Steve Hartman shows us a kid that is a shining example of what we need at this time. If we could be like him the world would be a much better place. ENJOY!
A Full Plate of Gratitude for the New Year
By Ashlie Miller
Golden cornbread, deep dark collard greens, side meat and black-eyed peas in a dish of Hoppin’ John. Red beans, andouille sausage, and rice. Long noodles, dumplings, pomegranates? There are so many fascinating food traditions for New Year’s Day. I did not grow up with that custom, but several years ago, my husband shared that his grandmother did serve a Southern version of good fortune meals. And by the looks of the restocking of bags of dried black-eyed peas happening at Food Lion on New Year’s Eve, many of you also hold fast to this tradition.
I’m not superstitious (or even a “little stitious” for those who know that joke), but I do love traditions to mark days and seasons. Several years ago, I adapted the tradition for our family. I’m sure I stole – or nicely modified – the idea from someone to whom I now can’t recall to give credit.
I apologize to the Southern mamas who can make good collards. I have no experience, but I am open to your tips. We settle for cabbage, which in its own right is a reference to cash. Sometimes, I might roast Brussel sprouts. This year, I used a can of Glory Foods canned greens and made cabbage and carrots for the less adventurous. Usually, we have blacked-eyed peas with some pork. This year, I used a recipe from Our State magazine for Hoppin’ John that did not disappoint. For the younger tastebuds, we also make macaroni and cheese (hey, it’s golden!). A good cornbread mix rounds out the meal. It is simple food – a perfect way to begin a year – simplicity.
As we eat, we reflect on a year past and anticipate the year we have stepped into. We open the Bible and read verses like Psalm 65:11 – “You have crowned the year with bounty; Your wagon tracks overflow with abundance.”
Then, we prayerfully read Proverbs 30:7-9:
“Two things I ask of you; deny them not to me before I die: Remove far from me flashed and lying; give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest I be full and deny you and say, ‘Who is the LORD?’ Or lest I be poor and steal and profane the name of my God.”
I’ve read stories that the old rabbis would give their young students saucers of honey as they read from the Torah so they would associate the sweetness of the honey with God’s Word – “taste and see.” I hope meals and traditions like these will forge sweet, lasting memories for my family and my spirit.
If you have not already had a New Year’s meal, perhaps make one today. It does not have to be symbolic foods, but something simply memorable to set your heart up for a year of gratitude and dependence on the Maker and Redeemer.
Now, will someone please pass the cornbread?
Ashlie Miller and her family rang in the New Year at their home in Concord, NC. Please send your collard tips to mrs.ashliemiller@gmail.com.
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A Year of Possibilities
By Doug Creamer
We have stepped into the New Year. The month of December always goes by so quickly. Here we are in a new month and a new year. We all may feel a little discomfort entering an unknown time. The truth is the future is full of many good things for us and there will also be some challenges that we will have to face. The question is which will we choose to focus on?
Fear and anxiety love to play in our minds with the unknown future ahead. We can find ourselves worrying about what will or might happen. There is a sense that the future is out of our control and that makes us feel uncomfortable. If we rely only upon ourselves and our own abilities then these feelings would be justified. But as the people of God, we must turn our focus upon Him and trust Him with the future.
We will face things that are challenging and difficult. What if some tragedy befalls us, what then? The place to begin is with the fact that God is in control. He may allow or even send some challenges into our lives to cause us to grow spiritually or to draw us closer to Himself. On the tragedy front, we have to remember that they do not originate in heaven. In those horrific moments we have to trust the scripture that teaches us that God can bring about something good from every situation if we will trust in Him.
To illustrate my point, I ask you to consider the tragic flooding and destruction that occurred in our mountains from Hurricane Helene. I believe that was not from God. Now I ask you to consider all the miracles you heard about during that time. Consider all the churches, communities, businesses, organizations, and individuals that offered help to those affected by this tragedy. People have come from all over to offer their services to people in need. Neighbors helped neighbors. God has a way of counteracting and bringing hope into hopeless situations. Sometimes it takes a little time, but God is faithful. God can bring good out of the bad!
So, I want to encourage you to take your eyes off all the things your mind has imagined that could be bad in the new year and look to your good Father who is planning GOOD things for your future. You may ask: How do you know God is planning good things for me? Jeremiah 29:11 promises us that God is actively planning good things for us and to give us hope and a good future.
The word hope grabbed my attention. The word hope is powerful. It means that we have a feeling of optimism. We actually believe that God is good and that he is actively planning good things for us. When we live with hope it means that we are actually changing our thought processes. Instead of allowing negative thoughts to prevail we are following God and allowing Him to change our minds. God’s new way of thinking allows us to believe that no matter what situation we are facing God is going to bring a positive outcome. That’s HOPE!
When we can live our lives with an expectant heart, expecting God to do something good, it will change the way we live our lives. We have to engage our faith and our active thoughts. When our thoughts want to run into the negative, we have to confront them with God’s promises for our lives. God is good and promises good things for our lives. Sometimes we may have to admit to our brothers and sisters that we are struggling so they can gather around us and encourage us and remind us of God’s goodness and faithfulness.
I know what I am writing is not easy. I know that at some point this year I will need someone to encourage me. You will need someone to encourage you. We can and we will do that for each other. I want to encourage you to grab ahold of hope. Look for the good God is doing in your life now and all year. Believe that He sees you in your situation and He is actively working on your behalf. Look for His promises in the scriptures for your situation and trust Him to fulfill those promises for you. Believe that He loves you and is making good plans for your future. I believe that 2025 will be a good year. It will have its struggles but let’s let those struggles lead us to Him.
Contact Doug Creamer at PO Box 777, Faith, NC 28041or doug@dougcreamer.com
Old Wrestlers
By Roger Barbee
Soon following our move to Lake Norman almost five years ago, my wife Mary Ann looked for a representative for a particular beauty product she used. Scanning a long list of saleswomen, she randomly chose one and called her. After their long conversation had finished, Mary Ann came to the library to tell me how pleasant Terri the saleswoman was and how much she looked forward to working with her. It was then that her phone rang, and Terri asked, “Did you say your husband’s name was Roger?”
In 1823 the English Romantic poet, Lord Byron, wrote his poem, Don Juan, in which he writes: “‘ Tis strange – but true; for truth is always strange; /Stranger than fiction; if it could be told,…” Over the years many other writers have expressed the same idea in various words, but no matter what version is written, all readers eventually learn the truth of Byron’s words.
There it was for me: Strange but True; Life not Fiction. The husband of Terri and I had wrestled against each other in high school. Mike wrestled for Mooresville High School, and I for A.L. Brown in Kannapolis. We competed in the same weight class for two years over fifty years ago and now we meet again, just not on a wrestling mat.
We four had the obligatory lunch to meet and talk and explore. Mike and I then continued sharing lunches, coffee in my shop, and he guided me around our new home, Lake Norman, which he knew well because his career was with the power company that built the Lake. We soon discovered that we had much in common.: Both of our hometowns had been textile towns when we were wrestling against each other; our parents had worked in the mills; we lived in mill houses, and both of those houses are still family occupied. So much, besides wrestling, shared.
Each week he would call and ask, “Want a coffee?” then in a few minutes he would appear with a soda for himself and the promised coffee for me. Each weekly visit found Mike helping me with some project in the yard or my shop. He is most responsible for the deck that expanded my small shop– giving me much needed work space. A trained engineer, he made certain it was correct and safe. Exact, even. He would rake the abundant pine needles fallen from the 42 pine trees in our yard to use for mulch in his gardens. Our weekly visit often included lunch, and when we ate at his favorite fast-food eatery, he would pull a rash of coupons from a pocket before paying and say, “A poor man spends money like he is rich, but a rich man spends it like he is poor.” Then as we ate, some finer points of theology or politics would be discussed. I will always remember how he once looked at me during one of these “discussions” and asked, “Are you that naïve?”
When I work with a project on the deck that Mike more or less built or move in my wheelchair around the yard gleaning pine cones, I see his presence. The bluebird nesting-box with the red roof still graces the pine tree where he fastened it after I “mentioned” to him how it needed to be there. When I admired a long row of irises in a neighbor’s yard, I asked Mike one day as we returned from a road trip to knock on the unreachable (for my wheelchair) door to inquire if I could have some. The kind, elderly lady must of approved of Mike because she gave me permission to take any irises I wanted, and now next to the back garden gate is a small, varied-colored growth of purple irises that Mike and I planted; and, like our friendship, it grows and thickens and blooms.
Both our lives, like all lives, have had their dips and twists and failures and mountaintops. But for two boys from the mill hills of small, textile towns, we have been blessed and have done well. And as I share life with Mike long after our competitive days, I appreciate more and more the odd, interesting, and fulfilling paths that we all travel, whether planned or not. Mary Ann and I moved to Lake Norman not knowing that the “Stranger than fiction” of Byron would happen, and that a friendship would be forged out of a time long ago when two scrappy, mill-hill boys competed against each other. Byron also writes that “…truth is always strange.” He’s right, of course, but not always in the way it may appear. It’s not strange that Mike and I respected each other as wrestlers. Nor is it strange that there is something deeper now.
Resolution Run 5K and a Red Cross Blood Donation
By David Freeze
Resolution Run 5K and a Red Cross Blood Donation
One of my favorite races each year is the Bradshaw Rogers Financial Partners 5K at The Forum, and here are a few reasons why. The run/walk is held each year on January 1st, the actual final resolution day for most people. And many of us have consumed way too many calories since Thanksgiving, so this date is the perfect time for a commitment and resolution to get more exercise That statement alone is too broad and rarely achievable because it is. But what if you decided to do your resolution in a trackable and achievable way?
One of my neighbors, 12-year-old Naomi McDonald, told me that she was going to do 12 races during 2025 and it all would begin with the Resolution Run. Two friends, husband and wife, told me that they were going to walk some of our races this coming year as a commitment to better fitness.
The Resolution Run 5K has several purposes, one of them being an opportunity to commit to a year of better health. Additionally, this is by far the lowest priced race of the year and 100% of all proceeds go to Rowan Helping Ministries. Cost is just $10 for early registration and then $15 on January 1st. Donations of cash, non-perishable food and especially canned goods plus used running shoes will be accepted and used at Rowan Helping Ministries.
Each participant will get a new shirt left over from our 2024 races, refreshments after the 5K and the unparallelled feeling of achievement on the first morning of the year. Especially if that achievement is a new thing, and you decide that you want more in the near future. All runners and walkers will be timed on an accurate course and results will be posted online afterwards. The top 10 male and female runners will get medals but the event can be as competitive or non-competitive as you want it.
Start time is 9am but plan to arrive by 8:15 to enjoy the check-in process while picking out your new shirt and a bathroom break. The Resolution Run uses the Butterball course which is protected by Salisbury PD, other volunteers and is coned off. Count all this as a fun morning with no pressure and come make that commitment to better health, especially if all this is new to you.
I am a big advocate of giving blood and have been doing so for more than 25 years. Since my back accident in May, I had not given but got back on track at Fieldstone Presbyterian Church in Mooresville on Monday. Why there? Because I have given four times there and each one has been extremely welcoming and pleasant. Homemade cookies help too!
A co-worker told me once, “There is no way I am going to give blood!” My response was, “How will you feel when you need blood?” His response, “I hope it will be there.”
Perhaps you have heard some of this before. Every two seconds, someone in the US needs blood for surgeries, cancer treatment, chronic illnesses and traumatic injuries. The need for blood is constant, with only about 3% of eligible people donating yearly. About 328 million people currently live in the US, and 6.8 million give blood. About 13.6 million units of whole blood are collected annually. Blood donations include red cells, platelets and plasma, and are one of the most important things we can do to help others, especially at this time of giving. There is no substitute for blood, and it can’t be manufactured. Your gift of blood will be appreciated.
Go to www.redcrossblood.org or www.oneblood.org to read more and schedule a donation. Giving blood is a favorite thing for me to do, recently made more fun because I have become a competitive giver. Of course I want to give as often as possible, but being competitive by nature, I now test myself with how quickly I can give a pint. Red Cross would frown on any more details, but I regained the SRR record this past week.
Look for more about the Resolution Run and other activities, soon to include a blood drive, at www.salisburyrowanrunners.org
A Much Greater Plan
By Ed Traut
Ecclesiastes 3:11 He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.
- We are sometimes so narrow minded and only see our lives in small frustrations.
- There is so much more going on way beyond before we were born and after we go and there is so much to life.
- He does make all things beautiful and fantastic. We must just look to Him and let Him be sovereign in every way.
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Prayer: Hallelujah! I lift my hands and praise and worship, because You are the Almighty God and my life is very small and insignificant compared to Your great plan. I yield to You and know that You make all things beautiful and good and I trust You no matter what things look like today. Amen.
Ed Traut
Prophetic Life