Friday, 20 November 2009

The Spice Of Life

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This is the spice rack Liz picked up for a song at a local Church Fete.

The picture shows the rack after she sanded and repainted it. [Apologies for the poor quality of the photo - it came via various mobile phones to my PC.] I think it looks very smart - and will no doubt get plenty of use in Liz's kitchen. She's asked me to make some labels for the spices and will then send me another picture to post on the blog.

Her chosen spices are these...

  • cinnamon
  • lebkuchen
  • mixed spice
  • ginger
  • juniper
  • nigella seed
  • paprika
  • fennel seed
  • coriander seed
  • cayenne pepper
  • curry powder
  • mustard seed
  • I must admit that there are quite a few there which I have never used. 

    I have been doing lots of sewing today - including another project Liz asked me about. Will post photos later about all that.

    What is your favourite spice? I love nutmeg, and have a very old nutmeg grater - I enjoy grating nutmeg into hot drinks, milk puddings and mashed potato. I'm also quite fond of sprinkling smoked paprika into savoury dishes [I keep that in a pretty little tin I got when Liz took me to Budapest back in 2005] Christmas cooking is definitely redolent of cinnamon, and ginger belongs with cold winter nights - but is there a spice for the summer months?

    nigella I presume Mr Lawson named his cooking daughter after the flower and not the seeds!

    Thursday, 19 November 2009

    Leaves From the Jesse Tree

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    Last year at church we used some Advent notes by David Coffey which briefly mentioned the "Jesse Tree" -  used by many Christians as an alternative to the more familiar Advent Calendar.

    The Jesse Tree is decorated with symbols relating to the coming of the Messiah as foretold in Scripture - from Genesis through to the Gospels.

    Above is a picture of one I made earlier! So this year I've prepared a whole month of bible notes entitled "Leaves from the Jesse Tree" round this theme, for members of our congregation. Just a simple thought, and a few verses, for each day of Advent, as we prepare our hearts for Christmas.

    If you would like to use this material too, you should be able to download it by clicking the link below

     Leaves From The Jesse Tree

    Wednesday, 18 November 2009

    Scissors and Soup

    DSCF0911 Another busy day. Very satisfying teaching at school, then after that, Sewing Club. The girls are working well on their Christmas bits.

    They are particularly keen on the 'leaf' stitch on Ann's machine, sewn in a variegated thread,  which you can see here on the bottom of Ellie's purse - and another variant of it below on the hem of Bethany's mat.

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    I got a new pair of scissors in John Lewis for the Club

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    We were greatly amused by the instructions on the back of the packaging...

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    ..yes, you do need a pair of scissors to remove the scissors from the pack. Bit of a Catch 22 situation there, I think!

    Bob has been equally busy. Among other things, today he was hosting the lunch for the local clergy. So he'd made a tureen of carrot and coriander soup for them. When I got home this evening, there was a bowl of soup and warm bread rolls waiting for me. A lovely treat on a cold autumn evening.

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    The man has been today to measure up for our new windows. It will be lovely to have the faulty ones replaced at last- but I am not at all sure that the first week in December will be a good time to have this done.

    I shall just have to keep even busier and move about a lot more so I do not feel the cold. Lots of hot soup to be eaten that week, I think!

    Tuesday, 17 November 2009

    He's The Reason For The Season!

    Church Ads have a new Christmas poster. Here is the poster - and the accompanying article from their website. I do hope it gets lots of people talking!

    churchad 09 Christmas starts here. In January churchgoers were dismayed by atheist bus adverts proclaiming that ‘There’s probably no God’.
    They will be encouraged to hear that recent research by Theos reveals that 85% of people agree that ‘Christmas should be called Christmas because we are still a Christian country’. But, research also shows that only 12% of adults know the facts of the Christmas story in any detail – the figure dropping to just 7% amongst 18‐24 year olds. So, to keep Christmas focused on Christ, we need to constantly tell the story of his birth in ways which engage positively with the public.
    Churches of all denominations are therefore being urged to participate in an advertising campaign: ‘Christmas Starts with Christ’. Posters on bus shelters feature a painting by the renowned artist, Andrew Gadd, depicting the traditional nativity scene in a modern day equivalent of a stable – a bus shelter. Radio commercials cleverly and light‐heartedly set the nativity in the context of a soccer match, a horse race, a police car chase and the Christmas pop chart countdown. The ads have been created by ChurchAds.net, an ecumenical charity comprising senior communications officers from the Anglican, Methodist and Baptist churches; plus the Church Army and Salvation Army, together with Christians from media and advertising organisations.
    Church leaders have welcomed the campaign, urging churches to
    participate. Nick Baines, Bishop of Croydon says: ‘This year’s atheist bus adverts backfired (for the atheists) by putting God on the public agenda and provoking people to ask if he is there. Well, Christians now have a chance to say a firm and confident ‘yes – and he looks like Jesus! Christmas is his festival.’

    Visit www.ChurchAds.net for more information

    Monday, 16 November 2009

    Bonhoeffer's Words For A Pastor's Wife

    bonhoeffer Jim Graham reminded us in his blog today that yesterday was the anniversary of the ordination in 1931, of the German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer.

    Back in the early 1980's, Bob wrote his dissertation on DB, and as I typed it up I got to read a lot of stuff written by and about this amazing man. And I mean typed - in those pre-PC days it was all sheets of A4 in the typewriter, tapping away with my right hand, whilst my left arm cradled a new baby. Then Bob would get home, proof-read and edit the pages - and I would re-type the corrected stuff the next day. No cut-n-paste, or 'save changes to...'!

    Whilst imprisoned by the Nazis, DB wrote a wedding day sermon for his niece, Renate, who was marrying another Pastor [DBs best friend and subsequent biographer, Eberhard Bethge] These words challenge me as much today as they did 25 years ago when I first read them...

    God gives you Christ as the foundation of your marriage. ‘Welcome one another, therefore, as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God’ (Romans 15:7). In a word, live together in the forgiveness of your sins, for without it no human fellowship, least of all a marriage, can survive. Don’t insist on your rights, don’t blame each other, don’t judge or condemn each other, don’t fault with each other, but accept each other as you are, and forgive each other every day from the bottom of your hearts.

    Your home will be a pastor’s home. From it, light and strength will have to go out into many other homes. The pastor undertakes a life of special discipline. The husband must bear alone much that belongs to his ministry, since the ministry is his and must, for the sake of God, be a silent one. So his love for his wife must be all the greater, and he must be all the more concerned to share with her what he may. And as a result the wife will be able to lighten the husband’s burden all the more, stand by his side, give him help. As fallible human beings, how can they live and work in Christ’s community if they do not persevere in constant prayer and forgiveness, if they do not help each other to live as Christians? The right beginning and daily practice are very important indeed.

    From the first day of your wedding till the last the rule must be: ‘Welcome one another… for the glory of God’.

    That is God’s word for your marriage. Thank Him for it; thank Him for leading you thus far; ask Him to establish your marriage, to confirm it, sanctify it, and preserve it. So your marriage will be ‘for the praise of His glory’

    Coughs And Sneezes Spread Diseases

    sanitiserWe are being Very Careful at Church about spreading germs. The Meeters and Greeters at the door, and the Deacons serving Communion are taking extra care to use hand sanitizing gel, and there are dispensers of the stuff all over the premises.

    It was even mentioned in The Notices before the services started yesterday [so we know it Must Be Important!]

    Trouble is, I kept thinking of this WW2 poster...

    coughs and sneezes

    and then I kept thinking of Tony Hancock...

    My afternoon of Supply Teaching was cancelled and I am feeling a little light-headed. Perhaps I am going down with something!

    Saturday, 14 November 2009

    Today, Tomorrow, Forever

    It is really lovely having my best friend Chris here for the weekend- lots of time to natter, and laugh about stuff, and a good excuse to go out somewhere interesting on a Saturday morning.

    DSCF0901The two of us went to the National Memorial Arboretum. We went there last December with Liz and Steph, and I blogged then and posted pictures [here]

    It was cold and wet and grey - just like these briskly marching cadets!

    DSCF0887 At the big memorial to those killed since the end of WW2 there is a sculpture of a young man opening a door - and last time I was interested to note that "At 11am on the 11th day of the 11th month, a shaft of sunlight will shone through the crack onto the centre of the monument"

    We were there just 3 days after the 11th, and a few minutes after 11am.

    And sure enough, there was the sunbeam

     

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    It was a wet blustery day- the poor ATS girl was surrounded by water

    DSCF0895 Staff members told us it has been a busy week- two services on Remembrance Sunday, and another on the 11th with Prince Edward in attendance.

    There were poppies, wreaths and crosses everywhere. Sadly lots of new names added since we were there in December - Chris Dunsmore's name has many names below it.

    Also we saw many crosses for Olaf Schmid, the young Bomb Disposal Expert from the West Country who died recently.

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    roadpeace At the end of the long path is a little wooden hut, with all sorts of interesting plaques inside - including one for Road Peace, a charity about which I confess I knew very little.

    The rain was heavy so we sheltered awhile in the hut. A windswept Chris enjoyed herself by the wooden animal sculptures on the porch!

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    DSCF0899 We noticed a memorial placed by the RAF Association, recently 'opened' by HRH the Princess Royal.

    The Arboretum is constantly being added to, and the trees are growing well - so it is a place which is worth revisiting.

    In the Chapel is the wreath laid by Harry Patch at the Cenotaph in Whitehall in 2008.

    It has been placed at the NMA now in his memory.

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    We will remember them, today. tomorrow, forever reads the engraving above the sculpture

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    Harry Patch said "No war is worth it. No war is worth the loss of a couple of lives let alone thousands. T'isn't worth it..."

    Lots to think about, lots to reflect upon - many shattered lives, and shattered families, to remember in our prayers. Conscious that many are not looking forward to Christmas because there is an aching void at the centre of their family life this year.

    The staff member in the gift shop said "Do come back in the summer when the sun is shining - it is lovely then" I knew what she meant - but somehow it didn't sound quite right.

    We drove back to Leicester and met up with Bob. After a huge lunch at the Windmill at Brascote and a trip to PCW for more ink cartridges, Chris and I settled down with our knitting.

    All in all a good day

    Coming Up Roses!

    Floss recently posted about customising your wardrobe.

    I had a load of pony-tail elastics which were decorated with silk flowers. I have had them years - and to be truthful, some of them may originally have belonged to Liz or Steph. But I never wear them in my hair now.

    So I carefully removed the elastic from the back and sewed brooch pins on to them. And now I have some pretty corsages to pin onto a winter coat or jacket.

    ...these two pictures show some of them before...

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    ...and here are some after!...

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    Satisfying result for a few minutes work and no cost!

    Friday, 13 November 2009

    How Far Is It To Bethlehem?

    DSCF0879 I know Christmas is coming when I have to get the  Palm Tree out of the garage and take it into school to be a prop for the Nativity Play!

    I love this tree - it was air freighted to Birmingham in 2005 by some Korean ladies who were using it as part of their dramatic tableau for the Women's Conference at the Baptist World Alliance Centenary Congress - but they did not want to pay for it to be shipped back again - so they gave it to me!

    Since then it has appeared on stage in at least 5 Holiday Clubs [Pirate and Desert Island themed], 3 Nativity Plays and also taken bit parts [the leaf fronds come out] for 2 Palm Sundays!  And afterwards it dismantles and packs away neatly into its box. It is around eight foot high and quite splendid.

    And as one colleague said "It looks so much more professional than something made from a cardboard carpet roll tube and green crepe paper"

    I think my Korean sisters would be quite surprised if they knew just how much use I have made of their gift!

    Totally inappropriate aside - I remember in my teens, a friend told me to avoid a certain bloke cos he had Desert Disease.

    "What's that?" I asked, "Wandering Palms" she replied!