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December 25, 2009
Merry Christmas!

May God bless you and keep you this day as you remember His gift!

Merry Christmas everyone!

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Dec. 25, 2009
Merry Christmas to all!

Merry Christmas to anyone who is on the computer on Christmas day!

This morning,I had a great Christmas! my parents and I stayed home this Christmas. Usually,we visit my aunt on Christmas,but not this year. We will still visit,and open gifts,but not until Sunday. but it was nice for a bit of a change.

Here's a list of what I got for Christmas!:


A shirt that says "Passion for fashion" It's a comfy shirt,I'm wearing it now. :o)

"Whirlwind"-by Robert Liparulo,book 5 in the "Dreamhouse Kings" series. Amazing. It's a must read.

Harry Potter and the half-blood prince!!!!! I am totally excited!!!!! YAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAY

$50 gift card to Kohls(Thanks a lot Aunt Kathy!!!!!! ILY)


And my dad got:


A superman t-shirt that I made for him

flannel lined jeans(The man is ALWAYS cold! Hopefully,this will help)

A book about the samuri(He really likes that stuff)


And for my mom:


Sarah Palin's new book,"Going Rogue"

A pretty cross necklace

A musical note necklace

Tomorrow,I'm going to my sister's house to open gifts,and probably eat a lot of really good food that's really bad for me! :o)  Then,after church on Sunday,my dad,mom and I will drive to my aunt's house,and eat more bad-for-me food,and open more presents,and visit,and all that jazz. I'm so excited!

I won't say what I got anybody until I get back,in case any of my family reads my blog. I wouldn't want to give anything away.

I hope everyone had a very merry Christmas!

God bless us,everyone!

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Dec. 24, 2009
Happy Christmas!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Happy Christmas to all my friends!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Your Christmas gift will be done :-D

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Thursday, December 24
Merry Christmas

Please do not send me private messages unless I give you permission. I will NOT add anyone as a friend who asks to be my friend in a private message. thank you! And if you want to link back to me, click on my button on the sidebar.

*************************************************************

Heya girlies! (and guys, if any of you read this. ;)

So right now our family is getting ready for Christmas, running around like chickens with our heads cut off. Which is a really really gross mental picture now that I wrote that.... O_____________O

ANYWAYS....

What do you all do for Christmas? Do you sing around the piano? Do you bake a birthday cake for Jesus? (we did up until last year. (= ) What are your traditions? Tell me!

This is a short post, but I just wanted to give you another perspective concerning Christmas, which is Joseph's perspective.

Imagine how he must have felt. All of you girls, at some time or other, have probably been heartbroken by some guy flirting with another girl, (considering you're 13+). *

Now imagine how Joseph must have felt. He was engaged to an amazing girl, absolutely perfect in every way. He was counting down the days to their wedding while working away in his carpenter shop. Suddenly, he hears footsteps behind him, and a small voice call, "Joseph? I have something to tell you."

He turns around to see his beautiful fiancé, standing there looking beautiful. But then he sees the tears streaked down her face and a sinking feeling settles in his stomach. What could be wrong? Mary wasn't the kind of girl to just cry about silly things, this had to be big.

Then she told him. She was pregnant, but it wasn't how it seemed, apparently. He backs up against the wall, shaking.

His dreams had all been crushed in a single moment. His beloved Mary had another lover, one which had taken everything from her. Rage boiled in him at the thought.

He punched the table, splintering the wood. Mary gasped, and began to cry. He looked over as she turned away from him, shoulders shaking as she sobbed.

He sighed. He still loved her, even after what she had done. He couldn't let her be humiliated or stoned as was the custom. So they talked it over, and he planned to send her away where she could mother the child in private.

He hardly slept at all that night. Tears soaked his bed, and his head pounded with rage. When he did fall asleep, though, he had a dream--a vision, more like it.

An angel stood in front of him, and told him that Mary had done nothing wrong. The child was implanted in her by God himself, and that she was still a virgin.

He threw off the covers, and raced to her house. Seeing her praying by her bed he could just barely keep himself from running in and holding her, his dear, innocent Mary who had taken all his yelling and accusing without fighting back.

He knocked on the door, and she came to answer it. When she took one look at his tear-stained face, she smiled, and he knew that all was well.

Nine months later...

"Oh dear God, oh dear God help me!" Joseph cringed as he heard Mary scream. It was too much for him! He had never helped deliver anything before, save a couple of goats.

Mary's scream pierced the air once more, and she squeazed his hand so hard he thought his bones would break.

Joseph looked around him in his distress, looking for something--anything--that would give his Mary some help. He found nothing, just straw and animals.

He felt helpless. He couldn't help his betrothed, and he couldn't even help the poor little baby about to give birth. No one would listen, not even his family. Mary was not pregnant by normal means, but still they shunned them, and so their baby boy was born in a stable--with sheep and cattle and donkeys.

"Joseph? Joseph... He's here." Mary whispered, gasping for air.

He turned, and looked at the little baby in her arms--and he knew this baby was the Messiah.

***************************************************************************

Again, this is simply my opinion of the story. I think Joseph's part is too often overlooked, and his pain often forgotten as we focus in on Mary. Of course, she's the main character, but there's always more than one side to a story, so I'm giving you the less-heard one. :)

Who's your favourite character (other than Jesus) in the Christmas story? Please tell me in a comment. :)

Merry Christmas everyone! =)

BeCcA

*I'm not encouraging teenage relationships here. I'm just stating that girls tend to have their heart broken by guys. :) Just to clear that up.

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Dec. 24, 2009
No Homeschooling, No Christmas for the Johansson Family

As you celebrate Christmas this year, please remember all the parents who are still fighting for their right to homeschool, and for parents who have had their children taken from them by force without just cause because they homeschooled their children--like the Johansson family of Sweden. This Christmas we can rest easy knowing that the gifts that we bought for our children will help further their education or offer a new way for your family to have fun together. The Johanssons have been denied Christmas with their only child, and so much more. 

Tia Linschied
Senior Editor of HSB
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Dec. 24, 2009
Communication Corner ~ Last Few Days of my Video Countdown to Christmas!

I've done this each year for a few years now.  These are the final days of my Video Countdown to Christmas that started on December 15th.  Each day I'm uploading an inspirational or comedic video that shares the spirit of Christmas with my readers.  Check it out on Communication FUNdamentals!

And Merry CHRISTmas everyone!
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Dec. 24, 2009
MERRY CHRISTMAS EVE~~

Hallo Everypeoples!

I cannot stay long but I just wanted to with you all a Merry Christmas! Tomorrow is my blogoversary but I probably will not be on much if any, so I just wanted to leave a small note for you all.

Merry Christmas.

Eat lots of good food.
Never forget the meaning of Christmas.

Without Jesus, everything is meaningless.
Trust me. Trust Him.
May God bless you overflowing.

Ever His,
Zel
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Dec. 23, 2009
Happy Birthday Jesus

 
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Dec. 23, 2009
Do the next thing



Elisabeth Elliot: "You are loved with an everlasting love." That's what the Bible says. "And underneath are the everlasting arms." This is your friend Elisabeth Elliot, talking with you this time about "Do the Next Thing."

When I went back to my jungle station after the death of my first husband, Jim Elliot, I was faced with many confusions and uncertainties. I had a good many new roles, besides that of being a single parent and a widow. I was alone on a jungle station that Jim and I had manned together. I had to learn to do all kinds of things, which I was not trained or prepared in any way to do. It was a great help to me simply to do the next thing.

Have you had the experience of feeling as if you've got far too many burdens to bear, far too many people to take care of, far too many things on your list to do? You just can't possibly do it, and you get in a panic and you just want to sit down and collapse in a pile and feel sorry for yourself.

Well, I've felt that way a good many times in my life, and I go back over and over again to an old Saxon legend, which I'm told is carved in an old English parson somewhere by the sea. I don't know where this is. But this is a poem which was written about that legend. The legend is "Do the next thing." And it's spelled in what I suppose is Saxon spelling. "D-O-E" for "do," "the," and then next, "N-E-X-T." "Thing"-"T-H-Y-N-G-E."

The poem says, "Do it immediately, do it with prayer, do it reliantly, casting all care. Do it with reverence, tracing His hand who placed it before thee with earnest command. Stayed on omnipotence, safe 'neath His wing, leave all resultings, do the next thing." That is a wonderfully saving truth. Just do the next thing.

So I went back to my station, took my ten-month-old baby, tried to take each duty quietly as the will of God for the moment. One of the very first duties that faced me was what in the world I was going to do about the church. We had 50 newly baptized believers, Christians, who a year before had not been Christians. Jim Elliot had been teaching them daily and preaching on Sundays. Jim Elliot was not there anymore. There was no other male missionary.

Now I happen to be a very firm believer in men taking the leadership in church. I believe that God has clearly defined the positions of authority in both the home and the church as belonging to me. So whether you agree with me on that or not, let me just say that I get my ideas from the Scriptures and that's where I had to start when I got back to my little jungle station. I was not going to run that church. But I was literally the only person around who had the Scriptures. There was nobody else that could teach those believers. So what was I to do?

One of the last things that Jim had said to me when I said to him before he left, "What will I do if you don't come back?" was "You must teach the believers." So I took two of the young men that Jim had picked out as potential leaders in the church. I explained to them that it was not my job to be the head of the church. It was their job to take responsibility. I said, "I'm here to help you."

So on Saturday afternoon, each week after that time, I would call one or the other of these men to my house. We would sit down together, translate a few simple verses from Spanish and Greek and English and whatever else I could draw on into Quichua. Then these men would get up and preach the sermon, which I had helped them make an outline for. I would draw out of them their own understanding of the Scriptures and try to get them to give me some illustrations from their jungle experience.

They would get up and preach-not a very good sermon. I could have done a better job. But I felt that it was not my job to take over the church simply because I was competent to do it. It was my job to encourage these men so that they would become competent.

Then there was the question of a diesel motor. What did I know about diesel generators? We had one for electricity, which we used sometimes in the evenings for a couple of hours. So I had to figure out how to run the diesel motor. I had to figure out how to keep the airstrip clean. I had to pay about 40 Indians swinging machetes to do that, which made me their foreman. I'd never been anybody's foreman before.

I was teaching a women's literacy class. We had a boy's school taught by an Ecuadorian teacher that I had to sort of supervise and encourage and pay and do various things that I was not used to doing. I had the medical work. I had the translation of the Book of Luke, which Jim and I had finished only in rough draft when he was killed. I was going to carry on with that, because, as I said, there were no Scriptures in Quichua. If the church was to grow, they had to have spiritual food. So I went ahead with the translation of Luke.

The grass in the jungle grows unbelievably fast, so I always having to hire people to cut the grass, to clean out the pineapple bed, to cut the branches away from the trail between my house and the airstrip. And I tried to decide what to do about a hydroelectric system that Jim had just begun to put in. I didn't know whether I should try to finish that or forget it.

You can imagine how tempted I was to just plunk myself down and say, "There is no way I can do this." I wanted to sink into despair and helplessness. Then I remembered that old Saxon legend, "Do the next thing."

I remembered a verse that God had given to me before I went to Ecuador in Isaiah 50:7: "The Lord God will help me; therefore, shall I not be confounded. Therefore, have I set my face like a flint and I know that I shall not be ashamed."

What is the next thing for you to do? Small duties, perhaps? Jobs that nobody will notice as long as you do them? A dirty job that you would get out of if you could have your own preferences? Are you asked to take some great responsibility, which you really don't feel qualified to do? You don't have to do the whole thing right this minute, do you? I can tell you one thing that you do have to do right this minute. It's the one thing that is required of all of us every minute of every day. Trust in the living God.

Now what is the next thing? Well, perhaps it's to get yourself organized. Maybe you need to clean off your desk, if you have a desk job that needs to be done. Maybe you need to clean out your kitchen drawers, if you're going to do your kitchen work more efficiently. Maybe you need to organize the children's clothes.

I know what an enormous job that is for Valerie, my daughter. All of a sudden, the children are coming out saying, "I can't wear this. This is too short or this is too long or this doesn't fit me anymore." What do you do with those things? If you're going to save them for the next child, you've got to put them somewhere where you can find them. So you just do that one thing. Somehow or other, the peace of God descends upon us when we take things calmly, peacefully and humbly as the next thing that God has assigned us to do.

About three years ago, I think it was, my daughter and her husband were going away for a weekend and taking with them the nursing baby. The baby was just a few weeks or months old. Val and Walt decided to go off for a weekend. They asked me if I could stay with the other children. I was delighted. I live on the other side of the continent from my children and grandchildren, and I was delighted for the opportunity.

So I stayed with them. In the first day, I don't remember ever being so busy in my life. I mean, it was "Granny this" and "Granny that" and "Granny, will you read us a story?" and "Granny, can we have some more juice?" and "Granny, would you pull my pants up?" "Granny, would you pull my pants down?" "Granny, can we have some juice?" "Granny, can we go outside?" "Granny, what time is supper?" Until I really thought I would go mad.

Well, my dear sweet daughter had the good sense to call me that evening. She said, "Well, Mama, how are you doing?" I said, "Wonderfully, Val." And then I said, "But I'm not sure I can make it through the next three days." Then I assured her that her children were wonderful children. They're not disobedient. They're not unruly. Everything was going along really very well, when you think of the way some households are run. But I said, "I keep thinking, 'Valerie's got a baby to nurse. That takes about six hours a day. How does she do it?' So tell me, Val, how do you do it?"

She laughed and she said, "Well, Mama, I'll tell you how. I do what you told me years ago to do. Do the next thing. Don't sit down and think of all the things you have to do. That will kill you. It's overwhelming. It's daunting if you think of all the things that are involved in a task. Just pick up the next thing."

I find this even in the Scriptures. Tucked in the back of the Book of Mark, following the story of the Crucifixion, we read this lovely little story. Mark 15:42: "By this time, evening had come. And as it was preparation day (that is, the day before the Sabbath), Joseph of Arimathea, a respected member of the Council, a man who looked forward to the kingdom of God, bravely went into Pilate and asked for the body of Jesus. Pilate was surprised to hear that He was already dead, so he sent for the centurion and asked him whether it was long since He died. When he heard the centurion's report, he gave Joseph leave to take the dead body. So Joseph bought a linen sheet, took Him down from the cross, wrapped Him in the sheet and laid Him in a tomb cut out of the rock and rolled a stone against the entrance."

Can't you imagine the disciples and Mary and Martha and the other bewildered women, sitting in absolute dejection and perplexity when their Lord and Master and King had just died? They couldn't think of one single thing to do. Here came this godly man, who looked forward to the kingdom of God, who bravely went in and asked for the body of Jesus. He could think of one thing to do. He did the next thing. That must have been a tremendous cheer and encouragement to those discouraged people.

~Elisabeth Elliot

 
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Dec. 23, 2009
Homeschooling Through High School ~ Merry Christmas!

Wishing you a very Merry Christmas! 

I want to share a couple of video clips which I located on YouTube...they are from a Public Television show that I have seen many Decembers over, titled, "Rick Steve's Christmas in Europe." These two clips share my favorite parts of the show.  I love the peacefulness, the simplicity, and the picture of the family generations coming together.  I hope you enjoy it, too!


Rick Steve's Christmas in Europe ~ Part 9

Rick Steve's Christmas in Europe ~ Part 10

 

May God bless you and your families as you focus on the beauty of God's plan for His children, and all that "Emmanuel" means to you.

~Lori

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