January 30, 2006
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Titus Two Ladies Meeting
The ladies meet once a week at our church for a Titus Two meeting. Normally, in times past, our Pastor’s wife teaches but the past few months we have been listening to a video series entitled, Lies Women Believe by Nancy Leigh DeMoss. It was excellent! This is the first time I have really sat under her teaching and I highly recommend this series. It was biblically very solid. We had a luncheon after the teaching and then most of the women stayed afterwards to help go through cupboards in the kitchen. We cleared out dishes that were not being used and washed down the cabinets. It was a lovely time. We’ve been at this little country church less than a year but I’ve come to love the people and appreciate the Pastor and his family so much. I thank God for the uncompromised Word that comes forth from the pulpit.
Comments (5)
That is a great study. i was blessed to be able to attend that conference in person with some dear friends a few years ago. Nancy Leigh DeMoss is very much a lady.
Oh, thanks for posting the great picture–lots of love in that room! I have heard good things about that study. We certainly are bombarded daily by lies and they often come in and from unexpected sources. How much we need to know HIS Word to combat the onslaught! With much love and many prayers, Paula
How wonderful you found a church that doesn’t compromise the Word! Those are very hard to find these days. Never heard of Nancy Leigh DeMoss, but now you’ve made me curious. I’ll have to do some research. Have a great week!
I love Nancy DeMoss and her book “Lies Women Believe”. I am not sure about the chapter on how may children we should have- but, nevertheless, it is excellent teaching
I am sure your group was blessed by it. We are very lucky to have someone around like her today. Not too many left like her- a ‘next generation’ Elisabeth Ellliot. I would love to do what she is doing- discipling women in obedience and surrender to the Lord. Blessings!
Thanks for the information. Is Nancy Leigh DeMoss the daughter of Elisabeth Elliot? About the book I’m reading: The Great Divorce by C. S. Lewis. This book is in the form of an allegoric dream/fable, where the writer boards a bus on a drizzly afternoon and embarks on an incredible voyage through heaven and Hell. He comes to a significant realization about the ultimate consequesnces of everyday behavior. I find it hard to read unless I’m alone, as I have to grasp every detail as he writes it. It’s a small book, so I should have finished it by now. However, his use of symbolic figures and conjuctures of Earth, Heaven and Hell makes an appetizing tale that must be eaten slowly. OR, it just may be my age and the slowing down of my brain. At any rate, I am enjoying the book.