Wednesday, December 30, 2009

My two favorite Christmas gifts!

Me and my new grandson, Andrew
















My husband scored major points when he bought me an exact replica (miniature) of the USS Constitution, hand carved and crafted!  I was sooooo surprised.  Unbeknownst to him, this ship makes an appearance in the book I'm currently writing, Surrender the Sea.







I hope everyone had a wonderful Christmas!!!

Monday, December 28, 2009

It's not about Heaven


Modern Western Christianity has been so watered down over the past two hundred years that to me it resembles nothing more than a wet noodle. Powerless, empty, limp. (I'm not talking about every church. I know there are groups that are in revival now, Praise God!)

I don't mean to shock people, but I've been thinking about this alot lately.  What is it about the American church that drives people away, especially young people? What is wrong with our message? I go to church every Sunday and do you know what I hear over and over and over?  The Salvation message about repentence and allowing Jesus to come into your life and forgive your sins, and messages about living moral lives.  But I never hear a message on what Jesus is saving us from, do you? I never hear a message on eternity or the coming kingdom or the realities of hell. We tell people that they must repent and ask Jesus into their hearts so they can go to heaven, but we never tell them what heaven is like or what happens if they don't.  So, why should they choose Jesus?   Some people choose Him because they are told He can give you your "best life now".  But that's a deception. I doubt the disciples would agree that after they decided to follow Jesus, they had a great life!  So, why choose Him? What is heaven?  What does happen after we die? And what does Jesus have for me in the here and now?

There's 3 major things I believe are missing in our watered down messages.
1. We no longer teach on the powers of the Holy Spirit  (we've taken the power out of our Faith)
2. We don't really tell people what Jesus has for them in this life besides helping us follow a list of rules (pretty boring, if you ask me)
3. We've not told them that It's not all about Heaven. (Heaven is only a temporary stop)

Regarding number 3, consider the following 2 scenerios.

A friend approaches you and asks you what your Christian Faith is about.  Here's 2 responses. They are both true and Biblical. Which one do you think would have more impact?

A. Being a Christian means you've repented of all your sins, committed your life to Jesus and you believe He's the Son of God. By that belief you are guaranteed a spot in Heaven when you die. In the meantime, you follow Him and try to be as good as you can.

B. There's a kingdom coming on the earth. It will be the final Kingdom in which God himself will come down from Heaven and rule over the earth from his throne in Jerusalem. He will rule with justice and goodness and there will be no more war or famine or death. His name is Jesus and He is looking for people who will help Him reign over the earth.  He came once before and paid the price with His own death so that anyone who wanted to, could join Him in this new Kingdom. When you pledge your life and loyalty to Him, He fills you with His Spirit, who gives you great power, and He begins to train you for your position in this Kingdom. He also wants you to go tell others about Him and His coming Kingdom because He loves everyone and doesn't want anyone to be left out of the adventure!

I don't know about you, but I've heard alot of option A over the years, but I've never heard option B.
Thoughts?

Friday, December 25, 2009

Merry Christmas and winner of last week's Raven Saint!

Congratulations to Amber Minnehan!  who won last week's copy of The Raven Saint!

Thank you all for entering!  The answer to the question posed on last week's posting is .....
B. Oui, to line my pockets with gold.! 

Many of you got it right! I'll have to make the question harder next time.
Now, for the last week of The Raven Saint giveaway, I thought I'd post my wonderful video book trailer. Most of you have probably already seen it, but if not, enjoy.
Beneath it, you'll also find my answer to the question posed to me recently regarding what I hope readers will take away from The Raven Saint.  I hope it blesses you.
As always, leave a comment and I'll enter your name for a drawing for the last free copy of The Raven Saint. I'll announce the winner next Friday. (remember to leave your email address!)



What do you hope your readers learn from The Raven Saint, especially from both Rafe and Grace’s characters?

Grace is such a perfect example of many Christians today. She loves the Lord and she’s busy about His work. The problem is, she’s so busy doing what she thinks He wants her to do, that she’s lost sight of who He really is. In other words, she has become entangled in good works and has forsaken her first Love. Because she measures her own worthiness on her good works, she measures others on theirs, and when she finds them lacking, she judges them. My hope through Grace’s story is that people will stop and take a good long look at their own hearts and ask themselves if perhaps they have fallen into the same trap as Grace. Do they have a heart like Jesus had, that loves everyone and doesn’t judge those who come to Him with open hearts? Or do they avoid and even snub those whose sins are out in the open? Jesus was able to separate the sin from the sinner and see the root cause of it in a person’s life. We can do that too, by getting to know someone and loving them, regardless of their sin. In reality, Grace’s sin of a judgmental heart was far worse in God’s eyes than the sins of those she judged. Don’t believe me? Just read what Jesus had to say to the Pharisees of his day.

Rafe turned his back on God at an early age due to the bad example of his so-called Christian father. Rejected by the pious man as well as by a woman he loved, Rafe is filled with heartache and rage. I believe rejection is one of our culture’s biggest problems. Rejection by a parent or by a close friend or spouse wounds the heart like nothing else can. It causes insecurity and rage and sets a person on a very dangerous path. The last thing Rafe should have done is reject God based on the example of Christians. As I said above, you can’t base your faith on the actions of so called godly people. You must seek God on your own and seek Him with all your heart. By rejecting God, Rafe ran away from the only One who could truly heal his own rejection. Through Rafe’s story, I hope people who suffer from deep-seated rejection can see a bit of themselves in Rafe, and like him, go to the only One whose love can heal that painful wound.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Merry Christmas!



From my family to yours, Merry Christmas! 

This is only half of my family as we sat down for Thanksgiving dinner at my brother's cabin in West Virginia. None of my 6 kids could make it (ages 19-29) but here you see my sister, Mother, me, my hubby, my brother and his 3 kids and my niece. 
(Check out the antler chandelier!)
Anyway, many many blessings on you and your families this year as we celebrate the birth of our Lord! 
I pray during all the festivities, presents, good food, and parties you stop and lift up praise to God for sending His son to save us all! 

Monday, December 21, 2009

Spend less, Worship more

Recently, I came across a campaign that really struck a chord with me. I don't know about you, but every Christmas I spend the entire month of December running here, running there, decorating, baking, going to parties, church functions, spending money we don't have, wrapping, cooking, dealing with family and essentially getting really stressed.! Each year, I vow to myself that I will do things differently next year and spend more time focusing on the reason we celebrate Christmas. I mean, how often in all they mayhem do we really take time out to think about the birth of Jesus and what it meant to the world and what it means to us? What a glorious sacrifice our Heavenly Father made by sending His Son to save us, but instead of letting that be our main focus, Satan has made us so busy with meaningless things that we forget. Then Christmas is gone, and we're exhausted and wonder what it all was for.





Think about what would happen if every Christian in this country spent even half as much on Christmas as they usually do and gave the rest to people in need??  Could we change the world?  Possibly!  At least we would we walking the walk, instead of just talking the talk. And maybe someone would sit up and take notice and wonder if there isn't something to this Jesus, after all?

You can find out more about Advent Conspiracy here: http://www.adventconspiracy.org/
Another great place that I trust to give money to is Samaritan's Purse:  https://www.samaritanspurse.org/  where you can purchase livestock and medicines for people in need.

Merry Christmas, everyone!


Friday, December 18, 2009

The Raven Saint chapter tease



The winner of last week's free copy of The Raven Saint is: Kaitlin Rose!


This week's contest I will keep all the names of the people who have entered so far in addition to the ones entering this week and I'll put them all in the same hat. In other words, if you've already entered twice and you enter again this week, your name will be in the hat 3 times.





Now, that you know a bit about the characters, can you predict what they will say? Here's a snippet from chapter 5. At the end, choose the response you think best fits our hero, Captain Rafe Dubois.



Chapter 5


Hot fluid seeped into her mouth. Spicy, bitter. It slid down her throat, stealing her breath. Grace jerked her head away. Her cheek brushed against something soft. The pungent scent of meat intermingled with the sting of brandy that bit her nose. Vague nightmarish memories lurked like shadows in her mind, taunting her. Memories of her capture and a tall Frenchman with a heart of stone.
A hand gripped her chin and forced her face forward. Fingers that felt like rough rope and tasted of salt pried her lips apart. More hot liquid burned her tongue, poured down her throat, and she gagged. Raising a hand to her mouth, she sprang up, coughing. Dark eyes peered down at her, the spark of concern in them instantly hardening.
“Drink this, mademoiselle.” Captain Dubois inched the bowl toward her mouth.
She pushed it away, shaking the fog from her head. “Can you not wait until I am conscious?”
“When you are conscious, you do not eat.” A shadow of a smile played around his mouth. He rose from the bed and set the bowl atop a table.
Only then, did Grace realize she lay upon a real bed. She scanned her surroundings. Two massive wooden chests ornamented in gold and bolted shut with iron locks guarded the wall opposite her. Upon the plush Persian rug at the room’s center sat three colorfully upholstered armchairs. Beyond them, a cabinet housed a haphazard assortment of books, swords, pistols, and bottles. A large carved mahogany desk perched before a span of windows that stretched across the stern of the ship. Two guns, perched in their wheeled carriages, flanked either side, ready to be shoved through portholes should an enemy dare to approach from behind.
She was in the captain’s cabin.
In the captain’s bed.
With the captain looming over her, wearing that sardonic smirk upon his lips.
Her chest tightened. “Why am I in your bed? What day is it? How long have I been here? And why are you feeding me instead of Father Alers?” She glanced down at the loosened ties of her bodice, and a flush of horror heated her face. “How dare you?” She cowered away from him.
Captain Dubois raised his brows. “Which question would you like me to answer first, mademoiselle?”
“None.” Grace swung her legs over the side of the bed. “I wish to leave this instant.” But her body would not cooperate. Her breath caught in her throat. Her head spun like a waterspout upon the sea, and her legs quivered like pudding. She lifted a hand to her forehead.
A warm hand gripped her arm. “I suggest you lie back down, mademoiselle, and eat something. It has now been seven days since you have partaken of a full meal.”
Grace shifted from beneath his touch and gazed out the windows where the rays of the morning sun angled across the captain’s desk, setting the brass lantern aglitter. The glow lit the quadrant, backstaff, charts, and quill pen and beamed off a rapier, setting aglow the amber liquid in a half-empty bottle.
“Mercy me, I slept here all night?” She snapped her gaze to Captain Dubois. The possibility sped through her mind, seeking an alternative, any alternative besides the one that her purity could never consider.
He grinned, yet a spark of playfulness flitted across his dark eyes. Remembering the loose bindings of her bodice, Grace threw a hand to her chest. “What have you done?” Terror crowded in her throat.
He gave a derisive snort then shook his head and gripped the baldric strung over his white shirt. “Never fear, mademoiselle. I prefer mes conquêtes to be awake.” He sauntered to his desk.
Conquests. Grace swallowed, praying he told the truth, praying she had not become one of his conquests during her unconscious stupor.
He picked up a chart, examined it, then tossed it back to the desk, sending dust particles floating within a ray of sunshine into a frenzy that reflected on his face. Danger hung on his broad shoulders like a well-fitted cloak, but there was a depth to this man that went beyond the baseness of a common brigand, a depth that lurked behind those dark, smoky eyes. He spoke of a greater good—what had he meant by that?
“You should not treat women as property to be conquered or sold to the highest bidder,” she finally said. Grace clasped her moist hands in her lap, trying to stop them from trembling. “Intimacies”—her voice squeaked and she cleared her throat—“between a man and a woman should remain within the sanctity of marriage.”
He turned, crossed his arms over his chest, and chuckled as if she’d told a joke. “Do spare me your proverbs, mon petit chou pieuse.”
“Did you just call me a shoe?”
A smile broke across his lips and widened. He chuckled. “Non. A little pious cabbage.”
“A cabbage? Of all the. . .”
“It is a term of endearment.” He waved a hand through the air, then settled his gaze upon her.
Endearment, indeed. More likely an insult to her intelligence. Fidgeting, she looked away beneath the warmth in his eyes. She’d never been alone in a room with a man other than her father. And Father Alers. What would Reverend Anthony say? Her reputation would be besmirched beyond repair. But what did it matter? Where she was going, she would not require a reputation.
He approached her. “You slept here because I feared your fever would return, and I loosened your bindings to allow you to breathe.”
Graced fiddled with the ties. “Though I am appreciative of the clothes, Captain, the bodice is far too tight.”
“Perhaps you are too fat.” He grinned.
“Fat?” She jumped to her feet. The cabin spun around her. “You are no gentleman.”
“And it took you only seven days to reach that conclusion?”
Grace sank back down to the bed, studying his cavalier attitude with curiosity. “You seem proud of your boorish behavior.”
“I am proud of many things that would not engender your good opinion.”
“Of that we are in agreement, Captain. But as I am sure you know, ‘Pride goeth before a fall and a haughty spirit before destruction.’”
He chuckled. “So, do you chastise me for being proud or being a boor?”
“Both.”
“Yet you are the one who has fallen.”
“I have not fallen,” Grace snapped. “I am here for a reason.”



Will Rafe say?

A. "You are here because I wish it so."
B. “Oui, to line my pockets with gold.”
C. "Oui, for my entertainment."
D. "There can be no reason for this madness."
E. "My apologies, mademoiselle, if I have offended you."

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Rita Gerlach's Christmas cookie recipe!

This is one of my favorite cookie recipes at Christmastime. I've made them for as long as I can remember. They were a big hit with my boys when they were little, and remain a family tradition to this day. Use your favorite cookie cutters. You can decorate them with sprinkles or ice them when they are cool. A tip to adding sprinkles is to brush the cookies with a bit of water and then add the candies. This recipe can be used for any holiday.Christmas Shortbread Cookies

3 cups of flour
1/2 teaspoon of baking powder
Mix these together in a bowl and set aside

2 sticks of butter softened.
1 cup of sugar
1 egg
1 tablespoon of your favorite extract. (I prefer almond.)

First, using an electric mixer, blend the butter until very smooth and creamy. Then add the sugar gradually...egg, and then extract.Add the flour mixture slowly. You can refrigerate the dough to make it easier to roll out.Tip: To roll out the dough, lay a piece of wax paper on a counter top or table. Place some dough on it, then another sheet of wax paper. Roll the dough out with a rolling pin. Cut into shapes and lift carefully off the wax paper. Place on cookie sheets. Add sprinkles.Bake at 32510-12 minutesCool on a baking rack before decorating with icing.

Rita Gerlach lives with her husband and two sons in a historical town in central Maryland, nestled along the Catoctin Mountains, amid Civil War battlefields and Revolutionary War outposts. Her newest novel, Surrender the Wind, has received four stars from Romantic Times Magazine, and has been heralded by readers and book clubs as a page-turner, and one of the best historicals they've read this year.


Rita's Website: http://ritagerlach.com/
An inspirational historical romance makes a great gift. Best price of the year for Surrender the Wind.
$7.76
http://www.buy.com/prod/surrender-the-wind/q/loc/106/211018427.html

Monday, December 14, 2009

Stop trying and start being!


During this time of year families who don't often spend a great deal of time together otherwise due to distance, buisness, or preference, join together to celebrate Christmas and New Years. Most of us have family members who don't know God. I know, I do! As my family descends upon my home for feasting and fun, I find myself often getting stressed. Since I don't see some of my family very often, I feel like this is an opportunity for me to put my Christianity on display in all its glory! Surely my family and friends will see the glow on my face, the peace radiated from my eyes, and how I have nothing but a kind word for everyone.
Surely they will ask me the cause of my utter bliss. Then they will sit in rapt attention at my feet while I share the gospel with them. Then, as the evening winds down and the candles burn low, they will give their lives to God.
Sounds like a dream? Well, it is. One of those illusive dreams that is always outside my reach.
But more often than not, nobody even notices anything different about me. Nobody asks me why I'm so peaceful or what the secret to my happy life is. More often than not, I get flustered and snap at someone or make some sarcastic comment. I try so hard to be the perfect example of Jesus. I try so hard, I walk around tense check every word I say before it leaves my mouth. But as each year passes, I realize that my plan isn't working.
Do you ever feel like that? You try and try so hard to be a good witness, to be such a good Christian, but nobody seems to notice and nothing ever changes.

Well, God spoke very clearly to me the other day. He told me to stop trying and start 'being'.

The truth of the matter is, in our own power, we can never be like Jesus. We can try all we want, but we will always just be our fallen selves. The only way to be like Jesus is to spend time with Him and lots of it!. I'm not talking a few mintues in the morning and a few minutes while you're driving to work or school. I'm talking an all-day, minute by minute relationship.
The more time you spend with Jesus, the more like Him you will become. Without even knowing it, He will change you from the inside out. He will make you uniquely you and yet so much like Him that other people can't help but notice. Then when we spend time with lost friends or relatives, we don't need to try anymore. We don't need to watch our mouths or check our frustration levels or worry about saying all the right words and taking advantage of every opportunity. We need only be ourselves. Because if we've been hanging out with Jesus, then ourselves will be like Him.
Remember the disciples, Peter and John? They spent 24-7 with the Lord for 3 years. Guess what the Pharisees said to them in Acts 4:13

When they saw the courage of Peter and John and realized that they were unschooled, ordinary men, they were astonished and they took note that these men had been with Jesus..

Spend time with the Lord. Talk to Him all day long. Include Him in every decision, every frustration, every conversation and maybe just maybe this Christmas someone will take note of you--that you have been with Jesus.

Friday, December 11, 2009

The Raven Saint hero - Captain Rafe Dubois

The winner from last week's drawing is Ashley Davis!!! Congratulations, Ashley, please send me your email address and/or your mailing address so I can send you the book.

This week, let's take an in-depth look at the hero in The Raven Saint, Captain Rafe Dubois.


Brief Description: Tall, well-built with jet black hair and dark, smoky eyes, Rafe Dubois has no trouble attracting les femmes. That is, until he comes across Mademoiselle Grace Westcott. The son of Henri Dubois, a rich planter on the French island of Saint Dominique, Rafe, at age 26, has already amassed a fortune of his own by hiring himself and his ragtag crew out as mercenaries to the highest bidder—performing whatever dirty deed is required of them, without question. But Rafe has an oddity that baffles both his men and Mademoiselle Grace. Instead of spending his wealth on himself, he gives most of it away to the poor and sick in Port-aux-Paix, his home town. In fact, it is his ultimate goal to build a hospital in the poverty-stricken port for those who cannot afford quality care. In truth, Rafe wants nothing more than to infuriate his father, a man who mistreated Rafe from birth and who committed the ultimate act of betrayal against his own son. I picture Rafe looking a lot like Orlando Bloom in the pirate movies. :-)

Strengths: Protective, Smart, Leader, Good heart, Intuitive, Risk taker
Weaknesses: Bitter, Arrogant, Rebellious, Loves Praise, Pessimist, Bad Temper

Inspiration: Rafe is the ultimate Bad Boy. And I love writing the bad boy! He’s rude, extremely macho, and arrogant. Yet he is a true leader, a commander who inspires others to follow him. He walks on the wild side and has a dangerous look about him. But inside, he’s a wounded warrior with a heart of gold. I think this is my favorite type of hero to write because bad boys are so deep, so passionate, and there’s a lot of stuff going on beneath the surface. Rafe has lived a lifetime of abuse and neglect. Those he trusted and loved the most stabbed him in the back. Consequently, he hates God and hates women. He has no self value, so he searches for it in the praises of others. Pretending to be altruistic, he is only satisfying his need for value and for revenge against his father—a father who has an outward appearance of piety that disgusts Rafe. Can you imagine the fireworks that are set off when Rafe meets the pious Grace Westcott?
If you would like to be entered in the drawing for The Raven Saint this week, please leave a comment about this post. (And don't forget to leave your email address--I had two people last week who left me no name and no way to contact them) If you entered last week, please enter again as I'm not going to bring those comments forward.
Thanks everyone!

Monday, December 7, 2009

Reversal of Fortune


I'm going through a study of the book of Esther by Beth Moore at my church. I don't believe it's a coincidence that this study became available just as I was beginning a new 3 book series on destiny. In God's Kingdom, there are no coincidences.

Esther is a story of a woman whom God chose to fulfill a great destiny. She came from lowly beginnings, an orphan, a Jew, a nobody to become Queen of Persia. Yet that wasn't her ultimate destiny. It was merely the means to achieve her destiny--which was to save her people from complete annihilation.

One thing Beth mentioned in the study is how there are moments in each of our lives, pivot points, where God does what she calls a reversal of fortune or a reversal of destiny. These moments or events can appear to our human eyes as extremely insignificant. But how we react to them and what follows has enormous consequences.

The cool thing is the Bible is full of examples of how God does this

Abraham was a nobody from Haran. God made him the father of a nation.
Joseph was a slave and a prisoner. God made him 2nd only to Pharaoh
Moses was insecure and stuttered. God used him to confront Pharaoh and lead the Israelites out of slavery
Gideon was the least of his clan in the least tribe of Israel. God used him to defeat the Midianites
Rahab was a harlot. God birthed the Messiah, Jesus, through her descendants
David was a shepherd boy. God made him King of Israel
Peter was a fisherman. God made him a fisher of men and the leader of the church in Jerusalem.

I could go on.....
It seems as though God is in this business of Reversal of Fortune, doesn't it?

In my own life. I was a wounded, insecure, shy girl who grew up without a dad and in a disfunctional home. God made me an author.

God has a "reversal of fortune" planned for your life. If you haven't already experienced it, it's coming. I guarantee it. You are no less important to him than any of those people in the Bible. And you are here for a reason. To do something big! But God won't just dump it in your lap. He requires something from you in return. Just study the lives of the people I listed above. What did they all have in common? I would venture to say 2 things:

Faith
Surrender
Small price to pay to reverse your destiny!
Can you think of other examples from the Bible?

Friday, December 4, 2009

Welcome to The Raven Saint month!

Every friday in December, I will post something about my upcoming release, The Raven Saint. All you need to do is leave a comment about the post and I will enter your name to win a free copy of the book. I will announce each week's winner the following Friday.

Simple Huh?


I'm very excited about this book! When I began the story, I thought it would be difficult to get into the heroine, Grace's character. Of all 3 sisters in the series, she was the sister I identified with the least! But as I progressed, I realized something very shocking. Some of Grace's worst qualities were also my own. Yikes. I wonder if you'll discover the same thing.
So without further ado, here's an in-depth look at Miss Grace Westcott.

Grace Westcott

Brief Description: At twenty years of age, Grace Westcott is the youngest of four sisters. With raven-colored hair and eyes a deep shade of emerald green, she’s been told she has beautiful exotic looks. But Grace closes her ears to such praises. Vanity only swells one’s pride, and pride goes before a fall. And she cannot allow such idle flattery to deter her from her mission to ensure her sister’s eternal salvation and attend to the poor in Charles Towne. Though not as petite as her sister, Hope, nor as tall as her sister, Faith, Grace tries to hide her medium, yet curvy, build beneath high-necked, loose fitting, plain gowns. There is no need to become a temptation to any of the men in Charles Towne. Not that she has received any unwanted attention—or any attention at all, for that matter. Besides, she is too busy aiding the poor and preaching to her sisters of the evils of sin, to have time for courting. If only they would listen to her, Grace is sure her sisters would save themselves a lot of pain and heartache. Yet despite Grace’s self-righteous attitude, she is a kind, generous lady who loves God and who would gladly give up her last meal to help someone in need.

Strengths: Self-sacrificing, Generous, Clever, Strong Faith, Confidence
Weaknesses: Judgmental, Idealistic, Lacks compassion for sinners, Nosy, Stubborn

Quirks: Grace wears a cross around her neck which is usually tucked within her bodice. When she’s nervous or upset, she pulls the cross out and rubs it. Also she throws a hand to her throat to cover up her exposed skin when she’s nervous. She says “Mercy me” all the time and is very outspoken about other people’s faults.

Inspiration: I love Grace’s character. I’ve seen her in so many people around me. She’s got a great heart, loves God, loves to help others, but she has one major flaw. She is too quick to judge everyone around her for any sin she sees in their lives. Since she has never had it rough in her life, since she’s always had a home and food and love, she cannot understand why people commit sin: why they steal or cheat or lie or are immoral. She only sees the sin, the top of the iceberg and refuses to look beneath. As a consequence, she comes across as being very prudish and self-righteous when in reality she only wants people to go to Heaven. More often than not, I find I can easily slip into this kind of attitude, judging the actions of others without truly knowing their heart. But wait until Grace runs into Rafe Dubois, the vile mercenary who kidnaps her from her home.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Say hello to Andrew!


I'm a grandma, or at least a step grandma. Andrew Michael, born November 17th early in the morning. A month early and only a wee bit over 5 pounds. But he's the best baby ever.
From left to right. My step-daughter, Susan, My hubby holding Andrew and me!