The Cohrs Family
Contact
  • Home
  • Writings
    • Trinity-St. John Lutheran School
    • Bible Study on Luther Movie
    • BLOG >
      • 2008 >
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2009 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2010 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2011 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2012 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2013 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2014 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
    • Sermons >
      • Celebration of Life - Chuckie Miller-Taylor
      • “What is your name?”
      • Reformation Day – Oct. 31, 2010
      • Reformation Day – Nov. 3, 2013
      • Here’s Your Sign
      • Arrrr – Where be your treasure, Mate?
      • God Calms Your Storms
      • Invocation
      • Why?
      • LHM and You
      • Beautiful Feet
      • Chapel - LHM
    • Publications >
      • Concordia University - Forester
      • Issues in Christian Education
      • LHM - Project Connect
      • Lutheran Centger for Religious Liberty
      • Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod School Ministry
      • Lutheran Education Association >
        • Shaping the Future - Fall 2015
        • Shaping the Future - Spring 2018
        • Shaping the Future - Winter 2020
        • Shaping the Future - Winter 2021
        • Shaping the Future - Spring 2022
        • Monograph
        • Shaping the Future Plus - 2017
      • The Lutheran Layman
      • The Lutheran Layman - Oct. 2013
      • Lutheran Laymen's League - "By Kids...For Kids" >
        • Lesson 1 - Thai Culture
        • Lesson 2 - Thai History
        • Lesson 3 - Thai Religions
        • Lesson 4 - Lutheran Mission Work
        • Bibliography
      • Lutheran Laymen's League - Bible Studies >
        • The Spirit of Power
        • The Power of the Breath of Life
        • The Power of Eternal Life
        • The Power to Pray
        • The Power to Encourage
        • The Power to Give
      • Michigan District - LCMS
      • Michigan In Touch >
        • Avoiding Staff Infection
        • Teams
        • Calm Waters
    • Devotional Thoughts >
      • Sauerkraut Seeds
      • Who is Fit to Lead in the Church?
      • To Encourage Workers
      • Happy Easter, Bunny
      • I Love to Tell the Story
      • I Am Not Ashamed
      • Foolish Sheep
      • Why?
      • What does it Matter?
      • “I Have Something For You”
      • Opening Day
      • Super Bowl XXXIX
      • Don't Worry
      • My Father’s Hands
      • “The Less Traveled Road”
      • Mother's Day
      • Partings
      • Stress
      • Surprise!
    • Daily Devotion - Lutheran Hour Ministries
    • Special Devotions >
      • Water
      • Office Personnel Devotion
      • 1966
      • Words of Eternal Life
      • Body of Christ
      • Pre-Convention Anxiety
    • Christ the King Lutheran School >
      • Faculty Devotion – Why Do You Teach?
      • Advent – the time of waiting
      • Advent – the time of preparation
      • Advent – Time for Preparation
      • Advent - Traditions
      • Ash Wednesday
      • Can Anything Good Come From …
      • Come to the Banquet
      • Do You Love Me?
      • Follow Me
      • Follow Me to My Father’s House
      • Give God His Due
      • Greetings from Paradise
      • He Healed Many
      • His Heart Could Have Stopped
      • How Can This Be?
      • It Rained
      • Memorial Day
      • My 1951 Ford
      • Reject Jesus?
      • Snow
      • Stop Doubting and Believe
      • Sugar Cookies
      • The Beatitudes
      • The Computer
      • The Greatest Commandment
      • The Honeymoon is Over
      • The Muckraker
      • The Power of a Word
      • The Rainbow
      • The Shepherds Returned
      • The Sunshine
      • The Witness
      • Valentine’s Day
      • What Do You Fear?
      • What Is Your Favorite Food?
      • Who is Jesus?
      • Who is the Boss!
      • Why a Lutheran School?
      • You Will Be Free
      • Your Sins are Forgiven
    • Our Savior Lutheran School >
      • All Saint's Day
      • Anxiety
      • Can I Afford a Lutheran School?
      • Change
      • Election Day
      • Give God His Due
      • Grandpa
      • Heart
      • Hope
      • I can’t believe it!
      • I'm Busy
      • I ‘m Going Out to Fish
      • It is almost Spring
      • Let the Children Come to Me
      • Light of the World
      • Living Water
      • Lutheran Schools – Just for Lutherans?
      • March Madness
      • My 1951 Ford
      • ​My People
      • New Beginnings
      • Our House
      • Report Card Time
      • Thanks-Living
      • The Christmas Gift
      • The Cold Front
      • The Dream
      • The First Day of School
      • The Flag and the Castle
      • The Power Went Out
      • ​This is a Test
      • Tiny Town
      • To Soar Like Eagles
      • We are at War
      • What Do You Want for Christmas?
      • Why Not?
    • PMT Devotions >
      • 2001 >
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2002 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2003 >
        • Issues in Christian Education
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
        • June
        • July
        • August
        • September
        • October
        • November
        • December
      • 2004 >
        • January
        • February
        • March
        • April
        • May
    • Zion Lutheran Church
    • Opa's Stories >
      • Bunny and Rich - Our First Date
      • Carol and Rich - Our First Date
      • The Squirrel in the Toilet
      • Bunny's Easter Lamb Cake
      • Christmas Traditions
      • The Christmas Angel
      • Childhood Homes
      • The Fall - The Dream - The Gift
      • My Father's Jobs
      • My Name
      • Goldfinger
      • Downtown
      • Rock Around the Clock
      • Sauerkraut Seeds
  • Family History
    • Ancestry DNA
    • Family Homes of Rich Cohrs >
      • Family Homes of Bunny Cohrs
    • Family Trees
    • Cohrs - O - Gram
    • Christmas Letter
    • Marjorie Colburn Tree
    • Bunny's Homecoming
    • Carol - A Gift From God
  • Recipes
    • Air Fryer Recipes >
      • Chicken Tenders - No Breading
      • French Fries
    • Appetizers >
      • Bacon Wrapped Water Chestnuts
      • Aunt Chuckie's Meatballs
      • Sweet and Sour Meatballs
    • Cooking For Phonics
    • The Cookie Jar >
      • Prairie Preschool - Bunny Cohrs, Teacher
      • Grades 1 & 2 - Rosanna Stellhorn, Teacher
      • Grades 3 & 4 - Danny Magelitz, Teacher
      • Grades 5 & 6 - Deitt Schneider, Teacher
      • Grades 7 & 8- Richard Cohrs, Teacher and Principal
    • Bunny's Recipe Scrapbook
    • Family Favorites >
      • Ann's Stuffed Pepper Soup
      • Apple Crisp
      • Aunt Cindy's Bailey's Recipe
      • Aunt Judy's Italian Beef
      • Aunt Melinda's Spaghetti Sauce
      • Bacon and Egg Muffin
      • Banana Bread
      • Becky's Crock Pot Fajitas
      • Boston Cream Pie (Rich's Birthday Cake)
      • Carol's Crock Pot Baked Beans
      • Cherry Delight
      • Chex Mix
      • Chicken Piccata Pasta (from Leigh Frirth)
      • Chuckie's Vegetable Medley
      • Lo Cal Chicken Parmesan
      • Mom Conrad's Hamburger Casserole
      • Dad Williams Standing Rib Roast
      • Double Berry German Puff Pancake
      • French Onion Burger
      • Marinated Cucumber, Onion, and Tomato Salad
      • Mary Hahn German Chocolate Cream Pie
      • Green Bean Casserole >
        • Hash Brown Shepherd's Pie
      • Hobo Dinner Foil Meal
      • Ken Klaus Pretzels
      • Lasagna
      • Old Fashioned Meat Loaf
      • One Pan Sausage and Veggies
      • Penne and Smoked Sausage Casserole
      • Rich's Beef Stroganoff
      • Rich’s Roasted French Onion Potatoes
      • Sage Turkey Stuffing
      • Sausage, Peppers and Onions
      • Sheel Pan ltalian Susoge Pepper Bake
      • Shepherd's Pie
      • Sloppy Joes
      • Slow Cooker Chicken Fajitas
      • Stuffed Green Peppers
      • Teriyaki Chicken
      • Texas Sheet Cake (Carol's Aunt Eileen)
      • Tuna Boats - Tuna Salad with Cornichons
      • X-Tra Special Cheesecake
    • Christmas Cookies >
      • BonBon Cookies
      • Chocolate Cookie Mice
      • Cranberry Nut Cookies
      • Grandma Cohrs Sugar Cookies
      • Holly Cookies
      • Kolachies
      • Old Fashioned Oatmeal Cookies
      • Oatmeal Cookies
      • Peanut Butter Blossom Cookies
      • Peppermint Pinwheels
      • Pfeffernussen
      • Russian Tea Cakes / Snow Balls
      • Snickerdoodles
      • Spritz Cookies
      • Sugar Cookies
  • Family Photos
    • Albert Cohrs
    • Anna Weidler
    • Lyman Collburn
    • Hazel Kingsland
    • Richard Frederick Cohrs >
      • PFC Cohrs
      • Kids Was Kids
    • Marjorie Colburn
    • Richard Paul Cohrs >
      • Randall Jay Cohrs
      • Daniel Lyman Cohrs
      • Three Brothers
      • Minister of the Gospel - Commissioned
      • Rich's 70th Birthday Party
    • Harry and Ruth Conrad
    • Edilberto and Marilynn Angulo >
      • Lynn's Memories
    • Arlene (Bunny) Conrad >
      • Siblings
      • Minister of the Gospel - Commissioned
    • Glen and Donna Williams >
      • The Family Scrapbook >
        • Animated Family Scrapbook
      • In His Own Words
      • The Smile of My Life
      • Obituary
    • Carol Williams (Bacon) >
      • Sisters
    • Wedding - Bunny and Rich
    • Wedding - Carol and Rich
  • Vacation Photos
    • European Vacation >
      • Florstadt and Surrounding Area
      • Trier, Luxemburg, Belgium, Netherlands
      • Worms, Neuschwanstein, Dachau
      • France
      • Rothenburg
    • Bunny and Rich's Hawaii Vacation - Scrapbook - 2002
    • Alaska - Rich 2002
    • Bunny and Rich - Florida - 2004
    • Carol's European Vacation
    • Israel - 2004 >
      • November 3, 2004: Chicago - Europe
      • November 4, 2004: Europe - Israel - Tel Aviv
      • November 5, 2004: Jerusalem - Bethlehem - Herodium
      • November 6, 2004: Jerusalem - Mt of Olives - Gethsemane
      • November 7, 2004: Jerusalem - Masada
      • November 8, 2004: Jerusalem - The Old City
      • November 9, 2004: Tiberias - Jericho / Bet Shean
      • November 10, 2004: Tiberias, the Sea of Galilee and Capernaum
      • November 11, 2004: Cana / Nazareth / Caesarea / Megiddo
    • Carol and Rich Hawaii Vacation
    • Joshua Tree National Park - 2008
    • Raven Cliff Salls, SC - 2009
    • Brattonsville, SC - 2009
    • Niagara Falls - 2009
    • Marco Island/Everglades - 2010
    • Key West - January 2011
    • Alaska Trip - August, 2011 >
      • Day 1
      • Day 2
      • Day 3
      • Day 4
      • Day 5
      • Day 6
      • Day 7
      • Day 8
      • Day 9
      • Day 10
      • Day 11
    • Israel - 2012 >
      • Jerusalem
      • Jerusalem
      • Mount of Olives
      • Ain Karem - Nazareth - Bet Shemesh
      • Bethlehem
      • Bet Guvrin-Maresha - Beit She'an - Caesarea Maritima
      • Caesarea Philippi - Camel Rides - Cana
      • Dead Sea - Golan Heights - Jacob's Well
      • Jericho - Jordan River - Korazim
      • Masada - Mt. Carmel - Qumran
      • Sea of Galilee - Mount of Beatitudes - Tabgha - Capernaum
      • Tel Dan - Valley of Elah
      • Special Pictures - Sheep and Goats
    • Germany Trip - September 2014 >
      • Day 1: Munich and Oberammergau
      • Day 2: Innsbruck and Neuschwanstein
      • Day 3: Eagle's Nest and Ettal Monastery
      • Day 4: Dachau and Oberammergau
      • Day 5: Augsburg
      • Day 6: Erfurt
      • Day 7 - 10: Erfurt Hospital
      • Day 11 - 12: Berlin and Flight Home
    • California Trip - January, 2015
    • Aruba - 2017
    • Great American Eclipse
    • Washington DC
    • Las Vegas - 2018
    • New York, New York - 2018
    • Pensacola Beach
    • July 4, 2019
    • Kentucy - August 2019
    • New Englamd - 2021
    • Niagara Falls State Park - September 2022
    • Washington DC
    • Charleston SC - October 2022
    • Pittsburgh - February 2024 >
      • Carnegie Science Center Miniature Railroad & Village®
      • Duquesne Incline
      • Pennsylvania Trolley Museum
      • Western Pennsylvania Model Pailroad Museum
    • Great American Eclipse 2024
    • Aruba - 2024
    • New Yory - 2025
  • Special Photos & Videos
    • On the Radio - Sirius XM 60's Gold >
      • On the Radio - Lutheran Hour - Action In Ministry
      • On the Radio - Lutheran Hour - Action In Ministry
    • Videos >
      • 75th Birthday Video
      • Train Set
      • TV Time
      • Home Videos
    • Jiminy Cricket
    • Dead Tree
    • Engraved Paver
    • Coca-Cola
    • Heidelberg Painting
    • Katrina
    • Wall of Crosses
    • Christmas 2003
    • Olympic Torch Relay Run - St. Louis, MO - 2004
    • Blood Moon
    • Super Blood Wolf Moon
  • Bucket List
    • Transportation >
      • Trains >
        • Alaska Railroad
        • Amtrak
        • Big Boy
        • El Train - Chicago
        • Manitou and Pikes Peak Railway
        • National Museum of Transportation
        • Roaring Camp Steam Locomotive
        • Royal Gorge Railroad
      • Planes >
        • Airports
        • B-25J
        • Memphis Belle
        • PT-13 Stearman
        • Space Shuttle Enterprise
        • Air Zoo Aerospace & Science Museum - Kalamazoo, MI
        • Combat Air Museum
        • Dover DE, Beach and Aircraft Museum
        • Final SWA Flight - FNT
        • Historic Aircraft Restoration Museum
        • Cape Canaveral / Kennedy Space Center - Florida
        • NASA Johnson Space Center
        • National Naval Aviation Museum - Pensacola Beach, Florida
        • Pima Air & Space Museum
        • Smartt Field - St. Charles County Regional Airfield
        • Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
        • Southwest Airlines - Special Aircraft
        • Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
        • USAF C-40C
        • USS Yorktown - aircraft
        • Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum
      • Automobiles >
        • Convertible
        • Shelby Cobra
        • Car Show
        • The Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Museum
      • Ships >
        • Queen Mary
        • Royal Caribbean Cruise Ship
        • Tall Ship - Bay City, Michigan
        • USS Yorktown
        • USS Laffy
    • PGA Championship
    • American Pickers
    • Aruba Vacation
    • An Inauguration
    • Become a Lord and a Lady
    • Graceland
    • The Henry Ford
    • Visiting all 50 States
    • Writing and Publishing a Book
  • Cohrs Fund
  • LEA Award - 2022
  • S.M.R.L.H.
  • Books
    • Three Score and Ten
    • Calm Waters
    • The Stones Shout His Praise
    • Welcome to the Family

Christmas Decorations 12-3-2013

As I drove through my neighborhood last night I was impressed with the number of houses decked out with festive lights, innovative lawn displays, and other yuletide items -- all hung, nailed, tacked, strung or otherwise fastened in the name of this merriest of seasons. There was one house in particular that looked as if it might double as an airport beacon, casting forth enough illumination to be visible from outer space.
 
Now, lest one deduce me to be the Grinch himself, I did put up my lawn decorations and house lights last weekend too. So it's not the idea of decorations I am opposed to, it's being tacky.
 
Now tacky I realize is a subjective measurement, for one man's plastic Santa placed next to a set of blow-up penguins playing keep away from a snowman using his head for the ball may be the next man's piece de résistance. Still, I find that for me, at least, the most meaningful houses are the ones with decorations honoring the magnificent spirit of this season.
 
I like lights strung along gutters and eaves that simulate icicles; I like trees decked out in lights. And I really like a crèche in the yard, depicting Mary, Joseph and Jesus.
 
Our Lutheran Hour Ministries' building has a large, lighted set that features snowflakes on either side of Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus.
 
My home has a crude wooden stable with the figures of Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus.
 
Of all the lasting childhood Christmas memories I have, the one that means the most to me today is when my dad would set out the manger scene. Every year there was one under the Christmas tree, and most years he placed one front and center in the yard. He would have us kids help him set up the figures and run the cord for the spotlight; then he would share with us his words immortal: "Boys, this is what Christmas is all about, not all that shopping stuff!"
 
I couldn't agree more.
 
Men, it's never too late to begin sharing a CHRISTmas decoration. If this is something you can add to your Christmas celebration, may this year be the start of a tradition your kids will remember 30 years from now.

The Best Present 12-10-2013

I must confess I like giving presents. I especially enjoy giving Christmas gifts to my family. There are few things in life I enjoy more than watching my loved ones open their gift from me. It is then I might get a gasp, a smile, a squeal of delight, a tear, or an exclamation as they see what I have given them.
 
There's a little method to my gift selection I can pass on to you. I pay attention. That's right. I pay attention to those around me throughout the year, listening for some indication of what gets them excited, what they're really interested in. For example, my mind tunes into their hobbies, collections, interests, etc. A friend who's into pens gets a special pen; a friend who golfs, well, he gets golf stuff; the one who enjoys trains gets a train set, etc. I know. It's a pretty complicated method.
 
I've also been known to be so bold to just ask what they would like for a gift. This tactic can sometimes be frustrating, however. For when the loved one mentions the best gift they could ever get just so happens to be the best gift everyone else wants, well, then, it's often difficult to find it. It's then I go into my super-quest mode: determined to pull all of the stops to obtain that item which is unattainable so that my loved one is especially excited come Christmas morning.
 
Over the years I've had my share of successes, giving those special gifts that elicit a gasp, smile or squeal. One time I even got tackled as my loved one ran to give me a hug.
 
One thing I've noticed -- no matter what the gift is -- the best time of the day is simply being together. I have come to realize I could wrap up just about anything and the gift would be appreciated. Okay, maybe not anything, but you get my drift.
 
This brings me to one last item, and it's the most important point I want to leave you with. Guys, the best present you can give your loved ones at Christmas is your presence -- throughout the year. When you are home for meals, cheering at sports events, sitting next to your kids as they do their homework, reading a bedtime story to your youngster, or just taking a walk -- being with them is a gift they can't replace -- nor would they want to.
 
Most every present under the tree will be worn out, broken, lost or outgrown over the years. Not so with the memory of the times you've spent together. And in these times of pinching pennies, isn't it nice to know the most enduring gift you can give is yourself?
 
So the next time you wonder what's the best present you can give that special someone, try giving yourself -- your presence.

Family Reunions - the Hard Way 12-17-2013

It's a familiar story. Everybody in attendance hasn't seen most everybody else in attendance since the last time a family member died. Now, I may be wrong in this, but the fact we're all seeing each other more frequently is not the best of signs. Keeping up this pace is not the ideal either, as it means there are going to be fewer reasons for getting together -- and fewer people to get together with when we do.
 
And so goes life -- and death. When I was a kid, death was far away. The thought of losing my parents would send me into a sudden, cold shiver: a gut-dropping sensation would overtake me when the thought turned into a real possibility, no matter how remote it seemed at the time. Still, then, I could shake the feeling pretty quick. After all, I was young. My folks were sort of young, and everybody seemed to be in pretty good shape.
 
But, oh, how things do change. In the last four years, I've seen my Dad, my aunt, my Mom, my brother-in-law, and now, just this past week, my uncle, exit this mortal vale. There are births and babies, of course, graduations and marriages too, but the old guard is making its final exodus now, permanently relinquishing their posts as patriarchs and matriarchs of the family. And as they go, so have some of my dearest confidants, best friends, and closest allies.
 
Commenting on this at last week's visitation for my uncle, a cousin of mine was telling me how our fragmenting brood needs to find time to get together and reestablish the pattern of family outings that were so much a part of our lives when we were all kids.
 
I said, "Yeah, we do!" (Or something like that).
 
That was the easy part.

Christmas Eve 12-24-2013

By the time you get this, your Christmas Eve should be in full swing. Hopefully, everything's bought that's going to be bought, and everything's up that's going to get put up. For grown-ups with kids there may still be some wrapping of presents, a little, last-minute decorating, or some other odds and ends, before the kids hit the ground running at 5 a.m. But for the most part ... preparations should be nearing an end.
 
As a kid in Chicago I remember one Christmas in the 1960s when I got my first G.I. Joe. That year my Dad was managing a neighborhood grocery story, my oldest brother was in Vietnam, and my Mom was on pins and needles. Around the house it was Johnny Mathis on the turntable, A Charlie Brown Christmas on our black and white TV, and wassail wafting from the kitchen. I was reading -- for the umpteenth time -- my Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun Christmas edition, and watching quarter-sized snowflakes steadily cover the street outside our home, which was in the back of the laundry my Mom operated.
 
What a time of the year Christmas is for kids! I hope it's as fun these days as it was for us back in the Middle Ages. Things were less frenetic then, more homespun and simple. Certainly, the distractions were fewer. The fact that four-year-olds can follow a series of commands on a hand-held computer is nifty, but somehow with all this connectedness (and the stream of choices that goes with it) there's a disconnect too.
 
Sadly, it's often the same for adults.
 
As this evening rolls on and quickly disappears, take a moment, no, better yet, seize a moment to contemplate what it's really all about. Beyond the warm glow of flickering lights, beyond the heady aroma of baked cookies and sweet breads, beyond the prospect of unwrapping that present you're biting at the bit to unwrap, there was a life born in this world 2,000 years ago that changed everything-for everyone-for all time.
 
May your Christmas be merry with the gift of Good News that's yours 365 days a year!

New Year's Eve   12-31-2013

​Well, here's another one for the record books. 2013 is history. Are you satisfied with your conquests this year? Are you looking to repeat your performance in 2014? If not, does melancholy over what might have been dampen your enthusiasm?
 
How about the New Year starting tomorrow? Are there plans to make it a banner year? Have you outlined strategies to tackle your objectives and achieve your goals?
 
Whatever state we find ourselves in, the New Year is all about (Surprise! Surprise!) new beginnings or, perhaps better stated, a chance to radically revise some old habits from the year before. Sure, it's just another flip of the calendar page, but it can be more.
 
And with that, enough said.
 
May your New Year be the start-or perhaps the continuation-of great things in your life. May your relationships improve; may your direction be clear and reasonable to navigate; may your health and well-being take you to new highs. Above all, may your determination to become the best person you can be-to your wife or girlfriend, you family, your friends, and yourself-find you satisfied with your efforts 365 days from now.
 
Happy New Year from the Men's NetWork!
Proudly powered by Weebly