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Historical Fiction That Grabs Your Heart and Feeds Your Soul

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Elaine Marie Cooper

Are Conservative Christians Ignoring Compassion?

March 21, 2015 by emcoop 2 Comments

I first became aware of a community concern one day when listening to the Christian radio station: An organization that serves needy moms in the area was looking for help. The deejay explained that a well-known group that facilitates local adoptions was low on their supply of infant formula. At the end of each month, when the cupboards in local households are growing bare, this group distributes formula to help babies get through a few days without hunger.

Many young moms in the program have worked with this agency to learn options for their pregnancy—alternatives to abortion. Some make an adoption plan. Others opt to parent their children. Many are single moms and most are poor. I’ve been told the line of moms awaiting cans of formula winds down the street. And they always run out of cans before they run out of hopeful faces standing in a queue.

When I became aware of this outreach in the community, it occurred to me that I might be able to help on a regular basis. As a nurse who has worked in the past with the needy, I fear that young moms will begin to dilute the expensive formula that is meant to be prepared appropriately for optimal growth of their children.  Infants with inadequate nutrition can carry the side effects throughout their lifetimes. That first year of nutrition is key for a child’s brain development.

Realizing the seriousness of the situation, I envisioned a simple outreach at my own church, though it was miles away from the inner city program that distributes the formula. With our pastor’s blessing, a friend at church and I began a monthly collection of formula and diapers. One of us then delivers the cans and packages to the small storefront location where, in a couple of days, the line will form once again—a line of hope in the midst of poverty.

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Am I sharing this story to brag about what a great Christian I am? Hardly. But I have been disturbed by recent stories on social media claiming that all government programs that serve families in need are encouraging an attitude of entitlement.

Are some of the recipients taking advantage of a government that encourages a welfare state? Absolutely. Does that mean we throw out the “baby with the bath water” as the old saying goes? I say, that is a heartless and ill-informed approach. There are many families who need a helping hand in difficult times and, while we’d like to think the local churches will foot the bill, that doesn’t always happen.

I worked in one of these “welfare” programs years ago that provided nutritional guidance, medical evaluations and food to young children. Were there families who took advantage? Yes. Were there families who were truly in need being helped? Absolutely.

The ones I remember the most were the handicapped kids who needed special formulas to survive. They were dependent on tube feedings and the cost was enormous. If the families involved had to purchase a month’s supply from their monthly income, they would have been thrust into deep poverty that would impact the entire family. When there is a special needs child in a home, it becomes a family affair—a blessing, albeit a difficult and costly one.

We can be all about pro-life, but will we allow our taxes to help maintain a life that is not convenient? It’s food for thought while sipping on our lattes.

Even regular infant formula is very expensive. The can that I purchased this week was $25 and that was the “sale” price. And the amount in that can will only feed a baby for a few days.

While I am not endorsing a liberal attitude of “free food for all,” I am endorsing compassion. And I’m encouraging Christians to pray and seek ways that we can be the hands of Jesus in a world where “the poor will always be with us.”

In our efforts as conservatives trying to be fiscally responsible, we can be in danger of ignoring God’s commands to help the poor. “He who is kind to the poor, lends to the Lord, and he will reward him for what he has done.” Proverbs 19:17

Instead of ranting on social media about attitudes of entitlement, perhaps a Christ-like attitude of rallying the Christian community to works of compassion would please the Savior Who loved us even when we didn’t love Him.

 

“For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink…” Matthew 25: 35

“If anyone has material possessions and sees his brother in need but has no pity on him, how can the love of God be in him? Dear children, let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.” 1 John 3: 17-18

“He who gives to the poor will lack nothing, but he who closes his eyes to them receives many curses.” Proverbs 28: 27

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

245th Anniversary of Boston Massacre

March 5, 2015 by emcoop Leave a Comment

Today is the 245th Anniversary of the infamous Boston Massacre. The incident took place even before the American Revolution officially began, but was a key event that ignited the flames of anger leading to that war.

Snow was still on the ground that freezing day in Boston in 1770, much as it is now. The King’s Army had already occupied the city for two years in hopes of quelling riots that broke out in protest to the increased taxes levied by King George and the British Parliament. The American Colonists were frustrated and angry. Tensions between the soldiers and the 16,000 residents of Boston were already high. [Read more…] about 245th Anniversary of Boston Massacre

When God’s Plans Don’t Fit

February 26, 2015 by emcoop 2 Comments

The four-year-old girl approached her mother in tears.  “Mommy, this new sheet won’t fit!”

The mom quickly explained to her distraught daughter that the small cloth bag she was holding was not the new sheets. The child’s new pink floral sheets were in the laundry being washed. What the little girl held was the bag they had come in from the store.

Her mom and I giggled at the child’s misunderstanding. Yet I began to see myself in the child’s view of what she was holding.

Often our lives seem a poor fit with our expectations. Who would have thought, when my own daughter was four, that at age twenty-four she would die of a brain tumor? That did not measure up with my expectations.

“Lord, this cancer doesn’t fit my plans!”

Like the four-year-old holding an empty bag that crushed her dreams for a beautiful new bed, I cried to my Father that this was the wrong choice. Yet God tenderly reassured me that he was preparing something greater—an eternity of benefit that in His perfect wisdom would reap untold blessings for many.

God in His infinite wisdom knew that life would reveal many trials that seem so wrong and out of place. That is why He said, “’My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, ‘ declares the Lord.” Isaiah 55:8 NIV

At such times, we lean on Him and bring our tears before Him. And like the four-year-old’s parent offered solace in her misunderstanding, Jesus sends His Holy Spirit for us to bring comfort and reassurance of His perfect provision.

“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is kept in heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God’s power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time.” 1 Peter 1: 3-5 NIV

The story of my daughter's journey with cancer.
The story of my daughter’s journey with cancer.

True Valentines Are Not Grey

February 14, 2015 by emcoop 4 Comments

All the recent publicity involving the release of a supposed romantic movie involving sadism has caused many to pause and consider what true romance really is.

In my personal experience, my committed relationship has involved watching my husband be self-sacrificing and compassionate. It’s the complete opposite of the Hollywood glorification of self-satisfaction and cruelty. My own marriage of nearly forty years has shown me that a true Valentine is one who serves others rather than themselves.

When our middle child and only daughter was diagnosed with a terminal brain tumor in 2002, my husband became my hero. His days were spent helping me to cope with this horrible disease. He filled in to care for her when I needed a break. He accompanied us to as many doctor’s appointments as his work schedule allowed. He voluntarily missed our son’s graduation from Officer’s Candidate School so I could attend. No dad wants to miss that. But Steve did—for me.

When we knew the brain tumor was coming back after a temporary remission, it was Steve who had the strength to sit and hold her while she cried, and while I paced the room, too frantic to sit. When she could no longer care for herself and was bed bound, Steve helped me feed her and keep her clean. And when she passed away, Steve wept over our loss with as many tears as I did.

Can you imagine the “hero” of “Fifty Shades of Grey” doing all this—someone so consumed with their past that all they can do is control, belittle and hurt the woman they supposedly love?

I’ve heard it said that this lead character has had a difficult past. My response is, “Who hasn’t?”  My husband came from a broken home and his mother died of cancer when he was a teenager. But he allowed Jesus to heal his hurts, save his soul and become a new creation in Christ. He became the sort of hero who could help care for a dying daughter.

So for those who think a dapper looking man in a suit who wants what HE wants is heroic, think again. The real heroes are helping others in the battlefield of life.

 

The story of my daughter's journey with cancer.
The story of my daughter’s journey with cancer.

 

 

 

The Book I Balked At Writing

February 10, 2015 by emcoop Leave a Comment

I’ll never forget the day a friend stopped me at church. She knew I’d written a book but, instead of the one she expected, I’d written a historical fiction. “I thought you’d write a book about your daughter,” she said to me.

I looked at her in shock. “Are you kidding me? Relive the nightmare of her brain tumor? No way.”

I wouldn’t even entertain the idea of such a project. It would be too difficult to relive her journey through cancer and eventual passing.

How could someone even mention that, I thought? [Read more…] about The Book I Balked At Writing

Vaccines and Cancer

February 3, 2015 by emcoop 4 Comments

When you read the title of this blog, you may have wondered if I was going to suggest that vaccinations cause cancer. That could not be further from the truth.

What I am suggesting is that, with the thousands of cancer patients who have suppressed immune systems (i.e. they can catch any illness that is within breathing distance), folks who choose NOT to vaccinate their children should keep them FAR AWAY from folks with cancer.

In the United States, we are currently undergoing a measles outbreak. It seems so foreign to many, since measles vaccine has been around for decades. Much publicity has been dedicated to the deleterious side effects of vaccines. In fact, there can be bad side effects to immunizations. Are the bad side effects common? No. Do vaccines usually prevent the very illness they are intended to immunize against? Yes.

Many years ago there was a terrible plague called polio. Throughout history, there were instances noted of polio-like illnesses and by 1910, frequent epidemics spread throughout the world. But the worst epidemic peaked in the 1940’s and 1950’s. The disease paralyzed or killed over half a million people worldwide every year.

My older sister was a victim of polio. She did not die, but has lifelong side effects that still impact her health.

In the 1950’s a miracle seemed to occur in medicine with the development of one, then a second more effective, vaccine to battle the polio virus. By 1961, only 161 cases were reported in the United States.

Now we are seeing the rise of another illness that has been previously under tight control with the use of a vaccine. The disease is called measles.

In 2004, there were only 37 cases of measles in this country. Compare that with 644 cases in 2014, and it is cause for concern. In the first 31 days of 2015, 102 people have already been diagnosed with the illness. Statistics are available on the CDC website.

Most of these cases are in children and adults who are either unimmunized for measles or underimmunized, meaning they’ve only had one shot. It takes two injections to provide adequate immunity.

Measles is highly contagious and seems to be spreading. Symptoms are a rash and fever. Victims can be contagious for four days before a rash develops. Measles can also cause pneumonia, brain damage, deafness and death.

The story of my daughter's journey with cancer.
The story of my daughter’s journey with cancer.

So where is the connection with cancer (a topic of interest to me since my own daughter died of that disease)? Imagine a child exposed to measles and possibly carrying the disease, being around someone on chemotherapy or undergoing radiation, whose ability to fight any illness is severely compromised. The thought sends a feeling of dread through me.

In this country, we are free to decide whether or not we immunize our children. But that choice can have deadly consequences for ourselves and others—something to think about when getting the real facts about vaccinations for children. Please be informed.

Sometimes studying history can tell us just how bad epidemics can be.

“Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.” Edmund Burke

 

 

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