Sunday, February 24, 2013

Knowledge Hoard


I start to feel it in my ears,
Bioflavonoids my dear.

My throat gets scratchy,
Vitamin and herbs to matchy.

Pain in the bum,
Gimme some Tums.

Start it before it starts,
Neurological wellness charts.

Something keeping me up,
Alka-Seltzer Plus in a cup.

Juggling tons of crap,
Keep it up with an app.

I feel a sharp pain,
Tylenol will sustain.

Nose wants to run,
Will it to be done.

Cough cough cough,
Grab cough drops.

Is that low blood sugar I feel?
A banana until the next meal.

Body getting weak,
An hour of extra sleep.

Kids fill ill,
Flintstone pill.

Killing the germs I hope,
Sanitize, Lysol, Clorox and soap.

See others are sick,
Stay away and offer a fix.

When all else fails to work,
I realize I’m a big jerk.

As I rest in these things,
I replace my mighty King.

Better when I first pray,
The other stuff just aids.

I stop, as a knowledge hoard!
Because God, you are Lord!

-Michelle Fozounmayeh
2-23-2013

Thursday, February 21, 2013

4 Traditions 4 St. Patrick's Day

4 Traditions...
Issue: St. Patrick's Day
In This Issue
Leprechaun Leftovers
Ode to Green
Little Patricks
Count your Blessings
A Green Poem
2012 headshot
Michelle Fozounmayeh
A joy filled wife and mom that enjoys writing, praying, speaking at women events and being an Area Coordinator with the ministry Moms In Prayer International.





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hats
We live in a world where we wear many "hats".  Even though we all have many parts of ourselves trying to survive...
Many Parts of Me
(click link for "hats" script)

Traditions do not have to make our world even more hectic!  It's not about doing more... it's about doing less!  It's about doing what matters!

Make sure the traditions you do are one's that promote values and have a purpose.  Maybe it's time to say good buy to the ones that keep you so busy that you don't have time to connect with your loved ones.
traditions
Greetings!

Throughout the years I have come to have a deep respect for the role family rituals and traditions have on the healthy state of our family.

For many years I worked as a Family Consultant with Once Upon A Family and picked up a few ideas.  Although traditions in our home have had seasons of success and seasons of rest or have had to be modified and/or changed to fit our family's needs, they still exist!  

Each issue of 4 Traditions features ideas I have gathered and/or created that you can use or modify to fit your family's needs.
Leprechaun Leftovers
Make believe...
Kids love to play make-believe from pretending forts are their homes to becoming a character from their favorite movie and acting out a scene. This tradition is a make-believe game that you can play with them.  It begins with a Leprechaun's visit and leads to a treasure box filled with goodies. Here's how to make it happen:  On the day before the holiday, tell your children the fabulous tale of the fun-loving Leprechauns.  Begin your story with the idea that Leprechauns remain hidden until the eve of St. Patrick's Day.  Then they appear to bury their hidden treasures.  If your child leaves a small-decorated box on the windowsill, the Leprechauns will fill it and bury it for your children to uncover.  Use "Leprechaun Leftovers", as clues to the whereabouts of the hidden treasure.  Sprinkle green glitter that leads the treasure seekers closer to their loot, then leave a miniature pail and shovel (from a local craft store) to mark the spot where the treasure is hidden. This is a great way to give your children the joy of watching you step into their world of make-believe.
Ode to Green
All day long...
Don't wake up blue, wake up green.  Start with your breakfast, and make the entire day green.  Have green scrambled eggs with green juice, or green pancakes with green syrup.  For lunch, make green sandwiches with green jell-O or pudding, green grapes and green milk.  Prepare an all green dinner with green mashed potatoes, or rice along with some green soup or pasta. Get creative and make sure that the entire day is green!  Your festive dinner will only be served to those who are dressed appropriately, head to toe, all in green!  Each year the outfits your family dreams up will get more outrageous.  Soon, this will become one of your family's favorite holiday activities.  Don't forget to snap your annual photo, all dressed in green, to include in your St. Patrick's Day tradition book.
Little Patricks
Shamrocks . . .
In 432 St. Patrick went to Ireland as a bishop.  One of his teaching methods included using the shamrock to explain the Christian doctrine of the Trinity to the Irish people. After nearly thirty years of evangelism, he died on March 17, 461, the day we now call St. Patrick's Day.  This tradition is all about being "Little Patricks".  To do this, make cookies or another simple treat with your children, then wrap the goodies in something green.  Use the below links to print out shamrock notecards to tie to your goodie bags.  
 
 
For a special touch add this poem:
 
3 Leaves
 
Just as St. Patrick did
In Ireland years past
I'm giving you a gift
That tells a story fast
 
3 shamrock leaves
Connected to one stem
3 parts of God
Connected to one Him
 
This is my gift to you 
One God you can trust
And His 3 love expressions
Over us, for us & with us
 
- By Michelle Fozounmayeh 2/21/2013
 
Leave your gifts on a porch, in a mailbox, or on a windowsill.  Irish or not, your friends will be tickled green.
Count your Blessings
Luck would have it...
As St. Patrick's Day rolls around, you often hear talk about luck.  Hide lucky pennies in your backyard or around the house for your children and their friends to hunt for. When each Child has found 9 pennies have them gather around. Explain that luck is not always on our side but God is always on our side.  Luck can run out but He gives us blessings that can never run out.

Add this little prayer for an extra special touch:
"Dear God, May each of these 9 pennies represent your blessings in our lives.  I ask that you will bless us with love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.  In Jesus Name, amen"

Then let them know that when they live-out these blessings then they end up blessing others too! Let them loose to finnish finding the rest of the pennies. When all the pennies are found they can "count their blessings" as they count their coins.
A Green Poem

In closing here is a link to a little bit of mindless humor; a poem I wrote about the color green...

 
All 4 HIM,
 

MICHELLE FOZOUNMAYEH
My Blog 

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

From Fear to Faith, by Julie Paik


Julie Paik is a dear friend and mighty prayer worrier.  For four years she has been blessing my life with her eloquent and honest prayers.  When I asked her to share her prayer testimony she wore her heart on her sleeve as she talked about how God graciously moved her from fear to faith through prayer.

Julie Paik's Prayer Testimony
Presented at a Moms in Prayer Rally
On February 2, 2013

You might think it takes an expert in prayer to give a testimony at a Moms in Prayer rally.  Not so.  I’m far from it.  I’m actually just a chicken redeemed and growing by God’s grace.

About 7 years ago, I left MOPS (a moms' group) with the noble intention of diving into our local public school.  My oldest son, Jonathan, was about to start kindergarten and my husband and I felt that God was leading us into our local school community.  It was a world with which I was pretty familiar; I had been a classroom teacher before I started staying at home.  Still, I am a stressed out chicken, and faced with a new environment for my risk-averse son, I felt desperate for the Lord to guide us through this time. I had heard about Moms in Touch many years before and even thought that maybe I should start a group at our school, but was scared of what people would think. Oh, the thoughts that swirled around in the confines of my mind: fear of man, fear of negative influences on my son in big, bad public school, fear of his not being accepted by peers or his teacher, fear of being perceived as an overbearing or negligent mom…you’re getting a little glimpse into my crazy thought life! I knew I needed to pray, so I prayed alone, which was good, when it happened, but mostly I was anxiously trying to guide my son through experiences by leaning on my own knowledge of the public school system, rather than on God Himself. 

Still, God is gracious, right? He provided Jonathan with a buddy who knows Him. They are still buddies and helping each other through the deep waters of middle school now! I can see now how God so sweetly answered my prayer back then for a friend for Jonathan, but my prayer life was pretty irregular and I wasn’t really keeping track of how God was answering.  I even questioned how God really answers prayer and wondered if it really did matter if I prayed. Wasn’t God going to do what God was going to do without me putting my two cents in?  

I lived in a battle zone between faith and fear, but in the summer of 2009 before I sent my youngest into school some friends encouraged me to ask the Lord for a partner with whom I could pray. This is when God used Michelle Fozounmayeh to invite me to pray. She just asked me if I would be interested in leading a Moms in Touch group with her at our children’s elementary school.  Yes! Another answer to prayer! And I didn’t have to go at it alone.  At least if someone ridiculed us, there would be two of us to take it instead of putting myself out there on my own! Remember I keep saying how gracious God is? He was gently growing my faith in Him.  

The Yerba Buena group started with four women and sometimes there were just two of us who could make it those Tuesday mornings, but having that dedicated time once a week, every week became a faith building gift to me.  We didn’t talk about issues and then say we would pray for one another as we parted; we prayed and asked God to act. It was a time to work out my anxieties about my children’s school lives in God’s presence along with women who could understand my heart and support me by agreeing with me in prayer and praying for aspects of an issue that I hadn’t even thought of and yet were so necessary.  Week in and week out during the last four years, I have had the blessing of hearing other women’s prayers in worshiping God, in the quiet breathing of confession time, in joyful or painful offers of thanksgiving, and in heartfelt petition to God, and even in the beautiful acceptance of asking for God’s will to be done above all else.  It’s a weekly remembrance of my great need for Jesus and His great sufficiency to meet all those needs in the way He deems best.

But still I act like I want to control God’s answers. I have found myself fearful of how God was going to answer or if He was going to answer at all. Sometimes I could see just what my child or his friend needs and couldn’t the Lord just answer according to what I envisioned?  But again, God has graciously taught me that praying invites His power and His presence into my life and into the life of the person for whom I’m praying, which is infinitely better than any scenario I could’ve imagined. Having a regular time, during which I can pray for our schools and my kids, has given me the opportunity to recognize prayer as a time of ushering God’s great power into a circumstance I have little ability to control. It brings me to the realization that I shouldn’t and couldn’t control the outcome of our prayers.  As He reminds us in Ephesians 3, God can do “immeasurably more than we can ask or think!”  

This greatness of God is what I was counting on when we started praying at the middle school last fall. I knew that Michelle couldn’t come and be my buffer at the start of this group, but the need for prayer was enormous and there’s only one Person who has the resources to meet that need! Still, the fear starting a new group gripped my throat, but God graciously brought beautiful women with whom I could put my faith in Him again. Through those times of prayer for our school with these women who have become my dear praying friends, God keeps encouraging me to ask Him to act in my kids’ lives in ways I know I cannot.  Sometimes I sigh in frustration or sadness when I hear about foolish and tragic things happening on campus, but instead of giving into the fear of darkness, I can just ask God to act and remember His beauty and His power.  I invite His immeasurable power into the lives of my kids and their peers, not because my prayer life is so great, but because He is!

Even with this assurance, sometimes this chicken still fears that my prayers are weak and will somehow dissipate into thin air, or I quickly give up on praying for something.  I tell myself that maybe it’s just not in God’s will if I haven’t seen an answer yet.  Enter God’s grace yet again. One of the beautiful ways that God has worked through my time praying with other moms is the fact that other people know what you have prayed for.  Those shared requests make it easier to keep praying together that God would act.  They also make it easier to see when He has answered in a visible way.  One of the women can see something that you might not.  Her child may have said something to her that was a clear answer to a prayer that your child didn’t really know about. Having a community of women with whom I can pray keeps my prayer life honest.  I can’t just rationalize away the answers God gives. We have one another to keep encouraging perseverance in prayer for things we haven’t yet seen answers. 

Would you believe that I come from a long line of praying women? It’s my blessed heritage.  My grandmother was well-known in our church for her powerful intercession and my mom’s praying voice is the first sound I remember hearing every morning when I was growing up. So imagine that Michael Jordan had a son who could not play basketball—that’s me!  Even as God patiently leads me in this journey from fear to faith, I still try to be or find the answer to the anxieties of my heart instead of actually lifting my prayers to Jesus.  I still struggle with wondering how God will answer.  I still occasionally wonder how much prayer really makes a difference. Good thing God is gracious.  At every fearful turn, He mercifully and patiently corrects me and guides me with His fatherly love for me. And praying with other moms has had the blessed effect of forcing me to put my faith in Him, once a week, every week for that hour.  With these women I have a shared record of God’s faithfulness and grace.  He really has worked through my prayers, frail as they may be. In my weakness He has been strong. 

In closing, let me share a verse with you.  It is a passage of Scripture I am holding close to my heart these days.  It’s from Psalm 34:4-5:
I sought the Lord, and he answered me; he delivered me from all my fears.
Those who look to him are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame.

This was written by Julie Paik and presented to a group of women at a Moms in Prayer Rally in February of 2013!

Saturday, February 2, 2013

iPray in One Accord


February/2013
iPray eVotionals
Greetings!

iPray eVotionals exhorts those who pray.  It's the glass of water held out around each month's turn for the runners who can use a quick and easy quench in order to finish strong.  

iPray in One Accord
(Approximate reading time: 8 Minutes)  
Getting in Tune
Last Fall my 4th grade daughter signed up to play the Clarinet in her school band.  The first noises that emerged from that thing sounded like shrieks of pain.  As the months have come along the shrieks have subsided and soft tones emerged.  I watched her practice keeping her cheeks in, perfecting her fingering as well as timing and putting it all together into simple songs.

When my daughter's clarinet was hidden away in it's case, it was out of sight and out of mind; nothing got worked on.  A while back her band teacher gave a 7 day challenge.  To help my daughter succeed my husband ran out and purchased a clarinet stand.  That way the instrument is out of it's case is a visual reminder not to mention easy access to practicing ALL seven days.  She took on that challenge and passed!  Everyday's practice allowed her to stay connected to the music and telling the story.

This past Tuesday was the band's first performance together.  It was a night of beginner band students, each blowing their hearts out, inching their way through songs such as Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and Jingle Bells.  Ignoring the occasional shrieks and missed beats, smiles beamed from parents faces.  They knew all the practice it took to get to this point.  Every parent was aware of the first sounds that came out of the instruments months ago.  Over time they listened to it transform into recognizable tunes.  After each piece the audience gave a proud applause.

Later that evening I still held the proud parent glow.  My daughter practiced hard on her own.  She worked on every detail.  I was impressed at her joining with other students that held the same determination to get it right and moved through months of practicing until they were ready to perform together.  Ask any parent, and each one would say they heard beautiful progress and that yes, they were playing in one accord.

I wondered what someone off the street might think.  Would they hold their ears?  Would the missed beats drive them crazy?  Would they perceive the coming together to play in one accord a beautiful thing?  What a blessing it is that God is the ultimate judge of how we are doing, as our parent He knows exactly how hard we have worked to come to where we are.  Yet, it is a blessing that we are not a finished product.  That we are a work in progress.  He brings us along and applauds us along the way.  If we keep going, keep working it out, we will not end as beginner students.

Beautiful progress, day by day, with a goal to come together with the rest of the band and play beautiful music together.  Each band performance better than the one before.  Yes there are moments we might get chosen to play a solo or a duet, but this work is meant to come together to blend with others.  We are meant to come together in one accord.

Psalm 133:1
Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.
Praying as Beginners
A few days ago I was praying with a friend that attends the prayer group I host.  She has been attending for a year and a half.  Throughout the time I have noticed her prayers becoming increasingly spirit led.  I decided to let her know that the growth in her prayer life is a blessing to me and I'm sure others as well.

My friend agreed that she has felt her prayers benefit from attending.  She had always prayed on her own and in her own quiet head all kinds of beautiful things emerged.  Praying out loud in front of others proved to be a different praying muscle all together.  For most, praying out loud with others is done on occasion and the muscle is underdeveloped.  This prayer group allowed her a space to pray out loud on a regular basis.  Listening to others, absorbing scriptures that were prayed, learning to let God's spirit guide and as she put it, "Getting out of my head" every week caused her one-accord prayer muscle to become stronger.

"Who cares if it sounds stupid," my friend proclaimed, "It's still a prayer!"

She could have stayed in that safe place of praying exclusively on her own, but she kept coming back because she was blessed by the prayers and the unique feeling of talking to God in one accord with others.  By coming back slowly her prayers matured and it has given her the opportunity to be used by God to bless others in huge ways! 

"On facebook you always see people saying they will pray," my friend pointed out, "but it is nothing compared to the real connection that is made when you actually pray together."

When we consider ourselves beginners, God smiles at the beautiful progress.  It's not just for the solos, He matures our prayer life and then gives us opportunities to share the gift of praying with and for others.

Acts 1:14
These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication, with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers.
Something Big!
Can you remember the first time you heard a live orchastra?  In this short story Missy experiences a live orchestra for the first time.  Because of it, Missy realizes what it means to be part of something big.

"Button up your shirt Ralphy... get your shoes on Sherry... come back here Candy... "  Missy's mom hurried around trying to get 4 kids out the door.  They were going to a concert where Missy's grandmother was going to play the violin...

Click to continue reading this 3 minutes short story.


Philippians 2:2
...fulfill my joy by being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. 
The Conductor
"I finally get that I am part of something big and it is eternal and it changes lives, communities and eventually nations. " 
-Celest Glass, From The Full Spectrum Blogspot

Often when a new mom joins our prayer group she either says, "I don't know how to pray," or "I don't like to pray out loud."
  
"That is okay!"  Is aways my response.  

Agreeing in your heart is still agreeing and joining in one accord.  I don't always know what to say either.  Thank God we have a conductor who is drawing our attention in, so our eyes are on Him and His prompting and not on ourselves.  Keeping prayer out of sight and out of mind breaks our connection, but the good news is our instrument is not locked up in a case.  It's simply turning our attention upward.  

There is a beautiful thing that happens when our eyes on are on the conductor, a little journey begins to find it's purpose.  When shared with others blessings pour out.   As my prayer life grew it became a privilege when God started nudging my heart to pray for and with others.  I'm not going to lie, at first it felt different to pray with an audience; ears beyond the conductor's.  I found that keeping one eye on my music (scriptures) and one eye on the Conductor (God's spirit) allowed me to be part of something big!  I'm talking Pentecost big!

God knew that this instrument was meant to be used in one accord! 

Acts 2:1
When the Day of Pentecost had fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.
The Challenge!
In the fall of 2009 I asked a then acquaintance friend of mine if she was willing to get together to pray one hour once a week together.  Instead of using that time to chat, we followed the guidelines found on the Moms in Prayer ministry; agreeing in one accord and using the format laid out in the Lord's Prayer.  Adoration/Praise, Confession, Thanksgiving and Supplication/Intercession.  Little did I know that my stepping out to ask was also an answer to her prayers as she had felt God was telling her that she needed a partner to intercede with.  Two semi-polished praying women came together and for the next year "worked out" getting in tune by keeping our eyes off of ourselves, off of each other and on our conductor.  Month by month our prayers became more like harmony to our ears and the hour zipped by.  

At some point we realized that God was asking us to be more then a duet.  He wanted us to be in an orchestra.  He kept bringing in new instruments with new sounds and new styles.  Each one required us to keep our eyes on the conductor to stay in tune with each other.  Adding in even one new instrument made a difference.  As we prayed in one accord the music got more full and more beautiful.  We learned to use our sheet music, incorporating scripture so that the oneness did not come from popular opinion but from God's Word.  We learned about that "still small voice" and to respond to it rather than our own opinions or thoughts.

Who can you pray with?  Not just once, but who can you regularly come together with to pray in one accord?  Can you step out in faith and ask a friend to commit to a weekly prayer gathering?  Not an opening prayer and then a bunch of chit chat closing off the time with another prayer.  A time where together you sit and praise God for who he is, confess sins, Thank God for what He does and then bring your requests to Him.  Praying for each other with each other, agreeing in harmony in One Accord.

Our prayer lives are meant to be prayed out in an orchestra that is under God's direction.

Eccles. 4:9-12
Two are better than one, Because they have a good reward for their labor.  For if they fall, one will lift up his companion. But woe to him who is alone when he falls, For he has no one to help him up.  Again, if two lie down together, they will keep warm; But how can one be warm alone?  Though one may be overpowered by another, two can withstand him.  And a threefold cord is not quickly broken. 
iPray...

iPray... that you will step out in faith, that you will pray in one accord with the oneness God intended.

iPray... that you will experience how God's spirit moves among us, see how God's power is unleashed and know how beautiful it is to be a part of something that is big.

In Jesus Name iPray, amen!

All for HIM, Michelle Fozounmayeh
iPray eVotional
In This Issue
Getting in Tune
Praying as Beginners
Something Big!
The Conductor
The Challenge!
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2012 headshot
Michelle Fozounmayeh



Michelle Fozounmayeh
A joy filled wife and mom that enjoys writing, praying, speaking at women events and being an Area Coordinator with the ministry Moms In Prayer International.


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