Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Boo! Teacher Halloween Treat...plus a few ways to make Halloween about God!

Some Christians choose to avoid all things Halloween and I totally "get" that and completely support their decision.

We don't "celebrate" Halloween either...but we do participate in cute, fun fall activities such as carving pumpkins, dressing up in (non-scary) costumes and going trick-or-treating!

Check out the following links for a few ways we have tried to make Fall and Halloween about God:

I happen to agree with this article from Focus on the Family, challenging families to pursue light instead of darkness during the Halloween season.

Tonight, my boys are dressing up as Transformer Bumblebee and Wolverine to attend our annual church fall festival. Should be a good time...will post pics afterwards!

For now, I wanted to pop in real quick and share this cute and easy "treat" I made for Little A's teacher today...


I simply dipped Milano cookies (Little A's and my favorite) into a bowl of melted white chocolate baking bars (followed instructions on package), let them sit for a few minutes, put mini chocolate chip "eyes" on them, let them sit for about 30 minutes and then packaged them up with this cute and free Boo Printable from Anders Ruff with a sweet note written on it.

We'll see if he actually gives it to her...he is super-shy when it comes to those types of things! :)

I hope you and yours have a safe and fun day, whatever you choose to do!

Happy Fall, friends! :)

Linking up with:
Home Stories A2Z


About the Author: Erin Vick Franklin is the founder and director of Worthy of the Prize. Erin has a BBA in Marketing and Management from TCU and a Masters of Christian Education in Church Recreation from Southwestern Seminary. She is a published, award-winning author and poet. Purchase her book Worthy of the Prize Sports Camps: A Church's Guide to Implementing an Effective, Community-Reaching Christian Sports Camp to be used as an outreach tool for your church or mission organization. Erin is the wife of A, a Worship Pastor, and a work-at-home-momma to 2 crazy little boys, a and e.


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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Mummy Dogs

Today I am sharing a quick and easy recipe to make for your family on those lazy weekends watching football or those crazy busy school nights.. or better yet, Halloween Night when you need a quick, yet fun food to feed those ghosts and goblins trying to sprint out the door to trick or treat!! 

I was excited when Erin asked me to share this recipe for her super cute "Dressing Up Your Tailgate" series! Erin is not only a fabulous mom, wife, sister, friend, daughter, and 'retired' volleyball player, she is also a huge inspiration to me!! Her faith, ministry, and blog has grown to help so many people in need that is truly an honor to guest post for her!!

Here is my version of "mummy dogs," a different and delish spin on the regular old, go-to hotdog!! A recipe that, for real, has all my boys (even my hubs) cheering when they see it on the weekly menu or cooking in the oven!!


Ingredients:
Pack of Hotdogs or Turkey Franks
1 can of Pillsbury crescent rolls (I use the Aldi brand)

Grab your cookie sheet. Unroll all the crescents from the can and rip the triangles into long thin strips. Wrap around the uncooked hotdogs and place on cookie sheet. Cook as directed on the crescent roll instructions. Serve with ketchup, mustard, BBQ sauce, hot mustard... sky's the limit!!
I got the recipe off of Pinterest... the Mother of all places to find recipes!! Ha!!

Happy Cooking ;)
Always - Abbey

What about you? Do you have any fun ideas for "dressing up a tailgate" or any other fabulous fall ideas that you would like to share? Leave a comment!

Go here for more ways to make your game day parties a hit!



About the Author: Abbey Lewis started her blog A Moments Peace just one year ago as an outlet to be creative, and to have a place for her boys to look back and see the real her! It has been that, times 100!! Abbey lives in Texas with her husband and two sons. She loves her family, her faith, her friends and she tries to put a positive spin on any thing that God has in store for her! Feel free to stroll through her blog, Sonic drink in hand, because she believes every thing is better when you have a Sonic drink!


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Sunday, October 21, 2012

How a Christian is Like a Pumpkin...great pumpkin-carving activity for kids!


God picks you from the patch, brings you in and washes all the dirt off, that you may have gotten from the other pumpkins.


He cuts the top off and scoops out all the yucky stuff.


He removes the seeds of doubt, hate, etc.


He carves you a new smiling face (more like scary if you're one of our pumpkins) and puts His light inside of you, to shine for all the world to see.


What a great opportunity to teach our kiddos what it means to have a personal relationship with God through faith in Jesus Christ!

Go here for more information about how to have a personal relationship with Christ and eternal life in Heaven with Him.

Story from DLTK.


About the Author: Erin Vick Franklin is the founder and director of Worthy of the Prize. Erin has a BBA in Marketing and Management from TCU and a Masters of Christian Education in Church Recreation from Southwestern Seminary. She is a published, award-winning author and poet. Purchase her book Worthy of the Prize Sports Camps: A Church's Guide to Implementing an Effective, Community-Reaching Christian Sports Camp to be used as an outreach tool for your church or mission organization. Erin is the wife of A, a Worship Pastor, and a work-at-home-momma to 2 crazy little boys, a and e.


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Monday, October 15, 2012

{Hope for the Home}: Halloween - What If You Don't Partake?


I have found over the years that Christ-followers' opinions about Halloween run the gamut. On the one hand, some folks enjoy dressing their kids in spangled costumes and traipsing them around the neighborhood to collect as much candy as their buckets can hold. And I even know at least one family whose teens are allowed to participate at local haunted houses - decked out in gory costumes and make-up - because they're run for charity. But, on the other end of spectrum, there are those who avoid any involvement in the traditions of the day due to concerns about their children's health, or because of a desire to avoid even the appearance of participating with satanic or Pagan practices.

Ultimately, I believe the decision to join in or not can be described as "a Romans 14 & 15 issue." That is, each family must take responsibility for seeking the Lord's wisdom and guidance and must then comply with the Holy Spirit's convictions on the matter. We ought not go along with our surrounding culture just to avoid making waves, but neither should those who've opted out assume that those who participate have fallen away from the Lord. Scripture calls us to be iron sharpening iron with other believers (Proverbs 27.17), so it's permissible to have respectful, uplifting conversations about this topic and any other, but we can - and should - do so without judging, from whatever angle we approach the day.

All that said, my family has come to the conclusion that the Lord doesn't want us to participate, and He's helped us to delineate specific reasons for our conviction. The decision hasn't come without angst; we've had to explain ourselves to "concerned" relatives, tolerate eyebrow-raising from friends (knowing they're probably talking about us behind their closed doors), and help our kids come up with polite answers to the inevitable, "So, what are you going to be for Halloween?" question they must field several times every October. But, ultimately, we all have peace that we've made the right decision for our family.

How do we manage when Halloween is splashed all around us from the day after Labor Day until November 1?
  • My girls are "sensitive." So when they were younger, they were very disturbed by the extremely gory displays in some stores. Thus, rather than subject them to unnecessary stress and the inevitable subsequent nightmares, I frequented stores with less prominent displays whenever possible; I even sought out and thanked the store managers for their sensitivity. When I had to visit stores with exaggerated displays - such as the local convenience store a block from my house - I purposed to go only when my husband could be home with the girls...and I politely told the store managers there why they'd see less of me (and my money) until after Halloween. That inconvenienced me - and it wasn't always fun to speak up, no matter how kindly - but it was a small price to pay for my kids' emotional well-being;
  • We've chosen not to participate in "alternative" events (i.e., church-sponsored Harvest Festivals and the like). I know many do so in good conscience, but for us those events have felt like "Halloween Lite," and we haven't felt comfortable attending. Instead, we've always spent the two months from Labor Day until Thanksgiving thoroughly engrossed in fall fun: apple picking, nature walks, making leaf collections, creating a wide variety of crafts, watching football, and baking, for example. We continue in that vein even now, and the girls have never felt they were "missing out." Though their fun varies from that of some of their friends, it's quite fun nonetheless, and it's also demonstrated for them that "different" isn't bad;
  • As the girls have matured, we've used the occasion of Halloween to initiate discussions about cultural and religious differences among various groups of people. We've explained how - because of our faith - we wouldn't participate in Ramadan or Diwali even if we lived in Saudi Arabia or India, respectively. And so, in the same way, we don't mark Halloween because, at root, it's a celebration of the Pagan religion. When they've asked why some Christians do participate, we've been able to share our understanding of Romans 14 & 15, all of which has been very profitable for their spiritual development;
  • In the last couple of years, we've begun to recognize Reformation Day as a family, reading biographical stories about Martin Luther and discussing other aspects of that cultural transformation throughout Europe. Some folks I know even have Reformation Day parties, and others focus on All Saints' Day or choose to use the month of October to learn about heroes of the faith, from Esther and Daniel to modern-day missionary friends and everyone in between;
  • As I said, we're not big on "alternate celebrations," but we also didn't want to spend October 31 each year either ignoring our doorbell or cowering in the dark so no one would stop by. Thus, we've opted to go out for a family dinner each year on that night, timing our outing to coincide with trick-or-treating hours. The girls know why we go out, but we've never made a big deal of it (i.e., "Hurry! We have to get out before the trick-or-treaters come!"). So it really has become just an enjoyable family tradition we happen to do on that day.
As with anything else, working out our faith in this area is a process; the practical application of our conviction develops and changes over time. Along the way I found a resource - Redeeming Halloween: Celebrating without Selling Out by Kim Wier and Pam McCune - that informed some of our decisions. I recommend it as a helpful guide for all Christian families because the authors address both sides of the issue: how to partake in a Christian manner and how to abstain without making one's children feel deprived.

Of course, in either case, we should seek to use October 31 as we should any other day: to grow in our own faith as Christian parents and to train up our children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. And rest assured; if He leads you away from celebrating Halloween, there is a reason for it, and He'll care for your family in the process.


Photo Credit: Germany is Wunderbar

Go here for more ways to make God apart of your everyday life and home!



About the Author: Tina Hollenbeck and her husband Jeff are raising two daughters and have another waiting for them in the arms of Jesus. Before becoming a mom, Tina taught English to immigrant kids in public secondary schools for nine years, but now she cherishes her role as an at-home wife and mother and also advocates passionately for homeschooling. Tina writes regularly for her blog, Being Made New, and is also the staff writer for Celebrate Kids, Inca Texas-based ministry to parents and educators. In addition, she’s developing a public speaking ministry of her own, and is available to address homeschoolers, women’s groups, and young people on a variety of topics. In her spare time, Tina enjoys singing on her church’s worship team, exercising, and scrapbooking. 


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