
Mother’s Day is filled with sentimentality; yet mothers well deserve recognition and gratitude for their indispensable contributions to our lives.
Booker T. Washington captures my sentiment: “If I have done anything in life worth attention, I feel sure that I inherited the disposition from my mother.”
When I think of my mother, Edith Walker Carder, I am confronted with the paradoxes of her remarkable influence on me and those who knew her.
- She had a sixth-grade formal education but excelled in wisdom,
- She was small of stature but big of heart,
- She never held an office in church but faithfully served God.
- She never taught a Sunday school class but knew the Bible thoroughly,
- I never heard her pray aloud, but she prayed without ceasing,
- She had strong moral values but never condemned others,
- She lived with constant physical pain but never complained,
- She knew poverty firsthand but was generous toward others,
- She grew up in a racially segregated world but welcomed ALL people,
- She never occupied a leadership position but influenced for good all who knew her,
- She never accumulated wealth but was rich in the “fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peach, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.”
Mom died in 2013 at the age of 95 but lives on in God’s eternal presence and in the lives of those who were fortunate enough to know her.
Yes, that describes my Aunt Edith exactly as I knew her.
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Thanks Bishop Carder, she must have been a wonderful servant of God…and mother!
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Ken, what a wonderful tribute to your mother! I know this – she lives on in you! ❤️Charlene
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Gratefull for sharing this
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