Monday, April 30, 2012

Daybook-04.30.12


FOR TODAY, MONDAY, APRIL 30

Outside my window...slightly overcast day.  It's already 70°, and it's supposed to be 82°.  By Wednesday it is supposed to be 89°.  I think it is finally time to pack away my winter clothes and get out my capris!

I am thinking...I am dreading packing away seasonal clothing.  It's a job I hate!

I am thankful...I have clothes to pack away!

In the kitchen...ham, beans and cornbread

I am wearing...black jeans and sandals, ruffly black, gold and burgundy top.

I am creating...a spiritual legacy for my children - Please God, don't let me mess it up!

I am reading..."Larkspur Cove" by Lisa Wingate, and reading and studying Psalm 11.

I am hoping...to be all that God wants for me to be.

I am looking forward to...our Mother-Daughter banquet on Saturday.  Our theme is "Women Who Most Influenced My Life."

I am learning... everything is going to be all right.

Around the house...plants to be planted.  We bought a red knockout rose bush - I am so excited - and some plants for our big planter on the porch.

I am pondering...why people act they way they do...I'm sure I'll never have the answer to that!

A favorite quote for today...

"...let this be my epitaph:
THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC”
― Kurt Vonnegut

One of my favorite things... is my newest obsession - listening to piano music by David Nevue

A few plans for the rest of the week: no night meetings this week, praise the Lord!  Hoping to walk the track at least 3 times this week, along with planning my menu and my part of the program for the upcoming banquet. I also need to get my mama's Mother Day gift this week so that I can get it shipped to her in plenty of time. 

A peek into my day...

My Willow Tree angel I see everyday when working at my desk.


Daybooking is a concept created by Peggy Hostetler.  You can link up at The Simple Woman's Daybook.

Friday, April 27, 2012

The Remnant


Today, I'm linking up with Lisa-Jo at The Gypsy Mama Blog writing for 5 minutes on the topic:

COMMUNITY

We're a small band of believers.  We like to call ourselves, "The Remnant."  

Photo from Google Images
We are what's left from a growing thriving church that fell upon hard times.  A hard fall that left us reeling even years later.  Successive hard leaders who perhaps did not know how to love the remnant.

Membership that dwindled down.

During this dwindling process, people told me I should leave, too.  It was a tempting thought.  Of course, I'd like to belong to a bigger fellowship.  More opportunities.  More spiritual blessings to be poured into me.

Or so I thought.

Still, somehow, I could never feel the leading of the Lord to leave the remnant.  And so I stayed.  Stayed and threw myself into serving.  

Because, isn't that what Jesus did?

He had many followers who fell away yet He stayed with His original community, His little band of 12 disciples.  And they changed the world.

Your community doesn't have to be big to impact the world.  You just impact each others lives in the little world to which you've been called.

STOP

Last April FFF for 2012!


Happy Friday to you all!  I've had a great week, hope you did, too.  I love to recap on Fridays the highlights of the previous week.  Join me, won't you?

1.  My favorite thing to do is, of course, write blog posts.  I had a pretty good week of posting.  It's hard to choose my favorites, because posts to a blogger are like children to a parent.  How can you love one more than the other?  They each contain a little part of you.  If I were to just pick one, though, it would be "Only One Eternity" because I love the illustration of the 3 stages of life.

2.  Favorite Photo(s):  Again, I couldn't just pick one.  For instance, I love this photo of a goose that decided the front of our church would be a good layover on his way back North.



Here he is in the church flowerbed.  I never realized geese were so BIG! Makes me wonder how they can fly ...

One of the church ladies brought some Spring flowers to the church.  I love fresh-picked flowers!



These photos were taken from our back yard.  The fields around our place are filled with some kind of yellow flower right now. I love the yellow fields against the blue skies.


3.  No favorite meals to report this week ... but can I just say that the chicken strip meal at Dairy Queen is on sale this month?   We picked up some for Tuesday night since I had a meeting.  Having takeout enabled me to actually be early for the meeting.  I love me some early!

4.  Quote of the week:

Regardless of the mess of your life, if Christ is Lord of your life — then you are the celebrant out dancing in a pouring rain of grace! Because when it’s all done and finished, all is well, and Christ already said it was finished.



I recommend you go read the whole post. (Just click on the link.) You'll be glad you did.

5.  Cool breezes and blue skies:  Is there anything better?  I so love this time of year that God created.  What an awesome gift!  When my hubby and I go walking laps on the track at the park, when we are done, we like to sit and rest at a certain bench.  I can feel the breeze on my neck and gaze at the trees and grasses in the park.  I think to myself, "And heaven will be so much more than this!  I don't see how it could be, but it will be. I have so much to look forward to as a child of God."  Gratitude wells up in my spirit!

This is a great world our Father created for us!  I hope you each go out this week and savor it!



If you'd like to share your weekly highlights, link up at Susanne's blog, Living to Tell the Story.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Writer's Workshop: 10 Things I Miss


10.  When I am alone, I never have to worry about what time I need to leave to go somewhere.  I decide to go somewhere, I gather up my purse (and sometimes, one of my various tote bags) and leave. Then I come back and get my phone and leave again.  Simple.  Kids came along, and then you had to search for a missing shoe before leaving the house. Every. Single. Time.

9.  When I am alone, I never have to find my stuff.  It is just where I left it.  I don't worry about someone moving it because they thought I was done with it. Conversely, I don't have to worry about someone taking it, because they thought I "didn't want it anymore."

8.  When I am alone, I can eat whatever time I want.  If I am involved in a project, I don't have to stop when I hear someone whine "I'm hungry." 

7.  When I am alone, there is always the Sound of Music that I like.  Or not.  Sometimes, silence is music.  Always, the television would be off unless I am actually watching television. I hate using the TV for background noise.

6.  When I am alone, there is no incessant yakking.  Enough said.

5.  When I am alone, I go to bed, I sleep and the house is quiet.  There is no partying that goes on the moment my head hits the pillow.  There is no home renovations or spring cleaning.  There is no smell of popcorn.  There are no dirty dishes in the sink when I awake.  (I am the only early-bird in my family.  I am wiped out by 9:30.  At midnight, the rest of my family comes alive.  This is when they love to watch movies and eat popcorn, whip up a batch of brownies, paint the living room or clean under the china cabinet.  Both my hubby and my kids work best at night while I am gently snoring away in dreamland. ... I said "gently snoring"  ... )

4.  When I am alone, it's always my turn for the bathroom.  When nature calls, I answer it right away. No more "holding it in" until I explode.  I can take baths for as long as I want to soak without people pounding on the door, calling "M--oooo--oo--m" or the baby wiggling her fingers under the door. I don't have to walk into a bathroom that has been turned into a sauna by my teenager who loves to take hot showers whilst shaving every inch of her body.  (Sorry if that's TMI).

3.  When I am alone, there is always enough toilet paper.  And a roll of it is always on the hanger - hung  in the right direction ...

2.  When I am alone, I never hear the dreaded question, "What's for Dinner?"   I hate that question.  No matter what the answer is, someone in my picky family is not going to like it.

1.  And the number 1 thing I miss about being alone is that I never have to yell ask, "Who drank the last of the tea?"  It really gets my goat to come home anticipating pouring myself a nice glass of iced sweet tea and picking up the tea pitcher and finding it EMPTY.  Not only that, but no teabags have been put on to brew!

storageexperts.co.uk

This was a fun exercise for me since it was a trip down memory lane. I'm actually an empty-nester now, and I would say these petty little aggravations don't happen anymore ... except my hubby still does these things ... well, except for wiggling his fingers under the door!








This post was written in response to prompt #3 "List the top 10 things you miss about being alone" at Mama Kat's Writer's Workshop. If you'd like to link up, visit her at her blog.



Tea Talk - 04.26.12



1.  I'm having my usual Irish Breakfast Tea in another teacup that I found at the antique mall in Monticello, Arkansas.  (I found FIVE different teacups that day.)  I love the colors in this cup and saucer.



2. I'm feeling happy and content. I am blessed!

3. On my mind .... thoughts of life and eternity.  This week, for some reason, I have been pondering the meaning of life and the realization that life is a proving ground for eternity.  What choices we make here have eternal consequences.

4.  A quotation to encourage:

When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and could say, 'I used everything you gave me'.
Erma Bombeck

I love this!  I think God would be pleased if we all use the talents He's given us.  Sometimes it takes us a lifetime to discover what they are ....but as long as you are alive, He has something for you to do!


Tea Talk is a meme hosted by Ruth at Celebrate Friendship.

















Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Only One Eternity

I've heard it said,  "You've only one life, live it to the max!" But I say, "You've only one eternity, choose wisely."

I'm not saying the life we live here is not important.  It most definitely is. Life is a gift and Jesus Himself said that He came so that we could live it abundantly.

However, I think we view our life here as the be-all and end-all of our existence.  In reality, our life here is a stepping stone to eternity. In light of eternity, our 70 or so years of earthly existence are just a blip on the timeline of our life.

God says:

"What is the nature of your life? You are [really] but a wisp of vapor (a puff of smoke, a mist) that is visible for a little while and then disappears [into thin air]." James 4:14 AMP

It's a sobering thought to think that what we do in our few years of life determines how eternity goes!

Of course the biggest life-choice we make will be with whom we will spend our eternity. Will you spend it with the God who created you, and then having made you, He loved you so much He couldn't bear to see you destroyed by sin.  He gave His own life to redeem you and make you His own child so that you could inherit Heaven.

Or will you throw His gift back in His face and go your own way?

Once you've determined to "cast your lot with the Lord's people,"  (I love that phrase - I found it in a 1928 obituary.) do you realize that you can have a part in determining what your eternity looks like?

“Don’t store up treasures here on earth, where moths eat them and rust destroys them, and where thieves break in and steal.  Store your treasures in heaven, where moths and rust cannot destroy, and thieves do not break in and steal.  Wherever your treasure is, there the desires of your heart will also be." Matthew 6:19-21 NLT

This whole section of the Bible talks about not being so concerned with everyday life but admonishes us to seek the kingdom of God first and He will give us everything we need.

Our focus should be on Him and the rest of our life - the life that begins the moment we step out of our body.

I love this illustration that I heard somewhere years ago.

There are three stages of life.  The first stage is our time in the womb.  How we love being in that warm safe cocoon with our every need supplied by our mother!  It's a wonderful place:  warm, comfortable, dark, hearing the comforting murmur of our mother, swimming in amniotic fluid that is the perfect environment for us. But then, a terrible thing happens.  The walls of our safe little abode start squeezing us out into a very tight place.  Oh, the struggle of getting out of that birth canal!  We are sure it's going to be the death of us.

Yet, when we are birthed into that second stage of life, it's even more wonderful.  Sight! Sound! Color! Taste! We can actually see and experience our mother's loving arms. As we grow and develop, life shows us so many wonderful things.  No more restrictions such as existed in that little womb where we once lived.  Now we can stretch, move, dance and sing!

Later, we think another terrible thing happens to us.  Death has come to claim us and end life as we know it. But just as life outside the womb is so much more wonderful than inside the womb, the third stage, eternal life, for the child of God is infinitely more enjoyable! It will be so great, we can't even imagine it.


“No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined what God has prepared for those who love him.” 1 Corinthians 2:9

God has prepared a wonderful life for His children - both here on earth and in eternity.  Choose now to join Him in His plans!


How ironic that Bible Gateway's verse of the day goes so well with my post:

“Your life is a journey you must travel with a deep consciousness of God. It cost God plenty to get you out of that dead-end, empty-headed life you grew up in. He paid with Christ's sacred blood, you know. He died like an unblemished, sacrificial lamb. And this was no afterthought. Even though it has only lately—at the end of the ages—become public knowledge, God always knew he was going to do this for you. It's because of this sacrificed Messiah, whom God then raised from the dead and glorified, that you trust God, that you know you have a future in God.” 1 Peter 1:18-19 MSG

Only One Eternity was written to share with community.  I'm linking up with Shanda at On Your Heart Tuesday. You can link up at A Pause on the Path.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Daybook - 04.23.12



FOR TODAY, MONDAY, APRIL 23RD

Outside my window...a cool morning, only 46°.  I love days like this!  Cool mornings and evenings, with sunny pleasant afternoons, highs in upper 60s or low 70s.

I am thinking...of this slogan that popped into my mind:

You only have one eternity ...  choose wisely!

I am thankful...that I chose Jesus!  I have been living for Him since I was 14 years old.

In the kitchen... chicken and rice

I am wearing... gray slacks and sweater with a gray, brown and black print top.  It's cool enough I'm back to wearing my short black boots.

I am creating... a new way to organize the bottom of my pantry.

I am going... to get my nails done today.  I love doing that!

I am reading... nothing right now. I must go to the library and pick out something new.

I am hoping... for clarity on a situation I'm going through.

I am looking forward to... my next day off!

Around the house... things look pretty good right now ... well, except for the bottom of that pantry ...

I am pondering... Psalm 11

A favorite quote for today...

The best way out is always through.
Robert Frost

One of my favorite things...azalea bushes.  They're gorgeous right now but they won't last much longer.

A few plans for the rest of the week: board meeting tomorrow night, worship team practice Saturday, blogging and surfing in between!

A peek into my day...


The path I walk after work.



Daybooking is a concept created by Peggy Hostetler.  You can link up at her site, The Simple Woman's Daybook.











Friday, April 20, 2012

FFF-April Blessings


I've had a beautiful week!  I hope you did as well.  On Fridays, I like to join a group of bloggers that focus on the positive things that happened in their week.

1.  We visited a site that I have written about before - The Bald Knob Cross of Peace.  (Click on the link to read about this wonderful landmark.) This time, we got there just before sunset. (Is it just me, or is late afternoon / early dusk some of the best times to take photos?)


Something new - a bench where you can sit and look over the hills.  If I'd been alone, I would have sat there a long time and communed with God.  It seems the perfect setting for a heart-to-heart with the Creator.


This field in front of the cross makes me think of the movie, "Sound of Music."  Can't you just see Maria dancing through the grass with her hands held high and singing, "The hills are alive with the sound of music?"


Here is the cross at dusk.  I was trying to capture the infamous "blue hour."  You can't tell, but there is an American flag in front of the cross.


2.  Another recent favorite highlight is time spent with my kids.  They are the best gifts God has ever given me!


Elissa, our oldest.



Malia - our baby!


Janae, our middle daughter, and Daniel, our son-in-law.


3.  We also visited another favorite of our places to go - Giant City State Park.  We had dinner at the lodge.  It's a tradition that anytime we visit the park, we must climb the water tower.





Jim and I and our young couple.


An amazing cloud picture from the tower.


Janae and Daniel in front of one of my favorite photo props, The Gyrator.



4.  Ah, well, the week ended and it was back to work.  I had a wonderful week at work, productive yet not too busy.  I enjoyed some organizing projects and played some gorgeous piano music as I worked in the afternoons. (No one was in the office most days - I have to have music to keep alert.)

After work, Jim and I went walking the track built at our local park.


There were some yellow flowers growing alongside the path we walk on.  Wouldn't you know the day I brought my camera, the city had mown them down!  (Jim said they were weeds, but they were pretty yellow weeds, nonetheless.)


Of course, Jim always walks faster than me ... one day, I will forge ahead!




I started this post with a picture of a bench, so I thought I'd end my photos with this pic of a bench along our walking path.


5.  I also had a busy week with posting.  It's a toss-up whether my favorite post was Hosanna Days or Sammy and Belle.

Bonus:  I couldn't leave without quote of the week:

In our rushing, bulls in china shops, we break our own lives.
Haste makes waste. The hurry makes us hurt.
… Ann Voskamp, A Holy Experience “Top Time Management Secrets to Know” 4/19/12

May I suggest you click on the link and read the whole post?  Her words are like water to my soul - I need so much to quit the hurry. I think I am not alone in that ...



To those of you who hung in and read this long post, thank you!  If you would like to read other favorites, go to the blog, Living to Tell the Story, and meet our lovely FFF hostess, Susanne.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Sammy and Belle

Today, the prompt I am writing on from the Writer's Workshop is #3 - Tell us something you learned about a grandparent that surprised you. I'm writing about my paternal great-grandfather who left a great spiritual legacy. I was surprised to find an obituary telling of his conversion when I was tracing some genealogy.

Once there was a young man named Samuel.  When he was 26, he had a real experience with God.   He decided to “cast his lot in with the Lord’s people” and joined a little Missionary Baptist Church not far from where he lived.


Three years later, he married Arabelle.  He called her “Belle.” (My dad loved his Grandma Belle and wanted to acknowledge the great influence she had on him.  He named the little plot of land where I grew up for her. He was always going to put a sign up saying “Belle’s Acres” but never did …)

Cana Valley Farm in 2009


Sammy and Belle (that’s how I like to think of them) were hard workers. They had an apple orchard and some farm land in Illinois.  Their farm came to be known as Cana Valley Farm. Their two story white house stood on a bluff overlooking a big sturdy red barn and a good part of their farm.  The apple orchard was their main source of income.  At Christmas time, they often made gift baskets out of their beautiful apples and had them shipped via the railroad to Chicago and points north.


God blessed them with many children.  Some records show 11, other 9.  I believe it was 9 children plus two grandchildren they raised because of their daughter-in-law’s death. There were four boys, four girls who lived and one daughter who died as an infant. My grandmother was the youngest.


Sammy had a long life for those days.  He had worked so hard all his life.  He was almost 71 when he passed away after being sick for two years.  It is said he had seizures, some felt it was brought on by all the spraying of chemicals on his apple trees.  Pesticides were much more dangerous then.


When he died, my grandmother was barely 17.


Sammy’s obituary says, “This ends the history of one of God's noble men, a loving companion, a good father and neighbor. He has gone and many relatives and friends will miss him. But the thorn strewn paths [never?] again shall pierce his glory guided feet as he humbly vies around God's throne and his dear name repeat.”


Not too long ago, I visited his grave.  He is buried next to Belle in the churchyard at that little church he joined so many years ago. I have actually been to Cana Valley Farm and saw the house and the big red barn. (I took photos but they didn’t turn out so well…) I also met a lady who once used to live nearby and often visited Cana Valley to buy apples. (This would have been from my great grandmother, Belle, and her son.)  She said that she remembered everyone in the community thought our family were the nicest people.


My point is this:  Sammy was a godly man.  Since Grandma was only 17 when he passed, she didn’t share that many stories about him.  But we do have his obituary which tells of his conversion and his godly life. The other details I have shared were supplied by my dad.


My generation has been handed a godly legacy.  It is up to us what we do with it.  I don’t know why God chose to save people in my family when there are so many that have never even heard of Jesus. Why were we so blessed?


I have been blessed in that not only do I have Sammy’s legacy, but my maternal grandmother as well as my parents left a godly heritage. All of them demonstrated their beliefs by living the best they could for God.


No, they weren’t perfect.  But they trusted in God. I know they prayed for their children and grandchildren to know God.


Even so, it doesn’t matter what our parents did with their legacy.  What it comes down to is this:  what will each of us do with the godly heritage we’ve been given? We can only be responsible for what we ourselves do.


And for any of my readers who cannot say that they have a godly heritage, let me just say, let it start with you!  You be the one to be the example and live for Christ.  Pray for those who come after you.  You will never know, until eternity, what an impact your prayers may have on a future generation.


Perhaps you never "cast your lot in with the Lord's people."  It is simple to do - recognize your need of God's mercy.  None of us are perfect and we have missed the mark in so many ways.  If you believe, like I do, that Jesus gave His life for our sins, rose from the dead, and lives to extend grace and mercy to everyone that wants it, then just talk to Him about it.  He wants you just the way you are right now!



This post was written in community with Writer's Workshop.  You can link up here.

Kitchen Essentials (A Repost)

One of the blogs I love to frequent is Kate's Centsational Girl.  She is having a Favorite Kitchen Gadgets Link Party this week.

I do love me some kitchen gadgets.  I've been known to drive miles just to visit a kitchen shop.  Pampered Chef is my friend.

I've been blogging since May of 2008 and have shared a lot of my interests over the years, and luckily, I have found a post that I did in 2009 for Works for Me Wednesdays that features kitchen gadgets. 

Without further adieu, here is my post with the essential tools needed if you like to bake: 


I was 20 when I got married and established my own kitchen. At that point in life, I knew how to make 4 items: banana chiffon cake, hamburgers, homemade pizza using a crust mix, and Texas Rice Casserole -- and my hubby hated dishes with rice in them!


I had a lot to learn ...


Over the years, I have learned a lot about cooking and what is needed in a kitchen. I believe that just as a carpenter or mechanic requires good tools to do his job, so should a homemaker have the tools she needs.

Therefore, I have decided to compile a list of what every homemaker needs in her kitchen. (Perhaps someday my daughters will need this list!)


Today, we'll review what I think every kitchen needs for baking:

First and foremost, you need a baking stone - preferably more than one. A lot of the tools I have are Pampered Chef, but I must confess that I own three baking stones, two are Pampered Chef, the other is not. I totally love baking stones and use them several times a week. They're great for pizza, cookies, biscuits and anything you would like to have a crispy, browned crust. Eggrolls turn out great on a baking stone!

Wonder Cup! I think Pampered Chef has renamed it something else now, but it is a measuring cup that you can measure shortening or peanut butter in and then push it out in one clean swoop. If you bake much, you'll love the Wonder Cup.


Next, you need several sets of measuring cups and measuring spoons. For instance, when you make a cake, you use up several measuring cups making the batter. Later, you'll have to wash everything up when it's time to make the frosting if you don't have extra sets. You can purchase extra of these items at the Dollar Tree. I recommend getting stainless steel, though, because I had an unfortunate experience once of having my favorite 1/4 C measuring cup that was made of plastic fall during a dishwashing cycle onto the heating element.


A glass measuring cup with a spout for liquids, preferably microwavable. For years, I just used the same measuring cup for solids as liquids. Then I got a glass measuring cup and it made all the difference!


A good rubber spatula - again I recommend Pampered Chef. You don't want a spatula that over time begins to crumble. Been there and done that. You need an assortment of sizes and don't forget to get one that is a flat on one side to scrape out jars. You want to get the last of that peanut butter!


ottogeneral.com

A full size apron. This is a must, unless you can look like Kelly Ripa in the kitchen. (Do you believe those commercials that have her whipping through the house looking like a million bucks?) I need an apron that covers my whole torso because I tend to get flour everywhere. I happen to have black aprons so that stains don't show. I have 4 of them so I never have an excuse to have a clean apron.


A second set of beaters for your mixer. I admit I don't have this yet, but I am going to purchase this soon. A fully equipped kitchen is a work of art that continually is evolving to meet your needs. Since I bake a lot of cakes, I feel a second set of beaters is essential. Who wants to stop and wash beaters before you can make icing?


A scoop for cookie-making. I'm talking about a scoop that has a lever that pushes all the goodness out into a ball of cookie dough. I have the medium Pampered Chef scoop, but would love the large one, too, for meatballs.


These are just some of the kitchen gadgets that I consider essential!

Tea Talk- 04.19.12


1. I'm having...Irish Breakfast tea in a cute cup that I found at an antique mall in Monticello, Arkansas.  I just paid 50¢ which pleases the bargain-hunter side of me very much!



2. I'm feeling....fine!  I'm in a good place right now.

3. On my mind....some projects I want to do around the house this Saturday.


4. A verse to encourage:

Every time we think of you, we thank God for you. Day and night you're in our prayers as we call to mind your work of faith, your labor of love, and your patience of hope in following our Master, Jesus Christ, before God our Father. It is clear to us, friends, that God not only loves you very much but also has put his hand on you for something special. 1 Thessalonian 1:2-4 (The Message)

Take heart!  Your work is noticed and God loves you and has planned something special with you in mind!


Tea Talk is a meme hosted by Ruth at Celebrate Friendship.  Go visit and be encouraged!

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Hosanna Days

The Easter season has already come and went.  Still, I am pondering nuggets of gold from Palm Sunday.


I love to picture the crowds when Jesus triumphantly entered Jerusalem that first Palm Sunday a couple thousand years ago. I feel like the excitement started as a small hum as a few people began calling out "Hosanna," and laying palm branches in the road before Jesus as He rode along on a donkey. Others picked up the refrain "Hosanna, Blessed is he that comes in the name of the Lord," until the sound swelled into a roar that the whole city heard.

The word "Hosanna" means "Oh, Save Us Now."

On that first Palm Sunday, the people were hoping for a deliverance from Roman rulers.  They didn't understand that Jesus came to bring spiritual deliverance, not a physical deliverance at that time.

Over two thousand years later, I find that I need saving. Of course, I need salvation. I cannot earn favor with God.  I cannot earn eternal life.  I am a sinner who wants to repent. I must trust in Christ, and believe on His name.

But in addition to that, I need to be saved from myself. I am my own worst enemy.

Most of the time, I know what I should do.  For example, Matthew 28:41 tells me, “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” I know I need to ever be in a vigilant state and to pray that I won't fall.  But, I'm lazy or I grow complacent and think, " I've been doing so well, I don't have to worry about falling." Beware! Thinking you won't fall is an invitation to disaster.

I know I need to keep my thoughts on good, true, lovely and pure things. [See Philippians 4:8] Yet, it is so easy to fall in the trap of watching or reading the news and start dwelling on all the things that is wrong in my world.  Pretty soon, I'm depressed!

I know I need to rest. In fact, God thinks rest is so important, He set aside a whole day for resting. Instead, I over-commit and over-book myself to where there is little time to just "be."  Sometimes, the most creative ideas come when you are doing nothing.  If your mind is jammed-full of thoughts, how can there be room for inspiration?

I think the next time I mess up, I'm just going to call "Hosanna!" Please save me now! 

In fact, I'm sure there are going to be "Hosanna Days," days where I mess up so totally, my only hope would be a Savior who will take my burdens in exchange for His.  Because His burden is light.

“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” Matthew 11:28-31 NIV



I'm writing in community with Michelle at Graceful,

and,



and

Monday, April 16, 2012

Daybook-04.16.12


FOR TODAY, MONDAY, APRIL 16


Outside my window
...overcast skies and 57°

I am thinking
... of how well our Singspiration went at our church this past Sunday.  We had a good attendance and people really worshiped during the music.  I'm also thankful for the song, "For the Life of Me," that Florence and I sang as a duet went okay.  I was worried because we did not have too much time to practice it.

I am thankful...for the gift of enthusiasm.  I am glad God made me an enthusiastic person.  Life is awesome, thrilling, sometimes scary, but should never be hum-drum. We are only here for a short time - make the most of it!

In the kitchen...broiled pork steak

I am wearing...black tank dress, turquoise shrug.

I am looking forward to... our next road trip.  I love going to see the scenery that God made.

I am learning ... to wait on things ...

Around the house... we are thinking of replacing our flood-damaged hibiscus bush with a knock-out rose bush.  I'm excited to think I may have lots of roses to use in bouquets in the near future.  In our area, knock-out roses seem to do really well and bloom continually up until frost.

I am pondering...the brevity of life.  A church member just called announcing the death of her husband.  She is the same age as I am.  It's sad to think that already she is a widow.  How quickly life passes for some!  It's just another reminder of how all of us need to be ready to face eternity.

A favorite quote for today...


It isn’t that technology is bad or even that we’re sinful, fallen people. It’s the serpentine forces from the Garden, always seducing to other worlds, worlds that seem better than ours. It’s always the war of the worlds. Virtual reality may seemingly offer the holy grail, but it’s our physical reality that is the holy ground.
… AnnVoskamp, Holy Experience, sharing at momheart.org (Go here if you want to read the whole post.)

It's so true, we always think someone else's life appears better than ours.  We don't trust God that He has us exactly where He wants us and where we will be the most effective.

One of my favorite things...color!  I am noticing since Spring has arrived how much I enjoy color.  When the trees are dead looking brown sticks, it is so depressing.  As soon as they don leaves (or even better, blooms) I feel happier looking at them.  I seem to be always searching for blooming flowers and appreciating their beauty.  I also enjoy the beautiful blue skies of spring and the sunlight that seems so much more prevalent this time of year.  God made such a beautiful world and I'm so thankful for it.

A few plans for the rest of the week: board meeting, hair salon visit, hopefully some organizing this weekend.

A peek into my day...Work, then walking the track with my hubby, dinner, dishes, then relaxing - or maybe working on board meeting stuff.
 




Love this photo of a butterfly, just "hanging around."  This was taken at Cane Creek State Park in Arkansas.


The daybook is a concept created by Peggy Hostetler.  Check it out at The Simple Woman's Daybook.