Insights into these Shoes' Soul

Welcome to our blog! You'll get glimpses into the fabric of our lives... find out what is happening in our family, get updates on our ministry, see what makes us smile, and hear what makes us tick. We hope these insights into our souls will make you smile, keep you informed and challenge you to pray for us.







Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Home from college

Devon came home last week - just in time for Mother's Day.  It was great to see him!  He had fun at CIU...not sure how much studying he did, but he had fun!  We are thankful that God provided a good bit of the costs through scholarships and gifts that were given.  He is planning on returning in the fall.  He has his dorm room already reserved and has applied for scholarships.

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Currently he is looking for a job somewhere here in Southwest Florida.  If he finds one here in the Ft. Myers are, he'll live with us, but if he finds one in Naples, he'll live with his grandparents there.  Pray for him!  It's a tough economy and jobs are hard to find. 

In the meantime, he's reconnecting with his cousins and his fishing gear! 

P.S.  He turns 21 on June 3!!  How is that possible??!

Debbie

What a week for Dawn

This last week we attended ECS's sports banquet. The volleyball team was awarded a special Volleyball Resolution from the Florida State Senate. Florida Senator Burt Saunders read the resolution and presented it to Coach Tom Baxter and the girls on the team. What a surprise! It was fun to cap the year with this special honor.

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Dawn's junior/senior prom was Saturday night. What we want to know is how did our little girl become this gorgeous young woman? She looked amazing! Pardon us again if we brag!!

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The last 4 weeks have been full of planning for this one night. Deb has been working for weeks on the dress. Dawn wanted peacock feathers and she got them! She wore her great-grandmother's necklace, found the perfect shoes, had her hair and nails done and it all came together perfectly. (Can you tell this is our first prom too?)

Her date was her boyfriend, Kyle Hopmann. He looked handsome as well. They had a great time dancing the night away.

Like we said, is this our little girl??!

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Mistaken Identity

For those of you who saw the article, no, I didn't have a deadly encounter with a pelican in St. Petersburg, FL!  Here is the story:  http://www.tampabay.com/news/bizarre/article497304.ece

white pelicanBut this Debbie Shoemaker is sitting here letting you know that I'm just fine and dandy in Ft. Myers, about 1 1/2 hours south of this little mishap.  Thanks to those of you who wrote asking if I was ok! 

(Make sure you read the story!)

Monday, May 12, 2008

Food riots in Haiti - Here are some of the Causes

'Crime' and Ethanol
Unintended Consequences

May 7, 2008

Biofuels are one of the major reasons you and I are paying more for groceries these days. For most of us, it is just an inconvenience. For many around the world, however, it is a catastrophe. Last week, United Nations Special Investigator Jean Ziegler called the use of biofuels, such as ethanol, a "crime against a great part of humanity."

In the past, global food crises were sparked by natural disasters and bad harvests. What makes this food crisis a crime against humanity is: We caused it. And like many man-made problems, this one can be traced to our false worldview.

Here in the United States, egg prices are up 35 percent; milk up 23 percent; and bread up 16. For most Americans, who on average spend 10 percent of their income on food, these increases squeeze our budgets.

But for the "great part of humanity" Ziegler talks about, it is a lot worse. In countries like Ethiopia and Bangladesh, people can spend 70 percent of their income on food; so even modest increases in food prices can impair their ability to feed their families. And price increases for the staples they depend on have not been modest: Wheat prices have doubled and corn prices quadrupled in the last year.

Rising food prices are causing social instability. According to the World Food Program, "33 countries in Asia and Africa face political instability as the urban poor struggle to feed their families"—which is why the president and Congress are talking now about increasing aid to these countries.

While the rise in food-staple prices has many causes, as Ziegler noted, one of them is definitely man-made: the use of cropland and food-staples to produce bio-fuels such as ethanol. He called "transforming hundreds and hundreds of thousands of tons" of foodstuffs into fuel "absolutely catastrophic for the hungry people."

Look at it this way: It takes 510 pounds of corn to make 13 gallons of ethanol—that amount could "feed a child in Zambia or Mexico for a year," while it fuels your car only for a week!

Ziegler is not alone; the IMF (International Monetary Fund) has raised grave concerns, and Secretary of State Rice recently spoke of the "unintended consequence from the alternative fuels' effort."

What is maddening about this is that the biofuel effort is fueled by politicians handing out massive subsidies to the farm belt and pandering to glassy-eyed environmentalists. Every presidential hopeful who participated in the Iowa caucuses had to sing the praises of ethanol. That is why John McCain stayed away, because he opposes the subsidies.

Now, I am all for farmers making money on their crops. They deserve it. But no politician with a shred of integrity can deny that it is more important to feed a child in Zambia for a year than to feed your car for a week. And—as if I need to remind you—this is an election year, so ask your candidates where they stand on this tragic political folly. And call your members of Congress to tell them how you feel.

A properly informed worldview is the key here. Two non-Christian worldviews have merged to bring about this crisis: one that sees maintaining political power as an end in itself, and one that sees the environment as our chief concern, even at the expense of humans.

We Christians insist on the proper use of government: that is, to restrain evil and promote justice. And we believe in proper environmental stewardship. But we insist that people, especially the poor, must come first.

Chuck Colson.