashlight God uses to shine truth into our lives.
The Gospel Frees Us from Shame: Embracing Sexual Intimacy with a Postpartum Body
We may not be able to change some aspects of our postpartum bodies, but the gospel can change how we think about them and help us embrace intimacy with our husbands.
Editor’s Note: This article addresses struggles and tensions that can arise, even in otherwise "healthy" marriages. Its encouragements are best read with discernment and consideration of your unique situation. If abuse (physical, emotional, or sexual) or other illegal or illicit behavior is occurring in your marriage, please tell someone and reach out for counsel and/or professional intervention.
Finding Joy on the Other Side of Guilt
When guilt paralyzes us, the gospel frees us to move forward into repentance and joy.
Remedies For the Mom Who Keeps Blowing It
Sometimes we get so tired of the same sins, we want to just give up and stay where we are. But keep going back to the cross for grace, because Christ's forgiveness drives us to repentance.
When You Don’t Measure Up
When we realize we’re not enough and that we can’t live out our “right” way of doing motherhood, there is good news that frees us from shame.
For the Mom Who Keeps Blowing It
I looked at my husband across the couch and heard myself say, “I’m tired of blowing it, of sinning the same way over and over again with our kids. Can’t I trade this in for another sin or something?!”…
The Talk
Do you remember the first time your parents or friends talked to you about sex?
I wouldn’t describe the emotions that I experienced from the conversation with my mom or with my friends as positive. And yet, in Genesis 2:25 we have a description of a very positive experience. Adam and Eve were naked and unashamed.
Can you imagine a scenario where you could be completely naked, emotionally and physically, and be unashamed? Nothing to hide. Nothing to cover. No good parts to emphasize. No bad parts to deemphasize.
This is the beauty of the sexual experience as God intends it.
We know that our kids won’t get the biblical view of sex from culture. The culture swings between sex being too important and not important at all. It is the end all of every great experience and it is so unimportant you can engage in it with anyone.
We need to give our kids a different view. We need to give our kids a grace-centered, biblical view of sex.
The question is how do we talk about sex to our children in a way that validates the goodness of sex, the way God intended, without shaming or scaring them into thinking sex is a bad thing.
How do we stand next to our child and give them more than a list of dos and don’ts?
We must show our children that a relationship with Jesus is better than any other experience. And we must make sure they know that no sin, sexual or otherwise, is beyond the grace of God. We can only give a complete biblical view of sex when we affirm that Christ loves the prostitute as much as he loves the woman who was a virgin when she got married.
Grace levels all of us.
This glorious news is worth the embarrassment that you may feel in any conversation with your kids.
So smile, and share.
The Gospel is our Guide to Guilt-Free Eating
It started less than an hour after she was born. Still exhausted and overjoyed after delivery, when the long-awaited newborn daughter I cradled began rooting for her first meal, I fed her. Three years (and a baby brother) later, feeding these children remains my primary task in life.
When so much of my brain space is occupied with thoughts of my children’s meals, it’s no surprise that it comes up in conversation with fellow moms. A new friend at a playground exclaimed that watching my toddler son devour a hardboiled egg made her feel guilty about her kids’ chips...
I guess even I feel some guilt about feeding my family sometimes.
...if you can’t shake your longing for guilt-free eating, the gospel reminds us we are in good company. We’re all groaning for the redemption of our bodies at that marvelous feast, but we miss the mark when we assume food choices can provide us a bit of moral superiority on the way. It’s not that caring about food or farming is bad, or that God doesn’t care about it himself. It’s that dividing food into categories that signal our success as a parent, maybe thinking that a “clean” or “natural” menu is a way to uphold our virtue or that feeding our kids more vegetables than crackers can ease our guilt, can go too far...
The Christian life is not about what we’re putting in our mouths, but what has come out of God’s. Our food choices are of some value, but not eternal value; God’s word stands firm forever.
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