This blog is to share my thoughts on Home as a Holy Place. Twenty-five years of marriage and children have brought many adventures that teach me daily home can be sacred ground. Wherever we seek Christ and whenever He reaches into our lives the holiness begins.

As We Strive To Overcome - God Encourages Us To Be Like Him

I sat in the garage.  I counted to ten.  I had not calmed down one little bit.  I counted again. Still angry.   I counted again.  I counted again and again and again.  One.  Two.  Three.  Four.  Five.  Six.  Seven…  Eight….  Nine.... Ten….  Pause.   Breathe.  “How do I do this?  What kind of mother do you want me to be?”  Perspective starts to return and I begin to see my children’s misbehavior differently.  Instead of feeling like a bad mom, I began to see their disobedience as an opportunity to lovingly remind them of the family rules and follow through with the consequences – with love.  And continue.  With love.  The events that brought me to the garage did not mean a big problem with parenting…. but how I responded to the problem was a critical part of parenting. 

And doesn’t God work with us in a similar way?  When I make mistakes, I feel that He shows me a better way and he still lets me know He loves me.  So I will go back in the house and let them know I love them.  I will remind them that we have rules and consequences in our home because I love them just as God has commandments because He loves us.  He sees the bigger picture and knows that tutoring me in His laws will bring me to greater freedom and understanding.  I want to do the same for my children.

I guess part of the frustration is that I’m in the garage so often.  Can’t I learn this a little faster?  I am not failing.  However painfully small my steps are – nevertheless they are steps in the right direction.  I love these words from D. Todd Christofferson, especially the part about repeated attempts.

…repentance means striving to change. It would mock the Savior’s suffering in the Garden of Gethsemane and on the cross for us to expect that He should transform us into angelic beings with no real effort on our part. Rather, we seek His grace to complement and reward our most diligent efforts (see 2 Nephi 25:23). Perhaps as much as praying for mercy, we should pray for time and opportunity to work and strive and overcome. Surely the Lord smiles upon one who desires to come to judgment worthily, who resolutely labors day by day to replace weakness with strength.  Real repentance, real change may require repeated attempts, but there is something refining and holy in such striving.
http://www.lds.org/general-conference/2011/10/the-divine-gift-of-repentance?lang=eng 

I love that!   “…there is something refining and holy in such striving.” Even in the garage.