A Time for Change

This post was originally an email, sent out to our wonderful readers. I have copied it here as reference and so that those who don’t receive our emails can be informed too!

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Well, this has been a challenging email to write! If you could only see how many drafts there have been - ha!

For some time now I've felt a tug to do less. I won't make a list for you, because I don't want to get us all comparing - but I have a habit of adding to my plate way more than I should. Sometimes I like the challenge; sometimes I get prideful; sometimes I don't realize I've bitten off more than I can chew.

Over the last few months the Lord has really stirred my heart. Forced me to think long and hard about the future. Amidst all my thinking and questioning, we had an unexpected trip to the ER for my youngest that flipped some things upside down. He's fine now, don't worry - it was a partially severed finger that is healing very well, thank God! Kids are amazingly resilient. The Lord used the week of the incident to make things clear to me (emphasis below is mine):

"But we urge you, brethren, that you increase more and more; that you also aspire to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business, and to work with your own hands, as we commanded you, that you may walk properly toward those who are outside, and that you may lack nothing." 1 Thessalonians 4:10b-12

​"the older women likewise, that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things — that they admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love their children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be blasphemed." Titus 2:3-5


God has convicted me of these things; He has impressed on me the immense value of being a wife and a mom. I know it seems ironic, since I lead a ministry to help you understand this very thing! But we can always understand better, can't we? I have struggled with wanting to continue everything about this ministry for you and wanting to just be a wife and mom.

Over time God has given me clarity on how to scale back and make sure my life is rightly prioritized, while still being able to share what He teaches me that others might love Him more. My most important ministry is in my home, with my husband and our children. I am confident that He wants me to take a step back, to focus more on my marriage and my beautiful kiddos (current and future - no I'm not pregnant). To manage our home and continue to create a peaceful space, to invest in our church family and community. To live a quiet life and be satisfied with that.

I am really excited for this, and I have been praying that it will encourage you to pattern your life after those verses above. So, what does it all mean practically?

It means that the magazine releasing in September will be the last one I publish, at least for the foreseeable future. Maybe someday it will be revived, but for now it's taking a long break. I am sad about this, yet I know it's the right decision. You can still order all of 2019's issues until the end of the year! (And please do, there is so. much. good content from wise writers. Tuck them away to revisit!)

Another change will be with the weekly emails; those emails, as you know them, will be taking on a new look. I will be writing as the Lord leads and sharing those blog posts as they're published. It will still be in the same place, www.strengthandsong.com/blog, and if you're on this email list you'll get an email every time something is published. I will still share guest posts every now and then, but it will be more of a personal blog - sharing what the Lord is teaching me personally and how He leads our family. The focus will remain on Him and encouraging you to know Him better.

It is incredibly bittersweet to be changing things, but I know the Lord started Strength & Song, sustained it, and is now turning it in a different direction. I am so thankful for all He has done. Including how He brought Natalya along; she has been amazingly helpful and wise, and a wonderful friend (none of that will change about her!). I'm sure you'll still hear from her on the blog! To God be the glory, great things He has done.

Because He lives,
Amy

A Marriage to Remember: Part 1

My in-laws celebrated their 10th + 40th anniversary this month!

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You may be a little confused. Doesn’t that make it their 50th?

No. And at the same time, yes.

My father and mother-in-law have one of my favorite marriage testimonies, and I am SO EXCITED to share it with you all! I’m going to break it in to two parts, because it’s too good to abbreviate for just one. This account was written for their vow renewal ceremony, and shared with Doug and Pam’s permission.

In the summer of 1968 Doug Brown and Pam Carrie met for the first time in a small mountain town called Featherville, ID. Their families owned rival businesses across the street from each other. The Brown family ran Wagontown Lodge and the Carrie’s ran Paradise Lodge (which is still in business today, now as Trinity Hot Springs). Pam was actually on a date with the game warden when she came into Wagontown’s café and saw Doug, who was working the counter while holding his baby girl, 9 month old Jamie.

Only a couple months before, nineteen-year-old Pam had given her newborn baby girl up for adoption. Seeing the baby girl in Doug’s arms captured her attention and touched her grieving heart. Meanwhile, Doug’s mother noticed Pam and pulling him aside, told him to get to know that girl (despite her being on a date). His mom had never pointed out a girl to him before, so Doug’s curiosity was peaked and he went over and managed to work his way in.

Doug and Jamie’s mother were no longer together at the time, and Doug and Pam liked each other enough to keep in touch through letters for the next year while Pam was in college in California and Doug was stationed at the San Diego Naval base. When they both returned to Featherville the following summer, Doug had been discharged from the Navy and was divorced, free to pursue Pam. They dated all of three weeks in June of 1969 before eloping to Boise for a courthouse wedding.

Early on in their marriage, Doug convinced Pam that they did not want any children, and he underwent a vasectomy. They spent a few years racing snowmobiles, riding dirt bikes, water skiing, and fishing in the beautiful mountains of Idaho before moving to Portland in 1975. They wanted to get away from the watchful eyes of family and start fresh living life how they pleased, with no one to hinder them. In Portland, they spent their time partying and living to get high, trying to fill the empty places in their hearts with drugs and alcohol. Their idea of marriage followed the popular opinion of the time that has remained the current theme of the world: as long as you are feeling in love, you should stay married. Sadly, like many couples, they had no idea what it really meant to be in love and committed to someone for life.

Eventually, their feelings for each other died away, and they saw no reason to remain together. They separated, remaining friends and hanging out with the same crowd, until November, 1978, when they divorced after nine and a half years of marriage.

After the divorce, Pam went back to Idaho but Doug remained in Portland. A close friend of his, a man named Don McLain, boldly informed him that he needed Jesus. Miraculously, the Lord prepared and convicted his heart to receive the Gospel, and Doug surrendered to the Lord on November 13th, 1978.

Immediately, he was filled with a passion for God and a hunger for His word. Don and his church actively took on the role of discipleship, and Don told Doug something that God would use to change the trajectory of his life. Don said that according to the Bible, God did not honor his and Pam’s divorce.

Upon hearing that, Doug decided there was only one thing to do. As a baby believer who had so much to learn, he wanted nothing more than to obey God and follow His will. He was going to track Pam down and tell her they needed to reconcile.

Little did he know that she was in a new relationship – one that she hoped would last, because she was pregnant with her boyfriend’s baby.

 

To be continued next week….

Written by Natalya Brown.