Dear Aunt Sevvy: I disapprove of the way my wife dresses. She wears tops and pants that reveal her female shape.
Read more at the source: Aunt Sevvy: My Wife’s Shape Is Showing
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Adventist Today.
Closer To Heaven
|
|
By admin
Dear Aunt Sevvy: I disapprove of the way my wife dresses. She wears tops and pants that reveal her female shape.
Read more at the source: Aunt Sevvy: My Wife’s Shape Is Showing
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Adventist Today.
By admin
by Benjamin Baker | 21 January 2019 | Question: Please help me and my wife to settle our religious differences. My understanding is that a man and his wife are to be as one in everything, I am a Baptist and she is a Seven-Day [sic] Adventist. She goes to church on Saturday and I […]
Read more at the source: Martin Luther King’s Advice to a Saturday-Sunday Couple
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Adventist Today.
By admin
9 December 2018 | Two separate inquests have been launched into the deaths of a young Adventist and his wife in Leicester, England. Jesus and Lorraine Sanchez who were found dead in their home on November 27. Leicester Live reported that a family friend broke into their home to check on them after growing concerned […]
Read more at the source: Inquests Opened Into Circumstances of Deaths of Young Adventist and His Wife in Leicester, England
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Adventist Today.
By admin
Plop them into the boiling H2O, wait 45 seconds, remove and plunge them into cold water, peel, cut, and squish out all the seeds by squeezing them between your hands. It’s a yearly ritual at our house-preparing the tomatoes for whatever my wife Roberta wants to create with them.
We are blessed to live in an area where the soil is as black as coffee grounds, and as fertile as anywhere I’ve ever personally witnessed. I’m not known for my “green thumb,” but it’s a simple process to grow things in the dark, rich earth next to our home. Just plug in the seedlings, do a little weeding from time to time, and harvest the abundant crop that inevitably grows each and every season that we put the garden in.
This year has been an exceptionally good one for tomatoes, and I have pulled (at least) a couple of bushels of red-orbed beauties from the eight plants that we put into the garden. It’s a kick for me to go out and pull fresh produce from the meandering vines, and this year has been a banner crop. I thoroughly enjoy trotting out to the tomato patch, pulling the various-sized fruit, loading them into cardboard boxes, and bringing them into the house to show my wife. That’s where the excitement ends though!
Once we’ve separated the “really ripe” ones from those that will be “really ripe” within a few days, it’s time for the yearly exercise that I really disdain:
Plop, remove, plunge, peel, cut, and squish.
Plop, remove, plunge, peel, cut, and squish.
Plop, remove, plunge, peel, cut, and squish.
It’s not nearly as rhythmic as it looks on paper. I always dream of a huge crop, and then when it arrives I disdain the idea of the drudgery in the “plop, remove, plunge, peel, cut, and squish.”
“Whatever you do, do your work heartily, as for the Lord rather than for men” (Colossians 3:23, NASB).
Often, it’s difficult to enjoy the thought that the “plop, remove, plunge, peel, cut, and squish” is part of my work here on planet earth. It’s not glamorous, enjoyable, or satisfying…but it’s needful. My wife works hard to save money, and feed a family that enjoys her home-canned salsa and tomato sauce. The least I can do is to lend a hand.
Michael Temple writes from North Dakota.
The post Lessons from My Garden appeared first on Answers for Me.
Read more at the source: Lessons from My Garden
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.
By admin
George H. Crumley, retired, is the first treasurer of the North American Division.
Read more at the source: NAD YEM 2017: An interview with George H. Crumley
Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Vimeo / NAD Adventist’s videos.