I Corinthians 13 for the Homeschooling Mom
If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and teach my
children Latin conjugations, Chinese and Portuguese, but do not have love, I
have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal, and no matter what I say, they
will not hear me.
If I have the gift of prophecy, and know my
children’s bents and God’s plan for their lives, and know all mysteries and all
knowledge, and am the keeper of the teacher’s editions and solutions manuals,
and if I have all faith, so as to move mountains, and even keep up with my
giant piles of laundry and dishes, but do not have love, I am nothing, even if
all the people at church think I’m Supermom.
And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor, and my formal
dining room gets turned into a schoolroom and our family vacations look more
like educational fieldtrips, and if I surrender my body to be burned, never
having time to get my nails done, put makeup on or even take a bath, but do not
have love, it profits me nothing, because all my family cares about is the
expression on my face, anyway.
Love is patient with the child who still can’t get double-digit
subtraction with borrowing, and kind to the one who hasn’t turned in his
research paper. It is not jealous of moms with more, fewer, neater, more
self-directed, better-behaved or smarter children. Love does not brag about
homemade bread, book lists, or scholarships and is not arrogant about her
lifestyle or curriculum choices. It does not act unbecomingly or correct the
children in front of their friends. It does not seek its own, trying to squeeze
in alone time when someone still needs help; it is not provoked when
interrupted for the nineteenth time by a child, the phone, the doorbell or the
dog; does not take into account a wrong suffered, even when no one compliments
the dinner that took hours to make or the house that took so long to clean.
Love does not
rejoice in unrighteousness or pointing out everyone else’s flaws, but rejoices
with the truth and with every small step her children take in becoming more
like Jesus, knowing it’s only by the grace of God when that occurs.
Love bears all
things even while running on no sleep; believes all things, especially God’s
promise to indwell and empower her; hopes all things, such as that she’ll
actually complete the English curriculum this year and the kids will eventually
graduate; endures all things, even questioning from strangers, worried
relatives, and most of all, herself.
Love never fails. And neither will
she. As long as she never, never, never gives up.
Misty
Krasawski is
the overly-blessed mom of eight children whom she homeschools in sunshine-y
Florida. She has been clinging ferociously to the hand of her Lord since she
was knee-high to a grasshopper, homeschooling for the past thirteen years, and
has eighteen more years ahead of her with the children who are glad she will
have done most of her experimenting on those who went before. Her wonderful husband
Rob has much treasure laid up for him in heaven for having been called to such
a daunting task. After the house goes to sleep she can sometimes be found
gathering her thoughts at http://www.homeschoolblogger.com/MistyKrasawski.
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