So what's going on for Women Of Wapato this week? Both Common Grounds and The Perk will meet every week this year (except for holidays.)We start the actual lesson of our new Bible study by Beth Moore, called Jesus, the One and Only this week. Please be aware that this will not be a video series by Beth. I'm just using her workbook on the subject to present the lessons. It will be Sherrie doing her imitation of Beth--big hair, southern accent, and all. No, in reality it will just be plain ol' Sherrie presenting the Word, with lots of interaction from you, based on studies by Beth.
Common Grounds meets at 6:30 PM on Wednesdays. For you working women that feel pressured trying to get there by 6:30, please realize that our first 15 minutes are specifically designed for snacks and socializing. The study doesn't officially begin until 6:45. Please don't feel bad if you can't get there until then. I'll be through by 8:15, and people always stay around and visit more then, though those that need to get home right away are free to leave. We need one more person to volunteer to bring snacks this week. Rita is in charge of reminding those who have signed up, so if you'd like to help out by bringing something tasty for this week, please give her a call at 503-828-2853.
The Perk meets Thursday at 9:30 AM. I want all you young mothers to know that you can bring your babies along with you. And in fact, it looks like we may be able to provide babysitting, though I haven't heard back officially, so can't really announce it yet. I don't want mothers to miss out on Bible study, as you really need all the encouragement you can get! So bring those little ones and we'll make it work! Just like with Common Grounds, our first 15 minutes are for eating and talking, so you have a little wiggle room to get there on time. I'll end by 11:15.
This week we'll be focusing on a Bible passage found in Luke 1:10-38. I suggest you carefully read this passage ahead of time so you'll be better prepared for our discussion. During this entire study we'll be be looking at Jesus in a fresh way, beginning with the announcement of His up-coming birth.
My Women of Faith commercial in last week's WOW-Zine didn't garner any response. I guess I'm going to have to keep my day job, as I wasn't successful as infomercial personality. So, this week I'll just tell it to you straight. I need at least two more women to come to Women of Faith with 9 others of us the weekend of October 5th and 6th. The cost is $91. I've also reserved 3 motel rooms( four women in each) at the Comfort Inn at the airport, which will cost an additonal $30 each. I need to know this week if you can go, otherwise I have to turn in our unused tickets. So ladies, please act NOW!
I'm going to leave you with a wonderful piece written by Ann Voskamp, author of One Thousand Gifts. She's got some real wisdom as to how we women can support each other. She has an unusual way of expressing herself, and I hope you'll enjoy it.
Posted: 14 Sep 2012 08:50 AM PDT
Girl, you’ve come from this long line of women —Women who shunned anything silk or feminine because they never wanted a man to notice them because men did things you didn’t want them to and took things that weren’t theirs to take.
Women who wore bulky sweaters and baggy pants and walked around hoping a lot of yardage might make their souls invisible and avoided mirrors like an allergy that might make it hard to breathe. Why is it that any reflective surface makes a woman see pounds and deflating ugly?
Did I ever tell you that I once followed a recipe in Seventeen magazine for DIY mousse? And went around with this sticky mess of hair that had sugar shaking out of it all day like a medical emergency case of dandruff.
And all the years the other girls were jaunting about in pink jelly shoes?
I had to wear black orthopedic shoes for an aching spine and have you ever tried to make black orthopedic shoes look right with white shorts? Numbers on tags have seemed like undeniable proof of ugliness and standing in a room full of primped women can make the self-hate gnaw right up your blushing insides.
Swim suits can taunt mean and clothes can mock loud and I’ve stood in front of mirrors and looked right in those eyes and whispered it out louder: Loser.
The boys called me barn-board straight Annie.
Being a woman every day can be this mind field in self-maiming thoughts.
I’ve cut my skin with glass and blades and words and hated myself enough to write down a plan to die.
Remember that part in that book
And she wound all those sticky expectations and the tape so tight around her middle that she couldn’t breathe?
Every woman should breathe peace in her own exquisite skin.
It was after reading Annie’s story
How you’ve revived and how you laugh again and no glossy, media-induced, photoshopped lies can steal away your God-given joy in being you.
Your soul is made to perfectly fit your skin… and you glow.
The way you’ve been going around here smiling, you make me think this, daughter of mine, that women could be this to each other:
We’ll tell our daughters at the sink and at the mirror and at the door, that your Father made you fearfully and wonderfully and uniquely and You are the perfect-sized you for a God-sized plan.
And we’ll say it in the dressing rooms and to the shaming thoughts behind closed doors and we’ll say it to every woman who hides: that God’s daughters fit in any swim suit, dress suit, shimmering suits, because they are suited up in the armour of Christ, and no arrows from the media or the past or ourselves can harm us.
We will be sisters to each other and we won’t ever judge another sister and we will see each woman’s face as pure God-masterpiece because it’s the truth and we’ll tell each other what every woman needs to hear: You have the prettiest eyes.
Because it’s always first the eyes, always first the perspective and the way we see, and if the eyes have light, the whole body is full of light. We have to help our sisters see who they are in light of Christ — so radiant.
So we’ll say it a dozen time a day, to every woman who we meet because it’s the truth and she needs to hear it and no matter if she has a man saying it, she has sisters speaking into her scraped and bleeding places: You are so beautiful — so soul beautiful. And we’ll watch our sisters’ eyes light, always first the eyes.
And we won’t ever let one of our sisters ever forget and we won’t leave even one woman behind:
The curve of a smile is a woman’s most perfect curve and the only tag that matters is the one that says Robed in the Righteousness of Christ.
It may not be easy to be a woman in this world. But it is always perfect to be a woman in His hand.
Hope-girl? When we held on to each other late in the kitchen last night?We are the women who let go all the woman-baggage that came behind and hold onto each other and affirm in the firm grip of Christ and did you hear me stand there in the kitchen and whisper to you what I heard the Father whisper about you?
You are a treasured possession, and love is being lavished on you and you aren’t ever rejected but loved everlastingly and over you, over you — God sings this everlasting love song.
It’s the last thing I thought of last night after the lights were out —
how you smiled and just shone.
IIt’s when you came up behind me and put your arms around me in the kitchen last night while I was making food for your Dad.
The way you laid your head on my
shoulder and you held me, mama in the daughter arms after all these
thirteen years. I reached up and laid my hand on your cheek, and it only takes a moment and mother and a daughter aren’t far apart anymore.
You know we come from a long line of women who have struggled in their own skin, right?Sherrie Ashcraft, Women's Ministry Director
sherrieashcraft@yahoo.com 971-285-6699
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