Posted on Leave a comment

Father's Day Fish Fry (On the Grill!)

P2662
P2659
P2657
P2663
P2660
P2661
P2658

Posted on Leave a comment

I Am My Father's Daughter! (And My Mother's)

Moms_camera_050

Posted on Leave a comment

I Love You, Dad!

Happy Father’s Day, Daddy! (here’s one from the archives, for old times’ sake!)

P2641
P2642
P2643
P2644

Posted on Leave a comment

Daddy, I Love You!

Happy Father’s Day!

P2633
P2632
P2629
P2631
P2630

Posted on Leave a comment

Sixteen, You Never Looked Sweeter!

Moms_camera_097

Posted on Leave a comment

On This Day: June 17

Updated June 16, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On June 17, 1928, Amelia Earhart embarked on the first trans-Atlantic flight by a woman. She flew from Newfoundland to Wales in about 21 hours.

Go to article »

On June 17, 1882, Igor Stravinsky, the Russian composer, was born. Following his death on April 6, 1971, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

 

Historic Birthdays

Igor Stravinsky 6/17/1882 – 4/6/1971 Russian-born American composerGo to obituary »
87 John Wesley 6/17/1703 (O.S.) – 3/2/1791
English Anglican clergyman and evangelist
75 Charles Gounod 6/17/1818 – 10/18/1893
French composer
66 E. G. Squier 6/17/1821 – 4/17/1888
American newspaper editor, diplomat and archaeologist
80 John Robert Greeg 6/17/1867 – 2/23/1948
Irish-born American inventor of short-hand
67 James Weldon Johnson 6/17/1871 – 6/26/1938
American poet, diplomat and anthologist of black culture
37 Aleksandr Friedmann 6/17/1888 – 9/16/1925
Russian mathematician and physical scientist
73 M. C. Escher 6/17/1898 – 3/27/1972
Dutch graphic artist
44 Martin Bormann 6/17/1900 – 5/2/1945
German Nazi party leader
87 Sammy Fain 6/17/1902 – 12/6/1989
American composer of popular songs
87 Ralph Bellamy 6/17/1904 – 11/29/1991
American motion-picture and stage actor
71 Charles Eames 6/17/1907 – 8/21/1978
American designer and architect
78 John Hersey 6/17/1914 – 3/24/1993
American novelist and journalist
69 Kingman Brewster, Jr. 6/17/1919 – 11/8/1988
American educator, diplomat; president of Yale University (1963-77)

 

 

Posted on Leave a comment

June 17

MORNING

“Thy Redeemer.”
Isaiah 54:5

Jesus, the Redeemer, is altogether ours and ours forever. All the offices of Christ are held on our behalf. He is king for us, priest for us, and prophet for us. Whenever we read a new title of the Redeemer, let us appropriate him as ours under that name as much as under any other. The shepherd’s staff, the father’s rod, the captain’s sword, the priest’s mitre, the prince’s sceptre, the prophet’s mantle, all are ours. Jesus hath no dignity which he will not employ for our exaltation, and no prerogative which he will not exercise for our defence. His fulness of Godhead is our unfailing, inexhaustible treasure-house.

His manhood also, which he took upon him for us, is ours in all its perfection. To us our gracious Lord communicates the spotless virtue of a stainless character; to us he gives the meritorious efficacy of a devoted life; on us he bestows the reward procured by obedient submission and incessant service. He makes the unsullied garment of his life our covering beauty; the glittering virtues of his character our ornaments and jewels; and the superhuman meekness of his death our boast and glory. He bequeaths us his manger, from which to learn how God came down to man; and his Cross to teach us how man may go up to God. All his thoughts, emotions, actions, utterances, miracles, and intercessions, were for us. He trod the road of sorrow on our behalf, and hath made over to us as his heavenly legacy the full results of all the labours of his life. He is now as much ours as heretofore; and he blushes not to acknowledge himself “our Lord Jesus Christ,” though he is the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords. Christ everywhere and every way is our Christ, forever and ever most richly to enjoy. O my soul, by the power of the Holy Spirit! call him this morning, “thy Redeemer.”

EVENING

“I am come into my garden, my sister, my spouse.”
Song of Solomon 5:1

The heart of the believer is Christ’s garden. He bought it with his precious blood, and he enters it and claims it as his own. A garden implies separation. It is not the open common; it is not a wilderness; it is walled around, or hedged in. Would that we could see the wall of separation between the church and the world made broader and stronger. It makes one sad to hear Christians saying, “Well, there is no harm in this; there is no harm in that,” thus getting as near to the world as possible. Grace is at a low ebb in that soul which can even raise the question of how far it may go in worldly conformity. A garden is a place of beauty, it far surpasses the wild uncultivated lands. The genuine Christian must seek to be more excellent in his life than the best moralist, because Christ’s garden ought to produce the best flowers in all the world. Even the best is poor compared with Christ’s deservings; let us not put him off with withering and dwarf plants. The rarest, richest, choicest lilies and roses ought to bloom in the place which Jesus calls his own. The garden is a place of growth. The saints are not to remain undeveloped, always mere buds and blossoms. We should grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Growth should be rapid where Jesus is the Husbandman, and the Holy Spirit the dew from above. A garden is a place of retirement. So the Lord Jesus Christ would have us reserve our souls as a place in which he can manifest himself, as he doth not unto the world. O that Christians were more retired, that they kept their hearts more closely shut up for Christ! We often worry and trouble ourselves, like Martha, with much serving, so that we have not the room for Christ that Mary had, and do not sit at his feet as we should. The Lord grant the sweet showers of his grace to water his garden this day.