Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Confirmation

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June 4, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Elizabeth got confirmed last Sunday and I wanted to share! This is in the tradition of a Bat Mitzvah. But, she’s only 11! Elizabeth is now an adult in the eyes of the church, and a voting member. I am so proud.

It was a busy weekend: Pentecost Sunday, Memorial Day, and Dad had to work the air show at base so he wasn’t available! And it rained all weekend. I was in charge of our church brunch. Stress!

Look how grow-up she looks! We had to get a new dress since she has recently outgrown EVERYTHING! She had no red!

Confirmation

Her lovely mentors. Pastor joked that Liz is such a handful she needed TWO mentors. haha

Mentors

The confirmation ceremony. Pastor recommended her for youth elder. Awesome. I loved hearing Pastor and her mentors praise her accomplishments and intelligence. Proud mama!

Confirmation Ceremony

Her mentors got Liz a lovely cross necklace.

It was a wonderful morning.

But, I was exhausted when we got home from rushing around and making sure the kids were ready and the food was prepared and laid out pretty. whew!

 
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Resurrection Eggs

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April 5, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We read this amazing book this morning.

We read Benjamin’s Box: The Story of the Resurrection Eggs and talked about our Resurrection Eggs.

It begins when Benjamin shows his friend a box his grandfather gave him. Inside the box is some straw from a baby’s manger bed in a stable. The grandfather had been a shepherd…

The story proceeds to go through the Passion story with Benjamin witnessing every event from a boy’s perspective. He and his friends witness Jesus’ entry to Jerusalem on Palm Sunday.

He meets Judas and tries to warn him of a plot and bribe to arrest Jesus.

The disciples and Jesus ate their Passover supper at Benjamin’s family’s house.

Benjamin feels guilty when he realizes that Judas plotted against Jesus. He can’t understand why the soldiers treat the innocent Jesus so meanly.

(Alex thought these eggs were so cool. He’s opening the one with the coins inside. Love his expression!)

Resurrection Eggs

Benjamin joins the disciples and friends of Jesus to witness the crucifixion.

Cross of Nails

He visits the tomb and is sad and confused. Along the way, Benjamin collects mementoes from each event of Jesus’ last days to put in his treasure box. He doesn’t realize the magnitude of the treasure until the last pages of the story.

Die for Casting Lots

Benjamin’s Box is a beautifully written and illustrated story for children about The Lord’s Passion. I love how it coincides with the Resurrection Eggs. I couldn’t read it without wiping away tears. Amazing to imagine what it must have been like for the witnesses of the time.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Bible study, Easter, Resurrection

Discussing the Bible

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December 23, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

My daughter may have a future as a lawyer.

real life christian

We were on the way to Elizabeth’s music lessons. She takes piano and voice lessons from a local college student. We live in Utah, so we are the minority that we’re not LDS. Elizabeth and I have often expressed confusion over the LDS practice of drinking hot chocolate while eschewing coffee, tea, and soda. We thought out loud about the fact three are hot drinks, all often have caffeine, three originate from tropical climates, all could be sweet or flavored. So, why is chocolate or cocoa ok?

What do the LDS have against coffee or tea? God gave the Hebrews their dietary laws in the Old Testament. Those laws are pretty straightforward. Muslims have their Qadaahul Haajah, Hindus have theirs. (Thank God I’m a Christian for the eating habits alone!)

I’ve researched LDS teachings and all their doctrine states: “hot drinks are not for the body or belly” Doctrine and Covenants. I’ve found that their leaders teach that “hot drinks” only refer to coffee and tea. So, coffee and tea are not permissible whether hot, cold, or lukewarm, while hot cocoa and hot apple cider are ok…but they’re…HOT. Maybe the words should be updated to be more clear? And no one who is LDS can explain this satisfactorily.

So, after her lessons, 11-year-old Elizabeth asked her 20-year-old music teacher about the hot chocolate thing. The teacher told my daughter she didn’t really know; they should ask her mother. (Lessons are held in the teacher’s parents’ house because her mother also gives piano lessons and they share a studio.) Said parents both started conversing with Elizabeth about the hot chocolate issue…it was never really explained to satisfaction. This family has lived all over the States and are very kind and open to questions. Some LDS are not so friendly to interrogation.

Not to lose an opportunity, Elizabeth asked them how do they know that the Book of Mormon is true? They said the Holy Spirit reveals it as truth to LDS believers. They countered with how do we know the Bible is true? Elizabeth said that the Bible is inspired by God (this led to a later explanation by me of the First Council of Nicea). She asked them what exactly they believe about sin and Jesus? Then they start asking Elizabeth questions about her faith. Elizabeth realized discrepancies and showed them the Roman road to salvation. Then they discussed the verses in James 2 about works. They came to a stalemate about then.

I hope she gave them some things to think about this week!

An hour later, as I was starting to worry wonder why Elizabeth wasn’t coming out of their house…she bounded down their porch steps all aglow and told me this whole witnessing story. I am a proud mama!

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Casual Jesus

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October 17, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

My 11-year-old daughter commented on a Christian singer with tiny plain gold earrings in both his ears: “He’s a boy. He can’t have earrings. And he can’t be Christian.”

My four- and five-year-old daughters chimed in, “Yeah, and boys can’t have long hair!” (The singer had a shaved head, praise God, so I guess he’s half saved?).

After resuscitation from my husband and a crying jag on both our parts, I barely recovered enough to query, “Wha-?! Why can’t he be a Christian?”  She could offer no explanation other than boys shouldn’t have earrings or long hair. I think she couldn’t really refute the irrational logic behind the earring/Christian analogy.

This conversation scares me.

And also sorta made me want to go out and get a punk makeover…What are my kids learning (and where are they learning it?)  – about image and etiquette and society and Christianity?

I’m sure I’m failing as a mom and as a Christian.

Lord, help me counter this bigotry that my children have been taught by ignorant people. Help me to not judge others by their appearances and not to raise my eyebrows when I see that dude at Target who has real horns growing out of his head and an actual metal zipper in his tongue (we smile at him, but he may try to eat us).

Oh, and what about club clothes in church? If you feel the need to purchase stripper shoes and miniskirts, that’s between you and God. Maybe you’ve been out all night and came direct to church. If you wear your red patent leather platform stilettos with your black pleather silver studded halter mini dress to church so my kids can stare, it makes me uncomfortable. It’s inappropriate in a teenager and I wonder what your mother would say, unless of course, she’s sitting beside you in a matching ensemble. And when my four year old tells me she thinks your shoes are pretty and she wants a pair just like them, I just threw up a little in my mouth.

But I can see why she thinks they’re pretty.

Some churches stare at newcomers who aren’t dressed “right.” And other churches claim, “come as you are.” It shouldn’t be about numbers or a secret handshake to get in. We’re teaching church and not Christ.

Do we want people to follow rules or show love?

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better. ~Maya Angelou

Our society has gotten so casual. While appearances shouldn’t matter, they do matter. Perhaps too much. Or perhaps, people are just concerned about the wrong things.

Casual Fridays, casual relationships, casual dining, casual décor, casual church…

I think we’ve missed the mark. This whole casual attitude has distorted what’s really important.

It’s all about respect. There just ain’t no respect no more.

Is Jesus casual?

I don’t think so.

casual Jesus

I know the Bible says that appearances shouldn’t matter as much as the heart, and I agree, but surely there must be a line drawn somewhere. (And I desperately search for that line when my 4-year-old wants stripper shoes and my 11-year-old thinks all earring-wearing boys aren’t Christian.)

Do we imagine Jesus, wearing surfer shorts and a ball cap, sitting in a teal and orange restaurant playing raucous rock and roll music through its speakers, eating his cheesy garlic biscuit while discussing how we should pray to Daddy God or explaining the parable of the sowers to the Hot Topic-clad apostles?

Maybe.

Can we imagine Jesus wearing distressed jeans and biker boots and a silk shirt unbuttoned to there with a blinged-out cross necklace (bigger than the medallion the French maî·tre d’ wears at that trendy bistro downtown), preaching to the thousands in a church café stadium with laser lights with a chai vanilla skinny double shot no foam latte in one hand and a PowerPoint clicker in the other, and a pricey mike headset on his perfectly styled hair?

Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

And what about Paul? I wonder if he wasn’t so casual. I’ll bet he was so uptight. He probably wore conservative clothes and all that. He was respected (except when that one dude fell asleep and out the window from boredom…and all that persecution he dealt and received…) And he and Peter didn’t get along at all.

But we live in a society where image is everything.

Did you want Madagascar cinnamon or organic molasses syrup on that latte?

John the Baptist wouldn’t fit in so well, I don’t think, as far as images go.

I think the whole image thing may even be worse in Utah (perhaps it’s a certain subculture here). And often, I just don’t have the energy to braid up three girls’ hair with flowers and ribbons while dressing my 18 month old boy like a Gap ad. Is it really worth it just to go to the grocery store or library? I’m always the last one to get ready and it’s haphazard, at best. I’ve gone out with my hair unwashed in a ponytail and different socks on and no jewelry (gasp! seriously, without the wedding ring, what will people think?!) while my 4 kiddos look like little Land’s End angels…for about 5 minutes. And my husband has on his 5 year old jorts and torn up tennis shoes with a holey T shirt he’s had since before we were married. And he still manages to look ok. I always feel judged whenever we go anywhere. No one cares what guys look like. At least my husband can’t wear earrings or long hair. He’s in the Air Force. whew! Should we just wear family uniforms like that weird family over there (khakis and matching polos)? It’d be SO much easier, and cheaper!

Jesus called the Pharisees vipers and hypocrites. What would he call the girl at church in the stripper shoes? What would he call the Pottery Barn indebted people or the moms who stress over their daughter’s braids being ruler perfect? What would he call the preacher in his trendy clothes with his latte? Of course, their hearts may be in the right place, but if they’re so concerned about their image, then I wonder.

And what are they portraying to my kids or anyone else? I’m working to learn myself and how best to teach my kids about love and respect.

And why does the Christian singer have to look like every other emo rock star? Why do the lyrics have to be so suggestive? Is Jesus supposed to be my boyfriend or my Savior?

What would we think if we saw Jesus or Paul or John, right now? How would we judge them by their appearances?

I think we should dress for success and be respectful. Church is a place of respect because it is the house of God. As Christians, we should honor Jesus however we can. As Christians, we are called to be separate from the world. If all you own are T shirts and jeans, or stripper shoes,  then wear your best T shirt and shoes to church to show respect to God.

And who cares what others think?

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Quiet Time with Kids

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June 8, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

The only quiet I get is when those four little rascals are sleeping. Which means, I get to go to bed around midnight and/or wake up before dawn. If I do both, I am rather a tad bit grumpy. So, lately, I have been greeting my pillow around midnight. And I dread leaving it all alone in the morning.

I don’t get a lot of quiet time to myself with four kids.

I know many things will change when my deployed husband returns home next month. (Many things will have to change when he returns…)

So, I am not a morning person. At all. When I can get the little darlings tucked away in their beds before 9 PM, I am happy to finish some chores and settle down to read. By then, I struggle to read what I should read. I often have to discipline myself to read the Bible instead of the latest Kindle freebie. I try to read a Psalm and/or Proverb every evening before getting too comfy and reading something else. I’m also reading a couple books with online book clubs.

Here is my great, almost brand-new La-Z-Boy recliner I found used on KSL classifieds for only $60! I also found the neatest little table at the thrift store that has a built-in book rack on the bottom.

Voilà! My quiet time/reading nook. Yes, my Rubeus kitty loves his new chair! Didn’t you know he rules this house?!

Recliner

And here is the battle station. Look how neat and tidy!

Mama Desk

I love the smell of organization in the morning.

So, in the mornings, after I’ve been so rudely awakened (occasionally at the unspeakable time of 0530) by a crying baby boy…I say a quick good morning prayer, stumble into his room, try to smile and kiss him and love on him while I change his diaper…stumble downstairs and give him his banana and cereal and cup of milk.

I make coffee (the nectar of the gods). I make it to the desk and check my Facebook and emails and delete 7/8 (a very accurate statistic) of them that are about deals and sales to stores I rarely frequent. (I really should unsubscribe – Who can afford it and who braves actual shopping with 4 kids?)

Then, I read my SOAP verse for the day and pray.

By that time, if I’m lucky (usually I’m interrupted), the boy is done with his breakfast and my coffee is brewed. I wipe him up and let him go wreak havoc on a tidy house…and he doesn’t like his morning naps anymore (what am I to do?)!

I try to settle back in with my cuppa and reading, but that doesn’t always happen. Usually, by that time, my youngest daughter comes bounding down the stairs (can you tell she’s a morning person?) and demands a drink and TV.

I usually go get my eldest daughter up to help me at that point.

On good days, I actually make a hot breakfast and we sit together and read devotions, memory verses, missionary cards, character study, etc.

Then we cheerfully do chores together, like dishes and laundry. I start dinner in the Crockpot or with a marinade.

Then we waltz off to do our read-alouds and family school work.

The lil girls do their Funnix and seat work without complaining usually. Elizabeth is Miss Helper and completes ALL her reading and notebooking in record time.

We all together prepare a lovely nutritious lunch, usually from leftovers.

Lately, the kids have been watching TV with cereal and no milk, much too late into the morning. The basement is still without carpet and all our stuff is in the garage from a sudden flood. Except the TV. The humongous projection TV is jammed into the little living room off the kitchen and it reminds me constantly why I banished it to the basement when we moved here.

I hope and pray to have more discipline to turn the TV off more and focus on finishing our school lessons in the next few weeks before deployment is over.

Many afternoons, I encourage the kids to play in the back yard or quietly in their rooms if the weather is bad.

Some days, I long for bedtime for the kids so I can be by myself for a little while.

How to Have Quiet Time with Kids

There’s a learning curve to having quiet time with kids. I have to model it before I can expect it.

  • Model quiet time with quiet activities, quiet voices, soft music for short times
  • Quiet busy bags, activities, or books for young children nearby in a safe space
  • Designate naptime or rest time mid-afternoon in bedrooms for a half hour or hour for everyone to recharge
  • Downtime in afternoon with poetry, audiobooks, tea, and/or art
  • Wind-down time in evening with prayers, stories, snuggles, aromatherapy, soft music
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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Bible study, faith, homeschool, parenting

Repairing Broken Roads

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June 3, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The bitter steam of my PG Tips wafts up from the jeweled Indian coaster on the corner of my desk. I sigh, heavy with longing and regrets.

Just today, how many failures and errors and missed opportunities?

Countless.

My angelic towheaded 5-year-old asked, “When do we know we get to meet Jesus?”

I remember the fear I had at her age: wondering who would raise me if my parents died? There was no one, not really. An old uncle or even older grandma; either would probably die before I reached adulthood. I didn’t like the idea of living with either of them. Such horrid thoughts for so young a child. I wonder just exactly what is her fear or is it just curiosity?

I answer her that no one knows how long they have to live and that we should always live a life so to be prepared to meet Jesus. We should pray and do His will and be blessings to others. That seems to satisfy her. This one has such deep thoughts. She often has nightmares. She worries. I see myself in her and it scares me. I want to shelter her, protect her, keep her innocent forever. Give her freedom and encouragement to love unabashedly. I want her to live the barbarian way.

Sometimes, I feel like I’m still sixteen, struggling with the same issues that all teens have: what is my life? It was a frightening and exciting era, full of hope and angst and terror. Much apathy.

It still is frightening and exciting. I think I have mostly gotten over the angst. I reminisce over the errors of my past and cringe. What is my life? What have I accomplished? I quake inside over the inevitable questions that will arise that I want to refuse to answer. Days creep into years and soon now, it will be too late. Scared to be accountable for all that lost time. What if I come up short, wanting?

My tea is cold and bitter now.

I have three daughters to raise to not be like me…despicable me. Let them be bonny and blithe and lovely and loved. Let them not ever have to understand the choices I made.

I have a son to raise to choose a wife who is not at all like me. May he grow up to be a Godly man and choose a virtuous woman from a loving family who will accept him as their own.

May these precious children never know alienation or be disavowed. May they only know love and acceptance.

I know God has a plan. I know God always had a plan. He was with me through all those wretched times when I didn’t call out to Him and all the times I did call out and didn’t hear or heed His answer.

I can wish all I want that I had met my husband when I was, oh, like fourteen…because that would have made some things ever so much simpler, right? I wish he was the only boy I had ever dated.

I often wish I could just erase the 14-28ish years…so many troubles. But, I guess it makes me who I am, even as messed up as all that is.

So, now I pray that God can use my past for good.

He promises that, right? Romans 8:28

Kids growing up in sheltered and safe households with little knowledge of the evils of the world don’t know how great they’ve got it. I often wish I had not known the world so intimately.

I pray my kids have a linear and easy road to adulthood.

I wish I hadn’t gone down so many broken roads.

What would I do differently if I could do it over?

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: growth, parenting

Mothers Day Tea

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May 7, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Our church had a Mother-Daughter Tea.

 Each group decorated a table and themselves around a theme. We chose Victorian with some friends.

My pretty girls at our Victorian-themed table.

Pretty Girls at a Fancy Tea Party
 
Elizabeth in her pink sailor dress.
 
Pink Sailor Dress
 
Me in my Victorian creation, complete with bustle. And no pics of the bustle! grr.
Victorian Costume
 
Me and my darling children…
Kids and Me at the Tea
 
Elizabeth and I won smoked the mother-daughter competion. She answered all 5 questions perfectly about me. I knew she knew me well!
Mother and Daughter
 
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Morning Basket

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February 27, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

My daughter and I came up with this idea to organize all our morning circle time things in one place.

A BIBLE BASKET

A convenient morning basket for kids (and moms) for quiet time.

This was great when my kids were very young, and we still incorporate lots of this now that my kids are teens and tweens.

I still love beginning our day with morning circle time.

We all come together as a family on the living room sofas after breakfast for read alouds, prayer, Bible study, scripture reading, missionary stories, music, and more.

What’s in our morning basket?

Morning Basket

Bible Study

My daughter and I have read the Bible in 90 Days. On their website, they have reading schedules for kids.

We’ve done SOAP journals. (S.O.A.P. stands for Scripture, Observation, Application and Prayer.)

She did a reading plan through Hands On Bible .

I am NOT a morning person, so we often “do” Bible in the afternoon or evening if we have a busy day.

We did Leading Little Ones to God one year.

Glow in the Dark Fish is a nice book for families.

We’ve read through The Dig.

We’ve completed The Talk series about biblical sex ed.

We often read a proverb and psalm every day (there are 31 of those guys, so that works out nicely most months…)

I need to find something short (Sure, I’d love to meditate and pray for hours on end, but let’s be honest… Who has time for that?) and powerful to do for my own devotional time. I’ve been reading and praying and journaling before bedtime. Mamas have to fit it in when we can. It’s sometimes so hard, especially when dad is deployed and I’m exhausted from doing it all.

Great Kids Bibles:

  • The Golden Children’s Bible
  • The Beginner’s Bible
  • The Child’s Story Bible
  • The Jesus Storybook Bible

Scripture Memory

Learning and memorizing scripture is so important for our future faith.

The girls loved My ABC Bible Verses and these printable cards.

We also loved Songs for Saplings and printables.

SEEDS Family Worship were also good for a while with these printables.

We have a Charlotte Mason Bible Scripture memorization box. The kids read the cards to us at dinner each night. Each prays for a missionary from missionary prayer cards.

Prayer

I love short and sweet prayer books for moms and kids.

I still love The Power of a Praying Mom and Praying Circles Around Your Children.

We had the whole set of Baby’s First Prayers. (also Nativity and Bible)

We also have a prayer cube.

My daughter made this darling little prayer wheel in AWANA last week and we will incorporate that into our Bible time.

Missionary Stories

We love reading and learning about missionaries. We love historical reading and learning about heroes of the faith.

We loved Hero Tales.

We now read through Christian Heroes missionary stories along with our chronological history reading.

Character study

I think I’m going to start stepping it up with some character traits study. While we often address character as it comes up in our Bible reading and homeschool studies, sometimes, it’s good to have a theme each week too and see how we can incorporate that into our relationships.

Homeschool Share has some great lapbooks.

These are some awesome character cards to use in all sorts of ways.

Education Cubes really engages the kids!

Music, Art, and Poetry

We often include a hymn, classical composer, or a folk song.

We love incorporating our picture study into morning circle time.

We love to read poetry that coincides with our chronological history. We also read poetry and listen to classical music with tea time.

Our circle time and basket is ever evolving as we grow and update. It’s a great resources for all ages – kids and parents!

How do you incorporate Bible study with little ones?

Resources:

  • Card File Box
  • Tabbed and Regular Index Cards
  • My Princess Bible by Andy Holmes
  • Little Boys Bible Storybook for Mothers and Sons by Carolyn Larsen
  • Hands-On Bible
  • Sword Fighting by Karyn Henley
  • The Child’s Story Bible by Catherine F. Vos
  • The Golden Children’s Bible
  • Teaching the Trinity
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