Thursday, January 8, 2015

You Never Know Who Your Cashier Is… And 5 Other Things McDonalds HasTaught Me

By Alicia Ruggieri

Alicia wrote this several years ago when working as a manager at McDonald's; I was really blessed and challenged by her words and wanted to share them . . .  



Note: Several years ago, finishing up my full-ride academic scholarship education, I would never (I repeat, never) have thought I would “lower” myself to working at a fast-food joint.  Yet, life has its unique twists, doesn’t it?  And working in fast-food has given a not-to-be-missed vantage point from which I could see my own foibles and spiritual missteps.  For some odd reason, the little world of McDonalds acts to concentrate human nature, letting us see its best and worst.  I’ve listed below some of the most interesting things McDonalds has taught me.  I hope you enjoy them and can learn from them as well.



1. You Never Know Who Your Cashier Is.  This is best illustrated by a situation involving my sister Bekki, when she was cashiering at McDonalds.  A familiar-looking, middle-aged, nicely-dressed man came in for lunch with his children and his conservatively-dressed wife.  Obviously frustrated, he gave his order with that tang of polite condescension that can easily be excused as articulation.  He kindly snapped at his wife, tartly rebuked his children, and was as snobbish as he could be without incurring guilt.  At the conclusion of his order, Bekki realized why he looked so familiar.  “Aren’t you the choir director at ___________ Church?” she asked.  “My family went to their Christmas concert recently and loved it.”  His face ashen, the man stuttered a thank-you and shuffled away.  This poor choir director had no idea he would be a lesson in consistency, for we are really who we are when no one (who matters) is watching.

2. Jesus Doesn’t Care If You Flip Burgers or Are a CEO (but other Christians Do).  I take the full responsibility for the foolish pride that caused me over and over to be ashamed of working for McDonalds rather than doing more “respectable” work.  However, most of my embarrassment rose from having to tell fellow Christians where I worked because doing this usually invoked either well-concealed derision or blushing pity, the same attitude I always used to take before my fast-food career began.  With a Savior who came from low-class peasants, who did manual labor until his thirties, and who chose uneducated disciples, I wonder why we Christians covertly scorn blue-collar (or even greasy-collar) work?  My friends, this should not be.  As Eric Liddel’s father told him, “God doesn’t care if you peel potatoes [for a living] if you peel them to perfection.”  Whatever our hand finds to do, if it provides for our families and doesn’t dishonor God, we should do it with all our might and encourage others to do the same.  (By the way, McDonalds doesn’t flip their meat, just in case you’re wondering.)

3. People Working in the Drive-Through Really Do Have Souls (even if they act like monkeys or machines).  I needed to be reminded of this not in a drive-through but in a sit-down restaurant a number of years ago when I treated the overburdened waitress with snobbish disdain.  However, because the interaction is so quickly accomplished, few customers in a drive-through realize how utterly rude they are to the people who are serving them.  Let us engage in some old-fashioned courtesy.  A cell phone glued to one ear, carrying on an additional conversation (Can it be called that?) with wailing children in the backseat, throwing money toward the drive-through window somehow hoping that it will land in the cashier’s hand, and keeping your window wipers on so that the waves of water splash the worker as they open the window… All unnecessary for common unbelievers.  But what about Christians?  Why do we heedlessly engage in the same behaviors?  I think it’s partially because we are thinking of the next thing we’ll do, rather than concerning ourselves with what God has us doing right now.  We blame the mechanical (usually unbelieving) worker for not interacting.  Really, though, if we can’t demonstrate common courtesy (and have the Spirit of God elevate it to uncommon courtesy!) for ten seconds in a drive-through, how will we ever persevere in it throughout life?

4. Education Doesn’t Equal Intelligence (and intelligence doesn’t equal godliness).  From observing people, I’ve found that they assume that you are what you do from 9-5.  This was reinforced during a class in which my professor asked, “Do you ever notice that when you’re introduced to someone, the first question asked after, ‘Where do you live?’ is, ‘What do you do?’  It’s as if the only important thing to know is where that person fits into the social and economic scales.”  I think human nature causes you and I to think this, inflamed by the modern idea that education equals salvation in every sense.  Overall, we have a (completely foundationless) notion that if you’re educated, you’re intelligent (and if you’re not educated, you’re not intelligent).  And in the Church, we’ve permitted another strange idea to creep in, a twist on the worldwide conception – that if we could just make people understand (i.e. educate them) enough, they would become Christians.  And if we could just give enough knowledge to Christians, they would become godly.  My friends, neither of these ideas is true.  Though, obviously, being educated doesn’t mean you’re not intelligent, and being educated doesn’t mean you’re not godly, there isn’t much (if any) correlation among intelligence, education, and godliness.  While at McDonalds, I’ve met very intelligent, very uneducated McDonalds employees who cured me of my delusion that education equals intelligence and that intelligence will (eventually) lead to godliness.  A highschool dropout, “Jeff” has read the dictionary from cover to cover and regularly peppers his conversation with highly creative, spur-of-the-moment raps.  Another “undereducated” man, “Charlie” can do three-digit addition and subtraction in his head within seconds.  Neither Jeff nor Charlie are Christians (They may be someday!), but that state is certainly not due to lack of intelligence. 

5. The World Vision Catalog Pictures Happen in the Next Town Over (and not just in the Third World).  And they’re not funny.  If McDonalds has done anything, it has caused me to realize that we Christians usually live in a bubble.  When we say we have “trials,” they are often only scratches on the surface of our bubble, not a rock that shatters it.  We live in a dreadfully hurting and dying world.  Here is a list of people I have been privileged to work with over the past four years:  “Daria,” a former prostitute trying to climb out of that darkness; “Ed,” stuck in a dizzying array of family issues (such that we would never think of) that he has to deal with; “Sam,” “Matt,” and “J.J.,” all bound in heavy drug addictions and dealing; and “Tiffany,” who decided to live with her deeply abusive boyfriend because her grandmother’s apartment is infested with cockroaches and she is afraid that the roaches will climb down her baby’s ears.  Or how about “Candy,” who wears a bald spot where her boyfriend pulled out her cornrow braid, scalp and all?  In the light of this suffering, how will we live?  What will be important to us, when there is so much hurting around us?  How will we treat others?  As cogs in a wheel or as those for whom Christ died?

6. Our Witness for Christ is Built (or Destroyed) in the Hum-Drum Moments.  When I first began working for McDonalds, I mentioned to a fellow Christian that working there gave me opportunities to share the Good News.  The well-meaning Christian gave me a puzzled smile and asked, “Really?  You get a chance to talk about the Gospel between flipping burgers?”  In a word, yes.  As Christians, we “talk” through our actions far more than through our words.  I have gotten to talk to more people about Jesus in McDonalds than I ever did in high school or college.  And I have found a greater receptivity to the Gospel as well, for did He not come to preach the Good News to the poor, to set the prisoner free, and more?  At McDonalds, I can tell people about my Lord through how I talk to rude customers, how I handle disrespect and disobedience to my requests from subordinates, how hard I work, how honest or dishonest I am, how consistent I am with what I say, etc.  This is true in all of life, from the home to the workplace to the shopping mall:  Our talk is only as good as how we behave.



We could all learn from these ideas if we applied them to the many different areas of our lives.  We will have a little more (truly) Christian compassion and demand a few less of our (perceived) rights.  We will think less of ourselves and our time (When did we begin to believe that any time really belongs to us, anyway?) and more of Christ and what He demands of us.  For our walk with our Father really comes down to that, doesn’t it?  To love the Lord our God with the utmost of our emotions, will, and mind, and to love our neighbor with the same dedication, regard, and thoughtfulness with which we love ourselves.

Challenging myself with you,

Alicia Ruggieri



You might find me on these link-ups:

Strangers and Pilgrims on EarthThe Modest MomWhat Joy is Mine, Yes They Are All Ours, Missional Call, A Mama's Story, Mom's the Word, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, Cornerstone Confessions, Mom's Morning Coffee, So Much at Home, Raising Homemakers, Hope in Every SeasonA Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Woman to Woman Ministries, Whole-Hearted Home, A Soft Gentle Voice, My Daily Walk in His Grace, Messy Marriage, My Teacher's Name is Mama, The Charm of Home, Graced Simplicity, Children Are A Blessing, Mittenstate Sheep and Wool, Imparting Grace, Preparedness Mama, A Look at the Book, Essential Thing Devotions, Count My Blessings, Beauty Observed, Christian Mommy Blogger, Renewed Daily, Soul SurvivalGood Morning MondaysThe HomeAcre Hop

Monday, January 5, 2015

Seeing Them as Precious

Tiny Debbie, just two, drags her stool to the sink, and she wants to "wash" dishes. 

But I haven't put away the dishes in the strainer and there are knives and there is glass and my hands are full with my six-month-old baby, and I have a choice. 

I can snap, "Not right now, Debbie; you need to come down from that stool," - because that would be easier for me in the moment. I can do what is convenient for me, I can give her the "righteous" no, while smugly insisting that she is learning obedience that way and giving myself the excuse that my hands are full, and that I am tired, and that it's been a long day, and the baby has been fussy; I can give her the "righteous" no.

Or I can see little Debbie as precious. 


I can look my little girl in the eyes, made in the very image of God and loved by Him, and I can hold Elisha with one arm and I can put away the dishes with the other and I can bring my tired body over to the sink and I can stand next to Debbie (or sit in a chair next to her) and engage my daughter and engage my son and I can talk to Debbie while she washes the dishes and talk to little Elisha about washing dishes and I can see them as precious. 

There are times to say "no," but right now, this isn't one of them, and I sense the Holy Spirit speaking to my mother's-heart - my tired mother's-heart and holding me close to Him and whispering Listen. 

You are tired, but this too shall pass -

Wouldn't it be easier to just let them play on the floor and supervise them? 

Maybe "easier" but not what the Lord is leading me to do right now. 

The Lord has been teaching me - teaching me slowly, to see my children as precious. 

They will only be tiny once, and I have this window, this small space in time, to nurture them, love them, instruct them, teach them, lead them... to Jesus. 

Do I want to be distracted during this time, trying to "get through" these years, pushing my children to crawl, to walk, to leave the nest, so that I can be "free" again? 

Or do I want to see them as precious? 


Lord, help me to see my children as precious... precious gifts, precious charges, precious souls... eternal souls

There is freedom in giving. 

Not in "taking back" what we think is ours. Our time, our bodies, our lives. 

Because they aren't ours - They belong to Jesus. 

A conversation that I had with a very dear friend burns in my heart -

I asked, Do you think that I should have more children?

And she paused and spoke to me and she said, "I don't think that it's an issue of how many; it's an issue of whether or not you are faithful with the ones that the Lord gives to you."

Her words, her words keep burning in my heart and she referenced the parable of the talents and she said that the Lord gave different amounts of talents to different people, and the issue was not about how many talents each one had, but rather with what was done with those talents...

It's not so much an issue of how many...

And I think that as humans we're tempted to make it into an issue. 

Whether we're advocating for large families or whether for small ones. 

But maybe it's not so much an issue of how many - rather whether we're faithful with the ones that we've been given... these gifts that we've been given. 

Because we can be unfaithful with one child or unfaithful with ten - The issue is a heart issue and a life issue and not a number issue. 

Are we being faithful? Am I being faithful? Am I engaging my children, leading them through all the events in the day to Jesus? Or am I merely trying to get through the day? 

It's not a matter of how many we can have or how few we should have... but about being faithful with what the Lord gives as we follow His leading and obey. 

And then we will see our children as precious... when we look into their eyes, as if looking at the face of God Himself. 

We will see them as gifts, as precious. 



You might find me on these link-ups:

Strangers and Pilgrims on EarthThe Modest MomWhat Joy is Mine, Yes They Are All Ours, Missional Call, A Mama's Story, Mom's the Word, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, Cornerstone Confessions, Mom's Morning Coffee, So Much at Home, Raising Homemakers, Hope in Every SeasonA Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Woman to Woman Ministries, Whole-Hearted Home, A Soft Gentle Voice, My Daily Walk in His Grace, Messy Marriage, My Teacher's Name is Mama, The Charm of Home, Graced Simplicity, Children Are A Blessing, Mittenstate Sheep and Wool, Imparting Grace, Preparedness Mama, A Look at the Book, Essential Thing Devotions, Count My Blessings, Beauty Observed, Christian Mommy Blogger, Renewed Daily, Soul SurvivalGood Morning MondaysOakhill Homestead, Grace and Truth Linkup, Faith Filled Friday, Faith and Fellowship Blog Hop, The Weekend Brew

Monday, December 29, 2014

Grace in Small Places

He also brought me out into a broad place;
He delivered me because He delighted in me.
Psalm 18:19


I'm learning that God's grace comes to us in surprising places . . . 

And many times that His grace comes in small places, in unexpected places, in places that the world looks over, but that the Lord sees as His stepping-stones to glory.

The manger, a small place, that held the glory of the Son of Righteousness, the Firstborn of creation. 

A small basket, whose five loaves and two fish fed 5000 and a small boy who offered the meager and the small. 

A small following - twelve disciples - whose testimony through the Lord's power shook nations. 

The Lord works through small things, so that His glory may shine greater through the impossibility of it all. 

And that all the glory is His alone. 

I'm in a small place right now. 



I didn't think of it as small when I first married, when my husband and I made our "home" in my Mom's home 5 years ago. 

It was cozy then, and we didn't need a lot of space; it was adequate, and we loved living with my Mom and still do. 

But then, the first baby came along, a little girl, and things got "cozier." 

It was still alright, though, and became a little easier when my Mom offered us the spare room for her to sleep in just before I gave birth to our second child.

A little boy. 

And I thought, how am I going to do this, fit all of our things, keep everything organized, stay sane? 

Add to this that my Mom has her house up for sale and most of my belongings are in storage. 

And that I am by nature an excessively organized person - for better, or for worse - and that I feel like I'm losing it when things are "out of place." 

I felt overwhelmed. And I looked at the clutter around me, the organized clutter, but clutter nonetheless, and I felt like it was closing in around me. 

And the space seemed so small  and I envied my friends who owned homes and even the ones who had apartments and I thought, if only I had more space. 

If only I had more space . . . 

If only I could organize my baby's toys and books . . . 

If only I could find Elisha's baby book - it must be packed away somewhere . . . 

If only, if only, if only. 

But the Lord constantly speaks to me in this small place, and though I still struggle with discontentment, I ultimately would not have it any other way.

Because this is His will for me right now. 

I know, I know, I know that He has placed me here for this time and that at the right time, He will bring me out into a spacious place. 

There are lessons that I have learned in this "small place" that I could never have learned anywhere else. 

So I would not change anything. 

And this small place holds blessings, hidden blessings, when I look beyond the "littleness" of my own thinking. 

My mother's constant loving influence on my children and the Godly advice that she offers me on a daily basis . . . 

Learning contentment in a "small place" so that by His grace, I may not take His provision for granted if He should choose to place me in a larger place . . .

My sister's help with my daughter when I was healing after giving birth to my second child . . .

My family's constantly stepping in to watch my babies for doctor's appointments, etc. 

So many blessings, countless blessings. 

And I'm reminded -

Reminded that the Lord works through the small, through the insignificant for
His glory.


And I believe that He will work through my small place, too. 



He's humbling me, teaching me to depend upon Him, softening my nit-pickiness into surrender. 

Sometimes we want great things, big things, when the Lord often works through the small. 

We want greatness, and then the Lord teaches us that to become great we must first learn to serve (Mark 10:35-45).

That He takes widows' mites, and poverty and our lack of ability so that He can work His glory and strength through our weakness. 

He works through small places . . . and then in His perfect timing, enlarges the pathway under us, so that our feet do not slip. 

So I hold onto this promise, and thank Him in the meantime for the grace to grow in this blessed small place:


“Enlarge the place of your tent,
And let them stretch out the curtains of your dwellings;
Do not spare;

Lengthen your cords,

And strengthen your stakes. 

For you shall expand to the right and to the left, 

And your descendants will inherit the nations, 

And make the desolate cities inhabited." 



Isaiah 52:2-3



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Monday, December 22, 2014

Christmas and the Wealth of Tradition--Part 2

“The things that we do regularly, that cause us in our deepest being to know and love and want God—to have our lives infiltrated by God—those things are traditions.”

- Noel Piper



They sit together on the creaky tan recliner and my Mama lights a candle . . . lights a candle for the fourth, the fifth, the sixth time. And little Debbie all aglow, perched on her lap, listens to my Mama sing to her, again and again and again-- “Silent night, holy night, all is calm, all is bright . . .” And my daughter holds the ornament that my Mom bought in a consignment shop, the globe of thick glass enveloping Mary, Joseph and baby Jesus inside, looped with a thin gold string for hanging on the Christmas tree.


Every night, my Mama sings with Debbie, and they light candle after candle after candle . . . and Debbie holds her treasured ornament. My Mama wanted Debbie to recognize the song when we sang it at the Christmas Eve service on December 24th . . . to recognize the candle and to one day realize that the light we hold symbolizes Jesus, the Light of the world, who came to bring the light of the glory of God into this dark world of sin.


So they sing together, Debbie listening intently, her eyes transfixed on the candle, her soft little child-hands holding the representation of the holy family. And even though she doesn’t understand it all now, the repetition seeps into her tiny heart and one day it will all mean something to her—


Repetition . . . Elisabeth Elliot once wisely pointed out in one of her books that repetition is never forbidden in the Word of God, only vain repetition. Because we remember by doing . . . over and over and over. We remember by repeating the same truth, the same act, the same memory verse. We remember. When we light the Advent wreath year after year after year, it helps us to remember, to recall, to cherish the ancient truths that each candle symbolizes. When we hang a Christmas wreath on our front door, we think of the beautiful new life that God has given to us through His precious Son, the verdant green reminding us of hope in the midst of winter. When we sing the wonderful old carols, the Christmas hymns, the ones that we grew up on and learned by heart, something fresh springs forth in our souls—the seed of remembrance shoots forth and the repetition of those truths year after year ministers to our redeemed beings.


Maybe this is why we are instructed to remember “the Lord’s death until He comes” by taking Communion, whether it be month by month or less or more frequently. We shouldn’t “need” to physically eat and drink a representation of the Lord’s body and blood, and yet, our God commands it. Why? Because we remember through repetition, through the act of doing—not legalistically, but joyfully, in contemplative love. We remember the great depths of His love and the sacrifice of His only Son. Through repetition, we remember.


And we have our own traditions that we keep in our homes and with our families. Some read the Christmas story together on Christmas day or on Christmas Eve. Some eat certain special foods—maybe a recipe that has been in the family for years, that has been passed on through generations. Some decorate their Christmas tree on a certain day. Some share memories of Christmases past or watch A Christmas Carol.


It’s important for a family to establish their own traditions, whether borrowed from someone else, whether concocted or hatched on their own. And they should be fun and meaningful, but ultimately Christ-centered—not just “family-centered,” but Christ centered. Because if Christ is our life, then His presence, His influence should pervade all that we do and say. Let our traditions be festive and full of laughter and brimming over with the grace and hope of our Savior.


It’s also important for a family to establish traditions that are rooted in Christ because this bonds a Christian family together, brings a warmth that finds it’s center in Jesus, and brings glory to Him. It is a way for a family to magnify the Lord together, through meaningful traditions that bring joy to our souls and impart grace to our hearts.


As Noel Piper says in her book Treasuring God in our Traditions, there are “especially times,” times when we pause and stop and reflect and remember an event in a special, out of the ordinary way—like Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving. When we fail to make these events special and meaningful and Christ-centered, in whatever way that the Holy Spirit leads us, we lose something of their significance and importance in our lives. We remember Christ’s birth in a special way, because it holds such significance for us as believers. Christmas is not an ordinary day.


So let what Dickens says of Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol, be true of us--“And it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us!” May we keep Christmas well, also, in the thoughts and contemplations of our hearts and through the traditions that help us to turn those hearts towards Him. At Christmas and at every “especially time,” for the glory of Jesus and the joy of our hearts.



You might find me on these link-ups:

Strangers and Pilgrims on EarthThe Modest MomWhat Joy is Mine, Yes They Are All Ours, Missional Call, A Mama's Story, Mom's the Word, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, Cornerstone Confessions, Mom's Morning Coffee, So Much at Home, Raising Homemakers, Hope in Every SeasonA Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Woman to Woman Ministries, Whole-Hearted Home, A Soft Gentle Voice, My Daily Walk in His Grace, Messy Marriage, My Teacher's Name is Mama, The Charm of Home, Graced Simplicity, Children Are A Blessing, Mittenstate Sheep and Wool, Imparting Grace, Preparedness Mama, A Look at the Book, Essential Thing Devotions, Count My Blessings, Beauty Observed, Christian Mommy Blogger, Renewed Daily, Soul SurvivalGood Morning MondaysOakhill Homestead

Monday, December 15, 2014

Christmas and the Wealth of Tradition




Eternal Love, warm and new and ancient and beautiful, wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger . . . the Lamb of the ages, helpless and scented with fresh-birth and sweet straw and the clear, thin scent of the cold night air. And He is Emmanuel, God with us, God with His people, the Firstborn of Creation with the late-born of men.


He is here, in our hearts, His presence within us, His presence all around us, His presence speaking to us through His creation. We light a candle. The lovely glimmer of light for remembrance. We remember and we are hushed and His presence is with us—not through the candle, but the candle helps us to remember. Helps us to remember, because we so easily forget and are burdened, heavy-weighed with the stresses and the visiting and the baking and the relatives and the bustle of the season. Helps us to quiet our hurrying hearts and remember.


And I think of the film The Nativity Story and the wise man bending low before the tiny King and offering his myrrh of remembrance, the myrrh that speaks of the Sacrifice yet to be made—a tangible symbol of what is to come, the anointing of His body for burial after the crucifixion. Symbols, remembrances. We are human and so easily forget. Sometimes in His compassion towards us, the Lord provides a symbol, a means to help us to remember.


We don’t need the Advent wreath, the poinsettias, the Nativity scene so gently and lovingly placed in our homes, the lights, the crisp green wreaths, the carols playing in our cars, the meaningful Advent hymns sung in our churches. But they may help us to remember. And we so easily forget. Forget what Christmas is all about—the King of glory coming down to us in innocence and holy light and dwelling among us. God with us; Glory with us—to the praise of His glory.


One of the Christmas traditions that sticks in my mind is the Christmas Eve service in the church of my childhood. At the very end of the service, the lights were dimmed and we each held a candle and sang "Silent Night" with our brothers and sisters. And our hearts were hushed in that quiet country church and we remembered together that silent night long ago when the Sacrifice lay in a crude manger and came in humility, mainly unnoticed by the world at large.



A small number compared to the vast armies of men and women celebrating materialism and “good cheer” and “giving” at parties and in homes around the world, but we gathered around the Sacrifice, gathered quietly, as they did so many years ago. We gathered quietly and we sang reverently and we pondered afresh what the Almighty had done for our souls. And we brought Him glory and wonder, as the Wise Men did, and we brought Him adoration and reverence, as the shepherds did, and we layed our souls low before Him, the Humble God-Man who was and is and is to come.


And we quietly left the sanctuary and our hearts were hushed and our spirits were lifted and we went our separate ways to our homes and we slept in our beds that are not straw but are warm and comfortable and we thought of the One for Whom we lighted a candle. And we thought of the light that burns brightly in our hearts, the Spirit of Truth and Grace, the One that the world will not receive, but by His grace and mercy, we have received.


Symbols are not necessary, but they are important. They leave visual pictures in our minds and impress upon us the importance of certain events, people, days, times. The lighting of a candle, the meaning behind the candy cane, the names of Jesus--“Lamb,” the “Good Shepherd,” the Rod of Jesse, the King of Kings—all evoking vivid pictures- symbols, of our Lord.


The symbols are not to be worshiped, but they help us to worship the One whom they represent. They help us to remember. They help us to pause and to think and to wonder. We are not bound by tradition, but tradition touches us, touches our souls and preserves something of the sacred surrounding certain events. Tradition keeps something for us, keeps the wonder, the significance, holds the key to meaning; tradition is not the meaning itself, but a means.


This is one of the reasons that I enjoy J.R.R. Tolkein’s The Lord of the Rings so much—his books are full of symbolism and wonder and imagination—so many things in them remind me of truths in the Scriptures and I think that the Lord allowed this for a reason—that even a fictional story can be used to point to the one True Story. And this is just what symbols can do--point us to truth.



Next Week: Part 2


You might find me on these link-ups:

Strangers and Pilgrims on EarthThe Modest MomWhat Joy is Mine, Yes They Are All Ours, Missional Call, A Mama's Story, Mom's the Word, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, Cornerstone Confessions, Mom's Morning Coffee, So Much at Home, Raising Homemakers, Hope in Every SeasonA Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Woman to Woman Ministries, Whole-Hearted Home, A Soft Gentle Voice, My Daily Walk in His Grace, Messy Marriage, My Teacher's Name is Mama, The Charm of Home, Graced Simplicity, Children Are A Blessing, Mittenstate Sheep and Wool, Imparting Grace, Preparedness Mama, A Look at the Book, Essential Thing Devotions, Count My Blessings, Beauty Observed, Christian Mommy Blogger, Renewed Daily, Soul SurvivalGood Morning MondaysOakhill Homestead

Monday, December 8, 2014

Why We Celebrate Christmas

The line was really long--

The kind of line that you try to avoid--

The kind of line that you get stuck in because you have two coupons that you want to use and they expire today. 

So you're stuck in a line and you're tapping your foot and glancing at your watch and eavesdropping in on the conversations around you. 

And the girl behind me was frustrated --there with her grandmother--her grandmother who understood little English--and the girl spoke under her breath--

Why do we celebrate the holidays anyway? To give presents? Isn't that what birthdays are for? 

And I heard her words, her flung-out words into that store and they shook me.

Because it suddenly struck me that many in the younger generation don't even understand what Christmas is all about anymore. 



We live in a society where Jesus has been so carefully and subtly removed that the holidays don't signify what they once did, even 50 years ago. 

Not that the whole of society had a saving relationship with the Lord, but, as a whole, I think that we understood the why of Christmas a little more clearly. 

And the Enemy has so distracted our minds and our hearts in these days that many, many don't even understand why we stop and remember--

Remember the little Baby in the manger, remember the hush of that night long ago, the glow of angel's breath in the chill air, the wonder and the beauty of the Son of God come to earth. 

For all mankind. 

Mankind who has now forgotten Him, forgotten why He came, even forgotten that He came. 

How do we tell them? 

How do we tell our neighbors and our friends and those we come into contact with that He came, touch their hearts with the message of Christmas, of our Savior's birth.

By living the truth of His coming.

In whatever sphere He has placed us--

Living before our children, before our relatives, before our friends and neighbors, before Him

Making a conscious effort to place the Messiah at the center of our celebrations, of our rejoicing, of our cooking, baking, shopping--

Living in an uncluttered, undistracted way that points ourselves and others to Jesus. 

This will look different in different people's lives--but in every believer's life will be authentic, life giving, joy-offering. 

He can teach us and give us the grace to do it. 

So that others may know--

Why we celebrate Christmas. 




You might find me on these link-ups:

Strangers and Pilgrims on EarthThe Modest MomWhat Joy is Mine, Yes They Are All Ours, Missional Call, A Mama's Story, Mom's the Word, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, Cornerstone Confessions, Mom's Morning Coffee, So Much at Home, Raising Homemakers, Hope in Every SeasonA Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Woman to Woman Ministries, Whole-Hearted Home, A Soft Gentle Voice, My Daily Walk in His Grace, Messy Marriage, My Teacher's Name is Mama, The Charm of Home, Graced Simplicity, Children Are A Blessing, Mittenstate Sheep and Wool, Imparting Grace, Preparedness Mama, A Look at the Book, Essential Thing Devotions, Count My Blessings, Beauty Observed, Christian Mommy Blogger, Renewed Daily, Soul SurvivalGood Morning MondaysOakhill Homestead


Monday, December 1, 2014

Juana Mikel's Choosing Him All Over Again

I am extremely excited and feel blessed to be a member of Juana Mikels' Launch Team for her book, Choosing Him All Over Again.


I'll be reviewing her wonderful, encouraging, and insightful book on strengthening marriages and learning to love our spouses in the way that God intended-- 

Juana's book can be pre-ordered NOW on Amazon here.

Her book is OFFICIALLY releasing on January 5th, 2015. 


Order a copy now or on her official release date; it will be a blessing to you and to your marriage. :-)

For more information about Juana, visit her blog: 




You might find me on these link-ups: