Generation Cedar is a family business and ministry to other families. They desire
to encourage families to raise the next generation for the glory of
God–firmly planted and flourishing “like a cedar in Lebanon”.
Click The Image To Visit Their Website
This was their most recent e-mail:
Enterprise: "a
systematic unit of economic organization or purposeful activity."
If we viewed the family as an
enterprise, so many controversial issues would unravel a bit. Wouldn't we see
things in such a different light if we viewed family in a different light?
Again, I must speak as a Christian, to Christians, with God's Word as my
baseline. Nevertheless, God's principles work to an extent in anyone's
life.
- If we viewed the family as an enterprise, it would completely change the way
we view children. Children who only take from the family are
considered burdens; children who give back are blessings. People want more
blessing; they don't want more burden. It's that simple.
- As in yesterday's post, viewing the family as an enterprise would cause us
to view marriage differently. It places the wife as her
husband's partner/assistant-what the Bible calls a "help suitable for him".
This understanding doesn't place the wife under oppression-it elevates her to a
place of importance. In God's design, a family can't be all it was intended
without the husband and wife working together toward the same goal-COMLEMENTING
each other in their specific gifts. Oh that we could see the simplicity of it!
- The family as an enterprise means economic growth and
production, and a wise use of resources. (It's a green family, really
;-) Stuff should be happening-in a practical way-to supplement the family
economy. (I'm not suggesting every family needs a home business-I'm talking
even on a simpler level of just cooking real food, finding cheaper ways of
living, canning from the garden-practical ways to stretch the budget by saving
and production.
- The family enterprise is a center of outreach for the needs
around it. How few programs and government assistance would be needed if we all
cared more about our neighbors and spent that extra money helping someone in
need instead of buying a new "whatever we don't need"?
Can we shake off the shackles of self-fulfillment and regain a vision of the
unity God intended in families-that unity that extends to communities and
ultimately is the glue that holds the nation together?
May God be gracious to resurrect the vision of family.
AND...
I got so excited thinking through this post that I decided to do a series
called "Family Enterprise" taking a day for each topic to talk
about specific ways the family can be a hub of economic growth, production and
conservation. I plan to cover at least the following topics complete with
examples, photos and ideas:
Saving money through:
Decorating
Utilities
Bartering
Homemade gifts
Recycling
Using natural resources
Homemade vs. commercial
Making money through:
Selling (yard sales, Ebay, etc.)
Using your gifts
Other...
I'm sure much of the information will be some of what I've discussed here
before, but I'm hoping it is worth repeating, and covers more details in a more
organized way.
Get your ideas and input ready!
Generation Cedar, 99 Alpha Ranch
Drive, Ashville, AL 35004, USA