More beauty from this week's walks in the neighborhood:
Favorite quote(s) of the week...
What drew you to Christ
except Christ? What draws you to Him now except His own blessed self?
If you have been drawn to the Christian religion by anything else, you
will soon be drawn away from it, but Jesus has held you and will hold
you even to the end.- Charles Spurgeon, Faith's Checkbook, p. 292.
Do you find yourself cycling through stages in your
relationship with the Lord? Have you listened to them?Owned them?Sought a love supreme?Any
Christian spirituality must begin with Christ--basking in his love for us and
realizing that we can now love as he loves. - Robert Gelinas, Finding the Groove, p. 47.
"What's in the satchel?" he [Judge Thatcher] asked.
"A few books. I don't think you'll miss them."
"What books?"
"That's an interesting question." I [Jim] said. "You surprise me. A narrative of some slave--that's one of them. It's never been opened, so I know you won't miss it. I don't know why you have it. Candide, something else by Voltaire, John Stuart Mill."
"My God, what in the world is going on?"
"Call it progress." I said. - Percival Everett, James: A Novel, Part three, Chapter nine.
I'm thinking about...
The trail down from my apartment: On one of my walks up Cedar Drive, I noticed a sign for the William Frederick Hayden Park. Sometimes the fence to the trail is open, sometimes it isn't. The trail is not paved like the Ladiga Trail back home, so I don't know exactly where the "park" part of this place is. The view from the road gives the impression that it is a nice trail. However, with it not being paved and the warning signs about wildlife, I'm not sure if I should even cross the fence line to explore. If I had another person to go with (or at least borrow an intimidating dog from someone), I'd be game for the adventure.
How would you handle this?
What I've read since the last digest...
James by Percival Everett ✮✮✮✮
You Have a Calling by Karen Swallow Prior ✮1/2
I'm currently reading...
Prayer: Finding the Heart's True Home by Richard J. Foster
Finding the Groove by Robert Gelinas
Mansions of the Heart by R. Thomas Ashbrook
Streams of Living Water by Richard J. Foster
Faith's Checkbook by Charles Spurgeon
Recent blog posts...
My First and Last words on the book James by Percival Everett here.
My previous digest, "Fall in the Country'" is here.
My "25 for 2025" challenge is here. (Updated regularly)
My "I Can Only Blame MyShelf" reading challenge is here. (Updated regularly).
From the Workshop...
October 4th was World Card Making Day. I know I've already met my goal for sending 100 cards to Cards for Kindness, but the organization issued a challenge. We were to make as many cards as we could on the 4th then send them in the following week. They want to break the record for the most cards received in a week. I took up the challenge and managed to make 23 cards in one day. I was whupped by the end of the day, but it was so much fun. We'll see if we broke the record.
I am thankful for...
I'm thankful that I'm not having company this coming weekend. My apartment looks like an okra patch right now.
NOTE: I thought that my combining the digest and hodgepodge would be a once in a while thing. However, scheduling seems to be going in that direction at present. Plus I'm teaching soon, so if I get to blog at all, it will most likely be a combo deal. Enjoy.
Looking out the window....
Had the opportunity to go on a walk around another part of the neighborhood:
The shrub (knockout) roses are still doing their thing.
All this holly needs is a little red cardinal perched on it.
The leaves are starting to show fall colors.
Black Dalea
I caught some other gorgeousness while I was out and about this week:
The petunias in the flower box in front of the UPS store are still showing out (mine are dead).
These beauties were in a planter outside of the Hobby Lobby in Belmar.
Favorite quote(s) of the week...
The Father has accepted
the great sacrifice of Calvary and has declared Himself well pleased
with it; how can He now be pleased to kill us! Why would there be a
substitute if the sinner still had to perish? The accepted sacrifice of
Jesus puts an end to fear..- Charles Spurgeon, Faith's Checkbook, p. 281.
"That is what equality is, Jim. It's the capacity for becoming equal. The same way a black man in Martinique can learn French, and so become French. He can also acquire the skills of equality and so become equal."
"I hate you." - Percival Everett, James: A Novel, Part one, Chapter six.
Fall officially rolls into the Northern Hemisphere on Monday (9/22)...what's your favorite thing about fall?
It's not winter.
The changing colors. I know that many of Colorado think that you have to go find the Aspen trees to see great fall color. However, I've found some fiery reds, browns, and golds just walking around the neighborhood. Sure, I'd love to see the Aspens, but at present, I have to work with what I've got.
The cool evenings and mildly warm days.
It's now soup, stew, and chili weather.
Football.
I know that I teach year-round, but fall gives me the new school year feel
What's one thing on your real or proverbial autumn bucket list?
World Card Making Day is Saturday. I'm considering participating.
Apples, pumpkins, sweet potatoes, butternut squash and cranberries are
some of the top fall foods. Which one is your favorite and how do you
like it prepared? Any on the list you don't eat? Which one have you had
most recently?
The only one I don't eat is butternut squash. In all honesty, I don't know how to prepare it properly. The couple of times I've cooked butternut squash, it came out bitter. Anybody got any simple recipe recommendations? Out of the list, I eat apples the most. They are a year-round food for me. The jury is still out on pumpkin. I normally don't like pumpkin (it has a whang to it) or pumpkin spiced anything (too bitter) however, flour-based baked goods with pumpkin seem to not have that malady, so I'm thinking about trying my hand at making pumpkin bread. I'll let you know how it goes.
From Hodgepodge Questions Volume 622
What's your favorite fall scent? Would we find this in or around your home right now?
It's more of a fall-winter scent, but I like the smell of orange spice. I have an oil diffuser and mix a few drops of Mainstays (Wal-Mart) Cinnamon Leaf and Sweet Orange. Smells like fall but also like Christmas. It puts me in the mind of Wassail. I also like pumpkin scented candles. However, I'm on candle restriction until I finish the Lavender Lemonade candle I got for my birthday and the Beaver Nugget candle I bought a Buc-ee's earlier this summer.
October is Country Music Month...are you a fan of country music? Do you
have a favorite country artist? Ever been to Nashville? In terms of
lifestyle are you more country mouse or city mouse?
I know it's hard to believe with me being from the South (and a country mouse in the middle of the Denver metro area), but country music isn't my favorite genre. I do have a few country songs (or songs with country flair) I enjoy:
How about
'country cooking'? (loosely defined as rich flavors, familiar foods,
large portions, often fried, and often associated with the southern
region of the US of A)?
chicken and dumplings-fried
chicken-shrimp and grits-biscuits and gravy-mac and cheese-fried green
tomatoes-cornbread-collard or turnip greens-deviled
eggs-'barbecue'-gumbo-banana pudding
Which of the foods listed is your favorite? Any on the list you haven't tried or would say a firm no thank you to if offered?
Miss Joyce, my scale (and homesickness) is mad at you right now. 😅
What's something that always has a positive impact on your mood?
Anything creative--whether it's my creativity or someone else's. The comfort of a quilt, the color splash of a photograph or painting, or the sweet melody and/or driving rhythm of an upbeat song can bring me out of a funk pretty quickly. Even if I'm in low-energy depression mode, I try to hunt for those positive influences. Other things that improve my mood are good comedy, fun books, naps, and comfort food (not too much).
What I've read since the last digest...
Gospel Evidences for Saving Faith by John Owen ✮✮✮✮
J. R. R. Tolkien by Colin Duriez ✮✮✮✮
On Reading Well by Karen Swallow Prior (a glorious reread) ✮✮✮✮
I went to a luncheon/training on campus Friday. These are some of the lovelies I found:
A pretty planter of Dianthus ("Pinks"), Lantana, and Marigolds.
Quickfire Hydrangeas
"Bluebeard"
Favorite quote(s) of the week...
Lord, if You send me
wealth like broad rivers, do not let the galley with oars come up in the
shape of worldliness or pride. If You grant me abundant health and a
happy outlook, do not let the gallant ship of carnal ease come sailing
up the flowing flood. If I have success in holy service as broad as the
German Rhine, let me never find the ship of self-conceit and
self-confidence floating on the waves of my usefulness. If I would be so
supremely happy as to enjoy the light of Your countenance year after
year, let me never despise Your feeble saints nor allow the vain notion
of my own perfection to sail up the broad rivers of my full assurance.
Lord, give me that blessing that makes rich and neither adds sorrow nor
aids sin.- Charles Spurgeon, Faith's Checkbook, p. 278.
When many are not ashamed to revile them [pastors] in public, some ought to be ashamed not to remember them in private. - John Owen, Rules for Walking in Fellowship, Chapter 3.
I'm thinking about...
My next class starts October 6th. I've got the students on my mind and in my prayers. I've got the preparations I want to make for the course on my mind. I always want to facilitate my courses well, but as always, I want my students to grow in faith in, understanding of, and fellowship with Christ. I never want my courses to just be another class students HAVE to take for a grade. I want them to learn and grow in the process of completing their assignments.