• Whenever Jeremiah and I start talking about our future, as in when he is finally–officially done with all of his training, he always adds the caveatunless we’re in Africa.” An example: “Abby I hope we will have a farm one day…unless, of course, we’re in Africa.” What this means is, unless we get called to foreign missions. After several years of this, it has turned into something of a brand in my side. The hot shock I always get poked with if I ever start dreaming a little too much. I feel like it’s how he reigns me back to reality, “Don’t count on any of these big dreams you have, because we may be living in a tent and sleeping on the dirt. You may be home-schooling our children and fighting off deadly pestilence with your bare hands. You may be boiling buffalo heart for our dinner and learning how to garden so that we can have vegetables. You may be leaving our families and learning to speak Swahili.” Ok, so maybe he doesn’t say all of that, but that is what I picture every time he says, “unless we’re in Africa.” Don’t mis-understand me here. I have always wanted to do foreign, medical missions with Jeremiah. As long as he’s talked about pursuing medicine it has been one of our dreams. I just don’t feel like God is calling me to long-term permanent missions. A month, two, even three sounds good to me…but our whole life???

    This past Sunday I was confessing this struggle to our friend Cohen [for those of you who read regularly he is the one who raked our yard when all that stuff was happening with Mom]. He and his wife Amie are long-term missionaries to Belize, and they are here in the States for a couple of months so that Amie could deliver and recover from having their fourth child. I told him about Jeremiah’s little caveat and he responded with a big, “Praise God!” “Oh no, no Cohen, don’t start praising God over there. I don’t want to live in Africa. I just feel like your calling, to permanent foreign missions, is so specific. Don’t you think I would know by now if that is what God was calling us to? Don’t you think I would have some desire–I am telling you I have none.”

    He started laughing pretty hard at me, and told me some things that were not reassuring in the least. Like, some missionary wives go kicking and screaming. Or, he was scared to death when God called him…and then he recommended I read this book. So I leave our Sunday school class in a mild state of panic, wondering if what I am running away from the hardest is still being orchestrated all around me against my will. Get the tent ready, I’m heading to Africa.

    So I sit down in big church (does anybody else still call it that?), with my mind in no state to pay attention to a sermon. I made a conscious decision to look my fear in the face, because you see, it was becoming apparent to me that what I was really fearful of was not Africa and all those jungle fears I listed above…what I was scared of was facing the reality of what it meant to “give it all.” The Sunday school answer, for all of us sweet little Christians, when asked “What are you willing to give up for Christ?” is “MY ALL.” And what I was realizing was that the reason it made me mad every time Jeremiah threatened to take me to Africa was that I knew in my heart there were some things I didn’t want to have to let go of…I was SCARED to look in the face of just how disgusting my “thing addiction” is. Please follow these next paragraphs (which are my stream of consciousness from church this week) to the end, because it is going to start out pretty petty.

    Ok Abby Clark Maddox you’ve been running from this Africa thing for years now, it’s time to ask yourself why. Are you really afraid that God won’t protect your family?…No. Are you really afraid that you will not be able to leave your extended family behind?…That would be extremely difficult, but I know, as long as I had Jeremiah and my girls tucked up against me, we could make it together. Are you afraid of living in a hovel?…I’m not afraid of getting dirty. That’s not what I asked, are you afraid of living in a hovel–as in not the house you’ve been dreaming about and designing in your mind and with Jeremiah (you know the one made of stone and wood, that sits on a farm with land rolling out in front of it, with a big library with a ladder that slides….) Oh please God NO, I can’t bear to be one of those people. Those people who love their things. They disgust me! Is that who I am deep down where I’m afraid to look? Can I really not stand the thought of being a missionary because I want to create my dream house???

    Lord, I am devastated and humiliated. Why is that house so important to me? That’s a good question to ask yourself, Abby. Why is it? Why do you so long to create that house?…Because I want to make something beautiful. Why? Because I want to create a space where my family longs to be. I want it to feel like a sanctuary…like a home where we cultivate our minds and love each other and use the things you’ve blessed us with to pour out beauty on others as well. Is that all?…I think so. Don’t you think we can create the kind of beauty you long for even in Africa? Do you think you have to have stone and wood and rolling ladders to create a sanctuary? I am bigger than that. I can show you my beauty through a dark black face with a huge white grin. Through a tiny, dirty child who flourishes under the love you have to offer. Through a giraffe grazing just outside your village. It’s not wrong that you long to create something beautiful for yourself and your family. It is wrong that you don’t trust Me to provide it in the way that’s best for you.

    Here a little bit of the sermon broke through to me. Brother Jimmy was referencing the Westminster Catechism: What is man’s chief and highest aim? To love God and enjoy him forever. He designed us to enjoy Him and His creation. That’s why He surrounded us with beauty, to watch as we delight in His workmanship. I realized that it wasn’t ugly to yearn for rolling fields and deep woods and a beautiful home built from stone and wood. It was ugly to cling to that more than I clung to His infinitely more beautiful plan…whatever it may be.

    Brother Jimmy ended his sermon with the story of the little boy who had his hand stuck in his mother’s expensive vase. They had tried everything to get his hand out: pulling, yanking, goop, even calling the paramedics. They had just decided the vase must be broken when the Dad got home from work. He took one look at the situation and said, “Son, what are you holding in your hand?” “A penny.” “If you’ll drop that penny, I’ll give you a dollar.” Clink, the penny dropped and his hand immediately slipped from the vase. I dropped my penny too at the close of that sermon. I was able to willingly stretch out my hand and say, “I’ll go. If that’s what you want, I’ll delight in going. I trust we’ll create beauty together wherever you lead us…and I’ll love and enjoy you forever.”

    I still don’t feel “called” to permanent missions, but I can honestly say that I am not fearful of it anymore. In some ways, it would feel pretty great to just GO and live a life not burdened by the question, “Am I really willing to give it all?” Unless we ARE called, I suppose I’ll just have to keep posing that question to my heart and facing the answer…I am sure I’ll have to give that home up more than once :), but the freedom that comes from giving it back to Him is a deep rush of cool air in my lungs.




  • Most days as a stay-at-home leave me feeling a lot like this picture–pale, harried, and exhausted You’re trying your very best to make life run smoothly–even be fun–for your children, while they both seem to be doing their darndest to make things complicated.

    Or it can look like it did yesterday morning when Pace came running into the kitchen, where I was cleaning up breakfast, screaming “Mommy, Mommy come look! Quick!” She was grinning from ear to ear and clapping her hands in anticipation. I don’t know if you’ve learned to dread your child’s excitement much more than their cries, like I have. I know, when Pace gets like that, it’s really bad, and she can hardly stand the suspense of seeing my face when I encounter just how bad it is. I follow her into their bedroom to find Mary Aplin standing by Pace’s big girl bed (the one with the white background), with the sheets and comforter smeared with…poop. I wish that was the worst part. What was even worse was that little Napoleon was standing guiltily by her artwork SUCKING HER THUMB!!! Isn’t there somebody else who is supposed to deal with mess like this? This is not what I signed up for when I volunteered to be a stay-at-home Mom!

    However, there are also days like today when I look around me and say, “Wow, this is precisely how I pictured my life would be.” Summertime, at the swimming pool with two tow-headed little girls in matching swimsuits that make them look so cute I can’t stop grinning when I look at them. The baby is trying her best to do what I’ve taught her and kick her fat little legs behind her in the pool. My “big girl” wants to be like Mommy and has spread her towel ever so perfectly on the chair beside mine where she is doing her best to sun-bathe seriously. I am able to spend a good fifty percent of my time actually SITTING in my chair because both girls are playing so happily and obeying so perfectly. Thank you Jesus! THIS is what I signed up for!

    Now don’t think that it was perfect…Mary Aplin had a big fat poo in her swimsuit at the end of our time (is anybody else noticing a trend here??), and the only way to get off the swim diapers (that our pool forces babies to wear) is to pull the tight, wet, poo infested article down their legs. And, we were having so much fun that I let the time get away from us and both little parties were in stages of starvation melt-down as I drug them through the parking lot. HOWEVER, I will take little issues like these any day if I could have those three perfect preceding hours.

    Now they are both sleeping soundly after wearing themselves out in the good ‘ol fashion sunshine. I love summertime, and I love being a stay-at-home Mom…