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Ready to Go

If you get to go away on vacation this summer, you may find as we did, that that particular week seems to fly by!  I hate to discourage you before you even pack, but vacations don’t last!  **Sigh**

While away on our recent vacation, my husband and I would sit near the pool and read our Bible in the morning.  We were seated near the gate that led out to the beach; therefore, many people walked past us as we sat there with our Bibles and journals open and a pen ready. The response from the passersby was truly interesting. The believers were easy to spot. When they saw our Bible, their look would brighten. Many would step back to make a comment.

One such person was a dear lady probably in her 60’s. She walked up to me, a smile on her face, and asked, “What does the Word say today?”

“The Lord is so good” I said, and then I shared with her the truth that I had just read from the psalms.

Her response to me was – “Oh, as I was just walking along the shoreline and thinking about being here on vacation, the Lord brought to my mind that this time away is how life is. You come here on vacation and enjoy yourself, but then at the end of the week, it’s time to go home. That’s the way it’s going to be for all of us. We’re here now for just a short little while, then one day, it will be time to go home, and we all have to be ready.”

She’s so right. Our time on vacation went so quickly, and was wonderful, but then the time was ended and it was time to pack up and head home. When our life is done here, we are all headed somewhere – heaven or hell. Will you be ready to meet the Lord on that day? Where are you going, Friend? You can know for sure that heaven is your home by trusting Christ as your Savior. (Click here to read how you can know!)  The time is passing quickly – don’t delay!  Heaven will be far better than anything we’ve ever enjoyed on this earth – and it will never end!

See you in church!

With love,

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A Peek Inside the Parsonage

I guess this would technically be called, “A Peek Outside the Parsonage” because I want to show you something outside on my deck. Look at this cute chandelier-like light that I found for my umbrella table at Lowe’s this past week.  I love it! Ta-da!!!!
Without being lit it even makes the breakfast table pretty!
This picture’s a bit blurry, but here’s what it looks like at nighttime with the votives lit…
This was only $15!  I think it gives lots of bang for the price.  As much as we use our deck in the summertime, I know this will be used lots!  It screws together around the pole of the umbrella in a matter of minutes; easy enough for even me to put together! 
A really neat idea that I read about recently to add a little color to your umbrella table is to take a tube pan and place the umbrella through the tube part of the pan, then fill the pan with potting soil and plants.  I found a nice tube pan at a yard sale last weekend for $2, and after I get some drainage holes drilled in it, I’ll be adding it to my table. 
Here’s another pretty porch/deck picture that I love.  They used curtains for some privacy and also to filter light through.  Thanks to All You for this beautiful inspiration!  Who wouldn’t love to call this theirs?  I sure would!

What special touches have you added to your porch or deck?

Happy Summertime!

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Work that is Fleeting

We dusted the house yesterday; enough grime has accumulated to write in it today.  We mopped the floor Saturday; today we have the Oregon trail down the hall.  We wiped the fingerprints off the windows and appliances after lunch; by bedtime it looks like a fog has descended.  It never ends, does it?  We can work and work to keep things clean at home.

Proverbs 23:5 says,  Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not?  We try to grasp hold of things that are not lasting.  The verse goes on to say, that  riches certainly make themselves wings; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven. Riches fly away.  A clean house is fleeting also.  Beautiful clothes wear out.  A thin body wastes away eventually.  A gorgeous home can be swept away in a moment.  All these things can be gone in a moment.  We need to labor for that which is eternal instead.

Matthew Henry said, “Those that aim at great things fill their hands with business more than they can grasp, so that their life is both a perfect drudgery and a perpetual hurry.  What you have, be a master of it, and not a slave to it.”  It’s okay to have a clean house, but if we are a slave to it, we will be miserable. 

I can drive myself to distraction sometimes with trying to keep everything at home in perfect order.  It won’t happen with people living here!  We must live here.  We should all strive to be masters of our home and good stewards of it, but it can’t be our master.  I’m preaching to myself, here.  It’s more important that I am driven by the things that are eternal.  For, as Solomon said, this cleaning job will take wings and fly away.  Wow.  Instead of being filled with hurry and dread, I can work, then not get flustered when things get dirtied again.  With God’s help, I will strive to master my home, but not a slave to it.  How about you?

With love,

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What’s Cookin’ in the Parsonage?

Oh, sweet and blessed Summertime!  How I love it!  We eat as many meals as possible out on our deck before it gets too hot.  Sunday dinner was outside yesterday, thanks to the warming of the temperatures.  There was a lovely breeze that felt great when the sun got a bit hot. 

I invited my mother-in-law to join us for dinner.  My husband closed his eyes for this pic, so I sweetly cropped him.  =)

Eating outside is just so relaxing.  It was nice for a Sunday dinner.  My menu was:

Rice
French Peas
Country Biscuits
Cantaloupe
Apple Pockets with ice cream

I made another new dish from my new cookbook.  This one was called Honey Pineapple Chicken.  It was a dish for the crock pot – a terrific choice for Sunday meals.  I think the meat was a little overcooked, so I’ll adjust the cooking and temperature time a bit.  My crock pot cooks a bit fast, so I’ll probably only do 3 hours on low next time.  It was still good, thanks to the liquid added.  The pineapple mixture that’s poured over the chicken is pineapple sweetened with brown sugar and honey, also a little lemon juice and soy sauce.  It’s delicious over the rice that I served as a side dish!

To prepare the chicken for Sunday, I browned the chicken Saturday night and place it in a dish in the fridge.  I also mixed the pineapple mixture together Saturday night and refrigerated it, so all I had to do Sunday morning was put it all in the crock pot.

The dessert was also from the new cookbook.  They are wonderful and hard to believe that they only have 136 calories and 3g of fat!  It’s a little apple pie in a yeast dough.  The recipe makes 16, so I had plenty to store in the freezer.  Love that!  I figure if you’re saving fat and calories on the pie you can splurge a little and have a scoop of ice cream or frozen yogurt on it!  I served these warmed in the oven.  Yum!

To make French peas, place desired amount of peas in boiling water and boil briefly – a minute or two.  Drain liquid.  Salt and pepper the peas.  Add a couple tbl. onion, chopped fine, lettuce (about 1/2 cup), chopped fine and a tbl of butter.  These are very good and a nice change from ordinary peas!

Have you been eating outdoors?  What’s been cooking in your kitchen this week?

With love,

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His Word in My Heart

In the middle of June last year I listened to Revive Our Hearts radio broadcast and I heard a woman, Janet Pope, the author of His Word in My Heart, being interviewed.  What I heard that day has changed me forever.  Here is part of the transcript I listened to that day:

Nancy:  Describe for us kind of what your life was like at that point. What was the setting, the backdrop, for how you got into this matter of Scripture memorization?



Janet: I’d love to tell you about it. It began in 1991. We moved from living in Dallas, Texas. We’d been there for eight years, and we were moving to Hattiesburg, Mississippi.


Nancy: Quite a difference there!


Janet: Yes. My husband grew up in Mississippi, so for him, we were moving home. But for me, I was going to a totally foreign place where I didn’t have any friends, and the first few months were very, very lonely for me. I just cried out to God, hoping that He would bring about a change in my life.


Well, at about that time, some of my new friends invited me to go to a Christian conference in Chattanooga. It’s about a six-hour drive, and I thought, “If nothing else, I need a break from the ‘mom routine.’”


Nancy: How old were your children at that time?


Janet: They were four and seven.


Nancy: You had your hands full.


Janet: One was in school and one was still at home. So anyway, one morning of the conference, a woman from the audience was called up to the front spontaneously and asked if she would share some Scripture with the group. She then quoted the entire book of Colossians for all of us.


I just sat there dumbfounded. I was mesmerized by what I’d heard, and I thought in my own heart, “I wonder what it would be like to really know God’s Word, to have it so embedded in my heart and mind that I would carry it with me wherever I would go.”


I had been a Christian for 14 years. I was 35 years old. I had not grown up in church, but I considered myself a very sincere and dedicated Christian.


I read my Bible every day, but I saw at that moment how shallow I really was. I really didn’t know God’s Word. I wasn’t a serious student of the Word, so on the six-hour drive home, I cried out to God and asked Him to make a change in my life.


I thought, “Okay, two small kids, I have no extra time slots in my day.” But I reasoned in my mind that if God wanted me to get to know His Word, then He would make a way—that He wouldn’t ask something of me and then make it impossible to achieve.


Because this woman had recited the whole book of Colossians, I thought, okay, maybe I could memorize Scripture. So I thought, “With God’s help, I’m going to start on Ephesians.”


It took me months and months—probably about six months—but I worked on it every single minute of every day and night. I found that even though I had no extra time slots in my day, I could memorize while I was doing other things. So I included Scripture memory in my morning routine—getting in the shower, blow-drying my hair, putting on makeup and clothes.


Those were times when my hands were busy but my mind was free. So I was able to memorize Scripture while I was doing the household chores—vacuuming, folding laundry, emptying the dishwasher, making school lunches, making coffee, things like that—I could memorize at the same time.


Not only was I getting to know God’s Word, but I was redeeming the time, just a minute here and a minute there. That’s really where I began.

Before the broadcast was over Nancy asked Janet to quote Ephesians One.  She did.  I listened with a heart of conviction.  I did not know the Word of God in that way, and hearing Janet quote Scripture, and hear the testimony of what memorizing chapters and books of the Bible had done in her life stirred my heart to do the same.  Just as Janet was challenged as she listened to the woman at the conference to come to know God’s Word, I was convicted to begin memorizing.  I began working on my favorite book in the Bible – Philippians. 

Last Sunday my husband asked me, as part of his series on the importance of memorizing the Word of God, to recite the book of Philippians.  By God’s grace, and for His glory, I was able to do so.  I’ve had many come to me with the same response that Janet and I had as we listened to Scripture being quoted – saying that they’ve been challenged to do the same.  Praise the Lord.  What a joy to see this trickle-down effect.  It has nothing to do with me, Friends.  It is only by God’s grace that we can do anything.  Even as  Philippians 3:13 says, I must forget that which is behind and reach unto that which is before.  I don’t sit and dwell on the fact that I memorized Philippians; Monday morning I began working on Titus…pressing forward.

There’s no quick method to memorizing – it comes after much diligence, but I took some of Janet’s tips on memorization and have added couple of my own that I would like to share with you if you are inclined to work on a passage of Scripture.  Many times we just need a little help about the how to’s to help get us started.

  • Write the verse (or chapter) down on 3×5 cards.  Use the little notebook with a spiral or a ring that holds the cards together.  Writing them out is one aid in memorization.  Having those cards with you will allow you to review them whether you’re sitting at a traffic light, in the doctor’s office, vacuuming, folding clothes or hulling strawberries.  Look carefully at the picture of my berries.  Just above the sink, on the windowsill are my verse cards.
  • I read the whole verse out loud a couple of times until I have an understanding of it.  Then I begin memorizing a phrase at a time until I have the whole verse down.  Then all day long go over it out loud.  Repeat it again and again.
  • As you learn a new verse, connect it to those that preceeded it – out loud.
  • Another tool you can use is your phone – if you have a video recorder or a voice note tool.  I used the voice notes and will read a passage.  Then to review, I play it and recite the passage along with my recorded voice.  You can do the same thing with a Bible site like Bible Gateway.  Pull up the audio version of a chapter and recite it with the reader.
  • It might also help to have someone who will hold you accountable – a partner who will listen to your verses and encourage you.
I’m excited about what the Lord is doing in my heart, and the hearts of others as we memorize His Word together.  I’m praying for many that told me they were going to start working on a passage this week.  Who will you be able to spur on because of your obedience to hide God’s Word in your heart?
With love,