Catalog deluge

To all mail-order companies who send me catalogs:

I do order sometimes from catalogs. But what makes you think that, once I order, I want a multitudinous supply of your catalogs? Do you really think that if you send me 20 catalogs in 30 days from the same company with pretty much the same merchandise, I’ll buy more?? No, I’m not tempted to buy more. I just toss them in the trash. I’m not a tree-hugger, but I hate to think of the waste of resources involved — plus the higher prices I am paying for your merchandise because of the excess mailings that are getting trashed.

Sincerely,

Your customer

I Want a Principle Within

I want a principle within of watchful, godly fear,
A sensibility of sin, a pain to feel it near.
I want the first approach to feel of pride or wrong desire,
To catch the wandering of my will, and quench the kindling fire.

From Thee that I no more may stray, no more Thy goodness grieve,
Grant me the filial awe, I pray, the tender conscience give.
Quick as the apple of an eye, O God, my conscience make;
Awake my soul when sin is nigh, and keep it still awake.

Almighty God of truth and love, to me Thy power impart;
The mountain from my soul remove, the hardness from my heart.
O may the least omission pain my reawakened soul,
And drive me to that blood again, which makes the wounded whole.

— Charles Wesley, 1749

What we wanted all the time…

The following was written by Amy Carmichael and included in Amy Carmichael of Dohnavur by Frank Houghton. It is a wonderful picture of our ultimate need and desire: our Father’s fellowship:

It was the hour between lights, and five little people under two years old were waiting for their food. Sometimes the cows belonging to the adjoining village from which part of our milk comes saunter home with more than their usual leisureliness, and then the milk is late. The babies, who do not understand the weary ways of cows, disapprove of having to wait, and that evening they were all very fractious. To add to their woes the boy whose duty it is to light the lamps had been detained, and the quickly gathering twilight fell upon us unawares as we sat together on the nursery veranda. The five fretful babies made discouraging remarks to each other and threw themselves in that exasperated fashion which tells the experienced that the limits of patience have been passed. And the more depressed began to whimper.

At this point a lamp was brought and set behind me so that its light fell upon their toys — a china head long since parted from its body, a tin with small stones in it which when shaken makes a charming noise, several rattles and other sundries. If anything will comfort them their toys will, I thought, as these illuminated treasures caught my attention. But the babies only looked disgusted. One of the most sweet-tempered seized the china head and flung it as far as ever she could. Not one of them would find consolation in toys.

Then a small child endowed with a vivid imagination and a timid disposition was sure she heard something dangerous moving in the bushes outside and she wailed a wail of most infectious misery and terror, and the quick panic which comes upon birds when they hear their own particular warning call, suddenly filled the babies’ hearts, and they howled.

Then I took the lamp and set it in front so that its light did not fall upon the toys but upon myself, and in a moment the whole five were tumbling over me cuddling and caressing — and content.

Are there not evenings in life when our toys have no power to please or soothe? There is not any rest in them or any comfort. Then the one Whom we love best takes the lamp and puts it so that the toys are in the shadow, but His face is in the light. And then we know that that is what we wanted all the time. And He makes His face to shine upon us and gives us peace.

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Safe

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Baby rabbit found in back yard

What Is the Shape of Your Faith: Personality

Some weeks ago Heather at Graced By Christ began a series called “What Is the Shape of You Faith?” I participated in the first installment regarding testimony, but haven’t yet in the subsequent ones about Personality, Abilities, Passion, and today’s about Life Experiences. The questions have been a bit more involved than I have had (or maybe made) time to deal with thoroughly, but they have been providing food for thought! I think I am finally ready to deal with the section on personality.

Before I do, though, I want to discuss a couple of inherent dangers in this type of study. Sometimes, when studying or discussing various personality types (or spiritual temperaments), people tend to pigeonhole others based on what they think everyone else’s personality type is and then listen to and react toward them through that filter. While this kind of study can help us understand and interact with others, we have to be careful about pigeonholing and over-simplifying.

One of the other major dangers in studying personality types is the tendency to then use our personalities as an excuse: what comes across to others as a flaw we excuse in ourselves with a “That’s just the way I am” mentality. A former pastor used to say, “With every strength there is an off-setting weakness.” Because we have a fallen nature, our personality traits can have their negative sides. We are all, as Christians, supposed to be continually conforming to Christ’s image. A study of personality can help us understand ourselves and how we relate to others, and we can rejoice in the way God has made us, but that shouldn’t be the end of it: we should be asking the Lord to help smooth the rough edges, to help us see the weakness as well as the strength of our traits so that we can best glorify Him and be used by Him and seek His help and strength to grow and act and react as He wants us to rather than as what comes naturally. For instance, someone who is naturally introverted can understand that that probably means she may not be likely to have a job or ministry that involves dealing with a multitude of people. But she shouldn’t let that introverted tendency cause her to not reach out to others, to not extend herself, to stay within her own four walls (I am introverted, and I know these are my tendencies). By God’s grace, she can reach out. Conversely, some personality types can run roughshod over people and have trouble seeing things any other way but the way they see them, or someone who is very direct and straightforward can come across as lacking in grace and be totally unaware that he or she is coming across that way. With these or any other traits, we can know what our tendencies are and see ways the Lord can use them, but we need to also see those traits are not an end in themselves and ask the Lord to refine us and conform us to His likeness. Any way in which we’re not conformed to His likeness can be a stumblingblock to other people.

On the positive side, years ago my pastor at the time was telling about how some of the different prophets in the Bible were contemporaries of each other. Some of them lived and prophesied around the same time and in the same places, or very close, and had similar messages. One reason for that, he said, was that each one had a different personality or style and could be used by God to reach different people. Some folks would be drawn to the one prophet; some to another. That was eye-opening for me, not just in understanding the Biblical prophets, but in understanding one of the reasons God made different personalities and how He could use them.

One other positive note about studying different personalities is the realization that all the different personality types are needed to balance each other out and accomplish different things.

Now….as to my own personality…I tend to get frustrated with these tests. I tend to be too analytical and often, as I am looking over the choices to answers to specific questions, think that none of them are exactly what my answer would be. 🙂 And the personality tests that result in all the initials have frustrated me because I haven’t quite understood the results, and the explanation of the results went on for pages and pages and only confused me more. But the test Heather recommended had links to explanations of the test results that were fairly easy to digest. I have taken these kinds of tests before and may have come up with some different initials (I thought I had kept the previous results somewhere, but couldn’t find them to compare my current results). But my results for this test were ISTJ: Introverted, Sensing. Thinking, Judging, the one called the Inspector, or in another place, the Guardian, the Duty Fulfiller. As I read through the description, I recognized myself in a lot of it, but disagreed with some of it. I saw and took another personality test on another site, and the result there was ISFJ; Introverted, Sensing, Feeling, Judging, the Nurturer, the Protector Guardian. So the difference seems to be between the thinking and feeling areas. That may be due to those questions on the test where my answer wasn’t clear-cut one way or the other, or, as Heather pointed out in her post, the result of Christ working in me to balance me over the years.

Heather asks:

So now we have our basic temperaments figured out how do we apply them to our faith?

How does your specific personality affect how you relate to those around you?

How does it affect how you relate to other Christians?

Non-Christians?

How does it affect your ministry?

Did you recognize anyone else’s personality when looking over the types?

How might this affect how you relate to them?

How does you personality affect your relationship to the Lord?

This post is already long, so I won’t go through a step-by step analysis: instead I’ll just mention a few things.

I do tend to be more practical than emotional, though I am not unemotional, and there are times in my life I have to fight being ruled by emotion. I agree that I am not effusive and probably can be seen sometimes as aloof. One set of college roommates once told me well into the school year that when they first met me, they thought I was a stuck-up rich kid. 😦 I knew I wasn’t rich and hoped I wasn’t stuck-up! I guess the fact that they felt free to tell me that indicated that they decided I wasn’t after all. That did grieve me, though, that I came across like that, but I often hear that charge being laid against others who are quiet and shy.

My pastor once said that some people are idea people and some people are – I forget what exact word he used, but the type of practical person who works out the ideas. I’m the latter. As such I can get very frustrated with the enthusiastic dreamers and the idea people, when they come up with something that either just won’t work or would be a pain to work out. It’s especially hard when the “dreamer” is the authority over the “doer” – the dreamer/authority comes up with the shadowy but enthusiastic idea which causes the doer to think, “What…?” “Do you have any idea what that would take?” One can feel dumped on in such situations or feel that the dreamer seems to be impractical or just dreaming and not caring about what he is requiring the doer to do, or that the dreamer is just dreaming while the doer has to do all the work. It’s hard to be patient and longsuffering – they probably think it is hard to be patient and longsuffering with the person like me who they might think is a “stick in the mud” or who “doesn’t like to try new things” (not entirely true) or who seems to keep shooting down their great and wonderful ideas. 🙂 It’s just one of those areas where we need to maintain balance, to realize that the world needs both dreamers and doers, and to try to be gracious with each other and find common ground.

One of the differences between the ISTJ and the ISFJ was that the “ISTJs are easily frustrated by the inconsistencies of others, especially when the second parties don’t keep their commitments. But they usually keep their feelings to themselves unless they are asked. And when asked, they don’t mince words. Truth wins out over tact.” I agree with the frustration part, but I don’t usually express myself by not mincing words. I don’t usually express myself at all when it comes to frustrations with others – at least not to that person. My poor dear husband hears a lot of my frustrations with others. I do see a tremendous need for tact, and though I am sure I fail sometimes, I usually try not to directly say, “You should do….” But rather, “You might try…” or “Well, this worked for me…” I think in this I am more like the ISFJ than the ISTJ.

“The grim determination of the ISTJ vindicates itself in officiation of sports events, judiciary functions, or another situation which requires making tough calls and sticking to them.” Grim determination? 🙂 I can’t see myself in any of those occupations – I am too indecisive, too prone to look at all the possible angles.

Words like faithful, dependable, hard-working come up on both profiles. I want to be and try to be – I am acutely aware that I fail in those areas. What progress has been made has mainly been due to growth in Christian character over the years.

“The ISTJ will work for long periods of time and put tremendous amounts of energy into doing any task which they see as important to fulfilling a goal. However, they will resist putting energy into things which don’t make sense to them, or for which they can’t see a practical application. They prefer to work alone, but work well in teams when the situation demands it…The ISTJ has little use for theory or abstract thinking, unless the practical application is clear.” Yep.

“Under stress, ISTJs may fall into ‘catastrophe mode’, where they see nothing but all of the possibilities of what could go wrong. They will berate themselves for things which they should have done differently, or duties which they failed to perform. They will lose their ability to see things calmly and reasonably, and will depress themselves with their visions of doom.” I can be like that – I think I’ve mellowed in this area over the years.

ISFJs are often unappreciated, at work, home, and play. Ironically, because they prove over and over that they can be relied on for their loyalty and unstinting, high-quality work, those around them often take them for granted–even take advantage of them. Admittedly, the problem is sometimes aggravated by the ISFJs themselves; for instance, they are notoriously bad at delegating (‘If you want it done right, do it yourself’). And although they’re hurt by being treated like doormats, they are often unwilling to toot their own horns about their accomplishments because they feel that although they deserve more credit than they’re getting, it’s somehow wrong to want any sort of reward for doing work (which is supposed to be a virtue in itself). (And as low-profile Is, their actions don’t call attention to themselves as with charismatic Es.) Because of all of this, ISFJs are often overworked, and as a result may suffer from psychosomatic illnesses.” Boy, does that paragraph hit the nail on the head!! Especially the last two or three sentences. I don’t really think I am unappreciated, but I can feel that way when I’m overworked and stressed.

“Like most Is, ISFJs have a few, close friends. They are extremely loyal to these, and are ready to provide emotional and practical support at a moment’s notice. (However, like most Fs they hate confrontation; if you get into a fight, don’t expect them to jump in after you. You can count on them, however, run and get the nearest authority figure.)” Yep!

“One ISFJ trait that is easily misunderstood by those who haven’t known them long is that they are often unable to either hide or articulate any distress they may be feeling. For instance, an ISFJ child may be reproved for ‘sulking,’ the actual cause of which is a combination of physical illness plus misguided “good manners.” An adult ISFJ may drive a (later ashamed) friend or SO into a fit of temper over the ISFJ’s unexplained moodiness, only afterwards to explain about a death in the family they ‘didn’t want to burden anyone with.'” This was one of those paragraphs that was very helpful to me – I recognized myself perfectly but couldn’t have told you beforehand that that was what was going on – trying to balance that something is wrong that I can’t hide but can’t articulate either.

The “I” for Introverted is one thing that has remained constant in any personality test. Introversion and shyness aren’t exactly the same things, but they do go together, I think. I was painfully shy growing up. After I became a Christian, because I tended to be pretty quiet in groups, people would comment on my “meek and quiet spirit.” I can testify that a closed mouth does not necessarily indicate a quiet spirit. One can have a raging spirit and still be quiet on the outside (which is not very healthy, by the way!) I usually let other people initiate conversations and friendships (because I usually didn’t know what to do or say or was too timid), usually had one close friend rather than a multitude of friends, was a homebody rather than a person who constantly had to be out doing things with other people. The Lord has helped me with these tendencies a lot through the years. One thing He did was to allow me to go to a small Christian school my last two years of high school, and I got involved in things there, like yearbook and student council, that I never would have dreamed of trying in the larger public high school I had been in, plus being in a smaller school, there is less opportunity to “hide” in the crowd. Then He allowed me to go to a Christian university and be in a dorm room with four other girls at a time. That forces one to interact with other people and come out of oneself a bit. Then He led me to a man to marry who is very easy-going and had no problems talking with or interacting with people. Plus all along the way He helped me to grow in Him and see the need to get beyond myself and reach out to and interact with others. After I was married and began to get involved in my local church, one of the first “jobs” I was asked to do was to go to the visitors at our ladies’ group, speak to them, introduce myself, and ask them to fill out a visitor’s card. That doesn’t sound too hard, does it? Well, it was a big step for me, and many times I would have to find a quiet spot, take a deep breath, and then go on. People who know me now probably would have trouble believing I was ever so shy, but I was. Nowadays I can start a conversation with other people fairly easily (especially if I don’t think about it too much beforehand), but it is still my tendency not to, to let someone else greet a visitor or take the first step. I’m still a homebody and can get very frustrated and depleted when there are a lot of activities going on that take us away from home. With the connection to the “outside world” with the Internet now, it would be all too easy for me to keep within my own four walls, yet thankfully the Lord has shown me the importance over the years of reaching out and interacting with others.

As far as ministry goes, for most of my life I have preferred to be the quiet one behind the scenes doing whatever needed to be done. You wouldn’t think an introverted person would be a leader. Yet God has put me in some positions that I knew I had to take or else be out of His will. I have seen Him stretch me in ways I never would have thought possible. I still feel awkward about the “in front of people” part of those ministries, but He helps me with that.

I don’t know that this post is very coherent: I’ve been thinking about it for weeks and composing it in spurts over days while reading the various profiles and having all of that swirling around in my head. J In some ways it might be better to let this sit for a while and then come back to it and refine it, as far as the writing goes. But since this is already so far behind the other posts on this subject, I want to go ahead and get it out there.

ISFJ Profile

ISTJ Profile

Anything to help….

Through a series of clicks, from a link at DeAnna’s blog for Owlhaven’s blog to Karen’s, I found a request from an expectant mom for pictures of other pregnant moms so she would feel better about her pregnancy size. 🙂

This was taken just before I was induced for the delivery of my third child, Jesse, a little over 13 years ago. He was 13 days overdue. He weighed 12 lbs. even. Yes, he did. Yes, the same skinny Jesse you’ve seen in other photos here. I am not sure why he was so big — my weight gain with him was the most moderate of the three of them, and I didn’t have the gestational diabetes that I had had with Jason. But I sure was glad when he finally arrived. 🙂

Expecting Jesse

He was born in a women’s hospital, which usually only had newborn babies around, and someone from the hospital had to go out and buy diapers because the newborn ones wouldn’t fit.

Newborn Jesse

Wasn’t he a cutie?! Still is!

Thursday Thirteen: Things Suzie the Dog Likes To Do

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Suzie is half collie, half German Shepherd. We’ve had her since she was a puppy, about 10 years now. She’s not the brightest dog in creation. 🙂 But she is sweet and affectionate.

13 things Suzie the dog likes to do:

1. Sleep

2. Eat

3. Be petted. If you pet her head and then pull away, she’ll put her head back under your hand.

Suzie the dog

4. Be on the trampoline. We’ve had it about as long as we’ve had her, so she grew up with it. She used to bounce on it with the kids. She still gets up there when they’re on, but doesn’t stay long. She likes to sleep there and observe the world from there.

Suzie the dog

5. Be with her people

6. Eat

7. Sleep

8. Go along with my husband and youngest son when they ride bikes. If she sees them getting the bicycles out, she whimpers and groans pitifully until they come and get her. They don’t always, because she doesn’t always stay right with them, and it’s hard to hold her on a leash while riding. But if they don’t take her while they ride bikes, they’ll usually take her for a walk afterward.

9. Chase squirrels.

10. Bark at other dogs taking a walk with their owners.

11. Come inside. She’s an outdoor dog, but makes a beeline for the door when it’s open.

12. Eat

13. Sleep

Suzie the dog

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!

Works-For-Me-Wednesday: Charitable Giving While Shopping and Searching

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This week I wanted to share a couple of relatively painless ways to give to charity in the course of what you usually do online.

Igive.com is a site for online merchants to register and online shoppers to buy and have a percentage of their purchases donated to the charity of their choice. When you first register on the site, you choose what charity you would like for your purchases to go towards. Igive keeps great records, sends an e-mail when a check for my organization is sent, keeps a list of my orders so that I can track them and make sure the percentages were applied, and lets me print out a page for tax-deductions. They send out e-mails from time to time about which merchants are having special sales or promotions. There are a few merchants I shop from online anyway, so it is no problem to log into Igive first and shop from there (the links take you directly to the merchants’ sites, but you have to begin logged in at Igive for the purchase to register and for a donation to be made). Plus, any time I am looking to buy something online, I can look through the “mall” link at Igive and see if the new merchant I am wanting to buy from is registered there. I’ve used it for years and have been very pleased with it.

I’ve only recently heard of GoodSearch, but it is a search engine which uses funds generated from its advertisers for online donations to the charity of your choice. It is powered by Yahoo, so it should be as good as Yahoo is. You don’t have to register there: just put the name of the charity you are interested in in the “Who do you GoodSearch for?” window, click on “verify,” and then conduct your search. The site “remembers” that charity each time you search, but you can change it any time you want to. I just tried it to search for a product I was looking at earlier today through another search engine, and came up with multitudes of results. I e-mailed GoodSearch to ask if they had a list of the charities supported through them: they replied that they supported 20,000 non-profit organizations and didn’t have a good way to list them all, but users could put any charity in the appropriate window, and if it is not yet supported, they can click on the appropriate link to add it.

And that brings me to the other point I was going to make: I have seen various charities and non-profit organizations linked on various blogs. Perhaps you might want to look into adding your cause to one or both of these sites.

If you’d like to participate in either of these endeavors and don’t yet have a cause that you would be interested in, may I humbly suggest the Transverse Myelitis Association.

See Rocks In My Dryer for more real tips that really work for real people.

Wordless Wednesday: Doing Homework

Doing Homework

I continually find Jesse in odd positions while he’s doing homework. Looks uncomfortable to me, but I guess it doesn’t bother him! I think of this as his vulture pose. 🙂

For more Wordless Wednesday photos, go here and here.

“What he wanteth of time…”

As I was thinking yesterday about four-year-old Canon’s home-going and the loss his family feels, something came to mind from one of my most often read books, Amy Carmichael of Dohnavur by Frank Houghton. There is a section quoting Amy’s writing about the death of one of their little ones at Dohnavur and a passage from a letter of Samuel Rutherford’s to a grieving mother over 200 years before which was a comfort then to Amy:

You have lost a child. Nay, she is not lost to you who is found to Christ; she is not sent away but only sent before, like unto a star which going out of our sight doth not die and vanish, but shineth in another hemisphere: you see her not, yet she doth shine in another country.

If her glass was but a short hour, what she wanteth of time that hath she gotten in Eternity; and you have to rejoice that you have now some treasure laid up in heaven…Your daughter was a part of yourself, and you, being as it were cut and halved, will indeed be grieved; but you have to rejoice that when a part of you is on earth, a great part of you is glorified in heaven…There is less of you out of heaven that the child is there.

I also thought of Jesus’s prayer, “Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me: for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world” (John 17:24).

We rejoice that Canon is with Him where He is, beholding His glory, free from pain and any more surgeries. We could not wish him back. That was one thought that came to me often after my mom passed away, and I missed her sorely and so wanted to talk to her again and give her a hug…but though I could wish her here for my sake, I really couldn’t wish she were here when I have some small inkling of what she is experiencing there.

Yet we are “indeed grieved” by the loss of our loved ones’ presence and fellowship. I know Canon’s family will feel this intensely both now and for many days to come. A verse that someone shared with me that was a great help (I am including the preceding and following verses as well) was from Psalm 119: 75-77: “I know, O LORD, that thy judgments are right, and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me. Let, I pray thee, thy merciful kindness be for my comfort, according to thy word unto thy servant. Let thy tender mercies come unto me, that I may live: for thy law is my delight.”

The ladies at Faith Builders asked if anyone would like to, to post a prayer for the family and link it back to a post there. I am not one to write out my prayers generally (even in Bible study books that tell me to…I’d rather just pray them), yet, during one of my mom’s serious illnesses when I asked many people to pray, many of them sent back prayers they had written out for her. I sent those to her, and it touched and ministered to her heart to know that people she didn’t even know would pray for her. So I pray that these specific prayers will be a comfort to Canon’s family.

“Dear Heavenly Father, I pray for Canon’s family during this time of grief. I pray that your merciful kindness would be for their comfort, that they would take refuge in You and know your everlasting arms underneath them, both now and in the days ahead. I pray that the funeral would honor and glorify you and bring comfort to those attending. I pray that you would help Canon’s mom with the many details she has to take care of. I pray that You would bring people across her path who would be able and willing to help both spiritually and practically. I pray for Canon’s siblings, that You would just help them especially during this time: help them not to be confused and hurt and disappointed, but draw them close to Thyself. Help them not to think that You didn’t answer prayer, but to realize that You did answer it, though in a different way. I pray that this would not be used by the evil one to cause bitterness in anyone’s heart that the outcome wasn’t different. I pray that if there are any who do not know You as Lord and Savior, that these events and the funeral would draw them to faith in You. I pray for Your continuing grace for everyone involved in the weeks and months ahead. Thank You for loving us and ministering to us. Thank You for Your grace. Thank You for preparing a place in heaven for Your children. Amen.”