AM I DOING THIS RIGHT? EXAMPLES OF BIBLICAL MOTHERHOOD
Intro: Let me ask you a simple question: What is a mother supposed to be? If we’re honest, most moms today are not measuring themselves against God’s design. They’re measuring themselves against: social media, pressure from family, comparisons to their friends, even their own expectations or guilt from what they think they should be. And the result? She is confused. Exhausted. Despairing. And for some— she’s quietly ashamed. “The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world.” (William Ross Wallace). But here’s the problem: How can you define “good motherhood” until you know what God designed it to be? The Bible doesn’t give us one picture of motherhood—it gives us a storyline. Not polished. Not perfect. But unvarnished & real. So today, we’re going to trace motherhood through Scripture—not idealized motherhood……but God’s design for motherhood in a broken world.
- EVE – WHEN MOTHERHOOD HURTS MORE THAN YOU EXPECT
Eve is the first woman in the Bible—and the first mother in human history.
Gen 3:20 “And Adam called his wife’s name Eve, because she was the mother of all living.”
But motherhood doesn’t begin for her in paradise. It begins after the Fall.
Which means her first pregnancy happens in a broken world. Her children grow up in a sinful environment. And her experience as a mother includes unimaginable pain.
The first lullaby ever sung… is eventually followed by the first funeral ever attended.
One son kills the other. Can you imagine that? The first mother buries a son… and grieves the violence of another. And yet—she keeps going.
I wonder if some of you know that kind of pain?
Disappointment in your children. Grief you didn’t choose. Circumstances you never saw coming. And you’re asking, “Am I doing this right?”
Listen—Eve teaches us this: You can live in a broken world and still be part of God’s unfolding plan.
Because even after loss… God was still writing her story.
Gen 4:25 “God has appointed another seed for me instead of Abel…”
God was not finished with Eve. And He’s not finished with you.
Your motherhood may feel messy—but God does some of His best work in messy places.
Charles Spurgeon — “Never could it be possible for any man to estimate what he owes to a godly mother.”
You may not see the impact right now… but heaven is keeping the record.
- SARAH – WHEN THE WAIT MAKES YOU WONDER
Sarah was promised a child by God. But the promise didn’t come quickly.
Gen 18:14 “Is anything too hard for the Lord?”
This wasn’t a nine-month wait. This was decades of wondering if God forgot her name.
She lived with infertility… disappointment… unanswered prayers. And if we’re honest—she didn’t handle it perfectly.
She laughed. She doubted. She tried to fix what only God could fulfill. But God kept His promise.
At 90 years old—she becomes a mother.
Gen 21:6 “God has made me laugh, and all who hear will laugh with me.”
That’s not just laughter—that’s relief. That’s redemption. That’s God having the final word.
Here’s what Sarah teaches us: God’s delays are not always His denials.
Some of you are carrying that weight.
You wanted children… but never had them. You wanted more… but couldn’t. You’re still waiting on something that hasn’t come.
Hear this: God didn’t lose track of you just because time passed. Is anything too hard for the Lord?
- JOCHEBED – WHEN YOU HAVE TO LET GO
Jochebed is raising a son under a death sentence. Pharaoh has ordered that Hebrew baby boys be killed. So, she hides Moses as long as she can.
Exodus 2:3 “But when she could no longer hide him…”
And then comes the moment every mother dreads.
She builds a basket…seals it (with pitch – it’s an ark)…places her baby inside…and sets him into the very river that was supposed to take his life.
Can you imagine that walk to the water? That moment of release? That’s not weakness. That’s faith.
Hebrews 11:23 “By faith Moses, when he was born, was hidden three months by his parents…and they were not afraid of the king’s command.”
Here’s the irony: The river that threatened him… became the road that delivered him.
I wonder if some of you are in that place right now?
You’ve done what you can…and now you’re facing what you can’t control.
Here’s what Jochebed teaches us: Faith is not holding on tighter—it’s trusting God when you have to let go.
You are not releasing your child into the unknown…you are placing them into the hands of God.
C.S. Lewis – Children are not a distraction from more important work. They are the most important work.
There is nothing small about shaping a life.
illus: There was a woman who raised 19 children…often in hardship…often in obscurity. Yet two of her sons grew up to be famous influential Christians: John Wesley and Charles Wesley. Those two were used by God to impact nations. Her name was Susanna Wesley. And she said this: “I am content to fill a little space, if God be glorified.” And here’s the truth behind that kind of life:
Your greatest contribution to the kingdom of God may not be something you do but someone you raise.
- BATHSHEBA – WHEN YOUR STORY IS COMPLICATED
Bathsheba’s story is messy. It involves sin, scandal, humiliation, loss, grief, consequences.
She held a child she would bury… and carried a name people whispered about. But that’s not where God leaves her.
In the middle of that failure, repentance happens. She followed the spiritual example of her new husband, David who prayed:
Psalm 51:1 “Have mercy upon me, O God… blot out my transgressions.”
And Bathsheba’s story is wrapped up in that moment of turning back to the Lord.
And what does God do? Does He discard her because of her failure? Nope. He redeems her.
Tony Evans – God can take a mess and make a message.
Joel 2:25 “So I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten…”
She becomes the mother of Solomon. She rises to a place of honor. She helps secure the kingdom.
And then—this is stunning— she shows up in the genealogy of Jesus.
Matt 1:6 and Jesse begot David the king. David the king begot Solomon by her who had been the wife of Uriah.
The woman whose story began in scandal… ends up in the lineage of the Savior.
Let me say it like this: She was taken in secret… but later she is honored in public.
The same story that began in sin… ends in redemption.
Are you carrying regret like that? Have you heard the enemy whisper: “You’ve disqualified yourself.”
Then hear what God says:
Rom 8:1 “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus…”
1 John 1:9 “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive…”
God doesn’t consult your past to decide your future.
He didn’t erase Bathsheba’s past—He just rewrote her future. And He can do the same for you.
- MARY – WHEN GOD INTERRUPTS YOUR PLAN
Mary is a young woman with a normal life… and then everything changes. An angel appears. And suddenly—she’s carrying the Son of God.
Luke 1:38 “Behold the maidservant of the Lord! Let it be to me according to your word.”
This wasn’t just a sweet moment. It was a life-altering interruption. It would cost her reputation. It would bring confusion. And eventually—it would break her heart.
Luke 2:35 “Yes, a sword will pierce through your own soul also…”
Elizabeth Stone –To be a mother is to have your heart walking around outside your body.
Mary didn’t just carry a child—she carried a calling that would wound her deeply. And yet… she says yes.
She didn’t understand everything. But she trusted the One who did.
Here’s what Mary teaches us: God’s assignments don’t always come with explanations.
I wonder if you’re living in that tension?
You’re raising children in situations you didn’t plan. Walking through seasons you didn’t choose. Facing outcomes you never expected.
And God is asking: “Will you trust Me with this?”
Motherhood is not about controlling outcomes—it’s about trusting God with what you never saw coming.
Conclusion: When you line these mothers up—here’s what you see: Women trusting God in every season motherhood brings.
So where are you?
Are you carrying pain like Eve? Waiting like Sarah? Letting go like Jochebed? Wrestling with your past like Bathsheba? Or being called into something you didn’t expect like Mary?
Wherever you are—God will meet you there.
He is not asking you to be a perfect mother. He is asking you to be a faithful one.
Are any of these true about you?
“I’m carrying pain as a mother”
“I’m waiting on something that hasn’t come”
“I’m struggling to trust God with my children”
“I have regret in my story”
“I feel overwhelmed by what’s in front of me”
Then today is not about trying harder. It’s about bringing it to God. Right where you are.
You don’t need a perfect prayer—Just an honest one: “Lord, meet me in this season of motherhood… and help me trust You with it.”
---------------- Transcript --------------------------
If I could just read my text today. Let's try that again. Discipleship is learning to think, live and love like Jesus while helping others do the same.
So discipleship is learning to think, live and love like Jesus while helping others do the same. You can't do that from a distance, can't do it from far away. You need a group of Christians that you meet with in between Sundays. And so you can find out more about our small groups@gccob.com group I want you to think of a time in your life that you felt unseen. And remember that the antidote to that is Christian community.
It's where you move from being a face in the crowd, like here, to a brother or a sister in a family. And so circles are better than rows. We like rows. Rows inspire, circles, impact. And so you can't see somebody's heart when you're looking at the back of their head.
Right? And so we see into people's hearts in our small groups. Join a small group on your ministry card. The very first box you can check is help me find a small group. The next three weeks, my wife Angie and I will be reorganizing small group ministry and rosters.
And so it's the perfect time to get involved in our small group ministry. Now, today's not really the beginning of a new sermon series. It's a one off sermon. And I'm going to do, I'm just going to preach straight up Mother's Day today. Haven't done that in a while.
Let me ask you, here's what I'm calling the message. Am I doing this right? I think moms ask that question silently to themselves all the time. I'm going to give you some examples of biblical motherhood to I want to ask you a simple question. What is a mother supposed to be?
I think if we're honest, many moms today are not measuring themselves against God's design. Instead, they're measuring themselves against social media and what they see there. Or they're measuring themselves against pressure from other family members or comparisons to friends. That's all always difficult. Or even moms are comparing themselves to their own expectations or to their own guilt from what they think they should be as a mom.
And what's the result? Well, she's confused, she's exhausted. Amen, moms. She's sometimes despairing. And there's even some moms, I would say, in here today, quietly ashamed.
William Ross Wallace wrote, the hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world. But here's the problem. How can you define good motherhood until you know what God designed it to be? The Bible doesn't give us a picture of motherhood. Instead, it gives us a storyline.
And this storyline is not polished. It is far from perfect. It is unvarnished and very real and raw. So today we're going to trace motherhood through scripture. Not idealized motherhood, but God's design for motherhood in a broken world.
And I'm going to give you five examples. And we probably ought to start with the Very first one. Shouldn't we? So, number one, Eve. Have you heard of her?
Eve is when motherhood hurts more than you expect. Eve is not only the first woman in the Bible, she's the first mother in human history.
In Genesis 3:20 says, and Adam called his wife's name Eve because she was the mother of all the living. This was Adam's first act of faith after the fall. He names his wife, something that looks into the future and says, there's going to be more life. It doesn't end with us. And he honors his wife and says, look, everybody that comes after her comes from her.
Motherhood, though, did you notice? Doesn't begin in paradise. Marriage began in paradise, in the garden of Ed Eden. And they messed it all up. So motherhood begins after the fall, outside of the garden.
Which means that Eve's first pregnancy happens in a broken world. Her children grow up in a sinful environment, and her experience as a mother includes unimaginable pain. Have you ever thought about this? The first lullaby ever sung young is eventually followed by the first funeral ever attended. And the same mom did both.
You know the story. One son, Cain, kills the other son, Abel. Can you imagine that? The first mother buries a son, and she grieves the violence of another son, and somehow she keeps going. I wonder if some of you know pain kind of like that.
The pain of disappointment in your children. The pain of grief that you didn't choose. The pain of circumstances you never saw coming and you never would have picked. And you're asking, am I doing this right? I didn't know motherhood would be like this.
You know what Eve teaches us? Eve teaches us, mom, that you can stumble in a broken world and still be part of God's unfolding plan. Because even after loss, God was still writing Eve's story. You know what she says in Genesis 4:25? Look.
She loses her first two sons. Abel dies, Cain is cursed, and he is sent away. But she says by Faith. In Genesis 4:25, God has appointed another seed for me instead of Abel. His name was Seth.
Friends, that means that God wasn't finished with Eve in the midst of all of that mess she had to deal with. And, ladies, he's not finished with you either. Your motherhood may feel messy. I suppose it does sometimes. But God does some of his best work in the messy places.
I love what Charles Spurgeon wrote. Never could it be possible for any man to estimate what he owes to a godly mother. You may not see the impact right now. Moms but heaven's keeping the record. That's the story of Eve number two.
Do you know Sarah? Sarah is when the weight makes you wonder.
This lady Sarah was promised a child by God. But the promise didn't come quickly. Genesis 18:14. God had to remind her. Is anything too hard for the Lord?
By the way, Sarah's wait wasn't a nine month wait. This was decades of wondering if God forgot her name.
She lived with infertility decades long. She lived with disappointment. Sarah lived with unanswered prayers.
And if we're honest, Sarah doesn't handle it perfectly, does she? She laughed at God at the beginning. Never a good thing to do. She doubted his promise. Then she tried to fix what only God could fulfill.
She looks at her husband Abram, and she says, look, we're not getting any younger. I'm already an old lady. My handmaiden is still young and of childbearing years. Why don't you go into her and get yourself a son and we'll have a family. That didn't work out.
And now they're still throwing rocks at each other in the Middle east, are they not?
But God kept his promise at 90 years old. I did not misspeak. At 90 years old, Sarah becomes a mother. Can you imagine her at the T ball game?
Genesis 21:6. This was her response. God has made me laugh. You know what she named her son? Isaac.
It means laughter. She laughs at God. He scolds her. He says, I'm going to make you laugh. Later.
She becomes a mom at 90 and she says, might as well name my kid what I did. His name shall be laughter. God has made me laugh. And all who hear will laugh with me. That was funny.
You mean that old lady is having a baby? What do we bring to the shower? Nobody knows. You see, that's not just laughter. That's relief.
That's redemption. That's God having the final word. And here's what Sarah's motherhood teaches us. God's delays are not always his denials.
I suspect that some of you are carrying that weight. You wanted children, but you never had them. You wanted more children, but you couldn't. You're still waiting on some that hasn't come. Come.
Can I tell you, God didn't lose track of you just because time passed by. Is anything too hard for the Lord? Well, that's Sarah number three. Jochebed. Everybody say Jochebed.
I had to relearn how to say her name last night. Called her Jochebed all week. It's Jacob. Is when you have to let go. Jochebed is raising a son under a death sentence.
Throw all the Hebrew baby boys into the Nile river. See if they can swim. Pharaoh has ordered that all the Hebrew males be killed. Little babies. So Jochebed hides her son Moses as long as she can.
And then Exodus 2, 3 says, but when she could no longer hide him, Jochebed is when you have to let go. This is the moment that every mother dreads. And at that moment, Jochebed builds a basket. And the scripture text says that she sealed it with something called pitch. Well, that's in Exodus.
We've already seen a structure being sealed with pitch. Back in Genesis, it was Noah's ship. You guys remember Noah's Ark? Listen. Jochebed builds a little ark.
She places her baby inside to protect him from the waters. And she sets him into the very river that was supposed to take his life.
Let me ask you something. Can you imagine Jochebed's walk to the water that day?
How about the moment that she takes her hands off that little ark? Can I tell you, that's not weakness. That's faith. Here's how I know God put she and her husband in the hall of fame of faith. Hebrews 11:23 by faith.
Moses, when he was born, was hidden three months by his parents. And they were not afraid of the king's command.
Here's the irony. The same river that threatened him became the roadway that delivered him.
I wonder if some of you moms are in that place right now. You've done what you can, and now you're facing what you can't control. You've walked your child through the river and you've had to take your hands off. Here's what Jochebed teaches us. Faith is not holding on tighter.
It's trusting God when you have to let go.
Some of you moms have some graduates and they're getting ready to leave your nest. Jochebed has a word or two for you. See, you are not releasing your child into the unknown. You are placing them into the hands of God. That's what she did with her son.
I love what C.S. lewis wrote. Children are not a distraction from more important work. They are the most important work.
Look at me. There's nothing small about shaping a young life. There's a woman who raised 19 of her own children. None of them were adopted. She raised them in hardship and in poverty and often in obscurity.
And yet two of her sons grew to be famous, influential Christians. Their names are John Wesley and Charles Wesley. Those two were used by God to shake the nations. Her name was Susanna Wesley. And she said this.
I'm content to fill a little space if God be glorified. What else are you going to say? If you birth 19 of them, you got to trust God. Here's the truth behind that kind of life. You're ready.
Don't miss this, ladies. Your greatest contribution to the kingdom of God may not be something you do, but someone you raise.
Jochebed and Susanna Wesley. Number four. Bathsheba. Bathsheba is. When your story's complicated, I suspect we don't have, like, the world's most perfect moms all in one room today.
Even though I love you dearly, I think you might be able to relate to Bathsheba. I'm not going to get into all the details of Bathsheba's story, but it's messy. It involves sin and scandal and humiliation and loss and grief and consequences, all of which she participated in. She held a child, a little baby she would later bury. She carried a name, Bathsheba, that people whispered about.
But that is not where God leaves her. In the middle of that failure, repentance happens. She followed the spiritual example of her new husband, David, who prayed this in Psalm 51, verse 1. Have mercy upon me, O God. Blot out my transgressions in Bathsheba's story is wrapped up in that moment of turning back to the Lord.
And what does God do? Does he discard her because of her failure and her immorality? Nope. He redeems her.
Tony Evans said, God can take a mess and make a message.
This is where I get to tell you my favorite Old Testament promise from God. When the children of Israel were under his judgment and all their crops failed, they repented. And he said in Joel 2:25, so I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten. I love the locust promise. God brought judgment, due penalty for their sins.
And they cried out to him. And he said, all that you lost because of my goodness and my favor and my grace. I'm going to give you back the years the locusts took from you. Bathsheba. That embarrassing thing that you did, got your husband killed, got your name destroyed, had made you go to the funeral of your little baby.
Now you're in the possession of another man. All of that, because of your repentance, I'm erased. Well, what's the proof? God? I'm glad you asked.
She becomes the mother of the Prince of Peace. You know, the Prince of Peace is in the Old Testament. Solomon. That's what his name means. She becomes the mother of King Solomon.
She becomes Queen Mother. She rises to a place of honor and she even helps him secure the kingdom from his other brother who tried to take it from him. And this, then here's the best part. This is stunning. Bathsheba shows up in the genealogy of the Lord Jesus.
Matthew, chapter one, verse six. Y' all know the begots. That's a church word, right? Begot. Matthew 1:6.
Jesse Begot David the king. David the king begot Solomon by her who had been the wife of Uriah.
That moment still remembered. That is Bathsheba. She was the one who had been the wife of Uriah. The woman whose story began in scandal ends up in the lineage of the Savior of the world. Who but God can do that?
Let me say it like this. She was taken in secret, but later she's honored in secret public.
The same story that began in sin ends in redemption. Ladies, are you carrying regret like that?
Have you ever heard the enemy whisper? You have disqualified yourself. Then hear what God says. Romans, chapter 8, verse 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.
God's taken the scourge of your spotty past off of you and put it on Jesus at Calvary the day you repented and believed you are not condemned. First John 1:9. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteous. Can I tell you, God doesn't consult your past to decide your future.
He didn't erase Bathsheba's past. He just rewrote her story. And, ladies, he can do the same for you if your story's been complicated by choices you made long ago.
All right. Did you survive Bathsheba? Let's get to the Virgin Mary. Amen. Number five.
Mary, this is motherhood. When God interrupts your plan. Mary's a young woman, 14, 15 years old, with a normal life. And is it an understatement to say then everything changed. An angel appears.
That's always kind of a big deal. And then suddenly she's carrying the Son of God in her womb. And how does she respond? Luke, chapter 1, verse 30. Behold the maidservant of the Lord.
Let it be to me according to your word. Can we agree that is a declaration of faith? It wasn't just a sweet moment. It was a life altering interruption. It would cost Mary her reputation for a time.
There'd be whispers about her. It would bring confusion and eventually, it was prophesied that it would break her heart to carry this little child. Luke 2. 35. Yes, a sword will pierce through your own soul.
Also, Elizabeth Stone wrote, to be a mother is to have your heart walking around outside your body.
Brothers and sisters, Mary didn't just carry a child. She carried a calling that would wound her deeply. And yet she still says yes. Did she understand everything? Good night.
No. But she did trust the one who did. Here's what Mary teaches us. God's assignments don't always come with explanations.
It's almost like you have to trust God. God. I wonder if you're living in that tension today. Moms, you're raising children in situations you didn't plan. You're walking through seasons you didn't choose.
You're facing outcomes you never expected. And God is asking you, like he asked Mary, will you trust me with this?
Motherhood can't be about controlling outcomes. Have you tried that? It's about trusting God with what you never saw coming. That's what happened to Mary.
In conclusion, today, when you line these mothers up one by one, here's what you see. You see women trusting God in every season that motherhood brings.
So, ladies, where are you? Are you carrying pain like Eve?
Are you waiting like Sarah?
Are you letting go like Jochebed? Are you wrestling with your past like Bathsheba? Are you being called into something you didn't expect, like Mary? Listen to your pastor. Wherever you are, God will meet you there.
We just showed you that truth in the word. He's not asking you to be a perfect mother. I hope that relieves you some. But he is asking you to be a faithful mother.
Let's bow our heads and pray. Right now, with nobody looking around, I want to poll the moms so I can see who I can pray for. Today.
I'm going to make a statement from one of the moms that we just learned about. And if that's you, I want you to raise your hand. Hey, I need prayer for this. Number one. I'm carrying pain as a mother.
Anybody else? Keep them up just for a second so I can see under the lights. I'm carrying pain as a mother. Okay. Bless you, sisters.
You can put those hands down. Number two. I'm waiting on something that hasn't come.
Lift your hands, please. I'm waiting on something that hasn't come. Okay, number three. Number three. I'm struggling to trust God with my children.
I'm struggling to trust God with my children. Lift those hands. You see? Okay. Number four.
I Have regret in my story, and it keeps coming up to my mind. I have regret in my story, and it keeps popping up. Anybody else? Okay. The Lord sees you.
Lastly, I feel overwhelmed by what's in front of of me. I feel overwhelmed by what's in front of me. Lift those hands. All right.
Put those hands down. Nobody looking around. Today's not about trying harder, ladies. It's about bringing it to God right where you are. You don't need a perfect prayer.
You just need an honest one. Something like this. Lord, meet me in this season of motherhood and help me to trust you with it. Lord, meet me in this season of motherhood and help me to trust you with it. Lord, all those hands that were raised represents precious hearts to you and to our church.
And so I ask for the ministry of the Holy Spirit to descend into this room and sit down next to those moms and those hands that were raised and do your work. Do your work of truth. Do your work of consolation and comfort. Do your work of encouraging. Do your work of filling with hope.
God bless these moms that are struggling in all these ways today. In Jesus name, amen. Let's stand together. Prayer team. If you'll come to the front, we're about to adjourn our service today.
On your ministry card, don't forget to mark on there. Help me find a small group. If you're new, we pray for people after our services are over and we pray for anyone and everyone about anything and everything. And if you think I probably need prayer but I can't think exactly what I need it for, then you're in the best spot because here's what I recommend that you do. Find a prayer line and go up to the prayer team and say, I know I need prayer.
I don't know exactly what for. Would you just pray for me? Whatever the Lord lays on your heart to pray for me and watch what God does. Are you glad that you came today? We thank God for moms and we thank God for our heavenly father.
I love all of you folks. I want to send you in the mission field filled full of the spirit of God. Thank you for coming today. The prayer lines are open. We are dismissed.
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