Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Meet the Design Team - Kim Schofield

Hi! Welcome to the SALT blog and another installment of our "Meet the Design Team" series! :-) I've been blessed to have been with the SALT team since the beginning and pray that the bios we've been sharing, as well as our artwork and challenges, have been a blessing to you too!

As the title suggests, my name is Kim...I am first and foremost a stay-at-home-mom to two little boys (5 & 3) and have been married to my soul mate and best friend (we got "hitched" five months after we met) for almost 11 years. Our family resides in beautiful New England. I have also been tremendously blessed to be on a few design teams and am a writer for Scrapbook News & Review, in addition to running a small event management business from my home. (It's true...I don't sleep much...LOL!)

I was raised in a non-religious home; where my parents took me to church when I was very young but later avoided all mention of anything religious or Godly, divorced, and each moved on to new spouses. As a teenager my Mother was diagnosed with cancer and during the time she was receiving treatment, I spent a summer with my Aunt and Uncle, who were Christians. Over that summer they took me to church and presented me with the gospel. Within a few weeks I prayed what I would call the sinner's prayer and at that moment felt that I was indeed saved or born again.

After my Mother passed away, I began a downward spiral into a very worldly and sinful lifestyle. (Just a side note here: I do not blame any of my circumstances for how I lived, as some have tried to do in order to make me feel better, it was my rebellious choice.) I was able to soothe my guilty conscious, that would pop up from time to time, by telling myself, "once saved, always saved." This idea that we can live however we want, with no regard for how God commands us to live, is so prevalent today. However, the Bible clearly teaches that if you love Christ, you will keep His commandments (John 14:15) and that God's grace does not give us a license to sin (Romans 6).

Many years later, I moved in with my Grandmother, started attending church again and for a time maintained a moderately Godly lifestyle. However, I was in a church that rarely focused on the problem of sin or holy living. Like the Pharisees in the New Testament, they were more consumed with cleaning up the "outside of the cup and dish" (Matthew 23:25) but cared little for what was on the inside. Jesus taught that if even if you appear lily white on the outside but fail to obey or serve Christ that your "inside is full of hypocrisy and lawlessness." (Matthew 23:28)

Once in New England I gave up church attendance and wasn't even sure that I was a Christian...Looking back, it's quite possible that I was not. Thankfully, once married (my hubby had been working for Christians and had recently himself become a believer...imagine that!) we started attending church regularly at our now home church. The first few weeks there our Pastor did a number of messages on I John 1:8-9, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." I believe for the first time in my life, I was not only hearing true, Biblical teaching but I was really broken over my sin. Not just a fear of going to hell, which I believe prompted me to pray that prayer so many years before, but a fear of facing a holy God, and answering for the way I lived. An absolute dreadful pit in my stomach would not go away until I prayed again, this time with a sincere confession of my sins and an earnest desire to serve Christ, no matter the cost.

I'm happy to report, praise God, that it's been a joyful 11 years! Not that there aren't struggles with remaining sin and the trials of every day life but there has ceased to be a struggle in my mind about the genuineness of my salvation. I trust that Christ has kept His promise to forgive my sins (through my ongoing confession of those sins) and that through ordinary means - it seems usually my children LOL! -, He is slowly cleansing me from unrighteousness (understanding that we will never attain any sort of sinlessness this side of heaven). I am truly grateful that we serve a long suffering God who is full of love, compassion, and grace. He has faithfully protected and guided me through many uncertain times in my life, and I praise Him for how He has chosen to work out my salvation. Romans 8:28 is one of my favorite verses, one we covered here just a few weeks ago, "For I know that all things work together for good, to them that are called according to His purpose."

May God be pleased to use my testimony of His goodness to be a witness and encouragement to those around me! God bless and thank you for hanging in there for my typical lengthy post! :-)

Thursday, 20 August 2009

Purpose

Like so many words that Christians use, it holds a different meaning when you become a child of God. Often when I hear it used it may mean to be puposeful - to know where you are heading and aim for it, sometimes regardless of consequence. It is seen as a 'good' thing to have a 'dream' and persue it. Or it could be taken to mean that you have a purpose, your existance is meaningful. These interpretations are not in themselves wrong, but sometimes through our self driven motivations they can become tainted.

When someone becomes a believer in Jesus and what his life and death signifies on a deep personal and spiritual level, their PURPOSE changes. Our motivation becomes to live each day for the GLORY of God. To honour HIM in the way we live our lives. How does this happen? When a heart is changed by the Holy Spirit, we realise that often what we live for on a day to day level is how the writer of Ecclesiastes puts it - MEANINGLESS. BUT through the death of Christ our lives can have deep MEANING, FULLFILMENT and PURPOSE.

Recently a friend of mine has undergone serious heart surgery, many prayers have been lifted up for him, and so far the surgery seems to be successful. He has lived a varied life, striving to fulfill the purposes of God, and inspite of fearing the worst he was able to trust God for everything. It has been good to be reminded that we are mortals and one day will die for sure, however our eternal destination is based on wether our PURPOSE has changed in this life or not.
How does your faith make you think differently about your PURPOSE?

Ruth
Pauline
Hazel


Mona



Kim

Julie



Stacy

Thursday, 13 August 2009

Meet the Design Team: Julie Masse

It's my turn to share a bit about myself but I really have no idea what to write! I live in Maine with my family which includes my husband, Jeff, our four children, Emma (7), Anna (5), Ethan (4) and Aaron (2). We will be adding #5 to our family in early October and are looking forward to meet this new blessing!

As for my "spiritual background" I was blessed to have been raised by Christian parents who made sure that my brother and I received Godly instruction, whether at home, at school or at church. I remember as a small child praying the prayer asking God to save me because of Jesus' wor on the cross but I believe that it wasn't until a bit later on that I actually was regenerated and changed by Holy Spirit of God. I am constantly amazed at God's grace and mercy extended to me! There is a hymn we sing often at church (in fact we just sang it last Sunday!), How Sweet and Awful Is the Place written by Isaac Watts. You really need to read the entire hymn, but two verses in particular always speak to me:

“Why was I made to hear Thy voice,
And enter while there’s room,
When thousands make a wretched choice,
And rather starve than come?”

’Twas the same love that spread the feast
That sweetly forced us in;
Else we had still refused to taste,
And perished in our sin.
The Christian life has not been easy (we are never told it will be!) nor have I passed many of the tests but I praise God for His long-suffering and faithfulness. That reminds me of another favorite hymn - Great Is They Faithfulness! When my oldest was born I used to sing that to her over and over and over and over. She got to know it quite well and always calmed down when I'd sing it to her. "All I have needed Thy hand hath provided . . ." how true that is!

I've been so blessed to be on this team! Sometimes I struggle with how to translate a topic in papercrafts but I always learn something and grow by studying the topic a bit more. Thank you to those who follow along with us - you encourage us every week by your visits and comments and I hope that our entire team is an encouragement as well!

Thursday, 6 August 2009

Imperfection

I (Pauline) spent a long time thinking about what my first challenge on SALT would be. I had lots of ideas but kept coming back to something we've been looking at in church over the summer. We've been reflecting on Bible stories with a beach/sea theme which set me thinking about the book of Jonah. It’s one of the Old Testament books that I studied at university and which I learned so much from.

We see Jonah being incredibly frustrated by being asked by God to take a prophecy to the Ninevites. For Jonah, Nineveh is an example of all that is evil and wrong in the world and he struggles with the idea that if the people repent then that is enough to wipe the slate clean. He realises that if he is to take the prophecy to the people then God is giving the people a chance to repent. Jonah can’t cope with the thought of this so tries to flee from the presence of God. It doesn’t work. Jonah realises that he can’t flee from God and that God works with the imperfection in Jonah’s life just as he worked with the Ninevites.

Jonah wasn’t perfect and just like Jonah, we aren’t perfect. We don’t wait until we are perfect to follow Christ, we follow knowing that we have failings but being assured that God will work with us. For me it’s a huge sense of relief knowing that God works with us even when we are stubborn and failing, there’s no expectation of perfection, just an expectation that we will try. The verse that really speaks to me is Jonah 4:2, "you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love".

My plan for the layout for the challenge was to use this verse however I couldn't seem to find the photo I was looking for. I've ended up departing from the plan completely and focussing on the theme of imperfection. It's one of the things that I love about the design team - that we each reflect on the theme for the challenge and produce very individual pieces of work. I hope that you can be inspired by what we do and allow it to springboard your own reflections.

Keep checking back on the blog over the next few days - with it being holiday season there are several of the design team away but there may be additions to this post as and when people are able to.

Pauline
x

Pauline

Kim

Lythan

Julie



Ruth



Hazel




Stacy



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