Oneplace.com Home
All Ministries
Featured Ministries
Spotlight Ministries
Bible Study Tools
Ministry Articles
Devotionals
Podcasts
MP3 Downloads
Newsletters
Shopping
Testimonials
Help
Partner With Us
FaithTalk Web Radio
 Insight for Living  -  Chuck Swindoll
rss
print
cart
email
LISTEN TO TODAY'S BROADCAST
Family Rules for 'Little Children' -- Part 3
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
The letter of 1 John is for the family of God. It contains the kind of expressions and information commonly heard among family members behind closed doors. We get that impression from numerous references in these five chapters addressing "little children" and "children," as well as "fathers," "young men," and "brothers." In this letter, John passed along the same kind of sage advice we hear when gathered at the knee of a family patriarch. At the time he wrote, John had lived almost a century and had endured the blast of life's harshest treatment. He had felt the brutal blows of persecution and bore the scars that proved it. He had also witnessed the fall of many who once walked closely with their Lord; he anguished over heresies that had sprung up in the lives of Christians he loved - people who were one actively engaged in churches where he had served. Because he had "seen it all," this old gentleman was able to offer some elementary rules all of us would be wise to hear and obey.
Series: Living Right In A Wrong World
Free MP3 File
Free w/ Registration
ARTICLE

Mother's Day
by Charles R. Swindoll

If there's one attitude families are guilty of more than any other when it comes to mothers, it's presumption . . . taking them for granted . . . being nearly blind on occasion to the load moms carry. This was reinforced in my mind last week as I was thumbing through a row of crazy greeting cards at a local drugstore. Time and again the joke in the card drew its humor from this obvious attitude that pervades a household: Forget the housework, Mom. It's your day. Besides, you can always do double duty and catch up on Monday!

Like this one: On the front of the card was a beleaguered mother. Draped over her neck were three unmatched socks and at her feet was an enormous stack of unwashed clothes. On the stove was a hot skillet burning the food. A cold, stained coffee pot needed attention. The refrigerator door was ajar and milk had spilled in it. The dishes, naturally, looked like a homemade Eiffel Tower reaching out of the sink. Inside the card was scribbled: "Look, lady, nobody said it was gonna be a free ride!"

But my favorite was a great big card that looked like a third-grader had printed it. On it was a little boy with a dirty face and torn pants pulling a wagon-load of toys. On the front it read: "Mom, I remember the little prayer you used to say for me every day . . ." and inside, "God help you if you do that again!"

Jimmy Dean, the country-western singer, does a number that always leaves me with a big knot in my throat. It's titled "I Owe You." In the song, a man is looking through his wallet and comes across a number of long-standing "I owe yous" to his mother . . . which he names one by one.

Borrowing that idea, I suggest you who have been guilty of presumption unfold some of your own "I owe yous" that are now yellow with age. Consider the priceless value of the one woman who made your life possible - your mother.

Think about her example, her support, her humor, her counsel, her humility, her hospitality, her insight, her patience, her sacrifices. Her faith. Her hope. Her love.

Old "honest Abe" was correct: "He is not poor who has had a godly mother." Indebted, but not poor.

Moms, on Mother's Day Sunday we rise up and call you blessed. But knowing you, you'll feel uneasy in the limelight. You'll probably look for a place to hide. True servants are like that.

If you don't watch it, you'll be planning lunch during the sermon. But that would be a waste of time. Especially since you're going to be taken out to eat (which will add to our indebtedness!). But in all honesty, it won't come anywhere near expressing our gratitude.

So, live it up on Sunday. It's all yours.

My advice? Shake up the family for a change. Order steak and lobster.

Taken from Charles R. Swindoll, "Mother's Day," in The Finishing Touch: Becoming God's Masterpiece (Dallas: Word, 1994), 232-33. Copyright © 1994 Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Print-friendly version of this article Print-friendly version of this article

MINISTRY LINKS
CLOSE
Copy this link and paste it into your favorite podcasting program:
http://podcast.oneplace.com/insight_for_living/podcast.xml
CLOSE
Having problems importing?
Here's your prescription for success!

STEP 1: Launch iTunes on your local computer

STEP 2: In iTunes, select Advanced from the menu
at the top, and then select, Subscribe to podcast...


STEP 3: Copy this link and paste it into the iTunes
subscription window:
http://podcast.oneplace.com/in/podcast.xml
STEP 4: Come back to Oneplace.com for more!
RELATED LINKS
OTHER PROGRAMS
Insight for Living
MINISTRY DETAILS
Insight for Living is the Bible-teaching radio ministry of author and pastor Charles R. Swindoll. Insight for Living is committed to excellence in communicating biblical truth and its application.

HOST BIOGRAPHY
Insight for Living's Bible teacher, Chuck Swindoll, has devoted his life to the clear, practical, application of God's Word and the communication of God's grace. A pastor at heart, Chuck...
MORE >