Issacharian Daughters -ID033

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID053 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id033.pdf

Dear Girls,

I have some great introductions for you all: ??Hi Issacharian Daughters,My name is Victoria and I am thirteen. I live not far from Taupo, New Zealand. I am the third oldest of eight children and we are all homeschooled. I have three brothers and four sisters. My favourite things I like to do are sewing, crosstitching and reading. We have heaps of books at home. I also like dressing up my younger sisters and hope in time to do some studies in make up, hair, and clothes. I’ve lived at a camp, which my dad runs as manager, called Lake Whakamaru (f-o-k-a-maru) Christian Camp, for almost four years now and it’s been a great experience. Every school holidays we run a holiday programmes called J-Force (Jesus Force) Camps for children aged 8-12. Reading your newsletters each week has really made me think of what I can teach the younger girls that come to camp. (To get more information about the camp visit www.lwccamp.com) You’ve been a real inspiration Genevieve.Many Thanks,Victoria Drinnan, Whakamaru, New Zealand ?? ??For all you computer literate girls, I thought I better introduce myself, and save you the trouble of having to squeeze info out of me… I am Elizabeth Benson, some of you may be familiar with the writings of my parents, Leyland and Christine. I am 20, and for the past four years have lived in the high country of North Canterbury, South Island, New Zealand. Prior to that, we lived in the city, in, ah, yes; Auckland. For those of you living in town, but longing for the country, I can assure you that the wait is worth it. Though little happened physically to mark those years as important, I grew spiritually in ways that perhaps I would not have otherwise. I learnt to value hardship, and I encourage all of you to strive for this. (By the way, I say ‘learnt’, but ‘learning’, or ‘beginning to have an insight into’ would be more applicable.) =) I am the youngest of five, and though four of us were raised as Christians, only myself and one brother have remained so. Nonetheless, it’s encouraging to see, that although they may not desire Christ as we do, the verse “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it,” is true. They still hold the same values we do. I want to encourage you sisters of prodigals, that you have a special role to play in leading them home. Most especially though, my number one lesson was love them as they are. Don’t worry about their obvious ‘flaws’, just love for who they are now. Not what they might be. Not what they were, but what they are. And if you struggle to see anything loveable in someone, remember to ask the Lover of all, to give you love you can share. He never fails. On a different note, I’m currently the only one home, am holding down three part time jobs to save so I can go to America for a friend’s wedding, and to fulfill the dream of meeting my pen-pals. I have a horse, love music, art, quilting, costume design, sewing, and almost anything Victorian. I feel most at peace when in the middle of a raging Nor’ Wester, on some distant mountain top, or down by a raging river. I love the wilderness, and God’s incredible power shown through it. I have no asperations for higher education at the moment, and plan to return home, (after my joint in the States), to rest, sew, serve, and laugh at the days to come. =) I encourage all of you to press on, because the cost is always worth it. I have been both degraded and upheld for my standards, and in every situation, God has provided a way for me to glorify Him. And that’s all that really matters. Bless you all. Elizabeth Sarah Benson ??A warm welcome to the girls joining us for the first time this week. We love receiving introductions from girls who receive this Issacharian Daughters newsletter. If any of you would like to send an introduction just email me your name, location and a bit about your family and yourself (your interests, passions, goals, what the Lord is teaching you, what books have really impacted you, etc).This weeks newsletter is attached as a pdf and follows below this note.Warm regards,Genevieve(pdf at top of page)

Monday, 9 April 2007

Dear Girls,The Leading Points of Christianity

The following short account of our duty to God and our neighbour was written three hundred and thirty years ago [i.e. 1559]. It shows in a form easily remembered the leading points of the Christian faith.To pray to God continuallyTo learn to know Him rightfullyTo honour God in Trinity The Trinity in unity The Father in His majesty The Son in His humanity The Holy Ghost’s benignity Three persons one, in Deity To serve Him always, guilelesslyTo ask Him all things, needfullyTo praise Him in all companyTo love Him always, heartilyTo dread Him always, ChristianlyTo ask Him mercy, penitentlyo trust Him always, faithfully

To obey Him always, willinglyTo abide Him always, patientlyTo thank Him always, thankfullyTo live here always, virtuouslyTo use thy neighbour honestlyTo look for death still, presentlyTo help the poor in miseryTo hope for heaven’s felicityTo have faith, hope and charityTo count this life but vanityBE POINTS OF CHRISTIANITY~Taken from The Girl’s Own Annual, 1889.Advice to Young ladiesArise early.

Dress thyself quickly.Go thy ways gaily.Do thy work wisely.Answer men demurely.Treat thy kin courteously.Rule thy tongue carefully.Con thy book soberly.Sing thy bit joyously.Dance thy round jocundly.Go thy supper warily And to thy bed merrily.

Kneel then devoutly.And sleep surely.

AnonymousFor the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,Genevieve SmithIssacharian DaughterLocations of visitors to this page

Issacharian Daughters – ID032

(Some newsletters do notwork in the previouspost.So they are now being individually posted along with all future newsletters.)

pdf of Issacharian Daughters – ID053 – click on link below for correct layout and photos

id032.pdf

Dear Girls,

Here is another introduction! ??My name is Coral Johanna and I’m nearly 16. I live with my family in Nelson, New Zealand. Up until 3 1/2 years ago anyone looking at our family would have said we were just an ordinary Christian family, my brother Nathan and I went to a Christian school. At school there was bullying which is one of the reasons we started homeschooling. Since starting we as a familyhave been challenged to rethink our ideas on parents responsibility to educate their children, dating vs courtship etc. At the moment I am starting up a home business, sewing myself clothes, helping Mum around the house and trying to get all my schoolwork done. Genevieve’s emails are so welcome in our house, both my Mum and Ilove them. The ones on the Steele’s courtship were especially good and they really showed how God can work. Thank you so much Genevieve for the time and effort that you put in.Yours in Christ,Coral Johanna Borger ??Welcome to all of you joining us for the first time. We love to receiving introductions from the girls who receive the Issacharian Daughters newsletter. Feel free to email me with an introduction. You could tell me your name, location, a little about your family, what your aspirations for the future are and what the Lord has been teaching you. And here is a note from an Issacharian Daughter here in New Zealand that she kindly said I could share with you all: ??Dearest Genevieve,

I would like to take this opportunity to thank you immensely for the great encouragement the Issacharian Daughters newsletters are to me. I anticipate their arrival each week. I am practically the only young lady in my circle of relationships who has no ambitions for a “career” beyond being a wife and mother, and in this stage of my life, a daughter of vision and virtue. I am constantly feeling the pressure that the world places on us daughters to become successful, accomplished, and rich in the world’s eyes. This mindset has crept into the church too. I just can’t get away from it! The words that I read in your newsletter are like a breath of fresh air to me. I am inspired by them. So, Genevieve, thank you for the time you take to compile them. Thank you for your careful preparation. Thank you to your parents, Craig and Barbara, for their input and godly oversight.

May God bless you richly in your service for Him.Your sister in Christ, Kedesh Simmons xox ??Until next week,

Genevieve Smith

(pdf link at top of page)

Monday, 2 April 2007Dear Girls,Girls of Grace and GloryTwo friends of mine, Krissy and Mandy Pucek, were invited by the mothers at their Church to give a series of talks to their daughters on beautiful and Biblical womanhood. The sisters entitled their talks Girls of Grace and Glory. There are many aspects of this invitation which I find absolutely remarkable. Let me share them with you. How many mothers do you know who would actively seek out Godly young women to be examples to their daughters? How many women would be so purposeful about raising their daughters to virtuous womanhood as to design life-impacting opportunities for older girls to share their testimonies with their daughters? And then, if you have a woman who is actively seeking Godly young women and who is purposeful about raising her daughters, how easy is it for her to find young women who are excellent witnesses to purity, femininity and Godly womanhood?Well, these mothers knew what they were doing when they invited the Pucek sisters to talk to their daughters! They recognised in these girls, young women who are sold out for the Lord, who are striving to glorify God in all they do and who are wonderful examples of beautiful, joyful and modest daughterhood.I have known Krissy and Mandy and their sister Jennifer Pucek for six years. Every time we get together we have rip-roaring conversations about what the Lord is doing in our lives, how He is answering prayer and we bear testimony to one another of how He delights in fulfilling the desires of our hearts. They encourage me in the way they serve their family and help their mother home educate their younger siblings. I wish all girls had access to girls like the Pucek sisters?? friends who are edifying and uplifting. It wasn’t an accident that Krissy, Mandy and Jennifer are the way they are. They are the products of faithful parents who home educated them since day one. They are standing on that legacy and walking further down the paths their parents began for them.Here is one other remarkable aspect of this invitation: After the Puceks were asked to speak to the group of girls they prayed and they sought out the advice of others. The Bible says that in a multitude of counsellors there is safety (Proverbs 11v14; 24v6). The Puceks took that to heart as they sought out young ladies who had done this sort of thing before and asked advice of many women as to how they could structure their talks. The most remarkable thing of all was their attitude: completely humble.??We feel ill-equipped to talk to these young women on these subjects, ?? was their comment.Their situation reminds me of 2 Timothy 2v20-21: But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay, some for honor and some for dishonor. Therefore if anyone cleanses himself from the latter, he will be a vessel for honor, sanctified and useful for the Master, prepared for every good work. The Puceks have worked at cleansing themselves. They have sought after purity. The Lord is rewarding them by giving them good works to do.Krissy shared with me some of the things she said in her talk. I want to share parts with you. Krissy gave the girls a question to ask themselves: ??Are the ways that I am thinking, acting and dressing, the things that I am participating in and the plans I am making for the future bringing glory to God and preparing me to be the woman God wants me to be? ?? And she shared with them this quote from George MacDonald: ??I want to help you grow as beautiful as God meant you to be when He thought of you first. ?? Our calling as woman is a beautifully high calling. If we can but catch a vision for it! Krissy helped the girls to do that. She continued: ??It starts with the heart, because sooner or later what is on the inside will come out in many different ways for all to see. ?? She gave some illustrations of girls who looked good on the outside but who ran away or rebelled. Their hearts weren’t right. ??They were not careful to pull the weeds and make sure their hearts were growing in the right direction. ?? Krissy asked the girls a number of questions for them to think about in order to evaluate where their hearts are: ??When you are twenty years old will you be proud of who you are today? Or ashamed or embarrassed? ?? ??How about when you meet that special guy that God has picked for you. You get to know each other. You’re getting serious. You sit down to talk. What are you going to have to tell him about your past? Are you going to want to skip some parts, like how much time you spent thinking about this really cute guy, or how you spent every cent you had on trendy clothes that you can’t even stand looking at in pictures now anyway? Or even worse, maybe how much time you spent with a guy, doing things and saying things that you don’t want to repeat now. ?? ??How about when you have children, and they ask you about when you were their age? What kind of things did you do? Do you want them to be able to emulate you, or is everything you say going to have to be.??Don’t make the same mistakes I did.’ ?? Krissy reminded the girls of something from page 2 of So Much More: ??We need to be as different as we need to be in order to be obedient to God’s design. ?? Then she quoted again from So Much More, from page 97: ??Amidst a generation of giddy, silly, loud, boisterous undignified, clumsy teenaged girls, picture a girl who radiates dignity, regal serenity, respectfulness, grace, a gentle and quiet spirit, poise, discretion, self-command, sincerity, peace, compassion, cheerfulness, and humility. ?? She finished by challenging the girls: ??When people see you, what do they see? Do they see the power of a God Who was able to make a sinful, dirty creature become a person who lives and breathes the fruits of the Spirit? Or do they see someone who is just like everyone else, only maybe not quite as bad? ?? She read again from page 97 of So Much More where it said: ??The heroines of the Bible were praised for having such feminine qualities as graciousness, discretion, strength, dignity, kindness, purity, faith, generosity, diligence, courage, wisdom, and servant’s hearts. ?? She asked the girls to do some homework, which readers of this Issacharian Daughters newsletter might like to do too: ??Read the book of Esther. Describe Esther. What was she like? Give specific instances when she demonstrated the attributes listed above. When was she courageous? When was she wise? When did she show a servant’s heart? ?? Let me end by saying this: The Pucek sisters aren’t perfect. They are sinners like you and like me. But they have been sanctified by the Lord Jesus Christ and set apart for His service like you and like me as well! My prayer is this, from Hebrews chapter 12: ??Therefore we also, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. ?? May the Lord be with us and strengthen us and keep us from the snares of the enemy so that we can run the race right to the finish and so that here and now we can be witnesses of beautiful, Biblical womanhood and be examples to those around us.For the Greater Glory of God through our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,Genevieve SmithIssacharian DaughterP.S. Those interested in purchasing the book So Much More can email me for details. Locations of visitors to this page

ID021 – Princess with a purpose — Part 1

Dear Girls,

We have some feedback about hairstyles!

Thanks to Heather Sheen for recommending the Ladies Against Feminism website. There are two articles on that site you might want to check out. One is “Help! What Do I Do With My Hair?” and the other is “Hairstyles for Older Women.” The links for these articles are below. If you have any trouble with the links then just go to www.ladiesagainstfeminism.com and use the search feature.

http://www.ladiesagainstfeminism.com/artman/publish/Femininity_amp_Modesty_16/Help_What_do_I_do_with_my_hair_12621001262.shtml

http://www.ladiesagainstfeminism.com/artman/publish/Femininity_amp_Modesty_16/Hairstyles_for_Older_Women_11301001130.shtml

Here are a couple of photos of a hairstyle a hairdresser-in-training did on my hair:

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The hairdresser did a side part with my fringe and tucked the ends behind my ears. Then she twisted sections of my hair into cornrows and used bobby pins to secure it. Then to give the hair at the back of my head a little height she tied the hair at the end of each cornrow into a loose knot and pinned that to my head. My hair just fell loose from there. I had just washed my hair that morning so it was very silky and slippery for the hairdresser to work with so she had to put some product in my hair (mousse or hairspray) in order to make my hair more manageable so that she could work with it easier. I quite liked this style and got a number of complements on it.

If anybody else has photos of hairstyle and instructions feel free to send them in!

Also, welcome to those just joining us. Have a look at the website at www.freewebs.com/issacharian. If you want to read any of the previous newsletters, they can be accessed at https://hef.org.nz/page/890437

The next newsletter is attached as a pdf file id021.pdf and the text from the newsletter follows this note below.

Warm regards,

Genevieve Smith

Monday, 15 January 2007

Dear Girls,

Princess with a purpose — Part 1

Mrs Lisa Hollinger and her daughter Seanna Hollinger organised a High Tea in San Antonio, Texas, USA while I was there in August 2006. They invited me to speak on how we young ladies are princesses with a purpose and to conduct a mini Titus 2 bootcamp. My two speeches will be serialized over the next few Issacharian Daughters Newsletters. At the High Tea the mothers and daughters who came were invited to dress like queens and princesses. Mrs Hollinger arranged for Seanna and I to give all the girls tiaras as they arrived. There are photos splashed through the next few newsletters of the lovely high tea.

Princess with a Purpose

I’m going to cover these things during our time together: the example of Princess Elizabeth Windsor, our purpose as daughters, an example of how Dad personalised the purposed we have as daughters specifically for my life, the battle which is waging around us, how we can answer people who don’t understand our purpose, pioneering, seeing ourselves as being Titus 2 women and preparing for this role and the longing of younger girls to be befriended by older girls.

Why should we talk about these things?

There are lots of good reasons!

We are just rediscovering what the purpose for daughters is. The world today doesn’t shed much light on this. So it is good to talk about it and encourage one another in this purpose so that we can be single-minded in our devotion to obeying God in this area of our lives

Taking part in the battle is an exhausting and sometimes discouraging thing. So it is good to refocus, get our vision in order, regroup and sustain ourselves for the continuing skirmishes.

Women have forgotten about the command for older women to teach younger women. Just ask your mothers. Probably most of them did not have older women in their lives instructing them. The older women teaching younger women mentoring structure was organized beautifully by the Lord. It is essential for us to grab hold of this and run with it for it will help us to make strong our side in the battle.

Objective

To stir you up to consider what influence your life will have in the lives of younger girls around you.

Story about Princess Elizabeth Windsor

New Zealand is part of the commonwealth. That means that Queen Elizabeth II is our queen. She became Queen when she was 25 years old. Prior to that she was a princess: Princess Elizabeth Windsor.

Her father was King George VI, a second son who never expected to be the king. His older brother, King Edward VIII, abdicated the throne in order to marry a divorced American woman. As the second son, George had never been prepared for the role of King and all the responsibilities and protocol which come with it. So when he became the king he felt like he’d been thrown in the ocean without being taught how to swim. It was very hard for him to become king when he wasn’t prepared so he made sure that his daughters would be prepared if they were ever to become Queens of England. He didn’t leave anything to chance. He engaged private tutors. He taught them how to talk, how to walk, how to conduct themselves at public functions, what to say in various situation, how to represent the crown, what their responsibilities would be. He made sure they knew constitutional law and history. Their instruction was aimed towards preparing them for the throne. In time it was necessary for Elizabeth, the eldest sister to become the Queen. Because of her father’s training she has done a wonderful job. She has really honoured her father by her conduct.

When she was 12 she confided to her Royal Horseriding Instructor that had she not been born to be Queen, she would, “like to be a lady living in the country with lots of horses and dogs.”

Regardless of this wish, she has embraced her role as Queen and really sets a great example of royalty for us all to admire. She never has a hair out of place. She never says the wrong thing or gives a bad impression. She is always presented just right and behaves just right. Unfortunately she did not groom her own children and so there is little to admire in the two generations following her. And while we don’t want to admire her politics there is much to admire in her public deportment and demeanor.

Queen Elizabeth II was a princess with a purpose: a purpose set by her father and ordained by her heavenly Father.

To be continued…

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

Genevieve Smith

Issacharian 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.

ID020 – Poem on wifehood

Dear Issacharian Daughters,

Here is another introduction from two girls who get this newsletter.

“Hello! We are Sarah and Wendy from the far north of New Zealand. We are sisters and the eldest of eight children. Our parents have home educated us all our lives. Recently we have become interested in learning new hairstyles while doing a study on femininity with our Mum. We were wondering if any of the ladies who receive this Issacharian Daughters newsletter have some good ideas for hairstyles. If any of you do we would love it if you would share them with us. Our email address is nc.burroughs@hyper.net.nz . Or you could send instructions and photos to Genevieve and she could email these to all of us. It would be neat to share what we know because it is sometimes hard to come up with easy and nice hairstyles. By the way, our hair is about 12 inches long. Thanks a lot. We look forward to hearing from anyone!

From Sarah and Wendy”

If anyone does have any suggestions for feminine hairstyles for long hair and would like to send these to me I’d be happy to send them out with the Issacharian Daughters newsletter. If you have photos too that would be great. Or if you know of any good websites with photos and instructions you could send me the link.

For those of you just joining us, “Welcome!” We always enjoy seeing introductions from girls so if any of you would like to introduce yourselves please feel free to do this. You could simply give your name and general location and tell us a little about yourself. Or you could answer some or all of these questions too: Have you made the move home? What prompted it? What is your family structure like? What have you learned since coming home? What is the Lord teaching you?

You can visit the Issacharian website at www.freewebs.com/issacharian. And you can access the previous newsletters at  https://hef.org.nz/category/issacharian-daughters/

This weeks newsletter is attached and the text follows below.

Regards,

Genevieve

Monday, 8 January 2007

Dear Girls,

Poem on wifehood

The following is an entry from Lanier Ivester’s website, www.laniersbooks.com. Her testimony Chief Among Desires was in the Issacharian Daughters newsletter #017. If you haven’t visited her website yet, maybe you will after reading this lovely post!

The Scottish-American preacher Peter Marshall is one of my heroes. Not only for his robust faith and his imagery-laden sermons that read like poetry. Not only for his distinction as one of the most respected chaplains of the United States Senate. And not just because his beloved Westminster Presbyterian was right here in Atlanta.

I absolutely love the picture of a truly happy marriage that his wife Catherine gave me in her shining biography, A Man Called Peter. And I deeply respect a man whose view on women and marriage was old-fashioned enough to be unorthodox, even in the 1930’s. My family and I read this book aloud together, and I remember that upon hearing the following quote from one of his sermons, I grabbed the book as soon as we were done for the night and scribbled it madly in my journal. It was like a bright standard, a ray of light shed upon my future hopes…

Marriage is not a federation of two sovereign states. It is a union–

domestic

social

spiritual

physical.

It is a fusion of two hearts–

the union of two lives–

the coming together of two tributaries,

which, after being joined in marriage, will flow in the same channel in the same direction… carrying the same burdens of responsibility and obligation.

Modern girls argue that they have to earn an income, in order to establish a home, which would be impossible on their husband’s income.

That is sometimes the case, but it must always be viewed as a regrettable necessity, never as the normal or natural thing for a wife to have to do.

The average woman, if she gives her full time to her home

her husband

her children…

If she tries to understand her husband’s work…

to curb his egotism while, at the same time, building up his self-esteem

to kill his masculine conceit while encouraging all his hopes
to establish around the family a circle of true friends…

If she provides in the home proper atmosphere of culture

of love of music

of beautiful furniture

and of a garden…

If she can do all this, she will be engaged in a life work that will demand every ounce

of her strength

every bit of her patience

every talent God has given her

the utmost sacrifice of her love.

It will demand everything she has and more.
And she will find that for which she was created.
She will know that she is carrying out the plan of God.
She will be a partner with the Sovereign Ruler of the universe.

And so, today’s daughters need to think twice before they seek to make a place for

themselves

by themselves

in our world today…

~ Dr Peter Marshall

We can reflect this glorious vision of marriage in our lives and ambitions and in the way we speak of marriage and prepare for it.

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

Genevieve Smith

Issacharian Daughter

ID019 – "God’s will is delicious; He makes no mistakes."

To open as a newsletter click here:  id019.pdf

Monday, 1 January 2007

Dear Girls,

“God’s will is delicious; He makes no mistakes.”

These are some of the last words spoken by Miss Frances Ridley Havergal before she died in 1879. I would like to have known such a woman! “God’s will is delicious!” Imagine someone making such a statement. What must she have been like? I imagine someone with a sparkle in her eye, very merry and fun and full of encouragement!

Even if we can’t meet such a person ourselves, we can know a little bit about her from her own writings and from the biographies which have been written. Several little biographical sketches can be accessed at http://www.wholesomewords.org/biography/ biorphavergal.html. I borrowed from these narratives in writing what follows.

What else would one imagine about a woman who would say, “God’s will is delicious?” Would one imagine that she was married to the man of her dreams? In fact she died a spinster at age 42. Did she live like King Solomon who said, “Whatever my eyes desired I did not keep from them”? In fact she suffered for a time from temporary near blindness. Perhaps apart from that she enjoyed perfect health. Actually no, she was often sickly. So what would cause someone to make such a statement? “He makes no mistakes.” Read on and let us see!

Miss Havergal was the author of this wonderful hymn (which she wrote originally as a poem to send out with her New Years Cards):

Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be

In working or in waiting, another year with Thee.

Another year of progress, another year of praise,

Another year of proving Thy presence all the days.

Another year of mercies, of faithfulness and grace,

Another year of gladness in the shining of Thy face;

Another year of leaning upon Thy loving breast;

Another year of trusting, of quiet, happy rest.

Another year of service, of witness for Thy love,

Another year of training for holier work above.

Another year is dawning, dear Father, let it be

On earth, or else in Heaven, another year for Thee.

Rhymes came naturally to her. She was born in 1836 to Rev Henry and Mrs Jane Havergal. Her father was a great composer of hymn tunes and sacred poetry, and music filled the atmosphere in which she lived. Many of her hymns have been set to the music written by her father.

Frances was raised in a Christian home but did not become a Christian until she was 14 years old. Her testimony is beautiful to read. It sheds light on the inner workings of a woman who intrigues me because of her deathbed statement that, “God’s will is delicious; He makes no mistakes.” Here is a commentary on her life which includes quotes from her testimony:

The great trouble and sorrow of her young life was that she felt she ought to love God, but that she did not. “Up to the time I was six years old,” she writes, “I have no remembrance of any religious ideas whatever. But from six to eight I recall a different state of things. The beginning of it was a sermon at Hallow. Of this I even now retain a distinct impression. It was to me a very terrible one, dwelling much on hell and judgment and what a fearful thing it is to fall into the hands of the living God. This sermon haunted me. I began to pray a good deal, though only night and morning, with a sort of fidget and impatience, almost angry at feeling so unhappy, and wanting and expecting a new heart, and to have everything put straight and be made happy all at once.

“This sort of thing went on at intervals, for often a month or two would pass without a serious thought or a true prayer. One sort of habit I got into in a steady way; every Sunday afternoon I went alone into a little front room over the hall and read a chapter in the Testament, and then knelt down and prayed for a few minutes, after which I usually felt soothed and less naughty.

“I had a far more vivid sense of the beauty of Nature as a little child than I have even now. I have hardly felt anything so intensely since, in the way of a sort of unbearable enjoyment. The golden quiet of a bright summer’s day used to enter into me and do me good. What only some great and rare musical enjoyment is to me now, the shade of a tree under a clear blue sky, with a sunbeam glancing through the boughs, was to me then. But I did not feel happy in my very enjoyment; I wanted more. I do not think I was eight when I hit upon Cowper’s lines, ending:

‘My Father made them all!’

That was what I wanted to be able to say; and, after once seeing the words, I never saw a lovely scene again without being teased by them.

“One spring (I think 1845) I kept thinking of them, and a dozen times a day said to myself, ‘Oh, if God would but make me a Christian before the summer comes,’ because I longed so to enjoy His works as I felt they could be enjoyed.

“All this while I don’t think any one could have given the remotest guess of what was passing in my mind. I knew I was a ‘naughty child’; in fact, I almost enjoyed my naughtiness in a savage, desperate kind of way, despairing of getting better, except by being made a Christian.”

She longed for someone to tell her about Christ. She says good men used to come and preach beautiful sermons in her father’s church, but when they went home with them they talked of all sorts of other things, “and I did so wish they would talk about the Saviour whom I wanted, but had not found. It would have been so much more interesting to me, and oh! why didn’t they ever talk to me about Him, instead of about my lessons or their little girls at home? They did not know how a hungry little soul went empty away.”

“Soon a sermon by the curate, on ‘Fear not, little flock,’ struck me very much. I did so want to be happy and a ‘Christian.’ I had never yet spoken to any mortal about religion; but now I was so uneasy, that after nearly a fortnight’s hesitation, being alone with the curate one evening, when almost dark, I told him my trouble, saying I thought I was getting worse. He said moving, and coming to new scenes was the cause, most likely, of my feeling worse, and that it would soon go off; I was to try to be a good child and pray, etc., etc. So after that my lips were utterly sealed to all but God for five years.”

“A merry laugh or a sudden light-heeled scamper led others to think I had not many sad thoughts, whereas not a minute before my little heart was heavy and sad.”

After her mother’s death, when she was eleven, she was often a good deal with her eldest sister, Miriam, at Oakhampton, where she is remembered as a clever, amusing child, sometimes a little wilful and troublesome from mere excess of animal spirits, but always affectionate and grateful for any little treat; much given to reading poetry, and not so tidy as she afterwards became, for she used to leave books about in the hay-loft, manger, and all sorts of garden nooks. But all this while the little girl still carried about with her, wherever she went, that burden of hidden trouble she had borne so long. “I know,” the autobiography goes on, “I did not love God; the very thought of Him frightened me.” She would try to force herself to think about God, hard as it was to do so. Going to bed, she would begin “How good it was of God to send Jesus to die,” while she by no means felt or believed that wonderful goodness.

“Between thirteen and fourteen,” Frances writes, “a soberising thoughtful time seemed to fall on me like a mantle, and my strivings were no longer the passionate spasmodic meteor flashes they had been, but something deeper, more settled, more sorrowful. All this was secret, and only within my own breast very few knew me to be anything but a careless, merry girl, light-hearted in the extreme. Now came a more definite and earnest prayer, for faith. Oh, to believe in Jesus, to believe that He had pardoned me! I used to lie awake in the long summer twilight praying for this precious gift. I read a great deal of the Bible in a ‘straight on’ sort of way. Once I determined, if eternal life were in the Scriptures, find it I would, and resolved to begin giving an hour a day to very careful and prayerful reading of the New Testament.

“In August 1850 I was sent to school. [She had been educated at home up until this point.] The night before I went, Ellen, dear, gentle, heavenly sister, stood by me brushing my hair. She spoke of God’s love. I could not stand it, and for the first time for five years I spoke out; ‘ I can’t love God yet, Nellie,’ was all I said, but I felt a great deal more. Mrs. Teed, the principal of the school, had a sweet and holy power. She prayed and spoke with us with a fervour I have never seen equalled. There were many Christian girls. I envied them. Mary was one. I longed to tell her how unhappy I was. At last I did. The simple, loving words of my little Heaven-taught schoolfellow brought dewy refreshment to my soul as she said, in French (we always had to speak French): Jesus said, ‘Suffer the little children,’ etc. It is every little child who ought to come to Him, every little child whom He calls, every little child whom He embraces.

“After this I had many talks with Mary, but with no one else. To Diana, the goddess among my school friends, and whom I believed to be like Mary, not a word could I speak; though I longed to hear her speak to me as Mary did.

“I drank in every word I heard about Jesus and His salvation. I came to see that it was Christ alone that could satisfy me. I wept and prayed day and night; but ‘there was no voice nor any that answered.’ I shall never forget the evening of Sunday, December 8th. Diana, whom I loved with a perfectly idolatrous affection, had hardly seen me all day. For some time I had noticed a slight depression about her. That evening, as I sat nearly opposite to her at tea, I could not help seeing (nobody could) a new and remarkable radiance about her countenance. It seemed literally lighted up from within while her voice, even in the commonest remarks, sounded like a song of gladness. I looked at her almost with awe. As soon as tea was over she came round to my side of the table, sat down by me on the form, threw her arm around me and said: ‘Oh Fanny, dearest Fanny, the blessing has come to me at last. Jesus has forgiven me, I know. He is my Saviour, and I am so happy! Only come to Him and He will receive you. Even now He loves you, though you don’t know it.’

“Having broken the ice at Belmont (my school), it was the less difficult to do so again; and before long I had a confidante in Miss Cooke, who afterwards became my loved mother. We were visiting at the same time at Oakhampton, and had several conversations, each of which left me more earnest and hopeful. At last, one evening in the twilight, I sat on the drawing-room sofa alone with her. I told her how I longed to know I was forgiven. She paused, and then said slowly: ‘Then, Fanny, I think, I am sure it will not be very long before your desire is granted, your hope fulfilled.’ After a few more words, she said: ‘Why cannot you trust yourself to your Saviour at once? Supposing now, at this moment, Christ were to come, could you not trust Him? Would not His call, His promise, be enough for you? Could you not commit your soul to him, to your Saviour, Jesus?’

“Then came a flash of hope across me, which made me feel literally breathless. I remember how my heart beat. ‘I could, surely,’ was my response; and I left her suddenly and ran away upstairs to think it out. I flung myself on my knees in my room, and strove to realise the sudden hope. I was very happy at last; I could commit my soul to Jesus. I could trust Him with my all for eternity. It was so utterly new to have any bright thoughts about religion that I could hardly believe that it could be so.

“Then and there I committed my soul to the Saviour; I do not mean to say without any trembling or fear, but I did; and earth and heaven seemed bright from that moment; I did trust the Lord Jesus.

“For the first time my Bible was sweet to me, and the first passage I distinctly remember reading, in a new and glad light, was the fourteenth and following chapters of St. John’s Gospel.”

This was in February, 1851, when Frances Havergal was fourteen. With this new glad light there came to her a great eagerness for study. She threw herself into her lessons with intense enjoyment until December came, when a severe attack of erysipelas in her face and head put a stop to the work she loved only too well. She was at once taken home, and was for some time nearly blind.

She bore it with great patience, although it was a great trial to one of her active temperament. To lie still was a difficult task for her; but to know that she must neither go to school nor study at home for a long time was indeed dreadful news.

In time she recovered from this illness. She learned French, German, Latin and Hebrew. Her father taught her Greek. She memorized large portions of the Bible including the Psalms, the book of Isaiah, the New Testament and the minor prophets.

Her father died suddenly in 1870, and she prepared for the press a new edition of his ‘Psalmody.’ She worked to make her father a success even after his death!

Even though she nearly lost her sight she was still able to write this beautiful hymn in later life known as the Consecration hymn.

Take my life, and let it be consecrated, Lord, to Thee.

Take my moments and my days; let them flow in ceaseless praise.

Take my hands, and let them move at the impulse of Thy love.

Take my feet, and let them be swift and beautiful for Thee.

Take my voice, and let me sing always, only, for my King.

Take my lips, and let them be filled with messages from Thee.

Take my silver and my gold; not a mite would I withhold.

Take my intellect, and use every power as Thou shalt choose.

Take my will, and make it Thine; it shall be no longer mine.

Take my heart, it is Thine own; it shall be Thy royal throne.

Take my love, my Lord, I pour at Thy feet its treasure store.

Take myself, and I will be ever, only, all for Thee.

The Lord had her life and this was delicious.

She had consecrated her life to her Saviour. She loved Him dearly. God’s Holy Word was her constant companion. She was earnest in prayer. Perhaps something she said to her sister will shed some final light on what led to her comment, “God’s will is delicious; He makes no mistakes.”

“Marie, it is really very remarkable, how everything I do seems to prosper and flourish. I thought this morning why it was so. I think I have the promise of the First Psalm. You know it says: ‘His delight is in the law of the LORD … and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.’ You know how I do love my Bible more and more; and so, of course, the promise comes true to me.”

May we all consecrate our lives to our Saviour Jesus Christ and live them for Him during 2007 and beyond. And may we experience the fulfillment of the promises of Scripture as Francis Havergal did and say with her, “God’s will is delicious, He makes no mistakes!”

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

Genevieve Smith

Issacharian 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.