It is difficult to define Hiraeth, but to me it means the consciousness of man being out of his home area and that which is dear to him. That is why it can be felt even among a host of peoples amidst nature's beauty. . . like a Christian yearning for Heaven. . . D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

Entries from May 1, 2007 - June 1, 2007

This is Fun!

I left a comment this morning  telling my friend, "Lawyerchick" who blogs at Musings from a Park Bench my favorite all time "slacker song."  Now, with the wonderful technology called "YouTube" not only can you go and  hear my favorite "slacker song" but you can see it, too!

So, if you want need a grin, this is for you! 

 (and for anyone who wants to know, yes, this song is on my iTunes!)

Posted on Thursday, May 31, 2007 at 05:01PM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments2 Comments

May Yardscapes

Posted on Thursday, May 31, 2007 at 10:19AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in , , , | Comments6 Comments

Fool Me Once. . .

"The burned hand teaches best.  After that the advice about fire goes to the heart."

Gandalf, The Two Towers 

I have now been sufficiently burned. . . 

Posted on Thursday, May 31, 2007 at 10:11AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments9 Comments

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 31
"Be of Good Cheer"

In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world. (John 16:33)

My Lord's words are true as to the tribulation. I have my share of it beyond all doubt. The flail is not hung up out of the way, nor can I hope that it will be laid aside so long as I lie upon the threshing floor.  How can I look to be at home in the enemy's country, joyful while in exile, or comfortable in a wilderness? This is not my rest. This is the place of the furnace, and the forge, and the hammer. My experience tallies with my Lord's words.

I note how He bids me "be of good cheer." Alas! I am far too apt to be downcast. My spirit soon sinks when I am sorely tried. But I must not give way to this feeling. When my Lord bids me cheer up I must not dare to be cast down.

What is the argument which He uses to encourage me? Why, it is His own victory. He says, "I have overcome the world." His battle was much more severe than mine. I have not yet resisted unto blood. Why do I despair of overcoming? See, my soul, the enemy has been once overcome. I fight with a beaten foe. O world, Jesus has already vanquished thee; and in me, by His grace, He will overcome thee again. Therefore am I of good cheer and sing unto my conquering Lord.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Thursday, May 31, 2007 at 05:40AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments1 Comment

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 30
Holy Foresight

Nevertheless I say unto you, Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of Heaven. (Matthew 26:64)

Ah, Lord, Thou wast in Thy lowest state when before Thy persecutors Thou wast made to stand like a criminal! Yet the eyes of Thy faith could see beyond Thy present humiliation into Thy future glory. What words are these, "Nevertheless-hereafter!" I would imitate Thy holy foresight, and in the midst of poverty, or sickness, or slander, I also would say, "Nevertheless-hereafter." Instead of weakness, Thou hast all power; instead of shame, all glory; instead of derision, all worship, Thy cross has not dimmed the splendor of Thy crown, neither has the spittle marred the beauty of Thy face. Say, rather, Thou are the more exalted and honored because of Thy sufferings.

So, Lord, I also would take courage from the "hereafter." I would forget the present tribulation in the future triumph. Help thou me by directing me into Thy Father's love and into Thine own patience, so that when I am derided for Thy name I may not be staggered but think more and more of the hereafter, and, therefore, all the less of today. I shall be with Thee soon and behold Thy glory. Wherefore, I am not ashamed but say in my inmost soul, "Nevertheless-hereafter."

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Wednesday, May 30, 2007 at 07:14AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments1 Comment

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 29
Fishers Follow Him

And Jesus said unto them, Come ye after me, and I will make you to become fishers of men. (Mark 1:17)

Only by coming after Jesus can we obtain our heart's desire and be really useful to our fellow men. Oh, how we long to be successful fishers for Jesus! We would sacrifice our lives to win souls. But we are tempted to try methods which Jesus would never have tried. Shall we yield to this suggestion of the enemy? If so, we may splash the water, but we shall never take the fish. We must follow after Jesus if we would succeed. Sensational methods, entertainment, and so forth—are these coming after Jesus? Can we imagine the Lord Jesus drawing a congregation by such means as are now commonly used? What is the result of such expedients? The result is nothing which Jesus will count up at the last great day.

We must keep to our preaching as our Master did, for by this means souls are saved. We must preach our Lord's doctrine and proclaim a full and free gospel, for this is the net in which souls are taken, We must preach with His gentleness, boldness, and love, for this is the secret of success with human hearts. We must work under divine anointing, depending upon the sacred Spirit. Thus, coming after Jesus, and not running before Him, not aside from Him, we shall be fishers of men.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Tuesday, May 29, 2007 at 06:25AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments2 Comments

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 28
Remind God of His Promise

And thou saidst, I will surely do thee good. (Genesis 32:12)

This is the sure way of prevailing with the Lord in prayer. We may humbly remind Him of what He has said. Our faithful God will never run back from His word, nor will He leave it unfulfilled; yet He loves to be enquired of by His people and put in mind of His promise. This is refreshing to their memories, reviving to their faith, and renewing to their hope. God's Word is given, not for His sake, but for ours. His purposes are settled, and He needs nothing to bind Him to His design of doing His people good; but He gives the promise for our strengthening and comfort. Hence He wishes us to plead it and say to Him, "Thou saidst."

"I will surely do thee good" is just the essence of all the Lord's gracious sayings, Lay a special stress on the word surely. He will do us good, real good, tasting good, only good, every good. He will make us good, and this is to do us good in the very highest degree. He will treat us as He does his saints while we are here, and that is good. He will soon take us to be with Jesus and all His chosen, and that is supremely good. With this promise in our hearts we need not fear angry Esau or anyone else. If the Lord will do us good, who can do us hurt?

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Monday, May 28, 2007 at 07:50AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Sunday Hymn: Conflicting Feelings

Conflicting Feelings

Strange and mysterious is my life.
What opposites I feel within!
A stable peace, a constant strife;
The rule of grace, the power of sin:
Too often I am captive led,
Yet daily triumph in my Head,
Yet daily triumph in my Head.

I prize the privilege of prayer,
But oh! what backwardness to pray!
Though on the Lord I cast my care,
I feel its burden every day;
I seek His will in all I do,
Yet find my own is working too,
Yet find my own is working too.

I call the promises my own,
And prize them more than mines of gold;
Yet though their sweetness I have known,
They leave me unimpressed and cold
One hour upon the truth I feed,
The next I know not what I read,
The next I know not what I read.

I love the holy day of rest,
When Jesus meets His gathered saints;
Sweet day, of all the week the best!
For its return my spirit pants:
Yet often, through my unbelief,
It proves a day of guilt and grief,
It proves a day of guilt and grief.

While on my Savior I rely,
I know my foes shall lose their aim,
And therefore dare their power defy,
Assured of conquest through His Name,
But soon my confidence is slain,
And all my fears return again,
And all my fears return again.

Thus different powers within me strive,
And grace and sin by turns prevail;
I grieve, rejoice, decline, revive,
And victory hangs in doubtful scale:
But Jesus has His promise passed,
That grace shall overcome at last,
That grace shall overcome at last.

John Newton, 1779
 
1 Corinthians 10:13  There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.
Posted on Sunday, May 27, 2007 at 09:06AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in , , | Comments3 Comments

Quote of the Week:  Augustine

Great You are, O lord, and greatly to be praised; great is Your power, and Your wisdom is infinite. You would we praise without ceasing. You call us to delight in Your praise, for You have made us for Yourself, and our hearts find not rest until we rest in You; to whom with the Father and the Holy Spirit all glory, praise, and honor be ascribed, both now and forevermore. Amen.

Saint Augustine

Posted on Sunday, May 27, 2007 at 06:05AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 27
As the Life—So the Fruit

For if these thing be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 1:8)

If we desire to glorify our Lord by fruitfulness, we must have certain things within us; for nothing can come out of us which is not first of all within us. We must begin with faith, which is the groundwork of all the virtues; and then diligently add to it virtue, knowledge, temperance, and patience. With these we must have godliness and brotherly love. All these put together will most assuredly cause us to produce, as our life fruit, the clusters of usefulness, and we shall not be mere idle knowers but real doers of the Word. These holy things must not only be in us, but abound, or we shall be barren. Fruit is the overflow of life, and we must be full before we can flow over.

We have noticed men of considerable parts and opportunities who have never succeeded in doing real good in the conversion of souls; and after close observation we have concluded that they lacked certain graces which are absolutely essential to fruit bearing. For real usefulness, graces are better than gifts. As the man is, so is his work. If we would do better, we must be better. Let the text be a gentle hint to unfruitful professors and to myself also.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Sunday, May 27, 2007 at 06:00AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments1 Comment

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 26
Commonest Things Blessed

Ye shall serve the Lord your God, and he shall bless thy bread, and thy water. (Exodus 23:25)

What a promise is this! To serve God is in itself a high delight. But what an added privilege to have the blessing of the Lord resting upon us in all things! Our commonest things become blessed when we ourselves are consecrated to the Lord. Our Lord Jesus took bread and blessed it; behold, we also eat of blessed bread. Jesus blessed water and made it wine: the water which we drink is far better to us than any of the wine with which men make merry; every drop has a benediction in it. The divine blessing is on the man of God in everything, and it shall abide with him at every time.

What if we have only bread and water! Yet it is blessed bread and water. Bread and water we shall have. That is implied, for it must be there for God to bless it. "Thy bread shall be given thee, and thy waters shall be sure." With God at our table, we not only ask a blessing, but we have one. It is not only at the altar but at the table that He blesses us. He serves those well who serve Him well. This table blessing is not of debt but of grace. Indeed, there is a trebled grace; He grants us grace to serve Him, by His grace feeds us with bread, and then in His grace blesses it.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Saturday, May 26, 2007 at 07:05AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt:  Colorful

Posted on Friday, May 25, 2007 at 08:22PM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth | Comments2 Comments

Monergism Book Sale

Memorial Day Book Sale at Monergism.  Check it out.

 So very sad I am that I've already used up my book budget for this month.  .  .do you think a Monergism sale merits dipping into the emergency fund?  I do.

 

Posted on Friday, May 25, 2007 at 01:02PM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments5 Comments

Poetry Friday

ATMOSPHERE

Let me live beneath the sky
Where the breezes blow,
See the glory from on high,
See and feel and know.

Mind and body are at rest,
Balmy is the air;
All my nature is the guest,
Of the freshness there.

Bird and tree and flowing brook
Deferential are;
Hills the valley overlook,
Also moon and star.

Clouds like curtains may be drawn,
Storms in fury break;
Yet there comes a brighter dawn
Nothing less could make. 

Nature has her atmosphere,
You may have one, too.
Charged with Christian life and cheer,--
Do men say you do? 

Rev. Lawrence Keister
The Shining Pathway 

Posted on Friday, May 25, 2007 at 07:19AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in , , | Comments4 Comments

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 25
God's Treasury

The Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure. (Deuteronomy 28:12)

This refers first to the rain. The Lord will give this in its season. Rain is the emblem of all those celestial refreshings which the Lord is ready to bestow upon His people. Oh, for a copious shower to refresh the Lord's heritage!

We seem to think that God's treasury can only be opened by a great prophet like Elijah, but it is not so, for this promise is to all the faithful in Israel, and, indeed, to each one of them. O believing friend, "the Lord shall open unto thee his good treasure." Thou, too, mayest see heaven opened and thrust in thy hand and take out thy portion, yea, and a portion for all thy brethren round about thee. Ask what thou wilt, and thou shalt not be denied if thou abidest in Christ and His words abide in thee.

As yet thou has not known all thy Lord's treasures, but He shall open them up to thine understanding. Certainly thou hast not yet enjoyed the fullness of His covenant riches, but He will direct thine heart into His love and reveal Jesus in thee. Only the Lord Himself can do this for thee; but here is His promise, and if thou wilt hearken diligently unto His voice and obey His will, His riches in glory by Christ Jesus shall be thine.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Friday, May 25, 2007 at 07:04AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Another Lazy Post

What Your Favorite Color Green Says About You:
Balanced --- Relaxed --- Flexible
Compassionate --- Philosophical --- Humble
Loyal --- Inventive --- Unique
Posted on Thursday, May 24, 2007 at 08:29AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | Comments5 Comments

Random Music Meme

I'm behind on two memes already (I haven't forgotten, really I haven't, I just haven't taken the time because I know it's going to take some time to do them right!) .  Even so, I'm going to do this one because it's very, very easy.

 Rebecca started a
"put-your-iPod-on-shuffle-and-confess-publically-what-comes-up" meme.  I don't have an iPod, but I do have iTunes on my computer, so I took the lazy way out.  I put iTunes on shuffle and then took a screen shot of the songs that came up.  I didn't even listen to them--how lazy is that?

 itunes%20meme.JPG 

Posted on Thursday, May 24, 2007 at 07:24AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in , | Comments9 Comments

Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 24
One a Majority!

One man of you shall chase a thousand: for the Lord your God, he it is that fighteth for you, as he hath promised you. (Joshua 23:10)

Why count heads? One man with God is a majority though there be a thousand on the other side. Sometimes our helpers may be too many for God to work with them, as was the case with Gideon, who could do nothing till he had increased his forces by thinning out their numbers. But the Lord's hosts are never too few. When God would found a nation, He called Abram alone and blessed him. When He would vanquish proud Pharaoh, He used no armies, but only Moses and Aaron. The "one-man ministry," as certain wise men call it, has been far more used of the Lord than trained bands with their officers. Did all the Israelites together slay so many as Samson alone? Saul and his hosts slew their thousands but David his ten thousands.

The Lord can give the enemy long odds and yet vanquish him. If we have faith, we have God with us, and what are multitudes of men? One shepherd's dog can drive before him a flock of sheep. If the Lord sent thee, O my brother, His strength will accomplish His divine purpose. Wherefore, rely on the promise, and be very courageous.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Posted on Thursday, May 24, 2007 at 06:41AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Check Book of the Bank of Faith

CHS.JPGMay 23
Full Reliance on God

For he shall deliver the needy when he crieth; the poor also, and him that hath no helper. (Psalm 72:12)

The needy cries; what else can he do? His cry is heard of God; what else need he do? Let the needy reader take to crying at once, for this will be his wisdom. Do not cry in the ears of friends, for even if they can help you it is only because the Lord enables them. The nearest way is to go straight to God and let your cry come up before Him. Straightforward makes the best runner: run to the Lord and not to secondary causes.

"Alas!" you cry, "I have no friend or helper." So much the better; you can rely upon God in both capacities-as without supplies and without helpers. Make your double need your double plea. Even for temporal mercies you may wait upon God, for He careth for His children in these temporary concerns. As for spiritual necessities, which are the heaviest of all, the Lord will hear your cry and will deliver you and supply you.

O poor friend, try your rich God. O helpless one, lean on His help. He has never failed me, and I am sure He will never fail you. Come as a beggar, and God will not refuse you help. Come with no plea but His grace. Jesus is King; will He let you perish of wants What! Did you forget this?

Charles Haddon Spurgeon 

Posted on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 at 07:37AM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in | CommentsPost a Comment

Recipe: Grandma's Citrus Chiffon Pie

When I was home visiting my mother over Mother's Day, we sat around the kitchen table and sorted and sifted through the collected recipes of many years.  It was great fun looking through the old recipes with my mother.  I saw recipes written in my sister's and my childish handwriting.  There were recipes from relatives long dead, half forgotten neighbors, aunts and cousins.

930302-832640-thumbnail.jpgThe recipe I am sharing with you is from my Grandma Smith.  I've taken care to transcribe the recipe exactly the way she wrote it down.  I don't remember ever tasting this recipe of my grandmother's, but both my mother and my Aunt Bonnie remember it well.   It seems as though this pie has an uncooked meringue--not a good idea in this day and age.  Perhaps they didn't worry so much about salmonella poisoning back in the late 50's or early 60's when this recipe was popular.  Either that, or she left that part out.  Regardless, I will be topping mine with whipped cream and not meringue.
 
930302-832635-thumbnail.jpg

 Click to Enlarge

Citrus Chiffon Pie
Mildred Smith, Norco, California
Late 1950's, early 1960's

1 envelope of (1 tab) unflavored gelatin
1/2 c. sugar
dash salt
4 egg yolks
1/2 c. orange juice
1/3 c. lemon juice
1/4 c. water
1/2 tsp. grated orange peel
1/4 tsp. grated lemon peel

4 egg whites
1/3 c. sugar
1 baked 9 in pastry shell

in saucepan, thoroughly mix together gelatin the 1/2 c, sugar and the salt.  Beat together egg yolks orange juice lemon juice and water stir into gelatin mixture.  Cook & stir over med. heat just until mixture comes to boiling.  remove from heat stir in orange & lemon peel.  chill stirring occasionally till mixture mounds slightly when spooned.  Beat egg whites till soft peaks form gradually add the 1/3 cup sugar beating to stiff peaks.  Pile into pastry shell  Chill until firm  Trim with dollops of whipped cream and a sprinkle of shredded orange peel.

Posted on Tuesday, May 22, 2007 at 06:55PM by Registered CommenterKim from Hiraeth in , | Comments5 Comments
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