Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Tension by Marcia Lee Laycock

I love books with a lot of tension on the page - books that make you grip them a little harder than others, books that make you hold your breath.

I love the Bible for that very reason. There are so many stories in it that do all of the above. The story of Joseph, for instance, especially the scene where his brothers come before him in Egypt to beg for food, not knowing this man is the brother they betrayed. The tension on that page is palpable. What will Joseph do? Has he forgiven them or will he punish them and get his revenge at last? And the tension is drawn out as he plays games with them, throws them in jail, tells them to leave and come back again, tells them not to return without their youngest brother. (A lot of lessons for a writer to learn here). Through it all we wonder what God is doing, how this drama will play out and how God will be glorified. Even when we know the end of the story, it makes us hold our breath.

My husband preached on this passage a while ago, and talked a bit about the tension - this is a short excerpt -

"The disguise of grace promises that one day there will be a great reveal. It’s what makes the tension grow in this story, the anticipation of what it will be like when the brothers finally know who he is, when the father is finally reunited with the son that was lost. All these are prompts to us of an even greater day of revealing. Every act of disguised grace here below has the purpose in it of knowing the author of this grace for who He really is, of being brought close to the Father. The Great Reveal is coming soon."

There has been a great deal of tension in the world lately, a great deal of drama. Many who are watching are grasping onto material things a little harder, hoping they won't slip away. Many are holding their breath as they wonder what's going to happen.

But, like the story of Joseph and many others in the Bible, we know what's in the last chapter. We know God's grace and mercy will be revealed. We know He will be glorified, whatever happens. Because, as my husband said - "He who lived His life mostly in a disguise of grace, was revealed through the resurrection as the King of Kings and Lord of Lords."

Psalm 33 says it so well - "Let all the earth fear the Lord; let all the people of the world revere Him. For he spoke and it came to be; he commanded and it stood firm. The Lord foils the plans of the nations; he thwarts the purposes of the peoples. But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations. Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord, the people he chose for his inheritance. From heaven the Lord looks down and sees all mankind; from his dwelling place he watches all who live on earth - he who forms the hearts of all, who considers everything they do. No king is saved by the size of his army; no warrior escapes by his great strength. A horse is a vain hope for deliverance; despite all its great strength it cannot save. But the eyes of the Lord are on those who fear him, on those whose hope is in his unfailing love, to deliver them from death and keep them alive in famine. We wait in hope for the Lord; he is our help and our shield. In him our hearts rejoice, for we trust in hi holy name. May your unfailing love rest upon us, O Lord, even as we put our hope in you." (Psalm 33:8-22).


Tuesday, February 28, 2012

The Dreaded Typo (and Other Improvements)

It never fails. I can proofread and reread a document, but as soon as I hit the Send button there it is: a misspelled word. On the first line no less. And while I pressed that key sending my work through cyberspace—the point of no return—to the intended recipient, my body position might have appeared erect and still but my heart skipped a beat. My inside voice screamed, “Nooooo.”

After I’ve scoured through a manuscript, progressed through the course of revisions, survived line edits, and then dared to trespass the final proof stage, those little pests yet burrow in the word count like nobody’s business.

In the world of writing I can strive for perfection. However, the fact remains that I’m not faultless and oversights occur, much to my dread. Incidents like these take place when I feel bleary-eyed after a long session of editing—but not always. Still, a typo isn’t going to sink a story. If the message is evident, the plotline strong, characters well-developed, timing stamps enhanced allowing the arc to flow as it should, a novel can prove its value by its content regardless of the pesky flaws such as those typos we all hate.

The same can apply to our daily walk. We’re human. We have flaws. If I were a walking manuscript (the old-fashioned kind), I’d probably have TYPO marked across my forehead. Thank the Lord I’m not an upright stack of papers. Then everybody would see the blatant blunder. Kind of like the feeling when you spot a typo, yet it’s too late to do anything. It’s published. It’s out there. Grin and bear it.

Really though, what’s great is that I can have flaws, make mistakes. Even so, the content, while abiding in God’s purpose and my daily journey in him, is what’s important, and it can shine with his glory. A novel can glorify his name in spite of imperfections. That’s grace.

When I first stepped into this field of writing there existed such moments of worry they disturbed a good night’s sleep. I suppose I’ve learned to accept mistakes from the extension of my hand as a part of life. Nevertheless, those annoying, detracting features don’t keep me from continual pursuit of the best work I can accomplish each and every time.

I often wonder if God, fully aware of all the typos, looks upon us as his manuscripts. Yet focuses on the beauty of the content, the orchestrated storyline of our lives, how we deliver ourselves, and most of all, the improvement we make with each and every step, ensuring our development into greater communicative vessels.

While I read scripture the other night, a verse popped out at me. “…but when perfection comes, the imperfect disappears.” (1 Corinthians 13:10). Sweet! Christ is our perfection. If we hold him in our hearts and allow him to abide in us, he no longer sees the imperfection. We are made whole, perfect in his eyes. When I held the first copy of my debut novel in my hands, I didn’t see anything but a work made whole, perfect in my eyes. That doesn’t mean I’m not going to seek improving on every count, but I know I have a communicative vessel in my hands, achieving what he sees fit by it. He called it into being, a rough draft now a final print.

The next time I spot an error in the form of a red flag snapping in my face after I initiate Send, I just have to live with it. Dreaded or not, typos are a fact of a writer’s life. Dismayed or not, mistakes are a guarantee of a human’s life. We can only hope to do better the next time around. There is always room for improvement. Maybe next time I’ll have fewer typos, but I doubt it. So, I’ll count my blessings as I go, grateful for a loving God who overlooks my typos—yes, my imperfections—and makes them “disappear” by the mere act of his existence in my life story.

A veteran of the performing arts, Tessa’s work included directing dance ensembles and cultural exchange programs under the auspices of missionary organizations. Besides traveling worldwide in performance and outreach endeavors, she contributed as a writer and editor for ministry newsletters as well as political literature. While her literary focus gravitates from genre to genre, she prefers stories involving love. “Many waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it.” ~ Bible
Tessa is the author of the romance/political intrigue novel, The Unforgivable (RisenFiction/April 2011), and a short story, Love and Lull (Digital Dragon Magazine/August 2010). For more information, visit her at http://www.tessastockton.com/

Monday, February 27, 2012

WHAT'S IN YOUR HEART?

What do you see?



When you look at the above picture, what description pops into your head?

Half-empty glass, or half-full?

If you said half-full, you’re probably an optimist, while the rest of us focused on the half-empty or negative side.

This idea is a theme I explore in my soon-to-be released Love Inspired Suspense, Shades of Truth. The hero works undercover in a youth detention center, and because he was once a young offender and now faces them day in and day out in his job, he is pessimistic about their rehabilitation prospects.

The heroine is quick to point out that he overcame his past to make something of his life. Why doesn’t he think others can, too?

Of course, he really hasn’t overcome his past. He’s merely spent the rest of his life trying to atone for it.

I watched a loved one be tormented by such guilt—unjustified guilt. No matter what anyone said, he couldn’t get the lie out of his head and forgive himself.

As I started writing Shades of Truth, I didn’t consciously set out to touch on this theme, but after answering numerous blog interview questions over the course of my book releases, I’ve come to realize that this need to break guilt’s bondage is a common underlying theme in many of my novels.

What does that have to do with my half-full glass analogy?

Well, because of his guilt, my hero brings a heart full of sadness and regret to those he counsels, instead of the hope the heroine and another pivotal character exude. It’s easy to tell someone that they need to forgive themselves and look on the bright side. It’s much harder to do.

Your turn: Has guilt over something you did, or said, or didn’t do, impacted your life? Were
you able to overcome the feelings? How?

Shades of Truth won't be in bookstores until mid-March, but if you’d like it now, click here to order from Harlequin at 20% off, and use coupon code FREESHIPAFFO to receive free shipping until Mar 31st.

I love to connect with readers, and have created some “extras” to enhance readers’ experience of my books. Check out these and other resources for both readers and writers at http://www.SandraOrchard.com.
I’d also love for you to connect on my Facebook Author Page

GIVEAWAY
Until March 4th, enter to win a copy of Shades of Truth at Goodreads. Open to residents of US, Canada, Australia, and Great Britain 

Sunday, February 26, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION

Coming Up This Week

Monday

Sandra Orchard: What's in your Heart?

Tuesday

Tessa Stockton: The Dreaded Typo (And Other Improvements)

Wednesday

Marcia Laycock: Tension

Thursday

Alice Valdal

Friday Devotion

Kathi Macias: Making a Difference

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Contest Giveaway Winners

Carolyn is the winner of Tom Blubaugh's book, Night of the Cossack (Valerie's post, February 13)

Congratulations Carolyn!

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News

Marcia Laycock's devotion ebook, Spur of the Moment - from the Arctic Circle to the South Pacific, stories to inspire - is FREE today on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007AKDFZ0

Mary Hawkins is hosting a book giveaway with her husband Ray on her blog tomorrow http://www.maryhawkins.blogspot.com They are giving away a copy of Ray Hawkins' devotion book From Eden with Love. A regular ICFW Friday Devotion contributor, Ray's third devotion book in his 31 Day Devotional series, Captured by Calvary, will be releasing soon from Even Before Publishing. His books are available in ebook format, including Kindle.

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Upcoming Book Releases

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego, CA and the Golden Triangle area of Thailand, Special Delivery, Book Two in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be a March 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Shades of Truth, will be a March 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, Like Sweet Potato Pie, Book Two in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a March 2012 release from Barbour.

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego and Mexico, The Deliverer, Book Three in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be a Fall 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Valerie Comer's debut novella, Topaz Treasure, which is part of the Rainbow's End collection, will be a May 2012 release from Barbour.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, will be an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.


To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.

Friday, February 24, 2012

DEVOTION: Heavenly Password by Shirley Corder




“Enter with the password: ‘Thank you!’
Make yourselves at home, talking praise. Thank him. Worship him.”
Psalm 100:4 MSG


I confidently typed in my user name and password to enter the site of my writers’ group on the Internet. Dumbfounded, I read the message that flashed on my screen. ‘Wrong user name or password.’

I tried once more. This time, a question appeared. ‘Have you forgotten your password? If so, click the button below.’ What a pain. How could I have just forgotten the password? I had a system. A fail-proof system. But it had just failed. Frustrated, I clicked on the button below and set about setting up a new password.

A few days later I stood at the automatic teller in a busy shopping center. I needed to withdraw money, but my mind went blank. Once again, I forgot my password. I knew where to find it at home, but I wasn't at home, and I needed the money now. Too bad. I had to go home, retrieve the password, and drive to the nearest bank.

Often, when I'm writing, my mind goes blank. My fingers hover over the keys as I try to think of the word which sits "on the tip of my tongue" - make that "on the edge of my mind" but refuses to make itself available. I have learned that I can sit in frustration for long minutes, but that word will not come. I have found the password to the missing words though. I now type XX and continue with my sentence. A few words later, I remember what I meant to say and zip back to replace XX with the correct word.

Sometimes, I don’t know how to pray for a specific situation. I sit or kneel quietly, waiting for inspiration. On occasions like this, I need to remember the Lord gave me a password. It is a simple one: “Thank you.” The more I say “Thank you,” the more joyous I become. There’s never any limit to the things I can thank God for. I start with the obvious: my family, my friends, the food on the table, sufficient clothes, a comfortable bed . . . More and more ideas tumble into my mind. The words flow, and in no time, I am able to pray fluently for whatever issues are on my mind. Not only does the phrase, “Thank you,” bring me joy, it opens my way into God’s presence.

Thank God for giving us a heavenly password. All we have to do is remember it, and it's so much easier than our others. You don't need to write it down, follow a formula, or hide it on your computer. "Thank you" - It's that easy.
Lord God, thank you for giving me a heavenly password. Help me to use it regularly, and may I always feel at home in your presence. Amen.



SHIRLEY CORDER lives in South Africa with her husband, a hyperactive budgie called Sparky, and an ever expanding family of tropical fish. She is contributing author to nine books to date and hundreds of her inspirational and life-enrichment articles have been published internationally. Her book, Strength Renewed: Meditations for your Journey through Breast Cancer is due for release in the USA in 2012. You can contact Shirley through her writing website, her Rise and Soar cancer site, or follow her on Twitter.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Thinking of Good-bye

It's been three months today since the little EmbraAir jet (Brazilian, appropriately) taxied onto the snowy runway in Rapid City, South Dakota. Through frosty plane windows, my son, Ethan, and I watched tropical fields of banana trees and red Brazilian clay fade into ocean, into night, and then into snow-dusted patches of prairie flanked by rugged Black Hills.

We have left Brazil and made our home in South Dakota - for good. My husband joined us in December, and I cannot remember a time I've been happier. All the years stored up waiting have finally come to pass. We are here - we are home!

And yet we have not forgotten all the faces and days we left behind in warm Brazil, where afternoons smell of sunlight and dried leaves, of summer grasses and salt breeze and hibiscus blooms.

Here is something I wrote back in September, never imagining that two short months later I'd be buying American furniture and winter coats and car insurance.

And yet - by some strange miracle, we are.

--

Sept. 3, 2011

I’m sitting here in the Galeão terminal overlooking Rio’s misty, jagged mountains. Lighter spots of favela housing dotting the hillsides like patchwork quilting. A heavy, gray tropical sky. Yesterday I saw the beach, a clear gray-blue under overcast skies, and pale, wheat-colored sand like sugar. Soft as powder beneath our feet. We stripped off Ethan’s shoes and he jumped and danced, barefoot, leaping and rolling and tossing handfuls like he’d been marooned at sea for months. “A mess!” he said in giddy joy, sifting handfuls down over his brown toes.

I just checked in at an automatic check-in machine, entering my numbers and making the mistake of punching “English” for the language option and choosing my nationality as “The United States of America.” Because then, of course, the machine promptly asked for my passport number. Which I didn’t have with me because I don't carry my passport for domestic flights. “You should have said you nationality was Brazilian,” smiled the TAM worker as she helped me punch in my RNE (foreigner’s ID) number instead.

I wheeled my single small suitcase through security, speaking and answering in Portuguese, and found the gate myself. A man just came over to ask me if I’d picked up an Internet connection at the airport. And no, I hadn’t. In fact I couldn’t get one yesterday, either, at the Maingots’ house, because I'd inadvertantly messed up the wireless configuration on my laptop.

All of this I told him in Portuguese without thinking twice. Then I turned back to my laptop to finish editing my third novel and watch the planes take off across dove-gray morning. The mountains disappear, jagged, into the deep, dark, tropical haze like they did in years ago in Fiji.



All at once tears spring close to the surface as I realize, for perhaps the first time, the extent of what I will leave behind. This trip to Rio—our morning spent in the American consulate—has just nearly finished our process for immigration. As soon as they receive my tax forms and Athos’ police report from Japan, they’ll mail us the visas we need for Athos' green card. Ethan will become an American citizen the minute he sets foot in an American airport. We can count the months now, and perhaps even the weeks. The process has gone staggeringly fast—so fast that we are not quite ready for it. I felt the same way in 2009 when, from Monday to Saturday, we became parents of a fragile infant. The mess, the cribs, the trying to figure out how to use a diaper and a bottle—all sprung on us in a few days’ time.

Now I sit here and stare out at the moody runway, a straw color through the tinted glass, and realize that, in a few short months, we will step off the plane into blustery South Dakota winter. Equally unprepared. Our suitcases filled with linen pants and green-and-yellow short-sleeved soccer jerseys. Sleeveless silk blouses and strappy sandals and thin cotton skirts. Jobless and homeless and wondering, as I did the day we carried that warm little bundle into our tiny, one-bedroom-apartment living room and put him in a borrowed crib: "Have we done the right thing? Can we possibly live up to the enormous responsibility required of us, and can we make it work? Make it a blessing?”

“Do we have what it takes?”

Are we what it takes?"

Suddenly it hits me: For the first time in ten years, I will leave behind my international life. I will no longer be exotic, odd, a curiosity. I wonder, with the first tingles of apprehension, if I will forget my Portuguese. The way my Japanese disappeared, like a reluctant cat, under the bed—toe by toe. Until I can barely coax it out into the light.

I will no longer breeze through international security lines at huge airports in São Paulo and Atlanta, switching languages as easily as I switch international documents. No more chatting in Portuguese about Brazilian soccer while I wend my way through the quicker “Brazilian” line. No more switching coins and currencies. No more blast of warm, tropical air as the airport doors swing open, Brasilia’s concrete terminal verdant with plants and glinting from rippling reflecting pools.

No more chilly green coconuts hacked open with a knife, in three perfect strokes, and pierced with a straw—the severed wedge given as a spoon to cut out the jelly-like white interior. No more macaws screeching from the trees as I run in early morning coolness just before sun-filled heat. No more nodding hibiscus flowers or clear-water beaches or fresh payapas and pineapples, like the sweet, pale yellow cubes I ate this morning for breakfast.



No more bitter Brazilian cafezinho coffee, piping hot and sugary-sweet, in tiny demitasse cups and saucers. No more golden loaves of ubiquitous French bread. No more fresh-squeezed orange juice or mangoes or bananas fresh from the tree at Athos’ grandfather’s farm, or walks through his plantations of blue-silver cabbages and striped zucchinis—dry red soil clinging to our shoes. No more round limes plucked from the limb or thick layers of dark coffee beans roasting in the open sun. No more conversations with my brother-in-law Kyle while we sit in his parents’ wooden house, rain pouring down outside in heavy sheets.

No more sultry bossa nova, at least not without a twinge of what-used-to-be-familiar-now-turned-exotic. No more airline instructions that I understand in either Portuguese or English, and do not remember which language was used. No more palm trees or beach-swept, salty hair or pungent scents of espresso or sautéing garlic.

No more TAM, and no more Brazilian phone numbers with the Brasilia (61) prefix code. I will not need to write +55 in front of my phone number or “BRAZIL” after my address.

After hours in the over-air-conditioned American consulate Friday morning, Athos and Ethan and I walked under palm trees, past tropical blooms and chattering macaws toward Botafogo. Then I took off my fancy heels and walked in the sand along the beach, listening to the waves roar and crash against the beach of Praia do Flamengo. Past empty cabanas where vendors sell coconuts, soccer jerseys, beer, and flip-flops during the summer months. Right across from those black-and-white wave-patterned sidewalk tiles—Portuguese in origin, yet so distinctively Brazilian.

Eternal summer, for better or for worse, is about to become a distant memory. Replaced by snow and cold noses and bitter mornings and brown autumn leaves and simple American addresses and phone numbers and postal codes. When I attend the American Christian Writer’s Conference, I will no longer be “the girl from Brazil.” I’ll be instead “the girl from South Dakota,” with a normal life and a normal residence. Only that I’m not really from South Dakota. I’m from Virginia, but I’m not really from Virginia, either. I’m from South Carolina. Although I’ve never really lived in South Carolina. It’s complicated, really—when who you are becomes somehow who you are not at the same time.



Should we move? Of course we should. We’ve been waiting for this day nearly seven years. I can’t wait to drive a car again. To speak in English and not answer questions constantly about where I’m from. To buy American clothes that fit me, and pay American prices that leave me with a little (or in some cases a lot) more left in my wallet. To earn money again instead of dividing precious reais with my husband and coming up short, all in hopes that we can both pay our bills for the week. To be near my family for a chance—my friends, my memories—and remember a bit the girl I used to be. Back before I left first for North Carolina and then for Japan so many years ago.

More importantly, Athos needs to go. He’s been blocked in here with his education and his job opportunities, neither going up nor forward, nor finding jobs in other cities, and we find our possibilities and assets decreasing almost daily in super-expensive Brasilia, which now boasts a higher cost of living than New York City. Athos needs the peacock fan of opportunities the U.S. can provide—in jobs, in career options, in movement, in locality, and in personal growth. He plans to get his master’s in the U.S.—more cheaply, more quickly, and with a wider array of choices, each of which suit him brilliantly.

My family needs to know Athos, the Brazilian in-law they love but know only as a distant acquaintance who appears in letters, notes, and occasional phone conversations. And Ethan needs to know his American family. The American life God has given him, too, which is equally as important as his Brazilian life—which he knows virtually nothing about.



We want to homeschool, which is illegal here. We want to drive and live in a relatively safer environment, pay lower taxes, choose our own schooling, and earn money to bless others, buy our first home, and adopt again. We want to plant a garden and show Ethan how a tomato grows—in our own backyard. We want him to run free, learning about trees and soil and animals and rugged life, rather than living out of a city apartment and running with whatever ill-behaved neighborhood children happen to congregate below us. We want him to step over snowdrifts and blooming columbines rather than discarded toilet paper and snack wrappers.

It’s done. We decided to move back to the U.S. ages ago, prayed toward it, and when the doors began to open, they opened so rapidly we nearly had to run to hold them back so we’d be ready. Life is never static--always moving, always changing. We cannot dig in our heels and refuse to change when the world around us is shifting, squeezing our family in directions we don't like. The time is coming; the time is nearly now. We will move forward with confidence.

For God's presence will follow us wherever we go--surrounding us like the pillars of fire and cloud as the Israelites camped on the banks of the Red Sea.

Yet I remember now, sitting here in the gray morning of the airport: that whenever we give up something, even for the exponentially better, there is always, always a loss.

I feel it. A little twinge of something sorrowful, a sob rising below the surface. That yes, Brazil, the land I once called the land of my dreams, the place that has torn me from blessing to torment and back again, I will miss you.

I cannot stay here, but I will miss you.

Seven years has woven you into my life like the patterns on a homespun hammock—in glistening, brilliant colors and darkened bands. Beautiful and deceptively strong.

And I will always carry a piece of you with me, wherever I go—like the ivory sand that sifted from my cuffs from when I unrolled my jeans after walking on Praia do Flamengo.


Jennifer Rogers Spinola lives in Belle Fourche, South Dakota, with her Brazilian husband, Athos, and three-year-old son, Ethan. She has lived in Brazil for nearly eight years and served as a missionary to Japan for two years. Jenny is the author of Barbour Books' "Southern Fried Sushi" series (second book released March 1, 2012) and an upcoming romance novella collection based on Yellowstone National Park (also with Barbour Books).

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Ash Wednesday Blessings: Two Views

The church I grew up in didn’t observe Ash Wednesday, or much in the Christian calendar apart from Christmas and Easter. A few years ago, however, our family was drawn to express our faith more sacramentally, so we sought out a service:

We were just a little uneasy. We had never done this before. We knelt at the altar as the minister prayed, "Almighty God, You have created us out of the dust of the earth: Grant that these ashes may be to us a sign of our mortality and penitence, that we may remember that it is only by Your gracious gift that we are given everlasting life; through Jesus Christ, our Savior."

"Amen," we responded as Pastor Brian dipped his thumb in a small bowl of ashes and marked a smudgy black cross on each forehead.

Back in the car our daughter looked in the mirror. "Ooh," disappointment rang in her voice. "It hardly shows. I wanted a nice dark one so it’d last all day." She was going back to school. My husband, who had an appointment with his banker, pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and gave his forehead a good scrubbing. I was headed back to my computer, which was unlikely to note whether I had marked the beginning of the Lenten season by attending an Ash Wednesday service or not.

That was 1997, but we haven’t missed an Ash Wednesday service since. The silence, the penitence, the awareness of our own mortality— these are profound things that one seldom encounters in today’s world.
And in A Very Private Grave, the first of my Monastery Murders, my heroine Felicity experiences her first Ash Wednesday service in a monastery in Yorkshire:


The spicy scent of incense met her at the door of the church. She dipped her finger in the bowl of holy water and turned to share it with the monk just behind her. Shy Brother Matthew extended a plump finger without meeting her eyes. They each crossed themselves and slipped into their seats in the choir.

"Miserere mei, Deus. . ."

What was the right term to describe how she was living? Counter-cultural existence? Alternate lifestyle? She pondered for a moment, then smiled. Parallel universe. That was it. She was definitely living in a parallel universe. The rest of the world was out there, going about its everyday life, with no idea that this world existed alongside of it.

It was a wonderful, cozy, secretive feeling as she thought of bankers and shopkeepers rushing home after a busy day, mothers preparing dinner for hungry school children, farmers milking their cows— all over this little green island the workaday world hummed along to the pace of modern life. And here she was on a verdant hillside in Yorkshire living a life hardly anyone knew even existed. Harry Potter. It was a very Harry Potter experience.

She forced her attention back to the penitential service with its weighty readings, somber plainchant responses, and minor key music set against purple vestments. Only when they came to the blessing of the ashes did she realize Fr. Dominic wasn’t in his usual place. Her disappointment was sharp. He had definitely said he was to do the imposition of the ashes and she had felt receiving the ashen cross on her forehead from that dear man would give the ritual added meaning. Instead, Father Antony, one of the secular priests who lectured at the college, not even one of the monastic community, stood to hold the small pot of palm ashes while Father Anselm, the Superior of the Community, blessed them with holy water and incense.

Felicity knelt at the altar rail, "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return." The ashes were cold, a sooty mark of grief, gritty on her forehead.


"Amen," she responded automatically.

Wishing you all a most blessed, holy and profound Lent.

Donna Fletcher Crow, The Monastery Murders: A Very Private Grave and A Darkly Hidden Truth www.DonnaFletcherCrow.com
The choir and cantors had practiced for weeks to be able to sing Psalm 51 to the haunting melody composed by Allegri. The words ascended to the vaulted ceiling; the echoes reverberated. Candles flickered in the shadowed corners. She had been here for six months— long enough for the uniqueness of it all to have palled to boredom— but somehow it hadn’t.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Putting Whitney Houston's Death in Perspective

Here in America (and no doubt, around the world), we recently paid homage to the memory of a beautiful and talented woman named Whitney Houston. Without doubt, Ms. Houston was one of the most gifted singers who ever lived. But it isn't the human and public accolades that impress me most about her life; it's that she was discovered singing in church.

Interesting. Now, since I'm not God and I have no idea what His plans and purposes were for Ms. Houston when he "knit her together" in her mother's womb, I won't even attempt to speculate on what He intended for her. But according to the promise of Jeremiah 29:11, I can confidently say that His plans for her were for "good and not for evil, to give her a future and a hope." If Ms. Houston received Jesus as her Savior, I can also say with confidence that she is basking in His presence at this very moment.

However--and this however is not restricted to Ms. Houston but rather to all of us, particularly in the Church--regardless of gifts and talents endowed upon us by our gracious Creator, we have choices to make as we progress along our earthly journey. Will we pursue God's purpose for our lives...or be distracted by the glitz and glamor and empty promises of the world? This is a question we must all answer, but it particularly applies to those of us who write or sing or act...or do anything in the public eye.

Personally, I have struggled with this choice many times, and I don't doubt that you have too. And we will continue to do so until we breathe our last. For that reason I will never judge the final actions of someone like Whitney Houston, nor will I preclude the fact that her life and death can continue to be used by God to draw others to Himself. I applaud the pastor who said to Ms. Houston's mother at the funeral, "Your daughter is responsible for bringing the world to church today." Perhaps, above all her stunning earthly achievements, that is Whitney's greatest and most meaningful. And I don't doubt that it was a great comfort to a grieving mother's broken heart.

The world needs heroes. That's the reason actors and singers and other public figures soar to the top of the "idol" list. Sadly, that only adds pressure to already highly-pressurized lives. It's not unusual or unimaginable for unbelievers to obsess over these public figures--and to condemn them if they fall--but it should not be so among those of us who follow Jesus. Our Lord was and will always be the greatest public figure to walk this earth, and yet He became so due to His humility and selfless living. He is our ultimate role model, the One who sets the bar for our own lives. What that means for us is that rather than idolizing people like Whitney Houston--regardless of how enormously talented they may be--we should be praying for them. Instead of idolizing those the world worships, we should be emulating Christ and those who follow Him by laying down their lives for others.

Missionaries? Absolutely. Christians in countries who risk life and limb to witness and practice their faith? Without doubt the greatest heroes in the world. Though they may live and die in obscurity and few if any will attend their funerals or visit their final resting place on earth, these people willingly lay down their lives for others. If given the opportunity, they no doubt would have done so for Ms. Houston.

How can we best remember this singing icon and honor her memory? First, by trusting that she is "safely home" in her Father's hands--assuming she truly did receive Jesus as her Lord and Savior at some point in her life, and I have no reason to believe otherwise. Second, by praying that her life and death will continue to be used by our sovereign God to influence others for the His Kingdom. And while there is time, may we pray the same way for those celebrities and stars who still walk the earth and have opportunity to use their lives for good.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION


Coming Up This Week

Monday

Kathi Macias

Tuesday

Fiona Veitch Smith

Wednesday

Donna Fletcher Crow: Ash Wednesday Blessings - Two Views

Thursday

Jennifer Rogers Spinola

Friday Devotion

Shirley Corder: Heavenly Password

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Upcoming Book Releases

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego, CA and the Golden Triangle area of Thailand, Special Delivery, Book Two in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be a March 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Shades of Truth, will be a March 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, Like Sweet Potato Pie, Book Two in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a March 2012 release from Barbour.

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego and Mexico, The Deliverer, Book Three in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be an April 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Valerie Comer's debut novella, Topaz Treasure, which is part of the Rainbow's End collection, will be a May 2012 release from Barbour.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, will be an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.


To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.

Friday, February 17, 2012

DEVOTION: Cemeteries and Perspective by Kathi Macias




“For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world,
and loses his own soul?” (Mark 8:36)


There is nothing like a trip to a cemetery to put our temporal lives in perspective. We live in an “it’s all about me” world, and even as believers, it’s easier than not to get caught up in that faulty mindset and quickly become overwhelmed with the urgency to fulfill my wants, my needs, myfeelings, my desires.

Materialism depends upon just such an urgency; advertising appeals to it. If we could just win the lottery, write that bestseller, buy that bigger house, that fancier car, those name-brand clothes, we’d be happier, more fulfilled, more satisfied. And, of course, we’d serve God more wholeheartedly!

The truth is, such a mindset is…well, just not true. If we aren’t joyously and wholeheartedly serving God where we are today with what we have right now, we wouldn’t do it if we inherited all the money in the world tomorrow. If we doubt that statement, it’s time for a trip to the cemetery.

Graveyards are filled with once-indispensable people, people whose lives meant something to someone at some time here on earth. But when they breathed their last and were lowered into the ground, did the world stop spinning? No? Then it’s a safe assumption it won’t stop spinning when we breathe our last either.

So what can we accomplish by making that trip to the cemetery? We can prioritize what we do today—and how well we do it—by asking ourselves this question: What did those once-indispensable people take with them, and what did they leave behind?

May we answer wisely, beloved—and live accordingly.

Kathi Macias is a multi-award winning writer who has authored nearly 40 books and ghostwritten several others. A former newspaper columnist and string reporter, Kathi has taught creative and business writing in various venues and has been a guest on many radio and television programs. Kathi is a popular speaker at churches, women’s clubs and retreats, and writers’ conferences. She won the 2008 Member of the Year award from AWSA (Advanced Writers and Speakers Association) and was the 2011 Author of the Year from BooksandAuthors.net. Kathi “Easy Writer” Macias lives in Homeland, CA, with her husband.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Seeing Is Believing, But Not Always

A few years ago I was involved in an online discussion with a small group of atheists. They insisted that God could not possibly exist because there is no proof. When I suggested that the miraculous is proof of God's existence, they expressed as much skepticism for miracles as they did for God. So I went out on a limb and told them about a miracle witnessed by my wife many years ago. The reason I say I went out on a limb is because my wife can provide no evidence that it ever happened. Still, I figured it was worth a try.

The miracle took place while my wife was living at a YWCA in South Africa thirty years ago. Her friend Angie (not her real name) was born with polio. She could not walk without crutches and leg braces. One leg was four inches shorter than the other, which meant she had to wear a built-up shoe.

Angie was a devout Christian and one night she asked my wife to go with her to a meeting hosted by a visiting evangelist. During the meeting, the evangelist called everyone to pray for healing. Angie grabbed my wife's hands and told her to pray for her.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

In Pursuit of Action

Contests. 

For many aspiring writers, they dredge up a range of emotions. There's nothing quite like putting your baby out there, only for it to be returned to you a few months later marked up in red, with scores that have you wonder for a second if they've accidentally left a digit out.

I entered my first contest in 2008. To be honest, I knew little about writing and nothing about publishing. Fortunately, the contest ordained everything from the font, to the size, to the margins to the line spacing so I didn't have a chance to embarrass myself by sending in something single spaced, written in Verdana, in size 6 font, with 0.5 inch margins.

This was good, since the content held plenty that now makes me want to bang my head against the wall and be eternally thankful that at least entries are anonymous. Suffice to say the judges did not think they'd read the opening pages to the next Gone With The Wind.

I've since learnt that opening your story with you main character stuck in a traffic jam doing a lot of philosophical thinking isn't the best way to hook a reader. They also generally don't care much about what she had for dinner last night or how long it's been since her car got serviced.

What readers want, we're told, is ACTION. Especially at the beginning. Things have to be happening, and fast. You can fill us in on her elderly cat called Skittles who has a thing for donuts later.

My question for you is this; we're told that readers want action and they want it fast but how fast? What is your preference? Do you want to get to know your character at all before we knock her / him over the head with getting sacked / finding out  husband is cheating / discovering they've accidentally picked up the only copy of the nuclear launch codes and have terrorists after them? 

Or do you prefer a few pages (by which I mean 3 not 30) of getting to know them and scene setting before the writer turns their world inside down and upside out?

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Encouraging Each Other

I don't think I ever belonged to a special group or club before I began writing novels. Finally I took courage and joined ACFW. I felt a little strange about that as I wasn't an American but a bit of an outsider. Then I discovered from the emails that other writers from all over the world also belonged there. There is so much help and guidance there that it gave me a great kick-start as an author.

Then my writer friend, Mary Hawkins, suggested I join this ICFW blog. Here it is truly an international membership. And we are all gradually getting to know each other and also some of our regular readers who take time to leave comments. As we Aussies say, "Good on ya!" You truly get to know those who really open up and share their hearts in their writing journey. It was also fun to share our favourite recipes in our international freebie book. Do take time to check it out.

And our Australian Writers Down Under Blogspot was another 'club' I couldn't resist joining. It's so rewarding to read each others' blog posts and see where they're at 'writing related' and what they're doing and how the Lord is working in their lives through all their personal struggles. Hey, dear follower, by now I reckon you've guessed writing is NOT easy. Yes, the ideas flow but that's only the start of a l-o-n-g haul and then the work really begins.

Margaret L, Jo-Anne B, Anna C, Deb, Me, Penny R & Jackie R(not shown)
A few writers who live in Sydney's environs decided to get together and share over morning coffee/lunch. And my place was the most central venue. Each brought a plate with goodies. Well, we had a marvellous time of fellowship, networking, sharing about family, the perils of publishing etc. We had a real communication problem... we never stopped talking!!!

It was so lovely to meet some of the writers for the very first time. It was such an encouragement to me, personally, and from their remarks they enjoyed it also. I think we'll be meeting again some time in the future.
This would also be another chance for those other authors who could not attend  for various reasons.

I wonder if some of you other wonderful international authors could get together under the ICFW umbrella.

Rita Stella Galieh is presently polishing Book II in the Watermark Women trilogy, before sending it to the publisher, Ark House Press. Book I - Signed Sealed Delivered, Book II - The Tie that Binds, Book III - A Parcel of Promises.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Creating My Grandfather: a Guest Post by Tom Blubaugh

My grandfather died of Lou Gehrig’s disease in 1941, in the same hospital where I was born in 1942. I have always regretted being deprived of knowing him. When I was a child, I spent a week each summer at my grandmother's house. Above the television, hanging on the gold wallpaper, were two oval, mahogany frames protecting two beautiful pictures. The picture on the right displayed a lovely young woman with long, wavy, jet-black hair—my grandmother. The picture on the left was my grandfather, a man with a soft, pleasant round face, a receding hairline, and a partial smile.

My grandmother never talked about my grandfather that I recall. As I grew older, I learned a few things about him, but nothing that really told me who he was. I never understood this. Perhaps it was because I never asked questions in spite of my interest. I’ve always been aware of the emptiness of not having a grandfather. My grandmother passed away when I was sixteen. Little did I know that any hope of discovering substantive information about my grandfather died with her.

As I grew older, I would ask my mother and her siblings about him, but no one seemed to know much about his past, and what they did remember conflicted with each other’s memories. Together my grandparents spoke nine languages. They wanted their children to be Americans; so when they spoke of the old countries, they spoke in a language their children didn't understand. She was from Poland, and he was from Russia.

None of their sons had children, therefore, my grandfather's name did not continue. He seemed like a ghost. All of their children, three sons and three daughters, have passed away except my Aunt Sarah. After my mother passed away, I sat down with my aunt and asked her every question I could think of, gleaning every detail I could. I then began to research the history of the time of my grandparent’s immigration to the United States. I found pieces of information that made the bits of truth I had already learned make sense. He had been a Russian Cossack soldier in the Ukraine, immigrating to America in 1910.

Writing this story has pushed my imagination to the limit. I wonder what my life might be like had my grandparents not come to America. Would my grandmother have been a victim of Hitler’s furnaces like the majority of her family? Would my grandparents still have met and married? Would I be a Polish or Ukrainian citizen—or an immigrant? Let me introduce you to my grandfather as I imagine him.

What I have just shared with you is the introduction to my historical fiction Night of the Cossack, which was released by Bound by Faith Publishers in April 2011. I started writing this story for myself because I deeply wanted a grandfather—my dad’s father died before I was born as well.

As the story began to take shape, I found I was writing it for my heirs. I wanted them to have a heritage, too.

Sometime during the process, I shared it with a published writer on a Yahoo writers group. She said I was on to something so I joined a local critique group. They agreed and encouraged me to pursue publication. Before I had finished the manuscript, a friend and his wife asked me to help them set up a website. They were starting a publishing company. In the process, they discovered the first chapter of my novel on my own site and asked to read the manuscript. When they finished, they asked me if they could publish the book.

Now I speak to young adults in schools, homeschool groups, and clubs. I encourage them to find out all they can about their ancestors before it is too late, but I have found that their parents take an interest as well.

After researching and studying the history of the Jews in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, I understand the fear my grandparents lived with and suppressed. They were terrified that Hitler was going to make it to America. They wanted their children to be Americans. I know they didn’t realize they were robbing their heirs of our heritage.

My novel is a great story for any age although I wrote it for the YA genre. I have received letters from readers age twelve to eighty-six expressing appreciation of my novel. Another author, who is a retired schoolteacher, reviewed my book and then wrote a ten-day study guide so homeschoolers, families, and book clubs could get the most from my story. I am humbled and grateful for this, but the greatest blessing is the closure I have received and, although he is mostly fiction, I have a grandfather.


Tom Blubaugh is a freelance writer living in Southwest Missouri with Barbara, his wife. They have six children and fourteen grandchildren. Tom has written nonfiction most of his adult life, but has recently written a historical fiction titled Night of the Cossack, published by Bound by Faith Publishers. This is Tom’s first novel. He co-wrote a devotional journal in 2009 for Barbour Publishing titled The Great Adventure. His other writings include articles for a denominational magazine and an insurance publication. He also self-published a book, Behind the Scenes of the Bus Ministry in 1974.

Tom started writing poetry at the age of fourteen. His vision of turning them into lyrics for rock and roll songs for popular artists didn’t develop. He considers writing to be a God-given talent and feels led to develop it. His first novel was published when he was 69. Tom says it’s never too late. He is now writing a sequel.

Tom spent twelve years as an insurance agent and eleven years as a financial planner. He is the past president of Jericho Commission, Inc., and still serves on the board of directors.

Interested in reading Night of the Cossack? Tom is offering one reader a copy, anywhere on Planet Earth. If the winner has an American address, he will send a paper book. If the winner lives elsewhere, he offers a .pdf copy.

If you'd like to put your name in the hat, please add your email address with your comment before Thursday, February 23, replacing @ with (at) and .com with (dot) com.

"Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws."


Valerie Comer's life on a small farm in western Canada provides the seed for stories of contemporary inspirational romance. Like many of her characters, Valerie and her family grow much of their own food and are active in the local food movement as well as their church. She only hopes her creations enjoy their happily ever afters as much as she does hers, shared with her husband, adult kids, and adorable granddaughter.

Her first published work, a novella, will be available in the collection Rainbow's End from Barbour Books in May 2012. Visit her website and blog to glimpse inside her world.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

SUNDAY EDITION


Coming Up This Week

Monday

Tom Blubaugh: Creating My Grandfather

Tuesday

Rita Galieh: Encouraging Each Other

Wednesday

Kara Isaac

Thursday

Paul Baines

Friday Devotion

Kathi Macias: Cemeteries and Perspective

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Contest Giveaway Winners

Claudia is the winner of Rose Dee's book, Back to Resolution (Narelle's post, February 1)
Claudia, please leave an email address in a comment on this post so we can contact you.

Aly is the winner of Melanie Dickerson's book, The Merchant's Daughter (LeAnne's post, January 26)

Congratulations to all our winners!

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

Upcoming Book Releases

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego, CA and the Golden Triangle area of Thailand, Special Delivery, Book Two in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be a March 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Shades of Truth, will be a March 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, Like Sweet Potato Pie, Book Two in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a March 2012 release from Barbour.

Kathi Macias' book set in San Diego and Mexico, The Deliverer, Book Three in her Freedom series involving human trafficking, will be an April 2012 release from New Hope Publishers.

Valerie Comer's debut novella, Topaz Treasure, which is part of the Rainbow's End collection, will be a May 2012 release from Barbour.

Sandra Orchard's romantic suspense set in Canada, Critical Condition, will be an October 2012 release from Love Inspired Suspense.

Jennifer Rogers Spinola's women's fiction book, 'Till Grits Do Us Part, Book Three in the Southern Fried Sushi series, will be a November 2012 release from Barbour.


To find more International Christian Fiction books, please visit our Recent Releases page, Backlist Titles page and our International Christian Fiction wiki.