Archive for April, 2006

prayer request

Please say a prayer for a friend of mine.  Her newborn baby, Jonathan, is having heart surgery tomorrow morning, Wed. April 5, at 7:30 am.  They are missionaries in Turkey.  They had to fly back home (Texas) because of the seriousness of baby Jonathan’s heart.  He has a heart defect that requires surgery even though he is only 6 weeks old.   Pray that the Lord heals Jonathan and strengthens Dawn and Billy Ray.

No Comments »Motherhood Ponderings

HB 3297 & SB 1984 Update (Shawn Dady)

Hi everyone,

Not all of you may be religious, I have no idea, but for those of you who are, I would just like to ask you to pray tonight for the meeting at our state capitol. We need prayer that the NAIS Protection Bill and the Raw Milk Bill will both pass with a simple majority through the House Ag. Committee. These bills represent months, even years, of blood, sweat and tears on the part of some. They are both tremendously important bills for the small farmer in our state, and the many things in the future rests on tomorrow’s outcome. Farms will fail or succeed, big government will grow or shrink. There is a lot riding on it.

No matter the outcome, we will know that we have all done our part in lobbying, talking, calling, visiting, begging, gathering signatures on petitions, praying and appealing to the Heavenly Father. Please pray. He is our last and best resort. Perhaps tomorrow He will show us mercy. We have put all the chips in place that are humanly possible. We can only rely on God.

If these bills do not pass, however, we are not giving up. We will continue to introduce them year after year, and with everyone’s help who is receiving this, we can continue to create a large grass roots movement that supports our right to freely farm and to freely consume and and all healthy food that we want/need for our families.

Proverbs 21:1
The king’s heart is like channels of water in the hand of the LORD: He turns it wherever He wishes.

Let us pray that God will turn the hearts of these little kings on this committee steadfastly in His direction.
Shawn D.

No Comments »State, Tennessee, Agrarian Life

Not Yours To Give - US Rep From TN Col. David Crockett

Originally published in “The Life of Colonel David Crockett,” by Edward Sylvester Ellis.

One day in the House of Representatives a bill was taken up appropriating money for the benefit of a widow of a distinguished naval officer. Several beautiful speeches had been made in its support. The speaker was just about to put the question when Crockett arose:

“Mr. Speaker–I have as much respect for the memory of the deceased, and as much sympathy for the suffering of the living, if there be, as any man in this House, but we must not permit our respect for the dead or our sympathy for part of the living to lead us into an act of injustice to the balance of the living. I will not go into an argument to prove that Congress has not the power to appropriate this money as an act of charity. Every member on this floor knows it.

We have the right as individuals, to give away as much of our own money as we please in charity; but as members of Congress we have no right to appropriate a dollar of the public money. Some eloquent appeals have been made to us upon the ground that it is a debt due the deceased. Mr. Speaker, the deceased lived long after the close of the war; he was in office to the day of his death, and I ever heard that the government was in arrears to him.

“Every man in this House knows it is not a debt. We cannot without the grossest corruption, appropriate this money as the payment of a debt. We have not the semblance of authority to appropriate it as charity. Mr. Speaker, I have said we have the right to give as much money of our own as we please. I am the poorest man on this floor. I cannot vote for this bill, but I will give one week’s pay to the object, and if every member of Congress will do the same, it will amount to more than the bill asks.”

He took his seat. Nobody replied. The bill was put upon its passage, and, instead of passing unanimously, as was generally supposed, and as, no doubt, it would, but for that speech, it received but few votes, and, of course, was lost.

Later, when asked by a friend why he had opposed the appropriation, Crockett gave this explanation: Continue Reading »

1 Comment »State, Tennessee

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