12/20/07

This week I have found great encouragement in my husband's beautiful song, "I Will Cast My Cares" from In A Little While, as I have been tired and had a headache. I have memories of hearing him write this song in our living room and now am reminded of the truth in I Peter 5:7, "Casting all your cares on Him, because He cares for you," as I hear the finished product.

Jesus, I'm frail, I'm so very weak
My faithfulness fails, my courage will flee
But You are my rock, my shelter and shade
When I'm burdened down, You'll carry the weight

So I will cast my cares on You
Yes, I will cast my cares on You
I will rest within Your arms
Knowing I am safe from harm
I will cast my cares on You

When I'm overwhelmed and I cannot stand
You hear every cry and You lift my head
I'm desperate for grace and mercy anew
I must have Your strength, Oh I must have You

12/17/07

Here is the front of Charis' head. You would probably guess that she was bald, right?



Wrong. Looking from the back, one can see she has the old-man-balding-head-look going on. It is either that or the start of a mullet. How cute is that?

12/13/07

Our Family

Corny, and yet so very funny...click here.

12/11/07

I find great joy in purchasing that special gift at an unbelievably low price. I look forward to getting the Christmas tree on the very first weekend in December. I can sing every song, in order, on Amy Grant's "Home For Christmas." But what happens when my shopping day is altered, or when we are not able to get the Christmas tree the very first weekend in December?
The answer is, my joy fades. Why does my joy fade? My affection has, without my even noticing, shifted from Giver to gift. Sure, I am joyful as long as every holiday plan goes as I pictured. Whenever it does not, I am left feeling letdown and empty.
"If Christ is to be glorified in His people, their following must not be rooted mainly in His promised gifts or threatened punishments, but in His glorious Person...But His works are great because the Lord is great. And they will become idols of delight unless they point us to Himself as our highest delight." (When I Don't Desire God, John Piper)
After a helpful conversation with my husband, I was aware of my lack of joy. Yeah, sometimes I am a happy person, but it is when things do not go my way I am no longer "happy." For me, the holiday is chock full of opportunities to make idols of those things intended to increase my affection for my Savior. Joy is ultimately in Him! He blesses me with good things, to show me His glory.
This week, whenever I am enjoying His special gifts of Christmastime, I have been trying to remember to turn to Him. I thank Him for the gift and that He alone is my delight. The things of this earth will not satisfy me. After Christmas is over, the tree will be gone. He Himself is joy to my soul.
"In your presence there is fullness of joy." (Psalm 16:11)

12/10/07

Even though the Steelers did not come out with a victory,
Charis' adorable little outfit can turn any
disheartened fan's frown upside down.

12/9/07

For the second year in a row, Stephen and I went to Gamble Christmas Tree Farm, where you take a hayride to the top of the hill, choose a tree for the boy with the chainsaw to cut down and pay for it in the barn at the bottom of the hill. As we were traipsing through the snow, mud and puddles, our eyes were on the lookout for that "perfect tree" from a storybook. We picked one out only to find that the backside, which had been nestled against another tree, was completely dead. The front had looked nicely filled out. Smooth move. The kind workers let us choose another.

Who would have thought it was possible to over-think picking out a Christmas tree. It started to seem as though every tree was "too tall, too wide or too bare." Finally we picked it out. It is a beauty, perfect for our home. If I could use one word to describe the evergreen, it would be "wide." It is certainly tall, but its width makes it look short and stubby. Let's just say I have to think before I run down the stairs and turn the corner, because it protrudes far from the wall. I have a bad feeling about this.
After Stephen and I had our fun, we went to pick-up our baby girl, who is too little to go out in the cold (but we are excited for the day when she will join us). The fun was just starting. She was wide awake and cooing during the decorating and singing of carols with Bing Crosby. Poor Stephen was subjected to my insisting that Christmas music be playing all day long. Is not that what you do on Christmas-tree-decorating-day?
He makes life fun for me. Whenever I sing along, in all seriousness, with Amy Grant, he chimes in making up words and singing off-tune. I act as though I do not like it, but as with all his jokes, it does not take me long to cave and crack-up.
We ended the evening by watching a Christmas movie together. I am pleased to say, that this morning when I woke up, the tree was still standing.


12/7/07

Scripture instructs women to be kind (Titus 2:5). Whenever I read that statement, I had a vague understanding of its definition. I know kindness is a good thing, pleases the Lord and is a fruit of the Spirit working in believers, but what does it look like practically, to be kind?

In Feminine Appeal, Carolyn Mahaney wrote a helpful chapter on "The Rewards of Kindness." In my desire to grow in kindness to family, friends and others I come in contact with, I went straight to the wealth of knowledge she provides here. She quotes Jerry Bridges who defines kindness as, "...a sincere desire for the happiness of others, and goodness is the activity calculated to advance that happiness." Talk about bringing clarity.
As sisters, wives, mothers, friends, grandmas, co-workers and girlfriends, how can we make kindness a habit? How can we advance the happiness of those around us? What will really knock the socks off of those you love?
Stephen loves scones. I love to bake, but for some reason, I do not enjoy the process of making scones (maybe it is because the batter is not nearly as tasty as chocolate chip cookie batter:) Sometimes I do not have time, but at other times, selfishness creeps in and I desire pleasure for myself rather than serving him. Would it bless him, or advance his happiness, if I made them? Definitely. Goodness would be buying the ingredients at the store, setting aside time to make the scones and carrying out that plan. That is calculating the advancement of his happiness.
The Lord does not desire that we be condemned. He is kind to convict us and will give us the grace to change. He is the Author of each relationship we are in. He will surely help us. Let's be praying this week that the Holy Spirit would impress upon our hearts one area we have failed to be kind, whether it be at a particular time of day (i.e. when we are tired at night), towards a specific person (i.e. a roommate) or in a way we do not enjoy (i.e. babysitting a sibling). And let us ask knowing He is mighty to help.

12/4/07

Kindness

I have recently been reading a book entitled Spurgeon: A New Biography, by Arnold Dallimore. While Charles Spurgeon's pursuit of the Lord is inspiring, I have also been encouraged by Susannah Spurgeon's example.

When Charles was married at age twenty-two, he was pastoring a church of over two-thousand people, visiting distant churches to preach and writing his first book. I thought our life was busy. Theirs was in a whole other realm of busy. With Charles speaking, traveling and writing so often, I am sure he often returned home to his wife exhausted. He was probably mentally drained from all the preparation for sermons and writing. He was probably physically drained from speaking and traveling. Dallimore said,

"He frequently returned home utterly exhausted, but invariably found loving arms awaiting him amid every possible kindness and comfort."

When Stephen comes home from work, a meeting at church, reaching out to an unsaved friend or spending time with the guys, he is often tired, mentally and physically (always loving and sensitive to me, though). Here is a perfect opportunity for me to welcome him in the door with loving arms and every possible kindness and comfort.

I often give into the temptation to withhold kindness. I must recognize why I am not extending kindness. Am I bitter that he had meetings at Starbucks or does not have energy to do something with me. Am I angry that he spent time with the guys or playing video games? I must fly to the Savior in these moments, to repent of anything that causes me to withhold kindness from Stephen.

Please pray with me, that the Lord would help us grow in loving our husbands this way. If kindness were always "felt," then Scripture would not command wives to be kind to their husbands (Titus 2:5). I want to invariably, or consistently, extend loving arms and show tons of kindness toward Stephen. I want to repent of the sin that hinders me from being kind to my husband when he returns home. I want the same to be said of me, that was of Susannah Spurgeon.

12/2/07

One evening, before waking Charis up for her late night feeding, I decided it was a perfect opportuninty to clip her nails. She was asleep and would never have to know that I finally gave her nails a much needed trim. Her arms were limp and she would not fight my efforts. Now I know why I put it off for so long.

There is no "perfect opportunity" to clip a baby's nails. It is inevitable that he or she will wake up the second the clippers go in the direction of the hand. That startle, in turn, causes well-meaning moms to catch the nail and the skin, causing the little piggy (yes I used the words little piggy) to bleed. That is exactly what happened.
I did not notice she was bleeding, however, until the blood had gotten on her sleeper. Then she had a delayed cry of pain. Have you ever considered how one is to put an adult size bandage on a three month old? It is a task that should probably not be attempted by average people like myself. I know that, because it just did not work.
After she was asleep in bed, I was left "shouting out" the little blood spots that had made themselves in the most peculiar places. Let's just say, I quit after nail number one.