Harriet Connor

Author of Big Picture Parents

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Where to Buy the Book

For readers in Australia and NZ, the best way to buy a hard copy of my book is from The Wandering Bookseller or Koorong. If you plan to buy multiple copies for a book club or Bible study group, The Wandering Bookseller can offer you a 20% discount.

If you live in the USA, you can order the book here.

If you live in the UK, you can buy a copy here.

For readers in other countries, the cheapest way to buy my book is by emailing your order to the Customer Service department at Wipf and Stock (orders[at]wipfandstock[dot]com).

Big Picture Parents is also available worldwide on Amazon in Kindle and paperback formats.

Redeeming Advent (Book Review)

For many of us, the season of Advent—the four weeks leading up to Christmas—is the busiest time of the year. Our calendars fill up with parties and celebrations, concerts and carol-singing. Our to-do lists spill over with shopping and baking, card-writing and present-wrapping.

But for Christians, Advent is also one of the most spiritually significant times of the year. Traditionally, Advent (which means “coming”) is a season of expectation: we remember Israel’s years of waiting for God’s promised Messiah to come; we also remember that we too are in a time of waiting—for God’s Messiah to come again in glory.

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Lessons from my First Decade of Motherhood

Our eldest son turns ten this weekend and it feels like a significant milestone. Motherhood (and fatherhood) teaches us a lot about ourselves and about life: not the kind of abstract knowledge you learn from a textbook, but the kind of wisdom and understanding you can only gain from experience. In fact, I have learnt most of these lessons by doing things the wrong way first!

Apart from experience, the thing that has taught me the most about parenthood has been listening to the wisdom of previous generations through reading the Bible and talking to my grandmothers. Here’s what I have learnt:

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Why Do Modern Parents Feel Overwhelmed?

I had a great conversation with Jonathan from Crosslife about why so many modern parents feel overwhelmed, and what we can do to help ourselves. We talk about how to deal with issues like busyness, “keeping up with the Joneses” and perfectionism.

Listen to our conversation on the Conversations for Life podcast here (scroll down to conversation 11.).

Poems by Amy McGrath

Here you will find poems about marriage, family and motherhood by my grandmother, Amy Gladys McGrath (1921-2019).

The Tears in Love

To the Terminus

Home

A Wreath of Words

The Cradle of Time

The Glistening Cup

Lifeline

The Next Horizon

Your Hand

For All My Daughters

Our Children

Your Future

The Long Road

My Shadow

More poems to come!

Leave Your Children a Legacy of Grace to Overcome Your Legacy of Sin

At some point, every parent looks with pity at their child and thinks, “Poor thing. They get it from me.” Sometimes we’re thinking of some superficial attribute—our knobbly knees or uncontrollable cowlicks. But other times, we’re thinking of something more serious we’ve passed on, like asthma or anxiety.

We can also feel guilty about the things we pass on not by nature, but by nurture. Modern parents live in fear of emotionally “scarring” their children through negligence or ignorance; we constantly seek out expert advice to help us get our parenting just perfect.

Sometimes the impact of our imperfect parenting is obvious: we see our children reflecting our worst habits right back at us. My heart sinks when I see our children snapping and growling at each other, saying “For goodness sake!” or “How many times do I have to tell you?!” 

Our children’s imperfections are a constant reminder that we have reproduced according to our kind. In a fallen world, human children inherit the genetic flaws and sinful tendencies of their imperfect human parents.

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Strong Families Share Mission

Most of us yearn to be part of a strong and healthy family, but what exactly does that look like? Perhaps we imagine a warmly lit room with family members sitting together. In our modern, urbanized society, the family home has become a place of retreat from the world. During the day, individuals scatter to their separate places of work and study; in the evening, they regroup at home to relax. “Family time,” to most of us, means leisure time.

But this vision of family life is relatively new. Before the industrial revolution, the family was a productive unit: the home was a place of work. What bound families together was not simply being together, sitting face to face, but doing together, working side by side.

What’s more, as Christians, our families have a mission from God—to point others to their Creator by stewarding his creation, passing on his covenant promises, and carrying out his Great Commission. When husbands and wives work together in love and unity, it tells the world something about Jesus and his bride. When parents bring their children up to work and worship alongside them, it tells the world something about the Father and his spiritual children.

While family movie or game nights have value, our families also need a shared mission. Working and worshiping together not only strengthens our family, but also strengthens our witness in the world.

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Review of ‘Big Picture Parents’ in Themelios Journal

“Where many books in this field focus (exclusively) on parenting practicalities, this volume does the more difficult and more needed work of helping parents think theologically about their roles in the home … What sets Connor’s work apart as one of lasting value is her lucid articulation of the metanarrative of Scripture and her insistence that both parents and children will find their true purpose as they come to see themselves within this story.”

Read the full review from Themelios Vol 44 Issue 2 by Dillon T. Thornton here.

Mums, Let’s Be Collaborators, Not Competitors!

As a mum, I know how easy it is to fall into the trap of seeing other mothers as competitors. When we meet another mum, we immediately start making comparisons; we want to know how we “rank” against her in different areas: our parenting, our appearance, our children, our cooking, our job etc.

If we think we’re doing better than that other mum—if we rank higher on the scale—we congratulate ourselves and feel proud. If we think we’re doing worse than her, we feel guilty, inadequate, and envious.

Why do we judge other mums like this? And how can we move from competition to collaboration?

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Strong Churches Depend on Strong Families

“Christian families should be strong at the core but flexible around the edges. Strong relationships within the family—between husband and wife, parents and children, older and younger generations—enable a family to extend their loving community to include outsiders.

Our churches will become stronger not by denouncing love for family as “idolatrous,” but by calling on families to open themselves up to gospel priorities.”

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