Mom Set Free: Find Relief from the Pressure to Get It All Right

Mom Set Free: Find Relief from the Pressure to Get It All Right

Mom Set Free: Find Relief from the Pressure to Get It All Right

Mom Set Free: Find Relief from the Pressure to Get It All Right

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Overview

Moms are under so. much. pressure. Pressure that weighs us down and threatens to wipe us out. Are you ready for relief? Mom Set Free will empower you to parent in the confidence of God's grace and to experience the freedom you were created for.

We moms are told that we have to get it all right so our kids turn out right. We’re told that their entire futures are riding on our ability to perfectly orchestrate their lives. And we’re told that the strength of their faith hinges on ours. And we begin to believe that if we just try hard enough, we can actually “be enough.”

These impossible standards leave us stuck in worry, anger, guilt, comparison, and shame. Jeannie Cunnion gets it. And in Mom Set Free she reveals how the Good News of the Gospel empowers us to live—and parent—in the freedom for which Christ has set us free.

Jeannie invites us to journey alongside her as we learn to:
-Lay down what God has not asked us to carry so we can thrive in what He has.
-Embrace our significance in our children’s lives in light of God’s sovereignty.
-Trust God with the children He has entrusted to us.
-Receive God’s grace so we can reflect God’s heart to our kids.

It’s time to breathe deeper, walk lighter, and reclaim the wonder and adventure of parenting.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501156441
Publisher: Howard Books
Publication date: 08/29/2017
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 405,204
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Jeannie Cunnion is the author of Parenting the Wholehearted Child and Mom Set Free, as well as a frequent speaker at women’s conferences and parenting events around the country. She holds a Master’s degree in social work, and her writing has been featured on outlets such as the TODAY show, Fox News, The 700 Club, and Focus on the Family. Jeannie and her husband, Mike, have four boys.

Read an Excerpt

Mom Set Free • CHAPTER 1 •


The Freedom to Rely on the “Enough-ness” of Christ

During my first pregnancy, I can clearly remember people—friends and strangers alike—telling me how much I would love being a mom. How I would love my son so much that I would feel like my heart would burst. And they were right. The moment the nurse laid my newborn son’s bare body on my chest and I felt his heart beat against mine, I knew there was nothing in this world I wouldn’t do for him. My instantaneous love for him overwhelmed me.

That newborn baby is now a teenager, and I am still caught off guard by how the very sight of him, along with his three younger brothers, slays me.

However, what I don’t remember anyone telling me before my first son was born is that motherhood would not only enlarge my heart but it would also expose all my weaknesses and inadequacies, and that there would be days when I’d feel so desperate that I wouldn’t even recognize myself. I didn’t see that coming. I didn’t expect that motherhood would reveal both the beautiful and the not-so-beautiful parts of my heart.

I recently attended a baby shower for a young woman named Nicole. She was a soon-to-be first-time mom and a woman I very much admire and adore. To call her wise beyond her years would be an understatement.

The shower was a joyous occasion, as all baby showers are, but the joy at this shower was palpable. Nicole and her husband, Jimmy, had long prayed and hoped for this “miracle baby” whom we were all eager to embrace and celebrate.

However, just about halfway through the celebration, I felt a strong inclination to pull my friend aside and warn her that parenting isn’t all petits fours, pink lemonade, and filtered Instagram photos. Perhaps it was because I was on the tail end of a very defeating week of parenting. The kind where my joy was lost in the battles. Failures outweighed victories. Fighting trumped kindness. All my intentionality felt worthless. And I was mentally and physically wiped out.

You’ll be happy to know I didn’t ruin the shower. I focused on the gift this child will be to Nicole and Jimmy. But soon thereafter, Nicole and I grabbed coffee and, because I love her, I shared with her some of the things I wish I’d known as a new mom.

I said things like:

This parenting thing is hard. Really hard. And there will be a lot of mornings when you want to pull the covers over your head and stay in bed because you don’t have the mental, physical, or emotional strength to meet the demands of the day and be the mom you want to be.

And when you do muster up the strength to put your feet on the floor and take that one next step, you will want to say, with the little energy you can summon, “Who wants to play hide and seek? Doesn’t that sound like fun! Okay, so you go hide, and be sure to find a really great spot where I’ve never found you before, and Mommy will come look for you after I count to five hundred.” Yes, you will do this because you are falling apart. It won’t mean you don’t love your children with all you have. It just means you’re human. And that’s okay.

And you will make mistakes. Lots of them. And you will have regrets. Big ones. And you will need Jesus like you’ve never needed Him before!

But, girlfriend, what I most want to tell you is this: On the days when you feel like you’re not enough, hold on tight to the truth that you have a Savior who is enough. And what is hard for you is not hard for Him! So run to Him. Rely on Him. Depend on Him.

Isn’t that what we most want to hear?

We all need another mom to affirm the “crazy” we feel. We need to know that we’re not the only one whose fierce love for our children coexists with feelings of failure and desperation.

We all need another mom to remind us—over and over again—that we have a powerful God who has given us His perfect son, Jesus Christ. And He is our enough.

When we’re feeling pushed far beyond our human limitations, and we look in the mirror only to find our face worn and weary with the day’s demands, we can turn to God’s Word and read the relief God promises.

O Jacob, how can you say the Lord does not see your troubles?

O Israel, how can you say God ignores your rights?

Have you never heard?

Have you never understood?

The Lord is the everlasting God,

the Creator of all the earth.

He never grows weak or weary.

No one can measure the depths of his understanding.

He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless.

Even youths will become weak and tired, and young men will fall in exhaustion.

But those who trust in the Lord will find new strength.

They will soar high on wings like eagles.

They will run and not grow weary.

They will walk and not faint.

(40: 27–31 NLT)

Did you get all that? There’s a lot of relief packed into this passage:

• God does not lose track of us.

• God very much cares what happens to us.

• God’s knowledge and understanding cannot be measured.

• God never grows weak or weary.

• He knows everything. Every. Single. Thing.

• He gives power to the weak.

• He gives strength to the powerless.

What we learn through the words of Isaiah is that who God is, which is sovereign, and what He gives us, which is grace, is enough. And He wants us to trust Him. When we’re exhausted—both mentally and physically—He wants us to rely on Him to be all that we need. He wants us to recognize that parenting is actually meant to—designed to—deepen our dependence on Him. He is wooing our hearts closer and closer to His in and through our kids.

God actually has a simple but profound message for us regarding our quest to be enough. In Psalms 46:10, His voice breaks through and proclaims, “Be still and know that I am God.”

I have clung to this verse for years. In fact, I most love the New American Standard translation that says, “Cease striving and know that I am God.” I’ve recently discovered something that makes this verse even more meaningful to me. The Hebrew meaning for “be still” is “enough.” Oh, how profound this is for our lives and for our parenting. He is saying, Enough of trying to be enough!

Whether you’re in the middle of raising tiny babies, tantruming toddlers, tenacious teenagers, or adult kids, you’re likely well acquainted with the hopeless feeling of being “not enough” for your children. But here’s the thing. As we seek to overcome the pressure we feel to be enough for our kids, we also have to take an honest look at the pressure we feel to be enough for God. See, most of us aren’t just trying to be enough for our kids, which is the horizontal pressure we feel. We’re also trying to be enough for God, and that’s the vertical pressure I want us to talk about honestly on this journey together.

Do you ever fear (or maybe the better question is, how often do you fear?) that you are disappointing God with your personal failures and your parenting mistakes? That pressure usually leads us to do one of two things. With clenched fists and gritted teeth, we try harder to keep God happy and not lose His love and acceptance. Or, we give up because we assume God has given up on us. Neither of which draws us closer to His heart, where He wants us to hear Him saying, “I don’t need you to impress me. I want you to rely on me.”

And when it comes to parenting—where we experience the horizontal pressure to prove we’re enough—we just keep searching for newer and better ways to control our child’s behavior, secure our child’s success, or change our child’s heart. And none of it works—at least, not for long.

Is it any wonder that under all this pressure we crack?

Are you tired of being the mom who is barely stumbling along, crushed under the pressure to be “enough”? Are you tired of feeling that you can’t catch your breath, can’t keep up, and can’t be all that your children need you to be? Are you tired of being tired?

I get it.

I spent entirely too long trying to prove to myself, to God, and to everybody around me that I was enough. Only in recent years have I begun to understand what Paul meant when he said that in our pursuit to be enough, we deny and reject the work of Christ—it’s as if “Christ died for nothing” (Galatians 2:21 NIV). In other words, if we ever had a shot at being enough, then everything Jesus endured on our behalf to reconcile us to God was pointless. God never called us to be enough. Not for Him and not for our kids. Not for our spouse and not for our church. He calls us to be loved. To be His beloved. This title has been gifted to us and can never be taken away from us. All because of Jesus. So we can stop trying to be enough because Jesus was, and is, our more than enough.

So the next time we wrestle with the question “Am I enough?” rather than try to justify our enough-ness, let’s see our question as a cue to recall the preeminence of Christ in our lives and our daily mothering. We can unashamedly proclaim, as Charles Spurgeon once said, “I have a great need for Christ. I have a great Christ for my need.” It is only in this confession—“I have a great need for Christ”—that we are relieved from the guilt of not being all we desire to be for our kids. It is then that we become grateful for all that Christ already is for them.

Jesus freed us from trying to prove that we are enough. He lived a sinless life, died a sinless death, conquered the grave, and has freely given us His perfect record (Romans 3:23–25 NIV).When we are in Christ, there is nothing to prove. Let that sink into your weary and worn-out soul.

We get to rest in the assurance of God’s grace and His sovereignty over us and over the kids we long to love and lead well. We are free!

Rest assured, when I say “We are free” I don’t mean we’ve been given an excuse to be a lazy or lousy parent. This is not a permission slip to give up. This is not an out. This is an in.

An invitation to:

• lay down what God has not asked us to carry so we thrive in what He has

• embrace our significance in light of God’s sovereignty

• discover God’s acceptance of us and affection for us, just as we are

• receive God’s grace so we can reflect God’s heart to our kids

• stop trying so hard and start enjoying our kids more

• weave grace into how we discipline our kids

• trust God with the kids He has entrusted to us

• become more of the moms we long to be for our kids

An invitation to trust that “everything that goes into a life of pleasing God has been miraculously given to us by getting to know, personally and intimately, the One who invited us to God. The best invitation we ever received!” (2 Peter 1:3–4 MSG).

We have been personally invited—by name—to walk in freedom from the pressure to be “enough”—for our children and for God.

Let’s turn now to see how this freedom applies to some of the immense pressure we face in our daily mothering!

Table of Contents

Foreword Elisabeth Hasselbeck xiii

Introduction: High Hopes xix

Part 1 The Pressure's On!

1 The Pressure to Be Enough The Freedom to Rely on the "Enough-ness" of Christ 3

2 The Pressure to Be the Perfect Example The Freedom to Point Our Children to the Example of Christ 13

3 The Pressure to Be in Control The Freedom of Believing That God Is Sovereign 23

4 The Pressure to Transform Our Children's Hearts The Freedom of Trusting God with the Children He's Entrusted to Us 35

5 The Freedom to Rely on the Power of Prayer and Experience God's Peace in Our Hearts 51

6 The Freedom to Make the Gospel Central in Our Parenting and Experience God's Grace in Our Homes 61

Part 2 Living in Grace

7 Our Struggle: A Little More Perfect = a Little More Lovable God's Truth: Because of Jesus, God Can't Stop Loving Me 73

8 Our Struggle: My Sin Is Too Great God's Truth: God's Grace Is Greater 83

9 Our Struggle: I Can't Shed My Shame God's Truth: Jesus Liberates Me from My Shame 95

10 Our Struggle: My Brokenness Makes Me Worthless God's Truth: I Am God's Broken Beloved 107

11 Our Struggle: I Must Live Up to the Gospel God's Truth: I Am Called to Live Out of the Gospel 117

12 Our Struggle: I Must Work Hard to Please God God's Truth: I Am Set for Freedom 129

13 Our Struggle: God Wants Me to Prove My Love God's Truth: God Calls Me to Repent and Rest in His Love 145

Part 3 Parenting With Grace

14 Who Am I? Making the Gospel Central in Our Homes 157

15 Is Who I Am Good Enough? Treeing Our Children from the Pressure of Performance 167

16 Broken Together Giving Our Children Permission to Be Honest about Their Weaknesses 179

17 Everyday Grace Answering Common Questions about Giving Our Kids Grace 193

18 Transforming Grace Nurturing Gratitude for God's Grace in Our Children's Hearts 215

In Closing: You're a Mom Set Free! 227

Bible Verses to Help You Breathe in Grace 233

Acknowledgments 253

Notes 257

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