David: A Man After God's Own Heart

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Of all the heroes of faith in all the stories in the Bible, David was called by God, “A man after my own heart.”

Imagine if a parent said this about his child. Basically, it would be a parent saying, “That child does so much to reach my heart, that child gives me such pleasure.”

David wrote poetry about His love and adoration of God. Do you write songs/poetry about how much you love and trust Him? David sang his songs for God. He attempted to capture the integrity of God’s love and care for him. He wrote love poems to God,

“The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not be in want of anything.” What trust! What a grateful heart.

How does David show he is a man after God’s own heart in the beloved praise of God as his shepherd—the one who protects, provides for, and restores his own? How can you show God that you are after his heart right in the midst of your story today?

Be encouraged by the podcast today on At Home with Sally.

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Tea Time Tuesday: Cheers: Sit Down and Rest a Spell

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“I must drink lots of tea or I cannot work. Tea unleashes the potential which slumbers in the depth of my soul.” -Leo Tolstoy

Isn’t that a great quote? I cannot work without tea. It “unleashes my potential” happens to be true for me. And isn’t this a great spot? I have favorite benches all over the world. I sit in natural places, decked with beauty, I drink something wonderful and I center myself to a point of peace. Then I go back to life. Do you have such a place?

“Cheers, friends! Sit down and rest a spell!” my grandmother used to say when we came to her house. Always a welcome, always a cheery wish for us to take time for a visit, a time to chat, a time to be friends.

So, today, sit down and rest a spell. You will be so glad you did.

This week, I put aside many responsibilities and sat down with various of my people. Travel with Joy and me to London, and visit the places where we celebrated life together. We ate amazing food, walked thousands of steps, visited King’s College in London where she has a postdoc and teaches, and had an evening in the darkness looking out on the ships on the Thames, the city lights, the London Eye, and chatted about all that was on our heart.

I took time to visit with friends visiting from America. Ran into 3 different people who recognized me on the street—and gave a surprising response to one of them—(what in the world was I thinking?). Heard stories of valor, took time to go on long walks with one of my favorite people, to eat a hamburger out in the meadow.

This week, pondering Simon and Garfunkel, Robert Louis Stephenson’s book The Kidnappers, ate an Indian breakfast, pondered God’s never-ending presence in my life, and enjoying the beauty of spring. Won’t you join me?

I am always so tickled that so many of you like Tea Time Tuesday—what do you like about it and what do you want more of? I want it to be a “Take off your shoes and set a spell,” sort of time.

People Who Know Their God

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“But the people who know their God will display strength and take action.” - Daniel 11:32

I love to be close to my children, to Clay, to a handful of friends who know me as I really am—what I like, my secrets, my ways of life, my home, my sweet ones. The knowledge we have for one another causes us to feel the blessing of intimacy and the grace to be known and still loved.

So it is with God. God is relational. He was the designer of the possibility of love, friendship, giving and receiving heartfelt conversations and connection. He cares that we take time to know Him. And when we know Him, our hearts and lives will be transformed. When we know Christ, Christ’s spirit will cause us to display strength and take action in our worlds to bring His love and light to bear.

This week, I had the privilege of meeting several people who shared their stories and the circumstances of their lives spoke so loudly of their knowing their God intimately. One sweet woman, who had already raised her children who were now adults, felt compelled to adopt a sweet little girl who had no family to live with, to love her. She and her husband are parenting all over again with this sweet girl as their very own. They displayed strength and took action.

Ainsley is another dear friend, who because of her love and knowledge of God, started conferences for women so that they could have close friendship and community with like-minded women through Wild and Free. She arranges, works hard, plans, and serves so that others might be encouraged. By faith, she and her husband bought property, a retreat facility, to host conferences and people to a beautiful place where they could come to be inspired. So much more—but her life reflects that out of her love and knowledge of Him, she reached out, she served.

Do you have a friend whose story has encouraged or inspired you because of her knowledge and love of God? Or tell me about your story about how knowledge of Him has changed your life. I would love to know about it. I hope you enjoy the verses I share this week on my podcast.

Many blessings of grace and love to you today, friends. And may you know Him and experience His love more every day.

FOR MORE

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Tea Time Tuesday: Friendship is Not Frivolous, but Essential to Our Well-being

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Friendship is not frivolous but essential to our emotional, spiritual and physical well being. Solomon, the wisest man in the world, wrote this.

two are better than one,
because they have a good return for their labor:

If either of them falls down,
one can help the other up.
But pity anyone who falls
and has no one to help them up.
Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm.
But how can one keep warm alone?
Though one may be overpowered,
two can defend themselves.
A cord of three strands is not quickly broken.

We were made for companionship, community, close friendship. We are happier deep down, flourish more, grow stronger in every way when we have a close friend standing with us in life.

Work is better with a friend, helping one another up from a fall, keeping warm, defending against an enemy.

He also said, “A friend loves at all times—when it is convenient, when it is not.

Jesus made very clear that friendship, laying down a life for a friend, was the centerpiece for passing on the knowledge and love of God from one generation to another. It is why he chose his disciples and modeled to us what love and influence looks like. Seeking godly friends, building this kind of community is holy work.

My friend Jacqui and I talk today on Tea Time Tuesday how God has used our friendship.

Giggle with us, sigh with us, as we share the ways God has blessed us and used our friendship. Praying God will multiply your blessed friendships.

She pulled out a wonderful quote:

“Let us be grateful to the people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.” — Marcel Proust 

And from C. S. Lewis, whose friends were in many ways his family:

“Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art.... It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things which give value to survival.”

Teatime Discipleship is all about ideas to build close bonds with others with whom we can share and survive life. What is your favorite friendship advice?

So much more on Tea Time Tuesday! Hope you enjoy it.

The Lovingkindness of God

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In the past few months, I have had the opportunity to have personal discipleship times with a number of people that I work with here in Oxford and in the States. Many carry a legacy of anger, passivity, scars, and loneliness from their childhood. It breaks my heart to hear their stories, as they are precious women and I would have loved to have given them the deliberate love, compassion, and sympathy of God that they could have as their memory.  

God wants us to learn what He is like, and what are the attitudes of His heart for us. On the Mondays ahead, I will be podcasting about scripture that teaches us about His amazing attributes that we can ponder, understand, and then model to those around us so that they might better understand and know God from the ways we exhibit His reality through our lives. I hope this will encourage you. 

Today, we talk of the lovingkindness of God—the term comes from Chesed, the Hebrew term which meant to give oneself fully, generously, with love and compassion. Imagine if we lived out the lovingkindness of God through our lives every day, how encouraged those around us would be. I like to imagine how wonderful it would be for me if those around me initiated God's true kind love and compassion to me every day. I think it would fill my soul. Let me know what you think. 

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  • Join my friends and me in membership at Life with Sally, a place for me to share more teaching from the Bible and messages on education, motherhood, discipleship, and more

Tea Time Tuesday: Coronation Day

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As I shyly walked into the church where the coronation was being shown on a large screen, balloons were flying around, decorations abounded, a hat was thrown onto my head and an extroverted gentlemen said with a large smile, “Long live the king!” And that was the beginning of a delightful celebration.

Hip, hip hooray was roundly cheered several times, we all stood for the king to sing the national anthem twice, and a feast of grilled hot dogs, hamburgers, sausages, chicken and salmon sizzled on 6 grills out in the rain and everyone celebrated by eating to their hearts’ content. It was definitely a day I would not quickly forget.

The enthusiasm, the sacredness of the ceremony and call to be a servant leader touched me. To hear of a national leader bowing before God with accountability to serve his people was a picture of what our own Jesus has done. I do understand the complexities of all the issues surrounding the monarchy—but the service touched a deep place in my heart.

Today, on Tea Time Tuesday, I speak of one of my favorite children’s authors and illustrators, a new recipe, the profound influence of music on our brains, beauty as something that lowers adrenalin and the ways of rhythms in life. How has your week been?

Blessings and blessings my friends.

Happy Mother's Day Giveaway!

Motherhood is by far the most comprehensive and difficult role I have played in my lifetime. It challenged me, stretched me, broadened me, instructed me, cultivated my faith and prayer life more than I could ever have imagined.

Motherhood is also the best ideal in which I have ever invested my life. it called me to my best self.

Some of my best memories are when I was holding infant Sarah in my arms and she looked up at me with those beautiful blue eyes and smiled just for me, and I knew I held a treasure that God had entrusted into my arms that had eternal significance and infinite worth. And then I got to repeat this three more times.

Those times when I nursed and sang lullabies late at night when my baby would pat my chest. The nightly talks, lying together in bed and secrets saved just for mama, me! The “Look at me, mama!” pride of trusting me with those little but big in their eyes, accomplishments (riding a bike, drawing a masterpiece that only a mama could tell what it was, sharing doubts, deep heart thoughts)… the dinner table talks, the evenings on the deck in the dark by the fire where we all shared in friendship, the snuggle on the couch reading together, mountain hikes, family days, birthday cinnamon rolls with “why I love appreciate you” sharing. Sleeping together under the stars and loving our little wonder-filled community. Bedroom talks over tea and chocolate chip cookies where dreams were shared.

I love my children to my very depths, they are my best friends, they are amazing and wonderful and such a soul-filling gift.

And next Sunday, we celebrate all mothers. So today, I want to give away 5 of my books, Teatime Discipleship, to honor you precious mamas who give so much of yourselves. It matters so very much.

Enter the giveaway through my IG (@sally.clarkson) or my Facebook fanpage.

Maybe your mama would love a copy of Teatime Discipleship.

Tea Time Tuesday, 2 Days Late

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“Best friends are those you can do everything with or nothing at all and still have fun and feel accepted.”

My friends, I love this community. I feel like I am coming back. Wish you could have tea today with me as I share my crazy days. After the necessary flurry of launching a book into the world, flying back to Oxford, settling in as much as possible; then having a team of people from my publishers come for 5 days to work on a really exciting project, I am barely beginning to breathe peaceful moments into life again.

The past few days took us about 23,000 steps each day all over Oxford to photograph “my places” and to record my thoughts about life. (It may become a book down the line.) We even had 2 gorgeous, almost warm days!

Today on Tea Time Tuesday, I speak of broiled trout with lemon-dill sauce, peach-almond bread, roasted red peppers, onions, mushrooms, and potatoes, and a lovely book, movie, and more.

So, is it too early to have spring fever?

Don't you think that God meant for us to go outside, to take naps under budding trees, to breathe in pleasure when everything is alive and inviting after a long hard winter?

An overwhelming desire to escape is rushing through every molecule of my being. To breathe apart from responsibility, or phone calls, requests or demands from loved ones. Just time to blow.

My house needs organizing. Groceries need to be bought. Meals must be made. Birthday presents for Clay, Sarah and Joy need to be gathered. But, my brain is empty and I just want to play, or nap, or watch a movie!

A maid would be appreciated right now, and a personal massage therapist in my home at my beck and call. And someone to provide a fully cooked, fresh, oh-so-tasty meal—where I do not have to wash a single dish. Coffee and a pastry at a cafe every day.

Do you have spring fever, too? What would you do now if you had no responsibilities?

Blessings and blessings to you today, friends.

The Power of Returning Spring

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“Earth, teach me regeneration as the seed which rises in the spring.”

-William Alexander

Recently, I realized that I had been in England every year for the past four years during the daffodil blooming season. These yellow lovelies are happy flowers, delighted to be alive, blooming in their glory.

It was so wondrous after a very cold winter with the dark and dirty that comes with it, to be reminded that spring is on the way—nothing can hold it back. Perhaps many of us need to have hope that there is a spring season of life, beauty, and strength just ahead. 

Each winter when all appears to be dead or dying, daffodils pop up, as if out of nowhere, to proclaim, there just may be a surprise and delightful life ahead.

The Unstoppable Power of Returning Spring

God masterfully transcribed lessons and insights of life into the very warp and woof of His creation. Spring, summer, winter, and fall cast the pulse of life as we experience it.

A time to bloom, to grow full-blown, to harvest, then all dies, for a season. Until the cycle of life starts over again.

But winter will not have the last word.

There are winters in our lives—times when it appears that everything is dead or dying. Cold, stormy weather beats at the windows of our hearts as well as the window pains of our rooms. As Jesus said in Matthew, there will be times when the storms will burst against our house.

During this darkness of the cold, there is a deepening of roots that will allow new and better growth, a putting off of the old leaves and wilted fruit to make way for the new. It is in the darkest of nights that wisdom is learned, perspective is given, and humility clothes our souls.

In winter, gloom flows over and the fog of despair rains hard on our hearts. This is not the end of our story.

The power of returning spring is unstoppable, as though God's song refuses to be quieted.

A force so strong that it defies all other forces, life will indeed show its glory, beauty, and strength, again.

Every year, when darkness seems longest, daffodils spring up first, Blooming "with all of their heart," they proclaim, hope is coming, light is on its way!

These, are a true picture of resurrection life.

Our Sovereign Role as Mothers

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Today on the podcast, I am joined by my angel friend (and one of my assistants!), Katie Haines. Katie is a wife, and mother of Ben (3 years old) and Emma (9 months old) and lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. Read below for a glimpse of our conversation that covers our sovereign role as mothers, the noble, the inspiring, and the beautiful. 

In 1947, a young Princess Elizabeth gave a speech in Cape Town, South Africa, on her 21st birthday declaring her dedication to the British people and her role as their future monarch. She says: 

“I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong. But I shall not have strength to carry out this resolution alone unless you join in it with me, as now invite you to do: I know that your support will be unfailingly given. God help me to make good my vow, and God bless all of you who are willing to share in it.”

When the young princess spoke those words nearly 80 years ago, I wonder if she knew then just how long her reign would be, or just how many trials and troubles she would have to sort through as sovereign. But in light of the upcoming coronation of King Charles III, we talk about:

Serving God with your whole heart. When Queen Elizabeth was crowned during her own coronation, she was anointed with oil by the Archbishop of Canterbury in a solemn and sacred ceremony, where she took an oath before God. Throughout her life, Queen Elizabeth continued to serve God with her whole heart, as she was raised to believe the role of the monarch was to bring light, beauty, and truth to the world.

When a child is born, so is a mother. And while swaddling precious new life, we aren’t anointed with holy oil right there on the spot, but we are anointed with the holy spirit for the work ahead. Ephesians 2:10 says: “For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”  Just as Queen Elizabeth believed her role as a monarch was to bring light, beauty, and truth to the world, mothers were designed by God to do the same for our households. 

Mothers were uniquely created to create goodness and calm chaos, to kindle hope, and foster faith. We are the beauty bringers and soul shapers of our homes and our communities. And the good news is, on the days that it feels like a burden too heavy to bear, the Lord has sent us a helper, the Holy Spirit. Scripture says that we were created to the good works, which he has already equipped us to do. We don’t need to try and push through in our strength but partner with the Holy Spirit in the work in which he has called us. 

Excellence requires investment. When it’s finally time for our children to take those first tentative steps into adulthood, what do we want them to take with them? Do we want them to take years of feasting, fellowship, hero stories, Scripture written on their heart, and the story of God that has shaped their soul? If our hearts long for our children to be shaped by the good, the true, and the beautiful, we must invest in it today. We must make “whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy” (Philippians 4:8) priorities in our home now to reap the good fruit of our faithfulness as our children grow into young adults. 

Today, if you’re struggling to feel like any of it is worth it. Perhaps your toddler is wiggling his way through story time (been there!), or your teenager is struggling with difficult attitudes at the dinner table; pray that God will show a glimpse of the harvest ahead. Just a small taste of what is it come, an encouragement to your weary heart in the midst of a worn down day. Because what you’re doing today matters not only for these small moments but for eternity. You, my friend, are writing heaven on their hearts. You are bringing the realities and goodness of God to them when you give one more goodnight kiss, read one more story, and make one more meal. 

Galatians 6:9 says, “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”

FOR MORE

  • Subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app.

  • Leave an iTunes Review These are so important as they help our podcast reach more women with messages of encouragement.

  • Follow on Facebook and Instagram for the latest news and updates.

  • Share with others. My prayer is that this podcast brings encouragement to women and families, and I would be honored for you to tell others about it.

  • Join my friends and me in membership at Life with Sally, a place for me to share more teaching from the Bible and messages on education, motherhood, discipleship, and more