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Posted by Megan on 02/28/2009 in Education: Home and Otherwise | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
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Nick just realized the discount link for the 35% off special wasn't working this week. He's reset the discount and extended it through March 7. Anyone can get Through His Eyes; God's Perspective on Women in the Bible by Jerram Barrs for $12.99 for one more week.
Wanted to let you know.
Posted by Megan on 02/27/2009 in Books & Culture, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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Posted by Megan on 02/27/2009 in Books & Culture, Education: Home and Otherwise, Family Life, God's World News, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
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Through His Eyes; God's Perspective on Women in the Bible by Jerram Barrs
Chapter 2: The Second Face of Eve: Eve at and after the Fall
It has been a couple of weeks since I actually read this chapter, but I did highlight quite a few areas of it (mostly because it's on sin and, well, I can relate to sin).
Right off the bat on page 25, Jerram says:
"We sometimes work very hard at seeing faults, and we appear to think it is very biblical to search out the sinfulness of people around us, both the sins of our fellow believers and, in particular, the sins of unbelievers. But that is not what Scripture calls us to do. We are indeed to recognize people's moral failures, especially our own, but we are called first to recognize their glory as persons made in the image of God."
I love this reminder because I've experienced so often in live or blog conversations a consistently low view of people in other believers. I want to see people as people made in God's image first. I want to place a high value on their lives because they are human. I need to do better here.
Talking about Satan on page 27, Jerram writes:
"His purpose on this occasion [in the garden of Eden] is to turn Eve and Adam from their worship of God alone; to turn them from their trust in the Lord as their Creator, Provider, Helper, and Friend; to turn them from their contented knowledge of who they are and to make them dissatisfied; to turn them from their glad acceptance of their status as creatures in God's world and to cause them to become distrustful of God's good intentions toward them."
I'd say mission accomplished, no? How often am I so easily turned from a contented knowledge of who I am in God and simply dissatisfied with my life and surroundings? Often. How often am I distrustful of God's good intentions toward me? I think I'm growing in this area, but I have to be honest and again say often. Way too often.
Okay, here was the big kicker for me, from page 30:
"There is nothing more unreasonable than the choice she [Eve] makes. But all sin is like this. We all need to admit that this unreasonableness is the nature of any sin, any disobedience against God. There is no excuse for sin. Sin cannot be justified, excused, or explained away. No matter how we hold sin up to the light of rational inquiry, no matter which way we look at sin, sin makes no sense. Sin is absurd. We may ask, "Why did Eve disobey?" or "Why did I turn from God's commandments?" "Why did this woman or this man forsake her or his marriage vows, commit adultery, and wreck her or his beloved children's lives?" We are desperate to be able to give a rational account of sin; we want to give sufficient reasons to show why Eve, or why you or I, make such a choice, but there are none."
There's more. There's so much more. But I'll stop for now and see if any of you want to chime in thoughts from chapter 2.
The main thought I walked away with from this chapter (and the thought that has been resonating through my head and heart for the past two weeks) is this: How would my life and the lives of my husband and children be different if every day I woke up and asked, "what would dying to myself mean today?" If I asked that question everyday (and then acted on its answer) for a whole year, what would happen? I think amazing things. It's not an easy question and I haven't asked it every single day for the past two weeks, but I have been asking it of myself quite a bit lately, and it is changing my thinking very little by very little.
Okay, anyone else have thoughts here?
To read thoughts from the rest of the book, click below:
Posted by Megan on 02/26/2009 in Books & Culture, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
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So here I am, getting all ready to enter the world of political activism. We had a bit of a reality check tonight when C8 asked us if we might get shot. No, Sweetie, this isn't going to be like the REAL Boston Tea Party. We're not going to get shot (at least not with a gun). We're going to pack a lunch. It will be like a big picnic in the park...with media.
Craig can't get out of school tomorrow to go with us, so he played his part tonight by coming up with our protest sign slogans. Here I am hard at work on one:
Here's the sign M10 will carry tomorrow:
E5's foray into the political fray:
And finally, my own sign of discontent (though I'm not entirely happy with the spacing of it and will probably redo it in about five minutes):
Here we go! Will I be more nervous tomorrow? As it is, I can't stop laughing.
Posted by Megan on 02/26/2009 in Education: Home and Otherwise, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
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Thing 1: An actual blog post I've written. I know, I'm surprised too. Maybe I'll remember I have a personal blog soon.
Thing 2: You all heard of the Nationwide Tea Party Protest taking place tomorrow across the country? There will be one here too:
I'm planning to go. The only real form of protest I've ever participated in has taken place in front of the television screen. The girls and I studied the Boston Tea Party earlier this year and this is a fantastic practical application if I ever saw one. I'd be a homeschool idiot not to take advantage of it.
Here are the other participating cities:
Fayetteville, N.C. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at the corner of Bow Street and Hay Street where the Liberty Point Resolves were signed
Washington, D.C. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the White House on the Lafayette Square Park side
Boston, Mass. – Feb. 27 from 11:50 p.m. to Feb. 28 at 1:50 p.m., location to be determined
Chicago, Ill. – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. at Daley Plaza Civic Center
Atlanta, Ga. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Georgia's capitol building in Atlanta
Orlando, Fla. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Lake Eola on East Robinson and North Rosalind Ave
Dallas, Texas – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. at Victory Plaza located at 3090 Olive St.
Fort Worth, Texas – Feb. 27 from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Cowtown Bar & Grill located at 7108 Camp Bowie Blvd.
Houston, Texas – Feb. 27 at 12 p.m. at Fondren Lawn at Discovery Green
Pittsburgh, Pa. – April 11 at Market Square on Forbes Avenue and Market Street
San Diego, Calif. – Feb. 27 from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. north of the Star of India on San Diego Bay
Tulsa, Okla. – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Veteran's Park located at 2st Street and Boulder Avenue
Nashville, Tenn. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Legislative Plaza located at 6th Avenue and Union Street
St. Louis, Mo. – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Steps of Gateway Arch located on Wharf Street
Portland, Ore. – Feb. 27 from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Pioneer Courthouse Square at the corner of Broadway and Morrison
Kansas City, Mo. – Feb. 28 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the J.C. Nichols Foundation located at 47th and J.C. Nichols Parkway
Cleveland, Ohio – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at 1 Public Square
Denver, Colo. – Feb. 27 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the east capitol steps
Fort Myers Beach, Fla. – Feb. 27 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Bowditch Park located at 50 Estero Blvd.
Lansing, Mich. – Feb. 27 from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the state capitol building at 100 N. Capitol Ave.
Omaha, Neb. – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Douglas County Courthouse located at 16th Street and Farnam Street
Greenville, S.C. – Feb. 27 at 6 p.m. on the Reedy River & Walking Bridge
Nashville, Tenn. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.at Legislative Plaza on 6th and Union
Shelby County, Ala. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at the entrance to Eagle Point Neighborhood
Seattle, Wash. – Feb. 27 from 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. at Westlake Park at 410 Pine St.
Philadelphia, Penn. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Independence Hall
Los Angeles, Calif. – Feb. 27 from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Santa Monica Pier
Springfield, Mo. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Lake Springfield Park
Sarasota, Fla. – Feb. 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Island Park and Marina Jacks at 41 Bayfront Drive and Ringling Boulevard
Phoenix, Ariz. – Feb. 27 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the state capitol building at 1700 Washington St.
Tampa, Fla. – Feb 27 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at the federal courthouse on 801. N. Florida Ave.
Oklahoma City, Okla. – Feb. 27 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the state capitol steps
New York City, N.Y. – Feb. 28 from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. at City Hall Park
Wichita, Kan. – Feb. 27 at 11:30 a.m. outisde Sen. Sam Brownback's office at 245 N. Waco
Davenport, Iowa – Feb. 28 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at Main and Locust Street
So...anyone else going to one?
Posted by Megan on 02/26/2009 in Education: Home and Otherwise, Family Life | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
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Actually, I really haven't given it much thought until just now, and since I haven't posted anything since Friday, I wondered if maybe I should give up the blog for Lent? Still, it seems the point is to give up something that would be a struggle to give up. Giving up the blog right now would be like giving up laundry - not so much of a struggle (except for that whole needing to wear clothes thing).
Truthfully? I didn't know it was Fat Tuesday until about 45 minutes ago. I didn't grow up observing the church calendar as such, and still have only a vague idea of what it all means (though I like Advent, at least in theory more than practice as we didn't actually do many of our Advent activities this year). In the Baptist church we had Christmas and Easter: no Advent, no Lent.
Anyway, I'm not sure what my point is, so I'll stop trying to make one.
I'm home tonight instead of in class: the girls are all coughing today, and I've had a fairly severe backache most of the day, so it just seemed to make sense not to inflict the coughing children on the family who watches them for us every Tuesday (have I mentioned we have friends who are saints?). It also made sense not to sit in a classroom chair for three hours when I'm as achy and stiff as I am now.
It could be all the running around of late: 5-hour drive on Friday, 3-hour round drive on Saturday with an 8-hour meeting sandwiched in-between, followed by another 5-hour drive on Sunday. I directed our Classical Conversations group on Monday, which meant preparing all Sunday night and getting up early on Monday. I'm about to run out of gas (could also be why I slept until 8:15 this morning). Sleeping until 8:15 a.m. feels super-duper until it is 5 p.m. at night and you are still cramming history reading with your girls because a late start equates to a slow start and one in which we just don't punch it very efficiently throughout the day. But then that could also be because swimming lessons are not happening this week and, because of the coughing, I didn't take E5 to preschool today, so we were all pretty much in our pajamas all day, which usually leads to a slow, lazy school day.
I wanted to see how long I could keep a sentence going there. Maybe I should give up run-on sentences for lent?
So, all that to say that I really just felt the need to check in tonight and don't really have anything of value to say. Surprised by that, are you? If you made it this far, you really do love me and I thank you for that, because I know this was just a bunch of drivel.
I'm planning to get together my thoughts on Chapter 2 of Jerram's book very soon (maybe even tonight, as this post needs some fast redemption), but for sure by tomorrow. If you haven't had a chance to read the small starter-discussion from Chapter 1 yet, please do. I haven't responded to any of them yet, but really should. Also, Belinda posted some great thoughts of her own on her own blog, so check that out, too.
Okay, enough of that. Hope those of you Fat-Tuesdaying are getting it all out of your system. Hope the rest of you don't worry about it too much.
Peace out...
Posted by Megan on 02/24/2009 in Books & Culture, Education: Home and Otherwise, Family Life, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (15) | TrackBack (0)
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1. Last week's conference attendance came about like this: I have a history of seeing conference brochures come in the mail, tossing them at Craig and saying, "We should totally try to go to this!" I spend 15 minutes planning the logistics of how he could get out of whatever he's supposed to be doing and who we could ask to watch our kids. I then forget all about it. We never end up going. That's what made Craig's decision to send me such a surprise.
In keeping with tradition, though, I have to say I wouldn't mind attending this one either. Craig, you have a teacher in-service that Friday. We could totally make this work. *wink*
2. Having said that, I'm not exactly looking forward to spending all day this Saturday in a training meeting for Classical Conversations directors. Granted, it will be better than the way I went through training last year - six hours on the phone - but I'm rather dreading the time, actually. Okay, dread is a strong word. Maybe I should say instead that I'd rather spend that time with my sister and her family. That's where my girls will be. I'll be sleeping there two nights but won't get a lot of time with them and that makes me sad.
3. And all that leads up to this: Craig rented a man movie for tomorrow night and invited some guys to come over here and watch it with him. That just cracks me up on so many levels. Here's to them and the leftover chili they plan to eat for dinner tomorrow night. More power to them. Please get all those movies out of your system before the girls and I come back on Sunday. *grin*
4. I'm considering declaring March "Spring Break Month". Anyone with me on this?
5. I have no idea why this happens, but I'm continually surprised by the amount of laundry generated by my family. I don't have a good system right now which means that every six days or so somebody comes to me worried because she no longer has any pants to wear. Every time this happens I'm all, "Really? Already? Didn't we just go through this last week?" I then scramble to wash everything we have in the house. I spend an entire day folding it and putting it away. I then retreat back into my normal state of laundry denial for the next five or six days. Wash, rinse, repeat. I have a college degree. You'd think I could figure this out by now.
6. It's still only February, yet I'm already dreaming about when it will be warm enough to go camping again. Camping! As if going once makes us experts or something. But when you've had as many bad vacation attempts as our family has had, only to have one of the first really good ones be a camping trip, you sort of want to go again. The girls do too. I'm thinking April. Think that's too early?
7. The YMCA homeschool swim class has been one of the best things we've participated in. The first time we did this I met two of my neatest friends, both of whom I still do stuff with. Our kids all like each other. It's nice. We then took a year off and rejoined last month. It's happening again. Something happens at the Y while the kids are swimming and the moms just wait around and start talking. It's a good investment on several levels. That one is a keeper, me thinks.
More quick takes can be found at Jen's Conversion Diary. Have a good weekend, everyone!
Posted by Megan on 02/20/2009 in Education: Home and Otherwise, Family Life, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (0)
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I signed up for a table at the next city-wide homeschool used books/materials sale. A lot of stuff I've been hanging on to because I keep thinking I'll eventually use it or because technically E5 isn't even in Kindergarten yet and there's still a good chance I will use a lot of this with her. A lot of stuff I'm just hanging on to because I spent money on it and it holds financial value in my mind if not practical value.
I'm digging through software right now. Right next to me is the dreaded homeschool planning/hour tracking software I just bought one year ago. It has brought nothing but trouble to me, but since I didn't know that within the 14-day window, I can't return it. They won't let me sell it. It won't work on my system. It's worthless to me. And yet I've still had trouble just throwing it away. I don't know why.
But here's the thing - every time I see the plastic box my stress level rises. I see it and it reminds me of the hours of frustration spent at my computer and the back-and-forth not-so-nice email exchange I had with the company. It reminds me that I wasted $70. So it makes no sense to keep it. I can't use it and the only thing it does is cause me to sin in some direction and towards somebody (either myself or the company or the poor innocent person to cross my path next while I'm in the midst of the remembering).
I'm putting it behind me.
At the same time I'm wondering what other kinds of junk, whether physical tangible junk, or emotional baggage I carry around for the perceived value I think it gives me.
It's time to let go of all of that which so easily besets me, the sin that so easily entangles, and run with perseverance the race marked out for me.
I've been sitting in the stands for too long. Time to get on the track. Oh, and empty the trash...
Posted by Megan on 02/18/2009 in Education: Home and Otherwise, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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Through His Eyes; God's Perspective on Women in the Bible by Jerram Barrs
Chapter 1: The First Face of Eve: Eve at Creation
I know that probably nobody has this book yet and thus you are not ready to discuss it, but I’m ready to begin processing it, so I thought I’d just start. I also hope that by starting it might spur some of you on toward going ahead and getting the book!
Speaking of, here’s one more plug for the book: This Saturday is the last day locals can walk in to the Covenant Seminary bookstore and get the book for 35% off by mentioning the Half-Pint House offer. The discounted link will still be active for web orders for one more week until February 28. After that date, the price will take on the standard 20% discount most books at the bookstore have.
Okay, business out of the way; now on to the book. This can take different forms as more of you begin reading it and interacting (if indeed anyone does!); until then, I do best by just pulling out some quotes and talking about them a bit. There are some reflection questions at the end of each chapter, so we can work on those a bit, too.
There were sections of this chapter I highlighted, but the one I thought I’d start with is on page 18. Jerram says,
That last paragraph in particular is what began kicking my tail last week when I started reading it. Of course somewhere deep inside me I know this, but for someone to just plainly say it like that made me realize it that much more.
I’m really appreciating here that this foundation of who we are in Christ really isn’t about male or female. It’s about individuals and God. When I answer to God it won’t be me peeking around from behind Craig, hoping Craig will assume responsibility for my actions here on earth. I will stand square before God myself, accountable for my own actions, my own sin.
I’m still thinking about more of these things, and especially in reference to other things from chapter 2, but I’ll wait until I hear from someone else. Anyone have time to get the book yet? Your thoughts?
Posted by Megan on 02/17/2009 in Books & Culture, Theology for Ordinary Life | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
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