This idea arrived in my inbox and, while the website is for women, I think girls could enjoy this activity too. It's a great way to get them to engage with a Bible lesson through music and key words.
campaign.constantcontact.com/render?v=001zhxIANf2OP4KNrc-H8q1BkEn9pQeZBOcmT1zrgVcig88_eBQQPsAc6IpWU5xF7No_4uOkjiFdtcQoHbPivRXWkawVgAwXDQPf2l74muVpVVYRomgaSJ_5og9mh0j1EkD4ijUA8Unof3INhapT09PbipkQqVQ6qBd5HEsUZJNCi4gqzjuoYBLTP5t1Vk7q5fy
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Worship = Service
This morning I attended the funeral of a woman who impacted my life in many ways. Doris Julien went home to be with the Lord very unexpectedly Saturday night. The celebration of her life today was filled with tears and with joy.
Listening to tribute after tribute to her caring heart, giving spirit, calming presence and gracious hospitality, I was struck once again by the tremendous value of a woman who walks with God. She modeled what I long to see in the girls I disciple--and in myself. The traditional SMM values of worship and service were beautifully blended in this woman. I was reminded that as we teach our girls practical skills, we must not fail to help them develop gracious, grateful hearts. A heart full of worship understands how God calls us to serve.
Doris served as a missionary in France with her husband Tom, then served in many ways in the U.S. when he became Executive Director of Grace Brethren International Missions. She oversaw the care of the missionary residence in Winona Lake for 14 years. Someone commented to me this week, "When I would go to the missionary residence, I would see her there taking care of details to make the missionaries feel welcome. She may have been the wife of the Executive Director, but she wasn't above cleaning the toilets."
May God give us as leaders such a servant heart, and may it be contagious.
Listening to tribute after tribute to her caring heart, giving spirit, calming presence and gracious hospitality, I was struck once again by the tremendous value of a woman who walks with God. She modeled what I long to see in the girls I disciple--and in myself. The traditional SMM values of worship and service were beautifully blended in this woman. I was reminded that as we teach our girls practical skills, we must not fail to help them develop gracious, grateful hearts. A heart full of worship understands how God calls us to serve.
Doris served as a missionary in France with her husband Tom, then served in many ways in the U.S. when he became Executive Director of Grace Brethren International Missions. She oversaw the care of the missionary residence in Winona Lake for 14 years. Someone commented to me this week, "When I would go to the missionary residence, I would see her there taking care of details to make the missionaries feel welcome. She may have been the wife of the Executive Director, but she wasn't above cleaning the toilets."
May God give us as leaders such a servant heart, and may it be contagious.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
In Tense
Bills to pay. Meals to make. Meetings to go to. Laundry to fold. Dishes to wash. Phone calls. Interruptions. Demands. Expectations. We find outselves trying to be all things to all people. Tension builds, like a rubber band being pulled farther and farther from it's anchor point.
Then we hear that there's something more we need to be doing in our Christian life, and our first reaction is to burst into tears. We don't want to stretch this rubber band any more. We know there's a breaking point. We know that when it does break, the recoil might be very painful.
So what do we do with our call to disciple those younger than us? How do we women keep from multi-tasking ourselves to death?
In Strengthening the Soul of Your Leadership, Ruth Haley Barton captured some of what I struggle with as I look at the challenges of discipling girls. As she lists tensions leaders experiences, she observes, "There is the tension between the need for an easy discipleship process through which we can efficiently herd lots of people and the patient, plodding and ultimately mysterious nature of the spiritual transformation process."
Her answers to those tensions? An intense concentration on our relationship with God. Only through disciplines that nourish our own souls can be find the strength to nourish others. Then, she says, "we will have bread to offer that is warm from the oven of our intimacy with God."
Then we hear that there's something more we need to be doing in our Christian life, and our first reaction is to burst into tears. We don't want to stretch this rubber band any more. We know there's a breaking point. We know that when it does break, the recoil might be very painful.
So what do we do with our call to disciple those younger than us? How do we women keep from multi-tasking ourselves to death?
In Strengthening the Soul of Your Leadership, Ruth Haley Barton captured some of what I struggle with as I look at the challenges of discipling girls. As she lists tensions leaders experiences, she observes, "There is the tension between the need for an easy discipleship process through which we can efficiently herd lots of people and the patient, plodding and ultimately mysterious nature of the spiritual transformation process."
Her answers to those tensions? An intense concentration on our relationship with God. Only through disciplines that nourish our own souls can be find the strength to nourish others. Then, she says, "we will have bread to offer that is warm from the oven of our intimacy with God."
Friday, August 14, 2009
Gifted
She seemed confident and assured—an excellent Sunday School teacher, a gifted youth worker, and, what I envied most, an accomplished organist whose music soared in the little church on the corner. We were only going to be in town for eight months, but amazingly, a house was available across the street from hers. She was almost in her eighties—I had just turned ten.
The doorbell rang as we were moving in. There she stood with a plate of cookies in one hand and a grocery bag in the other. My parents were obviously glad to see her. I drifted back toward my new bedroom while the grownups chatted.
Then I heard my name. Was she talking about me? What had I done? I stood around the corner from them so they couldn’t see me. After all, children should be seen, not heard.
“I thought she might like some books to read,” I heard her say. The grocery bag rattled as she set it down. I was there in a flash, looking through the books carefully selected to appeal to a girl my age. In a new house with no friends, no TV, nothing to do, they seemed like a fountain in the desert.
I felt her eyes on me, and my timid spirit took over. I started to fade down the hall, trying to be invisible. She called me back. “I hear you’re learning to play the piano,” she said. I nodded shyly. “Would you like to try an organ? I have one in my house.”
Of course I couldn’t go over there and play in front of someone I didn’t even know! She must have sensed the reason behind my hesitation.
“I usually work in my garden between 9 and 10 in the morning,” she said. “I’ll set some music books out, and you can just come over and have the house to yourself. Try it out and see if you like it.”
So I did—hesitantly at first, but gaining boldness as the days went on. Eventually, I didn’t even mind if she stayed in the house when I played. Soon I was stopping in the garden to talk with her on my way home, soothed and comforted by the chance to play that rumbling organ. Her interest, the fact that I mattered to her, was a powerful key to surviving a difficult time in my life.
I still can’t play the organ very well—unfortunately, her musical gift didn’t rub off on me. Her mentoring spirit, however, did. What greater gift can we give?
The doorbell rang as we were moving in. There she stood with a plate of cookies in one hand and a grocery bag in the other. My parents were obviously glad to see her. I drifted back toward my new bedroom while the grownups chatted.
Then I heard my name. Was she talking about me? What had I done? I stood around the corner from them so they couldn’t see me. After all, children should be seen, not heard.
“I thought she might like some books to read,” I heard her say. The grocery bag rattled as she set it down. I was there in a flash, looking through the books carefully selected to appeal to a girl my age. In a new house with no friends, no TV, nothing to do, they seemed like a fountain in the desert.
I felt her eyes on me, and my timid spirit took over. I started to fade down the hall, trying to be invisible. She called me back. “I hear you’re learning to play the piano,” she said. I nodded shyly. “Would you like to try an organ? I have one in my house.”
Of course I couldn’t go over there and play in front of someone I didn’t even know! She must have sensed the reason behind my hesitation.
“I usually work in my garden between 9 and 10 in the morning,” she said. “I’ll set some music books out, and you can just come over and have the house to yourself. Try it out and see if you like it.”
So I did—hesitantly at first, but gaining boldness as the days went on. Eventually, I didn’t even mind if she stayed in the house when I played. Soon I was stopping in the garden to talk with her on my way home, soothed and comforted by the chance to play that rumbling organ. Her interest, the fact that I mattered to her, was a powerful key to surviving a difficult time in my life.
I still can’t play the organ very well—unfortunately, her musical gift didn’t rub off on me. Her mentoring spirit, however, did. What greater gift can we give?
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Not optional!
Two questions:
"Likewise, teach the older women to be reverent in the way they live, not to be slanderers or addicted to much wine, but to teach what is good. Then they can urge the younger women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God." (Titus 2:3-5)
- How old do the "younger women" have to be before we start teaching them the values Paul lists?
- Does this sound like it's optional?
"Likewise, teach the older women to be reverent in the way they live, not to be slanderers or addicted to much wine, but to teach what is good. Then they can urge the younger women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God." (Titus 2:3-5)
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