Friday’s Fave Five

friday-fave-five-springSusanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details, and you can visit Susanne to see the list of others’ favorites.

My favorite moments from this week:

1. Easter weekend and the Living Gallery performance that Jason was a part of.

2. Spring/Easter break! No alarm clocks! And Jim, Jeremy, and Jesse are beginning to paint the outside of the house.

3. Favorite funny moment of the week: Jim gets a car allowance through his work because he uses his car so much for his job, and he was really in need of a new car: his old one was starting to, as he said, not nickel and dime us to death but $100 and $200 us to death, and it was just becoming unreliable. He found a good deal on an Explorer, and it is a newer model than he usually buys, with a few bells and whistles, one of which is a hands-free phone set up: there is a place to plug in his cell phone, and he can give voice commands to dial a certain number, then the conversation comes in through the speakers. When he took his mom for a spin in it and demonstrated the phone system by calling the house, she said, “I feel like I’m in Star Trek!”

4. I received the “mother of the groom” dress I ordered (shown at the bottom of this post). I like it! It’s going to need a little bit of altering, but overall I am very pleased.

5. One of my favorite quotes of the week from Nancy Wilson at Femina the day after Easter:

But secondly, when the disciples heard and really believed that Christ was risen, the celebration didn’t end the next morning. We live in the light of the risen Christ. The good news continues to be good news from one morning to the next. So, even though I’m mopping up from the feasting, the rejoicing extends from one Sunday to the next, all year long.

Friday’s Fave Five

friday-fave-five-springSusanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details.

1. Blooming dogwoods. Most of the dogwoods in the neighborhood are in pretty much full bloom now. So pretty! I love how they flowers seem to float around the tree.

Dogwood

2. Bird bell feeder. We used to have a bird feeder, but it was on a wooden stand that rotted over time, and we’ve never gotten it back up. But I got one of those bell-shaped bird seed hangers and hung it within view of the kitchen window. It was a couple of days before it was noticed, but now it has regular visitors.

3. Finishing Les Miserables!

4. Testimony service. Though the death and funeral of a friend could not be listed as a favorite thing, I enjoyed a testimonial time Sunday night at church in which many people shared her impact on their lives, plus many of the things that were said at the funeral. Pastor said, “You never had to guess what she was thinking because she would have already told you.” So true. She was kind of a crusty New England transplant to SC and was very direct, though never unkind. He also said, “Her best days were worse than our worst days.” She had a host of physical problems, yet kept active and kept a cheerful attitude. She took a warm personal interest in other people, especially young people. She dealt with problems and issues in a matter-of-fact way. The many things various people said about her life were a reminder of the influence, example, and encouragement we can be to others.

Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in Christ, and maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place. For we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish. II Corinthians 2: 14-15.

5. Easter week. I love this season of the year to reflect and remember that God loved us enough to send Christ to pay our sin and its penalties on Himself on the cross, and demonstrated His power and victory over the grave. One of my favorite Easter poems is the following:

Tomb, thou shalt not hold Him longer;
Death is strong, but Life is stronger;
Stronger than the dark, the light;
Stronger than the wrong, the right;
Faith and Hope triumphant say
Christ will rise on Easter Day.

– Phillips Brooks, An Easter Carol

empty-tomb-2.jpg

That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. Romans 10:9-10.

Melli’s ABC Challenge: U and V

It’s time again for Melli’s ABC photo challenge. We’re supposed to look for letters in common everyday things or in nature without actually manipulating anything to make the letter and without photographing the letter itself in a word or sign. We’re doing two letters a week, and this week it is U and V.

I think U has been the hardest letter for me so far. At first the only thing I could find that remotely looked like a U was this sideways one on my husband’s bicycle:

ABC Photo Challenge: U

And I saw a lot or arches all over town, which I considered as an upside-down U, but I wanted to find a “real” right-side up one. Finally yesterday I noticed this planter at my mother-in-law’s place was in a U shape.

ABC Photo Challenge: U

It will probably look a lot nicer in a few weeks — things are just starting to bloom and green up here.

Then I also noticed the pocket on this little sewing caddy also looked like a U:

Spool holder

My mom gave that to me many years ago.

I noticed a lot of windows with these types of Vs in an arch:

ABC Photo Challenge: V

ABC Photo Challenge: V

This heart-shaped metal door decoration also is in a V shape, at least along the two outer sides:

Wall pocket

And I think the hearts on these shelves look like stylized Vs:

Heart collection

…but that may be stretching it a bit. I could have used that for S, too!

You can visit Melli’s for links to the other players to see what they came up with, or to join in.

Works-For-Me-Wednesday: Towel Fuzz

wfmwbannerkristen

Works for Me Wednesday is a “backwards edition” this week, wherein we can ask a question for all the experienced experts out there.

My question is this: some of the new towels I buy sprout fuzz balls over over themselves and everything else in the washer the first several times they’re washed. Sometimes after repeated washing and drying it finally stops doing so, but some of them just keep on. I don’t know if it has to do with the quality of the towel: I’ve gotten them at three different places, and it hasn’t seemed to have made a difference. Any ideas?

Works For Me Wednesday is now hosted at We Are That Family.

Friday’s Fave Fives

friday-fave-five-springSusanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details.

So here are some of my favorite things from the past week.

1. These cute Easter sticky notes from my “secret sister” from our ladies’ group at church:

Easter sticky notes

2. There is a new thrift store between our house and my mother-in-law’s place that I’ve been wanting to visit, and I finally got to yesterday. Found some neat stuff!

This accent table:

Thrift store finds

I’m thinking about painting it white.

This cute spring decoration:

Thrift store finds

And this heart-shaped box:

Thrift store finds

3. Getting the caterer and menu set for our upcoming ladies’ luncheon. The menu is probably the hardest part, trying to decide between all the great-sounding choices. But that’s one more big thing to check off the list for this event.

4. Wed. night at church, a lady was asking me about Jason’s plans. She thought he was getting married in May after graduation, and she was wondering how his job search was going. I told her their wedding date was in August so that he could work and save up some money over the summer, and we discussed some of the options he was exploring for after graduation. She responded something to the effect that knowing that his wedding was later in the summer would change the way she prayed for him. It was such a blessing to know not only that someone was praying, but praying specifically and intelligently for him.

Then a little later on a similar thing happened: I stopped to ask a question of the lady who has being doing the “leg work” for the program part of the ladies’ luncheon (and boy, has that been a blessing! I’ve never had anyone to do that before. I should give her her own listing here!!) She asked me about the decorations and favors: I told her I had some ideas “incubating” and hoped to have them set in the next few days. She mentioned that she had been praying for me about that, and I thought, “Wow!” That just blessed me to no end. General “How’s it going?” questions are great, general prayer is great, but when someone unexpectedly is praying specifically for you and your family — well, it was just a major blessing! And a rebuke, for too often I fail in that area.

5. Wednesday’s night’s message by a guest speaker was another blessing — one of those sermons that just stays with you for days, and your mind turns it over and over and continues to learn from it. The speaker was a missionary and the brother of one of our ladies. Some years back he and his family were ministering in Siberia when they suddenly found they had to leave. I don’t remember now the details, but I think it had to do with their visas being due to expire, and their renewal was refused. So he had friends, family, and supporting pastors calling and asking what he was going to do now, and all he could say was, “I don’t know.” He brought out what God taught him at that time, that the destination isn’t so much the goal as the direction. He pointed out that Paul tried to go to Asia to preach the gospel, but the Holy Spirit wouldn’t let him; Abraham was called to leave his relatives and home and head out, but he didn’t know ultimately where he was going, and several others in Scripture who were faithfully doing what God called them to and heading in the direction He sent them without knowing, at least at the time, where they were headed or why they seemed to be stuck in a holding pattern for a while. We’ve been in that situation so many times, both in little things and in major questions of jobs and locations. The Bible says much about our “walk” as Christians, and a walk is made up of individual steps. We may not know where we will ultimately end up (at least on this globe: as Christians we know the final destination), but we just need to faithfully follow the steps just ahead and trust Him for the rest.

Of course, he said it a lot better. 🙂

Well, as I was jotting down things I could include as favorites for this week, I had a couple more. One was fresh strawberries being in season (I used to say one of the first signs of spring was strawberry shortcake. I still haven’t made that yet, but we have enjoyed a couple of rounds of fresh strawberries with breakfast). And the other had to do with my annual doctor’s visit — IT’S not one of my favorites, but the fact that it’s over for another year is!

You can visit Susanne‘s for more favorites from the week, or to add your own!

ABC Photo Challenge: S and T

It’s Wednesday, time again for Melli’s ABC photo challenge. We’re supposed to look for letters in common everyday things or in nature without actually manipulating anything to make the letter and without photographing the letter itself in a word or sign. We’re doing two letters a week, and this week it is S and T.

I found many more S’s than I thought I would. This first one is on a bench outside our church doors:

ABC Photo Challenge: S

This is scroll work on a picture frame:

ABC Photo Challenge: S

This is on my bread box:

ABC Photo Challenge: S

Looking at it now, it actually does have more swirls than a regular S, doesn’t it? But my main impression was an S.

There are three in sight here on my baker’s rack, one in the brass-ish color and two in white on their sides on top:

ABC Photo Challenge: S

I debated about whether to use this one, because the S is backwards. I thought about flipping it, but it would be obvious because the sign would then be backwards. But I thought doing the mulch this way was unusual.

ABC Photo Challenge: S

Then I didn’t find as many T’s as I thought I would. The first one is at the end of the brick edging next to the driveway.

ABC Photo Challenge: T

Would you call the pillar with the decorative work a T shape?

ABC Photo Challenge: T

That was a cross stitch piece one of my sisters did for me.

There is a T in the back of the rocking chair:

One of the set of Paula Vaughn prints

This is a little plaque in my hallway:

ABC Photo Challenge: T

You can visit Melli’s to see a list of links to the other participants. It’s been fun each week to see what everyone comes up with!

An update from yesterday’s post: everyone is much better. Jesse is a lot perkier, though his appetite isn’t back 100 % and he had a headache when he went to bed. But overall both “patients” are much improved.

Happy Wednesday!

Friday’s Fave Five

friday-fave-five-springSusanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details.

So here are some of my favorite things from the past week.

1. Chick-Fil-A biscuits. (I always seem to include food as one of my five, don’t I?) I had to get Jesse to school an hour earlier than usual, and had a little bit left on a Chick-Fil-A gift card my step-father had sent as part of his Christmas present, so I stopped for one after dropping Jesse off. That biscuit really hit the spot this morning!

2. Fine Arts Festival. Our state organization of Christian schools is sponsoring a fine arts festival this week that students in all its member schools can participate in. The host school is a couple of hours away, so I hadn’t planned to go to watch Jesse’s choir sing its two songs, but last Friday our school had everyone who was performing for the festival do so for a school assembly, so I got to see all the performances then. Everyone did a good job, but the standout performance for me was a duo acting piece by a couple of our seniors. I hope they all do great today! (Incidentally, this was why I had to get Jesse to school early — he had to be there at 6:45 a.m. and won’t get back til this evening. It’s going to be a loooong day for all of them.)

3. Chair pads. I had been looking for some non-slip chair pads for our hard wooden kitchen chairs for a long time. We had used the ones that tie on, but eventually the ties always pulled loose from the pad. Last year I finally found some that went with my kitchen decor at Kohl’s, but they only had three. I figured I’d mix and match with solid colored ones, but didn’t find any in the right colors. Then, after months of not having them, Kohl’s unexpectedly had more of the same style and color. So now all my kitchen chairs have pads that match and go well with my kitchen and don’t slide around when you’re trying to sit down. A little thing, in the grand scheme of things, but it makes me happy. 🙂

4. My new theme. I had been trying to change my blog over to this current theme for a while, but whenever I tried, it threw my sidebar into a mess. It acted as though possibly one of the graphics had been coded to be positioned to the left, and it was pulling everything else off kilter, but I went through and looked at each of them individually, and they were fine. I tried a few different things and nothing worked. I don’t know a whole lot about html code, but it occurred to me to try putting <li></li> between each graphic, creating a line of space between them — and voila! That worked. I was so pleased to have figured it out myself without asking my son for help, which I was just on the verge of doing (there is hope for me after all!) It’s not a big dramatic change of themes, but this seems cleaner, the font is bigger, and I like the way links are done here better — the old one had a dashed line under links in a post, which I didn’t like. Plus! I didn’t realize this theme had this til I switched over, but I had been wanting the feature where, if you’re on a particular post, a line at the top will tell you what the previous post and next post are. So I was really pleased to find that.

Sorry to be so wordy on that one!

5. The Spring Reading Thing that Katrina hosts each year. I love reading and love seeing what others have on their lists, and I like seeing their impressions about what they read at the end.

Bonus 6: The first day of spring!

This post is brought to you by the letters Q and R

It’s Wednesday, time again for Melli’s ABC photo challenge. We’re supposed to look for letters in common everyday things or in nature without actually manipulating anything to make the letter and without photographing the letter itself in a word or sign. We’re doing two letters a week, and this week it is Q and R.

I have to tell you I am very excited about my Qs!

Here is a lower-case Q in the wiring to the left of the traffic light:

ABC Challenge: Q

I’ve been wanting to take a picture of this for weeks just because it amused me. This morning I finally had my camera with me, and, lo and behold, the wheels make Qs.

ABC Challenge: Q

I can also see a Y and Xs there!

All of my Rs are lower-case. I’ll be interested to see if anyone found an upper-case one. This is the first one I saw, a corner traffic light arm downtown:

ABC Challenge: R

And here are a couple more:

ABC Challenge: R

ABC Challenge: R

Of the remaining letters, I’ve seen all of them, though I haven’t taken the photos yet, except U and W. You can visit Melli‘s to see more photo challenge entries for Q and R.

Friday’s Fave Five

friday-fave-five-springSusanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details. Isn’t that a cute new spring button?

This was not the best week, for many reasons, some of which I can’t talk about. But thankfully the Lord sprinkled some bright spots throughout.

1. The Lord’s mercies, new every morning.

It is of the LORD’s mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not.  They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.  The LORD is my portion, saith my soul; therefore will I hope in him.  The LORD is good unto them that wait for him, to the soul that seeketh him. Lamentations 3:22-25.

2. A new CDChrist Only Always, by the Galkin Evangelistic team. I’ve mentioned it a couple of times before, but I’ve been listening to it over and over this week.

3. Krispy Kreme donuts.

ABC Challenge: O

4. My cozy fleece jacket. The weather was warm for a few days but is nippy again this morning.

5. This comment from my husband on yesterday’s post.

You can visit Susanne’s for more favorites from the past week, and feel free to join in with your own favorites.

Happy Friday!

Encouragement for homemakers

I believe very strongly that a married woman’s first ministry is to her home and family, even if she’s working outside the home. The older women are instructed in Titus 2:4-5 to teach younger women “to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their children, To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God be not blasphemed.” I Timothy 5:13-14 says younger widows “learn to be idle, wandering about from house to house; and not only idle, but tattlers also and busybodies, speaking things which they ought not. I will therefore that the younger women marry, bear children, guide the house, give none occasion to the adversary to speak reproachfully.” It’s interesting to note the negative consequences of neglecting these responsibilities: God’s word can be blasphemed and the adversary has an opportunity for reproach.

The world in general devalues homemaking. Though books and magazines abound with housekeeping and organizing tips, the idea seems to be to spend as little time on it as possible so you can get to the important stuff. Believe me, I am all for streamlining my tasks as well. But those held up for admiration are often those who are doing something else. Homemaking is seen as drudgery.

And I have to admit, though I am where I want to be by choice, desire, and belief system, sometimes it feels like drudgery: when the laundry baskets are overflowing again two days after I got the laundry caught up, when I spend hours on a nice dinner that is consumed in less than 20 minutes and then have to spend more time cleaning up afterward, when nothing stays done, but the dusting and dirty floors and grocery shopping all have to be taken care of again and again. When I am doing something for our ladies’ ministry or something else that seems more “spiritual” in nature, I can get irritated that I have to stop and take time from the “important” stuff to stop and make dinner.

But all of those things are important. Someone has to do them, and everyone is ministered to when they are done well. Have you ever stayed in a hotel where there is pink stuff growing in the corners of the shower? Have you ever been to a restaurant where the waitress acts as though she’d rather be anywhere than serving you, and the baked potato is hard, the lettuce is limp and brown-edged, the meat unidentifiable by appearance and taste? When neither the process nor the recipients are valued, homemaking details devolve into chaos. What different results there are when people care.

I hadn’t intended to write an essay: I meant to just write a little prelude to some quotes I wanted to share that I will will encourage other homemakers as much as they have me. Though I kept note of the author of each quote, I failed to keep track of where I found the quotes.

One of the reasons that women writing about homemaking a century ago were so self-possessed is that neither they nor their readers were conflicted about the importance of their subject. A Victorian woman’s home was her eminent domain, and she ruled over it with as much confidence as Queen Victoria ruled the world.
~ Sarah Ban Breathnach, Romancing the Ordinary: A Year of Simple Splendor

Why do we love certain houses, and why do they seem to love us? It is the warmth of our individual hearts reflected in our surroundings.
~ T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings

The ordinary arts we practice every day at home are of more importance to the soul than their simplicity might suggest.
~ Thomas Moore

Homemaking—being a full-time wife and mother—is not a destructive drought of usefulness but an overflowing oasis of opportunity; it is not a dreary cell to contain one’s talents and skills but a brilliant catalyst to channel creativity and energies into meaningful work; it is not a rope for binding one’s productivity in the marketplace, but reins for guiding one’s posterity in the home; it is not oppressive restraint of intellectual prowess for the community, but a release of wise instruction to your own household; it is not the bitter assignment of inferiority to your person, but the bright assurance of the ingenuity of God’s plan for the complementarity of the sexes, especially as worked out in God’s plan for marriage; it is neither limitation of gifts available nor stinginess in distributing the benefits of those gifts, but rather the multiplication of a mother’s legacy to the generations to come and the generous bestowal of all God meant a mother to give to those He entrusted to her care.”
~Dorothy Patterson

No ordinary work done by a man is either as hard or as responsible as the work of a woman who is bringing up a family of small children; for upon her time and strength demands are made not only every hour of the day but often every hour of the night. She may have to get up night after night to take care of a sick child, and yet must by day continue to do all her household duties well; and if the family means are scant she must usually enjoy even her rare holidays taking her whole brood of children with her. The birth pangs make all men the debtors of all women. Above all our sympathy and regard are due to the struggling wives among those whom Abraham Lincoln called the plain people, and whom he so loved and trusted; for the lives of these women are often led on the lonely heights of quiet, self-sacrificing heroism.
~ Teddy Roosevelt, 1905

But housekeeping is fun……It is one job where you enjoy the results right along as you work. You may work all day washing and ironing, but at night you have the delicious feeling of sunny clean sheets and airy pillows to lie on. If you clean, you sit down at nightfall with the house shining and faintly smelling of wax, all yours to enjoy right then and there. And if you cook—that creation you lift from the oven goes right to the table. ~Gladys Taber, Stillmeadow Seasons

I long to accomplish great and noble tasks, but it is my chief duty and joy to accomplish humble tasks as though they were great and noble.
~Helen Keller

The preparation of good food is merely another expression of art, one of the joys of civilized living.

~Dione Lucas

Cooking is at once child’s play and adult joy. And cooking done with care is an act of love.
~Craig Claiborne

“Family dinners should be planned with as much thought and care as company dinners.”
~ Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book
, 1946

It is wholly impossible to live according to Divine order, and to make a proper application of heavenly principles, as long as the necessary duties which each day brings seem only like a burden grievous to be borne. Not till we are ready to throw our very life’s love into the troublesome little things can we be really faithful in that which is least and faithful also in much. Every day that dawns brings something to do, which can never be done as well again. We should, therefore, try to do it ungrudgingly and cheerfully. It is the Lord’s own work, which He has given us as surely as He gives us daily bread. We should thank Him for it with all our hearts, as much as for any other gift. It was designed to be our life, our happiness. Instead of shirking it or hurrying over it, we should put our whole heart and soul into it.
~ James Reed

Charles Spurgeon describes the excellent wife: “She asks not how her behavior may please a stranger, or how another’s judgment may approve her conduct; let her beloved be content and she is glad.

Excellence is to do a common thing in an uncommon way. ~ Booker T. Washington

Great thoughts go best with common duties. Whatever therefore may be your office regard it as a fragment in an immeasurable ministry of love. ~ Bishop Brooke Foss Westcott, b. 1825

The human being who lives only for himself finally reaps nothing but unhappiness. Selfishness corrodes. Unselfishness ennobles, satisfies. Don’t put off the joy derivable from doing helpful, kindly things for others. ~ B.C. Forbes

The trivial round, the common task,
Will furnish all we ought to ask;
Room to deny ourselves, a road
To bring us daily nearer God.

~ John Keble

What you do in your house is worth as much as if you did it up in heaven for our Lord God. We should accustom ourselves to think of our position and work as sacred and well-pleasing to God, not on account of the position and work, but on account of the word and faith from which the obedience and the work flow.
~ Martin Luther

IN little things of common life,
There lies the Christian’s noblest strife,
When he does conscience make
Of every thought and throb within;
And words and looks of self and sin
Crushes for Jesus’ sake.

J. B. S. MONSELL

Wheresoever we be, whatsoever we are doing, in all our work, in our busy daily life, in all schemes and undertakings, in public trusts, and in private retreats, He is with us, and all we do is spread before Him. Do it, then, as to the Lord. Let the thought of His eye unseen be the motive of your acts and words. Do nothing you would not have Him see. Say nothing which you would not have said before His visible presence. This is to do all in His name.
~ Henry Edward Manning

The best things in life are nearest: breath in your nostrils, light in your eyes, flowers at your feet, duties at your hand, the path of right just before you. Then do not grasp at the stars, but do life’s plain, common work as it comes, certain that daily duties and daily bread are the sweetest things in life.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson

ch1cl10a

(Since I have 13+ quotes, I am linking this to the Thursday Thirteen site.)