Wednesday, February 25, 2009

The 700 Club

Hi everyone, we have some awesome news!We're excited to announce that on March 14th, Kristi Watts and a camera crew from The 700 Club are coming to our home to tell our story. We called in with a prayer of thanks about God's financial protection and blessing during these difficult economic times. A couple months later, a producer called and interviewed us, saying they might be interested in telling our story. We were approved and the interview has been set! We'll post an update on when our story will air and will probably have a get-together to watch it with everyone. We hope you'll all be able to make it as we feel blessed to have been given the opportunity to share what God has done for our family and what He wants to do for everyone.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Feb 20th...Happy Birthday Lucy!

Happy 9th Birthday to our beautiful baby girl!

We love your inquisitive mind. The questions, specifically about God, that you come up with are amazing. We love your sweet, empathetic heart. We love your energy, un-ending and enthusiastic. You are our sweet and crazy angel. Our life would not be the same without you. Lucy truly means "light bringer" and you have brought so much light to our lives! Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! Thank you God for trusting us to be your parents. We feel so very honored to have been chosen.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Om-Kas-Toe, Book Review

The Sonlight homeschool curriculum is literary based and fourth grade centers much around Indians. I will admit that in school, I found the Indian Studies kind of boring. Not that I find Indians or their way of life, especially centuries ago, boring. It's amazing how they survived and build civilizations. Heck, I even have some Cherokee in me. I think my problem was rooted in the way the material was presented. I just found it so incredibly dull. Lucy and I are working on the book Om-kas-toe: Blackfeet Twin Captures and Elkdog, written by Kenneth Thomasma. The forward explains that, "without historical fiction" there would be no depiction of the way life was for Indian girls and boys before the 1900's. Before the 1700's, we can only speculate. The author interviewed and received many of his ideas from a 103 year old member of the Blackfeet Tribe.

The story itself is about twins born into the Blackfeet Tribe--a boy and girl. Normally, the girl twin would be left behind to die because it was believed that a mother would not be able to keep up with her responsibilities to the tribe with two babies. She talks the elders into giving her a chance and goes above and beyond in taking care of her chores. The twins can stay. From the start, they bring good luck to the tribe. In order for the tribe members to get food, the fastest runners have to hunt and capture animals. It works, but it's not easy. Then, Twin Boy finds an animal that the Blackfeet people name Elkdog. In reality it's a horse and life in the Blackfeet Tribe will never be the same.

I recommend this book to kids and adults, it's interesting. Children under seven or eight might get a little bored. The reading level is at a third/fourth grade level, maybe second if you have an advanced reader, but younger children might enjoy having it read to them. Young boys will probably be more interested than the girls as it seems to focus on Twin Boy. Twin Girl is part of the story though.

As for me, I've either found an Indian story that I'm really enjoying or I'm growing up and more open to learning new things. Let's split the difference on that one. Did you see that? I'm even learning to compromise more. Sure it's only with myself but it counts!

Monday, February 2, 2009

Book Review, The Shack

Let me begin by saying that the concept of this story is devastating and breathtaking. It is heartbreaking and full of hope. As I started reading, at the recommendation of a couple of friends, one Christian, the other not, I felt the main characters emptiness. I liked him and wanted him to find light. As the story progressed, I liked Mack even more. I liked his family too. They were a normal family and I could relate. As the book described the cause of The Great Sadness, as Mack refers to it, the abduction and murder of his six year old daughter, my heart hurt. I felt scared for the child, thought of my own, and cried. I fully understood the oppression that settled over Mack after such a loss. Then, someone claiming to be God, sends him a letter, inviting him to return to the shack where evidence of his daughter's murder had been found years earlier.

What occurs in the rest of the book is a little harder to describe. Mack literally spends the weekend with, God (Papa), Jesus, and Sarayu (The Holy Spirit). This is where the book gets a bit complicated as far as how it's perceived. When, God, Jesus and Sarayu are speaking, it's best to be reading their words in a quiet place because some of it is in great depth and a bit complicated. I got the gist of it but found if I wasn't paying close attention, I had to re-read the paragraph. There is a lot in the book that is right on! It made me really take a look at Christian life and my relationship with God and others. That being said, there were some parts, from a Christian point of view, that raised a red flag in my head. Phrases I knew were false to Christianity and that I knew would not come from, God, Jesus or The Holy Spirit.

The way Mr. Young describes each setting, particularly the shacks transformation, is beyond words! I was very disappointed that the forward stated that the story is true and it's not.
This book definitely paints a new, more personal, picture of religion. Since I was at a place of needing to feel God on a more personal level, I took something from it. Some worthy lessons. God, in three persons, depicted on a human level, like when He walked the earth, really made me feel a new kind of connection. Keep in mind, despite the Biblical inaccuracies, this book is a tear-jerker. While the resolution Mack is brought to in the end, on its own merit, almost makes the book worth reading, it was difficult, as a mother, to read the parts about his daughter's murder. I found myself crying a few times.

In conclusion, a lot of controversy on this one. I knew nothing about it when I started reading. I'm glad my radar went off throughout. I enjoyed the good and threw out the bad. I know many people might be offended by how human (and yet perfect) The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, are in this book, but I found that to be the most refreshing part of the story. I believe God meets us where we are, in a way we can relate to Him. That's the info, you decide!