February 18, 2025

On Love and Bullying - Gloria Guest


I was in kindergarten when I learned what Valentine’s Day and bullying were, on the same day.

The room was abuzz with excitement, as we each gave and received valentines to and from every classmate. I felt so happy each time one of the shiny, bright valentines was given to me. We each had a special bag to store them in and I couldn’t wait to take mine home to show my mom and sisters.

But then Janet, a girl beside me, started one by one, taking my valentines and adding them to hers. I was too intimidated to say no. By the time she was finished my heart was feeling as depleted as the little pile she had left me with. Valentines, I decided, was not so much fun after all, and I had just been introduced to my first bully.

Thinking back, I can’t help but wonder at how my child’s mind tried to comprehend two such juxtaposed experiences; that of friendship and love being combined with bullying and selfishness. It can be hard enough for adults to put them together, even as life experience has taught us they do sometimes come at once. If we are truthful we will admit that it is often the ones we love the most that we also hurt the most. How to understand this?

In James 3:10, James writes, “Out of the same mouth come praise and cursing. My brothers and sisters, this should not be.” How many times have I done this; especially to those closest to me?

This can be applied to our writing also. How often have we written that defensive or angry text and then hit send? Or written an article with a harsh edge we try to ignore? We can think we are hiding a hardened heart but it’s revealed in our tone.

“If I speak (or write) in the tongues of men or of angels, but do not have love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal.” I Cor 13:1. This makes me consider further, how ‘clanging’ I might be sounding to my readers. Or worse, to God.

Just as it was too much for me as a five year old to consider the presence of love and friendship hand in hand with the presence of bullying and selfishness, so it’s hard to wrap my head around the presence of goodness and caring in my words, existing alongside my unresolved issues and self-serving motives possibly lurking behind them.

Christ is our only hope. Paul exclaimed, after detailing how he often wants to do what is good but then does not do it; “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is subject to death? Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord!” Rom 7:24-25.

Both of those little girls in that kindergarten room that day, needed the help of Jesus; one to understand that she didn’t need to grasp for more love because God already loved her fully and the other to know that when someone hurts her, God's perfect love still exists and He wants to wrap his arms around her to comfort her.

Happy belated Valentine's to all of my Inscribe writer friends. May you too learn to not grasp for more love from those around you and to be comforted by God's love instead, as you endeavor to write from a heart filled with love.


Gloria Guest endeavors to write with a heart of love from the Saskatchewan prairies; which have included many newspaper articles and columns as a past reporter. She is published in two anthologies and is currently working on writing a devotional with the desire to provide hope to those who have gone through life's trials.





February 17, 2025

Take Out the Trash by Carol Harrison

 


 

Taking out the trash is a never-ending type of job. If I leave it for too many days, it starts to permeate the air with a less than pleasant aroma. I can’t take it out once and say, “There that’s all done for good.”

But what about the trash in my life and in my heart? I often struggle with negative thoughts pushing their way in and cloaking my heart with a dark covering. It blocks creativity and colours the world around me with pessimism. Yet in Proverbs 4:23(ESV) I read, “Keep your heart with all vigilance for from it flows the springs of life.”

I decided to look more closely at the words like keep and vigilance in this verse. Some translations use the word guard your heart and keep alert. I added those in to the study as well. This allows me more clarity about the meaning and how to accomplish God’s directive.

Merriam Webster defines guard as, “Protect from danger especially by watchful attention. In Biblereference.com it talks about keep, used in place of guard, not in terms of maintaining ownership but referring to maintenance, care, and support.

Vigilance is keeping watch for possible dangers or difficulties and being alertly watchful. So how can I be alert, watchful, and guard my heart and why should I?

In Luke 6:45 Jesus is teaching and says, “out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.” I believe this is also true of the words we write. They also come from those well springs of life in the heart, that center of my thoughts, emotions, and will. Temptation is real, pulling us away from what is best for our hearts. God knows all about my willful self and waits for me to come to Him for help in guarding against the negativity and lies of the enemy.

Romans 12:2 says, “Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewing of your minds.” Renewing my mind can only be truly accomplished with God’s wonderful and gracious help. For me it reminds me I need to take out the trash in my life and heart too. What am I watching, listening to, reading?

If I spend too much time on news stories it keeps me up to date with current affairs but it also plunges me into the darkness of depression. Too often it makes me forget that God is still in control and nothing is a surprise to Him. When the negativity takes over, the ideas for writing disappear and I want to escape into more mindless activities.

In Bible Study.com it states, “A God controlled thought life will

           - Govern your speech (Prov. 4: 24)

           - Guard your sight (vs 25)

           - Guide your steps (vs 27)

2 Corinthians 10: 5, “take every thought captive to obey Christ.” God can and does change our thoughts to good and positive when we allow Him to help us. So I need to seek God daily and take out the trash with His help by checking what I am watching, reading, and listening to. This allows me to hear God’s directions about words to say and write. In this way I can be alert and guard my heart.

 


Carol Harrison lives in Saskatoon, SK. She enjoys reading, sharing stories, and family time but realizes how easy it is to let herself be involved in many mindless activities which she needs to guard against.

February 14, 2025

A Dentist, the Heart, and Spring Cleaning by Sharon Heagy

 

photo courtesy of Bible.com


When I was a youngster, I didn’t mind going to the dentist. In those pre-cavity days it was an adventure. In my memory my dentist, Dr. Schadek, was a kind and gentle man. His office was in a formidable building with wide stairs and cement bannisters. The whole building was covered in Tyndall Stone, as many buildings in Manitoba and Saskatchewan still are, including the Legislative Buildings of both provinces. It is the only Canadian stone on the worldwide list of global heritage stone resources. It is also a wonderful source of amusement to kids of all ages as one can often find fossils embedded in the surface of the cut stones. Though quite a daunting structure in my mind, Doc Schadek’s office was in a one-story building.

The best thing about visiting the Doc in those days was the treasure chest. If you were well behaved, you were allowed to pick a ‘trinket’ out of the treasure chest. I had no doubt that this was actual treasure as the Dr lived in a castle! His house had a turret and a dormer window! My imagination ran wild.

I saved my trinkets in a safe place and treasured them. Until I didn’t. I grew up and, for some unknown reason, I stopped going to the dentist for several years. Perhaps he retired and we didn’t get another one. It’s a mystery. I cannot tell you what happened to my trinket collection. They must have been tossed as other things took their place in my heart.

Those were the days when I saved and “stored up for myself treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy and where thieves break in and steal” (MT 6:19 NIV) “Where my treasure was, there my heart was also.” (MT 6:21 NIV)

In time, lots of time, God gained my attention as He transformed my heart of stone into a heart of clay. It’s difficult now to remember a time without Him. He changed the desire of my heart from “treasures on earth” (vs 19) to “treasures in heaven.” (vs 20)

His word is life giving nectar to my body, soul and spirit. The guidance of His Spirit whisks me on winds to places I never dreamed of going. My friendship with King Jesus is a treasure to my heart which will never, ever get tossed like trinkets. He blesses me with words to write, not for my own sake but for His purposes. Yet all the above will wither and vanish away if I don’t guard my heart against the treasures of the flesh, of the world.

“Keep your heart with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life.” (Proverbs 4:23 NIV) Not just a little bit of vigilance, but with all vigilance. It won’t just happen, we need to make a deliberate choice, or continual choices, to keep the “springs of life” flowing.

Quite some time ago, I read an article that was placed below a beautiful painting of flowered lungs. The written words spoke of scholars and rabbis who believe the letters “YHWH” represent breathing sounds. YH inhaling and WH exhaling. Some say that a baby’s first breath speaks the name of God. Before writing this post, I listened to the sound of a heartbeat. As I sat with my eyes closed, I replaced the ‘lub dub’ sound of the heart with YH and WH. Listening carefully I could hear the whooshing sound of life sustaining blood flowing in the background. The springs of life.

As we sit to write, may we consider how, where and why our words come together. Who is the source, the Head of the river of our inspiration. Are we flowing with the springs of life or do we need a spring cleaning? Though I pray before I write, and will continue to do so, I think I will start praying like the psalmist in Psalm 139 – “Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me, and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the way everlasting.” (Psalm 139:23-24 NIV) Let Your river flow through me, Lord. Through us. Through InScribe. Amen.


Doc Schadek's Office


Doc's House



Sharon Heagy writes from Rockglen, Saskatchewan, where she lives with her husband, three cats and one very large dog, all of whom bring sunshine into her life. She writes to inspire and give hope, with a chuckle or two along the way.

February 13, 2025

Write What You Love by Steph Beth Nickel


 


Write What You Know

We've all heard the advice to "write what you know." However, that is only the jumping off point. As writers, we are also researchers, whether formally or informally. Every day we're discovering and observing new things that find their way into our writing.

Should we write what we know? Yes.

Should we always be learning new things and incorporating them into our writing? Absolutely.

Write What You Love

If you're a journalist or a content creator, this may not be an option—at least not during your "working hours."

However, this is just one reason why those who write for a living often make time in the morning or evening to write what gets their mojo flowing, what's on their heart, what they love.

While there are countless factors that determine what we write, there is a sense of joy and expectation when the topic is near and dear to our heart.

When Love is the Motivator

Imagine your ideal writing life.

Writing about a topic we're passionate about and getting our work into the hands of those who are equally passionate (or become so) can fill the proverbial well. (We all know that writing, even about things we love, can be draining.)

Further, writing about a topic we love in an environment that inspires and energizes us and earning a living from that writing . . . Does it get better than that?

Practically speaking, the ideal is rarely our reality, but love can still be our motivator.

As believers, the Lord is to be our First Love. Has He laid a message on our heart and provided a way to share that message with others? When we do so, we express our love for Him.

Are we able to provide for ourselves and our family doing what we love even if what we write about isn't our #1 passion? Creating our best work is a way to express love to our family and others who benefit from our efforts. It's also a way to obey Colossians 3:23-24, "Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving" (ESV), thereby expressing our love for the Lord as well.

Do we entertain, encourage, and/or educate others with our words? This is a way of expressing love.

The Power of Our Words

We should never underestimate the power of our words.

When life becomes too overwhelming, our fiction can provide a temporary reprieve.

When our readers are weighed down by life's challenges and heartaches, our encouraging words can lighten their load.

When they're seeking direction, our nonfiction can point them to the truth—as can our fiction.

As Christians, we know our readers need to know the One who is the Truth more than anything else. And we can share this Truth no matter what we write.

Is there anything more powerful, anything more loving, than sharing our words with others?



Steph Beth Nickel is the former Editor of FellowScript and the current InScribe Contest Coordinator. Steph is an editor and author and plans to relocate to Saskatchewan from Ontario to be close to family sometime after her husband retires in the spring of 2025. (Headshot Photo Credit: Jaime Mellor Photography)