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May 21, 2005
I'm giving my talk to the youth group at church, about my life as a Stay at Home, homeschooling mom.
Please pray that I'll say exactly what God wants me to. I don't want to add stuff that I shouldn't, nor not say things because I'm afraid it might offend. Thanks.
Posted at 03:39 pm by Rosesandtea
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May 20, 2005
As I prepare to talk to the youth next Sunday...
... it is interesting that on a few blogs I have received insight and inspiration about being a Titus 2 mom, or at least was prompted to remind myself (and my friend) of the blessings to come even when we don't see them now.
Today (or was it posted yesterday?) is an excellent post by Amy at Amy's Humble Musings and I commend it to you.
Posted at 07:13 am by Rosesandtea
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May 18, 2005
Created to Be His Help Meet, chapters 15 and 16
With chapter 15 Debi Pearl begins her sharing with us of her thoughts and experiences of the 8 attributes/actions wives are supposed to practice.
The first character quality is sobriety (Titus 2:4 - "...that they may teach the young women to be sober...")
Mrs Pearl begins with describing the sober wife as one who knows what marriage requires of her. "She makes a commitment to be the best wife, mother and manager of the home that anyone could be. She becomes the acting CEO of a great enterprise of which her husband is the owner."
Now some might think that using the analogy of a business is not right as marriage is supposed to be about relationship, etc. But although it is a union, a relationship, a marriage also has a purpose. The main one is to glorify God, just like all we do should glorify Him. It is also supposed to be an illustration of the union of Christ and the church (which again sounds more spiritual and relational than business like). But it is the means through which we obey God's command to be fruitful and multiply, it is the base relationship and environment in which we raise our offspring and teach them to walk in God's ways. There is a job to be done. With that in mind, perhaps a good business model can be helpful.
Some advantages I see are that we accept a chain of command in business or other work environments much more easily than we often seem to in Christian marriages. Despite clear commands in the New Testament to show respect and obey their own husbands, Christian wives struggle with practicing these while seeming to have no problem respecting their bosses in their employment (if not while married, while they were still single). Now part of the problem is the 24/7 nature of marriage and the principle "familiarity breeds comtempt" - which we have to overcome - but much of it is that we just have not grasped, as a body of believer, the importance of our relational roles, and the fact that humility and submission are in no way a sign of weakness (especially intellectual) or lack of dignity (see Philippians 2:5-9 for how Jesus is our example in this).
Mrs Pearl writes: "Her most basic responsibility is to make her husband's home run smoothly. She assumes the role of coordinator of all affairs. If the home doesn't run in an orderly fashion, the marriage will not be joyous and fulfilling, and neither will child training. When a woman soberly considers the needs, time schedule, and resources of her home, then she will be a more efficient help meet. This planning will eliminate tension and help set a peaceful mood. ....Men (and children) appreciate good meals, a clean house, and an atmosphere of peace- a refuge from the stress of life." (pp147-8 - emphasis Mrs. Pearl's)
She spends much of the rest of the first part of this chapter chapter encouraging wives to become organized with their meal preparation. She recommends the use of crockpots, and gives several menu suggestions for using a crockpot for several dinners throughout the week. She emphasizes planning so that one can buy and prepare meals to aid in the smooth running of the household.
Here I'll make another recommendation for the crockpot. An important point is that they do not have to be used solely in the preparation of casserole-type meals. They can be used to cook anything that might require a longish cooking time, like beans or baked potatoes. Then other things can be done closer to the dinner hour.
Sometimes even getting things in the crockpot can be hard for some reason. That's where pre-cooked freezer meals come in handy, or cans of soup. For those husbands who don't like "mixed dishes" with the meat and the vegetables cooked together (and who aren't as sweet and tolerant as mine is, even with dishes he doesn't like) a previously - cooked lot of meat can be frozen, and then defrosted and heated for dinner, with only the veggies to prepare. I think freezer meals are a real blessing for those times when things are so hectic that even getting the minimum of preparation done is difficult. Now of course one can fill the crockpot the night before and put it in the fridge, but not everyone has a big enough fridge.
I would recommend having a meal just for one or two people in the freezer (as opposed to the whole family) for those occasions when all the kids are down with a stomach virus or something. Then you can just heat the one meal for hubby and yourself (or only hubby if you've got it too).
Now I have a wonderful husband who is very patient and kind and is very tolerant of my weaknesses especially if things have been difficult at home. But it is nice if I have at least something to heat and serve to him, even if he is willing to do a little cooking or getting take-out on bad days. For those ladies who have husbands who seem to be less understanding and willing to step into the gap, planning is really essential and will save on stress all around.
Mrs. Pearl mentions self-discipline in this section, and that is so true. We wives need to exercise self-discipline in order to get things done. I need some more of this characteristic myself!
In the next part of the chapter Mrs Pearl contrasts modern, feminist thinking with some older thinking which emphasizes making the home pleasant for hubby to come home to. She warns against making the home a shrine, however, with undue concern for keeping or having everything just perfect.
Chapter 16 is about "loving our husbands." She focusses on the physical relation aspect. I think that most of us (including our husbands) will acknowledge that loving our husbands means more than satisfying their needs for intimacy, but so much of the other aspects of love are covered elsewhere in the book (like meals, having the home be a pleasant haven, being respectful, being an encourager, etc) that this is a good subject to fill this chapter.
I will not comment much about this chapter. I will quote from a man that wrote to the Pearls, who put things in a very clear way as he tried to communicate with his wife: "...to a man sex is just like having to eat. When I have missed a meal I unconsciously roam the kitchen, opening cabinet doors, and peer into the refrigerator, just looking and looking. I told her that a few days without sex leaves me in the same condition sexually. No matter how much I love her and respect her feelings and needs, I still have this overwhelming sexual need that drives me until it is satisfied." pp161-2
I just thought that was a very good analogy. Of course, husbands differ in their needs in this area just as they do in other physical needs.
Very little is said about physical difficulties (like damge after a difficult birth) and I feel that sometimes there are difficulties that are greater than what seem to be acknowledged in this chapter. But I think Mrs Pearl is correct in her assertion hormones respond to stimuli and if a woman is willing and ready to please, things are helped along a good deal just because of the physical response to the pleasant thoughts of giving to one's spouse. Mrs Pearl says refusal to meet the husband's needs in this area is sin. I feel that that is true except for brief times of real need. If medical attention is needed then I feel it is wrong to refuse to seek help because of embarassment, or just lack of motivation for whatever reason.
At the end of the chapter there is a warning about two kinds of perversion. I'll leave the one but mention the second, which is their advice to call in the law if there is ever any "sexual handling" of the children. I wanted to point this out because there are so many who feel that anyone who teaches Biblical submission is teaching women to not step in when there is abuse. That is not the case, at least with the Pearls and with many others.
Posted at 06:33 am by Rosesandtea
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May 17, 2005
Once again I will be late for this, sorry. The new chapters will be focussing on Titus 2 and I am really looking forward to spending time on them.
Meanwhile, please check out the other bloggers doing weekly reviews on Created to Be His Help Meet:
Kristen (although as of this writing 17:54 in England she has not posted hers yet)
Jenna
Sal
Molly has had her baby and will be skipping a week or two!
I'll try to get my post up tomorrow, I'm sorry for the delay.
Posted at 10:00 am by Rosesandtea
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May 12, 2005
Created to Be His Help Meet chapters 13 and 14
Kristen
Sal
Jenna
Molly
all have good posts on these two chapters.
Chapters 13 and 14 are about the duty of a wife to "reverence" her husband. This is based on Ephesians 5:33 " Nevertheless let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself; and the wife see that she reverence her husband". Now as this book is about how we as women should act or react, she does not deal with the first part of the verse.
Mrs Pearl writes on page 137, "Reverence is not just how you act; it is how you feel and how you respond with words and with your body language."
On Molly's blog we were discussing the difference between giving one's husband facts he may not know, or reminding him of something, in a deferential (or "reverential") way, as opposed to acting like he just doesn't have a clue. Sometimes it seems like there is a fine line. Molly hits it on the head and reiterates what Debi Pearl is trying to communicate here when she says if it is in this spirit :"I'd better help you since YOU obviously don't know what you're doing," then that is not what we're after. Another commenter on that post, and an IRL friend of mine also were helpful to me by giving phrases that they have used or could imagine using sometime. (I have a "phrase bank" in my head - I keep useful phrases there to help me know what to say, or to tweak as needed for various circumstances.)
I have been so discouraged sometimes when watching women who do the opposite of reverence their husbands. Telling jokes at the husband's expense (although sometimes that might be permissible - if very carefully done and with hubby's permission), especially if at all off-color or casting doubts on his intelligence or abilities, telling the husband publically he is talking too much, disagreeing in a negative, "I know better" way with him etc etc. And I realize I am guilty of some of those listed or of others not listed. I hope I am getting better as I have walked through the years of my marriage, and especially lately as I have been reading this book. I think I have excused a few things or not counted them as important, and have started to see things from dh's perspective a little more, maybe. I've been more aware about my need to change things.
This awareness struggles with the knowledge that sometimes I AM right, and dh is wrong, but the issue is my attitude and my respect, not whether dh is doing or being or thinking whatever is really right.
Mrs Pearl spells out her definition of reverence on page 141 "The very heart of reverence is extreme appreciation and profound thankfulness that this man, just as he is, has chosen to love me, just as I am."
Thankfulness. It's easy to become critical instead of thankful isn't it?
I'll close with a reminder that when we stand because the judge comes into the courtroom, or the president comes into the room, we do so because of the office that the man or woman holds - not because we think s/he is a really cool person with no faults that irritate us or views that bother us. We show respect - a type of reverence - because we honor the office and therefore we respect the person holding it. God has told us who is the head of the marriage, and even when things are looking bleak we can still honor God by showing reverence to our husband no matter how we view his performance as a husband or a Christian.
Posted at 10:53 am by Rosesandtea
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May 10, 2005
Although I re-read the chapters over the weekend, Tuesday has snuck up on me and I haven't written anything on Created to Be His Help Meet today. I hope to be able to write my post tomorrow. I am finding that having to be my son's amanuensis (I hope I have that right!) because of his cast, is causing me to be a bit slow in getting things done. If you have any helpful hints about this kind of problem, please let me know! :)
Posted at 11:38 am by Rosesandtea
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May 3, 2005
(If you were hoping to read a review about Debi Pearl's book Created to Be His Help Meet, please scroll on down.)
Yesterday (a bank holiday here in Britain) we went Geocaching. You can read about it (and the whole day) later on my other blog as I haven't written about it yet over there. I wanted to get this post in first.
I have had a "problem" with heights. I didn't use to. I didn't like them a lot, but wasn't too bad, and made it up the Eiffel tower in my 20's and went up other tourist attractions without too much trouble. Over the years it has gotten worse though, and I think it was compounded by my normal, natural maternal concerns for my children's safety. Thing is, when you combine natural concerns with an unnecessary fear, the fear gets a whole lot worse.
So in the last few years I have either avoided some situations or had a great deal of difficulty when up in places like mills or touristy places in Oxford.
Yesterday our geocaching walk took us over a pedestrian bridge which crosses a major road in the region.
The whole height thing was made so much worse by the fact that there was traffic whizzing below it at 60-90 miles an hour (plenty of speeders here) and that all my children needed to get safely across too. My oldest son took the youngest son, and my daughter went with them happily. So it was middle son, myself, and DH with youngest daughter following closely behind..... until... middle son gets scared, and I start feeling panicky. Real, heart-pounding, ready-to-cry panic. So we go back down. Dh goes over to join the others and leaves me with the two children on this side of the bridge.
DS1 comes back with the news that the cache, according to the GPSr is over a quarter of a mile away. It will be a long wait, plus DH appreciates my help in locating the site and the cache itself (I have a knack in finding the actual object). So I have to decide whether I will go or not. I realize that my fear is keeping my family from enjoying themselves. I think of a couple of people I know, whose fears are so extreme that they are kept from doing things they themselves could enjoy, or should do, and are keeping their families from enjoyment and good activities as well.
I decide I do not want to be that way. I want to say, I do have sympathy for genuine phobias or other emotional problems. But I feel a Christian should continually be trying to come out from under such problems and be moving forward - even in baby steps - wherever possible. And in one of those cases I mentioned, I knew that to a certain extent the person is resting in their problem, and not really trying to go forward, and it keeps this person from all sorts of things that would benefit them and their family. I am not trying to be unkind here as I write this, it is just that I could see that if I continued unchecked in indulging this fear, that it would only get worse, and limit me more and more.
All this is happening very quickly in my mind. I decided I did not want to be bound by this fear any more, that fear does not glorify God. I knew that it was not a logical fear - I knew the bridge was strong, and that generally people were safe on it. I knew that I was physically capable of crossing it. So the problem was emotional - how I felt did not match what I knew. I told DS1 to get Dad. Dad came back over and I told him I'd go. He hadn't realized until that day how strong my fear was (and I'm still not sure he understands such a fear). DS1 escorted DS2, and then I began my ascent with DH taking DD2.
I went slowly, avoiding looking through the spaces between the steps, or over the sides. I just concentrated on where my feet were going. I got up the steps to near the top but my anxiety increased although I was praying and trying to keep in mind the facts that it was safe and that I'd be OK. I started crying and cried harder as I continued ascending - as I got to the top I was sobbing and felt difficulty in breathing- at one point I couldn't take a breath inwards. Great, my body can take me across, the bridge won't fail, but I'm going to collapse with asphyxia because of my emotions!!
I did not want that bridge to conquer me. If God could help David kill Goliath surely He could help me. I wanted to glorify God and not be in bondage any more. I kept going. It got easier. I felt quite happy although still nervous when I reached the other side and started down. I made it! Thanks to God for helping me! I told David (dh) he should be proud of me (OK I needed some affirmation!!!).
Very near to the bridge on the other side I spotted this:
I wouldn't have gotten to see it if I had not crossed that bridge! Then, further along we came to a meadow with deer:
The photo doesn't show them well, but they are really there, you can see the flashes of white on their rumps! And at any rate, isn't it a pretty and peaceful meadow to look at?
That was wonderful, to see those lovely things. We got to go on to find the cache and walk into another village (details on all that on my other site, maybe tomorrow).
I still had to face my giant on the way back. It was a lot easier - but not completely easy. I still had the pounding heart and fears (worries that the kids ahead of me would behave foolishly - they didn't) but I made myself look down the road when I was at the top before moving on. I felt very weak, but I knew God was big enough to help me do it - He did help and I did do it.
This is not the end of my fears - but I hope that yesterday was a deadly blow to my Goliath.
For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.
2 Timothy 1:7 (New King James Version)
Posted at 10:07 am by Rosesandtea
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Chapters 11 and 12 - Created to Be His Help Meet
If you'd like to order a copy of Created to Be His Help Meet by Debi Pearl, click here.
This week we are reviewing chapters 11 and 12. The other ladies involved are:
Molly
Kristen
Jenna
Sal
Chapter 11 focusses on the differences between men and women, and why women are easily deceived.
I Timothy 2:13-14 "For Adam was first formed, then Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression."
Debi Pearl writes: Satan knew that the man could not be deceived, but the woman could. So, when she drew near to the tree, he convinced her that life would be better if she sought the higher state of being, "like the gods" - gaining spiritual insight into the nature of good and evil. Eve was deceived in three ways:
1. She followed her flesh in desiring the tree for its food properties.
2. She succumbed to its beauty, desiring it for its pleasant appearance. She did not follow logic; she followed her "sensibilities."
3. She wanted "deeper" spiritual insights than those provided by God.
The source of Eve's failure was her unwillingness to believe God and her husband.
p 107
I think the #3 reason certainly shows itself a lot in modern Christianity. Not content with our role as women, or with God's word itself, many women seek all sorts of information and experiences that ultimately cause trouble.
Mrs Pearl spends a lot of time contrasting the natures of men and women in this chapter. I think she's mostly right, and although she talks a lot about the physical aspects of men and their desire to conquer things she includes inventions and science which are not burly muscle subject but which still demonstrate a type of conquering. I know there are women in science - good ones too - but it is still a field dominated by men.
Later in the chapter she contrast Jezebel and her type to various examples of Godly women. You can read about the Jezebel spirit at No Greater Joy.
Chapter 12
In this chapter Mrs Pearl concentrates on two simple ideas:
1. God made men to rule.
2. God made women to not rule.
There are plenty of Bible verses in this chapter. I am not going to spend much time writing about this chapter but I do want to comment on a couple of verses and what Mrs Pearl says about them.
I Timothy 2:12 - But I suffer not [do not allow] a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, [that includes your pastor] but to be in silence. (parenthetical statements and emphasis Debi Pearl's)
I Corinthians 14:34 "Let your women keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but they are commanded to be under obedience; as also saith the law." Mrs Pearl points out that Paul is not responding merely to then-current Greek culture but is saying that this rule for women has been around for a long time.
Mrs Pearl, through discussing a letter she had received in which the writer defended women preaching (because they could be used by God, and be good preachers), points out that it is exactly because women can be very good speakers and teachers that this command was given by God. She points out that the issue is not one of qualification but of authorization.
That is such an important point and is so overlooked. After all, if women were consistently miserable at preaching and leading, they wouldn't be tempted to do it so much. I wonder if one of the reasons men are to be the speakers and leaders is because so many don't feel they have good verbal skills (for preaching) or leadership skills - and if women wouldn't jump in all the time, men could have a greater opportunity to develop those skills or let God supernaturally gift them either permanently or for a certain circumstance. But they won't ask God for help (and therefore won't receive it) if they are not in a position where they need to ask. If women are always stepping in to fill the gaps (and we can be so quick to do so) many men who otherwise would become (perhaps slowly!) aware that they need to do something, simply sit back and become lethargic.
Mrs Pearl discusses the cases of Deborah and Priscilla in this chapter. I especially liked the "Time to Consider" section for this chapter (this part is at the end of every chapter). There were several very practical things to do which will have spiritual repurcussions.
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Posted at 09:17 am by Rosesandtea
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May 1, 2005
I'm going to have a look at what look to be some good articles on modesty over the coming days. Check them out here.
I got the link from LAF - here's how you get to them.
Posted at 05:42 am by Rosesandtea
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Apr 27, 2005
thoughts on elders and child-rearing
Today I'm thinking about two things, although one subject kind of flowed from the other. And the second subject will be familiar to many homeschoolers, but I am thinking about it again after a seminar I recently went to.
1 Timothy 3:1-7 (King James Version)
1This is a true saying, if a man desire the office of a bishop, he desireth a good work.
2A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour, given to hospitality, apt to teach;
3Not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; but patient, not a brawler, not covetous;
4One that ruleth well his own house, having his children in subjection with all gravity;
5(For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the church of God?)
6Not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the devil.
7Moreover he must have a good report of them which are without; lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil.
I'm thinking about elders, but also about teachers.
James 3:1
1 Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we will incur a stricter judgment.
That one was from the NASB.
I'm going to be a bit vague here because I don't want to sound accusatory toward anyone. We see clearly in I Timothy the requirements for an elder. I wonder what ages the children mentioned in verse 4 are meant to be? I see using a Bible help (Crosswalk.com, which provides Strongs numbers and definition) that the word is teknon. It's the same word, I see, in Titus where Paul gives other instruction as to what sort of man should be an elder. Titus 1:5-10 but I'll only copy out verse 6, which has the word teknon for children in it:
v6 namely, if any man be above reproach, the husband of one wife, having children who believe, not accused of dissipation or rebellion.
It looks like from verse 10 that the part about rebellion refers to the man, not the children so we must not build too much on that.
But, we are at least talking about children who believe - who are of an age when they can believe so it is reasonable to assume that they are not real young. I don't know enough to know if young men who were of bar mitzvah age were then no longer considered children.
Am I assuming too much to think that teenagers would be included in the I Timothy and Titus passages? Or are we limited to children of ages say, 3 - 13 only? These are the ones who are to be in the prospective elder's control? Do older children count or not?
I am wondering about all this when I think about some well-known teachers in the evangelical arena.
What kinds of requirements should they have to meet? They are not necessarily functioning as elders in a local church and I have to say even the plain requirements for elders are not always adhered to in local churches, but do we have any requirements for the travelling teachers who suggest to us the best way to raise our children? Or teachers of any part of our Christian life?
I attended a meeting on Monday night that was OK as far as it went. But I just feel that we should be getting that kind of (very basic, to be honest) information from the pulpit as well as from the older members of our churches (Titus 2), and indeed we should be receiving even more specific and hopeful information than just love and show acceptance to your teens and just hang on because it will inevitably be a rough time.
I know there will be hormonal moments and that the teen years are simply a continuation of the training we started with our children many years ago, so I don't expect perfection. But I have from my own life, my husband's life. the testimony of many of my peers, and of some of the children of the older Christians that I know,the knowledge that teens do not always go off the rails. When I see large families being raised and notice the teens are pleasant, decent, people growing in their faith in Christ - not without faults, and not without some difficult times, but definitely without the heartache so many parents face - and then turning into decent adult Christians and citizens of their communities I take notice. And when one child out of 6 or 7 goes "wrong", it doesn't discourage me as much as when one child out of a family of two children is a tearaway. So what are these families doing right?
I'm a little disheartened when evangelicals are still -for over 20 years now - are being told - that there just isn't much one can do, and when a whole audience - who I know are not necessarily all Christians (and therefore I admit won't have or even know of God's standards) , are told that they have done the best they could do, so shouldn't feel that their unruly,difficult youths are their fault.
Have we all really done the best we could? I know that I have certainly failed - and this in the context of very actively trying to live according to God's instructions in every aspect of my life as each area is revealed to me in Scripture (it's a journey!). So those parents who chose material goods over raising their children themselves and stuck their children in daycare (NB I am not including here those parents who truly had to do so, just to make sure there was a roof over their heads and simple food on the table.), and before and after school care and let their older children roam in malls or city centers, basically being raised by the TV, computer and peers (of course not approved by the parents, if the parents even met them), these parents have no reason to regret anything? Is there no room for improvement for any of us?
I repeat that the suggestions were good as far as they went. Love your children. Show your acceptance of them (different than love according to the speaker). Have fun and laugh with them. A few good more nitty-gritty suggestions like keeping the computer in a high-traffic or visible area, not separate internet access computers in children's rooms. But I am saddened when these blanket, fairly basic things are all some Christian parents encounter by way of teaching. And no hope is given for expecting happy, pleasant, Christian teenagers at all. (if you get one then you were just lucky to get a compliant child is the feeling)
I agree with Mary Pride here (back to her again!) - if I remember correctly - that the best way to catch fish is to go to the person with fish on his line - not to the one who has fancy gizmos and great theories. With many other homeschoolers, and even many parents who don't homeschool but believe they have the responsibility and power to affect their children for good, I agree that one of the best ways to learn about Godly child raising - including teens - is to look at those families who have grown children who exemplify what you want to see in your own children. That and the Bible. Sounds simple enough. And I see the results - not 100% perfect, but still very good - in those who dare try.
Please leave a comment! I'd like to hear from you!
Posted at 06:00 am by Rosesandtea
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