Watch #3: Random People Coming to Mind?

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I received this from a godly mentor, and I pass it along to you.

Have you ever had someone totally random come to mind? Like your best friend in kindergarten who moved away and you never spoke to again?

I encourage you to pray for those random people who pop into your brain.

I expect we're all in need of prayer, and I suspect that God brings those people to mind specifically because they need extra prayer.

Of course, because these are random people, it's really hard to know how to pray, but if I think of something specific, I pray for it. Otherwise, I pray that God would be close to the person, that they would be open to what he's doing . . . something general like that.

And because these are random people, you might never know what these prayers do.

But I have one specific memory where my suspicion (that God brings those people to mind) was confirmed. I had a high school friend that I lost touch with after a school transfer. Twelve years later she randomly came to mind, and I prayed for her. The next week, I heard that, around that time I prayed, her family was going through a really hard time.

From my perspective, as much as I can acknowledge the upheaval in her life, I am incredibly thankful to be part of the body of Christ, and that I was permitted and called to pray for her. It is astonishing to me to think that God would interconnect us all so beautifully. That as sad as she might have felt, God was supporting her, through the body of Christ.

This is not meant to be a guilt thing, like, "these random people need prayer!" For me, I can easily fall into the self-condemnation of, "I was ignoring the prompting of the Holy Spirit!" And that makes me feel like a failure, and I shut down and don't want to pray at all.

Rather, this is meant to be an invitation thing. Because even if I don't always remember to pray, if I remember once this month, that is once more than I might have otherwise.

And it's a way that I can see God at work, and participate. Because, busy as I might be, I can take 15 seconds to pray.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

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Watch #2: How Does God Speak to You?

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I know that we are all different, and the ways that God speaks to me are probably different than the way that he speaks to you.

But I encourage you to be alert to the ways he is at work in the world.

For example, one of my friends sees the sunset and remembers the things of the Lord. My house is at an angle where we don't see the sunset, and I am almost never out and about at that time, but I like that the sunset, a daily recurrence, has meaning for her.

For me, I see God at work in the chance occurrences that have personal meaning. (Not that they are really chance, of course.)

One example: When we moved to unimproved land, we were living in a construction trailer. It was so small, there was no way to keep all our books out.

One son asked one day for Greek Myths. It was in storage, in some box amid 30 or 40 other boxes. I faced the mountain of stuff without any confidence of success. These boxes weren't all even labeled correctly. How could I find the one book that was missing?

I think I poked around for a bit, without success, and as I was about to leave, defeated, I glanced up, and there was the box that I knew had the book.

It was like the palpable presence of God fell on me at that moment, and I sat sobbing, because God cared about me, in my constrained space, and about my son's wish to read pagan tales of false gods (of all things).

I was known. My son was known.

It still brings me to tears.

And maybe it doesn't sound very dramatic in retelling (I found a book I was looking for!), but it was meaningful to me.

On another occasion, I was at Disneyland. On the last ride of the day, I heard my name called very quietly--and there, sitting behind me in Star Tours, were some of my dearest family friends that I knew from another state. Their family had been dealing with hard things lately, and to see them, so unexpectedly . . . what a gift.

In the scheme of life, and in the face of deep hard times, a five minute unexpected meet-up for greetings and hugs and a bit of tears . . . this is hardly anything. A wisp.

And yet, in that moment, for me, it felt like the gratuitous gift of God, that among the 44,000 people who were at Disney that day, and despite all the wrong turns and child swapping that had to happen for me to be on that ride at that specific minute, I got to see my friends.

This is my testimony that God gives good gifts to his children.

My prayer for you is that you will be on the watch for his handiwork, and that you will recognize it when you see it, whether in sunsets, or chance events, or however God speaks to you.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

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Watch for God at Work in Your Life

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I feel like there have been many emails that encourage you through the hard(er) parts of homeschooling lately. In this series, I am hoping to do a more positive series, on ways that you might be able to glimpse God at work in your life and the lives of your family members.

These are not practical like, "Now my morning routine is so much more smooth!"

Instead, I hope that, in your life, these might be practical in the sense of, "I have a new view of how God is at work in me and my family."

To begin:

A Tale of Two Plane Trips

Six or seven years ago, I had taken my youngest when I went to visit my family. He was a free lap child, and on the flight home he was not a happy camper. He probably didn't actually cry and scream the entire four hours, but that's how it felt.

I knew it had been a rough flight when another passenger from a few rows back stopped after the flight to say, "Don't worry about it. I have four children of my own, and sometimes this happens. If people make comments, just let it go."

I appreciated the encouragement--sort of--but it was quite embarrassing, to realize that we had been so disruptive that a man several rows away felt the need to tell me not to worry about being disruptive.

Now it's some years later. That crying baby is a pretty independent 8-year-old. And when we took a family trip recently, a woman leaned across the aisle to say, "You and your husband must have this parenting thing down. I've been watching for the last hour, and your spouse has been doing a crossword, and you have been reading a book, and your children just happily do their thing."

This is not meant to be self-congratulatory. After another flight, a few sons shoved each other on the gangway as they were leaving the plane. So if you happened to catch my family at the wrong moment, you would not think that we have "the parenting thing down."

But when this woman said that my children were independent, I realized that is mostly true. I hadn't noticed, because the youngest still needed attention at times, and sometimes children asked for snacks. But compared to a four hour cry on the plane, my normal has shifted.

So my family had changed, but I hadn't noticed it because that change has been incremental and gradual. (And, obviously, remains incomplete.)

But I suspect that, if you think about your life, you may have some area in which you, or your family, have grown in grace, perhaps without recognizing it.

Maybe it's not that years of training start to pay off with self-sufficient children on plane flights.

For me, for years I would pay the bills and be super grumpy, thinking that maybe this would be the month that God would not provide. And then at some point, that grumpiness went away. God has been faithful through the years, and that is no longer such a struggle.

My hope is that you can think of something in you or your family that God has changed.

And if you can't think of a way that God has been at work? Ask him! May he bring something to mind, so that you may be encouraged in your journey.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

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Teach Multiple Sides to Protect the Parent-Child Relationship

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Years ago, a friend’s teenage son declared: “When I grow up, I want to go to Saudi Arabia and openly preach the Gospel until I am martyred.”

Not exactly the life plans most moms have for their children.

What should we do when our kids tell us things that rock our world? I’ve written before about why Sonlight presents multiple views on various issues, such as different perspectives on historical events and the origins of the earth. If you’re curious at all, go ahead and read those to see what it looks like for Sonlight to teach multiple views on one issue. (For example, we present historical fiction about early American history from the perspectives of Spaniards, English colonists, and Native Americans.)

But I’ve been thinking of another reason for our approach to showing multiple sides of an issue. The very practice of looking at and discussing various points of view throughout your homeschool years helps protect your relationship with your kids.

You know your children are their own people. And sometimes that feels scary because you know you can’t control them! At other times it is truly awesome to watch the creative work of God unfold as your kids grow up.

As your children grow, they’re probably going be a little different than you expect. And they will probably disagree with you about some things. You pray and guide and do what you can to help them choose to follow Jesus. But you know that how they live their faith will still look a bit different than your life. Their fashion may be different than yours. Their financial choices may be different. Their paths of ministry may be different.

As one small example, my son Luke has a weekly movie night at his home. Anyone is welcome. They watch a movie and then discuss it. Luke uses it to demonstrate an open home (Brittany, his wife, says she never knows how many people will be at the dinner table) and to model the opportunity to talk about deep issues. I personally would never have started a ministry like that. To be honest, I don’t value movies the way Luke does. But I am grateful for Luke’s heart in this area. When I asked him how a book-loving mom like me could raise a son who loves movies, he replied, “Books and movies are both all about communication.” I had to admit that made sense.

In the face of these inevitable differences, big and small, we parents must decide: Do we want our children to be willing to talk to us about those differences? When they are teens and have some doubts about their faith, do we want them to feel like they can talk to us about that? Do we want to actually hear what they’re saying (even though our hearts might be thumping hard)? Do we want to be a helpful, trusted guide in their lives?

Since the answer is yes, we ought to start learning to listen and engage when our children are young. You can start looking at various viewpoints early on – to give both you and your children practice asking questions, listening and discussing. Your children learn that questions are OK, that not everyone believes what your family does, and that’s it’s OK to have convictions that run counter to our culture. You learn how to create a space where children can question and find answers.

Sonlight helps parents be intentional so they don’t fall into one of two extremes here:

  1. At one extreme, you could create a family culture where you can’t talk about anything. Any subject or idea outside what you believe to be true is shut down. Your children just hear your side of an issue over and over, without ever learning that the other side has intelligent (if unconvincing) reasons for their views as well. Your kids will grow up not knowing how to talk with someone who believes differently than them.But then sooner or later, at least by college-age, your children will meet intelligent, thoughtful, engaging, and kind people outside the boundaries you have drawn. They will meet Christians who believe God created the earth millions of years ago, or generous atheists who love their families and those around them. This can shake them to the core and make them feel like the whole foundation of what they thought true is suspect. They may feel duped and mislead. And then they may go and make their own way without your input at all.
  2. On the other extreme, you could choose not to provide your children any guidance. You could avoid teaching your children what you believe to be true, and instead let them chose anything from a young age. You could present all the world religions as equally valid options and let them choose what feels right to them. You could let them make all their own choices about values, morals and actions.Clearly, this approach does not work well. Children need to know that some things are right and some things are wrong. Some things are true and some things are false. They need to have a framework of truth before they can rightly evaluate things contrary to that framework.

So here’s a middle way that Sonlight helps you walk: You teach your children that your beliefs are true. You share your faith as the truth and you teach that you make your big life choices (like family, nutrition and finances) for a reason. But you also teach your children that other people believe other things and make other choices. And that those people are usually smart people trying to do good in the world.

You show your children that you are open to new ideas in non-essentials – for example, you may receive new information and let your beliefs change over time about what it means to eat in a way that is healthy and ethical. When you talk about history, you show curiosity for the experiences of all the people involved, not just those who were your cultural ancestors.

When it comes to essentials, like the core tenants of the Christian faith, you show that you can hear other viewpoints and that you respect those who share those viewpoints as people. You show that you are interested in what they believe and why. And then you demonstrate to your children that you still believe what you do.

Through this, you and your kids learn together how to have real conversations. You prepare for when your children say things that strike fear into your heart, whether it’s “I want to go to public school,” “I want to dye my hair blue,” “I want to listen to this new rock band,” or “I want to be martyred for Jesus.” When this happens, you want to have practice in actually listening to your children, so you know how to understand where they are coming from and what their motivations are. You show that you respect their intelligence and their desires. And yet you may still set boundaries about appropriate actions.

Sonlight helps you do all this. We think this is a wise way to raise children. If our children are to be true ambassadors for Christ in the world, they must be able to listen to the other side and respect people. If we are to be wise parents who serve as guides, we have to be able to listen to our children and respect them. We need to create an atmosphere where real conversation takes place.

Families who have used Sonlight for years know what I mean here. You can’t control your children, but you can take steps to keep the pathways of communication and influence open between you and them. Simply by choosing to homeschool and use Sonlight you are moving in that direction.

We are with you in this! God bless you in the noble task of raising and educating your children.

Blessings,

Sarita

P.S. In case you’re wondering, the young man who wanted to be a martyr for Jesus now serves overseas in a relatively unreached area (with a ministry approach that is much more sustainable than his original plans). I’m honored that he and his wife use Sonlight to teach their children!

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Five Ways God's Kingdom Is Different #5

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He Can Handle the Truth

At one point this year, I was tired. You probably know that feeling, where you think, "I am tired to the point that I could throw up." And I had been dealing with some upsetting issues, and was sad about Syria, and, generally, just . . . depleted.

And I headed up to town for a birthday party, and put in a new CD. The first song was from Psalm 94. And I listened to the words and was stunned.

I grew up in a home where the rule was, "No put-downs." And I know Matthew 5:22, that "Anyone who says, 'You fool,' will be in danger of the fire of hell."

And yet here was what the Psalmist said.

Take heed, you senseless ones, you fools,
When will you understand, you fools,
Does the God who teaches man all things not know?
Does he not know?

Does the God who formed the ear not hear,
Does he who formed the eye not see,
Does the God who disciplines nations never punish?
Does he not judge?

By the time this song was done, I was sobbing. More than sobbing. Screaming, wailing . . . the sounds of deep emotion that, had I been at home, I would have kept inside, because no child needs to hear their mother melting down. But I was alone in the car, with God and Psalm 94.

I listened to this song five times. And in between my wailing for Syria, and broken relationships, and all the rest, I would think, "Is it okay to sing along? I'm calling people fools. And I guess it is foolish to rebel against God and think he doesn't see you. But that feels really awkward and bordering on wrong. On the other hand, if I'm singing Scripture, and part of the Psalter, how far off can I get?"

And it reminded me of something C.S. Lewis, in his meditations on the Psalms, says. Paraphrased: "The Ancients were far more willing to express their true feelings, unedited, than are we today."

Which is what I leave you with. If you are rejoicing: rejoice. And if you are angry, don't be angry about being angry (anyone else been there?!). The Psalmist says, "Why have you rejected us forever, O God?" (Psalm 74). That's a pretty gutsy thing to say. And that's in God's worship manual.

So worship God as you are. He can handle it.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

P.S. And that Psalm 94? You can hear a version here.

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Five Ways God's Kingdom Is Different #4

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No, Really. It is Backwards

From childhood, I remember a nice diagram of how the Armor of God relates to the armor of a Roman soldier: helmet, breastplate, belt, shoes, sword, shield.

So I was surprised, reading Timothy Gombis's Drama of Ephesians years later, to find that Isaiah 59 actually speaks of God as a warrior: "He put on righteousness like a breastplate,
and a helmet of salvation on his head."

Gombis says, "Just as God waged warfare in the past to vindicate his name, to rescue his people or to judge his people, so now God wages warfare against the power through the church" (158).

And this warfare is not clashing in some kind of spiritual pitched battle.

Our warfare involves resisting the corrupting influences of the power. The same pressures that produce practices of exploitation, injustice and oppression in the world are at work on church communities. The church's warfare involves resisting such influences, transforming corrupted practices and replacing them with life-giving patterns of conduct that draw on and radiate the resurrection power of God. Our warfare, then, involves purposefully growing into communities that become more faithful corporate performances of Jesus on earth (159-160).

This is intense to think about. Gombis talks at length about the ways that we are lulled into not having the mind of Christ. Maybe that looks like consumerism, or the hunt for power. Those are obvious values of the world, and it can be hard to settle into service and loving your family, in the face of friends with perfect Facebook lives.

Which is all to say: the mind of Christ is not like the world's mind. Just resisting the way the world thinks, valuing things the world doesn't value (like children) . . . this is warfare the way Christ fought. Subversive, painful, sacrificial, unexpected.

When you love your children, you advance the Kingdom of God. It's exciting to think about.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

P.S. I had no thought, when I started this series, of a way to connect it with the Sonlight missions project. None. But as I wrote, the connection came to mind. If you haven't done so already, Sign up here!.

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Five Ways God's Kingdom Is Different #3

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It Is All Backwards

Timothy Gombis, in his book The Drama of Ephesians, talks at length about how completely different the Kingdom of God is. Power demonstrated through weakness.

Throughout John's Gospel, Jesus has opportunities to assert himself and conduct his ministry by grabbing headlines and making impressive displays of power. Each time he says, "My hour has not yet come"; this is not the way that God is glorified in him. Nearer to the end of his ministry, however, Jesus begins to recognize that his hour has come. The time to glorify the Father has arrived. How does Jesus do that?"

As John says, "Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end."

And he washes their feet.

Don't read past that. Sit there for a minute.

He could have done anything at all, at this end of his life, and he serves in the most demeaning way possible.

There is no way you can prepare for a king that backwards.

But keep going. As Jesus finishes praying in Gethsemane, "he looked up to heaven and said, 'Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son so that the Son may glorify you. . . .'"

And it is easy for me to read that as, "Because I'm about to be resurrected and will eventually have every knee bow." I read that as a statement of final exaltation.

But Gombis would argue that my reading is faulty. Because we worship Jesus, who triumphed over principalities and powers through dying.

That's not the way the world triumphs.

When David fought Goliath, he killed Goliath. He didn't win by having Goliath kill him! It's ridiculous.

It is backwards.

  • So next time your baby decides to finger paint with the contents of his diaper, and you clean it up;
  • So next time your children, after playing happily all morning, have a sudden, sharp disagreement that ends in screams, tears, or maybe worse, and you go to help them find the way of peace;
  • So next time you hit your 4 o'clock slump, when it's a long time yet for the husband to come home and dinner is not yet begun, and you start it anyway;
  • So next time you teach your fidgeting children, because you love them and want good things for them;

Don't think that is nothing.

Because in the backwards kingdom of God, this is how God's power is manifested. Through the little things done in love.

There is a beautiful verse in Ephesians 3. Paul says that he has been given the grace to preach Christ, to tell the things that have been hidden, "that the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known through the church to the rulers and the authorities in the heavenly places."

The picture I have is of faithful service in small things, and the rulers and authorities (however defined) are watching in awe.

The little things you do for Christ matter in the heavenlies.

It is backwards. But I am thankful for it.

Love

Amy's pic

Amy Lykosh
John and Sarita's oldest daughter
Second-generation Sonlighter
Homeschooling mom to five

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