This week husbands, sons and daughters will elbow their way
to the greeting card displays in search of the perfect card to celebrate
Mothers Day. Florists will put on extra
staff to handle the demand. Restaurants brace for business.
Countries around the world set aside a special day for
mothers. It is celebrated on the second Sunday in May in the U.S. Canada, New
Zealand, Australia, India, Brazil, Germany, Ethiopia and the Philippines. Woodrow
Wilson proclaimed Mothers Day an official holiday starting on May 8, 1914. Still
other nations honor mothers on different dates.
Regardless of our nationality, ethnicity or gender, we were
each carried in our mother’s womb, given birth through her labor and, in almost
all cases, nursed and nourished to life by her care.
No office and no position wields greater power and influence
over the future of humanity than the influence of a mother. The memories and lessons given in infancy at
a mother’s hand surpass every other classroom and instruction. The faith of a mother inspires and instructs
more effectively than any pulpit or pen.
We see it in history, and we see it in the Bible.
In a log cabin in Kentucky, Nancy Hanks Lincoln recognized
the early gifts in her child. She not
only taught him to read, but instructed him in the principles that would shape
his life. Without Nancy, and Sarah, who
became Lincoln’s step mother after Nancy died, it is unlikely that Abraham
Lincoln would have ever surfaced to lead our nation in its greatest hour of
crisis.
If it were not for Moses’ mother, the world would have never
known the great law-giver who led Israel from captivity and gave us the Ten
Commandments. It was she who hid him in
the reeds at the river to save his infant life and it was she who cared for him
in Pharaoh’s court.
How many mothers have petitioned God for the birth of a
child, as Hannah prayed in the presence of Eli, the prophet? Without her prayer, Samuel would not have
been born, and would not have been present to anoint David, the king of Israel.
In the fullness of time, in an obscure Galilean village, another young woman lifted up her eyes to heaven and sang, “My soul exalts the Lord, and my spirit has rejoiced in God my
Savior. For He has had regard for the humble state of His handmaiden; for
behold, from this time on all generations will count me blessed. For He that is
mighty has done to me great things, and holy is His name.” (Luke 1:46-49). Without Mary we would never have known Jesus,
and the world would remain lost in its sins without a Savior.
Paul referred to the importance of a
mother’s faith when he wrote to his young protégé, Timothy: “For I am
mindful of the sincere faith within you, which first dwelt in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice, and I am
sure that it is in you as well.”
(2 Timothy 1:5).
This Mother’s Day we honor all our mothers
who have shaped us and made a better world.
It also stands as a challenge to all those young women who give birth to
the next generation and shape the future of the world to come.
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