Showing posts with label family tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family tree. Show all posts

Monday, November 4, 2019

Were You Made for Such a Time as This?


Queens, princesses, duchesses, and other female royalty around the world are often fascinating to us. For example, Meghan Markle became known as Duchess of Sussex when she married Prince Harry. Since then, we seem to pay special attention to the royals especially of the United Kingdom. Probably, a large part of that is because the Duchess is an American-born woman and is not yet a British citizen as there are many requirements for that to happen and it’s a slow process.

We could think about our own heritage and look back into our ancestry to see where we came from and the history of our parents, grandparents, great-grandparents and on and on. We may be surprised or shocked to find out some fascinating facts, especially if we never knew anyone on one side of our family tree or the other.  

A few years ago, my own family tree expanded by a tremendous explosion! Since my biological father passed away during the WWII era, his history was never exposed to me. But suddenly, after being contacted by a supposed first cousin (later verified, of course), twenty-one first cousins were discovered on my father’s family tree that was never known to me previously. To shorten this long story, there was an immediate family reunion that happily lasted for days. And my Google contact list has grown into a garden of delight!

Generations of History
Many people already know their family history, but maybe not. Or not well. It could be great fun to start this project and with so many websites out there to support a search, it isn’t difficult. How many generations back could we discover? Where are our ancestors from? What did they do for a living? And how did our families eventually end up in America where we were born?

These answers could not only be fun to discover but may be quite important to pass on to our children or siblings. It was sad for me to find out there were all these cousins I could have grown up with if only I had known of their existence. Instead, decades melted away with no contact. Don’t let that happen to your family.

Just like the old famous song by Louis Armstrong says, “What a Wonderful World” this could be if we only allow it. And knowing our history is all part of the process to keep it going. Some of us have boxes and boxes of photos lying around the house (yes, millennials, before the 1980s we had photo film that needed to be developed which created a “hard copy” photo to keep). Okay, we were smiling when we said that, so relax, we know it is a digital world now. In fact, we can even take those hard copies and have them turned into a digital video or file folder to keep forever.

Five Keepsakes to Start
What other things can we do to create family keepsakes to pass on? Try these five and then add your own:

A journal for each child
Child’s growth chart (enlarged) for the wall  

Fill a shadow box with old keepsakes from the attic or closet

Start a journal for each child (even grown ones!). Write a weekly letter

Frame that handwritten family recipe from great-grandmother

Create framed pencil/watercolor drawings of the kids

Delicate Parts

After all that activity, be sure to sit and relax and read the one book that contains hundreds of fascinating family stories like a courageous woman named Esther who became a Queen, a female judge named Deborah, and a daughter and beloved mother-in-law named Ruth and Naomi.

It’s one way we will find out that we ourselves were created with loving care and not by accident, but with a purpose. Open the Bible and start with Psalm 139. In verse 13 it says gently, “You made all the delicate, inner parts of my body and knit me together in my mother’s womb.” It is so important to see that God, the Creator of all knew each one of us long before we were even born.

It’s our original family history written by our Heavenly Father and the one and only true God who created the entire universe!

“. . .Who knows if perhaps you were made queen for just such a time as this?” (Esther 4:14b NLT).



Monday, July 30, 2018

Who Sees You?

Today, Fresh Start Momentum continues our SUMMER SISTER SERIES highlighting the lives of some famous and amazing women who might just encourage us in our struggles. True stories that can give us insights for our lives in the 21st Century and how all women--married or not--have always been important throughout history. Join us for the final two weeks as we showcase our "sisters."

Many of us have never taken a look at our family tree. Where we came from and where we are going. We haven't even found out who our ancestors were, what they did for a living, and what effect they had on our lives. This week we take a look at the story of a downtrodden woman who lived in misery. Read on and see if you can relate to the existence she endured, then (here's the best part): try to recognize her worth that ended in fulfillment.

Desert Wanderings
It’s not very common today, but slaves or “maidservants” were acceptable in Biblical times. They were expected to do exactly what they were commanded to do and remain quiet. Slave or not, Hagar was a brave woman with a mind of her own. She knew she could be of some value, if only for her labor and the fact she could bear children. And this would become her history that still affects us today!


Hagar served Sarai/Sarah, Abram/Abraham's wife, who had not borne any children at all, even though she was in her 90s. As an answer to infertility, surrogate mothers were used then as now. Contrary to what we may think, it is nothing new. Hagar was expected to do just that for Sarah when she was sent to be Abraham's second wife.


Here was the problem: after Hagar became pregnant, she began to despise Sarah, who in turn, treated Hagar so badly she ran away. We are all humans, after all. We demean and discredit others when things don’t go our way. We cause them to do things they might have never done. We don’t consult the Lord for His direction in our lives. We then, just go about doing whatever we please and, often, turn around and blame God.

Promises and Plans

But God wasn’t going to let Hagar go. God would send her a son named Ishmael (a pretty wild and hard to control kid!) to provide her with a family. He promised that her descendants would grow to so many, she wouldn’t be able to count them. And that is exactly what happened.
He SEES us! 


When Hagar witnessed this promise come true, she knowingly said, You are the God who sees me. This is a heart-pounding statement that we would do well to remember. When we think God is not anywhere near, we are mistaken. When we think He does not hear us, we are mistaken. When we think He has no plans or promises for us, we are mistaken. He is everywhere, all the time, and in every way.  


For this reason, Hagar gave a special name to the well where the angel first found her. It is still there to this day in Beersheba, Israel. Hagar's many ancestors live there to this day.


"The angel of the Lord also said to her: You are now with child and you will have a son. You shall name him Ishmael, for the Lord has heard of your misery" (Genesis 16:11 NIV).

Find the story of Hagar in the Holy Bible, Genesis, Chapters 16; 21.