Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Praying Together in 1 Accord at such a time as THIS ....
It had been WAY too long since I had been a part of a group like that and such a BLESSING it was: husbands and wives and one son were there seeking God in ONE accord. May this just be The Beginning since we KNOW The One Who answers heartfelt persistent prayer. When all else IS failing, what do we have left?
Have you heard the song, Where 2 or 3 are gathered in My Name, THERE I AM ? (It is recorded on Hide 'Em In Your Heart newly re-released by Steve Green .) I was trying to explain this to one of our sons recently. When we gather with others who love Jesus Christ, there seems to be MORE of HIM Present, not that He isn't enough in each of us as individuals. However, it IS True that when we gather with other humble, Spirit filled believers in Jesus Christ, MORE of The Gifts of The Holy Spirit are able to operate manifestly for the benefit of each one there and we SEE Him more CLEARLY in what He IS/wants to do in each life.
PRAISE HIS HOLY NAME !
Sunday, March 22, 2009
25 & STILL Living at home? !!!
The DEVIL is a LIAR, he makes us THINK we are IN-dependent. Actually, when we have no one to "answer" to, we are his unwitting pawns. LORD, DELIVER US from DECEPTION ! Amen. AMEN. AMEN !!!
20-Something Reasons to Live at Home by Rachel Starr Thomson
I'm newly 25 and still living at home...
We're not here because our parents are control freaks (they're not). We're not here because we're scared of the real world, lack ambition, or just can't make it out there. Rather, we've discovered that living at home is an excellent way to lay a foundation for the rest of our lives. We're doing our best to take advantage of it....
Over the years, I've realized five key benefits of living at home as a young adult — whether with my own family or with another. Family life offers many blessings for the stay-at-home single adult, provided that we use this stage to actively and responsibly build a future. Living at home is especially helpful for single women, but guys can benefit from it as well....
Recently, a good friend of mine moved out of the apartment she'd been sharing with her mother into a new one with a roommate. After a few months, the roommate moved home to England, and my friend was on her own.
Before she'd been in that apartment a year, she was forced to move again. This time, she decided to move in with an older couple who had just sent their daughter off to university in Toronto. They had two empty bedrooms and hearts that were very willing to take in another "daughter."
Shortly after she made this decision, she and I had an interesting conversation. She expressed how much she had enjoyed having her way — her tea and a book before bed, her quiet, her music, her habits and preferences. I pointed out that this wasn't necessarily a good thing. In just a few months, my friend was losing her flexibility and ability to flow with others. We both saw that the coming change was the best thing for her.
After she moved back into a family home, the change in her was remarkable. In no time, she was back to her old self — more cheerful, flexible and fun to be around.
See the whole article at the link below:
Ihttp://www.boundless.org/2005/articles/a0001998.cfm
"A puppy thrown to the wolves will either be eaten or learn to be a wolf"...
The word "homeschooling" is misleading, and I'm not especially fond of it. Homeschooling is not primarily about school at all. Homeschooling is a lifestyle. It encompasses nearly every aspect of life and family, and its influence is far greater than anything found in the pages of Saxon math or Charlotte Mason-approved novels. It's that lifestyle I have loved, its foundations I am so grateful for, its inherent ideas about life I'm still living out. If I have children, I mean to homeschool them.
Sheltered at Home
Homeschooling is sharply distinct from the lifestyles of those who "go to" school, first because homeschooled kids don't "go" anywhere. They stay home. What does that mean to a child? It means shelter, security and greater ability to be children in a world that wants people to grow up too fast.
....
Many homeschool parents like to use the greenhouse analogy. A plant that is tenderly nurtured in a greenhouse, protected from predators and the elements, can later be transplanted to live a healthy, thriving life. One that is always outside may simply be eaten, or stunted and destroyed by wind, sun and snow it's not ready to encounter.
I like to say that a puppy thrown to the wolves will either be eaten or learn to be a wolf. A fully grown dog stands a fighting chance.
Our home was sheltered. I remember realizing at a very young age that many of my friends were scarred and jaded by their experiences at school — and I'm talking about children under the age of 10! They were already cynical, already hurt, already worldly-wise.
In many ways my siblings and I were naïve and innocent, and we knew it — and were glad of it. We did encounter evil. We learned about sin and consequences, hell and heaven, cold hard reality and the need for grace. But we didn't learn about these things by falling prey, nor were we left to figure things out for ourselves. We learned by our parents' side.
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Many homeschooling parents choose to bring their children home because they believe it is their God-given responsibility to disciple them.
Discipleship extends beyond spiritual concerns to character and life training. My mom practiced discipleship when she spent hours teaching us to scrub a bathtub properly, to cook a pot of spaghetti sauce from scratch and to wash our socks with homemade soap. We learned practical and business skills at home from our parents. We spent serious time with them, watching them in action, gleaning from their character and experience. And we learned how all these things related to who we were in God.
http://www.boundless.org/2005/articles/a0001998.cfm
(Formatting added.)