Wednesday, December 31, 2008

2008

Many of you are out there reading this and have never posted a comment, today is the time to join in, I expect at least 10 comments! :-)

So, 2008 was not without some challenges, but why dwell on the negative?!

Post up at least one way God has blessed you in '08 and please be specific. Let's honor God for the amazing way he blesses us, especially during times of trial and tribulation.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Finished my homework!

I finished up day 5 this morning. Something really cool is happening here. There is so much symbolism in the Bible that was completely lost on me until now.

This morning the question was how many loaves of bread were placed on the table in the tabernacle? 12....aha my brain thought 12 for the 12 tribes! And bread, The Bread of Life, brings me back to manna and God's daily provision for the Israelites. So much to think about, so rich in meaning, I love the quiet time spent in God's Word...best part of the day by far! There is so much more than what meets the eye when one simply reads the words on the page! I don't know how I've lived so long without this in my life.

I'm sad that it has taken me nearly 40 years to get serious about studying the Bible, I am eternally grateful to Kathy Vander Tuig for asking me to join her in facilitating a Beth Moore study. Reading God's word and gaining a fuller UNDERSTANDING of what I am reading is changing my life.

I am grateful that Beth Moore does all the work of showing us correlations between passages, but more than that, I am thankful that she reminds us each day to ask God to give us understanding of what we are reading. Without that moment of quieting down and asking God to be with us, it's just another fill in the blank session, more knowledge is good, but God is after our hearts.

When I taught Sunday School years ago, it always amused me that when the kids didn't know the answer to a question, they always went with "Jesus" as the answer. Those kids were on to something...the more I study the Old Testament stories, they all point to Jesus.

It truly is all about Jesus.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Sunday visitor

Yesterday (Sunday) our family had dinner at my dad and mom's house. Isn't it so wonderful when you don't have to rush in the house and cook right after church? Christmas dinner was at my house, so it was a relief not to have to do it all over again.

After dinner we played boggle, Ashley beat us all, that little stinker, she seems to find every single word the rest of us come up with and then a few more obscure ones that we missed.

Shortly after our game ended the doorbell rang, and my dad's friend Fidel had stopped by to drop off tamales, and to wish my parents a "Happy Christmas".

Fidel's smile is a mile wide. My dad met him a few years ago when both he and my husband, Ted, worked loading milk trucks at the dairy farm. Fidel was a manager at one of the barns. My husband Ted (both my father and my husband are named Ted so I'm trying to keep it clear for ya!) hadn't seen Fidel in a long time, and both of their faces lit up and Fidel threw his arms around husband Ted and gave him a big squeeze.

Fidel's english is not so great but he tries hard to communicate and we all just laugh when both of my parents talk LOUDER and SLOWER thinking he might magically start understanding their language if they speak to him as if he were a first grader.

Yesterday we learned to say "babies" when asking him about his kids, even though several of them are grown with their own kids. "Babies" is the word that Fidel knows to describe children. Fidel has 10 babies!!! Wow. He then told us that his brother in Mexico has 16 babies, then he grinned and quietly leaned over and said to my dad, "no too much working in Mexico eh?" Too much free time, means too many babies I guess.

He didn't stay long, but it was a warm and loving exchange and it left us all with grins on our faces. On the way home I remembered a conversation I had with one of my children's classmates not too long ago. The topic of our discussion was racism.

The classmate communicated that he didn't like the Mexicans because they didn't learn to speak english. He reasoned that his grandparents had to learn to speak english when they moved to the United States from Holland, and that the Mexican people should do the same. The boy didn't want to hear any spanish spoken around him, after all this is America for crying out loud!

I wished we had invited that classmate over to my parents house so that he could have met Fidel. I'd guess in 10 minutes, Fidel might have been able to break thru the barriers that exist in the mind of the boy of Dutch heritage.

I have butterflies in my stomach as I type this and wonder if I'll even have the guts to post it. Racism is always such a touchy subject, I tend to avoid the topic as much as possible. But staying quiet does nothing to improve the situation, and I'm not really the type to stay quiet, so here it goes.

As a teenager I was beating a drum pretty loudly to exclaim that I was not a racist, God had created all people to be equal! Easy for me to say since I lived in a bubble, and honestly had never even met someone of a different race, except the kids in my school who were from Korea, that had been adopted by a family in the area. In fact I hardly knew anyone who was a different nationality from me. It was pretty easy for me to claim that I was not a racist when I lived amongst only one race.

And then I joined the bigger world, and I quickly realized that it is a challenge to understand the ways of different cultures and races. Not everyone was like me, or thought like me, or even spoke like me...what an eye opener! Yes, I had racism in me...it was hard to adjust to living with people who were different than I was.

So here I am back in DeMotte again, and a lot has changed! Not all the kids attending the Christian school are "vans" or "stras" isn't that great?! For years my daughter was the only Carmen and now there are dark haired Carmen's all over! Our town what I liked to call "the bubble" is changing, and for the better in my opinion.

I could weep to tell you all how proud I am of my parents. My dad quickly began to reach out to the Hipsanic guys at the dairy farms. He immediately saw his job as an opportunity to shine God's light to people who don't know Him. The first Christmas the dairies were open my dad bought fruit with his own money, and ordered religious tracts in spanish from the Bible League. He bagged an apple, an orange, and a pamphlet into brown paper bags, and went out to the dairy farms during all three shifts to deliver them to every single worker. He shook hands and shouted "Amigo" -friend (the one word of Spanish my dad knows) to each guy and said Merry Christmas, God Bless you with a firm handshake and a pat on the back. He loved them, and they loved him back.

As the number of dairy barns grew, my dad had to enlist the help of others just to get that fruit delivered the week of Christmas, but every single year he got the job done, thru rain, sleet, and snow, early morning to middle of the night he drove his little pick up over the bumpy roads, and delivered that fruit.

This year he had lots of help because "Agua Viva" a Hispanic outreach church has formed, and the pastor, members of the church and also members of the committee that helped to start the church got on board and bagged and delivered the fruit to the guys working in the barns. How fun!

Our kids used to ask us, "why does Grandpa buy all that fruit and give it away?!" Honestly sometimes we wonder too, what drives dad to give of himself so freely when he really doesn't have all that much of his own? It is because he has the heart of Jesus, and he will reap his rewards in heaven. No, my dad is by no means perfect, he'll be the first one to tell you that, but we could all learn how to love one another more through his example of selflessness.

Father change the hearts that need changing. Erase racial divisions between us. Teach us to love the way you love. Help us to see opportunities to shed your light in the darkness. Thank you for Fidel, and for his laughter and his kindness, thank you for my dad who cares about other people more than he does about himself. Thank you for Agua Viva and empower everyone involved to reach those who do not yet know about you. You desire that we all live in your light...all of us...no matter the color of our skin or the language that we speak, use us to accomplish that in Your Name.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Under His wings

Something made me get out of bed at 4:30 this morning...probably the knowledge that my poor hubby was heading out to face the below zero temps for the day. He spends about half his day inside the heated cab of a semi truck, but with 4 loads today, he will spend 8 hours outside loading/unloading....brrrrrr. I COULD NEVER do his job, I am so thankful that he works so hard to provide for us.

Anyway, so there I was at 4:30 am about to turn on the tv and settle in by the pre lit tree (which is re-lit now) with a cup of minty tea when something made me dig out my Beth Moore study book. All I can say to anyone participating in the study is get it out and do day one today....don't argue about how many presents you have to wrap or cookies you have to bake, just get it out and do it.

If you are going to do day 1 soon, stop reading now. On week 5, after much "laying of the groundwork" which Beth Moore so loves to do, we go beyond the curtain to the sanctuary. We've studied every detail, the materials used to build the tabernacle and the rules the builders had to follow. Finally, we get inside, it will be worth the wait!

I hate to tell you ladies but we have to draw the tabernacle again. I almost had to wake my kids up to help me figure the dimensions. There are all sorts of equations in the margin of my book while I tried to remember how to multiply fractions and stuff. Finally, I got it on my own wooo hoooo!

We learn about the curtains of the tabernacle and how the materials they are made with represent sacrifice and royalty. The top covering of the tabernacle is woven of fine linen, with the colors; blue, scarlet and purple. Exodus 26:1 then tells that cherubim was also woven into the fine linen for the ceiling in part to symbolize the heavenly hosts that surround the throne of God.

We then read from the Psalms, verses that talk about God hiding us in the shadow of his wings.

"He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge" Ps 91:4

As I read a friend's blog this morning about her struggles with health issues, and as I watch the homeless gather in warming centers to beat the sub zero temps on the news this morning, and as I think about a couple I know who struggle with drug addiction and had their baby taken away by social services last week, I praise God that I live under the feathers of his wings. I praise Him for protecting me and my family, and for providing for us. The knowledge that he loves us enough to save us through the sacrifice of his own son blows me away.

Our study for day one ends with:

"Learn to experience the warmth and protection of life beneath the wings of the almighty."

I haven't been spending much time lately under God's wings, reading and studying his word. When I stray away from Him, I start back on the path of thinking that I have to do everything myself. Why am I like that? I sometimes think I need to not only be a superhero for my family, but that somehow I think I should be able to save the world too. Today, I will bask in the knowledge that God has my back. I am covered and protected, I am safe and provided for, the hairs on my head are numbered, God cares for me. Praise Him!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Guess what I found at Wal Mart?!

Let's just say Wal Mart is not my favorite shopping destination. Low prices, yes. Relaxing, inviting shopping experience, ummm no. Sam Walton's heirs get way too many of my hard earned dollars as it is, but Christmas baking season is upon us, and that can only mean one thing...a Wal Mart run.

So, I cruised the parking lot looking for an empty space, found one, pulled in, stepped my foot into an ankle deep ice and slush puddle, soaking my shoe, sock, and the bottom of my jeans. The shopping trip was off to a great start.

Crummy attitude in place, I headed to the entrance, and was greeted by a grown woman in a full Santa suit, ringing the Salvation Army bell, dancing around, and singing, laughing, and yelling Merry Christmas to each shopper as they passed by. You can not pass by this woman without a smile spreading across your face! I laughed out loud and she threw her arm around me and said "Merry Christmas Honey" in my ear. Tears sprung to my eyes...where does this volunteer bell ringer, in the freezing cold, get such joy?!

As I pushed my cart thru the produce section, I couldn't stop thinking about her. I'd guess her life isn't all that great, but she's just decided to make the best of it. God Bless her!

The buzz of my "santa" encounter was quickly fading as I manuevered thru the masses of people doing their shopping. Then I saw a little old lady pushing her husband in a wheel chair. I stopped feeling sorry for myself, and wondered how that little woman came up with the strength to push that chair around big ole Wal Mart.

I smiled at her, and as she passed me she asked, "hey do you like my shoes?!" I looked down and she was wearing crocs-those rubber shoes everyone says are so comfortable...one green one and one red one. I laughed again, and told her I loved them. Another human, despite her hardship, passing joy onto a complete stranger. Hmmm

What I did not find at Wal Mart was Chex cereal for the Chex mix I needed to make, what I did find, most unexpectedly, was Christmas Joy, right there in Wal Mart.

Yes, the economy is in the toilet, Chicago politics are corrupt, and there is another big snow storm on it's way to the area, but in a week we celebrate the birth of our Savior! I'm gonna try my best to spread some Christmas joy. I don't plan to dance aound the entrance at Wal Mart, or wear 2 different colored crocs, but I will be thankful, I will smile, I will whistle a merry tune, and I will go out of my way to spread joy. Wanna join me?

By the way I did find Chex cereal at Tysen's for only $1 more per box than Wal Mart, you gotta try the recipe on the back of the chocolate chex cereal box, it's delicious and easy:

Click here for the recipe and more yummy snack recipes: http://www.chex.com/Recipes/RecipeView.aspx?RecipeId=44440&CategoryId=342
P.S. Aldi in Crown Point has milk on sale for $1.99 and wheat bread for $.25. Saving money gives me joy!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Is it our responsibility to be nice?

When we moved into our new residence, we were so pleased to learn that the other side of the duplex we rent is occupied by a pastor and his wife. The day we moved in Ted approached the neighbor guy with his hand out for a cordial handshake. I heard Ted trying his best to chat and introduce our family, but the Pastor looked a little scared, and the conversation only lasted a minute.

Ted said to me, "and you say I'm anti-social??!!" I thought it was a little strange for a pastor, but maybe I'm just used to friendly, outgoing types, and it takes all kinds, I figured we'd get to know them better, and they would see we aren't scary.

Not so. We try to wave and smile when we see the pastor outside, and he honestly won't wave back. Maybe we've offended them somehow? We are kind of a loud and jovial family. We encourage our kids to respect the time of day, with no loud music or TV after 10 pm. And in our defense, I wake up every night when their baby cries. Big shock, Ted can sleep right thru it, but as soon as that baby starts to cry, I'm wide awake...certainly it's a "mom thing".

Even if we were offensive I expect different behavior from a pastor. Can you just imagine the non believer thinking "hypocrite"? If we are Christians, there is a certain level of friendly and cordail behavior expected, right? Love one another being so important and all that?!

So yesterday as I turned on the icy road into my subdivision, I apparently took too long turning the corner, because a big SUV came flying around me nearly clipping the side of my vehicle, honking, and making a rude hand gesture to me. Obviously the teen driving didn't recongnize me from church. Oh well.

Last night at my house I had a little chat with my teen daughter about the example she MUST set on the road. I think she's a pretty decent driver, and she's a laid back kid, so I don't see her as a road rager, but I'd guess she's not above honking at someone annoying. I was telling her that her behavior is on display because she goes to church and calls herself a Christian. I asked her to be mindful of that, so she not set a crummy example for other kids, to do her best not to get that "hypocrite" label.

And the same goes for me in my business. There are some people who must make it a goal to ruin another's day. They come in looking for a fight. What is my response? How do I need to behave as a believer, at times I want to stoop right to their level of crabby-ness but as God changes my heart into a servant of his, the urges to be snotty are fewer and far between. It is less of a struggle to simply shake my head after they leave instead of engaging in an argument. Praise Him!

And even more so, I quickly realize that the offender is probably in need of prayer over something gone wrong in their life. Compassion has taken the place of irritation more and more lately. This journey that God is taking me on amazes me, and I am so thankful for God's presence in my life. Without Him in my heart, I can easily be just as miserable as the rest of the world.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Christmas Potluck

Rosa promises pictures soon!

What a lovely evening of enjoying eachother's company and relaxing. Thank you to everyone who to0k time out of their busy schedules to attend!

I appreciate all of you who encourage me, show your support, volunteer to help out...you mean the world to me, don't know what I'd do without you...you know who you are! Love you all!

xoCathy

Monday, December 8, 2008

Oh Happy Day!


Wow, Singing with Larnell Harris was FUN!!


A choir was put together to sing back up for him at Community Church Saturday night. I thought it sounded fun to be in a choir, so I signed up, a few minutes into the first rehearsal I was wondering "what I was thinking??!!!" It's probably been 20 years since I sang with a choir.


Now that we sing primarily praise music, and with words only on the screen, as opposed to following a musical score, I realized pretty quickly that I have become an extremely lazy singer. Half notes are two beats???....oh yes, it started coming back to me, but very slowly!!


Then I got a cold about 3 weeks ago, and almost emailed Kyle to tell him I had to quit the choir, but instead I went and squeaked thru it with deaf ears and a scratchy throat. And that cold never did go away, so even on the afternoon of the concert I debated about staying home...I'm so glad I didn't give in to my stuffy head and constant tickle in my throat! At one point on stage I almost died of coughing and eye watering, but I said a little prayer, "God can I just please finish this concert?" and he answered with a yes, the tickle subsided.


When Larnell showed up it became pretty apparent that he is "all business" I imagine after one does so many concerts over many years, it becomes mundane, and more of a "job" as opposed to an exciting moment like it was for us. I felt like he was being less than gracious to our poor VOLUNTEER sound guy, and he wasn't overly friendly with us in the choir rehearsal either.


We have a few friends who are "front man" in bands, and I notice that there is a particular quality about a front man....a little bit cocky, they don't like it when the other guitar player's amp is turned up louder than their mic, and in general, they seem a little demanding. Outside of their band life, they are normal folks, but once they get on stage...it's all about them. I think it's part of what makes them successful leaders, that and a desire to have people like them.


Once the lights went down and Larnell got on stage, a different side of him seemed to emerge, and an engaging and sincere Larnell wooed the crowd with his velvety voice. From the smiles of pure joy on the faces of the audience members, I think he connects very well. At one point during the concert when the piano player was jamming out Larnell looked at the choir and seemed to roll his eyes with a sly smile as if to say yeah yeah yeah to Simeon and his show boating. I thought it was cute.


We had rehearsed some songs, but it was really fun when Simeon would look at our choir and mouth that we should sing back up, on songs like "His Name is King Jesus" and "Oh Happy Day". At many different times Larnell interacted with the crowd, he sang, "if you love him say I" to which the crowd bellowed "I"!


A big part of the fun for me was watching the crowd. They did a lot of standing up and clapping. There were some kids in the front row dancing around, and there were some more reserved folks who don't clap, but the looks on everyone's face was priceless, they looked as if they were having a blast!


At the end of the concert there were lots of cheers and hoots and hollers for Larnell. At that point he led us in acepella "O Come Let Us Adore Him" and as we sang the beloved tune Larnell and Simeon snuck out the side door. As if to say, thanks for clapping but let's give the glory to whom it belongs. I found it very moving, and that moment I realized that Larnell may very well be doing a "job" but his heart is in the right place.


On Sunday morning many people were still glowing from the concert, so it wasn't just I who felt the spirit moving in the room. In my Sunday school class I made the comment that during the concert I felt as if I were to have died right then and there, I wouldn't have cared. And my dear friend Carol Zandstra put it so much better, she said "it give you just a little glimpse of what heaven will be like with angels singing and dancing before the Lord." Amen







Friday, December 5, 2008

Family

I get to meet a lot of different people at my shop, and I've learned that I often take my safe and secure Christian home for granted.

I was chatting with a shopper the other day, and when the door opened, her jaw dropped and her eyes widened as she saw who was walking in the door....she gasped, "my sister!!"

Strange, I just say hi when I run into my sister, but this wasn't the case with these two. They hadn't spoken for MONTHS. You could cut the tension with a knife. I pretended to get busy straightening clothes, and then I heard the 2 year old daughter of one of the sisters yell, "AUNTIE Stephy!" and that little girl just ran full blast to her auntie who stretched out her arms and picked up that little girl and just planted kiss after kiss on her little cheeks. I thought I would bust trying not to clap and say wooo hooo!

The sisters gave eachther a sideways glance, and finally one asked the other "what did you do for Thanksgiving?" The shop is small and there was nowhere for me to hide as the floodgates broke, and one apologized and the other admitted it was a dumb thing to be mad about in the first place. The two stood for an hour and talked about their parents and step parents.

These lovely sisters come from a broken and just plain messed up home, where insults are hurled and fists thrown over Thanksgiving dinner. The tale unfolded between the two of them, how their step mother mis treats them, and their dad always takes her side. Brother in laws hate eachother, and refuse to be under the same roof together, it's just a big ole mess!

As one sister walked out the door she said, "I'll call ya" to the other. As the door shut, the sister still in the store mumbled, "yeah right".

It's so sad to witness broken families in action. As the little 2 year old girl waved bye bye to me as she left the shop I fast forwarded in my mind 20 years, and wondered, what would her relationship with her auntie be like by then, or maybe she wouldn't even be on good terms with her own mom. Devastating.

As my kids grow up, and date I have learned to bite my tongue....both of my girls are technically at an age where their boyfriends could become in-laws, and I don't want to say anything that would hurt my relationship with my daughters should that guy become their husband some day.

So who in your family could you apologize to?....send a note, give them a call, even an email might be enough to break the ice. God forgives us and He commands us to forgive others, isn't that hard to do especially when a family member has hurt you?

Almighty God, even before I was born, you selected a family for me, and I thank you for choosing a family that believes in you. Preserve our families Lord, help us to love one another, and where forgiveness or repentance is neccesarry, change our hearts and fill us with your love so that we may love others as you love us.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Belated Thanksgiving Thoughts...worth sharing

My buddy Elaine sent this to me via emai, thought I would share it with you.

THOUGHTS FOR YOUR THANKSGIVING TABLE

"Saying thank you is more than good manners. It is good spirituality." -- Alfred Painter

"If the only prayer you said in your whole life was, 'Thank you,' that would suffice."-- Eckhart von Hochheim, German theologian, philosopher (1260-1328)

"The unthankful heart...discovers no mercies, but let the thankful heart sweep through the day and, as the magnet finds the iron, so it will find, in every hour, some heavenly blessings!"-- Henry Ward Beecher, clergyman, social reformer (1813-1887)

"God gave you a gift of 86,400 seconds today. Have you used one to say, 'Thank you'?"-- William A. Ward, writer (1921-1994)

"Silent gratitude isn't much use to anyone."-- GB Stern, British author (1890-1973)

"The only people with whom you should try to get even are those who have helped you."-- John E. Southard

"Gratitude is a quality similar to electricity: It must be produced and discharged and used up in order to exist at all."-- William Faulkner, author (1897-1962)

"At times our own light goes out and is rekindled by a spark from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lighted the flame within us."-- Albert Schweitzer, Alsatian theologian, physician (1875-1965)

"Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it."-- William A. Ward

"If you want to turn your life around, try thankfulness. It will change your life mightily."-- Gerald Good

"As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them."-- John F. Kennedy, 35th President (1917-1963)

"I would rather be able to appreciate things I cannot have than have things I cannot appreciate."-- Elbert Hubbard, writer, philosopher (1856-1915)

"Hem your blessings with thankfulness so they don't unravel."-- Anonymous

The wonder of it all...

Last night at choir practice for the Larnell Harris concert which will take place this week at CCRC, our director of worship and arts led us in devotions, and he talked about spiritual warfare during the Christmas season. He wondered, why is it so hard for us as Christians to enjoy the true meaning of Christmas? He commented that isn't that smart of satan to attack us in this way and to strip us of our joy over the birth of our Savior?!

The passage read was one we all hear a dozen times through the Christmas season, how the wisemen were filled with wonder over the Christ child's birth. YES, the excitement started to grow in my heart!

Even on the recording of Larnell Harris, as he sings "the wonder of it all, oh the wonder of it all, just to think that God loves me...." You can hear the heart behind the words of the song, and it started to seep into my soul a little more deeply. And as we sang our Christmas songs, there it was feeling in my heart behind the words that were coming out of my mouth.

Then on the way home from practice, Shine 89.7 is playing all Christmas music, and I was a little cranky about that in the beginning, but as I left the church parking lot, "Oh Holy Night" came on the radio and I couldn't help but blare it, and the reality of the birth of my savior took over every bit of me, and I just blared that radio and sang at the top of my lungs in praise to my God who loved me enough to send His Son to walk among men and then die!

And I know it's an old concept, but it really sunk in with me, that the moment Jesus was born, I was given the opportunity to become something I NEVER could on my own strength....Wow, that is truly amazing and I am filled with the wonder of it all!

I pray for each of you to be filled with wonder at our amazing, unselfish God as we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ our Lord. Maybe if we each take just a second to really remember what Jesus' Birthday means to each of us, all the hustle and bustle of the season won't succeed in stripping away our joy!

Lord in heaven there are not words to use that can describe my joy today. You are a most incredible, amazing Father, and I thank you for the gift of your beloved Son. Praise you Oh Lord!

Monday, December 1, 2008

Reminder!

Despite what the original schedule you were given says, there is NO WIW Dec. 2, or Dec. 3.

Would you please remind anyone you think might not know about the schedule change? Thank you!

Don't forget Dec 9 is our potluck supper to celebrate Christmas!