Broken By Abortion, Fixed By Jesus
Labels: abortion, choice, forgiveness, Jesus, life, preborn, right to life, unborn
"bobbers 'n wigglers" is the odd stuff you find at the bottom of the tackle box. It's the blog accessory to The Baitstand. What is The Baitstand? A place where you can taste of the sweet salvation found in Israel's promised Savior, Yeshua Hamashiach, Jesus the Messiah.
Labels: abortion, choice, forgiveness, Jesus, life, preborn, right to life, unborn
Even the not very good films that depict the life changing experience of encountering Jesus make me cry. I long to see that essential salvation moment expressed on film. But films are mostly not made by people who have had such an experience, and one finds in the depiction of the Christian experience a great deal of awkwardness, misunderstanding, just plain missing the boat, and at worst, willful corruption of the gospel.
As one trained in film and with an eye for art film, I notice the plainness of the ordinary films that are trying to show the extraordinary, but I honor them for trying and see in their plainness a humility free from artistic pretense. Faith Like Potatoes, for example, just tells the true story of a man and how he changed.
I am inclined to make a list, but I'll keep it short. It is a non-exhaustive list of films dealing with Christian themes that I would prefer to watch.
Andrei Rublev is at the top. Nothing compares.
The Apostle
Nativity Story
Prince of Egypt
My Netflix queue is now overflowing with technicolor epics for the giant screen translated into private gems for in yer pajamas (pause it wouldya while I get my tea...)
"The end of all being is the Glory of God."
(The title of this post links to the complete sermon.)
Labels: Paris Reidhead, sermon
Bringing forth again the scripture I mentioned in the "Shabbat Shalom" entry below; it bears repeating, since it marked the beginning of our Sabbath honorings, and recently when we were out of town, Raechel honored the Sabbath without us, making the challah and the brisket, and involving Naomi in this precious way. She is singing, "Baruch Attah, Adonai..."
"Behold: The heritage of Adonai is children; the fruit of the womb is a reward. Like arrows in the hand of a warrior, so are the children of youth. Praiseworthy is the man who fills his quiver with them;" (Psalm 127:2-5)
Labels: baruch, candle lighting, shabbat
In the course of a wonderful "explore", as Pooh would say, of my favorite used book store, my nearly two year old granddaughter left the shelter of the children's book section and dove into the adult stacks all on her own, with me lurching along trying not to lose her. I lost sight of her for one moment, and then she rushed at me from behind a corner, holding a book out that she had chosen for my pleasure. It all happened so fast, I cannot imagine how she found it.
A Prayer Book for Jews in the American Armed Forces, in Hebrew and English, published in 1945, or the year 5705 on the Hebrew calendar. Only God could have placed that book in her hands.
This is the same bookstore in which I found a Hebrew-English New Testament, the exact edition I had less than a week prior given to a Jewish friend fluent in Hebrew who did not know the Lord Yeshua. It is a rare book, and I was startled to find it so soon again, except that God does work mysteriously.
That friend fluent in Hebrew, my old school mate, has recently died. I pray that she opened the book and partook of the treasures contained therein. Who would not be compelled by the unfathomable depths of the New Testament, by words such as this:
"To the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved." (Eph 1:6)

Labels: fish, ixoye, Jesus Christ, living water, purity
How shall we honor the Sabbath? We seek to be obedient to God, but we are also not slaves to the law, thanks to the gift of grace that is redemption in Yeshua HaMashiach.
I know that many have found answers to this question for themselves, and I am now in the position of seeking God's will for me. I have prayed for the Lord to reveal to me how He would prefer for me to keep the Sabbath, and that He would teach me the meaning of Sabbath, and as sure as I am that He answers my questions, I have been poised for His answer.
A long time ago I asked my husband if we might just take one Friday a month to observe a Sabbath at home. We already share Shabbat services elsewhere on two other Fridays each month. He said no at that time, because he was overwhelmed with all our commitments and wanted to remain spontaneous. But as I continued to pray, recently he suggested (and I'm sure he had forgotten my request) that we do just as I had asked. We settled on Friday, May 1, 2009 as our launch date. We decided to have an open invitation to all on the first Friday of every month, and make it comfortable, home-style and centered on Yeshua as our Sabbath rest.
As I prepared for the Shabbat, one feature of the traditional service was particularly intriguing. The Shabbat doesn't just fizzle out at the end of the 25 hours of rest. The ending of the memorial is as important as the beginning. The end of Shabbat is marked by the "Havdalah" ceremony. Havdalah speaks of dividing, just as God divided day from night on the first day of creation. It speaks of the process of sanctification by which His chosen ones are set apart from the world for Him. So my Sabbath observance must have a clearly defined beginning and a clearly defined end, in order to be properly set apart for Him.
In advance of our first Shabbat, I had a week of overwhelm at work. I had sleepless nights. I carried much stress and found little relief. By the time Friday, May 1 rolled around, I was desperate for rest. Then my daily reading for that day spoke to me as a blessed assurance:
"For indeed HE gives HIS beloved ones restful sleep. Behold: The heritage of Adonai is children; the fruit of the womb is a reward. Like arrows in the hand of a warrior, so are the children of youth. Praiseworthy is the man who fills his quiver with them;" (Psalm 127:2-5)
Although I put up signs in the community, sent a few emails and expected a few guests, in the end it was just Jerry, me and our daughter and her family. The psalm increased my appreciation of this company. We distinguished the Shabbat from ordinary family dinners by lighting candles, reciting blessings, praying, and engaging in a discussion after dinner. A bit more formal than usual, and an opportunity to impart to our family and worship with them.
I am committed to abstaining from work during this time, but Jerry continues to work as hard as ever, and we have an understanding that our marriage unit will benefit from even one of us observing the Sabbath. Interestingly, as Jerry left the house at 5am the following morning to go to work, he slipped and fractured his ankle. I pray the Lord will use this experience for good.
Even as I finish writing this post, I am prepared to finish the Shabbat with the Havdalah. Then I will head off with Jerry to the VA emergency room. The sky is darkening, and a layer of fog might prevent me actally seeing the first three stars of the evening...
"For we walk by faith, not by sight." (2Cor 5:7)
Since we own an electronics recycling business, I never have to buy electronics. So when I needed a new cell phone last year Jerry found me one from the pile of e-waste and it became my new phone. It had a scratch on the lens and a piece of the plastic housing chipped off, but it worked fine.
The prior user had installed a ringtone that I liked, so I kept it. It was a song that said, "When you cry, I cry, I cry along with you. When you smile, I smile, I smile along with you." I figured it was just another pop song, but whenever the phone rang I imagined that God was speaking to me with the gentle assurance of His presence. I didn't want to ruin my interpretation of the lyric by looking it up and finding that it was just another love song.
It wasn't until tonight that I finally researched the song and found that in fact it is a pop song, but one in which each of the three verses tells of a tragedy, and a person who calls out explicitly to God and God replies, "When you cry, I cry, I cry along with you. When you smile, I smile, I smile along with you." It is a very poignant song about human tragedy and the love of a God who answers and comforts us when we suffer.
The band is T.O.K., a reggae band from Jamaica and the song is called Footprints. No, they're not a Christian band, in fact much of what they do is unGodly. But somehow here they spoke a deep and penetrating truth that I have encountered in the Word of God, and in my studies of the suffering of the Israelites and all people. Even in a prior blog (below: "Mother Asks Again") I quoted Exo 3:7: ""The Lord said, 'I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave drivers, and I am concerned about their suffering." God does not necessarily prevent awful things from happening, but He does suffer with us, and He rejoices with us. He is God with us, Immanuel.
Tonight I am grateful for a God who would place a message in my phone for me, to remind me of His abiding love, His care, His empathy for such a one as me. I am touched by Your gentle comforting voice, my LORD. I believe you, and am in awe of such a loving Father.
Labels: immanuel

"He humbled you, causing you to hunger, and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your fathers had known, to teach you that man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord." (Deut 8:3)
Thank you, LORD, for the daily feeding regimen. When I depart from it, I hunger! The Living Water feeds us such that we will never be thirsty again, yet we hunger and thirst for righteousness. Filled and hungry at the same time.
"Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry..." (Phil 4:12)
My son spoke to me of an unexpected ministry that has sprung up for him and for my lovely daughter-in-law. They say grace before their meals. When they eat in the company of their peers, friends, colleagues, this becomes remarkable since most of their generation do not revere God. So to witness this Godly couple in their midst gives them pause, first to reexamine their idea of what a Christian looks like, and second to become aware of the presence of God.
On one occasion, my son was at lunch with a friend. The friend was paying, so my son did not consider it his place to take authority at the table and say grace. He may have done so inwardly, but just dove in to his meal. The friend was shocked, stopped him and asked, perplexed, "Aren't you going to do that grace thing?" This precious soul had already developed a hunger for worship, just from seeing the example of it in giving thanks for food.
Labels: hunger, saying grace
Here is a book and an actual healing website for a private journey through your abortion experience. Not just for the women who have made this tragic choice, but for their boyfriends, the would-be grandparents, the friends who drove them to the clinic, the husbands who pressured them, etc.
Perhaps the taboo is cracking, if not broken in the world and that death grip that Paglia talks about (see blog entry below) is beginning to at the very least be questioned.
The healing website:
http://www.abortionchangesyou.com/home
The author, Michaelene Fredenburg, speaking about her book to mental health professionals:
The word "feminism" ceased to be palatable to me after I realized that I had been lied to regarding my so called "right to an abortion", which turned out to be a doorway to all ugliness, an invitation from the culture of death to worship more deeply and more closely at the altar of the one whose aim is to destroy all of God's creation. My divorce from feminism was final and without regrets.
Being a wife only served to confirm how feminism handicaps women in relationships, as wives and mothers, with its insistence on the self-aggrandisement of the woman, the habitual stamping of the foot for "what I deserve!". The one single ingredient that made my marriage finally begin to work is anathema to feminism - that was humility. I have never needed the "f" word to define my strength, independence or achievement, and I have done what I could to warn off the young women in my arena to the hazards of feminism's braggadocio.
I am curious to read this from the critical liberal pen of Camille Paglia, who has been tracking the "f" movement and its weaknesses as it has morphed over the generations. Perhaps she sees in Sarah Palin a new way of understanding how women are achieving some of feminism's goals wholly outside of the "feminist movement". Here is Paglia:
"The next phase of feminism must circle back and reappropriate the ancient persona of the mother -- without losing career ambition or power of assertion. Betty Friedan, who had first attacked the cult of postwar domesticity, had long warned second-wave feminists such as Gloria Steinem about the damaging exclusion of homemakers from their value system. The animus of liberal feminists toward religion must also end (I am speaking as an atheist). Feminism must reexamine all of its assumptions, including its death grip on abortion, if it wishes to survive."
To read the whole piece, go to http://www.salon.com/opinion/paglia/2008/10/08/palin/index1.html.
Labels: abortion, camille paglia, feminism, sarah palin

Years ago I sat with my father in a cafe where his portraits of composers were on exhibit. There was Bartok, Bach, Ives, Schubert, many beloved characters painted as though the essence of their music were swimming about their faces in brilliant colors. He chatted with me about whom he had chosen to exclude from this series. One excluded composer was Sibelius. Dad explained, "He was at the premiere of Stravinsky's Firebird, and he booed! I can never forgive him for that." Then just as I was chuckling to myself about how ridiculous it is not to forgive something that happened over a century ago to people we don't even know, he chilled me with these words: "I don't believe in forgiveness, you know."
Because of the history of rejections and exclusions in our family, the most recent and painful involving Dad's rejection of my son, his words cut me to the quick. I left there in grief for the ruined relationships and hurtful unforgiveness, and unapproachability of my father, and along with much of my family, carried the wound for a long time. I endeavored finally to do what he could not, forgiving him and praying continually for him.
This last Father's Day we were in the same cafe again, at the same table, in fact. My father's wife took me aside to share her disappointment in how my sister and I had dishonored our father by neglecting him in years past on Father's Day. I saw that she was right. Going back to the table I felt tears welling up, and had a quick discussion with myself as the scene blurred before me. I had a choice. I could either pull myself together and write my father a letter some time later, or I could be a blubbering idiot, break down in tears right here and now and get it over with. The decision was simple, once I put my pride aside.
I let it all out right then, tears, spittle, remorse and all, and asked my father for his forgiveness for dishonoring him on Father's Days past, and while I was at it, for some other not so nice stuff I'd done over the years. What was the answer from the man who didn't believe in forgiveness? "Of course I forgive you!"
That table in that cafe is a landmark for me, and that was a landmark moment, (which I immediately sullied by snapping at my step mother when she seemed to want me to stop my confession, but there again I went on to ask for her forgiveness and received it.) The Lord did a beautiful work there, and if these were the bible days I'd put a rock there and rename the place Forgiveness Happened Here.
Oh, where would we be without our forgiveness? In this season of the High Holy Days I treasure the forgiveness I received from my earthly father and I pray for myself that I will always be as eager to forgive others as I am to be forgiven. Even more precious is the forgiveness offered by God through the sacrifice of His Son, the Lamb of God, which we need only reach out and ask for to receive all its blessings. Let us not forget that the Lord wants us to be like Himself, and that means showing forgiveness, even seventy times seven times.
Labels: forgive, forgiveness
Loretta called me a few weeks ago at 8am and told me that she had a ticket for me to go to Israel with a group of prayer warriors. I was shocked and excited at the opportunity, but I was unable to accept it. This is because I made a vow to God and to the world that I would not go to Israel without my husband. My thinking when I made the vow was that I don't want our lives in worship and service to God to be divisive, and because it is my desire to go with him. Labels: God's will, vows
That our bodies are just an approximation of the heavenly reality of Jesus' body, God's body, that we were made in His likeness, but of flesh rather than spirit, the best that could be concocted using the materials at hand. (yet still loved by our Maker, the clay having been lovingly formed by the potter.)
Albert is a soldier in the army of the Lord. He is ready for battle. He is unencumbered, so that if the Lord needs him to move out, he is ready to go. He describes himself like Gideon's soldiers who stood lapping their water from their hands instead of kneeling down to drink, that they might stay alert and ready. He shows me how this looks, with his hand cupped below his mouth as he scans the landscape for danger. Few possessions to tie him down, finances simple and in order, the minimizing of dependence on the ways of this world. He talked a lot, I listened. I admired, and I also wondered about myself.Labels: God's will

So much prayer, fasting, submission to the will of God, practice of faith, as well as fretting, worry and doubt in the less admirable moments, went into the days and weeks leading up to Raechel's wedding.Labels: El Shaddai, God, provision
"Then he said, 'When I was with you before, I told you that everything written about me by Moses and the prophets and in the Psalms must all come true.'"1. | Yeshua would be a descendant of David. | 104 (1 in 10,000) |
| 2. | Yeshua would be born in Bethlehem. | 105 (1 in 100,000) |
| 3. | Yeshua would be a miracle worker. | 105 (1 in 100,000) |
| 4. | Yeshua would present Himself as King riding on a donkey. | 106 (1 in 1,000,000) |
| 5. | Yeshua would be betrayed by a friend for 30 pieces of silver. | 106 (1 in 1,000,000) |
| 6. | Yeshua would be crucified. | 106 (1 in 1,000,000) |
| 7 | Yeshua would first present Himself as King 173,880 days from the decree of Artaxerxes to rebuild Jerusalem.����� | 106 (1 in 1,000,000) |
| | Total Probability (without God) | 1038 (1 in a 100 billion, billion, billion, billion) |
At lunch with my mother, she again asks the question, the thorn that won't be removed, the stumbling block, the pet unanswerable: Where was God during the holocaust?
Hi Michelle,
As soon as I invited Jesus to enter my heart I recognized that He had been knocking at the door of my heart for a long long time. I didn't know what that knocking was until I responded to it, then I realized that the knocking was a warm, familiar old friend. Jesus, Savior, standing like a stranger in the night, out in the rain - as if my window were so important that anyone would want to stand under it - serenading me with his gentle, unperturbed, patient silence, simply waiting for me to be ready.Labels: faith, God, Holy Spirit, Jesus, worship
Jesus was washing his disciples' feet when Peter in his enthusiasm suggested that Jesus wash not just his feet but his hands and head as well. Jesus replied, "A person who has had a bath needs only to wash his feet; his whole body is clean. And you are clean, though not every one of you." (John 13:10)
The enemy of Life is reveling in the current discussion of the tomb of Christ that was "discovered" by film director James Cameron. Jerry and I were driving home last night listening to a radio host who was speaking in tones of conciliation and peace, but this man's words were an assault on the Truth of the Kingdom of God. "Wouldn't it be a good thing to know that Jesus didn't resurrect as a body, that he really was just a good man, and human like us?" Wouldn't it bring us closer to Jesus to know that he had a wife and child?"Labels: devil, enemy of God, Jesus
When I encountered the hymn, Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing, I was very touched by it and added it to my repertoire. But as I examined the words, I found myself troubled to be singing lyrics that confessed to being prone to wander from God. 


