Lyn Cote's Blog, page 83

April 2, 2012

The Fruits of the Spirit–Are You Prepared for Easter?


"But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance: against such there is no law." Galatians 5:22-23


Earlier this year I asked if you would like to discuss the fruits of the spirit. In January, we had a lively discussion on love and forgiveness. In February, the discussion was less spirited on the topic of "joy."


I decided that perhaps instead of doing one a month as planned, doing all of them now the week before Easter might engender more discussion. (After all, I don't write these blogs just to talk to myself. :-)


One point that occurred to me is I believe there are two different types of fruits. The active "doing" fruits.


And the fruits we receive as a testimony of our relationship with God through the Holy Spirit.


For example, love is something we do–it's active. Joy, on the other hand, is something we receive. Joy is an evidence of God's working in us and joining with us. We receive it.


What do you think of that idea? Perhaps that's why love is more of a concern to us. That's what we are supposed to be doing. But joy we experience through nearness to God.


If we take this approach, which are the fruits that are "active?"


Which of –love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance?


Or do I have it wrong? What do you think? And how are you preparing for Easter-spiritually? (Though I love coloring eggs too!)–Lyn



Share

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 02, 2012 17:14

March 31, 2012

Two Winners & Fruits of the Spirits To Come!

Hi Thanks to our two authors from last week, Janet Chester Bly and Jane Myers Perrine, we have two winners to announce!


Peggy Clayton won Jane's book!


SC Mitchell won the book Janet offered!


Coming Tuesday we'll wrap up our discussion of the fruits of the spirit and prepare for Easter!


Happy Palm Sunday!–Lyn


Share

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 31, 2012 20:16

March 28, 2012

Author Jane Myers Perrine & The Strongest Women She Ever Met


My guest today is Author Jane Myers Perrine. Her latest books have taken a turn toward Jan Karon's tyope of story–a small town of interesting and special characters. BE SURE TO LEAVE A COMMENT FOR THE BOOK GIVEWAY DRAWING. Here's Jane:


"The Strongest woman I've ever met was Hazel Myers, my father's younger sister.


My father was one of six children.  Their father died when they were all young.  One-hundred years ago, there were no safety nets.  All my grandfather left the family was a house he'd built.  No insurance, no company benefits for my grandmother to raise six children.


This was made even more difficult because Aunt Hazel had juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.   She couldn't go to school because all the buildings had many flights of stairs.  My grandmother Jennie—for whom I'm named—took a job cleaning a school so she could take her youngest daughter with her, but the cold concrete floor caused Aunt Hazel's joints to ache terribly.


But with no education, a body filled with pain, and twisted fingers, she taught herself to type.  For many years as an adult, she worked as secretary at the Christian church the family attended.


I never noticed her handicap.  She had an odd little battery-powered vehicle she used to get around:  a three-wheeler with a bench seat.  She used to take her nieces and nephews on rides around the neighborhood.  She lived a life of caring for others and optimism even while in terrible pain all of her life.


After her death in her fifties, my father gave me her Bible in which he'd written, "She bore her thorns in the flesh bravely."


When I want to complain about my back hurting or pain in my wrists from writing, I think of Hazel Myers.  She would have rejoiced to have a computer with soft keys instead of using a manual typewriter.


I never heard Aunt Hazel talk about her faith, but it shown from her every minute of her life and was the source of her strength.



The Welcome Committee of Butternut Creek is the interwoven story of many people.  One of the heroines is Birdie MacDowell, a pillar of the church who helped found the thrift shop and the food pantry.  At nearly seventy, she's still working to support  her granddaughters.  She's weathered storms in her life:  the death of her husband, the addiction of her daughter, and the rearing of two girls from their births.   She endures and serves because she knows her strength comes from her faith."–Jane


Jane, it sounds to me like Hazel was the inspiration for your heroine, Birdie. (Love that name!)


Please leave a reply to this question to qualify for the book drawing.


Question: We have so many labor-saving devices today. Which one do you depend upon the most? Which one do you wish you could have "sent" into the past for your grandmother?–Lyn



Website: 
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 28, 2012 17:26

March 26, 2012

Author Janet Chester Bly & Do You Know What the Most American Thing in America Is?





My guest today is Janet Chester Bly, the wife of late Western author Stephen Bly. She is offering a BOOK GIVEAWAY TO A COMMENTER. I love the photo of the two of them above since it shows Janet's love for her husband shining through–also her sweet-nature. Janet is going to tell us about




Narcissa Kinney, Sponsor Of "The Most American Thing in America." Here's Janet:


"Stuart Brannon's Final Shot is full of adventure and humor and most of it happens in or near Gearhart, Oregon in 1905.


The railroad opened up more tourists for the seacoast village of Gearhart, tucked between crashing surf and Pacific forests. Narcissa Kinney insisted that the city council proclaim this a 'dry town,' which it remained for more than seventy years after her death.


I was intrigued in my research with the Chautauqua movement of the times and Narcissa's sponsorship that brought culture to Gearhart. She organized the forming of 200-acres of prime forest land set aside for Gearhart Park, that included an auditorium with arched entrance, belfry, double hip roof and clerestorey, used for traveling circuit speakers and entertainment. She made sure the development scheme protected the Ridge Path, a principal byway grande promenade through the area's dune meadows, as well as many other natural features as possible.


Because of Narcissa, Gearhart became the first planned coastal resort community in the state of Oregon.


Gearhart residents and visitors enjoyed classic plays, Broadway hits, opera stars, glee clubs and bands such as John Philip Sousa's. Fiery orators and activists, crusaders and preachers took advantage of this forum. More than four hundred other cities across the country sponsored these same events. President Theodore Roosevelt called them, "the most American thing in America." This movement thrived in the day before movie theatres and TVs.



Narcissa is the background real-life character important to the setting of Stuart Brannon's Final Shot. She inspires the fictional Lady Harriet Reed-Fletcher to sponsor her own benevolence project in the city of Gearhart. Lady Harriet and Narcissa compare in strong will, leadership and influencing the men in their lives to get involved in their causes.


Gearhart is where Stuart Brannon and his friends solve the mystery of finding his U.S. Marshal friend and the 'whodunnit' of several murders.


Not what Narcissa had in mind at all for Gearhart, I'm sure. But her husband, Marshall, founder of the local golf course, would approve the celebrity tournament Lady Harriet instigates and in which Brannon participates. And Narcissa would be pleased with the mission: raising money for the Willamette Orphan Farm."–Janet


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


BIO:  Janet Chester Bly has authored 30 nonfiction and fiction books, 18 she co-authored with Christy Award winning author, Stephen Bly. Titles include The Hidden West Series, The Carson City Chronicles, Hope Lives Here, and The Heart of a Runaway. She resides at 4200 ft. elev. on the Idaho Nez Perce Indian Reservation. Her 3 married sons, Russell, Michael and Aaron, live down the mountain with their families.


"Stuart Brannon's Final Shot delivers and reminds us what we'll miss most about the beloved author." Jerry B. Jenkins, NYT Bestselling novelist & biographer


"Bly throws his readers into the fray from the first page and never lets up…." Award-winning author Kathleen Y'Barbo


Michael Ehret, CWG editor-in-chief: "…unusual experience… I found it a fascinating look into the process (of the writing of Stuart Brannon's Final Shot)."


website:

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 26, 2012 17:01

Two Winners! And Special Guests this Week!

Angie won Debbie Kaufman's book!


And Rebecca won Winnie Griggs' book!


Congratulations & those who didn't win–I will be giving away more books this year when I post the reviews. So drop by when you see "Lyn Reviews…"


This week  I have two "J" guests–Author Janet Chester Bly and Author Jane Perrine.


Don't miss their stories of strong women. You'll love them–Lyn


Share

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 26, 2012 08:06

March 21, 2012

March 19, 2012

March 14, 2012

Best-Selling Author Linda Ford & What Kind of Strength Do You Have?


What a pleasure to have Author Linda Ford as my guest again. Linda is one of those brave women who have raised extra children. Since I barely managed to raise two, I am in awe of women who are called to be the mother of many. Here's Linda sharing a story of her daughter and the different kinds of strength:


"There are many kinds of strength. The loud, confrontational kind that says no to injustice. The stubborn kind that faces challenges. The quiet kind that does what needs to be done and says little about it. That's the kind of strength Sally Morgan in THE COWBOY COMES HOME shows.


It's the kind of strength my eldest daughter showed from a young age. She loved to help and as soon as she could push a chair to the sink would help peel potatoes and wash dishes. She was six where her little sister was born. By the time the baby was six months old, my six-year old would beg to be allowed to get her up and feed her breakfast on the weekend.


We especially appreciated her strength the year one of the younger children was in an accident and received a head injury. For a month, he was in a hospital 3 ½ hours from home. I was in constant attention which left 8 children home alone. My daughter had just finished her college year. She gave up her summer job and came home to care for the family. She had her hands full. A couple of the kids were new to our home and still challenging the boundaries. Having an older sister made them think they could ignore all we'd tried to teach them. Add to that a work crew on the farm who decided to take their meals with the family. To this day I can't believe they were so ignorant especially given the circumstances. But my teenage daughter handled it all in her quiet way. She dealt with responsibility that would have left many a more experienced woman in distress.



Sally Morgan, in the third story of THREE BRIDES FOR THREE COWBOYS has had to deal with her share of challenges as well. It's the Great Depression. Times are hard. Money is scarce.  Her father is dead. She's the sort of woman who simply does what needs doing whether it's baking cookies for a sick neighbor, making meals at home or taking over a household where the mother has died. However, Sally has to learn the true meaning of strength. And she does."–Linda


Thanks for sharing such a personal and such a touching story, Linda. Sometimes the only way a person finds their strength is when it's needed.  I'm sure God will bless your daughter for her faithfulness.–Lyn


PS-Drop by and visit her interesting

1 like ·   •  2 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 14, 2012 17:14

March 12, 2012

Author Jill Elizabeth Nelson & What Is Deep POV?


My guest today is Romantic Suspense Author Jill Elizabeth Nelson. She is going to tell us about the "Fire in the Bones" and how it led to publication. She is also showing off a new book that might be of interest to writers, title Rivet Your Readers With Deep Point of View. I know that's what I try to do in my books. Well, here's Jill:


"Passion to Publish


If I say, I will not make mention of [the Lord] or speak any more in His name, in my mind and heart it is as if there were a burning fire shut up in my bones. Jeremiah 20: 9 (Amplified)


Fire in the bones. That's how I describe the irresistible passion that kept me writing and seeking publication until the dream came true. Without that "fire in the bones," I don't see how any writer perseveres through the hurdles and heartaches until they not only become published, but start to make a career out of their passion to write.


I believe this fire has to be an innate gift from God because it cannot be manufactured. The blaze can be stoked and fed, and skills can be trained and grown, but the fire itself cannot be worked up by the will of man. Without it, manuscripts molder in desk drawers or on hard drives. Without it, poems or journals may be started but never finished. With it, fruit comes to maturity in the completion and sharing of words that can make a difference in other people's lives.


Every person has gifts and callings, whether they ever discover them or not, or whether they choose to use those gifts to serve the God who gave them. We're offered the choice of who we will serve with the divine spark within us. I read once that Elvis Presley began his career singing Gospel, but then he received some enticing offers and chose the spotlight of the world's fame. We see where that road ended for him, but the gift—the passion for music—did not dry up simply because he didn't choose to serve God with it.


How can you tell if you have the passion? Take this simple test: Ask yourself if you can stop writing. If you can, then perhaps journaling or the occasional poem might satisfy the temporary, momentary itch. If you cannot lay writing aside without feeling as if you've put a cork on a volcano, then the passion is a force in your life. Yield to it, and yield that force to God.


His direction will make the most of the gift He has given you, and He will lead you to the outlets for your creativity that are best suited to His purposes for your life. Proverbs 16: 9 says in the Amplified: A man's mind plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps and makes them sure. What a promise! Along His path is the most satisfaction and success possible.


These are the things I needed to believe even before I reached the milestone of my first published novel, or I never would have seen that book in print . . . or the others that followed. Even now, I encourage myself with these thoughts, because no matter where a writer is along the route of her career, there is still a long road ahead.


Lay hold on the passion inside, dear fellow travelers. It will carry you farther than you ever dreamed!"–Jill


BIO: Award-winning author and writing teacher, Jill Elizabeth Nelson, writes what she likes to read—tales of adventure seasoned with romance, humor, and faith. Jill is a popular speaker for conferences, writers groups, library associations, and civic and church groups. She delights to bring the "Ahah! Moment" to her students as they make new skills their own. Her handbook, Rivet Your Readers with Deep Point of View, is now available at

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 12, 2012 17:06

March 11, 2012

Two Winners!

SMoore won Tracey Bateman's book.


And Ausjenny won Sandra Orchard's book!


Thanks to all those who commented!


I have 2 exciting guests again this week–Jill Elizabeth Nelson and Linda Ford–Don't miss their stories!–Lyn


Share

 •  1 comment  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 11, 2012 17:01