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Cold Sesame Noodles With Cucumber

After college, I moved to New York City to launch her acting career. I survived on pizza and Chinese takeout. On sweltering summer nights in my un-air-conditioned studio apartment, I gorged on cold sesame noodles with crisp slices of cucumber.

Ingredients

8 oz. Chinese egg noodles, cappellini or pad thai-style rice noodles

1 Tbsp. peanut oil
¼ c. peanut butter
½ tsp. toasted sesame oil
3 Tbsp. rice vinegar
¼ c. soy sauce
2 tsp. toasted sesame seeds
1 Tbsp. honey
2 Tbsp. freshly grated ginger, or 1 Tbsp. ground ginger
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 Tbsp. red pepper flakes
1 Tbsp. sriracha or other red chili sauce
2 Persian cucumbers, 1 grated, 1 thinly sliced
1 scallion chopped
¼ c. salted roasted peanuts, chopped
¼ c.p fresh cilantro leaves, chopped

Preparation

1. Bring a pot of water to a boil. Prepare a bowl of ice water.

2. Cook the noodles in boiling water until al dente, 3 to 5 minutes. Drain and transfer to a bowl of ice water and soak for 5 minutes, until well chilled. Drain again, return to the bowl, toss with peanut oil and set aside.

3. In a large bowl, whisk together peanut butter, sesame oil, rice vinegar, soy sauce, sesame seeds, honey, ginger, garlic, red pepper flakes and sriracha.

4. Fold in the grated cucumber, half the scallion and half the peanuts. Add the chilled pasta and toss to coat thoroughly.

5. Transfer to a serving bowl, twirling the pasta into a nest shape. Top with the sliced cucumber, cilantro and the remaining scallion and peanuts.

Makes 4 servings.

Nutritional Information: Calories: 490; Fat: 23g; Cholesterol: 70mg; Sodium: 1400mg; Total Carbohydrates: 57g; Dietary Fiber: 4g; Sugars: 12g; Protein: 18g.

Read Patricia’s inspiring story from the April 2018 issue of Guideposts!

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Coaching from Heaven

Scott Lang was a small college coach who had no big-university dreams. For 15 years, Lang was head basketball coach at tiny La Roche College in Pittsburgh. He’d had opportunities to move to bigger schools—including several offers to join the coaching staff at a Division I university—but had turned them all down.

Lang was in love with the close-knit community where he taught. Basketball is basketball, wherever it is played, he believed. As long as he could teach and influence the young men who played for him, he couldn’t ask for more.

The players who joined Lang’s team came to realize he was as much a life teacher as he was a coach. And it was those off-court lessons he emphasized—accepting responsibility for your actions, comporting yourself in a way that commanded respect—that carried this current La Roche team through a most difficult winter.

During practice on December 10, Lang collapsed near mid-court from a heart attack. He died in a hospital that night. He was 41.

The La Roche team mourned. And then, senior guard and co-captain Laron Mann said, the Redhawks regrouped and started to win. “I realized two games after Coach passed that everything he told us was sinking in, and that this was going to be a special season.”

Those lessons were embedded in Lang’s seemingly endless list of team rules, some of them annoyingly picayune—like having to tuck in your jersey and tie your basketball shoes before being allowed on the court, or having to push in your chair after leaving a restaurant table, and thanking the manager as you exit the door. These bits of discipline were the foundation of an honor code that translated into a determined resolve when the team walked on the court.

Their victories mounted until February 26, when the team faced Penn State-Behrend in the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference tournament final. The winner would advance to the NCAA Division III tournament, something no La Roche team had ever done. With one second remaining and La Roche leading by two points, Penn St.-Behrend guard Nick Dvorsky let go a shot. Mann, 5-feet-10, leaped high in the air.

“I’m not the tallest guy,” he said. “But I just felt I had to get a piece of that ball, had to make a play.”

Somehow Mann blocked the shot. The buzzer sounded. Pandemonium overtook the court.

Amidst the celebration, the team gathered at mid-court for a team photo. Just as the photographer was about to snap his camera, someone shouted, “Wait.”

An assistant coach ran to the entranceway of the gymnasium, where a photo of Coach Lang hung. He grabbed it and raced back to the court. The team posed behind it.

“Before the game,” said Harry Jenkins, Lang’s former assistant and now the team’s interim head coach, “it was the players, not the coaches, who were doing most of the talking. They reminded each other of what Coach would have wanted. They willed themselves to make this happen. Coach was with them all the way.”

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Closer to Home

Kidnapped five times, married five times. I’ve been tortured, had my children taken from me and in my late twenties I discovered my long-lost twin sister. No sooner did we meet than the two of us were trapped for days at the bottom of a well. Not long after that she was poisoned, and died on her wedding day. Not only did I mourn her death but I had to do the dying as well (I played both parts).

You see, I’ve done all these things as an actress on the daytime television drama As the World Turns, a career that’s given me enormous satisfaction. But much of it would never have happened if it weren’t for an important conversation I had a dozen years ago when the world felt very lonely to me.

The acting started when I was 10. My best friend, Allison Smith, had read about an open call for the Broadway musical Annie, and was excited about it. “Let’s go to the tryouts,” she said enthusiastically.

“I’ll ask my mom,” I told her.

We lived across the bridge in New Jersey, and Mom agreed to take Allison and me into the city just on a lark. She figured we’d do the audition and we would get it out of our systems. Then we could go out for a nice lunch afterward.

The huge theater was overrun with girls our age. All of them vying to be one of the orphans living “a hard knock life.” Girls singing “Tomorrow, tomorrow…” and practicing dance steps in the halls. A few even wore bright red wigs. Some of the girls had professional headshots, typeset résumés and mothers who pushed and bragged.

You know what? Of those 700 girls, only two were picked: Allison and me. We were in the show. Suddenly my mom was driving us to the city six days a week for shows. Allison and I were funny and cute and singing our lungs out. It was…fun. I was a professional actress!

From Annie I went on to make commercials and TV shows, and eventually I landed a long-running part on the soap opera As the World Turns. I loved acting, but I loved my life at home even more—playing Monopoly with my brother and sisters, renting videos or just making each other laugh. Sunday morning was really special. That’s when we all went together to the pretty little church down the street. At 17 I won an Emmy. My whole family came with me to the award ceremony at Radio City Music Hall.

“Now if you really want a career,” people said, “you’ll have to go to Hollywood. That’s where you need to be seen.” That’s where the prime-time television shows were cast and the big movies made. That’s where the big agents worked and the big studios were. That’s where the big breaks happened.

I had just recently graduated from Immaculate Heart Academy in New Jersey when I announced to my parents and siblings that I was California-bound. I said goodbye to my colleagues on As the World Turns and thanked them for the tremendous experience I had gotten. I said goodbye to the house and the pretty little church, and packed my bags. Hollywood, here I come!

I’d been in the business for almost 10 years. I had been in front of a camera day in and day out. I knew how to memorize a page of dialogue in a snap, take direction and work with other actors. I had tons of video clips. Finding an agent wasn’t hard. The work came my way, the way it had back when I lived in New Jersey.

You could see me as somebody’s younger sister in a made-for-TV movie, or I was someone else’s girlfriend in a feature film. I auditioned for commercials and got sent out for interviews for TV shows. I made a pilot and then another pilot.

But in between jobs I sat in my apartment and wondered why I wasn’t having fun auditioning anymore. I remembered how my mom used to sit backstage at the theater during Annie, talking with the other moms as she waited for me to finish the show. We laughed about things on the way home, and pretended that the Lincoln Tunnel would take us all the way to Florida. I still talked to Mom and everyone else all the time. Still, you can’t pop popcorn and play Monopoly over the telephone.

Allison Smith moved out to L.A. too, and I’d call her to have someone familiar to talk to. “You’re doing really well, Martha,” she said encouragingly.

“I guess so.”

But was I? I kept waiting for the one job that would make me happy. That one show, that one movie, that one big part. The next time the phone rings, I told myself, it’ll be the thing I’ve always wanted to do. That’s what I was here for. If I could just stick with it long enough. Go to auditions, go to interviews, meet people.

Not far from my apartment was a church with lovely stained glass windows, a little like the one back in Jersey. I went there on Sundays, just like at home, but it didn’t feel like home. I’d just drive back to my apartment where the phone never seemed to ring often enough and the videos stacked up of the pilots that never went anywhere.

One day my agent called with some disappointing news. A big part I was up for went to somebody else. I couldn’t sit in the apartment alone. I needed to talk to someone. Mom and Dad always said you could talk to God when you had to share your troubles. But I’d done my share of talking to God in my bedroom. Now I wanted to talk to another person. I drove down to the church. I went up the steps of the rectory and rang the bell. Soon a white-haired man answered the door. One of the priests.

“Please, I need to talk to someone.”

We sat in the back of the hushed, empty sanctuary. The stained glass windows seemed to slow the light as it filtered through the rich hues. I’d seen this priest on Sundays. We had shaken hands once or twice, but I’m sure he thought I was just another of the many actresses who come and go in Hollywood over the years. Now, though, he acted as though I were the most important person he’d ever met. His eyes almost never left mine.

I told him about the church I’d gone to at home and the school where I’d studied. I talked about my family and the way they would come to all my shows and watch all the things I did on TV. I had such a vivid memory of my sister Fran holding up a sign when I was a finalist for Annie. “Go, Martha!” it said, as though I were one of the top scorers on the field hockey team at school.

“You miss your family,” he said.

“Not a day goes by that I don’t think of them,” I admitted.

“It sounds like you really want to go back to New Jersey to be with them.”

Tears rolled down my cheeks. My family. Just the word made me cry. That was exactly what I wanted more than anything else. I’d known it all along, of course. Funny that I needed to hear someone else say it. “But what about my career?” I asked. “I had some big dreams.…”

“God has a way of bringing us what we truly need when we follow our hearts’ desires,” the priest said.

I didn’t need to hear any more. A month later I was back home, living temporarily with Mom and Dad, going to our old church, catching up with my brother and sisters. It was like my life went from black-and-white to color again.

Within a month I met the man who became my husband and the father of my children. At almost the same time I got a call from the head scriptwriter of As the World Turns. “Martha,” he asked, “would you like to come back on the show?”

I had to explain to him that I didn’t come East to look for work. I came here to be closer to home. But since he’d made the offer.…Well, I haven’t been off the show since. Sure, there are times when the schedule is hectic. I mean, how many traumas can you have even if they are all made up? But my off-screen life is anything but traumatic. I have all the people I love most close by. It’s a beautiful reminder that as wonderful a job is, it’s still just a job.

Family? That’s forever. Family. There’s that word again.

14 Classic Movies to Watch in January on TCM

With the chill winds of January blowing and the call to spend time at home for safety’s sake, curling up on the couch for a classic film is an appealing option. Here are 14 movies we think you’ll enjoy on Turner Classic Movies (TCM) this month.

6 Classic Christmas Movies You Might Have Missed

One of the greatest blessings of the Christmas season is family time. With wintry winds blowing outside, it’s a great time to gather at home to enjoy some classic offerings from the golden era of Hollywood.

For most, It’s a Wonderful Life and Miracle on 34th Street are the pictures that immediately come to mind when classic Christmas movies are discussed, but there are so many other worthy holiday pictures from the 1940s and ’50s to enjoy.

As you decide what to watch this holiday season, you may want to keep these titles in mind. All are available on DVD/Blu-Ray and/or via one of the major streaming services, and most will also show up on various cable networks this month. They’re guarenteed to warm your heart and bring a smile to your face, something we can all use.

The Bishop’s Wife (1947)
This film tells the story of an angel who helps a bishop with his problems, only to find himself in a precarious situation. Bishop Henry Brougham (David Niven) is so focused on securing the funding to build a new cathedral that he is neglecting his wife, Julia (Loretta Young), and their child.

An angel named Dudley (Cary Grant) arrives to guide Henry (who is the only person who knows Dudley is an angel) through his difficulties, but Dudley finds himself falling in love with Julia, which naturally is upsetting to Henry.

So we’re left with a very unusual love triangle. How will it resolve itself? Will Dudley, his mission completed, decide to remain on Earth? Can Henry compete for his wife’s affections with a very handsome and charming angel? You’ll have to watch this holiday classic to find out.

The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)
This enjoyable comedy is set in New York City during the holiday season and, like the musical Guys and Dolls, is based on the works of author Damon Runyon. Bob Hope plays the title character, an inept racetrack tout who gets on the wrong side of a gangster and has to come up with $10,000 before Christmas.

The Kid hatches a scheme to house some elderly ladies in the gangster’s currently closed casino and thereby gain a city license that allows him to raise a small army of lovable mugs to accept money on the street for charity (though the Kid plans to use the funds raised to pay off his debt and save his own neck). The questionable Santas do raise the money, though not before the Kid gets on the wrong side of yet another gangster. And as you might guess, all turns out well in the end.

The Lemon Drop Kid is an enjoyable holiday trifle that has enough broad comedy to please the entire family. And here’s a bit of trivia: The popular song “Silver Bells” was written for this picture; Hope and costar Marilyn Maxwell perform a lovely rendition of this holiday favorite.

Meet Me in St. Louis (1947)
This family favorite is a nostalgic look at a year in the life of the Smiths, a middle-class (well, perhaps upper middle class) Midwestern family living in St. Louis just after the turn of the century and just before the opening of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, more commonly known today as the St. Louis World’s Fair.

The scenes that take place at Christmastime account for just a small portion of the film’s nearly two-hour running time, but they’re so moving and memorable that this beloved movie has come to be associated with the holiday season. It’s a safe bet that the beloved if bittersweet Christmas song “Have Yourself a Very Merry Christmas,” which Judy Garland sings beautifully in the film, had a good deal to do with that.

This is a can’t-miss family pleaser, with Garland as second daughter Esther, Mary Astor as the Smith clan’s loving mother, and Margaret O’Brien as kid sister “Tootie” among the standouts in the cast.

Remember the Night (1940)
This little-known film has become a favorite among Christmas movie aficionados, though it won’t be of much interest to (and might not be appropriate for) younger kids. Like It’s a Wonderful Life, Remember the Night is at once dark and light, sad and funny, edgy and heartwarming.

Fred MacMurray plays John Sargent, a Manhattan DA who seeks a stay in his prosecution of Lee Leander (Barbara Stanwyck), a shoplifter who’s been caught stealing some jewelry. Sargent fears that, with Christmas just around the corner, the jury will feel sympathetic toward Leander and let her off too easily. But having been granted his stay, Sargent then feels remorse at the thought of Leander being stuck in jail for the holiday so he makes arrangements for her bail.

Leander thinks perhaps the DA has bailed her out for less than chivalrous reasons, but when the pair discovers that they’re both from Indiana, he offers her a ride home for the holiday. The problem is that, while a warm fire and loving family await him, the home Leander left behind is not nearly so welcoming, and when she shows up at her unforgiving mother’s door for the first time in years, she is rejected out of hand.

But she continues on to spend Christmas with Sargent and his family, and redemption seems at hand. The pair fall in love (of course), but Leander still faces charges back in New York for shoplifting. Will she face the music, or escape while she can?

Ably directed by Mitchell Liesen, Remember the Night was the last movie the great Preston Sturges wrote before he took on directing duties as well. If you’ve never seen it, you’re not alone, but you should rectify that sooner than later. Remember the Night is a celebration of the love, encouragement and acceptance a family can provide.

Holiday Affair (1949)
In the late 1940s, Robert Mitchum was known almost entirely for playing tough guys in westerns, war pictures and films noir. Romantic comedies were definitely not considered his forte, but a modest NYC-set picture he made with Janet Leigh has become a favorite among fans of classic Christmas pictures.

Leigh plays a single mother whose world is disrupted by an encounter with a war veteran (Mitchum) who’s something of a drifter. Leigh has a boyfriend (Wendell Corey) who’s a perfectly nice sort, but it’ll be clear immediately to rom-com fans that he hasn’t a ghost of a chance against the new hunk in his gal’s life.

It’s fun to see Mitchum playing against type, and Leigh is lovely and engaging as ever. Holiday Affair‘s charms are modest but undeniable, and if you’ve never seen it, we recommend adding it to your holiday movie slate.

The Shop Around the Corner (1940)
This romantic comedy stands as one of director Ernst Lubitsch’s finest achievements. This wonderful film inspired two remakes (In the Good Old Summertime and You’ve Got Mail), but, as enjoyable as both of those pictures are, the original can’t be beat.

James Stewart plays Alfred Kralik, the most successful clerk at Budapest gift emporium Matuschek and Company. Kralik is so devoted to his work that he hasn’t time for a social life, but he does have a pen pal, a woman he’s never met in person, who provides a spark of romance in his life.

Kralik also has something of an adversary in Klara Novak (Margaret Sullavan), a new employee who grates on his nerves to no end. She is, Kralik’s convinced, the polar opposite of his wonderful postal friend.

You may have already guessed the twist that brings this picture to comedic (and romantic) life, but thanks to the deft touch of Lubitsch, one of the greatest directors in classic cinema, you’ll be delighted and enthralled as you watch this classic comedy unfold. Be sure to point out Frank Morgan, the wizard in The Wizard of Oz, to the kids; he plays Hugo Matuschek, the owner of Matuschek and Co. and Alfred and Klara’s boss.

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Citrus Veggie Stir-Fry

Crunchy cashews and a citrus-seasoned sauce will stir your appetite for this colorful, no-cholesterol vegetable medley. My husband requests this meatless entree often, so it’s on the menu at least once a month.

Ingredients

1 tablespoon cornstarch

1 cup orange juice

2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 teaspoon grated orange peel

½ teaspoon ground ginger

⅛ teaspoon hot pepper sauce

1 cup sliced carrots

1 cup julienned sweet red pepper

1 cup julienned green pepper

1 tablespoon canola oil

1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms

2 cups fresh or frozen snow peas

½ cup sliced green onions

⅓ cup salted cashews

4 cups hot cooked rice

Preparation

1. In a bowl, combine the first seven ingredients and blend; set aside.

2. In a large skillet or wok, stir-fry carrots and peppers in oil for 5 minutes. Add mushrooms and snow peas; stir-fry for 6 minutes. Add green onions; stir-fry for 3 minutes or until the vegetables are crisp-tender.

3. Stir orange juice mixture and add to pan. Bring to a boil; cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thickened. Stir in cashews.

4. Serve with rice.

Serves 4

Chris Tomlin Is Sparking a Revival

It’s an unseasonably cool night in August and a group of 18,000 strangers is heading into Madison Square Garden for a Saturday night concert. The arena is packed and pitch black save for a few hundred phones beaming amongst the crowd. There’s a special kind of energy. An anticipation.

It would be easy to assume everyone was here to see Taylor Swift or maybe even One Direction perform – there are enough teenagers wearing matching t-shirts, herding to the main stage to support that theory. But tonight’s show isn’t starring a pop icon or a hysteria-inducing boy band, it’s a collection of Christian worship artists who’ve come to have church at one of the most famous and storied music venues in the country.

READ MORE: CROWDER’S NEW SEASON OF MUSIC

They’ve all come for Worship Night in America, a nationwide, three-stop tour featuring Christian artists Matt Redman, Matt Maher and Kari Jobe and Christian speakers Louie Giglio of Passion City Church and best-selling author Max Lucado. The headliner and visionary behind Worship Night in America is Chris Tomlin, who may just be one of the most widely sung Christian artists in history.

With an estimated 20-30 million churchgoers singing his songs every Sunday, the Grammy Award-winning Tomlin has sold over 4 million albums, racked up 32 Dove awards and consistently found himself at the top of the Billboard charts. The singer shows no signs of slowing down with his latest album Love Ran Red, which was released earlier this year. Tomlin will be the first to say that 2015 is shaping up to be one of the best years in his career.

“You caught me on a crazy year,” Tomlin tellsGuideposts.org when asked about his packed schedule. The artist just wrapped his Love Ran Red tour, is planning another run on the road this fall and is releasing a Christmas album later this year. But it’s Worship Night in America that has him really excited.

“A couple years ago I felt like God was giving me this vision of gathering the church together,” Tomlin says of the tour. “The initial thought was that it would just be amazing to get my friends, who have such influence in the church, around the country and around the world, and just do a night (of worship) together. I hadn’t really seen that done before.”

And it was no easy feat to round up some of the most influential names in Christian entertainment.

“It takes a lot of unity,” Tomlin admits. “You don’t just call people…. It takes years and years of friendships and relationships.”

But the payoff is something the 20+ year music industry veteran couldn’t have imagined. He describes Worship Night in America as his “favorite night of playing music,” because he got to share the moment with his friends and with so many people who were reaching out to God simultaneously.

“At the end of the day what my heart was so full of was how God has given us these songs to give people a voice to worship Him. Everybody [on stage] has such a pure heart in that. There’s no ego. These songs are for people to worship God with. Let us get out of the way.”

Worship is definitely taking place at The Garden as Tomlin’s first night of his dream tour winds down but the scene is less Sunday morning service, more summer music festival.

READ MORE: HOW KB IS CHANGING THE NARRATIVE OF CHRISTIAN RAP

There are beach balls being hurled through the air as Jobe, Tomlin and the rest of the crew on stage dance through an energetic rendition of Tomlin’s “God’s Great Dance Floor.” It is, as Giglio joked, way past a pastor’s bedtime at this point but though hours have past, no one seems to want the night to end, least of all the performers on stage. They have seamlessly integrated each other’s most powerful songs – and graciously bowed to a crowd of fans who would rather take the reins and sing those lyrics themselves than quietly sit and hear them performed. They’ve been able to give ticketholders a chance to do something that doesn’t happen too often; to joyously and unreservedly celebrate their faith. All on a Saturday night.

Tomlin hopes this tour ignites a revival in the church.

“These first steps of Worship Night in America, I pray that they spark an awakening in people’s lives,” Tomlin said. “I hope that it becomes something that when people hear about Worship Night in America, they get excited about it like a normal concert and they say ‘I really want this to come to my city.’ It’s something that I hope goes bigger and goes past me and the dream that I had.”

If anyone can create something that can explode beyond his wildest dreams, it’s Tomlin. His music has been able to transcend him and his intentions to become a part of the “fabric of the church,” –what he calls his greatest success.

“It’s the thing I’m most proud of because at the end of the day, to have a number one radio song is great, but that lasts about 4 months. Then it’s gone, that song is gone and everyone is looking for the next thing. So, to have songs that find their way into the church and have this staying power and longevity with people, that’s powerful because then it goes beyond you. It’s not attached to you anymore.”

That’s how Tomlin can tell the difference between something he’s done for himself and something God has truly anointed.

“I always say there’s good songs, there’s great songs and then there’s God songs. I’m always looking for the God songs. It’s not like everything I write will be (one) but there’s just something about when God touches a song and uses it and uses it in people’s lives. I’m so grateful for that.”

Chris Tomlin Is Singing the Good News on ‘Adore’

Christian singer/songwriter Chris Tomlin is grateful—and it’s easy to understand why.

The man whose songs are sung by roughly 30 million churchgoers every Sunday is having a big year. Guideposts.org caught him a day after he learned that his critically acclaimed 2014 album Love Ran Red earned him a Grammy Award nomination in the Contemporary Christian Music category. It’s not his first time being recognized by the Academy of Recording Arts, but it’s a shock, all the same.

“I don’t know if you ever expect those things, but I surely wasn’t [expecting a nomination] this time around,” Tomlin tells Guideposts.org.

He’s also fresh from his debut performance at the Grand Ole Opry’s original home, the Ryman, a venue on most musicians’ bucket lists, especially a good ol’ Southern boy with a love for country music like Tomlin. His performance there came on the heels of spring and fall tours across the country with some of the biggest names in Christian music.

Now, the artist is back on the road, this time performing songs off of his latest Christmas record, Adore.

A follow-up to his 2009 hit Christmas album, Glory in the Highest, Adore was an unexpected project for the singer.

“[Glory in the Highest] was so special, the way people responded to it, that I thought, ‘Well, that’s my one Christmas record,’” Tomlin admits.

But the urge to create music for the season just kept coming. After some friends sent him a song titled “Adore,” Tomlin knew he’d have to get back into the studio and craft more seasonal tunes and he had no problem choosing old favorites and penning new hits for the latest record.

“We’ve remixed a lot,” the artist says. “We have a lot of those songs that people have come to love on there – ‘Silent Night,’ ‘O Little Town of Bethlehem,’ ‘Away in A Manger’ — just in a different way.”

There’s also new Christmas fare on the record. Tomlin recruited worship music duo All Sons & Daughters, Irish singer Kristyn Getty and newcomer Lauren Daigle to help him give the originals life. Daigle, who also received a Grammy nod this week, is currently touring with Tomlin and her song on the record, “Noel,” is his favorite.

“It’s my favorite because I’m not singing it! I don’t like to listen to myself sing,” Tomlin jokes before describing how Daigle’s performance of the song leaves him and the audience in chills every night.

It’s just another reminder of why the artist loves composing this kind of music.

“It’s hit me recently,” Tomlin says. “Christmas is really the only holiday that has its own genre of music. All of these seasons and holidays of the year, but there’s something about Christmas. What is that? I think it’s because it’s the greatest news the world has ever heard. The good news of Jesus being born, whether they know it or not, whether they know the reason or not, it makes the whole world sing. It’s so special to make music around this time.”

For Tomlin, the holidays are even more special now that he has children of his own to celebrate with. His eldest daughter is four and youngest is a year old and it’s the first Christmas for the family of four.

“Every morning is ‘Is it Christmas?’ That’s all they ask,” Tomlin says laughing. His youngest recently had her first encounter with a mall Santa while Tomlin was home from the road. “It’s just that unbelievable moment as parents where you’re just torturing your child,” the singer joked of the experience. “When would you ever put your one year old in the arms of some weird looking guy dressed in red with a big white beard? That didn’t go to well.”

Still, he’s enjoying seeing the holiday in a new light thanks to his children.

“I’m very grateful for this moment in life,” Tomlin says. “There’s so much joy and fun in the house.”

It’s a joy he hopes to share with others through his music.

“There’s a lyric in a song on the record called ‘Noel’ that says, ‘Come and see what God has done,’” Tomlin shares. ‘I hope people can take this record as an invitation to once again come and see what God has done. We think about Jesus in a manger and the wise men, the shepherd and Mary, but the bigger story is what God has done for the world. That’s powerful.”

Christian Band For King & Country Wants Men to Know Women Are ‘Priceless’

If you’ve ever been to a for King & Country concert, you’ll know it’s not just the music that stands out, but also the message.

Australian brothers Joel and Luke Smallbone have been making Christian pop for almost a decade, collecting Grammy’s, K Love Awards and topping all kinds of Christian music charts. Their latest record, Run Wild. Live Free. Love Strong. won Pop Album of the Year at last year’s Dove Awards, and they’ll be back as hosts of the Dove Awards this month.

READ MORE: LUPITA NYONG’O INSPIRES IN ‘QUEEN OF KATWE’

But their proudest achievement isn’t chart topping hits or platinum records – though both are certainly nice – but an empowering movement they’ve committed their careers (and lives) to fueling.

Seven years ago, the brothers were touring with their sister, Christian artist Rebecca St. James. James often spoke at women’s conferences around the country and Joel and Luke were recruited to be her back-up band of sorts.

“We’re sitting there going, ‘This is what our career’s going to amount to. We’re going to be doing women’s conferences for the rest of our life,’” Joel jokes of that time early in their career. “But we realized, ‘Man, we’re actually here by design. We need to say something. We’re the only dudes here and there could be something powerful about us saying something to these ladies.’”

The guys felt the need to contribute to the conversation about equality and women’s rights, so when their own music took off and they began playing for crowds of thousands – both women and men – they took the opportunity to deliver a message to their fans.

“After the conference we started doing shows for men as well so we started saying to the guys, ‘Hey guys, it’s time for us to be men of integrity. It’s time for us to treat women the way they deserve to be treated, with respect and honor,’” Joel says. The brothers often interrupt their set lists to encourage women to believe in themselves and to avoid bad relationships. They also speak to men about valuing the women in their lives.

But doing a bit of talking on stage wasn’t enough for the duo.

“It was kind of like we were just hitting the tip of the iceberg,” Joel says. “We hadn’t really gotten to the bottom of what’s going on.”

The pair went to their brother Ben, a film director, with an idea for a book (already on shelves) and movie called Priceless – which releases later this month. Both projects focus on issues of human trafficking and are inspired by true events.

“Part of the reason we wanted to focus on that was because, if we are to say that a human life is priceless, what’s the antithesis of that? It’s a life that can be bought,” Joel explains. “Our grand message is that we believe that you’re priceless. That a woman is priceless. That a man is priceless. For us to help illustrate that, we felt like talking about [human trafficking, where] someone can be bought was [important. It proves] the big picture message that a person is priceless.”

READ MORE: BAND OF BROTHERS IS HELPING OTHERS ACHIEVE THEIR DREAMS

As husbands, brothers, sons and now fathers, Joel and Luke take their feminist mission seriously.

“Part of the reason we’re talking about it is because the issue starts with men. If we didn’t have our distorted view of women and what they can give a man we wouldn’t have this issue,” Luke explains. “The issue would be 100% eradicated. Part of our responsibility is not just to talk about it and hope men get on board, but to actually stand up and say, ‘I’m part of the problem.’”

They hope that women can find encouragement in their Priceless contribution to the feminist movement and that men can view it as an opportunity to change – for the better.

“If you’re trapped in this world as a man thinking that what I look at on a computer screen is not wrong, then there’s an opportunity for God to do a new thing in you,” Luke says.

Ultimately, the brothers want their fans and anyone who hears the message to have meaningful relationships with the women in their lives, to be able to experience the blessing of a relationship in which both parties are treated equally.

“I don’t claim to be an expert on the movement,” Luke says. “What I know is that a lot of times we don’t respect the women in our lives the way we should. How I treat my mother, how I see other people treating their mothers or sisters or their spouse or their girlfriend — those are the things that I can actually address. And, if we didn’t have the women in our lives, we’d be fairly miserable human beings.”

Chris Pratt’s Words of Wisdom

Whether he’s expounding on the joys of ice cream or explaining how God has affected his life, actor Chris Pratt inspires others to laugh and gives his personal tips on how to let go of negativity in your life.

Read The Tip That Changed Chris Pratt’s Life from the June-July 2017 issue of Mysterious Ways magazine!

Chocolate Caliente Mexicano

I’ve been working on ranches for over 20 years, and the simple pleasures of that life are what I love most—hard work and being close to the land. But on cool fall evenings I sometimes like to indulge with a cup of Chocolate Caliente Mexicano, or Mexican hot chocolate. I rustle up a batch that is big enough to share with fellow ranch hands. The spicy cinnamon and sweet milk keep us all warm and happy.

Ingredients

⅓ c. slivered almonds ½ c. sugar
4 c. milk 1 tsp. cinnamon
4 oz. unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped 1 ½ tsp. vanilla

Preparation

1. In a large saucepan over medium heat, toast almonds until golden brown.

2. Add milk and chocolate.

3. Stir occasionally until chocolate melts and milk is hot, but not boiling.

4. Add sugar, cinnamon and vanilla. Stir until sugar dissolves.

5. Pour half of mixture into blender and blend until smooth and frothy.

6. Repeat with remaining mixture. Pour puree into cups and savor!

Serves 4.

Nutritional Information: Calories: 450; Fat: 27g; Cholesterol: 25mg; Sodium: 105mg; Total Carbohydrates: 48g; Dietary Fiber: 1g; Sugars: 37g; Protein: 12g.