Issacharian Daughters – ID062

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Monday, 29 October 2007Dear Girls,

The Courting Chair?? Part 2

Zach When people ask how I met my bride-to-be, I sometimes explain that it was all because of a Trojan RV. That week we spent repairing a string of broken-down parts was the week I discovered Miss Amy Ruth Bentley.

When we met a few days before at that Independence Day picnic near Mt. Rushmore, my family felt like we could have known the Bentleys all our lives. My mom and dad chatted with hers like old friends and our siblings were fast becoming buddies. I noticed Amy throughout the day as she cheerfully played games of tag with her younger brothers and sisters and joined her family in entertaining us all with a Psalm sung in 4-part harmony. She also visited with me briefly, but seemed very shy.It was in the week that followed that I began to see what Amy was like. We enjoyed many more discussions, and I learned that she feels strongly about many of the things I believe in. We worked and played together, and she was always ready to help or join in the fun. What impressed me most was that Amy loved being a woman. She radiated femininity.

When the day arrived for the Bentleys to depart, we stood in the yard and waved till they were gone. Then my brother Daniel turned to me and said,??Well, God’s not strapped for girls, is He? ?? I had to agree, the Bentley family was full of delightful girls who shared our worldview, and I considered Amy a definite possibility.

Amy After our departure, Katie and I wrote to each other. Daddy kept in touch on the phone?? talking to Mr. Ray sometimes, more often, to Zach.

About 4 months later, Anna and I were??playing mommy ?? to five children whose parents were out of town. It was the end of October, and my mom called me with surprising news. Zach and Daniel Lautenschlager were coming for a visit. They had been in Texas and were heading to Florida. We lived in the middle, and right on their way.

The way God arranges things is so perfect. Dad was between jobs at this point, and able to spend lots of time with our guests. Anna and I wouldn’t be home until a few days into the visit, but we invited everybody up to??our ?? temporary home for dinner the evening after Zach and Dan arrived. We found out that the day they came to Mobile was Zach’s birthday, and made him a pumpkin pie??birthday cake. ??

Anna and I came home for the last part of the visit. In the next few days I was able to get to know Zach further. I was impressed by his humility and love of truth. In a discussion he was always willing to see another side, willing to be proven wrong if he was wrong. Yet he was strong and thoughtful?? not a push-over to anyone else’s ideas. He was chivalrous too. At church on Sunday someone asked me about myself, and seemed surprised that I was not in college, had no job, and lived with my parents. Zach came quickly to my aid, defending the choices I had made and the worth of my position and work as a daughter in my father’s house.

After Zach and Danny left, my dad asked for my thoughts on both men. Danny, I told him, was fun and kind, and I liked him. But Zach ??in him I saw the kind of man I could follow. My interest was growing.

Zach Our time in Mobile was very precious. I got to spend much of the week with Amy’s father, Jack, and I was impressed by his deep love for Christ and visionary leadership of his family. This was the kind of man I wanted as a father-in-law. At that point, none of us knew whether our relationship would ever go that direction, but the friendship that grew up between Jack and me and the things we learned about each other became foundational in future decisions.

I was also further impressed by Amy’s deep understanding of biblical womanhood. There was nothing Amy wanted to do more than to be a keeper-at-home, and she was skilled at her craft. As a daughter in her father’s house, she had spent her time learning the multiple skills she would need to be wife and help-meet. When Dan and I arrived in Mobile, Amy was busy helping a family in the church. These folks had made adoption their ministry, though others would see some of their precious special-needs kids as only candidates for abortion. Amy was spending two weeks in their home, running the household and caring for five of the children while their parents were with the youngest who was recovering from surgery. We got to go to??Amy’s house ?? for supper one night, and I truly enjoyed seeing how she managed that home.

By the time we left Mobile, I could see Amy had many of the qualities I wanted in a wife, but there was still one major question unanswered for me. I knew I wanted a wife who thinks deeply and is willing and able to share her thoughts with me. In my conversations with Amy, she would very willingly listen to everything I had to say, but she still seemed somewhat distant and reserved. I know now that, from her perspective, she was actually being quite friendly with me, but at that time I didn’t see it. So we parted, and the waiting continued.

Amy Now we were back to sixteen hundred miles apart. Katie and I wrote each other. Dad and Zach talked on the phone. Daddy had become interested in purchasing a few firearms and often called Zach with gun questions. They talked about theology quite a bit too.

Time passed. Over the winter we planned Anna and Peter’s wedding. In early March they were married. They planned another summer of dinosaur digging in South Dakota, and asked if I could come out for a week or two. About this time Dad was talking with Ray Lautenschlager to see if Katie could come pay us Bentley girls a visit. It seemed, though, that she was very busy helping with family projects. One of these was a sewing project??stage costumes for The Fiddlers Three. They had contracted to play five nights a week at a dinner theatre over the summer, and needed historical American costumes to go with the music show they would call The Great American Adventure. Katie had mentioned it would be nice to have my help with the costumes, and my dad liked the idea. He had his eye on Zach, and I was going to South Dakota to see Anna and Peter anyway. The plan for the trip was that I would spend the first half at the L’s, costuming, and the second half with Anna and Peter digging bones?? three weeks in all.

Zach Over the winter, Amy’s dad and I had conversed fairly regularly via phone and email. It had become evident he was at least interested in allowing Amy and me to get better acquainted. It wasn’t anything he or I had said, but was simply the general tone of our correspondence.

Amy had also come up in conversations with my folks. Dad asked me what I thought about her not too long after Dan and I returned from our trip through Mobile. I told him that she was the kind of girl I was looking for, but that I didn’t know if there was any mutual interest; she seemed distant when we talked together. Both Mom and Dad suggested that I take another look. They both had their eye on her, and I see now that they saw many things I had missed.

When Amy volunteered to spend a couple of weeks at our house while she was in South Dakota, giving much-needed help on the costume project, it sounded very good. Maybe she was interested in becoming better acquainted after all. I knew this time would be significant. I determined to keep my eyes and ears open, and to strive to be myself.

Amy My twenty-fourth birthday fell a few days before my departure. Dear friends of mine came for dinner?? a family with several young children that has been a very important part of my life. Their little ones have helped to fill my season of waiting, and also the hole in my heart that longs to be a mommy. The wife and mother in this family gave me a very special birthday gift. It was a letter in which she told me she wanted to give me something more than a gift card or the kind of gift I could unwrap. What she really wanted was to give me the desire of my heart. She knew me well, and knew how I wanted to be married and have a home of my own. So, she told me that for the next month, she would pray daily for me and for my future husband. She would pray that he would be ready, that he would pursue me, that the months would be few until I was married. Five days later I was in South Dakota being picked up at the airport by the Lautenschlagers. Zach, who had a meeting that afternoon, was calling his folks on their cell phone to make sure they pointed out to me Harney Peak?? the highest point between the Rockies and Alps, and his own personal favorite mountain. I’ll always love Harney. Every day I was in South Dakota, my friend back home was praying for me and my future husband.

The costume work began almost at once, fabric shopping, pattern design, mock-ups in muslin, and alterations. I greatly enjoyed the company of all the L’s. They accepted me as one of the family, and it was grand fun. Again, I talked a lot with Zach, and enjoyed it. I got to work with him quite a bit, too. He had the clearest idea of anybody as to what the costumes should look like. I found as we worked on them that he expected excellence from me, and because he expected it, I worked until I achieved it. I loved earning his admiration for my work.

Some of the fabric we needed had to be ordered online. It got delayed, and we finally realized it could not arrive before I went to stay with Peter and Anna. We re-arranged so they would bring me back to the L’s a few days before I had to fly home. While I was away, The Fiddlers Three had an out of town gig. As it happened, I got??home’ before they did, and spent a day-and-a-half with Donna L’s parents, who were pet-sitting.??Grandpa ?? and??Grandma ?? Daniels are dear, and I really enjoyed getting to know them and hear from them some of the history that has made the L’s who they are.

The family returned, and the costume saga continued. As days became fewer, nights became later as we stayed up talking. The last day I was there, Mrs. Donna made all my favorite food for me, and, while Mr. Ray took the rest of us out to a quaint spot for pictures of the new costumes, she decorated the table for a lovely candlelight dinner. Zach told me I was the guest of honor ??like on a birthday ??and so he could ask me the kind of questions that are traditionally (L family tradition) asked to the birthday person. What was my favorite book? What would I do with a million dollars? What was my favorite time of day? Fun questions to discuss, dreadfully hard to answer.

Most of the family took me to the airport in the morning. This time Zach was one of the party. They waved me off from the other side of??security ?? until I could see them no longer.

˜ ??On the flight home I worked on journaling my thoughts. By this time I was beginning to know Zach well. I had come to Rapid City interested, and with eyes open, to see more of who this man was. I left only more interested. I could see in Zach so many qualities I admired. The things he was passionate about were things I loved, they were things that mattered?? like raising faithful children, defending life and liberty, advancing the kingdom of God, and living and telling God’s great gospel story. On a less vital level we had lots of similarities too?? we both liked dogs and not cats. We enjoyed the same music, the same authors, the same heroes. Oh, I knew I was interested?? but I didn’t know if he was. I talked with my parents about what I saw, and they prayed with me for God’s guidance, and His will.

Zach When Amy arrived at the airport we were acquaintances. When she left we were friends. We had spent many hours visiting, and she seemed to open up to me as time progressed. She began sharing her thoughts on different subjects and I was very pleased to discover she thought about things on a very deep level.

I also enjoyed working with her as I have enjoyed working with few others. She strove to achieve the desired look for each costume and was so pleased to please me. I found myself drawn to her gentle and quiet spirit. I could tell she had definite opinions about the way things should be done, but she was ever ready to yield her ideas and do them some other way.

During her stay, I had begun to develop the content of the show we were to perform that summer. My family and I viewed this show as an opportunity to tell the providences of God seen all throughout the story of America. As I started assembling my thoughts, Amy was very interested. We discussed the themes and elements several times, and I always found I could see things more clearly after talking with her.

I believe God designed husband and wife to co-labor in advancing His Kingdom. That’s what Biblical marriage is all about. The husband must act as servant leader, the wife must help, counsel and follow. By the end of the visit, it was beginning to dawn on me that Amy knew how to do this. I wasn’t sure I was seeing her accurately yet, but I was interested in finding out more. (…To be continued! ??)

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve SmithIssacharian Daughter

Notes: I have sent this email to girls who have embraced a vision of victorious daughterhood as well as those who may be thinking about doing so (and even to some girls who may just like some encouragement regarding different areas of home life). Some of the girls are in the USA, UK, Australia and other parts of the world. Most are in New Zealand. You are welcome to forward this email on to others so long as you do so in its entirety. If you do not want to receive these emails please just send a return email to me stating that fact. If you know of other girls who would be encouraged by receiving these emails, feel free to forward the email to them or send me their email address. Locations of visitors to this page

Issacharian Daughters – ID061

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID061 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id061-the-courting-chair-pt-1.pdf

Dear Girls,

Attached as a pdf is the next newsletter. The text from the newsletter follows this note for those of you who have a difficult time opening the pdfs.

Letters from readers

Hi Genevieve!Thanks for the newsletter! I really enjoyed it! I thought it was very cool how in obeying God and your parents you were actually doing things that would benefit or please Pete even though you didn’t know him at the time. God has pretty wonderful ways of working things out ay!!! I hope your wedding planning goes well!

Love Ruth in New Zealand

Dear Genevieve,

Thank you so much for your emails and encouragement, it is a real blessing to receive them!! I have found your [courtship] story so encouraging because it shows how much God cares about us and that He really has got that special person there who He is preparing and who will find us at the right time:) Your story helped me to realize more how important it is to keep ourselves pure and to serve our families.

In Christ, Hannah xoxoxo in New Zealand

Regards,Genevieve

Monday, 22 October 2007

Dear Girls,

The Courting Chair?? Part 1

A couple of years ago my family visited the Bentley family in Mobile, Alabama. Anna Bentley and I had been emailing one another and had become great friends. Anna was on the verge of becoming engaged when we visited and I enjoyed meeting her for the first time along with the rest of her family. Her older sister Amy really impressed me as a gentle and quiet young woman who was ready for marriage. I thought she would make some man a wonderful wife and I would tell young men this when the opportunity afforded itself! Looking for a wife? Make a trip to Mobile, Alabama! But I had to stop making these referrals when I discovered that Amy was now married! Here is her courtship story:

It was really two chairs joined together. The seats were turned so that the occupants could look into each other’s eyes ??as if they were the only two in the room. A single??S ?? shaped arm curved around the backs of both, dividing the courting couple, yet allowing them to hold hands over the shared arm. In the glow of the old, curved wood, the courting chair held all the charm and romance of yesterday.

Amy was eighteen when she met that chair, and something about it enchanted her. The old-fashioned chair was a picture of the beauty and purity she wanted for her romance, and seemed all tied up with her dreams for the future. She did not know then that the man she would love and marry lived sixteen hundred miles away, or that she would not meet him for almost five years. This she did know: when he came, she wanted to sit with him in that chair.

Waiting is not easy, and Amy had been waiting all her life to become a wife and mother. At eighteen she thought she was ready, and her father agreed,??if the right man came along. ?? But neither of them got to choose the date. They waited together. There was plenty for Amy to do in her father’s house and in the homes of others. She found in this time of waiting she got to be an extension of her father’s ministry. In his name, Amy could reach out to other families ??especially to busy mommies with lots of little ones. And she learned that as ready as she felt, there was still a lot she didn’t know. The waiting was a gift. Through it God was preparing her for His calling on her life.

While God prepared Amy to be a wife and mother, He was also preparing her man. Zach was twenty when Amy turned eighteen, and God was beginning to pour out His calling on Zach’s life. His father had decided that whatever his family did, they would work on it together. Now God was shaping Zach’s vision, training him to be husband and father. There was a great deal he needed to learn, and God provided many opportunities for Zach to work with his father and mother, brothers and sister. Their experiences were as broad as farming and business, politics and music.

So Zach and Amy waited busily, and their fathers were not idle either. They both gave their children wise counsel and prayed often for their future spouses. They also waited with their eyes wide open. The courting chair sat waiting too ??a reminder to hope.

Zach When I was seventeen, God laid on my heart the desire to pray for the woman I would someday marry. I was beginning to see that family relationships are foundational to living life the way He meant it to be lived, and I wanted very much to be a husband and father. By the time I was twenty-one, I figured that I had waited and prayed long enough. It had been four years, and I thought I was ready. Little did I know that it would be four more years before I would even meet the woman God had for me.

So, the waiting continued. By God’s grace, I invested time in studying the Scriptures, and as I studied what they have to say about romance and marriage, I discovered the guiding principle for this time in life: we are supposed to wait actively.

During this waiting time, I got to work with my dad and mom, brothers and sister in building up and operating the family business and??homesteading ?? a small family farm. When Dad helped start a conservative grassroots political action group, I got to work with him as full-time staff. During the same time, my siblings and I formed a band and started performing American folk music together.

I’ve come to see that a man must have an idea of his calling before he engages a woman’s attention. He has no right to ask a woman to follow him until he knows where he is going. As it says in Proverbs 24:27,??Prepare your work outside; get everything ready for yourself in the field, and after that build your house ?? (that Hebrew word??house ?? means household or family). And Psalm 1 joyfully proclaims that the righteous man??bears fruit in his season. ?? In other words, the waiting time is for preparation, and there are great things to be accomplished.

By the time I met Amy, God had provided experience in many of the things a husband and father must do. I had worked in several different fields, and had a general idea of God’s direction for life. Each of these opportunities could have been viewed as a distraction. Working with my family meant giving up higher paying jobs and going to college away from home. It meant missing many of the things I was told I would have to do to find a wife and get on with life. In reality, it was through working with my family that I was able to prepare for marriage and accomplish the things God had for me during my single years. And it was through working with my family I met Amy.

Amy The call came just months before my twenty-third birthday. It was the kind of call I’d been waiting for since I was eighteen. Years now I had spent waiting for a godly young man to see me, and to ask my dad’s permission to get to know me better ??not for just any reason, but because he saw in me what he wanted in a wife. But this call was not for me. It was about my little sister. A wonderful young man named Peter was interested in courting Anna, and in marrying her if it was God’s will. Anna was a few days shy of eighteen. She hadn’t yet finished high school and was still getting ready. I’d waited now for four-and-a-half years. That was hard. I wanted to submit to God, but I did not understand why He had ordained this.

As the days passed, I realized quickly that I had a couple of choices. I could resent Anna because she was seeing the beginning of a dream fulfilled, while I waited still. I could become bitter and angry at God and blame my parents or someone else for making my life miserable. Such a course would destroy my most treasured relationships, and make me wretched and my soul ugly. The other option was to trust. Not because I understood, but because I knew God was worthy of my trust. Trust ??and love my sister hard. I found that investing in our relationship, cultivating our friendship and seeking her best was the way to keep bitterness from growing up in me. It wasn’t easy, but it was by far the best.

I believe that was the hardest year I have known. But it was also very good. I had to learn to trust in God and give up myself. And He was ever gracious, patient, and there.

My sister’s sweetheart (and now husband), Peter DeRosa, works with his family in the creation science field. They are paleontologists, and the summer he and Anna were courting, the DeRosas were digging dinosaur bones in South Dakota. Our family drove out West to visit them and??help ?? dig for bones. Dino bones are cool, but I don’t remember that trip for the neat triceratops specimens we uncovered.

It was the very end of June when we arrived, bumping over muddy roads to the middle of nowhere. On Sunday, the 3rd of July, we followed the DeRosas back along the same roads toward Rapid City, the largest town in the area. A full day was planned, with church in the morning and a picnic and fireworks at Mt. Rushmore in the evening.

Mt. Rushmore is a great place to celebrate Independence Day. About thirty-thousand people do it every year on July 3rd. That makes for quite a crowd and a long wait to get in and out of the park. In the providence of God, the DeRosas had friends in Rapid City who invited them to avoid the crowd and enjoy Rushmore’s show with them from a neighboring mountain. We got to tag along, caravanning up winding roads and through tunnels that framed Mt. Rushmore as it grew closer around each bend. At length, our leaders stopped, and as we piled out of our car, we were introduced to a family of tall, blonde Germans with a long name:??Lautenschlager. ?? Try to say that ten times fast! Try to say it at all!

Ray and Donna L. had four kids ??though three were not technically kids anymore, Zach (25), Daniel (23), Katie (19), and Shonny (13). They were homeschoolers, like us, and we hit it off at once. We picnicked together, and the L’s pulled out some of their musical instruments: fiddles, bass fiddle, guitar, banjo, penny whistle ??great music, and great fun. They played American folk tunes mostly ??one of my very favorite genres. Between songs, the bass fiddler (Zach) kept inserting bits of the story of our American history and heritage. I love American history. When Zach and I talked I could tell we shared a similar worldview, though we didn’t agree on everything. I talked with his sister Katie, too, and found that we had a similar vision of womanhood. Our families both had such fun together that we made plans to see each other again while we were in the area.

Over the next couple days, we went to hear The Fiddlers Three (the Lautenschlager family band) perform a 4th of July concert, and had them over for dinner at our RV. Then it was time to say goodbye. But God’s plans aren’t always the same as ours. They are, in fact, better than anything we can imagine.

The morning after our dinner together, we Bentleys were planning to do a little more sightseeing and then start back toward home in Mobile, Alabama. But right in the middle of that hot July day, the generator for our RV died. This could have been a real problem if it weren’t for the fact that we had just met an unofficial RV mechanic ??Daniel Lautenschlager. We ended up parked in the L’s yard for a week while Daddy and Dan worked on the RV. One thing after another went wrong with it, and we had to wait for parts. In the meantime, we found plenty to keep us busy, from odd jobs, to games, to cooking, to floating down icy Rapid Creek on huge inner-tubes. We also helped assemble and mail 3,500 letters for South Dakota Gun Owners ??an organization dedicated to preserving the right to bear arms. Ray and Zach are both on staff with SDGO, and the whole Lautenschlager family pitches in on the work of South Dakota’s largest gun-rights organization. Throughout this time, our families had many laughs and many discussions ??both light and serious. It was a great deal of fun as our new friends began to be old friends.

When we first met, I could not tell Zach and Danny apart. But soon I found Zach standing out in ways I appreciated. He was a logical thinker ??and thought about a lot of things I cared about. History, family, beautiful stories, God’s covenant faithfulness. He was a very interesting man.

My mother tells me she was surprised by the way I interacted with Zach. I’m naturally a pretty quiet person, and Mama says that when I’m around young men, I become invisible. With Zach, she noticed, it was not so. She didn’t say anything then, but she kept her eyes open.

All good things must come to an end. When the day of our departure arrived, Daddy came in and told us he had bad news ??he could find nothing wrong with the motor home, and we would really have to leave. We said our farewells, and waved through the windows of that blessed RV as we departed ??not knowing when or how we would meet again. (…to be continued! ??)

I just love this part of the story! Look at God’s providential hand! He arranges for the RV to break down so that these two families can meet! What a God we serve! Part 2 will be emailed next week!

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve Smith

Issacharian Daughter

Locations of visitors to this page

Issacharian Daughters – ID060

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID060 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id060-emotional-purity.pdf

Dear Girls,

Attached is the newsletter for this week as a pdf. The text from the newsletter follows this note.

Letters from readers #1
Hi Genevieve!!

Congratulations on your engagement! I know you are going to make a
wonderful wife. I am excited for you over here…my mom sends her well wishes
as well.

Thanks again for the encouragement in the Issacharian Daughters newsletters. I have enjoyed reading those and one I have really been able to use lately was the recommended reading list. I have been trying to compile one on my blog (http://www.oneofthebunch.wordpress.com) and I had forgotten several that I needed to put there. I have also enjoyed all the “What Makes A Leader” newsletters. I look forward to seeing them come into my inbox, because they are such a refreshing read.

Thanks and congratulations to you and Pete!Courtney L.

USA

Letters from readers #2 Dear Genevieve,Thank you so much for your newsletter and encouragement for young women. I have been richly blessed by them.

Your courtship story has especially been an encouragement to me as I have been struggling with trusting the Lord in this area. It is not that I did not trust that He could bring me a husband but I began todoubt that He could bring me a godly husband. But your story, and so many others I have read and seen, have brought me to believe He can. And that is worth waiting. I look forward to seeing God’s hand working in my own story as I prepare and wait on Him. Romans 8:28.

Thank you for sharing. May God richly bless you and your intended as you seek His perfect will together.

Your sister in Christ,Lydia in Michigan,USA

Letters from readers #3Thank you for publishing Issacharian Daughters.It is encouraging for me to know that there are others out there who recognised that they were made to be women and want to bring glory as a creation of God.To stand up against a godless culture certainly does require the courage and conviction of a martyr.I’m beginning to understand a bit more that those godly young women who have decided to obey God’s design regardless of culture, are really feminine heroines.

By the way – praise the Lord! My father, having a thoughtful and genuine protector’s heart asked to see the book I was reading, So Much More, so I introduced him to Geoffrey Botkin’s letter in Appendix A.I was told recently by someone in my family that they were ashamed of me for wanting to be a homemaker, but my father came to my aid, and gave me protection and comfort to my heart.Women sometimes have no idea what men are like, but my father does! I am so, so thankful for him agreeing
to God’s design.It would have been so difficult to please him if he did not agree.”

An Issacharian Daughter in New Zealand

Letters from readers #4Dear Genevieve,

Thank you so much for the latest issue of Issacharian Daughters, Issacharian Daughters #059 – Beautiful Words?? My Engagement Story, Part 2.I enjoyed reading it so much, especially about all the ways in which God sovereignly prepared you for courtship and marriage as you honoured your father and mother.It is such an encouragement to hear and a wonderful role model and testimony to the younger girls out there.I remember when you encouraged me to honour my father’s wish of going to University.I know it is not from ourselves but from God.So, to God be the glory.

And last, but certainly not least, congratulations on your engagement! May God bless your marriage and ministry and may you continue to be an example to advance God’s kingdom.

With love,Katherine from New Zealand

Regards,Genevieve Smith

Monday, 15 October 2007Dear Girls,

Emotional Purity

Heather Paulsen, author of the fabulous book, Emotional Purity, wrote this article:

Emotional purity?? what comes to your mind when you hear that phrase? We know we should not trust our emotions, but how do we keep them pure? It seems that this whole idea of emotional purity is a new concept, and for most of us, it takes some time to process.

I believe a contributing factor to the rise in the problem of the lack of understanding emotional purity has to do with the past few generations. In our American culture it seems as though old people hang out with old people and young people hang out with young people. Generations are not mixing together and sharing ideas, thoughts, wisdom and feelings. This saddens my heart because there is so much to learn from each other.

Society today is different than it was in the past. Think back 100 years ago, just 100 years ago and young men and women were not allowed to be free with their time together. It was generally supervised, and when they spent time together, it was for the prospect of a process to marriage. The couple was guided and chaperoned. This guidance prevented emotional intimacy and more people were married. So, more people were married when emotions were not doled out without some form of commitment. Interesting?

In Christopher Schlect’s Critique of Modern Youth Ministry he examines why, as a society, we have this idea of separation of generational influence. Schlect states that, “Grandville Stanley Hall taught that each generation is, or should be superior to the previous one, and therefore needs to break free from those which precede it.” G. Stanley Hall was a pupil of Horace Mann, the evolutionist thinker. With this idea we can see how years later it has played out in all spectrums of life. Most believe that they can gain more insight from their peers than from their old fashion parents or grandparents. Because most of us believe this idea that Hall presented we have looked towards our peers and not our parents, for spiritual growth and emotional guidance.

John Dewey, a pupil of Hall, is considered to be the father of the modern public school system. Before Dewey, one-room schoolhouses were the mode of education, meaning all ages of children were together. This idea about the younger generation being superior to previous generations led right into the modern public school system. With this as a foundation of the public school system, we can see how easily it has become a part of our own thoughts and culture. One has to admit that each one of us has been influenced by the public school system. Knowing this we can see how our Christian society has applied these beliefs. We see youth groups and single groups looking towards each other for spiritual growth and fellowship, when we need to look to our parents or older members of the body of Christ.

In a recent article Erik Johnson says it well:

Since we were told in the ’60s to not “trust anyone over 30”, generations have developed a vague distrust of one another. It is a subtle suspicion that has even infiltrated the church, where it is common for activities to be segregated according to age brackets.

This is unhealthy ??if we examine Biblical attitudes towards the generations, we discover that generational separation is squarely against the tenor of scripture.

Throughout the Bible we see examples of the mixing of generations. Paul addresses this issue in his letter to Titus. In Titus 2 we see both older men and older women are to teach and exhort younger men and younger women in different areas. Older men are to teach younger men to be sensible, be an example of good deeds, purity in doctrine, dignified and sound in speech. Younger women are to be taught to love their husbands, love their children, to be sensible, pure, workers at home, kind and being subject to their husbands so that the word of God will not be dishonored. These qualities are to be taught by the older men and women of the church. Do groups that have peer teachers follow this example?

When people separated themselves by gender, not age, there was less emotional intimacy that took place. Men came calling to a young woman’s house, not to be friends with her, but to look to her as a marriage partner. In times past and in other cultures, young people could see the importance of having guidance from their parents, grandparents or a wise Christian mentor in this decision. They were not prideful in thinking they could do it on their own. And it is obvious today’s methods are not successful.

When we have this “free for all” method, emotions will be hurt and feelings stepped on. Friendship with the opposite sex is a delicate matter and should not be taken lightly. You may be playing with the heart of another person’s husband or wife and not even be aware. So, the person you are having a relationship with could be another person’s husband or wife! Emotional purity is protected when there is older guidance in our life. We are more protected from falling into an emotional trap.

Since there has been such a major culture change in the past 100 years, the church has tried to fill itself with programs that actually encourage emotional intimacy to take place. But I think it is beginning to backfire. Co-ed Bible studies are springing up all over. At these studies men and women are challenged to share deep spiritual issues with one another. This can lead us down a path of staleness with the Lord by taking our focus off of Him and placing it on a group or a person in the group. Remember the devil can appear as an angel of light (2 Corinthians 11: 14), so it may look “right” to have these close emotional relationships, but really it may be a scheme of Satan to pull your focus off of God.

Why do I say this? As I see it, men and women who share deeply spiritual issues and gain an emotional and spiritual bond with a peer group can become almost married to the group. They cannot seem to go out on a Friday night alone without a section of the group or the whole group itself. They find all they need spiritually and emotionally within that group without a commitment to any one person. Yes, I do mean all they need. Once a friend said to my sister,??Why do I need to get married? I find all I need in this singles group. ?? There are not just emotional and spiritual needs being met but also physical. There is a promise of accountability in these groups, but I have rarely seen it occur.

The way I see it, when we separate into peer groups with men and women together, what we end up having is “emotional fornication.” Chew on that for a second ??repeat it out loud. “Emotional Fornication.” I remember the first time those words were put together in my thoughts. “What?” was my first response, “Yuck!” was my second. I didn’t really care to define my past male friendships with such a disgusting thought. Consider this carefully and I think you’ll agree that “emotional fornication” is an accurate definition for what goes on between single and married people when they share their hearts with someone who is not their spouse.

Imagine for a moment one of those huge lollipops, the kind that you buy at an amusement park candy store. Take off the wrapper and pass it around to ten people. Allow them to lick as much as they want. Then whatever is left over is saved for their husband or wife, the rightful owner of the lollipop. YUCK, who would want that! When we give pieces of ourselves emotionally and spiritually to ten different boy/girl friends what is left over for the rightful owner? Just the leftovers! The rightful owner is God, then a mate of His choice. Keeping yourself emotionally pure is a gift that should be given to the rightful owner, your spouse.

When that lollipop is passed around for anyone to taste, it is not being kept pure. When we spread our heart around and share deep emotional feelings with a boy/girl friend or even a handful of boy/girl friends, we are cheating our future husband or wife from parts of our emotional selves. In a word: Fornication. You can see that when emotional intimacy is experienced in the wrong context, purity and holiness are thrown out the window. Being pure is the goal of the believer: “Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God” Matthew 5:8. Also, in Mark 7:20-22 Jesus is telling us what defiles us: ” ??That which proceeds out of the man, that is what defiles the man. For from within, out of the heart of men, proceeds the evil thoughts, fornications, thefts, murders, adulteries, deeds of coveting and wickedness, as well as deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride and foolishness. All these evil things proceed from within and defile the man.” So what this boils down to is purity and holiness from within that Jesus is asking from us, and we have to examine what in our lives helps or hinders us from finding that purity.

You might be trying to reason this all out by asking, “Sharing myself or my thoughts isn’t bad, is it?” Or, “It’s not hurting anyone, so what’s the problem?” The problem, when intimate ideas or dreams are shared with wrong motives or unclear relationship boundaries, and when people in those unclear relationships break-up or start dating someone else, the effects are felt by the heart. The more times this scenario takes place in a person’s life, eventually walls are raised, and the heart becomes protected with a massive, hardened wall. Imagine handing this shielded heart over to a bride or groom. Let’s hope this imaginary couple registered for a pickaxe and received it as a wedding gift. Because that’s the tool needed to break down those walls. Definitely, this is one tool that shouldn’t get lost in a corner of the basement or garage. Through the years this tool will become dull from the slow process of chipping through all the walls that have hardened to protect tender emotions. Of course, God in His power can make this process much less painful and shorter when either or both partners look to God and trust Him to heal past hurts.

Now that I have learned to look to my parents, or in your case it may be an older Christian mentor, I find such freedom to pursuing God with all that I am. My parents have gone through the “dating” scene and have experienced the negative consequences and to have that hindsight is incredible. It is that 20/20 perspective from my folks that gives me such a safeguard in repeating generational mistakes. Solomon repeats himself a number of times in the book of Proverbs, “Hear, my son, your father’s instruction and do not forsake your mother’s teaching” (1:8). “My son, give attention to my words, incline your ear to my sayings” (4:20). “My son, keep my words and treasure my commandments within you” (7:1). “Now therefore, my sons, listen to me and pay attention to the words of my mouth” (7:25). Do you think that the wisest man in all of history should be listened to? He knew the importance of having godly parental guidance. Freedom comes with this protection, and my sensitive heart loves having the safety net of my parents. I know that in the long run, I will be thankful that I have not spent the last few years

giving emotions to men that they do not rightfully deserve to have!

When you have intimacy without commitment you are playing with the heart of a fellow brother or sister in Christ and will violate emotional purity. With so many singles receiving intimacy: spiritually, emotionally and physically with members of the opposite sex, marriage is not special. When someone has this closeness with many boy/girlfriends, in the end it’s their future husband or wife who will not receive their whole heart, because they have given away so many pieces along the way. They become emotionally impure. Would you feel like a special guest if someone invited you over for dinner and brought out impure, half eaten or regurgitated food? Let’s see, your choices are Tuesday’s meatloaf, Friday’s chicken soup and three-day-old Chinese!

Emotional purity is a complex issue that each one of us has been affected by. I have had the chance to talk to many people about this concept of emotional purity before marriage. It is amazing how I get the same response from older people, married people, single people, Christians, non-Christians, young people and even my grandma; everyone knows someone or has been in a relationship that has left them emotionally hurt. It seems that many were grateful that their feelings are being put into words, as if they were saying, “Thank you for helping me put together a vocabulary to why this or that friendship did not seem so right.” Emotional purity before marriage allows us the greatest opportunity to become emotionally intimate with our mate during marriage.

Strive towards emotional purity, and one day you will reap the rewards. God blesses those who desire purity and holiness. Those qualities are beautiful and should be desired by a believer.

You can read more from Heather Paulsen by visiting her website: www.emotionalpurity.blogspot.com. And if you would like to buy her book, send me an email. For a limited time I have it on special for NZD$18.00 or AUD$19.00 including postage (this is down from NZD$26 or AUD$27.00). If you are in the USA you can get it from www.visionforum.com.

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve SmithIssacharian Daughter

Notes: I have sent this email to girls who have embraced a vision of victorious daughterhood as well as those who may be thinking about doing so (and even to some girls who may just like some encouragement regarding different areas of home life). Some of the girls are in the USA. Most are in New Zealand. You are welcome to forward this email on to others so long as you do so in its entirety. If you do not want to receive these emails please just send a return email to me stating that fact. If you know of other girls who would be encouraged by receiving these emails, feel free to forward the email to them or send me their email address. Locations of visitors to this page

Issacharian Daughters – ID059

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID059 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id059-beautiful-words-my-engagement-story-pt-2.pdf

Dear Girls,

The newsletter is attached as a pdf and the text from the newsletter follows this note. If you want to see the photos you will need to open the pdf.

Letters from readers
??Dear Miss Genevieve,

??I would like to receive the Issacharian Daughters newsletter. I had the privilege of meeting the Mallon Family at Vision Forum’s Quadracentennial Celebration of the Providential History of Jamestown, and we have been corresponding regularly since then. Their friendship has been a great blessing to me. Erin Mallon recommended that I subscribe to your newsletter. I was delighted by reading the previous letters you sent out on the webpage. I am convinced that my hearing about your newsletter was providential, for it was just yesterday that I was tempted to despair as I was looking for a good magazine or letter to subscribe to and could find none. I had been receiving a “Christian” teen girls magazine, and I am continuously disappointed with it. It compromises too much in order to appeal to today’s teenagers. My mother and I were looking through these magazines yesterday, and we shared our thoughts on them; they are definitely not suitable for a true young lady.

??Thank you so much for your ministry. Your vision is inspiring. May the LORD continue to bless you and your family as you continue to serve Him.

??I look forward to receiving your newsletter. Since there are not many like–minded people in my area, I treasure the encouragement and advice of others. ??Your Sister in Christ, ??Tiffany Carpenter
??P.S. I am 15 years old, have one younger brother, and I live in Conyers, GA, USA. My father is involved in the ministry of defending Creation Science. ??

??Hi Genevieve,

??Just wanted to let you know I enjoyed your courtship/engagement testimony so much! (as did my mom) I loved the pictures too! I shared your story with some of my kin and my friends.

??I am 21 (22 in December) and am sometimes asked by my kin, “So when will you meet the man of your dreams?” or “Found Mr. Right yet?” or “So when are you getting married?” etc. My answeris always the same,??The Lord will find my husband when He sees fit. ??Your testimony was a tool for me to share with my kin that this is how the Lord works. It was also a timely message for me because over the past 3-4 weeks I have had such peace about marriage and all. Ever since I was 16 I have struggled with “when will I get married?” type plaguing questions. I would lay my desires in the Lord’s hands only to snatch them back a while later and question again. However in the past three weeks, questions have come to mind and I can contently say it’s in the Lord’s hands. The Lord has given me peace on the whole topic and I think He sent you and your Pete’s testimony to inspire me and confirm my peace in Him.

??Thanks for sharing what the Lord has done in you all’s lives! Below I put a poem I wrote back in July. ;0)

??In Christ, Jessica??Stay at home daughter and goat momma to Milcah Jael (10 months) and Chava (9months) ??

~Maiden in Waiting?~

–Written by: Jessica

Alas, up in a castle,

covered in ivy and moss so green.

Sat a maiden sighing,

her eyes forlorn with sad sheen.

She walked over to the window

And with heavy sigh did pray,

“Dear Lord, where is my knight?

Wilt thou not send him today?

I am so tired of waiting.

The misery just grows stronger.

This is above and beyond my strength.

I can wait no longer.”

With that she left the tower,

she left the village–and her native land,

She took an airplane to the Bahamas

In search of her man.

While she was away searching,

Arrived her knight with armor that shone.

He called her name…and waited…

Then called her on her cell phone.

Her celly rang and rang,

A full voicemail was all he got.

So away he rode…disappointed,

That his “maiden in waiting”—was not.

~~~~

Notice
??Dear Girls for Christ attendeesand families,

??I have just begun to construct a website for GFC conferences but it is not completed yet!! I may need someone with website design anddesktop publishing skillsto help as I’m just not very skilled in that area. If youthink you couldhelp in this area please let me know, and if not pray it will go smoothly as I continue to work on it. Thank you.

??You can viewit in its unfinished state, if you paste http://girls4christ.googlepages.com/ in your address panel and click on the link GFC Registration Forms Jan 2008 which should give you the pdf file for the next conference which is to be held in January in the North Island of New Zealand.Hope this is helpful.

??Well, God Bless you all, and Lord willing we’ll see you all again next year!

??Love in Christ, ??Amy Lauder (GFC Co-Ordinator)

??PS: The registration form for the Woodend one (in the South Island of New Zealand), will be out closer to the time – Easter weekend in March 2008. Thank you. ??

Regards,

Genevieve Smith

Monday, 8 October 2007Dear Girls,

Beautiful Words ??My Engagement Story, Part 2

I always believed that if I was to be married, the Lord was preparing me for a man and preparing that man for me. I knew that He would bring us together in His good timing, and I didn’t need to worry about it. So I didn’t worry about it. And the Lord has proven to be so faithful!

I’m very thankful for wise parents like mine and a father like mine who would take the time to get to know Pete to protect me from becoming emotionally attached pre-maturely or unnecessarily if Pete and I proved not to have similar convictions. And I’m thankful for the wisdom and understanding of Pete and his submission to authority, that he would be willing to work with Dad in the beginning.

I want to point out some things in my story (from ID058 ??Beautiful Words ??My Engagement Story, Part 1), if I may:

Pete and I didn’t know one another until Jonathan recommended us to one another. Neither of us could have organised this ourselves. God sovereignly organised it and used people like Jonathan to bring us together. I think it is interesting that Jonathan showed Pete my Wanted poster back in 2004, but it wasn’t God’s timing for Pete to contact my dad until 2006 when Jonathan, upon spending more time with me, recommended me again to his friend.

I also think it is quite significant that it was through showing hospitality to Jonathan, through trying to make Dad successful in showing hospitality to Jonathan, that helped Jonathan get to know me a bit and recommend me to his friend, Pete.

As Pete’s parents and my parents got to know one another, I think everyone was in awe of God’s sovereignty in our lives and how He had brought our two families together. As Pete and I get to know one another, it is fascinating to see how God has prepared us for this courtship.

For example, God has prepared me for this courtship with Pete and a potential marriage with him in so many ways, but I’ll just mention a few:

Several years ago my mum asked me to read a book on the dominion mandate. The title didn’t grab me. It was called, Bound for Glory. It sounded to me like it was about dying and going to heaven, so I wasn’t very interested. But Mum had asked me, so I thought I should. Well, the book was amazing. It molded my thinking in so many ways and helped me to understand something I had never even thought about before: the dominion mandate. Reading that book and understanding the dominion mandate is one of the key things God sovereignly ordained to prepare me to be a suitable wife for Pete. Pete understands the dominion mandate and lives his life trying to fulfil it. Isn’t it great how God sovereignly moved through my mum to prepare me in that way? Just think if I had not been obedient?? I would have lost out on so much. Pete has really desired to marry someone who would understand his need to fulfil the dominion mandate, so God was fulfilling Pete’s desire by preparing me in this way.

2. Dad heard about a history conference in the USA and really wanted someone to attend. He couldn’t go, so he sent me. While I was over there, he extended my tickets so that I could also attend an Entrepreneurial Bootcamp. Now Pete is an entrepreneur, and attending this conference has helped me to understand him and his business and understand the need to be willing to face risk. This has prepared me a great deal for this courtship and prepared me to be a better wife to Pete. Isn’t this interesting that God sovereignly ordained that in doing something for Dad, I would be prepared to meet a man like Pete, and in fact that I would begin to desire to marry a man like Pete who had his own business that a wife and family could help him with? In this way, God was conforming my desires to His and preparing Pete as a fulfilment of those desires.

3. I have always tried to obey God and honour my parents in the area of modesty, but at one stage in seeking to be modest and to be covered up, I fell into looking very masculine. One day it really struck me that while I was probably pleasing God with my modesty, I probably wasn’t pleasing Him by looking masculine. I realised that I needed to dress femininely to please Him. So I set out to build a feminine and beautiful wardrobe that was also modest. Pete has commented so often on the way I dress. He calls it elegant. God teaching me this was again preparing me for this courtship with Pete and preparing me to be a fulfilment of a desire in Pete’s life of a wife who was modest and feminine and elegant.

4. One of the best ways God has prepared me is in the area of communication. Dad has taught me to say or ask what I mean and not use manipulative tactics. For example, instead of saying,??What are you doing on Friday? ?? one should be direct by asking,??Would you like to come around for dinner on Friday? ?? He has taught me not to hint at things, but to talk to the point. I could have laughed off Dad’s lessons or not listened, but I didn’t. I tried to please Dad by communicating in the way he wanted. And now I’ve found that communicating like this is a real blessing to Pete. So again, God was working through my parents to prepare me for marriage. I didn’t need to know that that was what God was doing, I just needed to obey my parents like God required of me.

5. Back in 2001 I heard a girl say that when she is struggling with feelings towards a young man, she would tell her dad about it and ask for his help in guarding her heart. As soon as I heard her say that, I thought,??That is the type of relationship I want with my dad. ?? Proverbs 4:23 says,??Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of life. ?? So when a time came when I was struggling with feelings towards a man, I thought to myself,??Well, here is my opportunity! ?? So I talked to Dad. I tried to concentrate on what to say rather than thinking about actually doing it because I didn’t want to chicken out! But it was great! Dad was great.??Well, Genevieve, ?? he said,??This shows that you’re wired up normally and everything’s working just fine. ?? I grinned.??But you know you should probably avoid ever seeing this man again. ????I know. ?? There was a whoosh of something straight into my heart at that point. It was love and gratitude towards Dad and the Lord. It was peace and joy and contentment. And I found my sense and reason returning and a freedom from the feelings I had been experiencing. When God created the world, He created it to operate in a certain way. Resting and trusting in the authority and protection of parents is His idea. It is the proper order of things, and if we operate within this order, we are blessed as a result. Anyway, that opened the door to being able to speak to Dad about things on my heart. And I built up this sort of relationship with him. This was such a blessing when Pete came on the scene because when I was confused or uncertain or had questions, I could go so easily and talk to Dad about these things. We had learned to talk on this level. And it meant that Dad could ask me how I was going emotionally and monitor where Pete’s and my hearts were and how we were emotionally by simply asking. Because he could monitor this, it meant he felt free to let Pete and I spend a lot of time together asking one another questions and getting to know one another to establish to our satisfaction that, if we were to marry, it would be an equal yoking. For me, being able to talk to Dad was a huge blessing at such a crucial time of deciding whether to enter into a courtship. And another huge blessing which has come out of learning to open my heart to Dad is that it now comes naturally to be open with Pete. Within marriage I trust that will lead to wonderful intimacy with one another.

So God sovereignly organised this courtship. And it has been through seeking to live in obedience to Him and to my parents and doing my job as a daughter?? helping my parents with their hospitality which is a family ministry?? that the connection was first made with Pete through his friend Jonathan and that I have been prepared for this engagement. Living in obedience to God and my parents is not always easy. Doing my duty as a daughter is not always a bed of roses. Sometimes there are thorns! There is a constant struggle against the flesh and my own sinful will. But with the help of the Holy Spirit and because of the Lord’s grace and mercy, victories have been won and progress has been made. And now on the brink of marriage I am excited to say that the struggle, the difficulties are so worth it! (See ID049?? It Is So Worth It at https://hef.org.nz/

Marriage in one sense is a starting point and in another sense a finish line. I’m now catching a glimpse of the finish line of maidenhood and seeing in a new way, with a sharper focus, the true abiding value of these years of preparation for marriage?? learning home-making skills, working on family relationships and helping my father. The closer I get to marriage the more humbled and blessed I feel that the Lord brought me onto this track of preparing for marriage in these years of maidenhood. As you too prepare for marriage, do not grow weary in doing good. Persevere!

One thing I do, forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Philippians 3v13-14.

Pete and I are now making preparations towards a wedding and working towards setting a date. We would value your prayers for our engagement, that God will bring all things about in His perfect timing; and for our marriage, that through it we might glorify Him.

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve Smith

Issacharian Daughter

Locations of visitors to this page

Issacharian Daughters – ID058

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID058 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id058-beautiful-words-my-engagement-story-pt-1.pdf

Dear Girls,

The newsletter is attached as a pdf and the text from the newsletter follows this note. If you want to see the photos you will need to open the pdf.

Letters from readers
“This year for school I am studying American gov. (from a Christian point of view of course, I’m homeschooled =) and it’s amazing to find that they mention in Scriptures that all authority comes from God. (Rom 13:1-7) (Well, of course I knew that, but what shocked me is even the authority of bad leaders comes from Him; it is they, as men with free wills, who use the power for themselves and choose evil.) Anyways, we must obey everything our leaders tell us, except in the areas of sin; then higher divine law comes into act. I’ve also been reading about Communism and how it seeks to destroy the family by disunity! I now understand that it is very, very important for families to stick together, because it is a domestic church, a little nation, with it’s own sort of government. If every family did its job, parents to love, teach and nurture children for God, and for children to submit to their parents’ loving authority, how much a better world this would be!

*sighs* There are sooo many things to learn. One never stops. I’m glad God only reveals a little everyday, or my head would explode. Ha ha…

Thanks again!

Your friend,Lisa”

??I highly recommend Anna Sofia and Elizabeth Botkin’s excellent book So Much More: The Remarkable Influence of Visionary Daughters on the Kingdom of God. This excerpt from chapter 11 of their book expresses the heart of ministry, as defined by God’s Word:

??Why do God’s enemies want to split up families? Because as strong, cohesive units, families pose a huge threat to God’s enemies. Take a family where each member is pursuing his own schedule, his own life, his own friends, his own ministry. Though today it wouldn’t be seen as dysfunctional, it is not functioning the way the family was created to function. A real family is a “self-sufficient, fully functioning, economically viable agent for the dominion of God.” A family is more than the sum of its parts. A “fully functioning” family thinks like a team. Each member has different abilities, but all share a vision and work toward the same goal. That is why the famous Von Trapp family’s motto was Cor Unum: One heart. Proverbs 29:18 says,??Where there is so vision, the people perish,” and where there is no united family vision, the family perishes. The weak and dysfunctional families are the families without a united goal and purpose. Though the members may be diligent in pursuing their own separate ministries, there will always be a limit to how much fruit these can bear, because families are most productive when the members are united in vision and work together to execute a common mission. We have had many opportunities to observe and compare all kinds of families from all over the world living in many different circumstances. The ones that have a dynamic, united life purpose, who see life as a battleground instead of a playground, where the members are each others’ best friends, all involved, and all building each other up and discipling one another, are the most incredibly fun, exciting, adventurous, and productive units. Most of all, they bear the most fruit and have the most influence, if only because families like this never go unnoticed.’

 

From Erin Mallon ??

Regards,Genevieve Smith

Monday, 1 October 2007Dear Girls,

Beautiful Words?? My Engagement Story, Part 1

I have always believed that if it was part of God’s sovereign plan for me to marry, that He was preparing me for a young man and preparing a young man for me. I didn’t need to worry about who he was, for the Scriptures indicated that the Lord would?? as He does all things else?? bring a marriage about in His perfect timing.

I am 27, and knowing about His sovereignty has been a wonderful and beautiful thing in my life. It has given me the freedom to concentrate on what God wants me to do now without worrying about the future; the freedom to do the job God has for me of assisting my parents and strengthening my family; and the freedom to engage in the ministries God has given of discipling my younger siblings, encouraging my parents, building into the lives of younger girls in the church and throughout the world through the Issacharian Daughters newsletter.

Knowing that God is sovereign has enabled me to be content, to trust God in two ways: 1) to know the desires of my heart and 2) to give me what was best for me, either singleness or marriage; and if marriage, then to the right sort of man.

All these years God has been saying to me,??I am sovereign. Believe in me. Trust in Me. Be content. Have faith. Have hope. Pursue Purity. Obey Me. ?? And guess what I recently discovered? While I have been trying to do all these things with the help of the Holy Spirit, He has been preparing someone for me who fulfils the desires of my heart and then some, who is a gift far beyond anything I could have dreamed of, hoped for or believed was possible! I can’t help but get this picture of God smilingly encouraging me along and knowing what a treat He had in store for me just around the corner.??Be patient! ??

A few months ago my dad gave a young man permission to court me. Let me tell you how God organised it:

Some time ago some friends of ours moved to Geelong, Australia, to study at a seminary. A young man called Jonathan was also at the seminary. He was planning a trip to New Zealand, and our friends said, “You have to visit the Smiths.” So he did. This was back in 2004. At the time he visited, we had some other folks over as well, so the responsibility to entertain him fell in my direction. This arrangement is not automatically approved of in our home, but the??emotional safety ?? features included him being of a different theological persuasion and also quite a bit shorter than me. So we felt free to talk through a number of subjects together. At one point we talked about courtship, and I shared with him a list of things I was looking for in a future husband. It was in a funny format?? a Wanted poster?? that I had drawn up for some friends to say thanks for giving me a hope chest. In spite of the humorous format, Jonathan commented that he was really encouraged to find that there are girls out there who are looking for high standards in a future husband and are themselves working towards being capable helpmeets for such men. Some of the things I had listed on the poster were that he would be a man of God, a staunch advocate of home education, someone who could teach me rather than visa versa, someone who had developed good relationships with members of his own family and had a vision for using his family as a tool for ministry and fulfilling the dominion mandate.

Jonathan asked if he could take a copy of the poster away with him as it would encourage him to aim higher himself. I said sure. When back in Australia, he rang and asked if he could share the poster with some friends of his, “Not that anything would come out of it, but so that they could be encouraged, as I am, that there are girls with high standards around,” he said. Again I said sure and didn’t think anything more of it.

Then in 2006 Jonathan rang me again. He was planning a trip to the USA and remembered that I’d recommended some ministries to look up over there. Did I have any updated information in this regard? As it happened, Dad was sending me over there to attend the History of the World Mega-Conference, and I told Jonathan that this was a not-to-be-missed event. So that became part of his itinerary. We had a few conversations over the week and when we were both back in our respective countries, he rang me again and asked if there was??anyone on the horizon ?? for me. Not sure what was coming next, I replied that there was not. Well, Jonathan said he had a friend, Pete de Deugd, who believed the same as I did, had the same convictions, a similar personality, was going in the same direction…Jonathan thought there was a high likelihood of there being a good match.

He said he’d already talked to Pete about me a couple of times. How would it work if Pete were to contact my dad? I said it would be easy for Dad to determine quickly whether it was a goer or not and that Pete would be welcome to visit here and befriend the whole family without having to commit to marriage from the first letter! Jonathan relayed all this to Pete. Shortly afterwards Dad and Mum and I got a letter of reference from Jonathan saying that he had told Pete all about me and wanted to tell us all about Pete. It was a really good letter. A couple of weeks later Dad got a letter of introduction from Pete.

Dad and Pete wrote back and forth for seven months. It would have been easy if Pete didn’t believe the same as us. The communication wouldn’t have lasted long at all. But the more they communicated back and forth, the clearer it was that there was a huge amount of common ground, unity of thought and vision. In fact there was little if any disagreement. So Dad invited Pete to come and visit us, which he did in June. Everyone knew why Pete was visiting, and as Dad had approved Pete through their communication, I was free to allow Pete to get to know me and to seek to get to know him. So we spent a great deal of time asking one another questions.

A year earlier an American friend had given me forty pages of questions that??courtin’ couples ?? would like to ask one another. The questions covered everything from convictions to preferences to ideas and experiences and likes and dislikes. With these questions in front of us, we just talked about everything under the sun. Every morning I would also spend time talking with Dad and discussing with him what we were learning about Pete. And every evening Pete and Dad would get together for a mutual question and answer session, Pete being especially concerned that he was honouring Dad’s position, role and responsibilities as my father and protector and that he was not engaging emotions prematurely. Pete really made sure Dad was happy with all of this. We were all very impressed by the end of his 10-day stay.

Through his letters we’d gotten to know that he was a man of humility, integrity, diligence and that he was a hard worker and shared the same convictions and direction as us. When he visited, all of this was confirmed?? as well as that he was very thoughtful, kind, patient, deeply serious about life yet with a great sense of humour and a thorough gentleman. And besides that, he and I felt comfortable around one another and could converse easily. We had a great camaraderie from the start.

Pete and I were both looking for specific things in a future spouse. We have a lot of convictions and wanted to be sure that if we married, it would be an equal yoking. So some of the questions we asked one another were: Are we desirous of looking after our parents as they grow older and unable to care for themselves? Do we desire debt-free living? What is our reaction to obtaining a loan or taking government handouts? What do we believe about children? Are they a blessing? How would we tackle the responsibility of children? How would we teach them, train them, discipline them, disciple them? As Pete and I discussed these sorts of things, it was apparent that we had the same desires in all these areas. This is what I had been waiting for!

When he got home, Pete told his parents about the trip and asked for their blessing to court me. Now when Jonathan had first told Pete about me, Mr de Deugd had gone online and had Googled me. He read my articles and interviews online and found out about us Smiths through our website. He was so keen back then that he’d told Pete he’d buy Pete and Mrs de Deugd tickets to fly over and visit us straight away! So when Pete told his parents of the success of his trip and asked for their blessing on courting me, they had no hesitation in giving it.

As a courtship was evidently the next step, Dad and Mum and I thought it would be a good idea for us to travel to Australia to see Pete in his natural environment, to meet his parents and see how he related to them before officially entering into a courtship. So we quickly planned a trip to visit there in July.

The trip was a real blessing and an important part of our growing friendship. My parents and his parents got on like a house on fire! I really liked his parents and felt within a short period of time that if it was possible to order grandparents for one’s children, I would want to order Mr and Mrs de Deugd.

It was wonderful to observe Pete treating his father with honour and his mother like a queen. He was so gentle and tender with her.

I met a lot of Pete’s friends, neighbours, relatives, church friends and some of his customers. They all made a point of telling me what a treasure he was, like pure gold, how skilled he was, what potential and talent he had and how good he was to work for and with. He has lived in the same place all his life and attended the same church for 20 years, so it was really wonderful hearing these things. I haven’t had the advantage of observing Pete over a long period of time, but these people, through their common report, made it obvious that he had a sterling reputation.

Two married women who are friends with Pete (one who has known him for 13 years and the other for 10 years) both opened their hearts to me and offered friendship…we are now writing. This was lovely! When Pete and I marry, and I move to Australia, it is wonderful to know that I already have friends there. You see, God is as sovereign over friendships as He is over marriages. He didn’t need to organise kindred spirits for me, but He has! And I thank Him for it!

My time in Australia was spent doing more talking. The discussions between Pete and I and his parents and my parents were really great. It was wonderful getting to know Pete and his parents and also spending time helping Pete with his woodworking business. The de Deugds took us out sightseeing as well which was lovely. Towards the end of the trip when our courtship became official, Pete said to his mum, “Mr Smith has given me permission to pursue his daughter.” Mrs de Deugd flew to me and gave me a big bear hug and said to Pete, “Well, you better pursue her hard!”

A couple of days later we Smiths returned to New Zealand. Pete and I continued to email one another and also began talking on the phone each day. We did this for nearly two months until September when Pete came to New Zealand again for four days. Talking on the phone was wonderful. We shared normal friendly things such as what we were doing each day and also talked about theological and philosophical subjects such as the approaches we would take to teaching our own children at home. We’d often read and discuss articles and discuss the husband and wife roles. Pete initiated listening to some sermons on marriage by Joel Beeke and Joe Morecraft III on sermonaudio.com and discussing these, which was wonderful.

Pete is self employed and owns his own mill and woodworking establishment. He has been building up this woodworking business of his and preparing to support a family since he was about 14. His vision with his business is that it be something his wife and children can help him in. That thrills me, because I had hoped to marry someone who I could really help in such a tangible way. When families work on something together, it can really strengthen the family and pull them closer together.

Pete said to me recently that the fact I have been working to help Dad without being paid really gave him confidence; in fact it inspired and encouraged him to think that I really would be loyal to him in the same way, and that I would be willing to work and help him without always wanting to go off and do my own thing or pursue my own life. The idea that I’d be desirous of being his helper and working to make him and our family successful and strengthen us rather than working to make myself successful and fulfill myself was very precious to him. And it was moreso to him because it wasn’t just an idea to me, but something I was actually doing now in my own family. And in seeking to die to myself and serve in my family, I have found that I have been very, very fulfilled.

The week after we Smiths arrived back in New Zealand, Dad and Pete talked on the phone a few times. I was blissfully unaware that this was going on, which is good as they were discussing such things as what my favourite place was in Palmerston North and where would be a good place to propose!

So by the time Pete came and visited in September, it turned out that he’d had a ring for about a month and a half or so and was eager to propose. The first day of his visit we went for a picnic at a favourite place of mine?? a little white church built in 1895 which had a church bell and was surrounded by beautiful gardens and a white picket fence. We explored the gardens and decided to have our picnic sitting on a bridge with our feet dangling over a stream.

After we’d eaten, Pete said he had a gift for me. He told me he had made me some flowers. Knowing of his incredible woodworking skills, I was imagining 3D flowers made from maple or something! He pulled out a gift-wrapped box. I unwrapped it to discover an exquisite wooden box which Pete had made with a myrtle burl veneer and flower marquetry on the top. He had used beautiful woods such as ebony and sycamore to make the inlaid flowers. The box was locked, and he inquired if I’d like to see inside the box. Naturally I said yes, and he handed me a beautiful old-fashioned key. It turned smoothly, and when I lifted the lid it was to see the most beautiful ring sparkling away sitting in the bottom of the box in a sea of blue satin. That is when Pete spoke those beautiful words I told you about in the Issacharian Daughters newsletter ID056?? Beautiful Words:??Will you marry me? ?? (See https://hef.org.nz/page/890437)

When we arrived home, I was expecting to show the ring to my family and tell them that we were engaged. Instead my family was showing us some engagement party invitations they had drawn up.??Could we quickly check them, and then they’d send them out? ?? Apparently, knowing that Pete planned to propose, they were hoping he’d do it on his first day with us so we could have an engagement party two days later on the Saturday night. They’d been planning this for quite some time and had told a number of people,??Keep this day free. There might be an engagement party! ?? I just had to laugh! What a wonderful family I have!

So there you have the history! I couldn’t have orchestrated this. It is a story of how I was found! It is a story of how the Lord brought two people together into a courtship and an engagement, and Lord willing, He will bring our engagement into a marriage in the future.

For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,

Genevieve SmithIssacharian Daughter

Notes: I have sent this email to girls who have embraced a vision of victorious daughterhood as well as those who may be thinking about doing so (and even to some girls who may just like some encouragement regarding different areas of home life). Some of the girls are in the USA, UK, Australia and other parts of the world. Most are in New Zealand. You are welcome to forward this email on to others so long as you do so in its entirety. If you do not want to receive these emails please just send a return email to me stating that fact. If you know of other girls who would be encouraged by receiving these emails, feel free to forward the email to them or send me their email address.

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