Archive for June, 2012

Jun 28 2012

Uganda Bound

Published by under uncategorized

 

Saturday I leave for Uganda for 9 days.  We get to visit the orphanage and the well that our church provided the funds to build.  We will also visit several other schools and orphanages. I am thankful for this opportunity and for those who gave to help me go.   I’m looking forward to loving on the children and encouraging moms and caregivers in training the children.

I don’t really know what to expect specifically, but I am going with the prayer and expectation of being used by our amazing God to display His awesome power! But then, isn’t that what I should pray for and expect even if I am just going around the block?

Men shall speak of the might of Your awesome acts,    And I will declare Your greatness.
Psalm 145:6

One response so far

Jun 13 2012

Beauty Treatment for Moms on Father’s Day

Published by under Father's Day,marriage

After all, this is how holy women who had confidence in God expressed their beauty in the past.
They placed themselves under their husbands’ authority as Sarah did.
Sarah obeyed Abraham and spoke to him respectfully.
You became Sarah’s daughters by not letting anything make you afraid to do good.
1 Peter 3:5-6

Everyone profits when the father is honored — the father receives the respect; the child will experience a full life (Deut. 5:16 Honor your father and your mother. . . that your days may be long, and that it may be well with you. . .); . . . and according to the above verse, the wife looks beautiful:

So, moms, let’s concentrate on this inexpensive way of improving our appearance as we respect and honor our husbands on Father’s Day and everyday.   It will look good on us!

Here are some excellent suggestions that were written by Mary Alice Smith who was married for 67 years to Bible teacher Fred Smith:

1) Appreciate him – Never give the impression, “I could have done better.”

2) Send him off each day with a pocketful of “feel goods” Get up and fix him breakfast, compliment him on how he looks, tell him you will be glad when he comes home.

3) Believe in him - Support his motives. Let him know you believe he is sincere in what he is doing. Never tear him down or cause him to doubt himself.

4) Know what is important in his life – Don’t assume that the family is number one always, especially if he is following a calling. Let him know you and the family want to participate in his calling, and you don’t want to compete with it.

5) Be loyal to him – We have friends who always “air their dirty laundry” when we are together. When the wife exposes the husband’s weaknesses, it is usually because she is insecure.

6) Laugh when he tells a story – I try never to groan and say, “You aren’t going to tell that one again, are you?” People watch the wife when the husband is speaking.


7) Let him brag to you – It is so easy for a wife to think it’s her job to keep her husband humble, but everyone else in the world does enough of that.

8 ) Make him feel like a man – Someone once said, “Treat him like a king and he will treat you like a queen.”

9) Help him concentrate – Be careful about interrupting your husband.

10) Avoid jealousy – The “green-eyed monster” is a sure sign of insecurity and selfishness. The love in 1 Corinthians 13 certainly excludes jealousy.

And I’d like to add one more:

Pray for your husband –  talking to God about any disappointments you have in him will avail much more than continually expressing them to his face.  Let’s be aware that it’s a tough job being a husband and father.  He needs our prayer support.

There is no higher calling for a woman than being a wife and a mother. This week I celebrated 42 years of being Mrs. Billy Daws. I am married to my best friend who is also the wonderful father of my children!! Happy Father’s Day, Billy.


 

One response so far

Jun 06 2012

Tell Your Children About D-Day

Published by under D-Day,history,Scripture

 

Joshua 4:6-7
. . . In the future, your children will ask . . . Then you can tell them,

John 15:13
Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.

Today is another opportunity to teach your children of how God has cared for us in the past.  It is another day to remember the soldiers who bravely fought and unselfishly gave their lives for the freedom of others. Inform your children about what happened on this day 68 years ago.

  • Look at a globe or map of the world and point out America, Britain, France, and Germany.
  • Talk about how the men left their homes and families and went to a far away country to fight for what was right. Help your children to think about how the soldiers and their families must have felt.
  • Briefly describe what happened on that day: “On June 6, 1944, thousands of soldiers forced their way into France, landing on 5 beaches in Normandy.  Their mission was to stop the German leader Adolf Hitler who had taken freedom away and killed many, many innocent people. The attack was the largest single-day invasion of all time, with over 130,000 troops arriving by air and by sea in one day. Even though the Germans had many soldiers, they were not able to stop the invasion. Two of the 27 countries that worked together were Britain which was led by Winston Churchill and America which was led by President Franklin D Roosevelt. They were called the Allies and God helped them win.   D-Day is often called ‘the beginning of the end of the war’.
  • Look at photos of D-Day: http://www.eugeneleeslover.com/D_Day.html
  • Get an overview of the war: http://www.show.me.uk/site/news/STO282.html
  • Clips from real footage of the invasion: http://www.kidsworldwar.com/?p=1
  • As you tell about what happened, use toys or some visuals to act it out.
  • Thank God for the soldiers who were so brave and unselfish to fight for our freedom.


 

 

No responses yet