果冻视频

Balancing Motherhood and Ministry

Family photo of mother and father with two small children laughing

Becoming a full-time mom after my second child was born was not my best season of life. I missed my work as an 果冻视频 campus staff worker鈥攁 job I loved deeply. And I was jealous of my husband, Brian, because he still got to share appetizers and do Proxe Stations and have great conversations with college students while I was changing diapers and reading Amelia Bedelia ten times in a row.

Now that my youngest is two-and-a-half, I鈥檝e been able to return to work very part-time. But, amazingly, I鈥檝e actually come to appreciate the great things about staying home with my two kids and all that that entails: swimming at the warm pool at the Y, visiting the aquarium, and even playing inside when it鈥檚 -10 degrees outside (a common occurrence in Duluth)!

Even more amazing is the fact that we鈥檙e choosing to add another child to our family. God has called us to adopt and we have obeyed. Bring on more diapers!

Committed to Home and Campus

As Brian and I juggle work and family, we continue to feel committed to effect change in both spheres鈥攐n campus and at home. By God鈥檚 strength and guidance, we鈥檝e been able to do that鈥攁nd even, at points, to thrive in the midst of it. Here are a few strategies that have been helpful to us in making both family life and ministry on campus priorities.

1. Get the kids involved in publicity. We made a sign for campus this fall and had our kids paint their feet and walk across it. It was the perfect addition to our art project. Afterward, my daughter said, 鈥淭hat was the most fun I鈥檝e ever had!鈥

2. Eat on campus. We are currently doing a replant at a school, which means, among other things, that Brian is trying to hang out everywhere he can on campus all the time. So we eat bag lunches in the student union and dinner in the cafeteria. The kids love being in the 鈥渃astle鈥 (the main building on campus), the dining hall provides ample healthy (and cheap!) choices for them, and Brian and I get to have dinner with our kids and students. Bonus: We don鈥檛 have to do the dishes, and the students love hearing our kids鈥 happy voices as they play hide and seek around the cafeteria.

3. Bring the kids with you! Sometimes, when Brian is out of town, I bring the kids along with me to large group. I鈥檒l pop in a movie for the kids or ask one or two students to keep them during the 35 minutes of my talk. The rest of the time they sing, sit on students鈥 laps, and open doors for conversations that otherwise may not have happened. Similarly, Brian will take them along to events like pancake outreaches on campus when I have my women鈥檚 Bible study. As a result, our kids start to say things like, 鈥淥h, I know Paul and Andy鈥 when we are praying and talking about campus life at home. They feel more involved and less frustrated.

This has even worked as I鈥檝e started to do more training for new 果冻视频 staff. Colleagues found housing for all four of us during the last bit of some training I was leading in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Our host family loved having our kids around so much that they allowed them to take a bath in their master-bath Jacuzzi!

4. Sometimes, don鈥檛 bring the kids with you! I have a very close, amazing girlfriend who does babysitting swapping with me every Friday. Brian and I also pay a friend to watch the kids on Tuesdays so I can work. And we have a large pool of babysitters who are not on campus so that when we need help for weekend events, we are not pulling students away from the event!

Whenever I leave and the kids are having a hard time, I do feel a twinge of 鈥渋ck.鈥 But then when I come home from work, it鈥檚 with a sense that I was in the right place.

5. Do all kinds of ministry as a family. We don鈥檛 just do campus ministry together. We also host a church small group in our home every Wednesday night. We volunteer at a homeless shelter downtown. We adopt a family to bless at Christmas. Doing ministry together makes it a normal part of life, not just 鈥渨ork.鈥

6. Practice disciplines. I used to study, read, ponder, journal, and enjoy long quiet times and study days. That doesn鈥檛 happen very often now. But I do still make time for those things. Sometimes it means the kids have quiet time in the middle of the afternoon so I can do my Bible study (though more often it means I stay up late). Other times I listen to worship music or Scripture during the day while we go about our business. Brian and I also take time away from our kids to do retreats.

It also means I set aside time to do things I enjoy. I am a communicator; if I鈥檓 not doing that consistently, part of me dies. So I set aside time to blog. And I go to the Y. I get my workout in while the kids get their swim lessons or playtime in.

Developing World Changers

Sometimes when I鈥檓 at home, I wish I were on campus. Other days, the opposite is true. But instead of feeling like a failure in both, I can receive the affirmation I feel from the Holy Spirit to keep doing both.

I don鈥檛 know how all working moms or couples do it, but I know that at the end of the day, I am committed to both my family and my campus being transformed by Jesus鈥攁nd becoming world changers.

Sandi is an evangelist for Jesus, cloth diapers, and fair-trade chocolate. She has been on staff with 果冻视频 for 15 years in various campus ministry, training, and teaching roles. She and her husband, Brian (an 果冻视频 area director in northern Minnesota and northwestern Wisconsin), love to enjoy Duluth, Minnesota, with their two kids, Calista and Elam.

You might also be interested in a new LifeGuide Bible study from 果冻视频 Press.

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