Sunday, January 31, 2016

January Twenty- Sixteen


I sat down a few days ago to record my memories of 2015. My initial impulse was to write down all the good stuff, the successes and the happy surprises. Then I started writing down the bad stuff, and I felt a pang of guilt because I was, more or less, complaining. Then I began to see all the ways the bad memories had shaped me and my family, the way they had given birth to redemptive moments. Remembering the good is important, but you can too easily paint a false picture. Remembering the bad can turn into a litany of complaints. The trick is to remember it all, and to remember the hard stuff in the right way, because sometimes the bad is where the great is hiding. –Andrew Peterson


Loving God, journey with me this year so that I may feel your presence, abide in your forgiveness, grow in your strength, and dwell in your love. Give me an open heart, an open mind, and open eyes so that I may sing your praise and follow your path always and everywhere. –Larry James Peacock


We now have a chance to begin once more. We know where we’re headed, this year of grace. We’ve walked it before and it’s no matter how well we’ve travelled in the past.  It’s time for a new beginning. Again and again let us pray to the Lord- guide us in your truth and teach us, for you are our God and our hope is in you. 


Four things to learn in life: to think clearly without hurry or confusion; to love everybody sincerely; to act in everything with the highest motives; to trust God unhesitatingly. -Helen Keller


 
Life is a precious gift, but we realize this only when we give it to others.


Every creature is the object of the Father’s tenderness, who gives it its place in the world.


Do we say “Thank you” to God every day?


 
Dear young people, do not bury your talents, the gifts that God has given you!  Do not be afraid to dream of great things!


Parents, can you “waste time” with your children?  It is one of the most important things that you can do each day.


Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. –G.K. Chesterton


Our life is not a pointless wandering.  We have a sure goal: the house of the Father.



Though I read this passage from Ruth Haley Barton about Advent back in December, it applies here and now too: “When circumstances do force us to wait, we can lean in and lift up our souls to the One whom we trust to do good things in and through us. Rather than succumbing to the inevitable frustration, we can allow ourselves to be changed by looking and loving and praying in whatever circumstance is causing us to wait, finding the presence of Christ there.
If we can wrap our heads around the transformative possibilities contained within this impossible season, we might discover that it is God who keeps us waiting for reasons only he knows.  And if we enter into this season with trust and with awe, we might even find ourselves thanking God for the many gifts this waiting time has to offer.”


You keep us waiting. You, the God of all time want us to wait for the right time in which to discover who we are, where we must go, who will be with us, and what we must do.
So thank you…for the waiting time. 
You keep us looking. You, the God of all peace, want us to look in the right and wrong places for signs of hope, for people who are hopeless, for visions of a better world that will appear among the disappointments of the world we know.
So thank you…for the looking time.
You keep us loving. You, the God whose name is love,
Want us to be like you—to love the loveless and the unlovely and the unlovable;
to love without jealousy or design or threat; and, most difficult of all, to love ourselves.
So thank you…for the loving time. 
And in all this, You keep us. Through hard questions with no easy answers;
through failing where we had hoped to succeed and making an impact where we felt we were useless; through patience and the dreams and love of others;
and through Jesus Christ and his Spirit, you keep us.
So thank you…for the keeping time, and for now, and forever, Amen. 
Iona Worship Book, 1998


Saturday, January 30, 2016

Friday, January 29, 2016

captive audeince

sure love how Poppy comes and listens when Anna practices flute and piccolo 

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Raising Awareness


We hosted the 3rd Hunger Banquet at UPC last night.   Even though Anna and Taylor have done this now 4 times (we put one of these on in Nashville at St. B's as well), there are still such good conversations that come out of this in our family.  

  

  
This year, Taylor was at a high income table and experienced the awkwardness of having more food than everyone else in the room.  I was thankful for the chance to talk to him about his feelings over the last couple of years of how unfair it all was and for him to contrast those feelings of anger to how it felt to him in this spot at the table. 

Below is an email from a friend who joined us and was placed at the table with Taylor as well: 
We enormously thank you guys for the significant experience we just had.
It wasn't all that fun, initially anyway, to be rich people eating amid the poor.  So what did we do?  Tried to find any possible way to ignore the plight of the poor, obviously.  We struck up a pleasant conversation with the rich people around us, eventually forgetting about the poor, and focusing on the unusually excellent kale salad.



At the end of the evening, we circled up and broke down those barriers of high/medium and low income sections of the room.

Through this simple simulation with food and seating arrangements, I think we all left with a bit more awareness of some of the issues surrounding the inequalities in our world.  We are now left with this question below: 
It is my prayer that God will continue to use a simple event like this to stir up in us a desire to join Him in His work more fully in this world. 

"Peace to you! As the Father has sent Me, I also send you." John 20:21 






Wednesday, January 27, 2016

12th woman

 Even though the Seahawks are not going to be in the Superbowl this year, 
the spirit is still alive and well here in Seattle. 
 teenager in the house... 

12th Woman!

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

dress up


getting decked out in costume with girls from the Rock to film the announcements for church last Sunday 





small group drama club (Sunday night play that the kids put on!) 



so thankful for our basement that is a great spot for putting on shows! 
We put all the costumes in the guest bedroom which is a perfect dressing room and backstage area. :) 



Monday, January 25, 2016

milk and cookies

On Saturday afternoon, Marcet and her boyfriend Henry came over and we decided to try to whip up an idea I'd run across on Pinterest. You never know with some of those crazy ideas posted there if they are going to work so we gave it a go to make a cookie that would hold the milk inside so that you could have milk and cookies together! I am pleased to report that we did it and had a great time in the process together! 



















Milk-and-Cookie Shots

Milk-and-Cookie Shots

INGREDIENTS

For the cookies:
1 cup shortening
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup light-brown sugar
1 large egg yolk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups all-purpose flour, sifted
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup mini chocolate chips
For the cookie shots:
1 cup dark-chocolate candy melts
1 1/2 cups milk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

DIRECTIONS

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease the molds of a popover pan.
  2. In a large bowl, cream together the shortening and brown and granulated sugars. Add the egg yolk and vanilla extract, and mix until completely incorporated. Gradually add the flour and salt, and mix until completely incorporated. Add the mini chocolate chips, and mix together until evenly distributed. The dough should be a little crumbly at this point.
  3. Form the cookie shots inside the molds, making the walls of the cookie shot about 1/4 inch thick. Chill for 20 to 30 minutes before baking.
  4. Bake for about 20 minutes or until the cookies just start to brown. Remove from the oven, and let cool completely.
  5. Melt chocolate candy melts, and then pour the melted chocolate into the well of each cookie. Let it sit for a minute, and then pour the excess chocolate back into the pan. Chill cookie shots until the chocolate has set.
  6. Mix together milk and vanilla extract, and serve inside each cookie shot.