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Archive for the ‘For Your Edification’ Category

Yesterday I spoke to a small gathering of ladies in our church.  Christians and Books–  the Importance of the Written Word.  (And then I did book reviews on the four books I mentioned in my last post.)  I shared a few  ideas and tried to make the case for reading over other less worthy uses of our time.    One of which was that if a person would spend only fifteen minutes per day reading, that would calculate into twenty books per year or one-thousand books in a lifetime.  If we could only tear ourselves away from the darn television.

We are now living in a generation who would like a fit body,
but are quite content with a fat mind.

~Paul Guiness

Still–young moms, myself included, sometimes have trouble eeking out even a scant fifteen minutes a day.   One mom said to me, "The only books I get to read each are Dr. Seuss."  And I can relate to that.  I’m pretty sure that I have I am a Bunny memorized.  Seriously.  (Hi.  I am a bunny. My name is Nicholas. I live in a hollow tree.  Would you like for me to continue??) 

So, the number one question that I got hit with after I gave my talk yesterday was:  "How do you find time to read so many books?"    Mostly at night, in the ten minutes between the time my head hits the pillow and before I fall asleep.  But when I got home, I really got to thinking about my reading habits and how I plow through books like I do.  I came up with a little list and here it is.  Don’t laugh at some of my suggestions.  After all, a mom’s got to do what a mom’s got to do.

1.  At night before I fall asleep.  But I already told you that.
2.  For at least 10 minutes while I’m in the bathtub each morning.  Everyone assumes I’m bathing and no one interrupts me.
3.  I keep a book on the back of the toilet.  Again–  everyone assumes…
4.  I always take a book in the car with me.  If I am picking a child up from an activity, I inevitably have to wait for him or her for at least five minutes.   If we’re driving into the city, sometimes Spencer will ask for me to read aloud to him.  Then we get the double blessing of being able to discuss what I’m reading!  (Sometimes it’s one of his books I read to him.)  Family trips are a great time to take along a book.  We will often read fiction on a family trip.
5.  Doctor’s offices.  Enough said.

Basically, as you can see from the list, nearly all of my reading time is "stolen time."  I don’t ever sit around during the day and read.  Destructo-baby leaves no time for sitting on one’s haunches.  Besides, there’s homeschooling and laundry to do.  You know the routine.  But even in this busy season of life, I desire to grow and stretch my mind.  And so I take what I can get.  And you should too.

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Inspired

Our family went on a little overnight excursion this weekend. We had parent-teacher conferences up at the school on Thursday and then school was let out for
Friday– so we surprised the kids by having the van all packed up and whisking them away right after meeting with their teachers and picking up their grade cards. Nothing does the heart good like a little family bonding over an indoor pool and Domino’s pizza delivered to your hotel room.

And, of course, a history lesson. No field trip family trip would be complete
without a little education. It’s just the Ray Way.

Recently, Spencer heard that Winston Churchill’s library was being housed at the nearby Westminster College.   Since he had just finished the second volume
of The Last Lion, (a Christmas gift purchased for him by his darling wife,) it
seemed only fitting to follow up on the reading with a little visit to his library. We didn’t know what a treat we were in for. When we got there today, we
discovered not only a library, but a 4-million dollar museum on his life and
accomplishments
.  What was meant to be a little one hour stint, turned into a three hour perusal of rooms and rooms of letters, memoirs and videos they had on file there.

 I loved learning more about the life of Winston Churchill.  He lived his life with such purpose and devotion for the good of Britain and for the world. I don’t even know if he was a Christian or not– (I read today that he rarely went to church.  When he was approached about this, he said he was not a “pillar of the church”
but a “buttress.”  He supported it from the outside.)
But his life story is amazing and it inspired me to work as hard for the Kingdom of God as Churchill did for Britain
and for freedom around the world.

Lately, our family has been viewing the Don’t Waste Your Life videos for our family devotions and as I was thinking on Churchill today,
I kept hearing Piper’s voice saying:

Only one life, ‘twill soon be past
Only what’s done for Christ will last.

Although I am just the wife of small-town, Baptist preacher, and not the wife of a world famous Prime Minister who helped defeat a tyrannical monster– I felt privileged today to be working for the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. With the cross of Christ before me and the world behind me, I will continue to engage in the battle against Satan, the ultimate tyrannical monster.

And hopefully, by God’s grace,  I won’t WASTE MY LIFE.

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For the last few years, I’ve used the Bible reading plan in the back of my MacArthur Study Bible.  But recently, I’ve found a new plan that I like better.  It’s broken up into four daily readings (Old Testament, Psalms, and 2 New Testament Readings.)  You can print it out here and cut the printed page into four bookmarks–one for each section in your Bible.

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Safety 1st???

If you’re in the market for a carseat, DO NOT buy one from Safety 1st.  We purchased this one for our Jane about a year ago.  At the age of 19 months, Jane could UNBUCKLE HERSELF  by pushing the little button the harness strap of her Safety 1st carseat. 

I have emailed Safety 1st twice now but they have not even granted me the courtesy of a reply.

So, in order to really pick up the Google traffic, let me just say:

Don’t buy from Safety 1st.
Don’t buy from Safety 1st.
Don’t buy from Safety 1st.
Don’t buy from Safety 1st.
Don’t buy from Safety 1st.

Why?   Because Safety 1st doesn’t put safety, 1st.

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Thoughts Over Tea

Every Tuesday afternoon after knitting class, Anna and I stop at the

Cyber Stop to get a Krispy Kreme donut and a drink.   (The Cyber Stop is
a full-service gas station featuring FREE wireless?!? I’m not sure WHO
it is that has time to surf the web while they’re filling up.)

Anyway.

Annaalways gets a soda and I get my all time favorite convenience-store drink: Lipton sweet ice-tea.  I love that stuff.!  Totally addicted.    When I drink it, I’m always thrown back to southern Arkansas where the folks really know how to make it.    Sometimes I think of Father Tim and Cynthia from my favorite books: The Mitford Series.  (Those books are just like old friends to me and I’ve read the entire
series no less than three times.)   Jan Karon has also written the Mitford Kitchen Reader that includes Father Tim’s Mother’s Tea recipe
(*see recipe & Kitchen Reader excerpt below)   Mmm. MMM!

Funny that I love sweet tea so much.   I grew up drinking the instant
kind and it never had sugar mixed in! I always drank it without batting
an eye until I met my southern-boy husband.   The first time he ever
tasted the instant stuff he nearly puked. But of course, being the
genteel, southern boy that he is, he was always the picture of
graciousness and kindness and never complained to his hostess future-mother-in-law.    However, after we got married, he sweetly informed me of a better way.    And of course, it was!   

When I grew up, I rejected the bitter, instant tea— but I didn’t reject everything
that my mother cooked.   She made a lot of things well and I still use
some of those recipes in my cooking today.   Her salmon patty recipe is
awesome and I still love her crock pot roast.   Today as I was drinking
the tea, I thought of other things that I grew up with but later
rejected.

For instance, I grew up in a church that went crazy over the Bill
Gothard movement.   At the time, I was growing spiritually like a weed.   I
was very zealous in my love for the Lord (as I hope that I still am)
and embraced the movement completely because the people at my church
whom I admired the most embraced it.    As I grew and especially after I
met my husband, I began to see many things within that movement that
weren’t completely biblical and even harmful to true, healthy spiritual
growth.   I look back at those years and shake my head at some of the
things that I thought and believed.   Twenty years later, I’ve thrown out
a lot of those beliefs just as I’ve pitched the instant iced-tea.   No good.    Yuck. 
But what I don’t throw out is the love that I had for the Lord or the
zeal that I had to follow Him with my whole heart.   And (hopefully) I
don’t make fun of the people I encounter who are at that same sort of
spot in their own spiritual walk. I may try to introduce the “better
recipes,” but I don’t belittle these folks who are trying to live out
their love for the Lord in the best way that they know at the moment. 
Hopefully, I’ll be like my sweet husband when he was sitting at my
mother’s kitchen table. Kind and gracious.

Many of us were raised in a certain tradition or with certain ideologies.   Eventually though, we grow up, go to college or change churches and get exposed to opposing
thoughts and ideas.   This can be and often is a good thing.   As our thinking
is challenged, we start to dig into the Scriptures for ourselves and
develop independent, autonomous ideas.   Hopefully, though, we don’t
throw the baby out with the bath water.   And of course, we never reject
the one thing that should forever be our constant: God’s Word.   Just
some random thoughts I had today over a glass of iced-tea.   Cheers.

—————————————

*“Man alive! What’s this?”
“It’s my new iced tea recipe,” said his wife. “Do you like it?”
He raised his glass in a salute. “It’s the best I ever tasted. I didn’t
know you could do this.”
“I didn’t, either. I never knew how to make good iced tea. So, with our
parish party coming up, I asked the Lord to give me the perfect
recipe.”
“That’s the spirit!”
“Do you honestly like it?”
“I never tasted better!” he exclaimed, stealing no thunder from his
mother, whose tea represented the southern idea—heavy on sugar, and
blasted with the juice of fresh lemons.
“I woke up yesterday morning and was bursting with all these new ideas
about tea. It was very exciting.”
“Hmm,” he said, gulping draughts of the cold, fruity liquid. “Tropical.
Exotic.”
He swigged it down to the last drop. “Two thumbs up,” he said. “I’m not
sure everybody would understand where the recipe came from.
She shrugged. “If He gave William Blake those drawings, why couldn’t He
give me a simple tea recipe?”
“Good point. What’s in it?”
“I can’t tell you.”
“You can’t tell me?”
“No, darling, I’ve decided to do something very southern—which is to
possess at least one secret recipe.” She looked pleased with herself.
“But you can tell me.”
“Not on your life!”
“Why not? I’m your husband!”
“Some well-intentioned parishioner would yank it out of you just like
that.” She snapped her fingers.
“No!”
“Yes. And then I’d be in the same boat with poor Esther, whose
once-secret orange Marmalade cake recipe is circulating through Mitford
like a virus.”
“If that’s the way you feel,” he said, slightly miffed.
  -A New Song, Chapter nine


FATHER TIM’S MOTHER’S TEA

2 large lemons

3 Lipton family-size teabags, tags removed

1 ¼ cups granulated sugar

Squeeze the lemons into a small bowl, chill the juice, and reserve
the skins. Place the teabags and reserved lemon hulls into a large
pottery or glass pitcher and our in 2 cups of cold water. Bring a
kettle with 4 cups water to a rolling boil. Pour the boiling water over
the teabags and cover the pitcher with a small plate. Steep for 10
minutes, then remove the teabags and lemon skins. Add the sugar and
lemon juice and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Add 3 more cups of
cold water. Serve over ice and garnished with a fresh lemon slice.  Enjoy!

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Bible Saturated

Today I was privileged to attend a mini-conference on teaching children’s Sunday School at our church.  We bought the DVD of the Bethlehem Baptist’s Children’s Conference and viewed them together in our fellowship hall.  Oh, what a heart for God those people have.  I was so inspired both as a Sunday School teacher and as a parent to be more Bible-saturated.  Pastor David Michael used an object lesson (since all good children’s teachers use object lessons, right?)  He took a sponge and dipped it in a pail of water.   As he raised it out of the bucket, it was so saturated with water that it was dripping back into the bucket.  He said, "This is how our lives should be–so saturated with the Word of God that we can’t help but ooze and drip with it."

He left us with this Word: 

Weak doctrine = Weak faith = Weak Christians

So read the Word, sisters.  Read it, memorize it, talk about it, think about it, obey it.

Drip with it.

Sponge

Give ear, O my people, to my law; which we have heard and known…And our fathers have told us.
We will not hide them from their children, Telling to the generation to come the praises of the LORD, And His strength and His wonderful works that He has done.   ~Psalm 78:3-4

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Appearances

The first meal I ever made for my new husband was deep-fried chicken.  The only thing I knew how to cook before we were married was scrambled eggs, chocolate chip cookies and a few other things on about that same skill level.  But I was determined to fry us up a pan of chicken that would rival the Colonel’s and so I reached for my Fannie Farmer Cookbook and went to work.

I slaved away all afternoon and when Spencer walked in the door from a long day of classes, I presented to him a beautiful platter of golden, pan-fried chicken with homemade mashed potatoes and chicken gravy.  The kitchen was  a disaster, but the table looked great!   He was impressed!   Being a boy who grew up eating all kinds of delicious dishes cooked by his southern-belle mama, he had worried that I might not provide the kind of meals to which he had grown accustomed.   The beautiful plate of chicken put his worries to rest.

He sat down, praised the beautifully prepared table and blessed the food.   Next, we took our napkins, covered our laps and picked up our forks to “dig in.”  That’s when I realized I had missed one tiny little detail.  The recipe had expressly said to COVER the chicken with a lid while it fried in the grease for twenty minutes.  Somehow, though,  I had missed that little instruction and so while it fried up to be beautiful and  golden on the outside, on the inside it was a bloody mess.

Things weren’t what they appeared.

Things aren’t always what they appear to be, are they?   Earlier this evening, I was peeling a small bowl of peaches reserved for a pie I that intend to bake for weekend company.  (My culinary skills have come a long way since the plate of nasty chicken.)  Those peaches were so ripe and juicy and just pie perfect, really.  As I got to the bottom of the peach pile, I picked up what looked like a beautiful one and  slipped my knife across the fuzzy peel.  It was only after I got into the meat of the peach that I realized it had gone bad–completely rancid.  I threw it out and  reached for another. 

Things weren’t  as they appeared.

How about you?  Are you what you appear to be?   Sometimes we’re tempted to act like something we’re not, aren’t we?  We’re tempted to be a certain way around “the preacher” or “that certain family.”  Sometimes we forget that God is never fooled no matter who else we’re fooling because He can look on our heart.

I may not be everything you expect me to be–but I do try to be the real deal. 

An open book.

Genuine.   

My kids aren’t perfect.  My marriage isn’t perfect.   My life isn’t perfect.   Did you know that I forgot to take my Bible to church last Sunday?  (And I’m the pastor’s wife for crying out loud!)  I just try to live out my faith and my passion for God in the best way I that I know, and then I try to make sure that you know WHO IT IS to whom I turn  when I’m struggling.  I don’t ever want to “fake it” because if you think my life is picture perfect, my life isn’t a true picture of grace is it?

So–don’t “fake it ’til you make it.”  Ask God to fill your heart with genuine love and passion for Him and ask the Body of Christ for help in the process. 

“Do not look at his appearance or at his physical stature, because I have refused him. For the LORD does not see as man sees; for man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.”      I Samuel 16:7

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Well, I do.  But this morning, the Scriptures just breathed  faith and encouragment into my heart.

NEED FAITH?
"[It is] …God who gives faith to the dead and calls those things which do not exist AS THOUGH THEY DID!"
~Romans 4:17

NEED ENCOURAGMENT?
"Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man to whom the Lord does not impute sin."
~Romans 4:7

I don’t know about you, but as a sinner who sometimes lacks faith–it’s good to know that I believe in a God who can call things into existence things which do not exist.  And it’s good to know I’m blessed because I’m forgiven!

If you’re down, sister, LOOK UP!   And be encouraged.

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