Teaching Good Things

Practical Skills for Real Life

Teaching Good Things - Practical Skills for Real Life

Don’t Let Your Ideal Ruin Christmas! Fake it til You Make it!

I think most of us truly desire to have one big happy family, all gathered around the table, holding hands to say the blessing and then to fill our hearts with laughter and our bellies with good food. I think most of us have our own version of the Walton family dinner table in our minds…especially us moms!

But the truth is TV is not real and of all the families I know there is not a single one that has the ideal. They all have issues, if not within their own household with extended family. We all have gatherings we need to go to, “because we are family”, yet we dread it. We dread an obnoxious personality, a hostile worldview, bratty kids, lack of love…name your reason.

For those of us that long for peace and joy around our table holidays can have a way of bringing out a dark or mean side of us. We want everyone on the same page, not clones of us, but rather clones with a spirit of Christ. We desire to break bread together and to enjoy a feast with the focus being on Christ. Wouldn’t it be grand to have all of our children and their families…to have Grandma and Grandpa…to have great aunts and uncles gathered around the table feasting in peace and joy?

Sad thing is we live in a fallen world and as our culture declines from the traditional, Biblical family, peaceful and joyful gatherings around the table becomes less and less the ideal. Many young people don’t even know who the Waltons are and because families are so dysfunctional they take their cues from Hollywood, pop songs and peers as to what a family should look like, which in turn makes it harder and harder to attend family gatherings.

So here is what we can do to reclaim and rebuild society:

Moms, although your husband is the head of the house you are the one that determines the atmosphere.

  • You can be angry because things are not as they should be, that people are not as they should be, or you can even slip off to your own self-pity party, but none of that will change a culture. The culture within your 4 walls is where you need to focus. Reforming a culture is a slow, tedious and painful process, but someone needs to do it! WE need to do it!!!
  • You MUST work hard at having a joyful spirit. If you are complaining, nagging or stressing out you will do nothing but tear down your home and as soon as your kids can leave they will. Be careful about a critical attitude and words. It is a joyful and peaceful spirit that draws people…even your own children. Don’t let them grow up and tell their children how stressed out mom was at Christmas, and if you need to, fake it til you make it!
  • You MUST work hard on their hearts! If you are focused on the details or materialism that won’t amount to a hill of beans and neglecting the fun, the simple and the quiet times that build relationships don’t be surprised if no one gathers around your table when you are old.
  • You MUST weed out destructive activities. If there are parties and gathering obligations that bring nothing but an unholy strife and if it is causing division within your own family sometimes it is best to stay home and start building holy traditions. Matt 10

With that said, Romans 12:18 says, “If possible, so far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men.” There are times we need to endure some situations to be a good witness, but often that “witness” can happen at other times than just Thanksgiving and Christmas. And there is a difference in putting up with obnoxious people and people who are planting seeds to destruction in your young children.

Let this be a simpler Christmas, slow down, create memories with family traditions. Reclaim your family’s table.

  • Be so very careful that you do not let your ideals ruin Christmas, but rather slowly work towards them. Change takes time.
  • Be sure your ideals are reasonable, not only to you, but to your family.



For us, we have found that we experience the most peaceful, most joyful fellowship around the table with other Believers. It takes more than a name to make a family; it is the blood of Christ and the baptism of the Elect that truly binds hearts and builds families.



My deepest desire and ultimate ideal is to not only share in feasting around my table with the members of my household, but also that all of our members also share the bonds of Christ.

What Not to Do During the Holidays

Unplugging, Reflecting, Rejoicing!

I’ll be unplugging the computer for a couple days to reflect on the price paid for my sins. May you know who you are in Christ and live your life in a way that brings glory to the One who gave His all.

Our family will gather tonight at church for Good Friday service. Tomorrow we have a community event to attend and we’ll finish the weekend off by celebrating Resurrection Sunday worshiping the King!

I love this time of year!

No matter what your circumstances, draw close to the One who has redeemed you! If you are not redeemed, I’d love to talk to you!

 

 

 

Alas! and did my Savior bleed
And did my Sovereign die?
Would He devote that sacred head
For such a worm as I?

Refrain

At the cross, at the cross where I first saw the light,
And the burden of my heart rolled away,
It was there by faith I received my sight,
And now I am happy all the day!

Thy body slain, sweet Jesus, Thine—
And bathed in its own blood—
While the firm mark of wrath divine,
His Soul in anguish stood.

Was it for crimes that I had done
He groaned upon the tree?
Amazing pity! grace unknown!
And love beyond degree!

Well might the sun in darkness hide
And shut his glories in,
When Christ, the mighty Maker died,
For man the creature’s sin.

Thus might I hide my blushing face
While His dear cross appears,
Dissolve my heart in thankfulness,
And melt my eyes to tears.

But drops of grief can ne’er repay
The debt of love I owe:
Here, Lord, I give my self away
’Tis all that I can do.

Making the Most of the Holiday Season

 

Can you believe next week is Thanksgiving? If you homeschool this is the craziest time of the year as we struggle to balance holiday festivities and book work.


My advice is to chill out and make the most of it. Between Thanksgiving and News Years is a great time for a break from the books, if you need to, do math and choose a really good book to read together; but everything else can wait. There is so much freedom in homeschooling, so USE IT! I am not saying this is an official break from learning, but use this time to let the children learn and use some practical skills. It's still education, even if it is not coming from a book.


A Few Suggestions:

~Research and plan a Thanksgiving Feast - Our family is panning an outdoor feast with our friends.

~Research and act out a Thanksgiving drama.

~Learn or write songs or poems of Thanksgiving.

~Create centerpieces using salt dough or outdoor greenery.

~Design your own Christmas cards- great project for kids!

~Make Rag Quilts for family - Easy and inexpensive to make.

~Look over the Make It Give It series and find items to give for Christmas.

~Assign the kids new meals/desserts/cookies to learn how to make.

~Organize and prepare a meal for someone needy, check with your local shelters or Ronald McDonald House.

~Plan a Christmas Carol night.

~Spend a week of deep cleaning and de-cluttering! Call it Home Ec. if you need to label it for a subject.

~Make something to give to a shelter or nursing home, a lap blanket, crocheted slippers, shawls, etc… These can be made while you listen to books on CD or take turns reading aloud while you create with your hands.

 

Use the next few weeks to take a break from the books and focus on giving to others. Use this time to really celebrate and enjoy family and friends. It is more important to build happy memories that can teach, than it is to make sure you do everything by the book- the way the Government says you should. They are your children and it is your schedule…make the most of it! January- April is the best time to get a lot of book work in, the weather is yucky for most of us, and festivities are slow; so until then think outside the box and enjoy life!

 

Anybody else have ideas to share?

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