Site Maintenance

Update: We’re all done our work and the site is back up.

Typically around the fourth of July, we do any major site updates since many are off from school then. We’ll be doing those updates this coming weekend, starting on June the 26th, instead of waiting another week because of travel and family plans.

The main thing is that the MyEPAssignments.com site, the store, and Brain Blast will have a brief outage on Friday evening, June 26th, as we are migrated to an updated server. Once we are back online, it will then need to “propagate” out to all the internet providers. We are starting this on Friday night to give it the weekend to do its thing, so it will cause the least interference possible. You will likely never notice that anything has happened.

This does not affect the allinonehomeschool.com or allinonehighschool.com sites at all.

In Reading 7, the old reading lessons will be coming down once we’re in July, by the end of next week. You’ve known that was coming. If you still need the lessons, please copy them into a document for yourself.

Not My Will, But Yours

“Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless not My will, but Yours, be done.” Jesus prayed this before surrendering to the fate of taking on the sins of the world.

On a walk this morning, I was thinking that, from what we see in Scripture, the hardest thing Jesus ever had to do wasn’t going to the cross, but surrendering His will.

Jesus prays that prayer three times. He had made the choice with His mind the first time…I don’t want to do this. Father, if there’s another way, take that route. But if this is what has to be, I want to do it Your way.

But it wasn’t settled in His heart. He had to pray it again. And again.

But He did get it settled and because He did, we can live free from the bondage of sin and in the power of His resurrection.

“Not My will, but Yours” was not about teaching us how to pray. This was Jesus wrestling over fully surrendering His will.

It was the hardest thing He ever had to do.

Is your will surrendered? We should live, like Jesus did, with a humble heart, a worshipful heart, a heart bowed before the Father. But where does your will want to go its own way? Where do you need to surrender?

Let’s apply this to parenting and homeschooling. Have you gotten ideas as to what your children should be when they grow up? That doesn’t have to mean doctor or lawyer, though it certainly applies to that as well. But what about your expectations for what your children should look and act like? What about your expectations for their future education and life path? Have you made goals taken from your own heart or from following the teaching of others?

Have you gotten ideas about what a family should look like and do from reading a book, a blog, watching videos, or just conforming to those around you?

Have you gotten ideas about what homeschooling should look like from others?

Have you surrendered your family, your parenting, your homeschooling to God? Are you willing to give up the image you are after for your children and family and seek only to be transformed into the image of Christ?

Take yourself, your family, your homeschooling, your habits, your attitudes, your ministries, your work, your dreams and goals, all of everything of who you are and that’s in your life, and surrender it up on the altar. Ask for His holy fire to come and consume or purify, either taking it away or consecrating it for His purposes.

His purposes are glorious and wonderous. What He accomplishes is eternal. What we do today only matters here and now unless the Lord breathes His life into it. Then it impacts forever.

A Heart Full of Light

“The lamp of the body is the eye. If therefore your eye is good, your whole body will be full of light.” Matthew 6:22

What do you have your eye on? It can be the difference between light and dark.

We’re told a mind set on the things of God is life and peace, but a mind set on this world is death and destruction. What’s your mind on?

We’re told to think on what is lovely and good and praiseworthy. There’s a reason for it.

Is what you are feeding your mind bringing light or darkness into your heart?

Is your media intake bringing life or death into your mind and heart?

Is what you are dwelling on bringing life or death into your mind and heart?

Are you stewing on something someone did or said or what someone didn’t do or say? We’re self-inflicting wounds when we’re embracing unforgiveness, resentment, offense, and other hurts. But we can guard our hearts and bring light into our hearts when we forgive, let go, not take offense in the first place, and have a soft heart of compassion for others.

Where are our eyes in these things?

I can’t find a quote, but it was Elizabeth Elliot I heard say something like, “There’s nothing more depressing than looking at yourself.” We don’t look at ourselves and what we want and think we need from others. Looking inward will darken our eye. We need to look up to let in the light.

But looking up and out isn’t looking to the world and to the news or to entertainments and distractions. Looking up is seeing a God of love who is always good and in control and absolutely perfect in all His ways. It’s having our faces turned to Him so that we reflect the light of His countenance out into the world, receiving His love, but always pouring it back out.

Love God and love others is THE command of the Bible. It’s not just for the sake of God and others. It’s what your heart was made for. It will fill your heart with life and light.

 

(Scriptures referenced in the first few paragraphs: Romans 8:6, Philippians 3:19, Philippians 4:8)

Your Freewill Offering – Humility

As I was reading Exodus, I was struck by the thought that the tabernacle, where God was going to dwell, was built from offerings, freewill offerings.

As mothers (and as Christians) we are tasked with building others up. We build those in whom Christ is going to dwell. God tabernacles with us, by His Spirit dwelling in us.

We are building these tabernacles in our homes, these holy places, our children.

The tabernacle was a holy place. It was set apart. It wasn’t to be like everywhere else. We aren’t meant to raise our kids in the culture and follow the whims of the “experts,” which can vary wildly one decade to the next.

God sets out a very particular pattern for His tabernacle. The builders follow the plan to the T.

Don’t you want to know the plan for building these tabernacles and preparing the way for the Lord in their lives?

Don’t look anywhere besides the Lord for a plan, a how-to. No one has God’s plan for your life, that includes you!

There’s only one Man with the plan, the good plan, the best plan, the perfect plan. And it requires only one thing.

Humility.

You can’t do this. You don’t know what to do. You don’t have what you need, except that You have Jesus who is everything, can do all things, and knows all things.

Give your children to God to parent, to teach, to guide, to counsel and offer yourself to be His tool in that however He sees fit. That’s your freewill offering, you, all of you for His perfect purposes.

He does all things well. He makes all things beautiful.

I had to learn this lesson. So, let me say, if you are like me and know there were ways you missed the mark on this one, do not fear. There are no regrets in Christ Jesus. He is Lord even when we mess things up. He was there. He knows how to turn it for good. He does all things well and knows how to make ALL things beautiful.

The Lord My Shepherd

Luke 1:79 To give light to those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace.

I released my latest book, The Lord My Shepherd. It’s 30 devotionals going through Psalm 23 phrase by phrase.

In Psalm 23, David talks about the valley of the shadow of death. He doesn’t sit there. He’s going through. He’s going to get to the other side; he’s going to make back out into the light.

We’re not meant to sit in the darkness. We don’t stay in the shadow of death.

If you are living in a shadow of confusion or weariness or any number of looming things that can cast a shadow on our lives, we’re not meant to stay there. Don’t sit down. Keep moving. But where to go?

That’s why we need a shepherd to guide us. That’s why we have a Shepherd to guide us. God meets needs. He comes to the aid of the poor and needy. He comforts the brokenhearted.

There’s a purpose to the shadow, but we won’t find it in the dark. Let Jesus lead you in the way of peace. He’s the good Shepherd and He loves His sheep.

The Lord My Shepherd (available online for free or at Amazon)