What Does the Word “Religion” Mean to You?

She who dwells in the shelter of the Most High

For many, it is directly connected to experiences they have or have had with a specific organized Church.  Whether that experience was good or bad for them tends to color how they view the word.  Someone recently told me that they hated Sunday School when they were young, and so have had nothing to do with any of it since.  Unfortunately, if someone teaches that God is angry, vengeful and something to fear, a child probably would not want to have anything to do with Him.  But like a person who is bitten by a dog at a young age and goes through life always afraid of dogs, they miss out on the wonderful unconditional love and joy a dog (and God) can bring to your life.

I personally do not belong to any particular organized Church or denomination. I enjoy going to Church.  I love the music, enjoy the people, and can be inspired by a well-prepared and delivered sermon.  Over my lifetime, I have attended Catholic Church, every Protestant denomination Church, non-denominational Churches, Jewish Synagogue, Baha’i meetings, Pentecostal Church (an experience), UU Church, Episcopalian Church, Kingdom Hall, Russian Orthodox (where I was invited by a monk to experience their beautiful icon paintings), mega churches and little tiny out in the middle of nowhere churches.  I have studied Rastafarianism, Buddhism, the Kabbalah, A Course in Miracles, Christian Science, Unity, read more spiritual practice and belief books than I could possibly list, have investigated the occult, astrology, numerology, scientology, Obeah, and have read and studied the Bible.   I have gleaned knowledge from all.  In the end however, it is my personal relationship with God and His word in the Bible that has proven to provide all the truth and wisdom necessary to live a loving, joyful, peace-filled life; not religion, which can get all muddled up by man with their creed and dogma, and has a tendency to push people away from God and each other.  As the Apostle Paul said: “And now, dear brothers and sisters, one final thing. Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”

That is what that book causes you to do. It also causes you to connect on a personal level with God, and to hear what He has to say to all of us.  Call me crazy if you want, but it was He who told me to paint and share this series, and so I am.  It is for His purpose, not mine.  It was He who told me to get myself and my mother out of here and down to Florida in January last year.  Listening to Him saved us from experiencing the dreadful winter that none of us knew was coming, and which would have made it unbearable for me to care for Mom, not to mention miserable and dangerous for her during her recovery from major femur repair surgery, on top of her dementia, which had been made much worse by the anesthesia.  But He knew, and I listened, even though I really did not want to deal with the challenge of transporting her to Florida in her condition and state.  Do people consider that “religion”, or is it the wisdom of listening in faith to the source of all knowledge so that we might be blessed.

Here are a few definitions of the word “Religion”. There are many definitions, because it is such a hard word to define, but I thought these three were good (from http://www.religioustolerance.org/rel_defn1.htm):

Definition from an unknown dictionary:

Religion (ri-lij'[uh]n) n.

The beliefs, attitudes, emotions, behavior, etc., constituting man’s relationship with the powers and principles of the universe, especially with a deity or deities; also, any particular system of such beliefs, attitudes, etc.

An essential part or a practical test of the spiritual life.

An object of conscientious devotion or scrupulous care: e.g. His work is a religion to him.

The Christian Apologetics & Research Ministry (CARM)’s definition is more flexible and may involve a deity, multiple deities, or no deities:

“An organized system of belief that generally seeks to understand purpose, meaning, goals, and methods of spiritual things. These spiritual things can be God, people in relation to God, salvation, after life, purpose of life, order of the cosmos, etc.”

Wikipedia defines religion as:

“… a system of social coherence based on a common group of beliefs or attitudes concerning an object, person, unseen being, or system of thought considered to be supernatural, sacred, divine or highest truth, and the moral codes, practices, values, institutions, traditions, and rituals associated with such belief or system of thought.”

This painting, called Under His Wings, is from Psalm 91:1-7:

He/she who dwells in the shelter of the Most High, who abides in the shadow of the Almighty, will say to the LORD, “My refuge and my fortress; my God, in whom I trust.” For he will deliver you from the snare of the fowler and from the deadly pestilence; he will cover you with his pinions, and under his wings you will find refuge;

E.J. Lefavour

http://www.hobbithousestudio.com

CAPE ANN SYMPHONY

CAPE ANN SYMPHONY

THE 64th SEASON: A SEASON TO REMEMBER

 

Cape Ann Symphony Features Spain, Germany & Japan in

A Global Tour Concert on March 20

Concert Debuts World Premiere from Japanese Composer Koto

Cape Ann Symphony’s March Concert features a Global Musical Tour with music from Germany’s Beethoven, Spain’s Rodrigo and a world premiere work from Japan’s Koto on Sunday, March 20, 2016 at 2pm at the CAS performance venue at Manchester-Essex High School Auditorium on 36 Lincoln Street in Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA. The concert program includes Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in C Minor plus guest artist renowned guitar virtuoso Grisha Goryachev in his Cape Ann Symphony debut playing the exotic Spanish guitar concerto, Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez and the world premiere of Araumi to Nagi (Stormy and Calm Seas)from Boston based Japanese composer Takashi Koto. Manchester-Essex High School Auditorium is handicapped accessible. Ticket prices are $40 for adults, $35 for senior citizens, $5 for Youth age 18 and under. For tickets and information, call978-281-0543 or visit www.capeannsymphony.org

Grisha_2015Guitar Virtuoso Grisha Goryachev

 

HOLY PASTA! Sista Felicia’s St. Joseph Pasta Making Day Photo Gallery Beginning to End!

Print

 

IMG_5763Cousin Eleanor Tucker, master  pasta dough maker!

 

Kicked off the 2016 Feast Of St. Joseph yesterday with friends and family at my annual St. Joseph Pasta Making Day Extravaganza!  Huge thank you to all who helped make all 130 lbs. of handmade Semolina Pasta for this years Feast!

IMG_5697

Cousin Marisa Marcantonio & Grace Pallazola

IMG_5755

IMG_5686

Andrea Carlson

IMG_5695

Highlight of my day…My Irish Childhood friend Kerrie who claims that “she can’t cook” making pasta with a smile😍 It must really be true that St Patrick was Italian…Cooking is secretly in her blood!

IMG_5668

Zachary Nobel, my personal “Pasta Runner”

Click See more for complete Photo Gallery of Yesterdays Event!

Community Reiki Share March 1st – Supporting Family Promise North Shore Boston

More Cape Ann Health, Fitness and Wellness News-
http://www.capeannwellness.com

Karen Pischke BSN, RN's avatarCape Ann Wellness

Dreamtime Wellness ™ Promoting Optimal Wellness for Body, Mind and Spirit

Monthly Community Reiki Share ‘First Tuesday’ Every Month.

Next Community Reiki Share – Tuesday. March 1st. 5:15 – 8:15 P.M. $20.00 Suggested Donation. Portion of monthly proceeds donated to charitable fund-raising, local and abroad. In 2015 we contributed to Open Door, Wellspring, SeniorCare Inc, Mother of Grace Club, Reid’s Ride, Cheryl’s Healing Journey, and a group helping to feed, clothe and educate children in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya, to name a few.

Contact us if you have a charitable organization or fundraiser and would like to partner with us. Those organizations we partner with are welcome to attend as our guests.

This month’s Reiki Share proceeds to help benefit Family Promise of the North Shore – a local non-profit charity helping homeless families build new lives.

Come early and join us in celebrating the coming of Spring – only 20 days…

View original post 469 more words

Some Genius Marketing Dude Just Took The Energy Snack Game To Another Level…

image

So the bitchy broad from Desperate Housewives of New York branded some mass produced Vodka with the brilliant name “SkinnyGirl” and #boom she is making millions seemingly overnight.

I was watching TV the other night and saw this ad for  “Energems” which is  basically chocolate with caffeine and they are acting like they revolutionized the chocolate energy snack game.  Uhm has no-one eaten chocolate covered espresso beans, readily available at just about any chocolatier in the nation?  Doesn’t matter if you have or haven’t because just like SkinnyGirl Vodka, it really doesn’t matter what’s inside the packaging, it’s more about the marketing apparently.   You just throw stuff together that’s already been around for hundreds of years, give it a catchy name and some slick packaging and it’s a guaranteed winner.

The Energems folks are just smart marketers.  Chocolate and caffeine and make it sound healthy- #Boom!

Uhmmmm hellooooooo, It’s frickin Chocolate and Caffeine.  It’s been right there under our noses all along.

Disclaimer: I have no idea if this stuff if good or bad, works or doesn’t. I just think the marketing is brilliant.

I need an angel investor to back my ideas for some products I’m developing. 

First and Foremost “Big Cock” Chicken brand where we inject frozen breaded chicken with Viagra.  Bake ‘em in a preheated oven for like ten minutes and you’re good to go all night long.   Hello??????   I’ll be retired in no time at all.

image

P.S. Look for my GoFundMe page any day now.

The March Rose Baker Artists

More Cape Ann Community News-
http://www.capeanncommunity.com

oldfolks76's avatarCape Ann Community

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Judy Menicocci (l) and Florence Martin (r) are artist being honored at the Rose Baker Senior Center for the month of March.

Juni Van Dyke has named Judy Menicocci and Florence Martin the March Rose Baker Artists of the Month. Juni is the instructor and coordinator of the Rose Baker Art Program and each month she selects one or two artists from the program to be honored with a show of their work in the lobby of the Senior Center. The show opens the first week in March and can be viewed weekdays from 9am to 4pm until the end of March.

If you ask Judy Menicocci about her art, she will say “Art has always been my escape.” As a child, she was constantly drawing and creating. Later as a busy young mother, her creative outlet was sewing.

Judy’s current passion is watercolor and acrylic. These are new interests…

View original post 187 more words

GOOD MORNING FROM NILES POND!

Mr. Swan’s morning grooming session, keeping his feathers well oiled and in excellent flying condition.

Mexico documents big rebound in monarch butterflies

Thank you to Hannah Kimberley for submitting the following story ~

mexicodocumeIn this Jan. 4, 2015 file photo, a kaleidoscope of Monarch butterflies cling to tree branches, in the Piedra Herrada sanctuary, near Valle de Bravo, Mexico. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

By Mark Stevenson, Associated Press

Monarch butterflies have made a big comeback in their wintering grounds in Mexico, after suffering serious declines, experts said Friday.

The area covered by the orange-and-black insects in the mountains west of Mexico City this season was more than three and a half times greater than last winter. The butterflies clump so densely in the pine and fir forests they are counted by the area they cover rather than by individual insects.

The number of monarchs making the 3,400-mile (5,500-kilometer) migration from the United States and Canada declined steadily in recent years before recovering in 2014. This winter was even better.

This December, the butterflies covered 10 acres (about 4 hectares), compared to 2.8 acres (1.13 hectares) in 2014 and a record low of 1.66 acres (0.67 hectares) in 2013.

While that’s positive, the monarchs still face problems: The butterflies covered as much as 44 acres (18 hectares) 20 years ago.

“The news is good, but at the same time we shouldn’t let our guard down,” said Omar Vidal, director of the World Wildlife Fund in Mexico. “Now more than ever, Mexico, the United States, and Canada should increase their conservation efforts to protect and restore the habitat of this butterfly along its migratory route.”

The United States is working to reintroduce milkweed, a plant key to the butterflies’ migration, on about 1,160 square miles (3 million hectares) within five years, both by planting and by designating pesticide-free areas. Milkweed is the plant the butterflies feed and lay their eggs on, but it has been attacked by herbicide use and loss of open land in the United States.

Dan Ashe, the director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said that in the first year of that effort, the United States had managed to restore about 250,000 acres (100,000 hectares) of milkweed, and raised about $20 million for the program.

“It is time for celebration because we see the beginning of success,” Ashe said. “But our task now is to continue building on that success.”

The Washington, D.C.-based Center for Biological Diversity, which is pushing for endangered species status for the monarchs, noted that even with the rebound, the butterflies are still only at 68 percent of their 22-year average. It said in a statement that “the population was expected to be up this winter due to favorable summer weather conditions in the monarch’s U.S. breeding areas.”

Read full story here

St Joseph Pasta Making Day @sistafelicia House

What is Faith?

faith Photography by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

spock

Everyone has a measure of it. Children have faith in their parents, people have faith in their spouse or loved one, their friends, their community, their doctor.  No one gets in an airplane, train, car or bus without faith that it will get them safely where they are going.  No one goes in for surgery without a certain amount of faith in their surgeon and anesthesiologist to bring them through safely.

Faith is defined in the dictionary as: “complete trust or confidence in someone or something”; and defined in the Bible as: “the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”

Some would say that those who put their faith in God practice “blind faith”. That can only be said by people who do not know God, who is perfect, and created and is in control of all.  Those who don’t put their faith in God, by default put their faith in man.  Man was created in perfection, but, because he also was given free will, chose to become imperfect.  Hence anything man does or creates is inherently imperfect.  Just consider the current Takata airbag defect issue, possibly affecting up to 34,000,000 vehicles; and the exploding lithium batteries, to name just two current evidences of the imperfection of man’s creations (of course there are hundreds of thousands of examples).  On putting faith in man, a study in the September 2013 issue of the Journal of Patient Safety says that between 210,000 and 440,000 patients each year who go to the hospital for care suffer some type of preventable harm that contributes to their death. That would make medical errors the third-leading cause of death in America, behind heart disease, which is the first, and cancer, which is second.

The millions who know and put their faith in God can live with assurance in an imperfect world, being imperfect themselves and surrounded by other imperfect people, because we put our faith in the perfection of God rather than the imperfection of man. That is not to insinuate that nothing “bad” ever happens to those who put their faith in God, but we have the assurance that whatever does happen is in God’s control, and therefore not “bad” at all, but necessary for ultimate good. That allows us to live in a state of peace in a world that does not know peace.

Personally, I would much rather be viewed as foolish by people for putting my faith in God, than to actually be foolish by putting my faith in what I know to be imperfect.  To quote Mr. Spock: “I find that highly illogical.”

E.J. Lefavour

http://www.hobbithousestudio.com

Interesting Machinery ~ 1890 Mann’s Green Bone Cutter

A friend showed me  this piece of old machinery.  Link to Rusty Iron for more information

IMG_2472