Sunday, October 6, 2013

A Prayer for Monday




2 Chronicles 15:7
But as for you, be strong and do not give up, for your work will be rewarded.


A prayer for Monday:

Dear Heavenly Father, 

We thank you for Mondays and for all new beginnings. Thank you for your graciousness in loving us and counseling and comforting us through your Holy Spirit. You are all we need, Father. May we be strong and not give up. May we be consistent in our Bible reading and prayer. May we live for you today, making your purpose our own. May we face challenges head on with you by our side. Give us your wisdom and mercy...your continued grace and favor. May our hearts be glad and grateful, looking for your gifts everywhere. Keep us from temptation; may the world not stain our hearts or weaken our resolve. May we keep our eyes on Heaven, on you, and on our reward. 

In Jesus name I pray, Amen

Joshua 1:9
Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

A Saturday for Him



Saturday morning. We should have a spring in our step that day, yes? The end of a hard week and usually some guaranteed relaxation, even for moms who still have laundry and dishes and spills staring us in the face.

I wanted to have a spring this morning...some extra joy. I wanted to give glory to God with my gratitude, but I struggled for hours.

We used to do our neighborhood Children's Bible Study every Saturday during the school year, but when summer arrived we changed it to every other week. We'd planned to go back to every Saturday this fall, but the children's ministry job cropped up for me, so I told the neighbors we needed to keep it to every other week.

But then life happens and we had to do it two weeks in a row to accommodate a trip to the Apple Orchard (still haven't been there due to weather...hoping for next Sat.).

So I awoke this morning with housekeeping and delegating hanging over my head, and my husband, as usual, working until 1:30 PM on Saturday.

The nothing-to-look-forward-to blues hit me hard and my thanks were few. The neighbor kids have multiple issues making them high maintenance; I didn't want to see them today, much less prepare my heart or home for them.

Yesterday, one of them, the girl about whom I frequently write, told Peter she wanted him to dig up the dead hamster's body so she could see it. He refused and told her she was crazy. She pouted and kept insisting but eventually she dropped it.

Peter didn't share this with me until this morning, and of course I was furious with her selfish, shocking nonsense. My heart was insistent that I don't owe this crazy girl a thing, and I'm sick of the whole business.

So I cleaned the house with a pout in my heart for a couple hours, and then the Holy Spirit dealt with me.

Whose life is this anyway? Yours, or mine? Whose Saturday is it...yours, or mine? Didn't I suffer on a tree, separated from my Father, to give you life? Aren't you bought and paid for? That crazy girl matters to me. Her soul matters to me. I expect you to live for me and get ready to serve these children this afternoon, with a smile in your heart.

Well, I didn't exactly have a smile in my heart, but I managed to finish cleaning and delegating and preparing the rest of the lesson.  I practiced a smile for two crazy neighbor kids.

The young lady arrived an hour early because her mother and grandmother went shopping.

Wonderful. I wasn't ready, and it looked like I was babysitting. My attitude flared again and I kept practicing that smile.

Fast forward two hours and the study is over. My kids and the neighbor kids are outside playing football with my husband. I watched them play in the muddy yard, a light rain dropping.

I saw such joy.

Neither of these children have a father in their lives, and that football game delighted them. The fellowship, the exuberance, the smiles...it was all perfect. God was glorified in that scene and I realized for the thousandth time as a Christian...It's not about me. I really am bought and paid for, and my Saturdays really aren't my own.

And watching that scene as though it were a movie? Well, it delighted me. It gave me such fulfillment, seeing my Savior as the star, front and center.

The greatest joy we can possibly experience? It comes from living for Him.

He takes our obedience and in turn, He gives us Life...Abundant.


image

Friday, October 4, 2013

Homeschool and Mother's Journal, Oct 4


In my life this week…

The hamster died and I was depressed for two days (not to mention Peter's reaction). As Scratch took his last breaths I couldn't get over how awful death is. He seemed to have a urinary tract infection and all we had in our low-income arsenal was a home remedy recommended online. He remained active for about two weeks and then declined rapidly in two days time.

In my mind I can still hear him running on that squeaky wheel late at night, and his face is still fresh for me.

Speaking in general about death, the worst part of grief are the memories of a loved one's presence in the home, as well as quotes from them that come to our minds. Seeing all their things is very hard as well.

If I ever lose one of these precious children or my husband, I would probably have to move to a different home or town to really go on with life. The environment would trap me in the past and make it very hard to count present gifts.

God gives us gifts every day--as simple as the cardinal that lands near the window, and the funny thing our littlest one says--and we have to be alive enough to actively look for such gifts and thank Father for them. Grief might be best described as a blindness to the present...a going-through-the-motions kind of existence with pain as your companion.

Many wouldn't agree with me and would say that leaving the house would be like leaving the loved one behind for good (devaluing them even). Everyone grieves differently.

When I lost a baby at 21 weeks gestation (but only 16 weeks growth as measured) the nurse wrapped our baby up completely at our request, and then placed him in my arms. Many people take photos as part of saying goodbye, but in my mind my baby was already gone, with Father, and the body didn't hold a lot of meaning for me. I just ached with a devastation that can still take my breath away, thirteen years later.

It was our loss, not our baby's, that's for sure. Recovery was all about trusting God completely and embracing His will and purpose as my own.

My husband did look briefly at our baby as he was born, and he's always been haunted by the vision, rather than blessed. Again, that was our reaction and it differs greatly from so many. Grief is a very individual thing.

Anyway, sorry for that stroll down grief lane...

We've had four hamsters over the years and this is the second death by illness. My heart can't take it again so I told Peter he had to save $100 to cover one vet visit before we can get another small pet. He was far better about keeping the cage clean and dry this time around, so he did mature some, but for rodents to live the optimal 3 years, owners have to follow every single recommendation and he doesn't yet have that maturity.

My husband and I are far too busy to care for a pet ourselves so it has to be 90% child effort and only 10% parent effort. Pet care teaches children so much but so often, especially with dogs I hear, the parents end up with most of the work. We just don't have that luxury so even if it seems harsh, I think this will benefit Peter in the end. He will have to give up many things to save that money, so proving that pets really do matter to him--that he cares not only about what they can offer him, but what he can give them as well.

In our homeschool this week…

My boys, 22 months apart, have shared a Sonlight Core for 2.5 years now. I choose a Core between their grades, which is easy to do since Sonlight designs their Cores to work for a range of ages, rather than for just one grade.

Thus, combining the boys works well except that Peter, the older one, is a more avid reader and goes through the novels very fast, whereas Paul sticks to the reading schedule. I had Peter read Homer Price this week (not part of our Core), instead of getting too far in Born in the Year of Courage, which Paul wasn't ready to start yet.



FR23

That way I only have to conduct discussions on the current Sonlight novel once, rather than separately as they're individually ready. For the most part Peter will read two novels to Paul's every one, which is appropriate since he's older anyway. I just have to work on lining up quality literature for Peter to supplement with.

Sonlight looks for high-quality literature books that match their chosen theme, such as the Eastern Hemisphere, which is part of the Core F we're studying this year. The books are reasonably challenging for the age range they post, but many are on the lower end of the age range, if you're looking at Lexile levels. For this reason as well, it's good for Peter, as the older in the learning pair, to be reading extra, high-quality, challenging books with higher Lexile levels.

That said, I look at sentence structure, sentence length, vocabulary, and descriptive quality when evaluating a novel's difficulty, and my assessment doesn't always match Lexile's. Lexile's just a guideline...a formula that can't take everything into account.

For example, this is a dictation passage Sonlight assigned from Call It Courage, which is Lexile 830 and grade equivalent 5.8. That's a fairy low Lexile, but look at the quality of Armstrong Perry's writing. It takes my breath away and I'm fully confident my sixth grader learned a lot about writing (and about Pacific Island culture) while reading this book.

Now the air was luminous with promise of another day. Out of the sultry mists the sea emerged, blue and violent. With the coming of this new day, terror raised its head. Mafatu tried to fight it back, to deny its existence; but it gripped his heart with clammy fingers, tightened his throat. Call it Courage, pg. 28-29


 Call It Courage/Newbery Summer

Doing more than two Sonlight Cores at a time is just impossible without much older children around helping with the read alouds and book discussions, so the choice for medium-size families is to combine kids into two Cores, or use another literature-based curriculum.

Thankfully, my girls are only 24 months apart, which will work well for another Sonlight-teaching duo later on.

I haven't used Sonlight Cores for 1st or 2nd grade. As a former first-grade teacher, still single at the time, I spent most of my money on books, so I have enough fiction and non-fiction around to create challenging learning years for younger kids.

My favorite thing this week was…

Mary, age 6, does AWANA Sparks and these were her memory verses this week:

Deuteronomy 6:5
Love the LORD your God
With all your heart
And with all your soul
And with all your strength.

Psalm 96:2
Sing to the LORD, praise His name;
Proclaim His salvation day after day.

Jeremiah 32:27
"I am the LORD,
The God of all mankind.
Is anything too hard for Me?"

Leviticus 19:2
..."Be holy because I,
The LORD your God, am holy."

We go to AWANA on Sunday night and we start Monday morning singing the new verses, continuing to sing them each day until they're mastered. It takes 5 days usually, with 2 more days of review, to be ready.

This week after two mornings of singing them, Mary whipped through them the third morning and told me, excited, that she thought about them at bedtime the night before, singing them to herself.

That really blessed me as a reminder that the Holy Spirit is in this parenting gig with me. He brought those verses to Mary's mind that night. What a relief to be reminded that it doesn't all depend on Mom and Dad's efforts. We just need to be obedient, and the results are up to God. Praise the Lord for that reminder!

Last weekend we watched Pete's Dragon for family movie time, found at our library. I loved it again-- I saw it at age 13 or so when it first came out--but the boys thought the musical parts were boring. They don't adore musicals like their parents do. Still, all were glued to the screen, enjoying popcorn and cuddling.


My kiddos favorite thing this week was…

Finding yet another snake in the yard, and two praying mantises, male and female, in the garden. Peter had already released the praying mantis he kept for a time, and he felt this blessing of more mantis sightings was God's way of helping him recover from the hamster's death. I convinced him these mantises needed to stay where they are to produce egg sacs for next year.

Mary and Peter are my nature enthusiasts, so the above applies to them.

Paul is loving football right now--playing it outside daily--and Beth continues to delight herself with dollies and pretend play of every kind...including a lot of clothing changes!

A few weeks ago I kissed my girls, calling them my princesses. Beth replied that Mary couldn't be a princess because she touches dirty things, and princesses don't do that. (Mary touches bugs, snakes, frogs and toads on a regular basis).

Mary smiled at Beth's silliness, looking up at me knowingly. I replied that Mary will be a princess to her husband some day, and that she would always be one of my princesses...toads and all.

I'm not sure that satisfied her Prissy Highness, who is feminine in every regard, even while sitting down to watch a movie (hands folded prettily in her lap).

Both my girls delight me for different reasons and I know they'll equally delight a nice Christian husband some day, with their respective God-given bents. I pray their husbands will really take the time to know my girls, through and through, and appreciate every gift they offer.

I’m grateful for…

~ God's holy Word

~ boys and girls

~ literature as a best friend

~ a husband sensitive to my feelings, with tender ones of his own

~ enough food and clothes and adequate shelter

~ a letter from Divya, a Compassion correspondent child of ours from India

~ penpals

~ looking out the window, seeing Mary in the backyard with such a serene face, as though God's glory thoroughly penetrated her soul at that moment.

Praise God for at least two children who really notice God's glory when they venture out. His glory is a gift and noticing it pleases God immensely.

A photo, video, link, or quote to share...

Isaiah 55:12
"For ye shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace: the mountains
and the hills shall break forth before you into singing, and
all the trees of the field shall clap their hands."

Psalm 19:1-6
The heavens declare the glory of God;
the skies proclaim the work of his hands.
2 Day after day they pour forth speech;
night after night they reveal knowledge.
3 They have no speech, they use no words;
no sound is heard from them.
4 Yet their voice goes out into all the earth,
their words to the ends of the world.
In the heavens God has pitched a tent for the sun.
5 It is like a bridegroom coming out of his chamber,
like a champion rejoicing to run his course.
6 It rises at one end of the heavens
and makes its circuit to the other;
nothing is deprived of its warmth.


Thank you for reading! How was your week?

HMJ Logo 500x484


Thursday, October 3, 2013

Dollyland



You know you're a homeschooler when your 4-year-old daughter, playing with her dollies, feigns excitement about the "curriculum" that arrives in the dollyland mail.

Busy doing dishes in the kitchen, you even hear her say the word curriculum correctly. You decide to play along and ask, "Oh, Dolly! How exciting! Was it the science curriculum you ordered?"

To which she answers, "No, it's my princess curriculum."

Monday, September 30, 2013

Our Dreams For Our Children


What dreams do you have for your children's futures?

After you think about that for a minute, ask: "Are these dreams mine, or God's? Are they for my sake, or for my children's sakes?

In a recent Simple Homeschool article, When Your Children's Dreams Are Different Than Your Own, contributing author Cheryl Pitt shares this about her homeschooled son:

Today he is 17, intelligent, and a hard worker. I was so proud when he recently landed his first job as a package handler for a shipping company. He loves his job and is proud of the paycheck that comes with it. As am I! I often tell him how proud I am of his work ethic and diligence.

I surprised myself one day, though, when he came home and asked if he could apply to be a driver assistant. He was excited. This opportunity meant more hours, more pay and a step up the package handler ladder. Maybe one day he could deliver packages, not just load them.

So why was I hesitant, upset even? I gave him my blessing, but in my mind I had some ugly thoughts. I wondered…
Is this really what the last 13 years have been about? Why did I sacrifice untold hours, years even, to facilitate his education? The good days of accomplishment and the bad days of tears? All so my son can become a truck driver?
 
This mother, a Christian, is aware that the world's idea of success can sneak in and become a mother's idea of success--especially when a mother has invested sweat and tears in her child's education.

We all feel Cheryl's angst from time to time, so a few reminders never hurt: What's important to God in regards to our children's futures?

Before we answer that, let's look at what's important to the world.

What the World Values:

1. The world values power, even if a powerful position yields a relatively low income. The president, for example, doesn't make enough to get rich, per se, but he's often considered the most powerful person in the world. The same goes, on a smaller scale, for managers and CEO's. Even if they aren't highly paid, the world deems their power significant.

2. The world values money, even if it's earned by buying and selling, rather than creating or establishing anything. The output or value of the work is not as important as the dollar signs.

3. The world values prestige--respect given to a position in society, rather than to an individual.


What God Values:

1. God values his own glory.

Isaiah 42:8 “I am the Lord, that is My name; I will not give My glory to another, nor My praise to graven images.”

Charles Spurgeon writes, "The great end of God in Christ was the manifestation of his own glorious attributes." Everything that God does is for his glory. His greatest passion is his own glory.


 
2. God values souls.

2 Peter 3:9 The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance

3. God values the least of his people and cares about how we treat them

Matthew 25:33-40 "The Son of Man will put the sheep (good people) on his right and the goats (bad people) on his left. "Then the king will say to those good people on his right, 'Come. My Father has given you great blessings. Come and get the kingdom God promised you. That kingdom has been prepared for you since the world was made. You can have this kingdom, because I was hungry and you gave me food to eat. I was thirsty, and you gave me something to drink. I was alone and away from home, and you invited me into your home. I was without clothes, and you gave me something to wear. I was sick, and you cared for me. I was in prison, and you came to visit me.' "Then the good people will answer, 'Lord, when did we see you hungry and give you food? When did we see you thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you alone and away from home and invite you into our home? When did we see you without clothes and give you something to wear? When did we see you sick or in prison and care for you?' "Then the king will answer, 'I tell you the truth. Anything you did for any of my people here, you also did for me.'"

4. God values humility.

Psalms 18:27 For you save a humble people, but the haughty eyes you bring down.

Psalms 149: 4 For the LORD takes pleasure in his people; he adorns the humble with salvation.

Proverbs 11:2 When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with the humble is wisdom.
 
5. God cares about our sorrows.

1 Peter 5:7 2 Cast all your anxiety on him for he cares for you.

Corinthians 1:2-4 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. 

Now, let me paint a picture of a godly man for you: He works hard each day to support his family using the talents God has given him. His motive is to care for his family and bring glory to God, not raise himself up in society's eyes.

He's a good steward, seeking higher income if it's possible, but not at the expense of his family's spiritual health. They need him to be their leader and a leader must be present and involved, somehow.

He takes his family to church and pays his tithe, and sets aside offerings for the poor. He watches over the family's money, insuring that their spending patterns bring glory to God, and not to themselves.

He doesn't seek recognition or fame or prestige, but works hard with integrity, letting God receive the glory for his successes. If he gains influence, he uses it to turn hearts toward God and publicly praise his Holy name; he's not ashamed of the gospel.

This is the dream we should have for our sons. Not that they'll have a title after their name, or a six-figure income, but that they'll bring glory to God by: caring about souls, about the least of God's people, about the hurting, and about their own humility before God.

We need to invest more time in their hearts than in anything else, because in the end, what will really make us smile about our sons? What will really bring us tears of joy? Not their titles, but their humility. Not their incomes, but their generosity. Not their prestige, but their faith.

To raise them for his glory. That's our dream and our prayer.

Prayer Time: Dear Heavenly Father, thank you for our sons and daughters. Thank you for placing your trust in us to raise them for your glory. Help us to keep our eyes on you, Father, and not on the world. May our children have Bibles and use them. May they have a heart for you and converse with you through prayer. May they put their trust in You and not in the world. May our sons lead their families well, and may our daughters create a home that glorifies you in every respect. May our children marry strong Christians and may their marriages and children make you smile. May we be worthy mothers to them all, for your glory.

In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

image