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AN
HONORABLE WOMAN
Let
me begin by wishing all of the mothers here today a Happy Mother’s
Day. We had better all
show some admiration to mothers, because, as the old saying goes;
‘if it weren’t for moms, none of us would be here.’
Now,
we all know that motherhood has its sweet and wonderful times, but
it also has its hard times; times caused when motherhood itself is
an accident, or when it is not even a possibility to others.
In truth, some mothers aren’t really all that nice, and
even in the best of circumstances, motherhood is not always a bed of
roses.
Today,
we are going to talk about women in general, and mothers in
particular. And we will
do so by using a perfect biblical example of each; the one found in PROVERBS
31.
While
you are turning in your bibles to that passage, let me remind you
that becoming a mother really isn’t all that difficult.
It is becoming a mom that is the hardest part.
And no matter how many diapers you have to change, or how
many nights you stay up with sick children, in the end it is all
worth it because those children will only grow up to do the same
things for their children.
Speaking
of mothers, I am reminded of a grade-school teacher who was teaching
her students about magnets. She spread metal shavings on her desk and then had the
students, one by one, take the magnet and slowly glide past them.
They were amazed how all the metal shavings jumped up to go
to the magnet.
The
next day, she gave them a quiz.
One of the questions was:
“I have six letters and I pick up things.
What am I?” She
was surprised to see that every child in class wrote down
“Mother” for the answer.
And
while mothers do pick up after everyone else in the home, they are
far more than picker-uppers. Their duties include being teachers, nurses, confidants,
chauffeurs, cooks, maids, and much more.
So
I guess we could say that an honorable woman is one who takes on the
job of wife and mother out of the love of her heart and not the pay
she could get from doing the job.
In
PROVERBS 31, we learn what a king’s mother taught him as he
was growing up.
We
do not know all that much about him, but we do know that in Hebrew,
his name means “dedicated to God.” This shows that His mother honored God even in her child
bearing, by dedicating her newly born son to God Almighty.
Let’s
read.
PROVERBS
31:1-9
‘The
sayings of King Lemuel, an oracle his mother taught him:
“O my son, O son of my womb, O son of my vows – do not
spend your strength on women, your vigor on those who ruin kings.
“It
is not for kings, O Lemuel – not for kings to drink wine, to for
rulers to crave beer; lest they drink and forget what the law
decrees, and deprive all the oppressed of their rights.
“Give
beer to those who are perishing, wine to those who are in anguish;
let them drink and forget their poverty – so they remember their
misery no more.
“Speak
up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all
who are destitute. Speak
up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy.”
Can
we see the immense depth of what this woman was teaching her son?
I think it might go way past “honorable” and go right to
“Godly.” Let’s
explore these words in more depth.
The
bible doesn’t tell us specifically, but we must assume that Lemuel
was raised to be a king, or at least that is the impression given.
And His mother is wisely preparing him early to be a proper
and kindly king.
She
reminds him that a lust for women will bring down any power, no
matter who holds it. And
she reminds him that to give oneself over to alcohol makes one
forget the priorities in their lives.
She goes on in verse 5 to say that alcohol will make
them forget to stand up for the oppressed.
And you know that when a person gets drunk they forget all
about what they are supposed to be doing, don’t they?
So,
his mother warns him of things to stay away from, but then she gives
him some very solid advice. Advice fit for a king.
She
shows her compassion towards those who suffer by telling him it is
okay if they drink to forget their misery.
And then she instructs him to speak up for those who cannot
speak up for themselves. She
tells him to speak up for them and to judge them fairly; and to
defend the poor.
This
mother was a very good woman, wasn’t she?
It is also evident that she was very intelligent and had much
common sense.
I
don’t know how Lemuel would have fared in today’s culture,
though. Being that he
was a king, he would be a politician today.
And what do all politicians do?
They try and tell you what sounds good to you, while planning
on doing what is best for them.
I know that sounds very cynical, but it comes from over 50
years of watching politicians before and after their elections.
So
we learn that Lemuel’s mother prepared him well. Isn’t
that what we try and do with our children?
Don’t we try and teach them right from wrong, fair from
unjust, and to treat people fairly?
But do today’s mothers always try to teach them about God?
In
the early Jewish households, the practice was for the children to
sit around the dinner table in the evening reciting the Proverbs as
found in the Bible. There
are very few parents who ever try and get their children to read the
Bible today. And that
is because they were never taught as a child.
We become our parents in many ways as we get older, don’t
we?
A
mother plays a very special part in God’s kingdom.
She bonds first with her child.
She is the child’s first experience into the world.
And she alone is the one who sets the course for the
child’s life. And since she is so very important to that child’s future,
shouldn’t she also see the need to steer that child in the
direction of the Bible and to Christ?
My
mother was a good mother. She
is gone now and all I have are the memories she gave me.
Memories like teaching me to pray.
She would say I had better pray that I didn’t have a son
just like me. Like all
smaller children, when I got punished, I would sometimes whine.
Well, she taught me about emotions.
She would say that if I kept whining, she would give me
something to really cry about.
And she would teach me the value of life by looking at me
after I had done something wrong, and remind me that she brought me
into this world, and she could certainly take me out of it.
Of
course I am joking. My mother was a Godly woman who taught every one of her five
children to be Christians. And
she did that while making sure the needs of her entire family were
being met.
But
for her to be a good mother, she first had to be a good woman.
In this same chapter of PROVERBS, we learn what a good
woman is. Let us
continue reading, starting with verse 10. And let’s try and find five qualities that make this lady a
woman of noble character.
(Read
verses 10-31)
The
first quality of noble character we see is that she supports her
husband.
Verse
11 reads, “Her husband has full confidence in her and lacks
nothing of value.”
Now
look at this woman. Do
you think she praises her husband out of respect, or do you think
she argues with him and causes strife in their marriage? I
do not see her as anything but helpful and supportive to him.
But
that also shows me that he must be the kind of husband who puts her
feelings as one of his priorities.
I do not see him taking her for granted or refusing to listen
to her when she has something to say, either.
It is obvious that this couple treats each other with
absolute respect.
One
of the most important needs a man has is for his wife to look up him
as her hero, not look down on him as a man who cannot do anything
right. A woman of noble
character esteems her husband for she knows how valuable he is to
her and how much he loves her.
It
has been said that a happy marriage begins with the wife.
She must treat her husband nice, and in turn, he will be able
to treat her even better. I
personally think that most men are very naïve compared to women, at
least emotionally. The
man sees things more in a black and white world, whereas a woman
sees the world in many shades of gray.
But when the wife treats her husband with love, he will do
the same thing the lady in Scripture’s husband did.
In verse 28, it says he praises her.
What
happens when a wife does not show respect and love to her husband,
either in her words, actions, or even in her tone of voice?
PROVERBS
21:9
says,
‘It
is better to live on a corner of a roof than to live with a
quarrelsome wife.”
Women,
it would do you well to heed that verse.
I know that some of you are pretty hard on your husbands.
I know they are pretty hard on you, too, but remember that
the woman is more able to initiate emotionally than the man. I
would challenge you to start saying things like, “Honey, thanks
for always being there for me.” Or “Thanks for going to church
with me, Lamb Chops.”
If
you but will talk with honey in your voice to your husband, he will
very quickly start talking to you with respect and love in his
voice.
Proverbs
12:4 says,
“A
wife of noble character is her husband’s crown, but a disgraceful
wife is like decay in his bones.”
The
woman in PROVERBS 31 is not only supportive of her husband
but she takes care of her home.
Verse
27 reads,
“She
watches over the affairs of her household and does not eat the bread
of idleness.”
Verse
15 continues with,
“She
gets up while it is still dark; she provides food for her family and
portions for her servant girls.”
Verse
21,
“When
it snows, she has no fear for her household; for all of them are
clothed with scarlet.”
I
know that it is not politically correct to say that a woman’s job
is in the home. But
I’m not very politically correct. And I am not afraid to stand
before you and tell you that each wife and mother has a
responsibility to manage the affairs of her home.
Do
you know why that is? It
is because men will mess it all up.
Ladies, you leave a guy in charge of the house for any length
of time and you know what happens. Ask Diana, what she has found
after coming home from visiting her family in Florida.
I keep telling her I do that so she will know I need her, but
she just rolls her eyes and starts fixing the mess.
Nowhere
in the Bible does it say that the man is supposed to be in charge of
the daily operations of a home.
Men are called to be the spiritual leaders and priests of
their home, but the day-to-day management is the wife’s
responsibility.
A
woman called from the office and asked her husband to make dinner.
She arrived home and saw her husband laying on the couch.
She was angry and asked, why he hadn’t made dinner as she
requested.
He
said he did make it. He
said he made pasta salad, and the directions told him to chill
before eating. And that
is what he was doing …. chilling!
That’s
what happens when a man manages the affairs of the home. Women,
on the other hand, have a God-given ability to know more about how
things need to get done in the home.
Some of you might think I am saying a woman’s place is in the
home. You are right, I
am. But instead of
getting upset at me, hear me out.
A woman’s place is in the home because she is the one who
has the abilities to hold it together and because she is the one who
has the most influence over her children.
But
a woman’s place is not just in the house. In
verse 17, it tells us she works hard and her arms are strong.
She is no stranger to work and eagerly pursues it.
So, just as much as a woman’s place is in the home, it is
also out of the home and in the workforce.
Look at some of the things she does.
Verse
16 says she buys some land and then plants a vineyard.
Verse
18 says she knows how to do business, as her trading is
profitable, and she stays up later tending to her business.
Verse
24 says she is a manufacturer.
She makes sashes out of fine linen and sells them to the
business in the marketplace.
This
woman tends to her family and her home, holding them together and
tending to their needs because she enjoys loving them that much.
But she is also an adept businesswoman, who could probably
run circles around most of her male counterparts.
While we are on the subject of where a woman’s place is, let
me set the record straight for those who misread the words and
don’t understand the context of the words in the Bible.
Some
Christians say a woman’s place is only in the home, taking care of
the needs of her husband and children.
But this passage in PROVERBS shoots that theory out
the window.
Women
are to be submissive to their husbands as to the Lord.
It goes on to say that the husband is the head of the wife
(or the leader of the wife) as Christ is the church.
Men,
this is directed at you. If
your wife will be obedient to God enough to be submissive to you,
don’t you think your responsibility is to treat her the way Christ
treats His church? A
woman being submissive to her husband has nothing to do with him
being above her as a boss. You
have a sacred duty to your wife.
That is to treat her with the same love that Jesus has for
you. Enhance her.
Encourage her. Lift
her up. And show her how blessed you think you are by having her
choose to be your wife.
So,
a woman can have her home as her career, or she can have a job as
her career. But she has to be careful not to burn herself out.
A
woman went into a doctor’s office, complaining of having no energy
at all and saying it was affecting every part of her life.
The doctor examined her and then gave her the results.
He said she was spending half her time taking care of her
husband, half her time working on her job, and half her time taking
care of her children.
Know
your limits and stay within them.
If you put too much on your plate, nothing you do will be
successful. I know that
some of you are handling nearly impossible workloads at work and at
home both. I know that
you sometimes feel like it is all ready to tumble down on you.
I
pray for you daily. I
pray that God gives you that incredible strength that you need to
make all the pieces fit together.
I pray that He gives you rest and restoration.
But above all, I pray that He gives you the insight to see
the amazing job you are doing, especially by taking care of your
families. And I pray
that your families are able to see that, too.
This
woman in the Scripture is not only self-sufficient; she also takes
care of the needs of other people.
In verse 20, we see where she gives to the poor.
It shows her great compassion.
I think women are more able to show compassion than men, too.
For instance, when a little child falls down and starts
crying, the mother will be the first to pick him up and wipe away
his tears with soothing words. The father, knowing the child isn’t really hurt, will
generally say something like, “That’ll teach you not to do that,
won’t it?”
There
is the story of a teacher who was teaching her class about
fractions. She looked
at one boy and said there were six people in his family.
She said if your mom bakes a pie, and then cuts an equal
piece for you, what percentage do you get of the whole pie?
The boy said 1/5. The teacher asked him two more times, wanting him to say 1/6.
Finally, she asked him why he kept saying 1/5.
He said that they didn’t have enough money to have pie very
often, so his mother would say she wasn’t hungry so the kids could
have it all.
That
is the best way I know to explain a mother’s love.
A
woman is a special person in God’s kingdom.
The woman in PROVERBS is quite the woman.
Like the women here today, she was capable of doing many
things, but the one thing she did that meant more than anything else
is found in verse 30.
That
verse tells us that beauty is fleeting, but a woman who fears the
Lord is to be praised. And
it says of such a woman that she will get the reward she has earned
and she will receive praise from others because of her very special
and very noble character.
Our
culture has raised a generation of people who literally go through
the motions without giving any thought as to the reality behind
those motions. It is not good enough to be a mother. You must be a very good, attentive, and Godly mother.
It is no longer good enough to be a wife who takes care of
the home. You must take
care of the home because that is your personal desire, all so that
your family will be well taken care of; and because you simply want
the very best for them.
And
it is no longer good enough to go to church and be active in it,
unless your heart’s desire is to do it for the Lord’s sake and
not your own. But these
last few comments pertain, not only to the women, but also to the
men just as much.
When
is the last time the two of you sat down together during the day and
read the Bible as a team? When
is the last time you held hands and prayed to God for the things you
need in your family? When is the last time you both put God first and yourselves
last?
Today
is Mother’s Day, and I wish each of you the most lovely of days.
This is the day we set aside to honor you for who you are and
for what you do for your families.
But let me ask you one question?
Now this is for everyone here today, but also for the women
and mothers.
You
have done so much for your families, but have you done the most
important thing? Have you told them about what Jesus can do for them?
Have you told them about what Jesus has done for you?
As
we go into a time of invitation, I want to invite the CrossRoads
Praise Team back up to sing our closing song.
And
I want each of you to fully realize that you are being given a
chance right now to make sure your life is as it should be – in
Christ as your Savior. For
your sake and for your children’s sake. Much of what they will go through tomorrow depends directly
on what you do today. Will
you think about that as we sing?
INVITATION
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