Tuesday, July 26, 2022
What God Says Vs. What Satan Desires
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
A House or a Home
Chasing empty dreams and pleasures- always feeling they’re burned out.
Spending all their strength on worthless things that soon will pass away,
Not living for eternity, only for today.
There’s a house without a Bible being read from faithfully,
Hungry souls and empty hearts who are starving spiritually.
There’s a home without a Mother to cherish and to train,
Neglecting her first calling, all other works now vain.
This house could be a home if she would seek to live God’s plan,
But she thinks she’ll find fulfillment in the love and praise of man.
There’s a house with a searching mother on how to make a home.
She desires to build God’s Kingdom, but knows she can’t do it alone.
She asks for the Lord’s forgiveness for wasting so many years,
Fully knowing that His calling will cost sacrifice and tears.
Now there’s a home with an open Bible that is read from faithfully,
A home that is built on prayer and a life that is lived purposely.
There’s a home that accepts God’s children as a blessing from God’s own hand,
A home filled with His treasures, seeing children as loved and planned.
There’s a home that has a table for the family to find rest,
Hearts at home are often happiest, hearts at home so very blessed.
There’s a home that has an altar where petitions are daily made,
A home where the love of Christ is beautifully displayed.
A house or a home will you pursue?
The choice is fully up to you.
Written By: Kristin Eason
Saturday, December 1, 2012
The Blessing of Home
I love to hear my 3 year old thanking God in her prayers for corn as she enjoys the fruit of her daddy’s labor.
I love the smell of a freshly bathed newborn cuddled in my arms.
I love to see my children lay on the floor with their daddy as they read through the daily Proverb each night before bed.
I love the excitement on my daughter’s face as I surprise her with a freshly made batch of play dough.
I love to read the thoughts from my 11 year old about becoming a missionary that she’s written in notebooks around the house.
I love to see all the unique, strange, and crazy things my son finds while exploring at the creek.
I love to look outside and see my son following close behind the steps of his dad as they do their evening chores together.
I love trying to make my home a haven that my husband enjoys coming home to at the end of the day.
I love to hear the voice of my 3 year old yelling, “yea, daddy’s home!!” as she hears her daddy’s truck pull in the drive after working all day.
I love to listen to my oldest daughter read me her creative writing papers and mention how she finally understands why I home school and that she wants to home school her kids one day just like her mom.
I love to hear my two girls say I love you, I love you most, and love you mostest every night before bed.
I love to see the smile on my oldest daughter’s face as she makes a dessert all by herself and we tell her it’s the best we’ve ever had.
I love the anticipation we feel as we bring home a new bundle of joy.
I love castles made out of blankets.
I love going to bed at night thanking God for a house full of children snug in their beds and that He called me to be a wife, mother, and a keeper of my home.
Thank-you Lord for the blessing of home.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
A Christian Home


A Christian Home
Barbara B. Hart, 1916
Jean Sibelius, 1865-1957
O give us homes built firm upon the Savior, Where Christ is Head and Counselor and Guide;
Where ev'ry child is taught His love and favor And gives his heart to Christ, the crucified:
How sweet to know that tho his footsteps waver His faithful Lord is walking by his side!
O give us home with godly fathers, mothers, Who always place their hope and trust in Him;
Whose tender patience turmoil never bothers, Whose calm and courage trouble cannot dim;
A home where each fins joy in serving others, And love still shines, tho days be dark and grim.
O give us homes where Christ is Lord and Master, The Bible read, the precious hymns still sung;
Where pray'r comes first in peace or in disaster, And praise is natural speech to ev'ry tongue;
Where mountains move before a faith that's vaster, And Christ sufficient is for old and young.
O Lord, our God, our homes are Thine forever! We trust to Thee their problems, toil, and care;
Their bonds of love no enemy can sever If Thou art always Lord and Master there:
Be Thou the center of our least endeavor Be Thou our Guest, our hearts and homes to share.
The last 2 days I have posted poems that I found in a beautiful book called Verses of Virtue. I ordered the book HERE from Christian Book Distributor. This will definately be a keepsake book that I am planning on putting in my girls hope chest!
Book Description:
Sing the praises of Christian womanhood! Through psalms, poetry, and prose, the Bible uses the beauty of language to communicate the vision, purpose, and mission of wives and mothers that once defined American family life. Gathering heartwarming and inspirational verses from Scripture, America's historical writings, and even antiquity, Phillips provides blessings and encouragement for your glorious calling. 126 pages, hardcover from Vision Forum
God Give Us Homes

God give us homes!
God give us homes!
Homes with the father in preist-like employ;
Homes that are bright with a far-reaching joy;
God give us homes!
God give us homes!
Homes that to youth most inspiring shall prove.
Homes with the children to brighten the hours;
Places of sunshine-sweet, sanctified bowers.
Friday, October 8, 2010
Childrearing is Soulwinning . . . Or Not
Modern-day Christian parents can’t figure out why their children are turning away from God in droves and rejecting the faith they were raised with, and it’s not uncommon to hear older couples in churches speak with regret about their children “who aren’t following the Lord.” Bewilderment and confusion surrounds their thinking as they try to grasp how their children could have walked away when they had tried so hard to “raise them right.”
It’s undeniable at this point that Christianity is losing its youth. Although many fall away from faith during high school, the college-aged population is where Christianity is being hit the hardest.
When Christian couples set out to raise a family today, they are well aware of these statistics, but they begin their journey with the best of intentions of raising their one to two children up as godly Christians, hopeful that their children will be an exception. They may even consciously intend on making choices that they believe will help their children remain faithful and moral–taking them to church, restricting what movies they can see, and heavily monitoring and overseeing their interaction with other “worldly” children. Every Sunday morning, they faithfully bring their child to Sunday school, and every Wednesday night, their child is in attendance at Awanas or the other church children’s program. For years, they are involved in every possible church activity, but as the child grows older, the parents wonder why their child isn’t making the faith his own or doing things of his own initiative. By the end of high school or college, the parent is tired of the battles. They don’t want to fight and drag their children to the youth group; they are tired of arguing about modest clothing choices, CDs, movies, boyfriends, and everything else. They look around at the other children in the church and shrug their shoulders. It’s just hard to raise kids in this culture, and they did their best. Apparently, they were just given a child that would not be a Christian. They are saddened and downcast, thinking that they were helpless victims and couldn’t have done anything better.
So said the older mother across from me, a year ago, as we sat in the church nursery rocking babies. She told me her story: how her son had walked away from the Lord, was living with his girlfriend, and was about to have a baby. She talked about how she had always brought him to church and youth group, but she ended with a shrug of her shoulders, saying, “But we tried to raise him right, he just wouldn’t listen. I don’t know what else we could have done.”
I continued to rock the baby asleep in my arms, as she went on, “But your parents, they’re so lucky to have children like you two. Such good examples, ministering and going to a Bible college. Your parents must be so happy!”
I smiled and replied something along the lines of, “Yes, my parents did an excellent job of raising us. The tireless effort my mom put into homeschooling us has really shaped us into who we are today.”
The mother’s tone changed slightly and she replied, “I don’t know how she did it! I would have killed my two kids, I tell you that! Your mother was so lucky to have such good, patient, and quiet kids.”
She continued, “You don’t intend on doing that with your children, do you?”
“Absolutely.” I replied. “It is one of the things I look forward to the most!”
At this, shock and slight repulsion started to show on her face, and she went on to try to convince me why I should work and put my children into public school. Although I tried to present my reasoning, she was incapable of understanding where I was coming from, and she ended our conversation by saying, “Well, you’re young. You might change your mind once you have kids and have to put up with it every day!”
When I walked away from the nursery that day, my mind was just completely boggled by this interaction. Though this woman had admired the results of the training we had received at home from our parents, she failed to see the role that it played in shaping children into mature and God-loving individuals. You see, she may have thought my parents were “lucky,” as in “You must have hit the lottery jackpot and gotten two great kids!” but the truth of the matter was that my parents had put in tireless effort into shaping us into who we were. They were not “lucky,” they were obedient to God’s call to train up your child in the way they should go.
My parents did not simply take us to church and hope that Sunday school and sermons would bring us to the Father. They read us the Word, had nightly devotions, prayed and conversed with us about all of life from a Biblical viewpoint. They also led by example, and showed us what it meant to minister, love, forgive, and put God before all else.
Christian parents who trust in church ministry programs will be disappointed. There is only so much that a church can do for a child, and in the end, it was never the church who had responsibility for the child in the first place. God’s Word calls parents to train up their children, and God gives the responsibility for shaping the child’s worldview squarely into a parent’s hands.
“These commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates.” ~Deuteronomy 6:6-9
Notice that this verse speaks of the home having an atmosphere of godly instruction. It is all good and well to have Scripture training at church, but if the home is not the foundation of the child’s Scripture learning, results are doubtful, and the parent is not fulfilling his God-given responsibility.
In a culture where getting a “Christian” child out of the child-rearing experience appears to be “hit or miss,” it is understandable why people react even more harshly to me when I say anything about wanting a big family. To them, this is merely my way of trying to be more spiritual or a “supermom,” while increasing the chance that I will bring up children who walk away from the Lord.
But, let me tell you, I am not setting my mind on this because I think there is anything about having babies that is holy or righteous in and of itself, or because I hope to one day be viewed as “supermom.” Having children for the wrong reasons can be done with any family size in mind. Even Christian parents who have two kids because it’s “the next life step” can be wrongly going about the idea of child-rearing.
Any parent who brings a child into this world ought to do so with fear and trembling and prayer and supplication before the Lord, because a new soul–one that will live eternally–has irrevocably been created, and that soul will end up one of two places. If Christian parents truly believe what they claim to about eternity and Heaven and Hell, than I urge them to think more carefully about what choices they will make in raising their children.
It may not mean homeschooling–though I think public schooling your child will only increase those exhausting battles, and is comparable to swimming upstream–but it most certainly will mean providing a foundation of truth and Gospel learning at home, and not merely Sunday school or church camps.
May God help us to bring up godly children who will glorify Him with their lives, whether we are parents now or will be in the future!
This article orignally appeared on Tiffany’s blog, True Femininity
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Making Time For What Really Matters
take that walk with my family in the cool of the evening,
play that scrabble game my daughter has been wanting me to play,
Read that book to my children,
Decorate those fall cookies with my kids and not worry about the mess.
I’m going to spend my time on things that really matter- building memories with my children and enjoying God’s many blessings. Housework can wait because... I don't have the time, I'm busy making memories.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Children Keeping You Out of the Ministry?
If this sounds like you or someone you know, head over to Walking with Sarah and read Rhonda Devine's post titled, "Children Keeping You Out of the Ministry?" I pray that it will bless you as it did me.
Women are called to manage their homes (1 Tim. 5:14) ; this pleases God and keeps the adversary from speaking reproachfully. Women who make homes keep God’s word from being blasphemed (Titus 2:4). The way I understand this is that a home that is well managed is a positive glory; a home in shambles is a poor testimony. But this is not to lay a guilt trip on women; rather, it should inspire us to view our seemingly mundane tasks as a truly worthy calling that God uses to transform the world. We often think of homekeeping as drudgery. But God says it silences our enemies. That is something potent. God always does things backwards from what we think. This requires wisdom.
Nancy Wilson of Femina
Your good works ought to first be done at home--ministering to the needs of your family. Then if God gives you time, opportunity, available resources or in a different season of life--to take those gifts and those abilities and expand them, as we'll see the Proverbs 31 woman does, outside of your own home.
Nancy DeMoss
We have experienced substantial joys in professional ministry, but nothing is quite so fulfilling as the personal joy of seeing family friends come to faith… The family is at the very heart of authentic ministry and evangelism. As ministry professionals, we hold the firm conviction that family is ministry and that the most effective spread of the gospel occurs through family. We are also convinced that we were never more effective in evangelism than when we had children at home.
Kent and Barbara Hughes
Disciplines of a Godly Family, Crossway, 2004, p. 86- 87
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Biblical Motherhood
In 1950, the great Scottish American preacher Peter Marshall stood before the United States Senate and he explained it this way:
The modern challenge to motherhood is the eternal challenge — that of being a godly woman. The very phrase sounds strange in our ears. We never hear it now. We hear about every other kind of women — beautiful women, smart women, sophisticated women, career woman, talented women, divorced women, but so seldom do we hear of a godly woman — or of a godly man either, for that matter.
I believe women come nearer fulfilling their God-given function in the home than anywhere else. It is a much nobler thing to be a good wife than to be Miss America. It is a greater achievement to establish a Christian home than it is to produce a second-rate novel filled with filth. It is a far, far better thing in the realm of morals to be old-fashioned than to be ultramodern. The world has enough women who know how to hold their cocktails, who have lost all their illusions and their faith. The world has enough women who know how to be smart. It needs women who are willing to be simple. The world has enough women who know how to be brilliant. It needs some who will be brave. The world has enough women who are popular. It needs more who are pure. We need women, and men, too, who would rather be morally right that socially correct.
These quotes were found in a wonderful article called The Rise and Fall of Motherhood in America.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Sour Dough Bread
3 Tablespoons instant potato flakes
Mix warm water and yeast together until dissolved, add sugar and potato flakes. Let ferment on counter for 3-5 days. Then feed with starter feeder (below). If you get starter from someone else, you can omit this step. I would highly recommend trying to find someone to share 1 cup of their starter with you. It takes several loafs of bread before you get that real "sour-doughy" taste.
Feed the starter directions:
1 cup water
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup instant potato flakes
Place ingredients in a bowl and add entire starter and cover with a cloth napkin.
Let this stand at room temperature for 8-10 hours or more- it will start to bubble- you can even hear it!
To make the bread mix the following:
1 cup starter (that has just been out all day)
1 1/2 cup water
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup sugar
6 cups BREAD flour
Mix well and put in a greased bowl.
Cover and let rise til double- this will take approximately 8 hours or more.
Punch down and put in 2 greased loaf pans covered by a cloth napkin and let rise again for 2-3 hours.
Bake at 350 degrees for 30-35 minutes. Pour remaining starter back in jar with lid in the refrigerator.
Turn out of pans onto a cooling rack. I rub butter or oleo on the top crst to keep the crust soft. This is the BEST straight out of the oven!
Sour-Dough Tips:
1. I feed my starter in the morning.
2. Mix up bread the night before and let sit on kitchen counter all nights in a cloth covered bowl.
3. Next morning it should be ready to punch down and put in loaf pans.
4. Cover with a cloth in the loaf pans and sit on the counter most of the day and should be ready to bake and eat by supper time.
Keep the unused starter in a clean jar in the refrigerator with the date on jar when you last fed it. (you can also write on a calendar) It needs to be fed at least once a week to keep active. If you dont want to make bread a particular week just feed the starter, let set out 10 hours then put it back in the refrigerator. This can also be used to make a double batch of bread at a later time. You always need to leave yourself at least a cup of starter or more in the jar.
Note: If you put dough in loaf pans and it should rise to big before you get home to bake it- punch down and let it come up to a rise again. It will be fine.
*You can also use the dough to make cinnamon rolls! I just split the dough in half and make 1 bread and 1 batch of rolls.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
What Makes a House a Home?
I was just telling my husband that our house is finally feeling more and more like "home". It has taken almost 3 years to feel that way though. Over the years I have learned what does and does not make a house a home. I've learned that:
The size of a house doesn't make a home.
Having a spotless house doesn't make a home.
Having a "new" house (we built our own) does not make a home.
"Home" happens when memories are made:
Playing board games around the kitchen table, sharing meals and holidays, bringing home a new baby, learning how to ride a bike, planting a family garden, backyard picnics, counting stars on the back deck, making smores by the fire, baking apple pie, canning summer's bounty...
"Home" happens when first steps are taken, first words are spoken, laughter fills the air, fingerprints decorate the wall, and love fills the hearts.
But most importantly "home" happens when the Lord is the builder. Build defined is: Webster: 1. … to form by uniting materials into a regular structure… 2. To raise or place on a foundation… 3. To increase and strengthen; to increase the power and stability of; to settle, or establish, and preserve.
It is the LORD only that strengthens a home and gives it stability and the ability to last. Is the Lord the builder of your home?
What makes your house a home?
Psalm 127:1
Unless the LORD builds the house,its builders labor in vain.
Proverbs 24:3-4
By wisdom a house is built, and through understanding it is established; through knowledge its rooms are filled with rare and beautiful treasures.
Proverbs 14:1
A wise woman builds her home, but a foolish woman tears it down with her own hands.
Titus 2:3-5
The aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things; That they may teach the young 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"
The Lordship Of Christ In Our Homes
May God’s peace be upon this house
That God has blessed you with
A home that reflects His awesome love
And the grace He freely gives
May it be a home with open doors
That welcomes strangers in
And makes them feel loved and accepted
Knowing that God dwells within
Our homes should be more than a house
Where we live day by day
It should be a place where God can reign
And precious memories are made
For as we establish in our homes
The Lordship of Jesus Christ
We invite His presence to come and dwell
And fill each room inside
So as we continue to lift up the Lord
In every part of our lives
It’s then our homes will reflect the faith
And hope we have in Christ
By: M.S.Lowndes
Friday, August 13, 2010
Beautiful Motherhood

Mothers, don’t let anyone ever dupe you into thinking there’s anything ignoble or disgraceful about remaining at home and raising your family. Don’t buy the lie that you’re repressed if you’re a worker in the home instead of in the world’s workplace. Devoting yourself fully to your role as wife and mother is not repression; it is true liberation. Multitudes of women have bought the world’s lie, put on a suit, picked up a briefcase, dropped their children off for someone else to raise, and gone into the workplace, only to realize after fifteen years that they and their children have a hollow void in their hearts. Many such career women now say they wish they had devoted themselves to motherhood and the home instead.
John MacArthur
Successful Christian Parenting, 1998, p. 195
One of the things the feminist movement has done so successfully is to stir up discontent in women with being homemakers and to convince them that other pursuits can increase their sense of self-worth… Fueling discontent and pushing women out of their homes in search of greater meaning and satisfaction has resulted in off-the-chart stress levels for many women who can no longer survive without pills and therapists… The greatest spiritual, moral, and emotional protection a woman will ever experience is found when she is content to stay within her God-appointed sphere. This does not mean that she never leaves her house, but rather that her heart is rooted in her home and that she puts her family’s needs above all other interests and pursuits.
Nancy Leigh DeMoss
Women are called to manage their homes (1 Tim. 5:14) ; this pleases God and keeps the adversary from speaking reproachfully. Women who make homes keep God’s word from being blasphemed (Titus 2:4). The way I understand this is that a home that is well managed is a positive glory; a home in shambles is a poor testimony. But this is not to lay a guilt trip on women; rather, it should inspire us to view our seemingly mundane tasks as a truly worthy calling that God uses to transform the world. We often think of homekeeping as drudgery. But God says it silences our enemies. That is something potent. God always does things backwards from what we think. This requires wisdom.
Nancy Wilson of Femina
Your good works ought to first be done at home--ministering to the needs of your family. Then if God gives you time, opportunity, available resources or in a different season of life--to take those gifts and those abilities and expand them, as we'll see the Proverbs 31 woman does, outside of your own home.
Nancy DeMoss
Family J.R. Miller Pg.65-66
But it should be understood that for every wife the first duty is the making and keeping of her own home. Her first and best work should be done there, and till it is well done she has no right to go outside to take up other duties. She is to be a “worker at home.” She must look upon her home as the one spot on earth for which she alone is responsible, and which she must cultivate well for God if she never does anything outside. For her Father’s business is not attending Dorcas societies and missionary meetings, and mother’s meetings, and temperance conventions, or even teaching a Sunday-school class, until she has made her own home all the her wisest thought and best skill can make it. There have been wives who in their zeal for Christ’s work outside have neglected Christ’s work inside their own doors. They have had eyes and hearts for human need and human sorrow in the broad fields lying far out, but neither eye nor heart for the work of love lain about their own feet. The result has been that while they were doing angelic work in the lanes and streets, the angels were mourning over their neglected duties within the hallowed walls of their own homes. While they were winning a place in the hearts of the poor or the sick or the orphan, they were losing their rightful place in the hearts of their own household. Let it be remembered that Christ’s work in the home is the first that he gives every wife, and that no amount of consecrated activities in other spheres will atone in this world or the next for neglect or failure there.
Pg. 180
There is nothing in the daily routine of the family life that is unimportant. Indeed, it is ofttimes the things we think of as without influence that will be found to have made the deepest impression on the tender lives of the household.
Pg.188
When we think of the importance of evenings at home it certainly seems worthwhile to plan to save as many as possible of them from outside demands for the sacred work within. It were better that we should neglect some social attraction, or miss some political meeting, or be absent from some lodge or society, than that we should neglect the culture of our own homes and let our children slip away from us forever.
Pg.219
To make a home godless and prayerless is to send our children out to meet all the worlds evil without either the shelter of covenant love to cover them in the storm or the strength of holy principle in their hearts to make them able to endure.
Pg.223
It is impossible to estimate full influence of the reading of the word in a home day after day and year after year. It filters into the hearts of the young. It is absorbed into their souls. It colors all their thoughts. It is wrought into the very fibre of their minds. It imbues them with its own spirit. It’s holy teachings become the principles of their lives, which rule their conduct and shape all their actions.
Pg.262
No other work that God gives any of us to do is so important, so sacred, so far-reaching in it’s influence, so delicate and easily marred as our home-making. This is the work of all our life that is most divine. The carpenter works in wood, the mason works in stone, the smith works in iron, the artist works on canvas, but the home-maker works on immortal souls. The wood or the stone or the iron or the canvas may be marred, and it will not matter greatly in fifty years; but let a tender human soul be marred in its early training, and ages hence the effects will still be seen. Whatever else we slight, let it never be our home-making. If we do nothing else well in this world, let us at least build well within our own doors.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Spiritual Food

We wouldn’t starve our children on purpose by not feeding them. Why is it that we often withhold spiritual food by not feeding our children daily from the Word of God? So often we underestimate the importance of doing this or we believe it’s someone else’s responsibility. We leave the responsibility to our church, Sunday school, or school teachers. God’s word says that it is OUR responsibility to equip our children. We are the ones responsible to train up our children in the way they should go. I have found that I can always find an excuse for not finding time to read/study the Bible with my children…. to busy, to late in the evening, to tired, … Maybe it would be easier if I would stop making excuses for myself and state the truth.. lack of discipline, misplaced priorities, lazy. The truth hurts and we like to sugar coat things sometimes. When we know the good we ought to do and don’t do it we are sinning. That is God’s words, not mine. We can call it whatever we want, but God calls it sin. Raising Godly children takes a lot of discipline! It’s sad how we can manage to find the time to watch t.v., surf the net, clean the house, read a magazine or book, but when it comes to reading the Bible with our children we can’t even squeeze in 15 minutes a day. Let’s feed our children food that always satisfies, food that makes them grow spiritually- a daily feeding of God’s Word.
Matthew 4:4
4Jesus answered, "It is written: 'Man does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.
Matthew 5:6
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they will be filled.
Hebrews 5:12-14
12In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God's word all over again. You need milk, not solid food! 13Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness. 14But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil.
2 Timothy 3:16-17
16All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
Proverbs 22:6
6 Train a child in the way he should go,
and when he is old he will not turn from it.
James 4:17
17Anyone, then, who knows the good he ought to do and doesn't do it, sins.
Proverbs 4:20-22
20 My son, pay attention to what I say;
listen closely to my words.
21 Do not let them out of your sight,
keep them within your heart;
22 for they are life to those who find them
and health to a man's whole body.
Deuteronomy 8:3
3 He humbled you, causing you to hunger and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your fathers had known, to teach you that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the LORD.
Friday, August 6, 2010
Television and Ungodly Influences in the Home

We would never purposely allow violence, pornographic magazines, vulgar language, or books in our home that teach evolution would we? Why is it that we don't see a problem with watching shows on t.v. in our homes that promote these same things? According to usetoday.com, the average American home has more televisions than people with an average of 3 televisions per home. As christians we shouldn't find entertainment in watching shows that promote a sinful lifestyle. Did we forget that it was SIN that nailed our Lord and Savior to the cross? Do we really think filling our minds with filth will have no consequences?
I'm not saying that it's wrong to ever watch television, but we need to use the Biblical standard for choosing which programs we watch:
Phillipians 4:8
"Finally brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable-if anything is excellent or
praiseworthy-think about such things."
Proverbs 31:27
"Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of life."
Galatians 5:19-21
Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.
I want to share with you a few titles of some of the most popular t.v. shows of 2010:
True Blood
Lie to Me
Gossip Girl
Desperate Housewives
Hell's Kitchen
The Vampire Diaries
Pretty Little Liars
Charmed
Buffy the Vampire Slayers
Dirty Sexy Money
Sex and the City
Bad Girls Club
Californication
Here is just a few of the many dangers of television:
1. Desensitizes us to sin.
2. Corrupts our character. "garbage in, garbage out"
3. Creates a false view of reality.
4. Wastes time we can be spending doing something fruitful.
5. Steals precious time we can be spending with our family.
6. Is linked to a higer risk of autism in children.
The following paragraph is taken from Nancy Leigh DeMoss from Revive Our Hearts
Children will cultivate an appetite for whatever they are fed in their earliest formative years. I have known young people from 'committed' Christian homes who know more about movie stars and rock groups than they do about the patriarchs or the disciples. They can sing along with all the top hit songs but do not know the great hymns of the faith. I can only assume that they have an appetite for what they've been exposed to.
"If we allow our children to listen to music, attend movies, read books and magazines and hang out with friends that promote profanity, negative attitudes, illicit sex, rebellion, and violence, we should not be surprised when they adopt the world's philosophies."
God intended that our homes should be like a greenhouse--a potting place for young, tender plants, where they can be nurtured and brought up in the ways of God until they're prepared to go out into the world and to withstand the attacks and the storms of life outside your home.
As parents we need to be careful what influences we are allowing in our homes. May our homes and the programs we watch glorify the Lord and be pleasing in His sight.
The TV is my shepherd, my spiritual life shall want,
It makes me to sit down and do nothing for the cause of Christ.
It demandeth my spare time.
It restoreth my desire for the things of the world.
It keepeth me from studying the truth of God’s Word.
It leadeth me in the path of failure to attend God’s house.
Yea, though I live to be a hundred, I will fear no rental;
My “Telly” is with me, its sound and vision comfort me.
It prepareth a program for me, even in the presence of visitors.
Its volume shall be full.
Surely comedy and commercials shall follow me all the days of my life,
And I will dwell in spiritual poverty forever.
Author Unknown
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Mother's Prayer
Each day I try harder to be the mom I want to be,
But my constant imperfections keeps me in prayer upon my knees.
May my voice become sweeter instead of hurried and rough,
No one said it was easy- Motherhood is TOUGH!
May my heart enjoy serving without griping and grumbling,
Being a mother is a calling so humbling.
May my mind be encouraged by the Truth Your Word reveals
And not swayed by circumstances or how I seem to feel.
May my footsteps lead my children to the path of righteousness
May my actions be in tune with the faith that I profess.
May my feet not run to quickly as I do my chores each day
For little ones are waiting for mom to sit and play.
May my hands fold in prayer seeking guidance and grace
for You alone are God and for this I give You praise.
May my life be lived to raise the children You entrusted me
That their lives would honor You and bring to You glory.
Romans 8:28
And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Embracing Your Role As Homemaker

It's not easy being a homemaker in todays culture. The very word "homemaker" is counter-cultural. The world considers those who choose to work at home as lazy, unproductive, wasting our time, talents, education. We receive no recognition from others for our hard work or salary for the long hours we put in, but we can guarantee that our reward is in heaven. None of our days sacrificed in serving others will go unnoticed by our Lord and Savior. Choosing to stay at home to raise your children is a decision that you will never look back and regret and neither will your children. You will never hear a child tell his mother that he wishes that she would have worked full time so that he could have spent his childhood at daycare. We live in a society where mothers have forsaken there God-given roles and pay others for jobs they simple "dont have the time for" in order for them to pursue more "important" tasks. We can pay someone to raise our chidren, pay someone to clean our house, pay someone to make our food, pay someone to do our laudry... the list goes on and on. I'm not saying all those things are bad in and of itself, but when we refuse to embrace God's calling for us as women we are saying to God that His plan for womanhood isn't relevant anymore, it isn't good enough. God's Ways are always perfect, always good. When we choose to do things our way or the world's way there will always be consequences. Don't ever let anyone tell you that you are not serving God unless you put your ministry before your children. Raising Godly children that fear and love the Lord IS ministry! This should be your first priority. Rest in the season God has placed you because the season of raising little souls is fleeting and will pass quickly.
If we do nothing else well in this world, let us at least build well within our own doors.-JR Miller
Titus 2:1-5
1 But as for you, speak the things which are proper for sound doctrine: 2 that the older men be sober, reverent, temperate, sound in faith, in love, in patience; 3 the older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things— 4 that they admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love their children, 5 to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be blasphemed.
Here are some motherhood quotes you might enjoy:
When you cook nutritious, tasty meals for your family, you are pointing them to the One who feeds the hungry and who satisfies thirsty souls with Himself. You’re giving them an appetite for Him.
And when you go to the time and effort to be sure that your husband and your kids have adequate clothing that fits, you are pointing them toward the One who clothes us with His righteousness.
See, every aspect of homemaking is meant to reflect some spiritual, eternal truth that we’re trying to picture to our world.
When you maintain a clean home, an orderly home, you’re creating an atmosphere where your family can appreciate the value of being spiritually clean, cleansed from sin, and of having lives that are spiritually ordered. You’re teaching; you’re training not just to be clean and orderly because that is not a supreme, ultimate eternal virtue. It’s pointing them to virtues that are supreme and eternal. As you are homemaking what you are doing is creating a taste for our ultimate home in heaven.
We’re talking about homes that reflect the glory of God, the beauty of Christ, and that are havens and greenhouses and places where life can be cultivated and where people can grow and become like Christ and where the gospel can be manifested.
Nancy Leigh DeMoss
"To know the true state of a nation, look at the state of the Church. To know the true state of the Church, look at the families who populate her pews. To know the state of her families, look to the fathers who lead them. Destroy the vision of the father, and you render impotent the family, thus creating a chain reaction that will spread throughout civilization."
- Douglas W. Phillips
Family JR Miller
Pg. 118
The place in which He (Jesus)
was prepared for that mission was not in any of the fine schools of the world, but in a lowly home; not at the feet of rabbis and philosophers, but with his own mother for his teacher. What an honor does this fact put upon home! What a dignity upon motherhood!
Family J.R. Miller Pg.65-66
But it should be understood that for every wife the first duty is the making and keeping of her own home. Her first and best work should be done there, and till it is well done she has no right to go outside to take up other duties. She is to be a “worker at home.” She must look upon her home as the one spot on earth for which she alone is responsible, and which she must cultivate well for God if she never does anything outside. For her Father’s business is not attending Dorcas societies and missionary mettings, and mother’s meetings, and temperance conventions, or even teaching a Sunday-school class, until she has made her own home all the her wisest thought and best skill can make it.
There have been wives who in their zeal for Christ’s work outside have neglected Christ’s work inside their own doors. They have had eyes and hearts for human need and human sorrow in the broad fields lying far out, but neither eye nor heart for the work of love lain about their own feet. The result has been that while they were doing angelic work in the lanes and streets, the angels were mourning over their neglected duties within the hallowed walls of their own homes. While they were winning a place in the hearts of the poor or the sick or the orphan, they were losing their rightful place in the hearts of their own household. Let it be remembered that Christ’s work in the home is the first that he gives every wife, and that no amount of consecrated activities in other spheres will atone in this world or the next for neglect or failure there. JR Miller
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Instilling God's Word In Our Children

Little minds are so impressionable! Instilling God's Word in our children takes effort, but is well worth the investment of our time. God says in 2 Timothy 3:16-17
that all Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. We are so grateful that God has blessed our family to be able to send our children to a christian school to receive a christian education. God has also blessed us with a great church and Sunday school teachers that teach our children the Word of God, but it is ultimately our job as parents to train up our children in the way they should go. So many times as parents we think we are doing our part just by sending our kids to a christian school or taking our children to church. Whoever spends the most time with your children has the greatest spiritual influence. Mothers- No one can parent and raise your children better than you can. God blessed you with the children you have because He chose YOU to train them, to lead them, to protect them. How tragic it would be to send our children out into the world without a solid foundation of scripture!
There are so many ways we can teach our children scripture. Several months ago I bought a small primitive looking chalk board and hung it in my kitchen. Each week I try to write a different scripture on it. The kids look forward to finding a new scripture written on it. Another thing I made was a scripture jar. I typed up several scriptures on colored paper, cut them out in strips, and folded them. I then put them in a cute little jar that I leave out on our window sill as a reminder. Each morning before we eat our breakfast I let each of the kids take out one verse and read it outloud. While we eat breakfast we discuss the verse and what God means by it and how it applies to our life. I'm sure you could come up with more creative ways than I did, but that's what works for us. If you have any creative tips on teaching children scripture please share them with me! I would be glad to hear them!
Deuteronomy 11:18-19
18 Fix these words of mine in your hearts and minds; tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. 19 Teach them to your children, talking about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up.
At a very early age we put a spoon in the hand of a toddler, teaching him how to feed himself. We must do the same with the Word of God, teaching young hearts and minds how to draw life-giving and life-shaping truths from its pages. Kay Arthur Youniquely Woman pg. 226
If you fail, father, to teach your son to fear God, the devil will teach him to hate God. If you fail to teach your son to guard his mind, the devil will gladly teach him to have an open mind. If you fail to teach your son to obey his parents, the devil will teach him to rebel and break his parent’s heart. If you fail to teach your son to select his companions, the devil will gladly choose them for him. If you fail to teach your son to control his body, the devil will teach him to give it over completely to lust. If you fail to teach your son to enjoy the marriage partner that God has given him, the devil will teach him to destroy the marriage. If you fail to teach your son to watch his words, the devil will fill his mouth with filth. If you fail to teach your son to pursue his work, the devil will make his laziness a tool of hell. If you fail to teach your son to manage his money, the devil will teach him to waste it on riotous living. And if you fail to teach your son to love his neighbor, the devil will gladly teach him to love only himself.
John MacArthur
Crucial Lessons for a Wise Father, Selected Proverbs.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Rest

Matthew 11:28-30
“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”
Rest. Something the world considers as being lazy, idle, and unproductive. Most days I feel like I need to always be doing something, yet God says it is a good thing to rest. We all NEED those quiet times, those moments of peace where we can be alone with God and replenish our strength from Him. As Nancy Leigh Demoss says, "You have to drink of Him before you can pour out into others’ lives." So true! Whenever I neglect resting in the Lord I find myself snapping at my husband and kids and living my day feeling drained instead of replenished. I often feel like I am running on empty. Instead of running faster and trying harder I need find rest in Jesus and let Him be the satisfier of my thirsting soul!
Being a wife and mother of 3 is hard work! Alot of days I tell myself that I don't have time to rest. That I just have to much to do and that I have to keep going in order to get everything I need to get done, done. I continue living my day in my own strength and end up frustrated, tired, with nothing left to give to my family. I believe the reason so many mothers are overwhelmed with the daily duties of motherhood is because we don't begin our day with Jesus. We wake up and tackle the day on our own, in our own strength, but our strength will never be enough. We might spend our days being busy, but there is a difference in being busy and being fruitful. We cannot live a fruitful life apart from Christ. Only through abiding in Him can our lives produce fruit. How often we plan our own steps, goals, dreams, and how we spend our precious time. When was the last time you asked the Lord what HIS plans, dreams, and goals for your day was? I am speaking to myself as I'm writing this because I'm guilty in not seeking the Lord's will as I begin each day. I usually read my Bible at the end of the day before bed, but have realized that this is not what God wants for me. He wants me to BEGIN each day with Him. God's yoke is EASY and His burden is LIGHT! God wants us to find rest for our souls in HIM. We wont find true rest for our souls by reading a good book, having a break from the kids, getting the house in order, or by getting more sleep. Come to the only One who can give you the rest your soul yearns for!
Lord, as I begin each day help me to seek Your will and not live according to my own plans. Your word says that your yoke is easy and your burden is light. Help me to weed out the things in our family that do not produce fruit. Lead me to still waters and help others to see the reflection of Jesus living in me. Amen.
Mark 6:31
31Then, because so many people were coming and going that they did not even have a chance to eat, he said to them, "Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest."
Psalm 127:2
2 In vain you rise early
and stay up late,
toiling for food to eat—
for he grants sleep to those he loves.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Summer Break?

During each school year I find myself looking forward to “summer break”. I anxiously await ice cream filled evenings, later bedtimes, sleeping in, and days that my kids can simply be kids. Over time I am beginning to learn that there is no such thing as summer break or any break for that matter when you have young kids at home. It seems that summers are busier than ever and my calendar is filled with places to go and people to see. There are days that it’s after lunch before I can finally take a shower. There are always hungry stomachs to feed, boo-boo’s to kiss, laundry to be cleaned, bills to be paid, dishes to be washed. Sometimes I long to have a day where I can choose to do absolutely nothing but day dream and enjoy the simplicity of life. I long for days where I can sleep in, read a book, and actually relax and watch my kids simply be kids. Life with kids is busy- life without kids is busy too!! I’m starting to see that I have to take the ordinary- the everyday things that has to be done and try to make them extra-ordinary. Instead of eating lunch inside we have a picnic lunch in our yard. Instead of going to bed early I watch an old time favorite “Mary Poppins” with the kids while eating homemade strawberry sundaes. Instead of dreadfully cooking supper I include my 2 oldest kids and let them help set the table and prepare the food. Instead of them looking at this as a chore they joyfully help me in the kitchen and feel a sense of accomplishment as they do something “all by themselves”. Usually by the end of July I am looking forward to school starting so things will “slow down”, but this year I am going to strive to enjoy living in the moment. I realize if I am always looking ahead to the future then I’m not really living for today.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Berry pickin' season!

My favorite time of year… well, besides Christmas; strawberry pickin’ season! I was beginning to worry that we wasn’t going to have any strawberries to pick this year because of all the rain we’ve had. This spring has been unseasonably wet. They are calling for another 3-4 inches of rain tomorrow evening. By this weekend it supposed to be in the upper 80’s and sunny which should be very helpful for our garden. Each year we plan on having a smaller garden, but instead it grows larger each year. We decided to plant a vast assortment of fruits and veggies this year. We planted asparagus, corn, green beans, green peppers, sweet potatoes, carrots, watermelons, cantaloupes, onions, radishes, tomatoes, potatoes, and even pumpkins for the kids this fall! We will also have fresh peaches to pick for the 1st time this year from our 3 year old peach trees. Being a family of 5 we eat a lot of food and gardening greatly cuts down our grocery expense. The kids also enjoy picking and eating fresh fruits and vegetables; although they complain when asked to help pull weeds. I remind them- anything worth having is worth working for. Last year at this time I found gardening more of a chore than a pleasure due to a colicky baby. As of today, Ellie is now 15 months and also enjoys gardening. She planted her very 1st sunflower seed this year and enjoys eating fresh strawberries. Over the last several years of staying home with little ones I’ve come to appreciate the “simpler” things in life. It’s not very often that my husband of almost 10 years and I share a moment with only the two of us. I’ve come to realize the full extent of the saying “the most important things in life aren’t things”. Knowing the Lord, trying to make my home a haven, enjoying friends and family, and of course fresh picked berries are some things I am much grateful for. “I am beginning to learn that it is the sweet, simple things of life which are the real ones after all.” Laura Ingalls Wilder