Thursday, November 29, 2007

A Reason to Hate Sin by Phil Johnson

This article seemed especially fitting to our family as my husband's grandfather is in failing health, as a friend fights a recurrence of cancer and is not doing well, and a distant cousin is no longer with us. May the members of our family reach out to Christ as their rock in this painful time, and that their sorrow is not hopeless.

A friend of mine learned on Thanksgiving Day that he has terminal cancer. I visited him in the hospital that afternoon, and he was devastated. Doctors had discovered an inoperable tumor during surgery, and they simply stitched him back up. He now has all the pain and none of the benefit from that surgical procedure, which was extremely invasive. He was not much improved when I saw him again a couple of days later—after I had been to a memorial service for another friend's father.

So I've been thinking a lot recently about the frailty and the shortness of our human existence—and how sad death is, even for the Christian.

Of course, Christians understand that death is a consequence of sin, and death's sorrow ought to be a universal reminder of how evil sin is. The fruits of humanity's rebellion against God are invariably bitter, tragic, painful, and ugly—and death is the culmination of it all: sin's wages. We all know the pain of loss from death, or we will at some time in our lives. It is simply impossible to live a long life in a sin-cursed world without being assaulted with the sorrow and tragedy of human loss. Even Jesus felt that pain, and He wept at the death of His friend Lazarus (John 11:35).

Have you ever wondered why He was weeping? It could not be just grief over the loss of Lazarus, because He was about to bring Lazarus back to life. Yet it's clear from Scripture that His tears signified real sorrow.

So what was He mourning about?

Surely He was grieving over the effects of sin on people He loved. He was sorrowing over the ravages of evil on His creation. He was thus identifying with those whom He loved, even in their anguish. "For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities" (Hebrews 4:15). He bore our griefs and carried our sorrows. He is a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. And at Lazarus's grave He felt the full weight of anguish over the sinfulness of the human condition. He was deeply and sincerely moved by it.

Death is a horrible enemy. Scripture says in 1 Corinthians 15:26 that death is "The last enemy that shall be destroyed." And when you sit with someone who is dying slowly, you come face to face with the fact that death is a formidable, tyrannical, universal foe. The searing pain and sadness of death seem almost unbearable at times. If we thought about it in merely human, earthly terms, we might be tempted to become chronically melancholy and despondent.

But Scripture gives us both hope and a reason to rejoice, even in the midst of the gloom of death. Remember: it was in this very same context that Jesus made one of His most glorious promises about His victory over death and hell. He told Lazarus's devastated sister Martha: "I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die" (John 11:25-26). He meant, of course, that believers can never die spiritually, and that even their physical death is only a temporary condition.

But that promise, glorious as it is, does not erase death's temporal sorrows. It did not even keep Jesus Himself from weeping. The short verse that records His sorrow over Lazarus's death comes just ten verses after He made that promise. We who cling to that promise likewise still have profound sorrows, but thankfully, our sorrow is not a hopeless sorrow (1 Thessalonians 4:13).

Pondering the universality of death and the inevitability of it, I have to wonder what certain Emergent leaders could possibly be thinking when they systematically try to downplay the hope of heaven and urge Christians to be more concerned with earthly matters.

Indeed, "if in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men the most pitiable" (1 Corinthians 15:19).


HT: Team Pyro

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Works for me Wednesday....Christmas tag idea



I don't know about you, but I never know what to do with all the Christmas cards I get every year. I hate to throw them out because they are so pretty, but don't really have a use for them. So I started doing what my mom does. She saves all her Christmas cards and when the season comes around again and it's time to wrap gifts, she pulls out last years Christmas cards. She cuts them into strips and uses them as tags on all the gifts!

You end up saving money and making neat little one-of-a-kind gift tags!

For more helpful hints visit WFMW at Rocks in My Dryer!

Freebies

Free Huggies Gentle Care Sensitive Baby Wipes

Free $10 Starbucks Gift Card from Hyatt Hotels

Free 2008 Betty Crocker Recipe Calendar (USA)

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Turkey Pie

If you are like me, then you still have leftover turkey. Eating a plate of leftovers for several days after the holiday leaves you tired of eating turkey, stuffing, gravy, potatoes and any other casserole you might have hanging around your refrigerator.

You also may not feel like making pie crust from scratch...in that case, I have a solution. But we all know there is nothing like a homeade crust, so I'll give you that recipe too!

Jiffy Mix Dough

2 cups Jiffy Baking Mix
2/3 cup milk

Mix it together with a fork. Shape with your hands and roll out or store it in the fridge, wrapped tightly, until later.

Homeade Pie Crust

4 cups flour
1-1/3 cup shortening, plus one good plop
1 tsp salt (optional)
3/4 cup cold water

Put flour and salt into bowl. Cut in shortening thoroughly. Add water. Blend with a fork and shape with your hands. Separate 1/2 and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Refrigerate or freeze until later. Makes 2-3 double crusted pies.

Now that we've got our crust done, do you have any gravy left? Any leftover turkey drippings? I kept the extra drippings thinking that I would be making pies a few days later...so I can make gravy just as good as it was on Thanksgiving!

What you want to do is make up some more gravy for the inside of your pie. Once you have that made, add in your leftover turkey and any veggies you might want in there. I usually add in green beans and corn. If you want potatoes, I would recommend making the gravy thinner since the starch of the potatoes will thicken up the inside of the pie.

If you use the Jiffy mix, I would just use it as the top of the pie. Load up a large casserole dish with your turkey mixture and then put the rolled out crust on top of the dish, tucking in the sides. Beat an egg and brush the top, and make a few small slits over the top to let the steam escape. Bake at 350 for an hour or so.

If you use the homeade pie crust, roll out the bottom, place in a pie pan. Fill it up with your turkey mixture and roll out the top crust, placing it on top. Press the edges together and crimp it with your fingers. Brush the top with a beaten egg and makes some fork holes in it. Bake at 350 for an hour or so.

(The baking time is all going to depend on how hot your turkey mixture is...and you want to make sure that the dough is fully cooked through)

Joy to the World by Isaac Watts

(It seems like I'm always a day late on these hymns lately! Sorry!)

"Joy to the World" is one of the best-known and best-loved of Christmas carols. It contains a message of joy and love replacing sin and sorrow. It may also be interpreted to be about life after the second coming of Christ. The hymn is significant for its widespread use throughout Christian denominations and for the musical stature of the people who created it.

The scripture-based words are by Isaac Watts. The music was adapted and arranged by Lowell Mason from an older melody which was then believed to have originated from Handel; not least because the theme of the refrain (And heaven and nature sing...) appears in the orchestra opening and accompaniment of the recitative Comfort Ye from Handel's Messiah, and the first four notes match the beginning of the choruses Lift up your heads and Glory to God from the same oratorio. However, Handel did not compose the entire tune.

Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King;
Let every heart prepare Him room,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven and nature sing,
And Heaven, and Heaven, and nature sing.

Joy to the earth, the Savior reigns!
Let men their songs employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat the sounding joy,
Repeat, repeat, the sounding joy.

No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground;
He comes to make His blessings flow
Far as the curse is found,
Far as the curse is found,
Far as, far as, the curse is found.

He rules the world with truth and grace,
And makes the nations prove
The glories of His righteousness,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders of His love,
And wonders, wonders, of His love.

Freebie Update...




I would hope that those of you who sign up for the freebies and samples that I post weekly, signed up for this one! I just received my boxes in the mail. I have to say that this was one of the best freebies I have received!

I received two boxes of individually wrapped assorted chocolates that include: Coffee, Dark Chocolate, Praline Cream, Milk Chocolate, Hazelnut Cream, Praline and Hazelnut Chunk, and Cream Chocolate. YUM!

There is nothing like getting over a pound of FREE german chocolate!!

(Angela...did you sign up for this one?)

Unfortunately, it is too late now to get it...but those of you who overlooked it...maybe you should pay more attention when I post free samples and freebies!

Huckabee on Homeschooling

Monday, November 26, 2007

My Favorite Christmas Music

1. Behold the Lamb of God by Andrew Peterson




I cannot stress how much I love this cd. Go to the show, get the cd and get the dvd. You will not be disappointed!








2. Savior: Celebrating the Mystery of God Become Man by Sovereign Grace Music



(See my write up about it!)






3. Season of Love by 4Him




(I grew up listening to this and still enjoy it)







4. Because it's Christmas by Barry Manilow





(This is a must have...Barry and I go waaay back!)









5. Have a Holly Jolly Christmas by Burl Ives





(Another childhood favorite)









6. When My Heart Finds Christmas by Harry Connick jr








(Love this!)

A quote

"That's one of the ways in which the self-esteem movement works against the message of the gospel. The prevailing emphasis of our culture is to tell people that what's wrong with them is that they feel bad about themselves. If they will just feel better about themselves, they can be cured of anything.But the Bible says you'll never feel good about yourself until you learn first to feel bad about yourself. When you realize how bad things really are, then you are in a position to learn how to feel truly good. Then it won't be about you, but about the One who died to forgive your great debt so that you, in turn, can be a debt forgiver to others around you.Anytime I harbor animosity toward anyone, it is because I have diminished my sense of the debt I owe to the living God."

-Alistair Begg

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Four Things

I read this over at All About Us and thought I would join in :)

Four Things You May or May Not Know About Me


Four jobs I have had in my life:

1. Pampered Chef Consultant
2. Preschool teacher
3. Direct Marketing/Sales Associate
4. Avon Representative

Movies I Would Watch Over and Over:

1. Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
2. Les Miserables...10th Anniversary Special
3. An Affair to Remember
4. Tommy Boy

Four TV Shows that I watch:

1. The Office
2. Lost
3. 24
4. American Idol

Four Places I have been:

1. Rhode Island (born there, lived there til I was 11)
2. Maine (lived there from age 11-21)
3. Tennessee (lived here from 21 to present)
4. Paris, France (visited my sister when she was a nanny)

Four People who E-mail / Call Me Often:

1. My Hub
2. My mom
3. Teana Gina

Four of My Favorite Foods:

1. General Tso's Chicken/fried rice
2. Pizza
3. Beef and Brown Potatoes
4. Meat Pie

Four places I would rather be right now:

1. Shopping
2. in bed, fast asleep
3. in bed, not-so-fast-asleep (iykwim)
4. Anywhere with my family

Things I am looking forward to this year:

1. Going to Maine for Christmas
2. to Louisville next year for Together For the Gospel
3. Jamison's first birthday
4. Watching my children discover new things


Want to play? Consider yourself tagged and please let me know you decided to play!

A Huckabee Review

Friday, November 23, 2007

A few pictures for a holiday weekend!

"Gideon, smile!", I said
"I can't!", he said.
So I made him!
Yes, my baby tried to eat puppy chow...I pulled three pellets from his mouth!


My boys, helping mommy break up the bread for the stuffing!

A Thanksgiving table The turkey....YUM!
Mmmmm....dessert!

Hey Angela! It looks nice, eh?
Cheap slave labor
See the arm from behind the tree? It's the phantom raker....

Christmas gifts you just CAN'T pass up...aka The TBNN after Thanksgiving sale!

(this is ALL in fun, and I'm sure that those who are very much against reformed belief, wish there was a pill for it, lol)


NET FINNEY 2.0 - The most popular Calvinist/Reformed Internet filter out there today. It's saved millions of unsuspecting Christians from being infected with Reformed theology.

Was: $39.95
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Rick Warren's 40 Days of Porpoises: Warren's gripping work dealing with Christian animal rights. A must for any Vegan-Christian friend.

Was: $19.95
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Talking Fred Phelps Doll: The perfect gift for your darling dumpling this Christmas. Make the life of your little one complete with Talking Fred.

Was: $9.99
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The ePhod: Make sure your Indy-Fundy only listens to "good" music! The ePhod ensures that nothing but music with the right balance between rhythm, melody and harmony will play. And NO SONGS WITH DRUMS!

Was: $249.00
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The TNAIRSECCLKJMV (t-nair-seckel-KJM-vee): Now the most complicated translation is more affordable. For the loved one in your life who must have every translation under the sun.

Was: $59.99
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Calvinix Reformed Theology Inhibitor: Our most popular product of all time. Calvinix blocks those nasty Reformed thoughts before they ever make it to your brain. Supplies limited.

Was: $19.95
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I found these at TBNN...Team Tominthebox News Network!

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Thanksgiving Checklist

Swiss Cheese Green Beans: check...just have to put on the buttered bread crumbs in the morning.

Sweet Potato Casserole: check...just have to put on the pecan topping in the morning.

Party Potatoes: check...just have to put pats of butter on top before baking.

(Tomorrow, I will take these out of the fridge about an hour and a half before baking to let them get down in temperature so the stoneware doesn't crack!)



Cherry Pie, Whoopie Pies, Congo Squares and Frank's Bars: check!





Turkey Brine is done...just waiting until the turkey goes into it later.

I will make the Bread Stuffing later tonight when I have room in the fridge when the turkey goes into the brine. Of course, I can't make the gravy yet....gotta wait until tomorrow for those turkey drippings!!

Edited to say: Bread Stuffing is done....the boys helped me...pics to come!

This will definitely make tomorrow much less stressful. It also helps to have a double oven :)

2007 Toy Review: part 1

I figure, what better way to review toys than to tell you what toys survived the year with my boys. Friends can tell you, they know how to play with toys!

Firstly, the following toys are recommended NOT to be purchased. Unless your child is calm and doesn't want to run up and down the halls with their cars (mine do), this might last more than 6 months. Each of these have been purchased for the kids at birthdays, and 6 months or less, one the wheels have broken off, and there is no way to fix it. They still play with two of them, but get very frustrated with the wheels always falling off.












Now, something I do recommend, is the miniature diecast cars. The kids have a bunch of these, and aside from a little chipping of the paint, they are very durable!

This Mack has also stood the test of time! Highly recommended!

This is the alphabet classroom made by Vtech. Nolan received this 3 years ago and it is still in really great shape! It's fun and educational and is still a big hit!

If you're one of those people who shop on Black Friday....

Here are the ads: Black Friday ads

They have a main site that is updated daily!

Happy Shopping!

Works for me Wednesday....cleaning up the toys!



I don't know about you, but I feel like there is a never ending battle between my house and the kid's toys. On any given afternoon, if you were to stop by, you would find the living room and hallway littered with race cars, play food, abc buses, etc...the list goes on and on.

A couple of weeks ago, I had an epiphany! I started at one end of the house...the dining room. If there were toys on the floor, I took the broom and swept them into the kitchen. Then I swept all of those toys into the hallway. I started again in the living room and swept all of those toys into the hall. As they accumulated, they were all swept into the kid's rooms.

I know what you're thinking....that I'm a genius. I know, I've often thought the same thing! Within a matter of two minutes, your entire house can be free of toys!

Of course, the bedrooms leave much to be desired, but that is what the kids are for! What works best here is telling the kids to clean up their rooms to surprise daddy who is almost home from work. My boys are 5-1/2, 4, 2-1/2 and almost 1....so that works. I'm thinking that when they are teenagers, they won't really care if they surprise daddy with a clean room anymore, lol.

Try this and tell me how it goes! Head on over to Rocks in My Dryer for more helpful hints!



Next week, I will share a way to save some money on gift wrapping!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Holiday Recipes #6: Bread Stuffing and Gravy

Here is a recipe for your basic stuffing....comes out good every time! (you can easily make this the night before!)

I usually double this since everyone loves their stuffing!

Bread Stuffing

Approx 15 slices of bread
1 medium chopped onion
1 stick butter or margarine
2 stalks chopped celery
1/2 cup chicken/turkey broth
salt, pepper, sage (to taste)

In a small saucepan or in the microwave, cook onion, celery, and margarine until soft. In a large bowl, break bread up into pieces with your hands. Poor cooked mixture over the bread. Add as much broth you need to make the mixture stick together. Start with 1/2 cup. Add salt, pepper and sage to taste.

It's best mixed with your hands!

You can just keep this covered in the fridge until you are ready to stuff your turkey. You might have left over, you can just put that in a loaf pan and bake later to have extra.

Turkey Gravy

1-1/2 cups turkey drippings from pan
1-1/2 cups flour
1-1/2 tsp salt
3/8 tsp pepper
6 cups broth

Place drippings in bowl and add flour, salt, and pepper...whisking to a smooth paste. Add broth. Using a hand blender, whisk, or mixer, mix until everything is smooth. Microwave at full power until bubbly and thick, beating smooth every 2 minutes.