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Welcome to THE CAT'S MEOW's Easter issue! We hope you enjoy it! We're testing a new format; please let us know how you like it!!!
As we announced last week, the new website is online! Beginning this week, you can reach it at all these addresses:
We're continuing to upgrade and improve things, too! Don't miss the updated Photo Album -- even more cute pics of our favorite kitties! As time allows, we'll be adding a special Holiday Cats album and free-to-use Graphics Library, too!!!
Everything you Need To Know You Can Learn From The Easter Bunny...
Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
Walk softly and carry a big carrot.
Everyone needs a friend who is all ears.
There's no such thing as too much candy.
All work and no play can make you a basket case.
A cute little tail attracts a lot of attention.
Everyone is entitled to a bad hare day.
Let happy thoughts multiply like rabbits.
Some body parts should be floppy.
Keep your paws off other people's jellybeans.
The grass is always greener in someone else's basket.
An Easter bonnet can tame even the wildest hare.
To show your true colors you have to come out of your shell.
The best things in life are still sweet and gooey.
HAPPY EASTER!!!
Seen in several places |
Easter Traditions and
Origins
The Easter Season
Easter is not
only a holiday but a season unto itself. To many
religious people, it marks a time of miracles and a
reaffirming of faith. To those with a more secular view
of the world, it is a celebration of the end of winter,
a time to look toward the warmth of the coming summer
and a chance to shed the heavy, dour clothing of the
winter for the bright colors of
spring.
Easter traditions and symbols are
well known: the Easter Bunny, Easter eggs and Easter
baskets have become hallmarks of this spring festival.
Yet there is more to them than meets the eye. Let us
examine these and other Easter traditions and symbols
and see just how our modern day version of the Easter
holiday developed and from where.
Long before
Easter became the holiday it is today, the spring
festival was celebrated by the people around the world.
Although associated with the sun and the Vernal Equinox,
the celebration was originally based on the lunar
calendar. The name Easter is derived from the Saxon
Eostre (which is synonymous with the name of the
Phoenician Goddess of the Moon, Astarte), a Germanic
goddess of spring and the deity who measured
time.
Curiously, a Jewish festival, Purim,
also celebrated in the spring, has as it central
character and heroine, Esther who, as queen, kept the
evil Haman from killing her people. Even the very word
moon derives from the Sanskrit mas or ma, meaning "to
measure."
Many scholars have suggested that
the reason that the moon was chosen by the ancients as
the way to measure time was the link between the female
cycle and the cycle of the moon. A lunar month of 28
days gave 13 periods in 364 days, which was the solar
equivalent of 52 weeks. The ancient Hebrews had long
followed a lunar calendar, as had most other ancient
cultures. Thus humans could match their natural lives
with the nature of the night sky above
them.
As Christianity grew and spread
throughout the world, it was common practice to adopt,
modify, convert or take over existing non-Christian
festivals, sacred locations and even names, and
assimilate them into the Christian theology. The Romans
used this method of cultural absorption for centuries as
a way of expanding and firming up the Empire. Given the
fact that Christianity had its roots in Roman ways, it
is not surprising that the same technique was used to
spread belief in Christ.
The best example
of this was in ancient Britain where the bearers of the
Cross built their churches and monasteries on the very
sites where far more ancient rites had been
held.Because Eostre,
also know as Ostara, was the goddess of spring and her
symbolism dealt with renewal and rebirth, the Christian
belief in the resurrection of Christ fit well with these
themes.
The connection between Christ’s
Resurrection and Jewish Passover, which, in addition to
the dramatic story of the flight from Egypt, also
contains elements of a spring celebration, made the
merging of the two religious traditions easily
accomplished.
Reprinted from Easter Traditions
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PASSOVER
This year 5764 (2003-2004) Pesach begins at sundown on April 16,
and ends at nightfall on April 24, 2003.
Again, this year we will experience the first night of Passover, which is called Leil Shimurim -- the night of God's watching. This is the point in time when, again, God desires our redemption and demands nothing in return. It is an opportunity to feel God's loving presence, as He envelops us in a secure cocoon, protecting us from any danger. Let's allow ourselves to trust Him in return and take the risks involved in love and commitment.
The Sages designed the Passover Seder as 15 steps to make you enormously successful.
Here's the key to unlocking the code.
Passover is the time when each Jew embarks on a personal journey from slavery to freedom. In order to guide us in our quest, the Sages carefully wrote a book outlining 15 steps to freedom. It's called the Haggadah. The Sages say that Passover occurs on the 15th of Nissan (the Jewish month), to teach us that just as the moon waxes for 15 days, so too our growth must be in 15 gradual steps. Think of these as 15 pieces of the Passover puzzle. Assemble them all and you've got freedom!
1. KADESH
To begin the Seder, we make Kiddush and sanctify the day. The word "kiddush" means special and unique. The first step to personal freedom is to recognize that you are special. You have a distinct combination of talents, skills and experiences that qualifies you to make a unique contribution to the world.
In Egypt, the Jews were forced to build the store-cities of Pitom and Ramses. Why was this tortuous labor? Because these cities rested on swamp-land, and every time the Jews built one level, it sunk into the ground. Slavery is a life with no accomplishment, no achievement, and no meaning.
On Passover, we begin our journey toward personal freedom by asking: What is humanity's biggest need? What can I contribute most profoundly to nurture and protect the world? And... what am I going to do about it?
2. URCHATZ
"Why do we wash our hands at this point in this Seder?" the Talmud asks. "Because it is an unusual activity which prompts the children to ask questions." The very name Haggadah means "telling," for the goal of the Seder is to arouse curious questions, and satisfying answers.
We've all felt the sense of awe upon meeting a fascinating person, or reading an enlightening new book. But as adults we may become enslaved by the idea that it's more sophisticated to "know it all." Passover teaches that to be truly free we must approach life with child-like wonderment. "Who is the wise person?" asks the Talmud. "The one who learns from everyone."
Passover is the holiday of springtime, joy and renewal. Nissan is the first month. And the very word for "month," chodesh, has the same letters as the word for "new," chadash. The Seder is filled with unusual activities. Be curious. Be a student of life. Be free.
3. KARPAS
We take a green vegetable and bless God for creating fruits from the ground. Gratitude is liberating. "Who is the rich person?" asks the Talmud. "The one who's satisfied with what he's got."
This appreciation comes through focusing on details. For example, to get this green vegetable to our table, it had to be planted, harvested, packed, shipped, unloaded, unpacked, displayed, and rung up by a cashier -- before we even bring it home! If we truly appreciate all we have, we'll be constantly proclaiming: "Life is a wonderful gift!"
On a deeper level, we dip the vegetable in salt water to let us know that even those things which appear bitter -- a lost job or a broken relationship -- are ultimately for the best.
Gratitude is an attitude. It requires constant effort and attention. A Jew strives to say 100 blessings every day. The reward is emancipation.
4. YACHATZ
We break the middle matzah, and put it aside to serve later as the Afikomen. Why do we break the matzah now if we don't need it until later? Because a key to freedom is to anticipate the future and make it real.
The definition of maturity is the ability to trade a lower pleasure now for a higher pleasure later. Children lack this perspective and demand instant gratification. (Why not eat 10 candies now? Because you'll get a stomach-ache later!) The challenge of adulthood is training ourselves to look at the long-term consequences. (Why not intermarry now that I'm in love? Because the future portends family tension, confusion for children, and estrangement from one's roots.)
"Who is the wise man?" asks the Talmud. "The one who sees the future." We break the middle Matzah, not for now, but for later. Because true freedom is a long-term proposition.
5. MAGGID
The Sages tell us that the unique ability given to humanity is the power of speech. Speech is the tool of building and construction. God used it to create the world ("And God said: Let there be light."), and the Kabbalists used it to create the golem.
On Seder night, we use our gift of speech for the central part of the Haggadah: telling the Passover story. The very word "Pesach" is a contraction of the words Peh Sach, meaning "the mouth speaks." The Hebrew name for Pharaoh, on the other hand, is a combination of Peh Rah, meaning "the bad mouth." For just as speech has the power to build, it also has the power to destroy. Gossip and slander drive apart families and communities.
On Passover, we use speech to "build" humanity -- by communicating, connecting, and encouraging each other. We stay up long into the night, relating the story of our exodus, tasting and sharing the joy of freedom.
6. RACHTZAH
One aspect of freedom is the ability to elevate ourselves above the lowest common denominator on the street. We've all felt the sensory assault of billboards, gratuitous talk-radio, immodest fashions, and violence on TV.
At the Seder we wash our hands as a preparatory step before the Matzah, in order to carefully consider what it is we're about to eat. One who is concerned with spiritual and physical health is discriminating about all forms of consumption: which movies to watch, which friends to spend time with, and what standards of business ethics to uphold. The streets are filled with a multitude of options. But we must not consume indiscriminately.
We "wash our hands" to cleanse and distance ourselves from unhealthy influences. Freedom is the ability to say: "I choose not to partake."
7. MOTZI
We make the "hamotzi" blessing to thank God for "bringing forth bread from the ground." Which is odd because God brings wheat from the ground -- and man turns it into bread! In truth, God gives us two gifts: 1) the raw materials, and 2) the tools for transforming it into life.
Today, technology has pulled us away from seeing the beauty of God's creation. We fine-tune our environment with air-conditioning, synthetic foods, cosmetic surgery, and genetic engineering. Mankind is perilously close to "playing God." But in truth, man cannot create anything perfect; man can only tune into God's ultimate perfection. Which is more awesome to behold -- the world's biggest super-computer, or the human brain? Between your two ears are 10 billion nerve cells -- a communication system 100 times larger than the entire communications system on Earth.
When we make "hamotzi," we hold the Matzah with all 10 fingers - reminding us that while human hands produced this food, it is yet another gift from the Creator and Sustainer of all life.
8. MATZAH
Both bread and Matzah are flour mixed with water, then kneaded into a dough and baked. What is the difference between them? The difference is
that bread dough has sat unattended for 18 minutes and becomes leavened (bread). The Matzah which we eat on Passover has been baked quickly.
The spelling of "Matzah" is similar to "mitzvah:" Just as we shouldn't delay in the making of Matzah, so too we shouldn't procrastinate in performing a mitzvah. The lesson of Matzah is to seize the moment. Delaying even one second can mean the difference between an opportunity gained or lost.
Why 18 minutes? Because the number 18 is the numerical value of "Chai," meaning "life." They say that "baseball is a game of inches." Actually, life itself is a game of seconds. The Talmud tells of people who had sunk to the depths of humanity, and then in one moment of insight reversed their lives for all eternity. More than just the difference between Matzah and bread, the Seder teaches us the difference between life and death.
9. MARROR
At the Seder we say: "In every generation they rise against us to annihilate us." The Egyptians broke our backs and our spirits. The Romans destroyed the Second Temple and rivers of Jewish blood flowed. And so it was in every generation: Crusades, Inquisitions, Pogroms, Holocaust, Arab terrorism. Intense and irrational violence has stalked our people to every corner of the globe. Why the hatred?
The Talmud says the Hebrew word for "hatred" (sinah) is related to the word "Sinai." At Mount Sinai, the Jewish people acquired the legacy of morality and justice -- a message that evil cannot tolerate. We taught the world "to beat their swords into plowshares." We taught the world "to love your neighbor as yourself." We taught the world equality before justice, and that admiration belongs not to the rich and powerful -- but to the good, the wise, and the kind. Hitler said: "The Jews have inflicted two wounds on mankind -- circumcision on the body, and conscience on the soul." How right he was and how much more work we have to do.
Throughout the generations, the forces of darkness have sought to extinguish our flame. But the Jews have somehow prevailed. We have God's promise that we will be the eternal nation. For without our message, the world would revert to utter chaos.
At the Seder, we eat the bitter herbs -- in combination with Matzah -- to underscore that God is present not only during our periods of freedom (symbolized by the Matzah), but during our bitter periods of exile as well. He will never forsake us.
10. KORECH
The Hillel Sandwich is "bricks-and-mortar:" broken Matzah held together by bitter herbs and charoset. The Matzah was once whole. So too, the Jewish people can become crushed and divisive. But we are held together by our common links to Torah and our shared historical experiences.
The Talmud says that as Jews in Egypt, we were redeemed only because of our unity. We were unified in our commitment to each other and to the future of our people. Weeks later at Mount Sinai, we stood together and accepted the Torah with one heart and one mind.
Today, we are fighting amongst ourselves under the watchful eye of the world media. It is both embarrassing and discouraging. The biggest threat to Jewish survival may be from within. Our only response is to stand loudly and proclaim: Every Jew is a Jew. Period. The inclusion of the "Wicked Son" in the Seder expresses our conviction that no Jew is ever irretrievably lost. We are all one family, responsible to love and care for one another.
The Matzah may be broken, but it can be restored. It is this Hillel Sandwich which has traditionally symbolized our commitment to glue the Jewish nation back together. On the merit of unity we were redeemed from Egypt, and it is on that merit that we shall be redeemed once again.
11. SHULCHAN ORECH
When we think of attaining levels of holiness, it seems strange that one of the mitzvots of Seder night should be eating a festive meal. That is because the Jewish attitude toward our physical drives and material needs is quite different from that of other religions. Our religious leaders are neither celibate nor do they meditate all day on a mountaintop. Rather than negating or denying the physical, Judaism stresses the importance of feasting and marital relations.
God wants it that way. The proof is that instead of creating all foods bland (or in the form of "protein-pills"), God concocted a variety of flavors and textures -- orange, strawberry, chocolate, banana and mango. Why? Because God wants His people to have pleasure! Adam and Eve were put into the Garden of Eden -- the Garden of Pleasure.
The Talmud says that one of the first questions a person is asked when they get up to Heaven is: "Did you enjoy all the fruits of the world?" On Seder night, we eat the festive meal to teach us that true freedom is the ability to sanctify life, not flee from it.
12. TZAFUN
The last thing we eat all night is the Afikoman. (Matzah for dessert?! And I thought we were having macaroons!) We eat this final piece of Matzah -- not because we are hungry -- but because we are commanded. Physical pleasure, though an integral part of our lives, sometimes gives way to a higher value.
To illustrate this concept, the Talmud compares a person to a "horse and rider." The purpose of a horse is to take you where you want to go; but left to its own devices, the horse will get lazy and may even throw off the rider. That's why the rider has to be in control of making all the decisions. So too, our bodies are the vehicles for moving us through life; they require care and attention -- but not to the extent of assuming a pre-eminent position. There is a difference between eating healthy, and flying to Europe in order to dine on authentic Italian food. A person dominated by material strivings is anything but free. Judaism says: control the physical so it does not control you. Become a master of yourself.
It is this ability to rise above our physical selves that demarcates the difference between humans and animals. The story is told of the Baal Shem Tov looking at his neighbor eating dinner -- and instead of a person, seeing the form of an ox. The man was solely in pursuit of physical pleasure, no different than an animal. Freedom is the ability to put our soul in control. "Who is the strong person?" asks the Talmud. "The one who can subdue his personal inclination."
At the Seder, we hide the Afikomen, search, find -- and win a prize! The same is true with our spiritual yearning to do the right thing. Although it might be buried inside, we can search for it, find it -- and the prize is pure freedom.
13. BARECH
Social pressure is one thing that holds us back from taking charge and doing the right thing. Barech, the "Grace After Meals" was instituted by Abraham 4000 years ago. Abraham would invite idolatrous wayfarers into his tent for a hearty meal, and then tell them the price of admission is to bless God. They thought he was crazy! Nobody believed in God! Abraham was called Ha'Ivri ("the Hebrew"), meaning "the one who stands on the other side." He was a social outcast and a lone voice in the wilderness.
Would we have been able to stand up to that kind of social pressure? Do we speak out today against the proliferation of media, sex and violence? Against drugs and crime in our streets? Slavery is a pre-occupation with self-image and social status. ("What will they think of me if I voice my objection? How will I bear the pain of isolation and rejection?")
The Hebrew word for Egypt is Mitzrayim -- from the root meitzar, which means narrow and constricted. When we left Egypt, we became free of the societal forces which restrict us to a narrow path of fashion, image and ideas. Freedom means doing the right thing even when it may not be socially popular. I have to live with my own conscience. The reality is liberating.
14. HALLEL
As the feeling of freedom inebriates our souls (helped along by the four cups of wine!), we sing aloud in joy. When the Jews came out of Egypt and crossed the Red Sea they broke out in song (Exodus chapter 15). When we see the upending of evil, the Egyptians drowning at the sea, we are instinctively grateful to the One who orchestrated the turnaround! God delivers us from slavery unto freedom -- and we are amazed at the beauty and swiftness of it all.
The Jews in Egypt had sunk to the 49th level of spiritual impurity, and only when they hit rock-bottom did they turn to God and cry out. It was at that moment that they were redeemed. Redemption can be as quick as the blink of an eye. Our Egyptian experience began with Joseph sitting in the dungeon prison -- and rising to the position of Prime Minister in the span of one day!
The Seder is the only one of the 613 mitzvot that is performed specifically at night, for on Passover, we turn the darkness into light. With "Hallel," we abandon all intellectual posits, and experience the emotional joy of freedom. Song is the expression of an excited soul. It is the way to break out of oneself and reach for freedom.
15. NIRTZAH
We conclude our Seder with the prayer, "Next Year in Jerusalem." Every synagogue in the world faces Jerusalem. It is the focus of our hopes and aspirations -- not merely in a geographic sense, but in a conceptual sense as well. The Talmud says creation began in Jerusalem, and the world radiated outward from this spot. Medieval maps show Jerusalem at the epicenter of Asia, Europe, and Africa. The world flows into this place, and all of life's forces resonate there. From Jerusalem, the whole world is cast into perspective.
The name Jerusalem means "city of peace." Peace, shalom, is more than the absence of conflict; it is the seamless harmony of humanity genuinely embracing a common vision. Jerusalem is a vision of God in our lives, a metaphor of a perfected world. Jerusalem gives us hope to achieve what we as a people must do, to sanctify this world.
In Egypt, we hadn't yet absorbed this lesson: we were too burnt out from hard work (Exodus 6:9) and had become immersed in the spiritual abyss of Egyptian society. When we finally were redeemed, it happened so quickly and hastily that even then we were unable to grasp its full significance. What this means is that year after year, each successful Seder adds meaning to the original events, and brings us closer to the final redemption.
As the Seder draws to a close, we sense the process of redemption is under way. We shout aloud: "Next Year in Jerusalem!" We're on our way back home.
Reprinted from Inspiring Quotes
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 Inspiration Line is a FREE
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perspectives. Our intent is to inspire through motivational articles,
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interesting news and helpful tips on relationship skills, pet care, health
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STILL HE WALKED!
He could hear the crowds screaming
"crucify, crucify..."
He could hear the hatred in their voices, these were his chosen
people.
He loved them, and they were
going to crucify him. He was beaten, bleeding and weakened...
His heart was broken, but still He walked.
He could see the crowd as
He came from the palace. He knew each of the faces so well.
He had created them. He knew
every smile, laugh, and shed tear,
but now they were contorted with rage and anger . . . His heart
broke, but still He walked.
Was He scared? You and I would
have been, so his Humanness would have mandated that He was.
He felt alone. His disciples
had left, denied, and even betrayed Him.
He searched the crowd for a loving face and He saw very few.
Then He turned his eyes to
the only ONE who mattered and He knew that He would never be alone.
He looked back at the crowd,
at the people who were spitting at Him,throwing rocks at him and
mocking Him;
and He knew that because of Him,they would never be alone. So for
them, He walked.
The sounds of the hammer striking
the spikes echoed through the crowd.
The sounds of his cries echoed
even louder, the cheers of the crowd,
as His hands and feet were nailed to the cross, intensified with
each blow.
Loudest of all was the still,
small voice inside His heart that whispered
"I am with you, My Son," and God's heart broke.
He had let His Son walk. Jesus
could have asked God to end His suffering,but instead
He asked God to forgive, not to forgive Him, but to forgive the
ones who were persecuting Him.
As He hung on that cross,
dying an unimaginable death, He looked out and saw,
not only the faces in the crowd, but also, the face of every person
yet to be, and His heart filled with love.
As His body was dying, His
heart was alive. Alive with the limitless, unconditional love
He feels for each of us. That is why He walked.
When I forget how much My
God loves me, I remember His walk.
When I wonder if I can be
forgiven, I remember His walk.
When I need reminded of how to live like Christ, I think of is walk.
And to show Him how much I love Him, I wake up each morning, turn
my eyes to Him, And I walk.
By Carrie McCutcheon
Reprinted from More
From Rondout
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On Love
Almost all religions teach that love is the supreme virtue. And a
few spiritual teachers perceiving that we are all gifted at loving
that which pleases us, teach that the highest, most edifying forms,
which might ultimately save the world, involve our regard for those
that it is difficult to love...some of whom may be our enemies.
--(Channel) Surfing the Apocalypse, S11 Redux, Guerrilla News Network
http://www3.sympatico.ca/leighnot/On_Love.htm

LOVE
Love is located within you. It is yours to nurture and savor, give to
others in any way you choose. Love must be without qualifications or
demands. Your love must not depend on your being loved in return.
You must learn to find ecstasy in other people's happiness. You must
ask nothing of your love. Love can be experienced only by those who
know themselves and have no fear of a detached love. Once you feel
love for yourself, it is natural to give it away. Love for yourself
provides the ability to love others. Only a person who experiences
love within is capable of genuine detached love. With no
expectations, you will find it quite easy to love those who refuse to
love you.
Love isn't dependent on being loved in return. Love is loving without
being loved. It isn't physical, nor emotional, it is spiritual and
holy. True love can never die, only bloom. Human love is demanding,
and conditional. True love is God's love - no deposit, no return, no
end, no death - only love - forever, and for always. For everyone.
Perfected love is not a love we are capable of as human beings. It
is blessed upon us by God - It's the one true love - the greatest
love of all. If we allow God's love inside our hearts we will love
ourselves, our life, our world and our fellow human beings.
Unconditional love - the love only God has perfected.
Because there is God - there is Love. Love is Life, Life is Love.
The lack of love is the same as the lack of life - death.
Emptiness. Nothingness. Love is all we need - love one
another - in our likeness, and uniqueness. Only love can cure what
ails this world - the lack of it will result in total destruction.
Love makes the world go around.....Love is all we need.....
Love and Light,
Donna Wallace
a.k.a. Gentle-Daydreamer
© 2002
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How to Make an Easter Bunny Cake by Monica Resinger Did you ever see the bunny cakes in the grocery store bakery department? If you have, you may have noticed that they can be expensive. I'm going to tell you how to make your own so you can save money. You'll need: any flavor cake mix a round cake pan white frosting (purchased or homemade) stiff construction paper in white, black and pink glue Optional: Easter grass jellybeans shredded coconut Directions: Prepare the cake mix according to package directions and bake it in the round cake pan. Most cake mixes make enough batter for two round cake pans; therefore you can make two bunny cakes or make cupcakes with the rest of the batter if you only want to make one bunny cake. After the cake has cooled, remove it from the pan and cut the circle in half. With white frosting, frost the bottom of one of the halves generously, then stand the two halves up on their cut side on a plate or cake stand and push the two bottoms together so the frosting is in the middle holding them together. Now frost the whole thing. It should look like a half circle standing on a plate; this is the body of the bunny. For the eyes, cut two round circles out of white construction paper, then two smaller circles out of black construction paper and glue each black circle onto a white circle. Stick the eyes onto the frosting on the front of the bunny body (one of the narrow ends). For the ears, cut bunny ear shapes, in proportion with the body, out of white construction paper. Cut smaller bunny ear shapes out of the pink construction paper and glue them onto the white ones to make the center of the ear. When glue has dried, insert the bottom of the ears into the frosting about an inch above the eyes. For further decoration, lay Easter grass around the cake, place jellybeans on top of the grass and put coconut on the frosting of the cake as bunny hair. This cake makes a nice centerpiece for your table. Use it with a vase of in-season flowers and there you have it. © 2001, Monica Resinger About the Author: Monica Resinger is the Editor of The Homemaker's Journal, a jam-packed daily e-mail e-zine that publishes the collective advice of thousands of homemakers in all home and garden topics! Become a part of The Homemaker's Journal and get or share solutions to your homemaking problems! Join now by sending a blank e-mail to:
Reprinted from Insprational Angels
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"A Sacrifice at Auschwitz"
In A Book of Saints, Anne Gordon tells the story of Father
Maximilian Kolbe, who was a prisoner at Auschwitz in August 1941.
A prisoner escaped from the camp, and in reprisal, the Nazis
ordered that ten prisoners had to die by starvation. Father Kolbe
offered to take the place of one of the condemned men. The Nazis
kept Kolbe in the starvation bunker for two weeks and then put him
to death by lethal injection on August 14, 1941.
Thirty years later a survivor of Auschwitz described the effect
of Kolbe's action: "It was an enormous shock to the whole camp. We
became aware that someone among us in this spiritual dark night of
the soul was raising the standard of love on high. Someone
unknown, like everyone else, tortured and bereft of name and
social standing, went to a horrible death for the sake of someone
not even related to him.
"Therefore it is not true, we cried, that humanity is cast down
and trampled in the mud, overcome by oppressors, and overwhelmed
by hopelessness. Thousands of prisoners were convinced the true
world continued to exist and that our torturers would not be able
to destroy it.
"To say that Father Kolbe died for us or for that person's
family is too great a simplification. His death was the salvation
of thousands. ... We were stunned by his act, which became for us
a mighty explosion of light in the dark camp."
-- Bill Norman, Markham, Ontario. Leadership, Vol. 16, no. 2.
See: Mt 20:28; Jn 15:13; 1 Ti 2:6.
Reprinted from A Dose of Inspiration
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A JELLYBEAN PRAYER
Red is for the blood He gave,
Green is for the grass He made.
Yellow is for the Sun so bright,
Orange is for the edge of night.
Black is for the sins we made,
White is for the grace He gave.
Purple is for the hours of sorrow,
Pink is for a new tomorrow.
A bag of jellybeans, colorful and sweet, is a promise, a prayer, and a
loved one's treat.
- Author
Unknown
From my Grandma's fridge door |
Work for yourself but not by yourself!!
No Selling/inventory/home parties
Join an ethical family-focused company that values financial security,
social consciousness and complete health:
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