Ingratitude.  We’ve all seen it in the child who is given a birthday gift…a really fabulous, valuable gift.

She doesn’t open the card first to see who it’s from.  She rips the gift open and upon it NOT being what she expected, shows no appreciation to the giver.

Her mother, sensing the surprise and an expectation of gratitude from the giver for this undeserved, valuable gift, sweetly says to her daughter, “Wow, what a nice gift!  Isn’t it a nice gift, honey?”  Her daughter replies, “Sure”, then nonchalantly grabs the next gift in the pile.

Mom, embarrassed at her daughter’s ingratitude, hints again.  “Sweetie, let’s read the card together and see who it’s from!”  But her daughter is already tearing through the next three gifts, tossing them aside, clueless and indifferent.

Finally her mother, frustrated and mortified, exclaims, “Just say thank you!”  Her daughter turns to the expectant giver and with no feeling or sincerity, mutters, “Thanks.”

You may be picturing a little girl that you know.  But this is actually the state of too many people in too many church seats today…maybe even yourself, if you’re honest.

battling ingratitude

Too many of us enter the church doors, ready to consume and see what’s in it for us.

We wait for the right people to greet us and make us feel welcome.  We hope for the right songs with the right feels, expecting the right traditions and the right sermon that gives us just enough reassurance that we’re doing just fine.  We are ready to consume.

As we sit in church, God’s Word is read and we are presented with valuable truths…priceless, really.  Salvation.  Hope. Love. Conviction. The lost.  But because we are living life on “consumer mode”, each truth is briefly glanced at before casting aside in apathy or disappointment.

“It’s not what I want.  It doesn’t fit my sensibilities.  It doesn’t promote my lifestyle or social cause.  It doesn’t make me feel good and it doesn’t revolve around the most important person in the room: ME.  It is asking more than I’m willing to give.  My good name is on the line.  My reputation is on the line.  My very life is on the line.  Nope.”

In other words, God’s truth for the consumer disappoints and ingratitude seeps in.

And yet, when the pastor calls you to give thanks, you do it.  You don’t do it from a heart of true gratitude, but because you were told to.  “Thank you, God…” you recite like the scolded child to the gracious giver.  Meanwhile your heart is onto what’s “next”.

If you had been the giver of the gift to the child, would you feel appreciated by her “thanks”?

So how much more does the all-knowing God of the universe, the one who sees the very motives of your heart, sense ingratitude with your lip service?

When you come to church on Sunday and recite the right words, but your real life is a testimony of ingratitude, consumerism, entitlement, and discontent, you ARE that child at the birthday party.

We can all agree that “thank you” is meaningless without a truly grateful heart.

battling ingratitudeSo then, when it comes to the ingratitude we show towards God, we must ask ourselves this question:  Is it that the gift isn’t truly that valuable or am I actually undervaluing the gift?

As the gift-giver to the little girl, you would never say “Oh, the gift I gave must not actually be valuable.”  After all, you paid for it yourself.  You KNOW how valuable it actually is.  Instead, you’d say, “Oh, she must not understand how valuable the gift is!  If she did, she’d react quite differently!”  Yeah, that’s us, friends!

If you struggle with a life of reluctant, half-hearted “thank you’s” to God, these are questions you must be daring enough to ask yourself: “Is my ingratitude based on reality or my perception of reality?”

Are you believing that God’s truth, forgiveness, grace, and sovereignty are not all they’re cracked up to be?  Are you believing that they are significantly less valuable than expected and worthy to be cast aside with all other disappointments?

Or, perhaps, is there something amiss in your evaluation of the gift?

Could it be that the lies of this consumer culture and sinful world have convinced you the gift of God’s truth is significantly less valuable than it is?

Could it possibly be true that it’s not the gift that’s the problem, but your own faulty, deceived view of it?

Here’s a reality check:  God has given us the greatest gift the world has ever seen:  his only Son Jesus.  He has also given believers HIMSELF through the Holy Spirit.  He has given us salvation, purpose, protection, love…these gifts are extremely valuable.

He’s also given us the unconventional gifts of suffering, struggle, perseverance, the building of character.  These are the hardest ones to take hold of and be grateful for.  But in James 1, a portion of scripture dedicated to the testing of our faith, these are called “good and perfect gifts”.

So could our lack of worshipful, humble, on-our-faces gratitude, even lacking in the smallest degree, be as simple as not valuing the gift for what it really is?  The answer is YES.

In addition, when we have a skewed view of ourselves in relation to God’s gifts, our sense of entitlement rises.  We begin to think we either deserve the gifts OR that we deserve even better than what God provides.  Both lead to disappointment.

We all, to varying degrees, fail to give God the gratitude he is due.

And the ante is up when our daughter is looking at our response to God’s goodness and gifts.  None of us can ever adequately express it.  But we can begin to look hard at our hearts and the ingratitude lurking there.  We can be honest and ask God, “What lies are keeping me from understanding how valuable your gifts are?  Forgive me. Show me.  Open my eyes.”  And he will.

Are you daring enough to receive God’s response? Only then, by God’s grace, can we truly cast aside the heart of the spoiled child instead of the gifts from the greatest Gift-giver of all.

Where do you struggle with ingratitude towards God?  How has God opened your eyes?  Comment below!

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Have you ever seen that quote “She believed she could so she did?”  Well, for moms, that cute little quote can get us through about three extra minutes of our day before reality kicks in again!

What if, instead, we said “She believed God could, so she ______?”   Trusted.  Loved.  Stepped forward in faith.  Obeyed.  Spoke up.  Hoped.  Changed.  

What if we stopped the little inspirational pep talks and replaced them with supernatural God-talks?

In other words, moms, what if we stopped relying on the inspiring quotes to get us through the tough moments of routine and busy-ness and daily challenges and went straight to God?

What if, every Monday, we prayed, believed, and trusted God with all the failures, insecurities, and unknowns?

If you’d like to pray, I encourage you to pray something like this (based on my Facebook video here):

Monday Morning Mom Prayer:

God, Father, you’re here with me.  You’ve seen it all–my whole mom story.  My successes, my failures, my doubts, my hopes, my disappointments.  You see it all, you see deep down inside of me past where even I can see.  You love me more than anyone ever could and you long for me to trust you with everything.  I have doubts, I struggle, I fall, but God, you love me and as your forgiven child, there is nothing I can do that will disappoint you.  You see it all and you’ve seen it all and there’s NOTHING Jesus didn’t die for.  God, when I fail, convict me and show me, push me if you need to, to make it right in my relationships.  Open my heart to the draw of your holy spirit to be used by you, just as I am.  Help me not compare myself to other women who seem to do everything better…better lives, better things, better everything.  Be with me here, just as I am, with what I have, and what you’ve given me.  Help me to only long for more of you.

 

Click here to download this prayer as a plain-text PDF.

God, I trust you.  I don’t feel it always, and sometimes I need help.  But today I’m telling you I trust you.  I trust you with my

 

Heart.

Marriage.

Kids.

Family.

I trust you with my friendships

And my lack of friendships.

I trust you when I’m alone

And when I’m surrounded.

Successes.

Failures.

Desires.

I trust you with my body.

Health.

Emotions.

Spirit.

I trust you with my years.

Seasons.

Months.

Days.

Hours.

I trust you with my agenda this day.

My routines

And the unexpected.

My control issues.

My insecurities.

My needs.

I trust you with finances.

Click here to download the fancy shmancy, fridge-worthy printable version of this prayer.

My belongings.

The things I can touch and can’t touch.

I trust you with my past

My present.

My future.

The unknown.

I trust you with the people I need to forgive.

And those who I’d like to forgive me.

I trust you with my mouth when it says too much

And when it doesn’t say enough.

I trust you with my hands when they are too busy

And sit idly by.

And do humble work for your kingdom.

I trust you to do justice in YOUR time and in YOUR way.

I trust you with my pride and arrogance

And the moments where I’m humbled.

I trust you when I feel far from you

And when I feel close.

I trust you when I feel like the enemy is ready to crush me and defeat me.

Because you have already won for me.

 

God these are all things that I can CHOOSE to snatch from your protective, loving hands and try and control myself.  But I won’t this day.  I choose right now, even though it’s hard, to hand it all over and actively trust you.  Release me from the feeling to carry it today.  As a mom that’s hard, but I am saying now.  I TRUST YOU.

 

In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

Friends, I want to say I trusted God with today, too.  I need this prayer just as much as you do, more than every Monday even!  And I prayed this over you today over on my Facebook page (you can watch the video by clicking here).  I know that some of us feel alone in motherhood, but I want to reassure you that you’re not!  As moms, we’re in this together, not to compare lives, but to support and complement one another as the body of Christ for his glory.  I hope you know that today and prayed, like I did, to trust God with it all.  I hope, after today, we can say that we trusted God together.

If you’d like to download a printable, very non-fancy shmancy version of this prayer, click here and print!

If you’d like the lovely, fridge-worthy printable version of this prayer, click here and print!

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When you hear the word “cherished”, do you imagine something precious?  Embracing something close because it’s special?  Is it deeply loved and valuable to you, like a treasure?

So many girls and women don’t realize they are CHERISHED by God.

He’s created each of us uniquely.  So we are precious and valuable to him, like a treasure, with no strings attached. Psalm 139 says we are “fearfully and wonderfully made”.

However, as girls and women, we have come to believe our value comes from elsewhere.  We’ve been told value can be found within, if we just look for our goodness and follow our hearts.  And we’ve been told value can be found outside in success, approval, influence.  We hold ourselves and other women to an impossible standard.  We’re defeating ourselves, making our value contingent and consistently out-of-reach.

But although these counterfeits distract us from the truth of our value in Christ, I want to talk about an opponent that makes the fight for our value even harder: sexual exploitation.   While the Made Matchless mission is to help girls and women find their value, identity, and power in Jesus Christ, sexual exploitation DEvalues, MISidentifies, and DISempowers girls & women.  The world has taken the God-given sexuality of women (a beautiful thing) and heinously abused it to make us doubt our value.

What exactly is sexual exploitation?

According to USLegal.com, “Sexual exploitation means taking advantage of the sexuality and attractiveness of a person to make a personal gain or profit. It is the abuse of a position of vulnerability, differential power, or trust for sexual purposes.”

Now, before we jump to action, angered by the realities of sexual exploitation (and we should be), you should know: this isn’t going to be only about the problems “out there”.  The source of this problem is not isolated to creeps on the internet, wolves in sheep’s clothing, and pimps.  If it were, we’d round them up and consider the problem solved.

My hope is, after reading this, you are just as upset at your OWN possible contribution as you are with what happens on street corners and in corner offices–upset enough to do something.

God’s intention is for women to find their value in Christ. 

It’s true. As a woman, when you believe you are valuable simply because you’re created by God, the other counterfeits of the world become less alluring.  You’re relieved knowing your value isn’t determined by accomplishments, accolades, and academics.  Nothing can increase or decrease your value to God.  You can forfeit the comparison game and enter a life of true purpose, the way God created you.  It’s amazing!

But when sexual exploitation enters the ring, the fight’s harder.  The message of a girl or woman’s value is tied to her both emotionally AND physically.  It’s no longer just a lie to be dispelled because many times, something physical has actually been DONE to reinforce these messages deeper.  Messages like…

  • “You are not valuable enough to cherish, respect, or treat with dignity.”
  • “Your value is based on what I can take from you and you’re worth less once I’ve taken it.”
  • “Your value is based on how you look and how you can perform sexually.”

Even when no physical contact has been made, we experience the undeniable effects of the exploitation deep in our souls.

Jesus has a different message. 

Jesus always treated women with dignity and honor in a culture that viewed women as lower-class citizens.  He talked with them, healed them, cared for them, and wept with them.  And Jesus’ message continues to be, “I love you right where you are.  I love you enough to die for you.”  We are cherished by him!

So can you imagine God’s view of sexual exploitation? Taking his precious treasures and treating them as disposable?  When politicians use women for their own gratification, it says, “Your value is what you can give me.”  When strip club billboards line our highways, they say, “Your value is attached to these parts of your body.” Sexual harassment, abuse, sex trafficking, pornography–these all DEvalue God’s cherished creations. It’s sickening, saddening, and maddening, but these aren’t the only culprits.

What about “acceptable” offenders?

Acceptable offenders are those in our culture that communicate and consume the same messages, even if those involved are “willing”.

Let me ask you: Are there ways -you- “accept” the message that a woman’s value is tied to her sexuality or downplay the harm in that message?

I’m not talking about simply admiring beauty.  I’m saying when a sexually-charged scene is on your favorite show or movie, do you turn away?  Turn it off?  Decide not to watch it again?

Or do you justify it?  “She did that scene willingly.” “But the story line is so good!”  “I’m not affected by these kinds of scenes.”

Even if you’re not affected (which is doubtful), have you considered this?  The producers feel that an actress’ sexuality makes the show better.  This shifts the value from the actress to her sexuality.

Furthermore, instead of her vulnerable spirit and sexuality being expressed beautifully in the precious, private confines of her loving marriage, it’s exposed to the open eyes and minds of millions of consumers.  And they’ve placed the price of a Netflix subscription on it.

And we kinda love it.  In fact, we hope for a Season 2 and for the book to made into a movie.

“But she’s been paid for it.”

Most of us would never dream of paying a woman to come into our living room to take off her clothing.  But that’s exactly what we pay for when we watch it on TV.

If you can agree that an actress has value completely separate from her sexuality, perhaps even agree that she was made in the image of God, and yet watch her have sex with a man, saying “But she’s been paid for it,”  that’s hypocrisy. We can’t insist that women be cherished and valued–even MARCH for it–and then accept them being used for the sexual satisfaction of consumers.  We can’t have it both ways.

“She did it willingly.”

I remember when my daughter first noticed a Hooters restaurant.  “Look, Mommy!  There’s an owl on the sign!  It’s called Hooters!”

I don’t remember exactly what I said, but it was something like, “That place doesn’t treat women with dignity or respect.  Women are valuable to God and that place doesn’t treat them with value.  We are always to treat women with value and dignity.”

I then shared with my kids how important it is to not look down on women who work in places like that.  As Christ-followers, it’s so important to give our children a whole picture of sin, forgiveness, and redemption.

And it’s equally important to have compassion, to try to understand why someone makes choices without judging their motives.

Are the women working in Hooters willingly?  Yes, possibly.  But “willingly” might mean its her best option out of two choices.  It might mean it’s all she knows, based on the tapes of her past.  We don’t know.

My daughter needed one message that day: she has value simply because God made her.   And my son needed one message:  he has the duty to treat every woman with honor and dignity, no matter where she finds herself in life.

The excuse that women “willingly” give themselves up to sexual exploitation continues to promote exploitation.  Don’t get me wrong, there are indeed women who willingly live in sexual sin, deeply mistaken in why they are valuable.  But as long as we believe that “willingly” means “exploitable”, then men will struggle to truly cherish women and women will struggle to truly feel cherished.

Your new lens

It’s time to view what we do, think, watch, and read through the lens of VALUING and CHERISHING women as image-bearers of God.  We must take an intentional, penetrating look at what we allow into our homes, families, thoughts, and lives.

But first, let me ask you this…

Do YOU know you are cherished by God?

You weren’t created by accident and his love for you isn’t dependent on what you’ve done or not done.  It’s everlasting.  He created you, so you are precious to him.  Because of that, he can save you from your sin today.  If you feel his calling now, turn from your sin and receive his forgiveness.  He’ll make you new.  You’ll begin to understand how much you are cherished by him.

Only a God who cherishes his creations would be willing to die for them.

To DIE for.  That’s you.

Until you embrace your value to God, you’ll always search for strings attached and alternate reasons why others should cherish you.

The timing of this post isn’t accidental. 

In 2017, we saw many politicians (including our President) and celebrities admitting to sexually exploiting others.   Our culture, from top to bottom, is saturated with sex.

And did you know January is Human Trafficking Awareness Month?  According to the FBI website, “Human trafficking, believed to be the third-largest criminal activity in the world, is a form of human slavery… Human trafficking includes forced labor, domestic servitude, and commercial sex trafficking.”  Our world has a devastating, insatiable addiction to sex, pornography, and sexual exploitation.  And, according to the FBI, it’s not only in dark alleys.  It’s in our neighborhoods, schools, closer than we think.

But, sister, you can help change the course of the next generation!  How?

Here are some ways to fight sexual exploitation in your communities and home:

  • Refuse to consume media that doesn’t treat people as “cherished” and valuable.  View shows, movies, commercials, websites, novels, and photos through this lens.
  • Teach your family members to look away when sexually-charged images appear.
  • Repent of the times you’ve been an “acceptable” offender and receive Christ’s forgiveness.
  • Sexual exploitation never respects “stop”, so enforce the rule in your family that when someone says, “Stop!” to assume they mean it, even if they’re laughing.  As we say in our home, “Stop immediately, the first time it’s heard.”
  • To learn more about how you can buy this shirt and help stop sex trafficking, click here.

    Support organizations like WellSpring Living and Exodus Cry that help those caught in/coming out of sexual exploitation.

  • Purchase one of Made Matchless’ “Cherished” clothing items.  All profits will be donated to Exodus Cry and come in infant to adult sizes.
  • Statistics show the average child first sees pornography at age 9.  Educate your children on the harms of pornography and enforce rules for internet use. Recommended resource:  “Good Pictures, Bad Pictures”
  • Have an ongoing conversation with your children about what healthy sex is and isn’t, teaching them it’s between a married man and woman, as God intended.  Recommended resource when they’re young: “Before I Was Born: God’s Design for Sex”
  • Exploitation happens youth-to-youth, too.  Regularly check in with your kids about friendships, conversations happening among peers, and what’s appropriate/not.
  • Restrict your child’s technology and social media use.
  • Check out StopItNow.org for ways to talk with your kids about sexual abuse.
  • Have an ongoing conversation with your family about the value ALL people have as God’s image-bearers.
  • Know the signs of sexual abuse in youth, taking action when necessary.
  • Know the signs that someone is a victim of trafficking , taking action when necessary.
  • If you’ve been a victim of sexual exploitation and have never told anyone, tell someone!  See a trusted Christian counselor who can help you heal from emotional and physical trauma, as well as help you see your value in Christ.
  • When a friend opens up about her pain, listen without judgment, asking how you can help.
  • Financially support women who are pregnant and think they have no options.  We can’t affirm the undeniable value of women while denying the value of unborn women and their moms.  Let’s be consistent.  A great organization for information and support is ProGrace .
  • Pray for opportunities to share these truths.
  • Live authentically.  It’s hypocrisy when Christians say they care but do nothing or sweep things under the rug.  Sins need to be exposed to the light.  Read Ephesians 5:1-20 to see what God says about this!
  • Share this post with a friend.

Girls and women will continue to look for value in things other than Christ and there will always be people looking to exploit us.  The enemy spreads pretty convincing lies about our value, to hurt us in our most vulnerable places.  But as Christians we have the matchless power of Christ IN us to change the course, one person, action, and choice at a time.

What would you add to the list of ways to help?  Comment below.

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