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Tuesday, November 24, 2015

 St. Nicholas on the Move!




We all love the story of St. Nicolas and the way he blessed the poor. Why not play St. Nicholas and call a local school in a poor area, nursing home, soup kitchen, women’s shelter or fire department and add those to your holiday baking deliveries? 

Can you image someone in need or difficult situation receiving a delightful homemade treat to cheer them? It’s like wrapping them up in a warm blanket and setting them next to a fire-the fire of Christ’s love.

Sometimes it’s that one act of random kindness that brings hope to a helpless situation and gives a person a reason to believe again. A warm hand shake. A smiling face. A Christmas song. 

Christmas Advent is the perfect time to think about others. I loved giving my children an opportunity to keep the spiritual focus during the holiday season. What better way to reach out to a lonely neighbor or new family than to make up a batch of fun Christmas treats to share?

One of our favorite holiday treats to share is

Frosty White-Chocolate Pretzel Snowman.

You will need:
  • 1 bag of long pretzel rods
  •  Mini chocolate chips for eyes
  • Mini multi-colored candies for buttons and nose
  •  Red fruit roll ups for scarves
  •  Jelly fruit rings for hat brims
  • Ju ju  gummy candy for hat tops
  • White almond bark-1 ½ packages


Dip the pretzel rods into the melted chocolate 2/3 of the way up.
Apply the jelly ring around the top of the pretzel for the hat brim
Add extra chocolate to a ju ju and put it on top of the head making the top of the hat.       
Work your way down using the chocolate mini chips for eyes and a mini -colored chip for a nose.
Apply the scarf by going around the snowman in the back like you are going to wrap a present with ribbon and crossing it in front. This works best with two people, one holding the pretzel snowman and one applying it.
Add the buttons at the end below the scarf.  
Place the finished snowmen on a wax paper covered cookie sheet and put into the freezer for quick drying.
We spruce them up by wrapping them in festive bags, boxes and Tupperware. We even put some in a snowman mug! They say Your Special and Loved.





Thursday, November 19, 2015


Christmas Advent Fun 

I love that it all started with God. It was His idea to celebrate the birth of his son. He set a bright star in the sky like birthday candles and sent gifts through three kings. The heavenly hosts sang songs to lonely shepherds and a tired mother and father found room in an inn.

Let’s keep our hearts yearning for what’s important this holiday season. Take the Nativity out first, let it be the first thing you decorate with. Take it out piece by piece one each day and read the correlating Bible verses and reflect on its meaning.


I will be posting fun foods to make with the family as well as craft and Advent ideas weekly, so subscribe to stay informed and receive my Holiday eBook for free!

The first craft I want to post is how to up-cycle Christmas cards into beautiful ornaments.  So many tell the Nativity story in a beautifully illustrated way. We use gold trim, glitter glue, red and green ribbons.

Each year we save the prettiest cards to make into ornaments for the next year. It’s also fun to do it with friends and trade cards- have a Trading Christmas Cards Party! Its also a great idea to glue a magnet on the back and let little hands tell the story by putting each magnet on the refrigerator in sequence. Here is one of my favorites we have made over the years.


For Full FREE download of instructions Click on the Picture.
More Advent Activities for Kids 

Thriving Family has a terrific FREE Advent resource for families! It has games and puzzles for kids for each day along with a poster and some great verses to read. Build lasting strength in your family by learning the Bible and celebrating these things together.

http://www.thrivingfamily.com/advent

Monday, November 16, 2015






                Squanto and Making Sense of Adversity

Black Friday Deals New Millennium Girl BooksI love the story of Squanto. It helps us to make sense of adversity. How can God worked EVERYTHING together for good in our lives, especially the struggles that make no sense? I think it all boils down to one thing: Our world view- do we struggled to fit God into our plans or do we fit into His?

God has a plan for all of humanity: The rise and fall of nations. The birth of babies who will become world changers. The preaching of the good news to all men.
Squanto’s story poignantly reveals this. When English traders landed in what was to become Plymouth, Massachusetts a decade before the pilgrims arrived, Wampanoag Indians came out to trade.  The traders sadly took them prisoner to Spain, and sold them into slavery.

Even in the midst of this tragic circumstance God kept a young Indian boy named Squanto safe and appointed a kind Spanish monk to buy him. He was treated well and taught the Christian faith.


Black Friday Deals New Millennium Girl BooksIn 1618 he happily sailed back to America. But when he arrived there, an epidemic had wiped out Squanto’s entire village. It was as if God’s hand plucked him out and spared him! God had a plan for Squanto’s life that was bigger than himself. He would be an important part in birthing a new nation. One that God could use for good in the entire earth! (Yes, I still believe we are a great nation in the midst of everything!)

A year later the pilgrims arrived in America and Squanto greeted them in English!
According to the diary of Governor William Bradford, Squanto became a special instrument sent from God of good. He showed them how to plant  corn and practically how to survive in the new land. He stayed with the pilgrims for his entire life.

So, in honor of the redeeming love of God in Squanto’s life and the first Thanksgiving so many years ago, I am posting Chocolate Marshmallow Pilgrim Hats. What a fun way to teach your children about God’s faithfulness in building our nation!

Chocolate Marshmallow Pilgrim Hats

Black Friday Deals New Millennium Girl Books
Four Easy Ingredients

1 12 oz bag of chocolate chips
1 package chocolate striped cookies
1 bag of marshmallows
1 tube of yellow decorator’s frosting

This is great for kids of all ages-preschoolers to middle graders!

Thursday, November 5, 2015

The Pilgrims and Homeschooling


With Thanksgiving around the corner, it’s a great time to incorporate art with writing! My kids love bean mosaics and we made a cool one of the Mayflower. We chatted as we worked about the First Thanksgiving. How brave the Pilgrims were, how devout their faith in God was and their desire to raise godly children. Then they wrote the account as if they were one of the Pilgrims.

It almost feels like homeschooling! We look at the public school system with shaking knees and pounding chests and think, there’s got to be a better way than this! We embark  on the Home Education ship to take us to a good land, free land only to find that there are challenges and hardships there too! 

BUT if we stick it out, like the pilgrims did, teach self-government so our children begin to take responsibility of their things and actions, we learn that what we have embarked on is a life changing experience! One that could possibly change the world with godly adults with leadership qualities and moral character that will shine in the darkness of this world.

Keep at it dear friend! Your harvest is greater than you know! Pull back if you need rest. Regroup and get creative! Join a co-op, talk with a friend, get your nails done! You’ll be glad you did. The Pilgrims had an opportunity to go back after that first year. But they didn’t take it. They pressed on to build the New World.

Making Bean Mosaic is easy!
·         Draw a picture of a the Mayflower  and the ocean on orange construction   paper
·         Using Elmer’s Glue, make a puddle and let children fill in with beans
·         Embellish with glitter glue

·         Let dry for about 4 hours