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Friday, December 30, 2011

Popular Posts: Behold the Lamb


This week I am reposting some of the most viewed posts from the last several months.  Many of you loved this information about the birth of Jesus as much as I did!




We are over half way through our 25 Days of Christmas series!  Most of it has gone according to the plan I had put together with a few curve balls thrown in.  Today is one of those curve balls.  Last week at the women's Bible Study I attend through my church, we were asked to bring something to share in regards to the Christmas season.  My new friend Brittany shared with us from a post she had put up on her blog several years ago.  I was BLOWN away by this information.  Oh, how marvelous and thorough and complete the mind and plan of God is!

Behold the Lamb- Brittany Bonner

The prophet Micah foretold the birthplace for the coming Messiah seven hundred years before the birth of Jesus Christ. Micah said that the Messiah would be born in the little insignificant village near Jerusalem called Bethlehem. The actual location of the birthplace of Jesus Christ is also found in the prophecy of Micah, the location was Migdal Eder which in Hebrew is the “tower of the flock”.

“And you, O tower of the flock, hill of the daughter of Zion, to you shall it come, the former dominion shall come, the kingdom of the daughter of Jerusalem.” Micah 4:8 “But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who are little to be among the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose origin is from of old, from ancient days.” Micah 5:2

Migdal Eder, the tower of the flock mentioned in Micah 4:8, is the watchtower where the priestly shepherds would watch over their flocks in the shepherd's fields there at Bethlehem.

This tower is where they would watch over their flock from the second story and where they birthed the newborn lambs in the lower portion of the two story tower there in the fields of Bethlehem. In the lower portion of this watchtower that the birthing of the lambs would take place, ewes were brought to give birth to the lambs. In this shelter the priests would bring in the ewes which were about to lamb for protection.

The shepherds would wrap the newborn lambs in swaddling clothes to protect the body of the lambs, keeping the new lambs without spot or blemish, they would then be laid in a manger until they had calmed down.

These were not just any flock and herd.

Migdal Eder was the watchtower that guarded the Temple flocks that were being raised to serve as sacrificial animals in the Temple. The shepherds who kept them were men who were specifically trained for this royal task. They were educated in what an animal, that was to be sacrificed, had to be and it was their job to make sure that none of the animals were hurt, damaged, or blemished.” These special lambs came from a unique flock which were designated for sacrifice at the temple in Jerusalem.

These lambs would be offered as sacrifice at the Temple just four miles away in Jerusalem.

With the establishment of Temple worship in Jerusalem, the fields outside of Bethlehem became the place where this special group of shepherds raised the lambs that were sacrificed in the Temple. Being themselves under special Rabbinical care, they would strictly maintain a ceremonially clean stable for a birthing place. The Tower of the Flock was used for birthing ewes, and the surround fields were where these shepherds grazed their flocks. These shepherds customarily kept their flocks outdoors twenty-four hours a day every day of the year, but brought the ewes in to deliver their lambs where they could be carefully cared for.

It was to this place that Joseph took Mary. It was in this special stable at “Migdal Eder” that Christ was born!

The "swaddling clothes" that wrapped the lambs was also used to wrap the Lord Jesus.

These priestly shepherds in their fields near Bethlehem on that Christmas Eve knew where to go to find the newborn Messiah, Jesus Christ. He would be found where the angel had told them, wrapped in swaddling clothes lying in a manger in the lower floor of the tower of the flock, Migdal Eder

Luke 2:8-18 records that there were shepherds in the fields keeping watch over their sheep by night.

“And in that region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night … And the angel said to them, ‘Be not afraid: for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.’” Luke 2:8,10,11

These shepherds were none other but the shepherds from “Migdal Eder”. The angels told the shepherds that they would find the Babe wrapped in "swaddling clothes and lying in a manger." There was no need for the angels to give these shepherds directions to the birth place because they already knew. These were the men who raised sacrificial lambs that were sacrificed in the Temple. When the angelic announcement came, they knew exactly where to go, as Luke 2 indicates, for the sign of a manger could only mean their manger at the tower of the flock!

Migdal Eder at Bethlehem is the perfect place for Christ to be born. He was born in the very birthplace where tens of thousands of lambs, which had been sacrificed to prefigure Him, were born. God promised it, pictured it and performed it at Migdal Eder.

It all fits together, for that's the place the place where sacrificial lambs were born!

The Lamb born at Migdal Eder was the Lamb to be sacrificed to take away the sin of the world.

You see our Lord Jesus was born in Bethlehem where all sacrificial lambs were born, and our Lord Jesus died in Jerusalem where all sacrificial lambs were killed.

John the Baptist proclaimed of Jesus,

"Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world." John 1:29

Jesus is presented in the Bible as being “in type” as a sacrificial lamb. It was not by chance but by choice that Christ identified His death with the time of the observance of the Passover.

Peter spoke of our redemption as wrought by the

"Precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot" 1 Pet. 1:19

and Paul told us that

"Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us" 1 Cor. 5:7

Even the first fulfilled type by which Christ is to be revealed in Heaven is as the Lamb (Rev. 5:6-13). The baby grew up! He grew into a man to fulfill the plan for our salvation. He grew up to be the advocate, the intercessor, the "one mediator between man and God, the man Christ Jesus." (1 John 2:1, Heb 7:25, 1 Tim 2:5) He grew up so that He could die, thereby offering a perfect, sinless life in sacrifice for our sins. He grew up to be raised from the dead, conquering death and instilling a living hope of eternal life in all who come to Him. He grew up so that he might become “the source of eternal salvation." (Heb 5:9)

I'm glad that Jesus was born. But I rejoice even more in the life He lived, the death He died, and the accomplishment of His resurrection! While the world remembers a baby in a feeding trough, let our remembrance of His death help us to look to the Man, the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ throughout the year.

Behold, the Lamb.

For Brittany's complete sources, see this link.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Popular Posts: Lessons In the Wait - Marriage

This week I am featuring some of the most popular posts from the last few months.







The bride’s dress was amazing.  The groom looked over the moon in love. The vows were heartfelt.  The flowers were gorgeous.  The cake was splendid sugary goodness. It was a beautiful wedding, but IT is inevitable.  What is IT?  IT is the dreaded bouquet toss.  The time when the relationship status of single girls is displayed for all to see like the bright lights of Vegas.  I know that scene all too well and totally boycotted the tradition at my own wedding!  Call me a party pooper, but I had been there, done that, one too many times!  It is one of many times when you are face to face with the fact that you are single but your heart longs to be married.  I was 24 (almost 25) when I married Hal.  The years between college and my marriage were refining years for me.  God taught me a lot about myself and even more about who He is.  I had intended to also give my responses to the questions below, but when I read the responses from Sarah, I decided you didn’t need to hear from me today.  
Sarah and her husband, Jay, live outside of Washington, DC where Jay works as a Naval officer currently stationed at the Pentagon.  She is a Razorback loving girl married to an Oklahoma Sooner.
Jay and Sarah
What was greatest lesson God taught you in The Wait?

There are many things that the Lord taught me while I was single and waiting!  I think the one that stands out most in my memory was learning about the character of God, specifically His goodness.  It was really a matter of Him asking me, "Do you believe that I am who I say that I am?  Do you believe that I am good, and all that I do is good?"  I learned from scripture that God is good and it is impossible for Him to be otherwise.  Resting in the truth of God's Word made it possible for me to trust God with the desires of my heart.  


What do you wish you had known now that you are married?

1.  How to cook, grocery shop, and menu plan
I survived off of Lean Cuisine pepperoni pizzas, Chick-fil-a, and Sunday night dinners with my family for most of my single life.  However, my microwaving and drive-thru skills have yet to impress my husband.  It's hard to cook for just one person, but it would have helped my first year of marriage if I'd had at least a little experience.

2.  How to practice hospitality
I tend toward introversion, but I married the most personable, friendly, and social man you will ever meet.  Jay loves to host his friends, neighbors, and colleagues.  I've learned that hospitality is a skill that requires some preparation and work, but is always worth it.  I wish I'd practiced hospitality more when I was single - even just hosting girlfriends for coffee and dessert. It would have been a great practice for helping my husband in this way now.
3.  God's design for marriage
Reading more about God's design for the husband and wife in marriage would have been a great blessing now as I'm learning (and will continue to learn!).   Lindsay has posted about The Excellent Wife by Martha Peace, and we have said in conversation many times, "I wish I had known this before I was married!!"   We prepare for four years or more in waiting to begin a career - how much more should we prepare for marriage while we wait?  
  
What one scripture did you cling to?

I clung to a lot of verses about God's goodness!  Here are a few:
  • No good thing does He withhold from those who walk uprightly.  Psalm 84:11
  • You are good and do good.  Psalm 119:68
  • And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose...to be conformed to the image of His Son...  Romans 8:28-29
  
The Lord used these verses, among others, to convince me of His goodness in the midst of my waiting.  Any bitterness or fear or loneliness that crept into my heart was quickly rebuked with the truth of God's character - and His good intentions towards me. 

How did God use your single time to change you?

If I start counting at 22 - because honestly, my dream was to be married right out of college - God gave me seven years of waiting.  I hope that from His perspective, I was refined.  During that time I learned about contentment in the Lord alone.  I also learned to be vulnerable before the Lord in prayer.  Sadly, I don't remember asking the Lord for a husband until I was 27.   It was almost as if I was afraid to ask Him - in case He said no.   I finally had the realization that asking God for something as good and godly as marriage (after all, marriage was His idea!), was not wrong.   In fact, it was probably sinful for me NOT to acknowledge Him in my desire for marriage.  Once I began intentionally petitioning the Lord for a husband, there was a sense of security that guarded my heart.  No longer was my heart gripped with fear  when thoughts of being single flooded my mind;  instead, by God's grace, I could meditate on the truth that God will give me what is good, according to His glory.  
What other encouragement or resources would you give to single women desiring marriage?

I read a few books that were immensely helpful in shaping my thoughts about both singleness and marriage.  The following titles are pretty funny (the kind you might rather purchase on Amazon than buy at the bookstore, ha).  BUT the biblical wisdom presented is really helpful.  I highly recommend them both.
1.  Did I Kiss Marriage Goodbye?:  Trusting God with a Hope Deferred by Carolyn McCulley
2.  Get Married: What Women Can Do to Help It Happen by Candice Watters

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Popular Posts: What I Didn't Know About the Pill


This week I am featuring some of the most popular posts from the last few months.  I was BLOWN away by your response to this post.  So many of you were in the same place I was ... clueless!  Others were a huge encouragement in my journey!

As I read the words in front of me, I felt myself getting sick at my stomach. How could I not have known this? Why didn’t anyone ever tell me? Could this have happened to me? My mind was racing. I picked up the phone and called Hal. I read him the words, and he said: “Well, I guess that makes our decision.”
We had been talking and praying about what to do about/for birth control for several months. During my pregnancy with B, I had read an article online from a source I trust that had begun my questions about whether or not I should be taking a birth control pill. Since I was pregnant at that time, we didn’t have to make the decision right away. At my 6-week post-partum check up, my doctor and I discussed the different options that were available to me since I was nursing. She wrote me a prescription for a pill that I would be able to take while I was nursing. After the appointment, I filled the prescription and, for probably the first time ever, I read the drug information the pharmacy gives you when you fill a prescription. 
“This medication is used to prevent pregnancy. It is often referred to as the “mini-pill” because it does not contain any estrogen.” Norethindrone (a form of progestin) is a hormone that prevents pregnancy by changing the womb and cervical mucus to make it more difficult for the egg to meet sperm (fertilization) or for the fertilized egg to attach to the wall of the womb (implantation). Regular use of this pill prevents the release of an egg (ovulation) in about half of the women who use it. While the “mini-pill” is more effective than certain other methods of birth control (e.g. condoms, cervical cap, diaphragm), it is less effective than estrogen/progestin birth control because it does not consistently prevent ovulation.”
Those words shocked, sickened, and saddened me all at the same time. I had always just assumed that the pill prevented ovulation 100% of the time. Until reading the article mentioned above, it never even crossed my mind that it was possible for ovulation, fertilization, and conception to occur, but implantation to be prevented due to the effects of the hormones in the birth control pill. I just naively took the pills and believed that it was preventing ovulation, but as I read the drug pamphlet, I was completely aware of how this birth control pill worked.
I won’t ever know if the pills I took for years prevented ovulation or if they prevented implantation. There is nothing I can do about a decision I made in the past. I can only confess the sin before the LORD and ask for His forgiveness, and then I have to leave it there. In God’s infinite mercy, He forgives the sin a believer confesses before Him. I don’t believe I will be held accountable for something that I didn’t know, but that once I have the knowledge I can’t continue on in the same behavior. Now that I know how the pill works, I am responsible for this knowledge.
Those of you who have been reading “Rubies and Rewards” know that one of the reasons I started this blog is to encourage women in their pursuit of becoming the kind of woman that God desires us to be and that He talks about in His Word. I am not writing this to condemn or judge anyone. I am writing this because I didn’t know these facts, and maybe you don’t either. Take this information, research it further, talk with your doctor, and pray about it. I am not a medical doctor, and I don’t pretend to be. I have been told that some pills work differently than others. Research the pill you take. 
For me, it was written in black and white in front of me. I also understand that in some people’s eyes this is a gray area. But for Hal and I, this was not a gray area. We felt that if conception occurred and that if something I was taking (birth control pill) purposely prevented the pregnancy from progressing, then we were not comfortable with that option or any hormonal birth control that couldn’t 100% guarantee us that ovulation wouldn’t occur.
13 For you created my inmost being; 
   you knit me together in my mother’s womb. 
14 I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; 
   your works are wonderful, 
   I know that full well. 
15 My frame was not hidden from you 
   when I was made in the secret place, 
   when I was woven together in the depths of the earth. 
16 Your eyes saw my unformed body; 
   all the days ordained for me were written in your book 
   before one of them came to be. 
17 How precious to me are your thoughts, God! 
   How vast is the sum of them!
          Psalm 139:13-17

Monday, December 26, 2011

Can You Help R&R?

December 26th ... we made it!  I pray that each of you had a wonderful holiday weekend with your family and were able to spend time worshipping the Savior!  We had a great weekend, but I am very much looking forward to this week as well!  Hal is off until after the new year ... yippee!  We will be enjoying some family time here in Mississippi and then heading to Arkansas mid-week.  This week I am going to feature several of the posts that have received the most hits since I started the blog in August.


I will be letting you know about a few changes to Rubies and Rewards after the first of the year.  I want each of you to know what an encouragement you have been to me on this journey!  On the days when I feel that I am just too tired to blog, I remember your emails or comments about how you have been challenged or encouraged through reading Rubies and Rewards and then I am challenged and encouraged to keep going!  As a treat for helping me stay motivated, I will be giving away some super yummy candy from Bauer's candy. I received some of this as a gift and let me just say I was hooked!  Marshmallow and carmel may sound like a weird combination, but oh my word, is it fabulous!  How can you win this yummy candy?  When Rubies and Rewards reaches 125 fans on the Facebook page, I will select a winner from the Facebook Fans!  So ... share R&R with your friends and ask them to become a fan!


Friday, December 23, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Merry Christmas


Have you stopped to read the scriptural account of the birth of Jesus today?
Luke 2
The Birth of Jesus

 1 In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. 2 (This was the first census that took place while[a] Quirinius was governor of Syria.) 3 And everyone went to their own town to register.
 4 So Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to Bethlehem the town of David, because he belonged to the house and line of David. 5 He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him and was expecting a child. 6 While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, 7 and she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no guest room available for them.
 8 And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night. 9 An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. 10 But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. 11 Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord. 12 This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.”
 13 Suddenly a great company of the heavenly host appeared with the angel, praising God and saying,
 14 “Glory to God in the highest heaven, 


   and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.”

 15 When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let’s go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.”
 16 So they hurried off and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby, who was lying in the manger. 17 When they had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child, 18 and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them. 19 But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart. 20 The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things they had heard and seen, which were just as they had been told.
 21 On the eighth day, when it was time to circumcise the child, he was named Jesus, the name the angel had given him before he was conceived

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: No Stress Zone


Just for today: stop planning, stop preparing, and stop running around.  Stop ... and focus on the Savior today.  I have thought a lot this year about how tempted we are to over plan and end up stressing during the month of December.  I have resolved that I don’t want my boys to see me stress about anything having to do with our celebrations.  I want them to see the joy that this season brings.  It may mean that I have to get up earlier or stay up later to get things done, but my prayer is that this season each year for our family will be one of anticipation, joy, and celebration!


3:39 PM


Monday, December 19, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Silent Night ... Holy Night




Turn off the TV and turn up the Christmas music!  Create your own station on Pandora or put on your favorite iPod play list.  Remember this season by worshipping all day long as you listen to Christmas music that reminds us of Christ’s birth.  Chris Tomlin's Christmas album, Glory in the Highest, has been my favorite this year!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Christmas Tree Campout


Pull out the sleeping bags and maybe the air mattress and have a camp out under the lights of the Christmas tree!  Take the opportunity to name a blessing in your lives for each light on the Christmas tree!  If you have little ones like I do that probably would never go to sleep, maybe just read the Christmas story or watch a movie together under the lights. 

Saturday, December 17, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Nativity Decorating

We have lots of nativities around our house during the Christmas season.  For our family, they are a simple way of reminding us what we are celebrating.  I try to pick up a new one every year so we can keep building our collection. Some of them are within reach of little hands and others are up high. I love the idea of the Fisher Price or Playmobil sets and hope to pick one of those up after Christmas.


One of my favorites ... this set was Hal's grandmother's 
I picked this one up for $5 this year just for Drew

Don't you love the dust that decorates this table as well. :)


Friday, December 16, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Happy Birthday Jesus Party


We have been reminding big brother all month that his birthday is over and that is now time for baby Jesus’ birthday!  This year I picked up a “Happy Birthday Jesus” plate for us to use.  We are making a birthday cake with candles on Christmas Eve to celebrate Jesus’ birthday.  At the age of 3, this is something that he really can understand and will give us something to build on in the future!


Does your family have a birthday party for Jesus?  Share your party ideas by leaving a comment below!



Thursday, December 15, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Behold the Lamb



We are over half way through our 25 Days of Christmas series!  Most of it has gone according to the plan I had put together with a few curve balls thrown in.  Today is one of those curve balls.  Last week at the women's Bible Study I attend through my church, we were asked to bring something to share in regards to the Christmas season.  My new friend Brittany shared with us from a post she had put up on her blog several years ago.  I was BLOWN away by this information.  Oh, how marvelous and thorough and complete the mind and plan of God is!


Behold the Lamb- Brittany Bonner

The prophet Micah foretold the birthplace for the coming Messiah seven hundred years before the birth of Jesus Christ. Micah said that the Messiah would be born in the little insignificant village near Jerusalem called Bethlehem. The actual location of the birthplace of Jesus Christ is also found in the prophecy of Micah, the location was Migdal Eder which in Hebrew is the “tower of the flock”.

“And you, O tower of the flock, hill of the daughter of Zion, to you shall it come, the former dominion shall come, the kingdom of the daughter of Jerusalem.” Micah 4:8 “But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who are little to be among the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose origin is from of old, from ancient days.” Micah 5:2

Migdal Eder, the tower of the flock mentioned in Micah 4:8, is the watchtower where the priestly shepherds would watch over their flocks in the shepherd's fields there at Bethlehem.

This tower is where they would watch over their flock from the second story and where they birthed the newborn lambs in the lower portion of the two story tower there in the fields of Bethlehem. In the lower portion of this watchtower that the birthing of the lambs would take place, ewes were brought to give birth to the lambs. In this shelter the priests would bring in the ewes which were about to lamb for protection.

The shepherds would wrap the newborn lambs in swaddling clothes to protect the body of the lambs, keeping the new lambs without spot or blemish, they would then be laid in a manger until they had calmed down.

These were not just any flock and herd.

Migdal Eder was the watchtower that guarded the Temple flocks that were being raised to serve as sacrificial animals in the Temple. The shepherds who kept them were men who were specifically trained for this royal task. They were educated in what an animal, that was to be sacrificed, had to be and it was their job to make sure that none of the animals were hurt, damaged, or blemished.” These special lambs came from a unique flock which were designated for sacrifice at the temple in Jerusalem.

These lambs would be offered as sacrifice at the Temple just four miles away in Jerusalem.

With the establishment of Temple worship in Jerusalem, the fields outside of Bethlehem became the place where this special group of shepherds raised the lambs that were sacrificed in the Temple. Being themselves under special Rabbinical care, they would strictly maintain a ceremonially clean stable for a birthing place. The Tower of the Flock was used for birthing ewes, and the surround fields were where these shepherds grazed their flocks. These shepherds customarily kept their flocks outdoors twenty-four hours a day every day of the year, but brought the ewes in to deliver their lambs where they could be carefully cared for.

It was to this place that Joseph took Mary. It was in this special stable at “Migdal Eder” that Christ was born!

The "swaddling clothes" that wrapped the lambs was also used to wrap the Lord Jesus.

These priestly shepherds in their fields near Bethlehem on that Christmas Eve knew where to go to find the newborn Messiah, Jesus Christ. He would be found where the angel had told them, wrapped in swaddling clothes lying in a manger in the lower floor of the tower of the flock, Migdal Eder

Luke 2:8-18 records that there were shepherds in the fields keeping watch over their sheep by night.

“And in that region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night … And the angel said to them, ‘Be not afraid: for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which will come to all the people; for to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.’” Luke 2:8,10,11

These shepherds were none other but the shepherds from “Migdal Eder”. The angels told the shepherds that they would find the Babe wrapped in "swaddling clothes and lying in a manger." There was no need for the angels to give these shepherds directions to the birth place because they already knew. These were the men who raised sacrificial lambs that were sacrificed in the Temple. When the angelic announcement came, they knew exactly where to go, as Luke 2 indicates, for the sign of a manger could only mean their manger at the tower of the flock!

Migdal Eder at Bethlehem is the perfect place for Christ to be born. He was born in the very birthplace where tens of thousands of lambs, which had been sacrificed to prefigure Him, were born. God promised it, pictured it and performed it at Migdal Eder.

It all fits together, for that's the place the place where sacrificial lambs were born!

The Lamb born at Migdal Eder was the Lamb to be sacrificed to take away the sin of the world.

You see our Lord Jesus was born in Bethlehem where all sacrificial lambs were born, and our Lord Jesus died in Jerusalem where all sacrificial lambs were killed.

John the Baptist proclaimed of Jesus,

"Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world." John 1:29

Jesus is presented in the Bible as being “in type” as a sacrificial lamb. It was not by chance but by choice that Christ identified His death with the time of the observance of the Passover.

Peter spoke of our redemption as wrought by the

"Precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot" 1 Pet. 1:19

and Paul told us that

"Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us" 1 Cor. 5:7

Even the first fulfilled type by which Christ is to be revealed in Heaven is as the Lamb (Rev. 5:6-13). The baby grew up! He grew into a man to fulfill the plan for our salvation. He grew up to be the advocate, the intercessor, the "one mediator between man and God, the man Christ Jesus." (1 John 2:1, Heb 7:25, 1 Tim 2:5) He grew up so that He could die, thereby offering a perfect, sinless life in sacrifice for our sins. He grew up to be raised from the dead, conquering death and instilling a living hope of eternal life in all who come to Him. He grew up so that he might become “the source of eternal salvation." (Heb 5:9)

I'm glad that Jesus was born. But I rejoice even more in the life He lived, the death He died, and the accomplishment of His resurrection! While the world remembers a baby in a feeding trough, let our remembrance of His death help us to look to the Man, the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ throughout the year.

Behold, the Lamb.

For Brittany's complete sources, see this link.





Wednesday, December 14, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: If At First You Don't Succeed .. Try Again!

I have learned a lot in the last few weeks about what works and doesn't work for teaching toddlers ... at least my toddler!  I mentioned in this post, that we planned on using a wooden Advent calendar.  I loved the way my cute calendar looked, but of course he was way more interested in getting the candy than reading the verse and I didn't feel there was enough repetition for him to really "get" what we were teaching.  I decided to go "old school" and make a felt board.  I went online and printed out characters and headed to the teacher supply store to have them laminated where I found this wonderful bulletin board set that I decided to use instead.  I was able to get felt and Velcro at Wal-Mart and our felt board was done!  We have really loved using this board.  We walk through the scripture each night and move the pieces on and off the board.  I have gotten over the fact that it isn't the most beautiful holiday decoration.  This works for us this year and next year may be a totally different story when I have two different ages trying to learn.
Our story pieces

The felt board

Mary riding on a donkey with Joseph to Bethlehem.  Of course this doesn't look quite right, but a 3 year old doesn't know that!

D placing the shepherds

And Baby Jesus
I have also see a few other ideas in the blog world that I think are great and that we might use next year!  This Advent Book that Grace Full Mama shared builds on the passage in Luke each day so that by the end of the month, the kids have mostly memorized the scripture.  I also love Truth in the Tinsel.  Each day you read the Christmas story from the  Bible and make a craft or ornament together.


What have you used to teach your children this year?  Do you have ideas for teaching toddlers?  Older children?

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: The Christmas Story


I don’t think you can read the Christmas story enough during the Advent season!  I mentioned that we have many children’s books, but we have also read it straight from scripture.  If you have older children, read the accounts of Jesus’ birth from the different Gospels and then talk about what additional details are mentioned in each book.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

25 Days of Christmas: Gingerbread Nativity


Pinterest strikes again and we are going to make this one a Ramsey tradition!  Instead of making a gingerbread house, we made a gingerbread nativity scene. I went the easy route and we used pre-made icing and crackers instead of gingerbread.  I love this idea because you can be as creative as you want to be!

The graham crackers were small squares so we headed to the pantry and used Wasa crackers!

Tasting the sheep. :)

Daddy's donkey turned out great!

Showing momma where Joseph goes

Our creation!

Having fun with licorice