Summary: Mums have one of the toughest ministries that God has given out!

NR 18-03-07

Mothering Sunday

Today is Mothering Sunday, the day when we thank God for giving us the one human being on this earth who generally has had the greatest impact on our lives.

Today we come to Church to give thanks for our mothers – whether or not they are dead or alive.

Story: I heard a story about a missionary who was trying to stir up interest to get people to go to a foreign country to preach the gospel.

At the end of the service a woman, dragging a little boy behind her, told the missionary, "I just feel like God is calling me to be a missionary."

"He is, indeed" replied the missionary - and pointing to the little boy, said:

"And there’s the first little heathen he wants you to preach to."

I would like to focus this morning on one verse

from our second reading, the verse in which St Paul writing to Timothy said this:

I have been reminded of your sincere faith, which first lived in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives in you also (“ Tim 1:5)

Timothy’s faith was nurtured on his mother’s knee – and probably his grandmother’s knee too.

Mothers have a wonderful opportunity to influence their children, in their early years for good.

They have the opportunity to bring them up to love and to serve God as did Eunice her son Timothy.

Someone once said “Mothers are the glue that holds the family together.”

Question: But can anyone tell me what mothers actually do? What is their job description – to use modern “business speak”

Answer: Mothers are:

1 teachers

2 cooks and cleaners.

3 nurses and doctors,

4 psychologists and counsellors,

5 car drivers and coaches - and

6 even football supporters.

Story: Maddy used to drive Jonny and Chris when they were younger to football in Kandern about 20 miles away, when we were living in Basle, Switzerland.

She came so regularly, that at the end of the season, the Kandern football club presented her with a bottle of wine for being their best supporter!!

Mums are very important.

I like the term the has come into vogue recently: Mums are homemakers.

Because homes need making – they don’t just happen

Story: I heard the story about a little boy - who was sitting on the front steps of his house - with his face buried in his hands.

As he was sitting there his father arrived came home. He asked the little boy what was wrong.

The little boy looked up and said, "Well, just between us, Dad, I’m having trouble getting along with your wife, too!"

The Ministry that mothers are called to is one of the toughest assignments God ever gave anybody!

Someone once said a mother has to be

i) as insightful as a psychologist,

ii) as tough as a marine corps drill instructor,

iii) as gentle as a nurse.

And she’s needs the negotation skills of a negotiator trying to broker an agreement between trade unions and management.

Being a mother requires

i) an endless supply of energy,

ii) a massive amount of patience, and

iii) an iron will, and

iv) the recognition that if she ever gets sick, she’s got to get well before the end of the school day.

600 college students were asked to write down the most beautiful word in the English language and 422 of them wrote the word "mother".

But the one great motherly quality I haven’t mentioned comes from our first reading (in the Old Testament) this morning – self sacrifice.

Mothers have a wonderful capacity for self-sacrifice – putting the good of their children ahead of their own good.

This is wonderfully illustrated in our Old Testament Lesson today - the story of Hannah – the mother of Israel’s first major Prophet called Samuel.

1. The Problem

We see that even the great men and women of God have their problems.

Hannah had a problem and that was that she had no children

In those days, it was a disgrace for a woman to be barren – and not to have a child.

For it was seen as God’s curse on the woman

2. The Jealousy

Elkanah, Hannah’s husband had a second wife Penninah who did have chidren.

And as if that wasn’t bad enough, Hannah was taunted by Penninah

3. Real Hurt

Hannah suffered a lot over the reproach

Can you remember the nursery rhyme:

Stick and stones might break my bones

But words will never hurt you!

Don’t you believe a word of it! Words can hurt. And Hannah cried a lot over it.

4. The Solution

But Hannah took her problem to the Lord.

She prayed about it – and God heard her prayer.

Some of the great men and women of God have been just that because they WRESTLED in prayer over their concerns.

Hannah brought her problem to God – with her prayers – and God answered her .

And how he answered her !!

He gave birth to a son, Samuel who went on to be “The Prophet” in the Land.

Politically and spiritually he became the leader of the nation for many years.

6. The self sacrifice

But that isn’t then end of the story:

Hannah wanted the very best for her son.

However, the only way Samuel would be able to

fulfil his godly calling was to go away from her.

He had to go away to boarding school with Eli, the High Priest in Shiloh

Because in those days that was the only way - that he could fulfill his God given calling.

I am sure that it must have broken her heart - to know that she wasn’t going to have him much longer – though she would visit him regularly.

But she was prepared to give up what she wanted - for Samuel’s best.

Because she loved him and loved God too.

She wanted Samuel to be a man who would serve God wholeheartedly.

Self sacrifice is one of the greatest traits oof true motherhood

And in this aspect of motherhood, Mothers reflect the character of God.

God sent his own Son into the world for the good of mankind.

Jesus came and lived a perfect life on earth.

He died on a Cross – an event we recall on Good Friday - to enable us to come to know God.

And God the Father raised him from the dead – an event we recall each Easter.

And it through the resurrection from the dead that God proved that Jesus was who he said he was.

It was through the resurrection that God proved that Jesus could do what he promised.

What does this mean for us today?.

Jesus calls us to be his disciples – he wants us to CHANGE the way we live.

We are called to be no longer selfish and self centred.

Rather he CALLS us to follow his example and live for the good of others.

Often that calls for us to sacrifice things – just as mothers have to sacrifice things for the good of their children

Just as Hannah had to sacrifice for the good of her son

Let us resolve to be changed people – to allow

the Holy Spirit to dwell in us more and more.

Let us be a light on Romney Marsh.

Let us be a community remembered for the quality of life we live - not backbiting as so many in the world do.

And to do that might be alien to our nature – but we can resolve to do it – if we will.

I’d like to leave you with a picture of what the Early Church was like.

St Luke in the Acts of the apostles records this of the Early Church members

42They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. 43Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles. 44All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. 46Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

Could any of that be said of us as a Church today?

If not, I wonder if we, as a church, are actually then authenically Christian – or we simply being religious?

For the two aren’t the same!