We have a "game" around here of counting how many homegrown ingredients are in a meal. This wrap, salad, and pickle meal of mine one noon included:
"Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth." Psalm 46:10
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Our Mealtime "Game"
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
Harvest Time, Bricks and Snow
The garden is nearly empty after Mom and I had a harvest day last week. (Plus Mom harvested the carrots a different day.)
Potatoes were first priority, and I had fun capturing the process, which you can watch in less than one minute HERE.
The cats appreciated blankets over the newest cement the nights of our first snows!
Saturday, October 15, 2022
September 2022 Recap Video
While my last Summer Recap post only brought us to the end of June, here is a jump ahead to the month of September. But this time in video form!
Click HERE for a brief overview of September's:
· Life on the prairie
· Garden Harvest
· Applesauce & Salsa Canning
· Cleaning
· Composting
· Drying Herbal Teas
· Healthy Personal Care Products
· Handknits
· Homegrown Meals
· House Projects [following professional mold remediation]
· Watercolors by Elsa & Me
· Health Hacks
· Reading Recommendations
· Flower Gardens
· and more!
Brew yourself a cup of tea or coffee, get cosy under a blanket, and enjoy!
Saturday, October 1, 2022
Shut In – Day 227: Land, Ho!
My dates for this series may not be quite accurate for at least two reasons:
- When the historical account says anything like “after one month,” I estimate
30 days.
- Plus I am not using an ancient calendar.
But if you
remember from when this series began, the goal was simply to glean real-time insights
into the long months that Noah and his family were “shut in” the ark by God. So
when the account in Genesis 8:5 reads, “in the tenth month, on the first day
of the month”… I think October 1st.
So, what
happened on this day in history, 227 days after God closed the ark?
“the tops of
the mountains were seen.”
As autumn quickly makes us forget summer here on the prairie, my mind heads toward the Thanksgiving observance coming up. So this first sighting of land after months tossing on the ocean reminds me of the joy of the Pilgrims upon their arrival to the land where they hoped to build new lives with the freedom to worship God and also raise their children without such worldly influences.
But the
sighting of mountain tops from the ark was rather different. There would have
been no forests or farmland to be seen. No place to build cabins and hunt for
food. No natives to meet, trade with, and learn from.
Instead the
tops of the mountains would have been dead and barren as the flood waters left
them high and drying. This was no place to land and start a new life. Noah still
had to wait an unknown amount of time.
As he daily
cared for all the land animals still in existence, he must have had time to
think, to wonder about the future, and to ponder what he had been through.
Even though Noah knew he had found favor with God, that did not exempt him from suffering... and lots of it.
First, God
called him to build what must have been a laughing-stock to the evil-hearted world
– a monstrous ship filled with outrageous amounts of provisions.
Then God shut Noah
and his wife, three sons, and their wives into this ark.
Next came the terror
and grief of the flood and the death of every person and animal left outside on
the land.
Then the
survival mode of daily life, learning to care for every animal’s needs when God
may have felt very far away and silent in the storm. At least every bit of Noah’s
surroundings could serve as a reminder that he was being kept in the covenant care
of God.
When 40 days
later the rain finally stopped, what a relief it must have been!
But then came
the wind sent by God, which – though all the while working for their ultimate relief
– may have tossed them about as much as ever.
Finally, enough
of the endless ocean had dried and settled to allow the ark to get caught on a
mountain and sit still for the first time in months. Imagine the renewed hope that
an end may actually be in sight! (But I do wonder how crooked the ship could
have settled – making life hard in a new way.)
Now Noah had to
wait and wait to even get a glimpse of anything but water. And when the first
land appeared, it was uninhabitable desolation – nothing like the lush and
living world before the storm.
And there was still nothing to do but wait… still shut in! But seen from our perspective, we know that every stage of this journey was a sign of God’s favor and grace on Noah.
I'll let you make the application to your own life again.
See previous
posts in series here:
Part I: The
Lord Shut Him In
Part II: Day
10: The Animals
Part III: Day
20: The Man Noah
Part IV: Day
30: The Walls
Part V: Day
40: What God Says... He Does
Part VI: Day
70: After the Crisis
Part VII: Day
100: When Waiting Turns to Years
Part VIII: Day
150: Touch Down!
Part IX: Day
181: Survival Mode while Shut In
Next Post:
Part XI: Day 267: Testing the Waters