Pope Leo X dubbed Martin Luther a "wild boar" -- loose in the Lord's vineyard. Luther opposed bad doctrine and called the Church to biblical orthodoxy. That's how we came up with the name. I post things that interest me and family updates here...
Friday, December 24, 2010
Dancing Dan
I saw Dancing Dan holding a sign and dancing this morning at 8:30am. Yes, Christmas Eve. He was working. And guess what he was advertising? Himself. His sign said "Dancing Dan" and his phone number. Guess Dan is looking for work. On Christmas Eve.
Dan may be the hardest working guy in Sacramento. He's the best sign dancer on the planet and does his job with enthusiasm, joy, commitment, and integrity. If I ever had anything to sell, Dan would get my first advertising dollars.
Duran Central had an enlightening post this week about the recession in California and our need to be compassionate with those who are struggling to find work (the blog author and I had a bit of a back and forth in the comments). In order to get my compassion I want to see you working at least as hard as Dan.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
Getting mobile
She's just too cute not to share...having mastered sitting up she's now moving on to rolling and scooting.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Church work
I don't think of myself as unemployed. I always love filling out a form that asks for my occupation. Usually I put down "homemaker." My second job is churchman - member of a church. After my family (and *honesty* myself) I spend my time, energy and thoughts on the things of the church and the people of the church. One of my greatest desires in becoming a wife and a mother was to have more time to study the Bible, theology, and serve the church. (Insert laughter here)
So that's the background to explain why I'm sharing this link. It's a case study-type post about a successful church planting strategy. I really liked this part:
And while we're on the subject of churchmanship, check out this list of appropriate work for women in the church. When you've done all these and still have any time left over, maybe then you can complain about the few roles withheld. From John Piper:
Now off to cook dinner!!!
So that's the background to explain why I'm sharing this link. It's a case study-type post about a successful church planting strategy. I really liked this part:
The spirit of loving relationship and real friendship is trust-building. Relationships are not begun by first of all trying to peg/categorize/scrutinize a newcomer. The church body acts as a family, with a warm and winsome character. They love and know each other, and they want to love and know newcomers. At the same time, these churches do not ignore or excuse sin. Necessary exhortation, rebuke, and warning take place, but in the context of this evident, existing relationship of Christian love. Part of the vision is maintaining the life of community and fellowship by sending and planting before the congregation grows so large that members become practically unknown to each other and visitors become invisible.I like this model much more than the nameless, consumer-focussed mega-church one. How 'bout you?
And while we're on the subject of churchmanship, check out this list of appropriate work for women in the church. When you've done all these and still have any time left over, maybe then you can complain about the few roles withheld. From John Piper:
Ministries to the handicapped
- hearing impaired
- blind
- lame
- retarded
Ministries to the sick:
- nursing
- physician
- hospice care—cancer, AIDS, etc.
- community health
Ministries to the socially estranged:
- emotionally impaired
- recovering alcoholics
- recovering drug users
- escaping prostitutes
- abused children, women
- runaways, problem children
- orphans
Prison ministries:
- women's prisons!
- families of prisoners
- rehabilitation to society
Ministries to youth:
- teaching
- sponsoring
- open houses and recreation
- outings and trips
- counseling
- academic assistance
Sports ministries:
- neighborhood teams
- church teams
Therapeutic counseling:
- independent
- church based
- institutional
Audio visual ministries:
- composition
- design
- production
- distribution
Writing ministries:
- free lance
- curriculum development
- fiction
- non-fiction
- editing
- institutional communications
- journalistic skills for publications
Teaching ministries:
- Sunday school: children, youth, students, women
- grade school
- high school
- college
Music ministries:
- composition
- training
- performance
- voice
- choir
- instrumentalist
Evangelistic ministries:
- personal witnessing
- Navigators
- Home Bible Studies
- outreach to children
- Visitation teams
- Counseling at meetings
- Billy Graham phone bank
Radio and TV ministries:
- technical assistance
- writing
- announcing
- producing
Theater and drama ministries:
- acting
- directing
- writing
- scheduling
Social ministries:
- literacy
- pro-life
- pro-decency
- housing
- safety
- beautification
Pastoral care assistance:
- visitation
- newcomer welcoming and assistance
- hospitality
- food and clothing and transportation
Prayer ministries:
- praying!!!
- mobilizing for major Concerts of Prayer
- helping with small groups of prayer
- coordinating prayer chains
- promoting prayer days and weeks and vigils
Missions:
- all of the above across cultures
Support ministries:
- countless jobs that undergird major ministries
Now off to cook dinner!!!
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Baby needs a nap
Is 5:30pm too early for bed time?
Friday, November 12, 2010
Children: Blessing or Burden?
If you don't read Amy, you should.
Amy shared a link to this blog post a while back and I was encouraged by it. Maybe you will be too?
_______________________________________________
http://yes-theyre-all-ours.blogspot.com/2010/10/children-blessing-or-burden.html
Recently, a sweet young mother emailed me for encouragement, as she and her husband are in the early stages of trusting God for the number of children in their family. This precious young mom has three little children, very close together, and is already receiving an abundance of negative feedback about her "large family." Unfortunately, most of the comments are from family and friends.
We live in an era when children are definitely thought of as a Burden, rather than a Blessing, and couples who dare to have more than two of these "hindrances" are considered to be ignorant, foolish, and totally out of touch with reality. Our society considers children to be inconvenient, a nuisance, unruly, expensive, dispensable, and a threat to an already over-populated world.
Would you agree??? What is your view of children??
Frequently, even as Christians, we have the same view as the secular world around us. We no longer realize the value of a child. We've been indoctrinated into believing that the world is over-populated. In additon, our own experience seems to validate the fact that children are sometimes inconvenient, irritating, expensive, unruly and annoying!!!
However, the Bible teaches that children are a Blessing and a Reward! That means, it is our duty to adjust our thinking to align with what the Scripture says, not to reinterpret Scripture to match what the world says.
"Lo, children are an heritage of the LORD: and the fruit of the womb is his reward." -- Psalm 127:3.
So, why don't we view children as a Blessing??
The main problem is that we look at children from a temporal, earthly perspective. It is easy to see that children cost us money (sometimes lots of it!), get sick at the most inconvenient times, embarrass us in front of our friends, arrive in this world with their nights and days mixed up (and often revert to those primitive behaviors in their teen years!), and require years of education, training and sacrifice. So, how is that a blessing again??? ;)
The key to understanding the blessing of children is to develop an eternal, spiritual perspective. God sees children as as blessing because they advance His kingdom. The Psalmist compares children to arrows in the hand of a warrior. Scripture teaches that we are in a spiritual battle, and our children are our weapons, who will one day wage war against the enemy and his strongholds. (Refer to Ephesians 6:10-18.)
"As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man; so are children of the youth. Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them: they shall not be ashamed, but they shall speak with the enemies in the gate." -- Psalm 127:4-5
A second reason that children are a blessing is that they force us to grow up and to develop character. It is a baby that causes a carefree girl to become a caring, nurturing woman and an irresponsible lad to be transformed into a dependable man. Not that this metamorphosis is automatic or guaranteed, but being entrusted with the care and destiny of a living soul is such a sobering responsibility that many have been transformed by it. Also, we are so prone to self-centeredness, and it is our children that cause us to get over ourselves and to learn the blessing of self-sacrifice. As one mother of a large family confided to me many years ago, "With the birth of each new baby, I die to myself a little bit more."
And of course, children are a blessing to us just because they bring us pleasure, joy, and even entertainment! We enjoy their cute antics and clever little sayings and take much pride in their accomplishments. We enjoy being with them and doing things to bless them. We even take pleasure in the special way they say, Mommy or Daddy! If we will look a little deeper, we will see that this pictures the relationship that our Heavenly Father desires to have with us. He enjoys spending time with us, in giving us good gifts (Matthew 7:11), and He loves to hear us cry out to Him, saying Abba Father!
So, if we believe that children are a blessing, why don't we want more of them???
A wise man once said -- "The Bible calls debt a curse and children a blessing; but in our culture, we apply for a curse and reject blessings. Something is wrong with this picture."
Back to the young mother I was corresponding with. She was worried about family members that were already upset about the number of children they had and would not welcome the news of another pregnancy. I was transported back about 21 years (!!) when we announced that we were expecting our third child. I remember my mother-in-law being so distraught over the news. She just couldn't believe that we were going to have three children!!! Remembering how horrified she was at the thought of three grandchildren, I dreaded telling her about number four . . . and five . . . and well, I guess she got used to the announcements by the time we got down to number ten!!! ;)
But, this is what I really want to share in this post. Those same babies that my dear mother-in-law was so unhappy to learn I was expecting, were the very ones who drove her to the store, to the bank, to the pharmacy, to doctor appointments and hair appointments these last years. They also mowed her lawn, planted flowers, killed various pests for her (including setting mouse traps and catching and disposing of mice!), hung pictures for her, mopped her floors, helped her up when she fell . . . and even discovered her when she had breathed her last. And those babies that came on down the line, they were the ones who ministered cheer to her daily with their irresistibly cute antics, their childish stories, and their unconditional love. They may have seemed like a burden to her in the beginning, but they were a blessing to her in the end!!
The world sees children as a burden . . . . God sees children as a blessing to help share the burdens of life!
Amy shared a link to this blog post a while back and I was encouraged by it. Maybe you will be too?
_______________________________________________
http://yes-theyre-all-ours.blogspot.com/2010/10/children-blessing-or-burden.html
Recently, a sweet young mother emailed me for encouragement, as she and her husband are in the early stages of trusting God for the number of children in their family. This precious young mom has three little children, very close together, and is already receiving an abundance of negative feedback about her "large family." Unfortunately, most of the comments are from family and friends.
We live in an era when children are definitely thought of as a Burden, rather than a Blessing, and couples who dare to have more than two of these "hindrances" are considered to be ignorant, foolish, and totally out of touch with reality. Our society considers children to be inconvenient, a nuisance, unruly, expensive, dispensable, and a threat to an already over-populated world.
Would you agree??? What is your view of children??
Frequently, even as Christians, we have the same view as the secular world around us. We no longer realize the value of a child. We've been indoctrinated into believing that the world is over-populated. In additon, our own experience seems to validate the fact that children are sometimes inconvenient, irritating, expensive, unruly and annoying!!!
However, the Bible teaches that children are a Blessing and a Reward! That means, it is our duty to adjust our thinking to align with what the Scripture says, not to reinterpret Scripture to match what the world says.
"Lo, children are an heritage of the LORD: and the fruit of the womb is his reward." -- Psalm 127:3.
So, why don't we view children as a Blessing??
The main problem is that we look at children from a temporal, earthly perspective. It is easy to see that children cost us money (sometimes lots of it!), get sick at the most inconvenient times, embarrass us in front of our friends, arrive in this world with their nights and days mixed up (and often revert to those primitive behaviors in their teen years!), and require years of education, training and sacrifice. So, how is that a blessing again??? ;)
The key to understanding the blessing of children is to develop an eternal, spiritual perspective. God sees children as as blessing because they advance His kingdom. The Psalmist compares children to arrows in the hand of a warrior. Scripture teaches that we are in a spiritual battle, and our children are our weapons, who will one day wage war against the enemy and his strongholds. (Refer to Ephesians 6:10-18.)
"As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man; so are children of the youth. Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them: they shall not be ashamed, but they shall speak with the enemies in the gate." -- Psalm 127:4-5
A second reason that children are a blessing is that they force us to grow up and to develop character. It is a baby that causes a carefree girl to become a caring, nurturing woman and an irresponsible lad to be transformed into a dependable man. Not that this metamorphosis is automatic or guaranteed, but being entrusted with the care and destiny of a living soul is such a sobering responsibility that many have been transformed by it. Also, we are so prone to self-centeredness, and it is our children that cause us to get over ourselves and to learn the blessing of self-sacrifice. As one mother of a large family confided to me many years ago, "With the birth of each new baby, I die to myself a little bit more."
And of course, children are a blessing to us just because they bring us pleasure, joy, and even entertainment! We enjoy their cute antics and clever little sayings and take much pride in their accomplishments. We enjoy being with them and doing things to bless them. We even take pleasure in the special way they say, Mommy or Daddy! If we will look a little deeper, we will see that this pictures the relationship that our Heavenly Father desires to have with us. He enjoys spending time with us, in giving us good gifts (Matthew 7:11), and He loves to hear us cry out to Him, saying Abba Father!
So, if we believe that children are a blessing, why don't we want more of them???
A wise man once said -- "The Bible calls debt a curse and children a blessing; but in our culture, we apply for a curse and reject blessings. Something is wrong with this picture."
Back to the young mother I was corresponding with. She was worried about family members that were already upset about the number of children they had and would not welcome the news of another pregnancy. I was transported back about 21 years (!!) when we announced that we were expecting our third child. I remember my mother-in-law being so distraught over the news. She just couldn't believe that we were going to have three children!!! Remembering how horrified she was at the thought of three grandchildren, I dreaded telling her about number four . . . and five . . . and well, I guess she got used to the announcements by the time we got down to number ten!!! ;)
But, this is what I really want to share in this post. Those same babies that my dear mother-in-law was so unhappy to learn I was expecting, were the very ones who drove her to the store, to the bank, to the pharmacy, to doctor appointments and hair appointments these last years. They also mowed her lawn, planted flowers, killed various pests for her (including setting mouse traps and catching and disposing of mice!), hung pictures for her, mopped her floors, helped her up when she fell . . . and even discovered her when she had breathed her last. And those babies that came on down the line, they were the ones who ministered cheer to her daily with their irresistibly cute antics, their childish stories, and their unconditional love. They may have seemed like a burden to her in the beginning, but they were a blessing to her in the end!!
The world sees children as a burden . . . . God sees children as a blessing to help share the burdens of life!
Friday, October 29, 2010
Walk for Andy
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