Watch Pastor TC on Connecticut Sttyle. |
Quotes:
The first recipe for happiness is: Avoid too lengthy meditation on the past. ~ Andre Maurois
Turn your bitter into better relationship. |
Click to LOOK INSIDE this Book
|
If you don't have a church home we invite you to Restoration Springs Interdenominational Church 1575 Thomaston Avenue in Waterbury.
www.rest.org If you need baby blessings please contact me at 203-753-7377 or officiate weddings go to - S & M (Strong Marriages) http://rest.org/SandMplus.htm
Remember In the Book of Ecclesiastes chapter 4 and verse 12 (Bible) "And if one prevail against him, two shall withstand him; and a threefold cord is not quickly broken."
TRANSLATION (With only husband and wife the commitment can easily fail, but with God, husband, and wife the cord of commitment is not quickly broken.)
Pastor TC Brantley Restoration Springs Interdenominational Church
| |
look under Restoration Springs |
Marriage Seminar
January 16, 2010 6 to 9 pm
|
Click to LOOK INSIDE this Book
|
Quotes:
A marriage without conflicts is almost as inconceivable as a nation without crises. ~ Andre Maurois
Married couples you are not alone. |
When the Thrill Is Gone:
You can still rekindle passion and improve your sex life in a low-sex marriage.
Generally speaking, magazine articles about how to improve your sex life -- especially in marriage or a long-term relationship -- contain the same advice: candles, hot baths and soft music are often invoked.
That may be because these "better sex" stories are a staple of women's magazines. I don't know about you, but candles always make me think of church, baths are something my mother made me take, and soft music reminds me of going to the dentist. Definite turn-offs all. More |
Quotes:
A successful marriage is an edifice that must be rebuilt every day. ~ Andre Maurois
Every day, you must rebuild the relationship. |
FACEBOOK CAUSING DIVORCES:
Facebook is cited in one out of every five divorce petitions, according to some new research published this week. Apparently, the ability to "poke" with such ease is simply too tempting to resist.
According to the Telegraph, the center claims about 20 percent of all divorce documents include some type of reference to Facebook
The root of the problem should come as no surprise: Too many spouses are using the social network for flirting -- or more.
"The most common reason seemed to be people having inappropriate sexual chats with people they were not supposed to," Mark Keenan, Divorce-Online's managing director, is quoted as saying.
More and more people may be discovering their significant other's indiscretions via social networks, but there's no reason to believe that one is causing the other. Cheating is cheating; Facebook is just a medium (albeit one that creates an easily findable path of breadcrumbs). MORE
|
Quotes:
When you fall just fall into each other arms. | |
Pastor TC on Radio
Hear DJ Buck and Nancy on (January 7 2010) with invited guest Pastor TC.
To hear previous shows go to Archive
Click to read some of the accomplishments of Pastor TC. All to the glory of God. |
Click to LOOK INSIDE this Book
|
Click to LOOK INSIDE this Book
|
Marriage Advice: Stop Having the Same Fight
Almost every couple has one: that seemingly trivial fight that just keeps cropping up, day after day, month after month, making you feel as if you're stuck in your very own version of Groundhog Day. Perhaps it's about your husband's leaving his cereal bowl by the sink rather than in the dishwasher, or your forgetting - oops! - to tell him that his mother called. The issues that trigger bickering can seem insignificant, but when fights keep on resurfacing, your otherwise happy marriage can become a petri dish of resentment and hurt feelings - the kind that leave you and your beloved sitting in different rooms watching the same TV show.
More |
Quotes:
Without a family, man, alone in the world, trembles with the cold.
~ Andre Maurois
Man who has passions is not complete until he has found a wife. |
Quotes:
Stop trying to be perfect and just honest. |
The Facebook divorce
"We are getting a divorce. It has been in the works for a while now," Lauren, a 36-year-old mother of two who resides in a small town outside of Austin, wrote on her Facebook page at the beginning of July, about her husband of 13 years. (Lauren is not her real name.) She was commenting on a response -- a single, stunned "Huh?" -- to the change in her relationship status. "Lauren went from being 'married' to being 'single,'" read the dry, cold, unsympathetic recitation of fact. The infamous little broken-heart icon, the fixture you hope that, like some medical alert bracelet, you will never have to wear, fluttered up to hang alongside it. This is how life's big moments unfold on Facebook: Epic emotions are reduced to emoticons. The Facebook divorce
| |