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Ruth Shaw began a blog, Ruthlace, in 2006 at the age of 82, in order to write about her life growing up in the 1920s and 1930s, the Great Depression, World War II, along with stories her own mother shared with her of earlier times.
Recipes, stories and photographs from the Shaw-Baird clan.
Bestselling authors share God's blueprint for becoming a woman of real strength and virtue. They affirm the wonderful truth that no matter how ordinary a woman's circumstances or how imperfect she is, God is able to work within her to bring about the most beautiful of spiritual fruit.
In Marriage Matters, Janice Shaw Crouse argues that marriage is a critical element in a free society and that society's most vulnerable communities, especially minorities and the poor, suffer the most from the nation's retreat from marriage. Crouse writes that marriage advances the public interest and we should create laws and policies that support rather than undermine it. She demonstrates both the public and private importance of marriage, and organizes her argument in a thoughtful and logical manner. Compared to other household arrangements, Crouse observes, marriage is by far the best for raising children and offers financial advantages as well. Writing about bullying, Crouse shows how t...
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The desire for our children to be free from want and danger and to be able to enjoy their youth in innocence would seem to be universal. Conventional wisdom says that parents in every socio-economic level of society share the dream of preserving their children's innocence. All want to provide a childhood and adolescence that shelters and protects children from the harshness of life and nurtures them until they are able to withstand the onslaught of reality. One need only look at troubled areas of the world, such as Northern Ireland, parts of the Middle East, or any number of other points on the globe, to see how weak is any communion forged out of these universal desires for the welfare of c...
Through a thoughtful, well-documented evaluation of our society and honest reflections by mothers today, this compelling and controversial book offers readers a challenge--to rediscover and preserve the biblically ordained, psychologically sound, and developmentally critical vision of motherhood that will better serve people in the 21st century.