Friday, June 5, 2026

Flashback Friday: When I Fall In Love

 

 

 

   The beautiful song, "When I Fall In Love" was written by composer Victor Young
with lyrics by Edward Heyman and first introduced as the theme song for 
Howard Hughes' 1952  Korean War romance drama, "One Minute To Zero".



Image courtesy/Amazon.com


.

Although many people are familiar with legendary crooner Nat King Cole's
smooth rendition of this song, the very first hit version was recorded by
the lovely vocals of singer-actress Doris Day 74 years ago
this week on June 5, 1952. 


When I Fall In Love
(1952)
Doris Day
(Uploaded on October 2, 2022)
 The Orchard Enterprises
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Friday Focus: Remember The Sabbath

 

 

 

 

"For the sweetness of life lies in usefulness,
 like honey deep in the heart of a clover bloom."


 

Image courtesy/Pinterest

 

 

The whole world was a deep, dark blue,  for I had waked with a grouch that
 morning. While blue is without doubt a heavenly color, it is better in skies 
than one's mind; for when the blues descend upon a poor mortal on earth,
 life seems far from being worth living.  

I didn't want to help with the chores; I hated to get breakfast; and the
 prospect of doing up the morning's work afterwards was positively revolting. 
Beginning with the usual round of duties-under protest- I had a great many
thoughts about work and none of them was complimentary to the habit. But 
presently, my mind took a wider range and became less personal as applied
to the day just beginning. First I remembered the old, old labor law:

"Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work; but the seventh day is the
sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou shalt no do any work."
(Exodus 20:9-10)

It used to be impressed upon us as most important that we must rest on
the seventh day. We may not "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy"
(Exodus 20:8) but we'll not forget to stop working. With our present
attitude toward work, the emphasis should be upon "Six days thou
shalt labor," and if we stick it out to work the six days, we will
rest on the seventh without any urging.

Given half a chance, we'll take Saturday off also and any other day or
part of the day we can manage to sneak, besides which the length of 
a work day is shrinking and shrinking for everyone except farmers,
and they are hoping to shorten theirs.

"In all labour there is profit; but the talk of the lips tendeth only to penury."
(Proverbs 14:23)

But really the old way was best, for it takes about six days of work to give
just the right flavor to a day off. As I thought of all these things, insensibly,
my ideas about work changed. I remember the time of enforced idleness
 when recovering from an illness and how I longed to be busily at work again.

Also, I recollected a week of vacation that I once devoted to pleasure during
which I suffered more than the weariness of working while I had none of its
satisfaction. For there is a great satisfaction in work well done, the thrill of
success in a task accomplished.

I got the thrill at the moment that my mind reached the climax. The separator
was washed. It was a job I especially dislike, but, while my mind had been busy
far afield, my hands performed their accustomed task with none of the usual sense
 of unpleasantness, showing that, after all, it is not so much the work we do with
 our bodies that makes us tired and dissatisfied as the work we do with our minds.

We have been, for so long, thinking of labor as a curse upon man, that because
of our persistently thinking of it as such, it has very nearly become so. 

There has always been a great deal of misplaced pity for Adam because of his
sentence to hard labor for life when really that was all that saved him after
 he was deported from paradise, and it is the only thing that has kept 
his descendants as safe and sane even as they are. 

"Go to the ant, thou sluggard, consider her ways, and be wise; which having
no guide, overseer, or ruler, provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth
her food in the harvest. How long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? When wilt
thou arise out of thy sleep? Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little 
folding of the hands to sleep; so shall thy poverty come as one that
 travelleth, and thy want as an armed man."
(Proverbs 6:6-11) 

There is nothing wrong with God's plan that man should earn his bread
by the sweat of his brow. The wrong is in our own position only. In trying
to shirk while we "let George do it," we bring upon ourselves our own
punishment; for in the attitude we take toward our work, we make of it
a burden instead of the blessing it might be.

Work is like other good things in that it should not be indulged in to excess,
but a reasonable amount that is of value to one's self and to the world, as is
any honest, well-directed labor, need never descend into drudgery.

It is a tonic and an inspiration and a reward unto itself. For the sweetness
of life lies in usefulness, like honey deep in the heart of a clover bloom.

 

"Remember The Sabbath"
Laura Ingalls Wilder
(1867-1957)
Beloved American writer and author
of the "Little House" series of books.
A devotional from the book,
"Saving Graces: The Inspirational 
Writings of Laura Ingalls Wilder"
Edited by Stephen Hines
(1997)
Broadman & Holman Publishers
Nashville, Tennessee

 

Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Hillbilly Kitchen: Every Man Will Love This Meatballs & Brown Gravy Dinner!

 

 

 

 

Looking for a budget-family recipe your whole family will love?
On today's episode of The Hillbilly Kitchen, gracious host Becky 
shares an easy and delicious recipe for Meatballs & Brown Gravy! 

Remember to always put God first! 

 

Every Man Will Love This Meatball
& Brown Gravy Dinner!
The Hillbilly Kitchen-Down Home 
Country Cooking
(June 4, 2026)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Wednesday's Word: Selah/ "Pause"


 

 

 "Let be and be still, and know, recognize and understand that I am God. I will 
be exalted among the nations!  I will be exalted in the earth! The Lord of hosts
is with us; the God of Jacob is our Refuge, our High Tower and Stronghold.
Selah, pause and calmly think of that!"
(Psalm 46:10-11)

 

 Beautiful Heliotrope Flowers In Bloom
Image courtesy/Picture This
 
 

Summer flowers, like the lovely, old-fashioned Heliotrope, are an awesome
display of the intricate, "down to the last detail" artistry of the Creator's power.
They remind believers of the beauty and brevity of life, the assurance of God's
provision, and the surety of His eternal promises.


  The Hebrew word, "Selah" pronounced (say-lah) appears often in the Book of Psalms,
and encourages the reader to carefully pause to consider or reflect upon the glorious,
  eternal nature of God . Often, when a  particular verse of Scripture captures our
 attention, God is speaking directly to us, though we may not realize it at first.

I clearly remember the day when I had to take my beloved dog, Mariah, to
be put to sleep after she developed cancerous tumors in her abdomen. She
could barely walk and I had all I could do to put her in the car and drive
to the local animal hospital.  Although the veterinarian tried to reassure
me that I was doing the right thing for her,  it was one of the hardest
moments of my life. I never felt so alone and guilty, thinking
if only I had not been preoccupied with other things...if only I
had noticed Mariah's worsening condition sooner...if only...

Afterwards,  driving back home I was so blinded by tears that I could
hardly see the road in front of me.  When I finally reached home again,
the first thing I did was grab my Bible and sit down on the living room
couch. Closing my eyes, I asked God to speak to me through His Word,
to let me know that I had done the right thing for Mariah.

As I opened the front cover of my Bible, the pages fell open to Psalm 84.
The words of this lovely song seemed to leap out at me as I read the following
verse: "Yes, the sparrow has found a house, and the swallow a nest for herself,
where she may lay her young-even Your altars, O Lord of hosts,
my King and my God."
(Psalm 84:3)

"...even Your altars..." I quickly read these words again, and I realized
that God was not only speaking directly to me, but, He was comforting 
my broken heart with the assurance that my beloved Mariah was with
 Him now. My faithful pet and friend, like the sparrow and the swallow, 
had found a place of rest for herself on His altars.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The History Of Tomato Soup...Cake?




Mmm...Mmm...Good!
 

1935 Campbell's Soup Ad
Image courtesy/Attic Paper

 

Tasting History's Chef Max Miller shares the story behind one of the oddest recipes
  popular during the lean years of the Great Depression-Tomato Soup Cake!

 

Tomato Soup Cake From The Great Depression
Tasting History With Max Miller
(June 2, 2026)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday Bible Study With Les Feldick: There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation

 

  

 

"Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, who
 live and walk not after the dictates of the flesh, but after the dictates of the Spirit." 
(Romans 8:1)

 

Les and Iris Feldick on their Wedding Day
(June 21, 1953)
Image courtesy/Through The Bible
 With Les Feldick Newsletter

 

 

Les continues his walk through the Bible teaching us
to connect the dots within the Holy Scriptures. 

 

 

There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation/Part One
(1995)
Les Feldick Ministries-Official Site
(Uploaded May 7, 2019)

 

 

 

 

There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation/Part Two
(1995)
Les Feldick Ministries-Official Site
(Uploaded May 24, 2019)

 

 

 

 

There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation/Part Three
(1995)
Les Feldick Ministries-Official Site
(Uploaded May 24, 2019)

 

 

 

 

There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation/Part Four
(1995)
Les Feldick Ministries-Official Site
(Uploaded May 30, 2019)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, June 1, 2026

Monday Meditation: More Myself

 

  

"I have been crucified with Christ, in Him I have shared His crucifixion; 
it is no longer I who live, but Christ the Messiah lives in me;and the life
 I now live in the body I live by faith in the Son of God, 
Who loved me, and gave Himself up for me." 
(Galatians 2:20)

 

Image courtesy/DeviantArt

 

 

CHRISTIANITY isn't a narcotic that dulls you into obedience.

It involves battle-it's excruciating to give up control.

But that is why we must not feel despair if we are struggling.
To struggle does not mean we are incorrigible. It means we are alive!

A disciple says, "I hear You, Lord.  It's the nuttiest thing I ever heard of.
It's risky. I'll look like a fool, but I'll do it. Because my life is no longer
committed to doing my thing but Your thing."

Heaven will not be filled with innocent people, running around and saying,
"Oh, there was another way? I guess I never noticed."  Rather, they will say,
"You bet there were other options that begged to control me. By God's grace
and my struggle, Jesus is my Lord."

Is Jesus' desire to be the Lord of our lives some little fetish of His?
Why is it so important to Him? Why should we want Him to have
 control of our lives? Besides the fact that He deserves it because 
 of who He is, He knows He is the only one in the universe who 
can control us without destroying us. 

No one will ever love you like Jesus.

No one will ever know you better, care more for your wholeness. 

The last breath Jesus breathed on this planet was for you.

Jesus will meet you wherever you are and He will help you.

He is not intimidated by past failures, broken promises, or wounds.
He will make sense out of your brokenness. But He can only begin to be
 the Lord of your life today, not next Monday, or next month, but now.
And the great and joyful paradox is that while He totally transforms us,
He makes us more ourselves than ever before.

 

"More Myself"
 By Rebecca Manley Pippert 
Global conference speaker,
author and evangelist, whose passion
is seeing people come to know Jesus

This devotional is from 
The NIV Women's Devotional New Testament 
With Psalms & Proverbs
Zondervan Publishing
(2001)

 

 

Who Am I 
(20o4)
Casting Crowns
(Uploaded February 17, 2020)