Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The Woman's Touch

When I think of what we call the “woman’s touch,” I immediately see a man living alone in the old west who gets himself a mail-order bride. She takes one look at his disheveled cabin and gets out the broom and bucket and whips the place into shape. The next scene in the movie shows ruffled curtains blowing in the windows, fresh bread coming out of the oven, and a cleaned up cowboy sitting meekly at the table, eating his dinner with newly acquired, civilized manners.

Though we should laugh at the stereotype, there is something powerful to be said for the feminine touch. Not only does the cabin really get remade into something for humans, but the cowboy is remade as well. If he is going to enjoy the company of a real woman, he is going to have to shape up, take a bath, clean up his habits, and stand tall. He’s a new man.

Men want to be made new. They enjoy being the kind of men that a woman will respect and admire. When a culture has the bar too low, and the women are easily im­pressed, too eager for any male companionship of any cali­ber, then the men can get away with slouching around. And they will. But when the culture is characterized by women with high standards, it is a great blessing to the men. They will stand tall to impress a woman like that.

If the above mail-order bride had not been a power­ful force for good, the house would still be a pigsty and the man would still smell to high heaven. But she had a backbone and a standard (and was cute to boot), and the man readily conformed so that he could share her bed and board. This is how it should be, and the men know it. In fact, the men like it that way. It makes life far more inter­esting and gives them purpose and a heritage, someone to defend and provide for.

On the other hand, if the women are willing to com­promise, few men will argue about it. If she will climb into his bed (or someone else’s) without a marriage commit­ment, who’s to complain? He can have all the benefits of marriage with none of the responsibilities. This has a far-reaching effect on our culture: men become more immature, irresponsible, reckless, and selfish; the women try to take up the slack but become restless, competitive, insecure, and discontent.

Imagine for a moment what would happen if women across our country suddenly said something like, “You must be crazy if you think I will sleep with you without a wedding.” Not only would there be a diamond shortage, we would have far fewer miserable, misplaced women with big paychecks and nothing to go home to.

The feminists have successfully marginalized the woman’s “traditional” role, denying its power and impact. In their view, the perky mail-order bride described in the scene above is a brainless idiot who has been hoodwinked into settling for the menial, inferior, even worthless job of housekeeping for a man who has married her just so he can have sex, children, and live-in maid service. And I don’t think it’s exaggerating to say that any women who have opted to stay home and raise their children are viewed by the feminists much the same way, even if the marriage was nothing as crude as a “mail-order.” But who is really the wise woman here and who is the fool? Is the hard-working wife really so dumb? Doesn’t she get what she really wants?

The feminists, being above such things themselves, have figured out a much better way to handle male/female relations. Far from being a mail-order bride, the modern feminist is an internet girlfriend. She has moved in with one cowboy after another, is having sex and cleaning up apartments for free for any number of men with whom she has no long-term plans or commitments. He doesn’t have to change his ways or clean up after himself. Why should he? He can find another, younger, maybe more attractive woman if he gets weary of this one. She can expect noth­ing from him.

Now you tell me: Who is the dummy here?

Of course, I have exaggerated to make a point. But still, let’s face it. Women have a powerful impact on men, for good or for ill. Some women are tyrannical and what they need is a husband who will tell them to quiet down for pity’s sake. Women can have a destructive impact on men when they have low standards (like the harlot or strange woman in Proverbs), or when they have high standards for the men but not for themselves (the clamorous woman). The best-case scenario is the wise woman who loves what God loves and isn’t eaten up with discontent. She is at peace with her calling as a woman and is blessed by the happy consequences of her labors.

The world is full of homes in sad need of a woman’s touch: a roll-up-your-sleeves-and-get-to-work kind of touch that resounds with God’s creation wisdom and overturns the foolishness of feminism. When we turn away from some of these crazy man-made ideas and embrace God’s design for the family, we will see homes and the men and women in them remade and restored. And there’s no telling the impact on civilization as we know it.

Another Article by Nancy Wilson

Monday, January 11, 2010

IT'S NOT A NEW DECADE PEOPLE!!!

Here's a sample of last week's news reporting: "A new decade is about to start ...", "What better way to start a new year and decade ...", and "ABC 'World News' Decade Look-Back." One would think that the first decade of the third millennium came to an end midnight Dec. 31 and the new decade began a minute after midnight. The truth of the matter is that we must wait another year before the new decade begins at 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 2011. Just do the math: The end of 2001 was the first year of the decade; the end of 2002 completed the second year and so forth. The end of 2009 completes the ninth year and the end of 2010 completes the 10th year and the end of the decade. One minute after midnight Jan. 1, 2011 begins the second decade of the third millennium.

Many reporters and talking heads will read this column and will still refer to 2010 as the new decade. My question: What is the most suitable characterization we can give them? I think it's the same characterization we would make of a person who's shown that an object is white and he insists upon calling it black -- stupid. Then there's the person who agrees that 2010 does not begin the next decade but prefers to say it's the next decade anyway. For that person, reality is optional. Then there's the person who steadfastly holds that 2010 begins the next decade because that's what most people believe. He might be a politician.

(taken from "Untrue Beliefs" ...a short essay by Walter E. Williams)

You can check out the whole text for yourself if you'd like...

I just thought I might post this because like the rest of the population out there I really hadn't thought much about it and since it is a majority belief that it is a new decade I wouldn't have questioned the matter.

Nonetheless... I figured if I didn't know, then maybe you don't either.

"There is no better way to stop inquiry than by certainty." -Richard J. Maybury


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Man in All his Glory

Oh how mighty and great
man's creations be.
He created automobiles, trains and airplanes
and ships that sail the seas!
Oh what divers intellect
that man does possess,
He makes one or many; science, history, psychology
or other sundry subjects as his best.

Man's triumphs would be wondrous indeed
if it weren't compared to God's.
Oh how excellent is our Lord
for he created man from sod!
Of setting the planets 'round the sun in orbit
no simple man can boast
And barely can he understand
DNA or Plasmodium in a mosquito
Funny then, how o're trifling
accomplishments we exclaim
When God in seven simple days did
this vast universe ordain...

Friday, January 1, 2010

By the Light of the Moon

What do you do when the moon is full, there's a nice layer of snow, ice.... and more snow, and it's only two degrees out?
Why, you go cross-country skiing of course!

Which is exactly what I did tonight with three of my brothers, Isaac, Channing and Patrick. =)
We journeyed down our back driveway, and then proceeded over a barbed wire fence (skis still on) and down a steep hill (where I made the mistake of actually going down the steepest part -after being warned not to- and there hit a small piece of wood or something and belly flopped). Then feeling like I just lost a few brain cells in the crash, we crossed another fence and slid down Kay Road. Then we found an opening into on of our fields and glided across the snow to my cousin's, the Meyer's house.
Well before we got there we carved "♥ 2010" into the snow... boy that was tricky on skis! lol
Soooo.... when we got to the Meyers we snuck up to a window and started singing "Hark the Harold Angels Sings."

Uuuunnnfortunately... they were gone. =(

...but they happen to have a great tubing hill so Paddy and Channing decided to go for a couple trips down it.

By the time we proceeded homeward... we were all getting a little cold and anxious, and attempted to hurry back through the field, down the road... and up and then back down a hill. lol

This is my family's winter tradition.

...and now here I sit drinking hot cocoa.

So if you ever come visit me in the winter and there's a full moon, you can be sure to come along on a swell adventure like this one. =)

Courtship Blues, by Nacy Wilson

So it isn't a fairy tale world after all. You read the courtship book(s), and you thought it sounded so easy. And maybe it was at first. But then came the crash. The whole thing fell through, blew up, unraveled, and came to a screeching halt. And whether you are the mother or the daughter, you still feel devastated and embarrassed that what seemed to be a good idea at the time obviously wasn't. And there goes your idea of the perfect couple and the perfect courtship. But before you give up on the whole idea, consider a few things first.

Courtship is supposed to be the time to find out if you are right for this person. It is not the wedding planning segment of the relationship. That is called "engagement." Courtship is a time for two people to get acquainted in a non-threatening manner, with parental oversight. It is a time for getting to know each other. It is a time for finding out. If after a few weeks of "finding out," you find you are not interested, it is not a disgrace. It is not a sign of failure. It is not even a huge deal. Unless of course, you have made it a huge deal by making courtship more than it ought to have been.
One of the first ways to wreck a courtship is to start acting like it is an engagement. Parents can do this by running ahead when they should be exercising wisdom and caution, checking to see how their daughter is doing with it all, and getting to know the young man who is doing the courting. Well-meaning friends do the same thing when they start congratulating the couple and asking about the honeymoon. All of this exerts undue and unkind pressure on the couple. It changes the tone of the relationship from low key to high pressure. It makes the two people involved feel like they must resolve all their issues immediately. And often this is not possible, so one or the other asks to please be excused. So ends the courtship.
Another creative way to trash a courtship is for the couple to get too physically involved too fast (as in, at all). Some dads allow no physical contact; some dads allow some. Some dads aren't watching. When it finally comes to light that there has been way too much going on, someone usually blows the whistle and calls the whole thing off. And because of the physical intimacy, there is much emotional damage. This is more often the case when the courtship has been allowed to drag on far too long. This sometimes comes from parents wanting their sixteen-year old to be in a courtship, even though they will not consider marriage for several years, and such an arrangement increases all the hazards.
Some parents think courtship is simply a form of entertainment for their offspring, so they allow (or encourage) their daughters to be "courted" by several men over several years. None of these ends in marriage for various reasons, but it sounds great on the resume to say you have courtship "experience." Why not just go back to recreational dating? At least in the dating system no one expects you to be "serious" about the relationship, and no one is surprised at the break up.
Some courtships fail because of too many idealistic assumptions from the outset. Daughter visualizes her own personal dream relationship, and when this solid Christian man doesn't sweep her off her feet or swing her up onto his horse as he rides by, she calls it off. She wants more fireworks, or she wishes he were more like some man in her imagination. This unfortunate scenario can be caused by indulging in too much cheap fiction or by simply being too immature to handle a serious relationship.
As long as I am venting about this, I may as well include the over-eager parents who thrust their daughter into a courtship that she is not ready for. She may be a submissive daughter who is striving to please her parents, but as the relationship continues, she may buckle under the pressure. Parents should not cause such misery. They are supposed to be the means God uses to protect their daughters, not the means of inflicting suffering. A daughter who is marrying for no other reason than to please her parents is in grave danger indeed. Who wants a martyr for a wife?
And of course, sometimes even when the courtship is conducted in an honorable fashion from start to finish, it still doesn't end with a wedding. If courtship really is a time for "finding out," then sometimes the couple will find out that they just don't click or jive. So a courtship can end with good feelings all around, even if there is a bit of disappointment. That's not a big disgrace. It's just a bump in the road and can be easily overcome. If you haven't made it to be a huge deal, it won't be a huge deal.
In spite of all these sad and miserable endings, courtship does have a lot going for it. Consider, for instance, that when all cylinders are running, Dad keeps daughter from having to do the dirty work. He says "no" for her whenever it is appropriate. She doesn't have to fend the guys off; Dad does it. If the courtship ends, Dad can do the breaking up for his daughter. She doesn't have to explain or defend. Dad does. This is a glorious aspect of courtship that can protect not only the daughter, but also the fine fellow who has been behaving like a gentleman. It's far easier for a young man to deal with another male, even if he is telling him to get lost. And it's funny how dads understand the issues and can communicate them squarely. Of course, I have to admit here that I know there are exceptions. I know there are dads who cannot be trusted. But let's hope here that we are not dealing with that sort. Nancy

Courtship Blues, by Nancy Wilson (article from Credenda Agenda)


2010

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!

A whole brand new year for fun and adventure. ...and hopefully less stress. lol

I never make a new years resolution. I've always disliked it when people promise themselves that they are GOING to do something... and then a few months (or even weeks) later they're back to their old habits.

BUT... this year, I have a 'New Years Resolution.' My goal is to have a closer walk with the Lord. I guess I figured that that is something I should always strive for and the advantage of the new year is just an excuse to do better. =)

Today we have an older gentleman from our church over and we're having a nice dinner. Actually what I like to call "linner" because it's right in between lunch and dinner. I figure that if there's a brunch there should be a linner. lol

Well, my dear friends, I hope you have a wonderful, joyous and God-centered new year.
Happy 2010!!

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Winter

Happy first day of winter!!! ...I know there are reasons for having the first day of winter so late in Dec. but maybe someday they'll be nice and change the calendars for those of us Northerners and put the seasons back a month or two. It would help a really lot to prevent confusion.

So I've been very busy preparing for Christmas. Presents, wrapping, cookies... always more cookies. =)

Supposedly we're supposed to get 8 in. of snow Christmas Eve, and 16 in. on Christmas!!! ...I wonder if we'll even have Christmas on Friday??? Maybe... we'll have it on Saturday! Who would mind? =)

And so... right this moment I am working on downloading photos for a present for my Grammy.

Oh and I'm listening to some great Christmas music!!! I bought a Christmas CD by "Better Homes and Gardens" at WalMart, and it's excellent. It kind of adds a jazzy, smooth sound to Christmas. Definitely worthwhile. =)

So I hope all of you a having a very merry Holiday Season!!!