As
a busy wife responsible for the care and nurturing of so many lives
outside my own, it's nice to be reminded that it's "God's job" to hand the
"fruit production" in my life - to bestow upon me the fruit of the Spirit.
Most days I'm just busy ensuring that four sets of teeth get brushed after
every meal - the thought of being loving, joyful, peaceful, patient, kind,
good, faithful, gentle and exercising self control can be daunting. Thank
goodness for encouraging authors like Elisa Morgan, who not only inspire
the heart, but also offer the tools to keep me aiming at and running
towards my spiritual goals.
Naked Fruit: Getting Honest About the Fruit of the Spirit
(Revell, August 2004, hardcover, 168 pages) gives moms the tools they need
to open their hearts and souls to accepting the Spirit's gift, and equips
them to grow in their relationship with God and with those whose lives
they touch. Author and MOPS International President Elisa Morgan's concept
that the "Naked Fruit" of a relationship with God is simply becoming (as
best we can) like Jesus is as refreshingly satisfying as the first bite
into a luscious orange on a hot summer afternoon!
The book's brief, yet insightful chapters end in thought provoking (but
manageable) "Fruit for Thought" exercised designed to help busy mothers
see a clear path to growing more fruitful in their own circles of
relation. Although the book is aimed at mothers, any Christian looking to
honestly make the world a better place and wanting to grow in love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self
control will doubtless benefit from the experience of reading, savoring
and digesting NAKED FRUIT.
LH: I am pleased to share the following Book
Spotlight interview with Elisa Morgan, president of MOPS International and
author of the new book
Naked Fruit: Getting Honest About the Fruit of the Spirit.
Elisa, could you start off by telling our readers about your background
with MOPS and your own family?
EM: MOPS International began in 1973 with a group of women in a Denver,
Colorado suburb. I was hired as the first president in 1989. For the last
fifteen plus years, it has been my pleasure and honor to lead this
ministry to moms in a unique and challenging season of life. Initially, I
felt very ill-equipped to lead this organization but after much
soul-searching I realized that God wasn't asking me to be a perfect
mother, but rather to lead as a "Mother Inferior", one mom helping
another.
When I began at MOPS, my children were three and five. Today my family
includes my husband of twenty-five years, Evan, my eighteen-year-old son,
Ethan, my twenty-year-old daughter, Eva, and her new baby, Marcus - all
living with us at home right now!
LH:
Naked Fruit is such a
refreshing book, especially for busy mothers who may be struggling with
their vocation to motherhood. What message do you hope that readers will
take away from the experience of reading this book?
EM: That the fruit of the Spirit is attainable through God's help. And
that if we really want to grow a life that matters, these characteristics
should be our goal. One more thing: early motherhood is a very humbling
and challenging season. God can grow fruit even in days that are filled
with frustrations...i.e.: compost is necessary for fruit production!
LH: In
Naked Fruit, you
emphasize the importance of the concept of stripping away the idea that
Christianity is simply "being nice". What do you mean by this and how do
so many moms fall into the trap?
EM: We tend to think that the fruit of the Spirit is all about putting a
sweet smile on our faces and being nice, nice, nice all the time, even
when we don't feel like smiling or being nice. It's a misconception of
Christianity. The fruit of the Spirit is really about being like Jesus.
Jesus was always fruit-filled in his interactions with others but he
wasn't always "nice". He was loving to the prostitute but told her clearly
to stop sinning. He was loving to the Pharisees but told them not to make
faith harder than God says it is. He was peaceful but expressed this
quality by napping in the bottom of a boat in the midst of a storm on the
Sea of Galilee while his disciples freaked out. Jesus was always loving,
joyful, peaceful, patient, kind, good, faithful, gentle and
self-controlled but he didn't always look "nice" according to the
definitions of his culture.
LH: What can I do as a mom to "make a difference" in
the lives of my own children and other loved ones?
EM: Focus on the big picture: are you and your children growing to look
more like Jesus each day, each month, each year? Again, it's not about
being nice but rather about possessing the characteristics of his
personality in your own unique personality. Joy will look different in you
than in your child. That's okay. But are you still growing joy?
LH: Elisa Morgan, thank you so much for your time
and for this wonderful book,
Naked Fruit. Are there
any additional thoughts or comments you'd like to share with our readers?
EM: One other thing - Another reason we shy away from fruit production in
our lives is that we believe that the responsibility for growing love, joy
etc. is all up to us. We know we can't produce these qualities in and of
ourselves. We've tried. And failed. And so we figure - forget it. The
fruit of the Spirit is up to God to produce in us. Our job is to cooperate
with him by connecting ourselves to him in a relationship with Jesus
Christ. God's job is to grow the fruit.
Related
Articles
CatholicMom.com Book Club
Additional Catholic Book Spotlights
MOPS
International Web Site
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