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31
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12552055/Child-vampire-body-Poland-17th-century-feared-body-archaeologists.html

'Child vampire' body is found in Poland: 17th century locals feared body of youngster could come back to life, archaeologists say

    A woman with a scythe across her neck was found in the same cemetery

By Elizabeth Haigh

Published: 09:55, 23 September 2023 | Updated: 10:02, 23 September 2023

The remains of a six-year-old child a community feared would come back to life as a vampire have been discovered in Poland partially exhumed and with half the body missing, archaeologists say.  The 17th-century Polish cemetery in the village of Pien has been the focus of historians this week after it was revealed multiple bodies had been unearthed with 'anti-revenant' protection methods.  Myths surrounding the undead and vampires date back to as early as the 11th century in eastern Europe, and it is not uncommon for skeletons bearing the marks of these superstitions to be unearthed.  In eastern Europe tales of people who died and then returned to the living world several months later were rife, and were often blamed for sudden deaths, accidents or even just generally making life more difficult - such as being held responsible for a poor harvest.  But the discovery of a tiny child's skeleton treated this way is believed to be the first of its kind.  The child, believed to be around six years old, was discovered buried face-down, so that if they awoke they would bite the ground rather than suck the blood from the people above them, the Times reports.  Its foot was also held in a padlock, which could have been to make its exit from the grave harder, or to symbolise the 'closing of a stage' and make it impossible for the child to return.  But archaeologists also discovered that after burial, the body was partially exhumed and the top half removed, presumably to be destroyed.  Team leader Professor Dariusz Poliński from the Nicholas Copernicus University in the nearby city of Torun told the Times the child was clearly 'greatly feared'.  He continued: 'The reason for such a brutal and disgusting burial is unknown.'

The grim discovery was made in the same cemetery as a woman who was buried with a scythe pressing down on her neck a way to ensure she would decapitate herself if she tried to rise from the dead, experts said.  Professor Poliński previously told MailOnline: 'Ways to protect against the return of the dead include cutting off the head or legs, placing the deceased face down to bite into the ground, burning them, and smashing them with a stone.  The sickle was not laid flat but placed on the neck in such a way that if the deceased had tried to get up most likely the head would have been cut off or injured.'

In a similar way to the witch trials, myths surrounding blood-sucking revenants returning to haunt a local populace caused significant hysteria in some areas of Europe - and even led to some executions of innocents thought to be vampires.  Those who died and were deemed to be at risk of returning were often buried in remote graveyards away from major settlements.  Professor Poliński said this could include people who died unbaptised or those who killed themselves.  They could also have had particularly violent deaths or experienced frightening symptoms of mental illness, or serious diseases.   Methods to ensure they remained dead included placing a scythe over the body, burning it or even staking and decapitating it.   In 2015, archaeologists in the village of Drewsko 130 miles away found five skeletons buried in a similar manner at a 400-year-old cemetery.  Sickles were found pressed against the throats of an adult man, who was between 35 to 44 years old, and an adult woman around 35 to 39 years old.  An older woman, who was 50 to 60 years old when she died, was buried with a sickle laying across her hips, and a medium sized stone at her throat.

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Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: August 30, 2023, 11:16:12 AM »
https://proverbs31.org/read/devotions/full-post/2022/09/13/jesus-never-asked-you-to-be-busy?utm_campaign=Daily%20Devotions&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=225276678&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_aKiibUGsP8xq-5fw_4qBteXOoNmq4FTEe2gOVEmuVPykjHiRboKhzw7ohpWmBsJWPCJjPdHASGJRGsdYIWNwq5__XsA&utm_content=225276678&utm_source=hs_email#disqus_thread

Jesus Never Asked You To Be Busy
September 13, 2022
by Grace Valentine

“‘Martha, Martha,’ the Lord answered, ‘you are worried and upset about many things, but few things are needed or indeed only one. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her.’” Luke 10:41-42 (NIV)

I get you because I am you I’ve been you since I was 17. Always busy. Always “productive.” Living life like a race and running from activity to activity. Trying to achieve it all.  You’re overwhelmed and overbooked.  You’re undercaffeinated and underappreciated.  You’re busy.  And chances are, if you and I are this similar, then my favorite word is also your favorite word: “YES.” You say “yes” without thinking, then find yourself in over your head. Life is moving faster than you are, and some mornings, you wonder if there’s ever going to be an eye cream good enough to hide your bags.  I get it.  But, friend Jesus never asked you to be busy.  Don’t let your plans distract you from your purpose. See, there’s nothing wrong with keeping a calendar. There’s nothing wrong with having plans. But are you pursuing plans, or are you pursuing purpose?

I often get distracted from God’s will when I focus on my will. My will is to be busy, have plans, be productive and achieve success. But God’s will is forever for me to sit at His feet, focus on Him and pursue my relationship with Him. I will never know why I was created if I don’t know my Creator and Savior.  There’s a Bible passage I love where two women, Mary and Martha, prepare for Jesus to arrive at their home. However, they each handle His arrival differently. Martha was the one preparing the house while Mary sat at the feet of Jesus, simply listening to Him.  Jesus told Martha, “‘Martha, Martha you are worried and upset about many things, but few things are needed or indeed only one. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her’” (Luke 10:41-42).

Martha may have been the one who was being productive, but she was missing out on her purpose. What Martha was doing was helpful but it wasn’t holy.  You only have one purpose, and it is Jesus.  To love Jesus.  To be with Jesus.  To show others Jesus.  So, my busy, overwhelmed and tired friend drop your worries. Drop your anxieties. Drop your to-do list. Drop your plans if they are getting in the way of time with sweet Jesus.  Your purpose is more than your job, your activities, your financial stability or your calendar. Jesus doesn’t want your schedule, your hustle or your good deeds. Jesus wants YOU.  When He said “come to me” (Matthew 11:28, NIV), I don’t think He meant “come to Me with a busy life.” He didn’t say, “Come to Me when you have space in your life.”

He meant for us to come right now in our weariness and sit at His feet. He meant for us to be authentically ourselves and not bring our full résumés. He meant for us to come now, even in the midst of the craziness of life.  Whether you are in college and overwhelmed with school, or you are a postgrad overwhelmed with adulting whether you are a mom of three, or a single woman killing it at work do me a favor and make time for Jesus time to be with Jesus. Call out to Him, and give Him your silence so you have a chance to hear Him speak. Open your Bible and read His Word.

Let's stop focusing on all the things and instead focus on Him. How are we supposed to figure out our purpose if we aren’t doing life with the One who created us?

How are we supposed to change the world if we're not first sitting at the feet of the One who saved the world?

Many people will tell us to hustle. Many people will tell us that each day is about working harder and becoming smarter. But trust me we can work as hard as we want, and if we aren’t sitting at His feet, we’re missing out on true purpose.  So go to work, study for the test and do your squats. But before you do any of that, sit quietly alone. Separate yourself from the hustle. Talk to Jesus, and open up your Bible. Jesus wants you not your hectic life, not your hustle.  Let’s seek Him first so we don't risk missing out on His beautiful Kingdom.

33
Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: August 30, 2023, 11:07:28 AM »
https://proverbs31.org/read/devotions/full-post/2022/09/12/light-the-way?utm_campaign=Daily%20Devotions&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=225276831&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--Dn60LQmNi7w0xqCis3Yc-VdxxHwxVHEUJAakTmiMucal9gsSQSmNJsOeS5b8fg8piPhIQwI54jZgE3QS9cl8eTPkR6A&utm_content=225276831&utm_source=hs_email#disqus_thread

Light the Way
September 12, 2022
by Lauren Green McAfee

“Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path.” Psalm 119:105 (NIV)

Every morning growing up, hours before most of my friends were awake, I was up learning math from my dad.  Since I was home-schooled until middle school, I would wake up before the sun, eyes still drowsy, and march downstairs to see a dim light stretching out from my dad’s office, where I would start my lesson for the day.  The soft glow from my dad’s office pierced the darkness and gave me enough light to see the stairs I walked down. And there, behind his desk, my dad would be reading his Bible allowing the Light of the World to shine into his heart.  Today when I read our key verse, Psalm 119:105, I often think of those early-morning math lessons.  Many years after my middle-school days, my dad would end up leading an effort to found a world-class museum dedicated to the Bible, called Museum of the Bible, in Washington, D.C. When you walk into Museum of the Bible, one of the first things you see, etched in the marble pillar in the middle of the lobby, is the museum's theme verse, which is also our key verse today: “Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path” (Psalm 119:105).

This verse is found in the middle of the longest chapter in the Bible. This majestic chapter celebrates the incredible gift that is the Scriptures. What we have in the Bible is a miracle the children of ancient Israel only saw in flashes during the Exodus or received from the prophets.  God has spoken to us, and we have His words preserved. And what are we to recognize His Word as?

Light. But if I’m being honest, I don’t always see it.  The day-to-day busyness of parenting, marriage, cleaning the house, volunteering at church, working and trying to stay engaged in my friendships can feel like there is never enough time in the day to study and appreciate God’s Word or see its light for my path. Yet every time I prioritize the space for Scripture engagement, I find myself more refreshed and strengthened. What a gift, that God has given us His Word to light our paths!  Ultimately, the light of God’s Word makes Him known. John 1:4-5 says, “In him [Jesus] was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (NIV).

Jesus showed us what a life following God’s path looks like. Each step He took, every person He touched, every word He spoke, was filled with love and truth. Jesus’ words brought healing to the hurting and life to the broken. They also brought judgment on the wicked and rebuke to the religious.  It was because He claimed to be God that the religious leaders of the day killed Him. Jesus, the “light of the world by darkness slain,” as one hymn puts it, was murdered on a cross. At the moment of His death, it was noon, yet there was a blackness that covered the sky. Darkness seemed to have won. Yet the promise in John 1:4-5 was true. The light of Jesus shined into the darkness, and the darkness could not overcome it.  What is darkness but the absence of light?

You can’t spread darkness; you can only make things darker by hiding the light.  My dad’s passionate dedication to God’s Word has had an impact on me I will never forget. And it is my prayer now that, as I learn to take time to allow God’s Word to be a light to my feet, it will have an impact on my daughter as well.

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Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: August 23, 2023, 10:54:28 AM »
https://proverbs31.org/read/devotions/full-post/2022/09/07/you-are-worth-taking-care-of?utm_campaign=Daily%20Devotions&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=224654713&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8oTMc10kEyuvG4EsVdwJ2GbECyFI919f8t6Of3KsoAD2c_OWO-aojMSP4QnbzAE6Q60r8iFsR98qgCjcfgCB96mJQnzQ&utm_content=224654713&utm_source=hs_email#disqus_thread

You Are Worth Taking Care Of
September 7, 2022
by Bonnie Gray

“See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these.” Matthew 6:28b-29 (NIV)

I forgot I left out the flowers after coming home from the grocery store. I’d spent an embarrassing amount of time deciding whether even to get flowers.  When it comes to buying flowers for friends to cheer them up, I don’t hesitate. But flowers for myself?

It felt too indulgent. Then I felt torn between buying flowers that cost less or buying the ones I wanted: hydrangeas.  I decided to go for it, placing the hydrangeas in my cart. But they ended up on the countertop at home that night. Because I was rushing to get dinner on the table, by the time the family gobbled up the food and washed the dishes, it was too late.  I forgot to put the flowers in water! They were neglected, put to the side. The petals all wilted.  So many times, I feel like those wilted flowers, worn and exhausted because I’ve neglected my emotional and physical well-being. I get so busy taking care of everyone else, I forget God cares about my well-being.  Do you, too, ever feel like those hydrangeas, in need of nurturing?

Do you find it easy to put your heart to the side?

God understands all the hard circumstances surrounding you. Yet your well-being is at the very center of God’s heart. You are His beloved daughter. God cares for you.  How you feel is important to God. He sees how you’re really doing. He wants you to take care of yourself because He loves you.  Having grown up the oldest child in a single-parent family, I’m an encourager by nature. I find it easier taking care of others, yet so often I forget my own well-being needs tending to until I end up feeling exhausted and burned out with stress and worry.  When you feel overwhelmed, hear Jesus whisper to you in Matthew 6:25-29:  “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life? And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these” (NIV).

Do not worry about tomorrow, God says. Look at the wildflowers they do not toil. Yet how beautiful I’ve made them.  How much more you mean to me, more than any of these!  Are you worried about so many needs around you that you’ve forgotten you, too, are worth taking care of?

Let’s get practical. Maybe you’re wondering, What is a simple way to remind myself of God’s care?

Soul Care Tip: Buy yourself flowers. A Rutgers University study found that simply looking at flowers improves emotional health; the presence of flowers triggered happy emotions in participants, increasing feelings of life satisfaction. Flowers are a God-given, natural mood enhancer!  Today, when you feel pressures pressing in, here is truth you can hold on to and breathe in.  Do something that brings you joy.  Do something that brings you peace.  Do something that brings you beauty.  And hear Jesus whispering:  I love you. I am with you.  Shine your light. Sing your song.  You are worth investing in, taking care of and nurturing.  The happy ending to my story is that I learned hydrangea petals freshen up when placed in warm water. A few hours later, my flowers were refreshed again!  Your heart will also be refreshed, just like flowers blooming in the warmth of the sun, when you take time to rest and enjoy what brings you peace and joy.  It’s never too late to run into the arms of our loving Savior, who cares deeply about our well-being!

35
Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: August 23, 2023, 10:45:25 AM »
https://proverbs31.org/read/devotions/full-post/2022/09/06/when-it-may-be-time-to-draw-a-healthy-boundary?utm_campaign=Daily%20Devotions&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=224654817&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_sO-hpcCLnu7iUMwK5ENs8T6NmZdpsJKtt3KXXsU5qIq8gJrPywCshCZ3wQadGv-nocmrYaU-eOZ_rY_Rw1aq8e4B8Vg&utm_content=224654817&utm_source=hs_email#disqus_thread

When It May Be Time To Draw a Healthy Boundary
September 6, 2022
by Lysa TerKeurst

“Like a city whose walls are broken through is a person who lacks self-control.” Proverbs 25:28 (NIV)

I’ll never forget asking my counselor to help me process how I finally got to the place where I said this about a difficult relationship I was walking through: “No more. No more devastation. No more betrayal. No more being lied to. No more.”

I wondered if that was the moment I became broken. But he replied, “No, Lysa, that was the moment you declared you were healing.”

Sometimes “no more” means doing the work to fight for the relationship. By implementing good boundaries, each person can be held accountable to healthier relational patterns.  Sometimes “no more” means acknowledging the heartbreaking reality that the relationship is no longer sustainable or safe. Though this is really hard, wise counsel has helped me see there’s a big difference between difficulties that can be worked through and destructive patterns that are detrimental to our well-being.  Both dynamics require that we pursue healing. We need solid Truth from God’s Word to help, guide and direct us. Sometimes we may also need a godly professional counselor who is specifically trained to educate, comfort and challenge us.  I know what it feels like to be paralyzed by another person’s choices and not know what to do about it. In the past, I’ve been hesitant to draw boundaries both because it felt uncaring and because I didn’t have the confidence to know how to implement and communicate healthy parameters.  Now, I’ve discovered a better way to view boundaries. I don’t draw boundaries hoping to force another person to change in ways they may be unwilling to change or incapable of changing. Instead, I place boundaries on myself to help me exercise self-control over what I will and will not tolerate. Self-control is crucial so that I regulate my reactions and direct my efforts toward myself staying in a healthy place. Good boundaries are the only fighting chance I have for navigating relational challenges in a productive and healthy way.  If you’re in a “no more” kind of place, consider these questions about boundaries and how you might be able to apply this in your own life beginning today. Remember, this assessment isn’t permission to be selfish and "peace out" on responsibilities. Instead this is meant to help us see where we may be losing self-control because we don’t have appropriate boundaries, like our key verse warns against: “Like a city whose walls are broken through is a person who lacks self-control” (Proverbs 25:28).

    What kind of person do I want to be, not just in this relationship but consistently in all my relationships?
    What do I need to do in this relationship to stay consistent in my character, conduct and communication?
    What are some areas of my life where I have the most limited capacity (for example: at my job, in parenting, during the holidays, etc.)?
    Based on my realistic assessment of my capacity, does this relationship threaten to hyperextend what I can realistically and even generously give?
    Do I feel the freedom in this relationship to communicate what I can and cannot give without the fear of being punished or pushed away?
    What are some realistic restrictions I can place on myself to reduce the access this person has to my most limited emotional or physical resources?
    In what ways is this person’s unpredictable behavior negatively impacting my trust in my other relationships?
    How am I suffering the consequences of another person's choices more than they are?
    What are this person's most realistic and most unrealistic expectations of me? What are my most realistic and most unrealistic expectations of them?
    What boundaries do I need to put in place?

As you consider these questions, you may find it helpful to process them with a trusted godly mentor or Christian counselor. These questions to consider aren’t to further complicate our relational dynamics. Instead, these are meant to help identify where we are dancing with dysfunction.  Toxic realities in relationships will not tame themselves. We cannot ignore them into health. Nor can we badger them into a better place. We have to get honest about the hardships that are complicating and probably preventing the kind of health we not only want but need for some of our relationships to survive.  I’ve learned we can’t just “get over” our hurts we have to work through them. And boundaries are a great way to start experiencing health in your own life. Let’s take this step together.

36
Fun, Games And Silliness / Tomatoes
« on: August 23, 2023, 10:39:26 AM »
Customer: "How much are these tomatoes?"

Owner: "Ninety-nine cents a pound."

Customer: "What? The stand down the road only charges seventy-nine cents a pound!"

Owner: "Then why don't you shop there?"

Customer: "They don't have any today."

Owner: "Well, when I don't have any I charge seventy-nine cents, too!"

37
The Top Ten Ways The Bible Would Have Been Different If It Had Been Written By College Students

10. The Last Supper would have been eaten the next morning...cold.

9 The Ten Commandments would be only five, double-spaced and written in a large font.

8. A new edition would be written every two years to limit reselling.

7. Forbidden fruit would have been eaten because it wasn't cafeteria food.

6. Paul's letter to the Romans becomes Paul's email to abuse@romans.gov

5. Reason Cain killed Abel: They were roommates.

4. The place where the end of the world occurs: Finals, not Armageddon.

3. Out go the mules, in comes the mountain bikes.

2. Reason why Moses and followers walked in the desert for 40 years: They didn't want to ask directions and look like freshmen.

1. Instead of God creating the world in six days and resting on the seventh, He would have put it off until the night before it was due and then pulled an all-nighter.

38
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-12431921/Woman-25-reveals-diagnosed-stage-three-colon-cancer-24-began-BURPING-10-times-day.html

Woman, 25, reveals how she was diagnosed with stage three colon cancer at 24 after she began BURPING 10 times a day

    Bailey, 25, from Florida, began burping excessively during a holiday in 2001
    READ MORE: These are the four warning signs of colon cancer in younger adults

By Maria Okanrende For Mailonline

Updated: 10:58, 22 August 2023

A woman who went from never burping to belching 'five to ten times a day' has revealed how she was then diagnosed with stage three colon cancer at age 24.  Bailey Mcbreen, 25, from Sarasota, Florida, never imagined that something so ordinary could have been a symptom of something so deadly.  The nurse knew something was amiss during a holiday with her fiancé in 2021. The trip was marred by constant belching around 'five to ten times a day' even though she was incapable of burping before.  The couple joked about her sudden ability to release gas, and with a doctor putting it down to 'anxiety', she focused squarely on planning her dream wedding.  She recalled: 'We were joking about my burping on holiday because I never used to be able to do it.  We didn't think it was anything alarming as burping is so normal for everyone else.  I casually mentioned it to my doctor on my next visit, but again, they also didn't think anything of it and it was put down to anxiety.  I had no other symptoms and eventually everything just went back to normal until January this year'.

What was once considered an embarrassing joke soon transformed into something much more sinister.  As time went on, her unusual burping was accompanied by a variety of other concerning symptoms such as vomiting and nausea.  She explained:  'I had been planning my engagement party so I was really busy and preoccupied, but then after the party, I realized I hadn't gone to the toilet in a couple of days which was not normal for me.  As the week went on, my symptoms started snowballing. I had excruciating abdominal pain, cramping, and nausea, and I couldn't keep my food down.  As a nurse, I knew they were the symptoms of a small bowel obstruction, so I tried to resolve it on my own.   However, by the time the weekend came around, I was in so much pain my mom said I needed to go to the hospital'.

At her mother's insistence, the pair went to a hospital, where Bailey was given a CT scan. Moments later she would receive a devastating diagnosis.  'Within 10 minutes I was told that I had a mass on my colon and that they believed it was colon cancer until it was proved otherwise' added Bailey.

'I was admitted to the hospital straight away. When my biopsy results came back, it was confirmed that I had stage three colon cancer.  I felt the blood rush out of my head when I heard those words, and my entire body froze. I couldn't believe what I was hearing.  I then just went into nurse mode and started asking lots of questions. I was thinking about IVF, losing my hair, and chemotherapy'.

Bailey underwent further surgery to remove part of her colon and some of her lymph nodes.  She has also completed 12 weeks of chemotherapy and is currently waiting for results to determine her next steps.  She continued: 'I'm in a waiting game at the moment to see if I will need more surgery.  The doctors couldn't get a clear margin the first time round to remove the cancer as it had also attached itself to my spleen. Or I may need further treatment such as radiotherapy'.

The quick turnaround of events has left Bailey in utter shock. She remarked that she never would have considered burping to be a symptom of cancer: 'It's something that is so easily dismissed.  But I've learnt that anything that is not normal for you, is abnormal.  Symptoms are our body's way of telling us that something is wrong'.

An oncologist told Bailey that burping is one of the biggest symptoms seen in young adults with colon cancer.  The bride-to-be says she is 'praying' the cancer doesn't return, adding she has felt 'lost' since her bout with the grueling treatment.  She said: 'Since finishing chemo, I've been feeling lost. It's weird just waiting around and praying that I won't have a reoccurrence.  However, I have been planning my wedding in the middle of all of this, which has given me something to focus on and keep my mind occupied.  We're having a small destination wedding in November. It's been amazing to have something that's giving me light during something very dark and scary. I can't wait to get married'.

Bailey is focused wholeheartedly on turning her life around 'holistically' so she can maintain the energy needed to fight for her life. The experience has also taught her some key lessons about life.  'My biggest takeaway from all of this is to not let medics dismiss your symptoms. You know your body better than anyone and if you think something isn't quite right, don't let it be covered by modern medicine'.

EXCESSIVE BELCHING AS A SIGN OF COLON CANCER

Belching, also known as burping, is your body's way of expelling excess air from your upper digestive tract.  A healthy person usually burps up to 30 times a day. However, some conditions may cause you to burp more often.  Belching alone is not a definitive symptom of cancer, but it may be a precursor to cancers in the digestive system.  Excessive burping that occurs alongside other symptoms can be signs of certain cancers, such as gastric (stomach) cancer, esophageal cancer, and colon cancer.  In addition to constant burping, look out for symptoms like:

    Poor appetite
    Unintentional weight loss
    Abdominal pain
    Discomfort in the abdomen, usually above the navel
    Feeling full after eating only a small meal
    Heartburn or indigestion
    Nausea
    Vomiting, with or without blood
    Swelling or fluid buildup in the abdomen

Information compiled by Verywell Health

39
Fun, Games And Silliness / Re: Word Association
« on: July 23, 2023, 02:18:50 PM »
leather

40
Fun, Games And Silliness / Re: Keep A Word, Drop A Word, Add A Word
« on: July 23, 2023, 02:18:01 PM »
maple tree




41
leniency

42
Fun, Games And Silliness / Re: Movies and Actors
« on: July 23, 2023, 02:16:32 PM »
Torrey B. Lawrence

43
Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: July 23, 2023, 02:15:22 PM »
https://proverbs31.org/read/devotions/full-post/2022/07/06/story-shaped-women?utm_campaign=Daily%20Devotions&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=217922253&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_mmVfii4HYZmpnB9j3F8gbDggY23grz3bFSfqFTrv0fYoVLGLo1kznZCqk64vFnLEHRFkiAreRlYkG4ogK-Koxoyt6Cg&utm_content=217922253&utm_source=hs_email#disqus_thread

Story-Shaped Women
July 6, 2022
by Iva May

“Such things were written in the Scriptures long ago to teach us. And the Scriptures give us hope and encouragement as we wait patiently for God’s promises to be fulfilled.” Romans 15:4 (NLT)

When my daughter was 3 years old, her grandparents gave her a video player and a handful of Disney videos. Cinderella was her favorite. I didn’t realize the impact that Cinderella’s story had on Jennifer until the day a salesman knocked at our screen door.  Jennifer was sitting in timeout (due to bad behavior) near the screen door when the salesman approached.  He asked, “Little girl, is your mother at home?”

Jennifer replied with “No, but my mean, wicked stepmother is!”

We are designed for story. Stories leave fingerprints in our minds and upon our hearts.  Until I read through a chronological Bible, it had never dawned on me that the Bible tells one big story. No individual book or narrative stands alone; all are part of the bigger story.  As I read the Bible chronologically, I identified patterns and made connections that I would have otherwise missed. For example, stories about courageous women permeate the big story:

*  The promise God made regarding Eve’s seed (Genesis 3:15) animates the story of the entire Bible. It’s as if God refused to redeem humanity without going through a woman’s womb.
     
*    The book of Joshua begins with the story of the faith and redemption of Rahab, a notorious Canaanite harlot. (Joshua 2:1-21; Joshua 6:22-25) God’s promise to Abraham to bless the nations began with a woman with a sordid past.
     
*  God turned sorrow into redemption through Naomi and Ruth’s story, embedded in the Judges story. While Israel did what was right in their own eyes, God worked below the radar to give them a king after His own heart. He did this through two widows.
     
*  The story of Hannah’s infertility marked the transition from the time of the judges to the Kingdom Era. (1 Samuel 1:1-2:21) God opened Hannah’s womb to bear a son, who anointed the first two kings of Israel. She had no idea that God would catapult her son into His story in this way.
     
*  Huldah’s counsel regarding the recently discovered Book of the Law found among the idols and rubbish in the temple invigorated both King Josiah’s faith and Judah’s revival. (2 Kings 22:14-20; 2 Chronicles 34:22-28) Her role in national revival is preserved in Scripture.
     
*  God positioned Esther as a queen, and Mordecai as an influencer and intercessor, for the Jewish exiles. God used a woman to preserve His people in exile.
     
*  Mary the mother of Jesus, and the many women spread throughout the Gospels, Acts and the Letters, show God’s delight in women!
 
In our key verse, Paul refers to the value of understanding the Old Testament story and the many cherished stories within: “Such things were written in the Scriptures long ago to teach us. And the Scriptures give us hope and encouragement as we wait patiently for God’s promises to be fulfilled” (Romans 15:4).

The story of Scripture teaches us, offers us hope and encourages us all while we wait for the final chapter of Scripture to unfold in history.  Because God created us, He knows the impact a story can have on our hearts and lives. God wove His story throughout the Bible, knowing that we would see our reflection in it, and not only that but see His love for women just like you and me. How beautiful it is that we can be wholly shaped and transformed by the story of God’s Word.  And sister, the best news is: Who God was for the women of the Bible, He is for me and you!

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Faith / Re: Devotions
« on: July 23, 2023, 02:07:36 PM »
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Our Hope for Broken Things
July 5, 2022
by Alicia Bruxvoort

“He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” Psalm 147:3 (NIV)

I read the text through a haze of tears. Then I let the groan in my throat spill through my lips. My friend’s struggle was spiraling from bad to worse, and I felt like a paralyzed spectator watching her world unravel.  I had listened and encouraged, consoled and comforted. But I couldn’t fix my friend’s shattered dreams or reverse her agonizing situation. I sank to the floor in a heap of sadness and expressed my frustration to the Lord.  It’s all so broken. What can I do?

God didn’t answer with a voice from heaven, but a single word crossed my mind: Pray.  I pushed the idea away. Of course I would pray. Later. But right now, I wanted to do something.  As if on cue, I spotted a teddy bear lying beneath the coffee table not far from where I was sitting. When I plucked the forgotten toy out of hiding, I noticed its head was dangling askew. Oh, great, something else that’s broken.  As I swatted a trickle of tears, my teenage son sauntered into the room and glanced at the toy in my hand. “You should put that on the counter for Dad,” he suggested with a wink.

My son’s advice stirred a memory from long-ago days when my life was a blur of diapers and demands. With five small children beneath my roof, I didn’t have the capacity to strategize how to fix all the things that got broken in our house. So, eventually, my kids developed a solution of their own.  Whatever fell short, fell apart or failed to work was deposited on the kitchen counter, next to the stack of daily mail, in hopes of attracting my husband’s attention when he came home from work.  “Just take it to Daddy,” they’d say when the punching bag went flat or the hula hoop cracked.

“Just take it to Daddy,” they’d propose when the jump ropes grew tangled or the doll’s arm dangled.

That pile may have looked like clutter, but it was a humble appeal for help. Each time my children added something to the countertop mound, they admitted the fix they needed was beyond the faculty they possessed.  When they couldn’t fix what was broken, my kids simply surrendered it to one who could. And as beloved children of God, we are invited to do the same.  We do not all have earthly fathers who are inclined to fix broken things, but each one of us has a heavenly Father who is willing to repair and restore what we cannot. In fact, Psalm 147:3 describes our good Father like this: “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds” (NIV).

The term the psalmist uses to communicate “healing” is rapa, which means to mend by stitching. This word alone paints a poignant picture of our heavenly Father’s heart.  It reminds us God does not hold at arm’s length what is broken. Rather, He encourages us to draw close and place in His hands what has unraveled. Then He engages in the intimate work of fixing what is fractured.  My son plucked the teddy bear from my grasp and headed to the kitchen, and as he put the toy on the counter, my next move became clear.  I closed my eyes and carried my hurting friend to God in prayer. It wasn’t my last resort; it was a wise next step.  With a single word, God had reminded me that prayer isn’t succumbing to helplessness; it’s putting faith into action. Because even when we don’t know what to do, our Father’s hands hold hope for broken things.

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I don't have any trust in the police and still believe situations like this will continue.

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