“Calvin and the Huguenots,” Francis Foucachon – New Saint Andrews College
Labels: church, Disputatio, Family, France, Huguenots, moscow, New Saint Andrews, Reformation, Vaudois, Waldenses
Foucachon Family Blog |
The Blog of Daniel and Lydia Foucachon
Bienvenue!
Hi! My name is Daniel Foucachon. I am American and French, and currently reside in Moscow, Idaho, with my wonderful wife Lydia, and my 4 kids Edmund, William, Margaux, and Ethan. I am the founder of Roman Roads Media, a publishing company creating video courses geared towards high school aged homeschoolers.
Labels: church, Disputatio, Family, France, Huguenots, moscow, New Saint Andrews, Reformation, Vaudois, Waldenses
From an NSA news release:
Rev. Francis Foucachon, a native of France with a Huguenot family heritage that extends to the 16th century Protestant Reformation, will present "Calvin and the Huguenots" at the Nuart Theater this Friday, October 30, at 3 p.m. The lecture is free and open to the public.
The lecture, the fifth in the College's yearlong Calvin Lecture Series marking the 500th anniversary of John Calvin's birth, is on the eve of day that Protestants celebrate the Reformation worldwide.![]()
Foucachon is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA) and has served as a church planter in France with Missions to the World. With its speaker series, New Saint Andrews joins an international and interdenominational commemoration of John Calvin's life and work. New Saint Andrews, which is firmly rooted in the Calvinist tradition, is a limited-enrollment classical Christian liberal arts college located on Friendship Square in Moscow, Idaho.
Labels: Covenant, Family, France, Huguenots, New Saint Andrews, Reformation, Vaudois, Waldenses
The following was sent to me by my friend Luke Welch:
Truth be known, all the following information was developed by me. So don't go off and write your own personal end-times book without giving me credit for the beautiful proofs I am about to lay out for you.
----begin----
666 is made of 3 sixes. The sixth letter of our alphabet is "F"
666 = FFF
Qu'est-ce que l'FFF?
La Fédération Française de Football. AKA - the devil. Here's more.
When did the FFF last win the World Cup? 1998.
How many times has the FFF won the World Cup? 3.
1998 / 3 = 666
Still not convinced?
What shape describes the geography of France? the HEXagon! Hmmm!? See it all coming clear?
NEED MORE PROOF?
What is the FFF's Website?
http://www.fff.fr
Let's break this down:
http:// w w w . f f f . f r
23 23 23 6 6 6 6 18
2 * 3 = 6 18 = 6 + 6 + 6
So: 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
10!!!!!! 10 sixes!!!!!!
And Daniel, if that's not enough - take this last little bit of evidence that something funny is going on with French people:
What color is the devil? Red.
Does the devil have horns? Yes.
What animal has horns? A Bull.
Is a pentagram a five pointed star? Yes.
How many points does a pentagram have? 5.
So the perfect picture of the devil would say : "Red Bull" and have 5- Five-pointed Stars. And a 666.
Enjoy the photo:
The French are not big on breakfast. Often very light like a Croissant with coffee. However there are four breakfasts in the year which are exceptionally special. There is a Huguenot tradition in France of having a special advent breakfast that my father grew up with and then did with us, and that I am now continuing. It is often not a huge breakfast, mostly because we would otherwise be late for church, but it is always very special and unique. There are a few things that always accompany it, such as a tangerine with a candle stuck in it, as well as Papilottes (which we didn't have this time since you can't get them in the states. Papilottes are a Christmas-only chocolate that is wrapped in a foil with a joke inside and sometimes a little firecracker.)
Other than those, it varies from time to time. This morning we had eggs, toast, and breakfast sausage; a donut (with coconut on top), fruit cake, a slice of pound cake, a chocolate cigar, peanut butter cups, and hot cider (and of course the orange).
Here are a couple photos of our first advent breakfast:
Labels: advent, Christmas, church, cooking, Covenant, Family, France, gastronomy, gourmet, Huguenots
Avenge, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints, whose bones
Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold;
E'en them, who kept thy truth so pure of old,
When all our fathers worshipped stocks and stones,
Forget not: in thy book record their groans,
Who were thy sheep, and in their ancient fold
Slain by the bloody Piedmontese, that roll'd
Mother with infant down the rocks. Their moans
The vales redoubled to the hills, and they
To heaven. Their martyred blood and ashes sow
O'er all the Italian fields, where still doth sway
The triple tyrant; that from these may grow
An hundred-fold, who, having learnt thy way,
Early may fly the Babylonian woe!
John Milton, in The Waldenses: Sketches of the Evangelical Christians of the Valleys of the Piedmont, Alexis Muston
Labels: France, Huguenots, Reformation, Vaudois, Waldenses
My uncle had David B. "sabrer le champagne". It's when you hit the neck of a champagne bottle in such a way that the neck of the bottle comes off neatly. He hit it at a bad angle after cheers of "harder", and, well...the rest you can see!
This is total immersion to French culture
4 stitches, some bandages, and some French cheese later:
Labels: David Beauchamp, France, New Years, vacation
we're leaving tomorrow morning with several more bags than we came with
It has been a crazy, but very full and blessed ten days!!
I'm connected through the free wifi at the McDonald's that was walking distance from our old house
I've taken over 3,000 pictures so far, walked through Lyon several times, especially enjoying the medieval section and the Roman Amphitheater, bought several books, and was given 2 full boxes of books (mostly relating to philosophy and religion) from my uncle, eaten many amazing meals, many of which were enjoyed with extended family over several hours, and thoroughly enjoyed all the beauty around me!! And most of all, I've been able to spend some good time with my grand-parents, and with my Suzanne, Alex, Matt, and Timmy, though not nearly enough!!
I forgot how fast they drive here, and how narrow the roads are!! (now I realize why I have tended to drive faster than most Americans..)
a few pics:
Roman road
A bridge over Le Rhone
We are standing on some remains of the Roman Amphitheater, with a long exposure (13 seconds). We had to stay really still
Le Rhone, 15 second exposure
Right near Saint Peters we found a pub that sold a very interesting
beer : Calvinus beer. (www.calvinus.ch) :) An organic beer made in memory of John Calvin by the Frères Papinot.
Labels: Calvinus Beer, France, Lyon
Labels: France
We just got back from Bordeaux. The ride down was gorgeous! It's amazing
how much variety there is in the French countryside within so short a distance. It's kind of like all the different landscapes you have in the U.S. packed into the size of Texas. We really saw this phenomena going down to Bordeaux. The countryside is very rocky, and reminds me of pictures I've seen of Scotland. They raise a lot of sheep, and make Roquefort cheese with the milk. Roquefort and this other kind of cheese that was really good (but I forget the name), are their two specialty cheeses. Both are made from sheeps' milk. I feel tempted to go on about the cheese after reading the latest Credenda Agenda (great magazine by the way), but I guess I will stop here. :)
We arrived in Bordeaux and stayed with my Uncle and his family. My father and my uncle have several things in common besides having the same last name. They are both pastors,
they both married an American wife (and speak English as well), and they are both church planters in France:) The big outing we did was to go to the "Dune du Pyla", the highest sand dune in Europe. It is 117 meters high, and is composed of soft, white, fine sand. We had a ball running up, and it was even more fun running down! On the way up, you basically had to take two steps to go the length of one real step. It was a wierd feeling! The view of the Atlantic ocean from the top was amazing, even though it was somewhat hazy. Coming down that dune was of course the most fun! It felt as though you where running down the side of a cloud, if that makes any sense.
We went on another outing as well; we drove to St. Emilion. St. Emilion
is a cute, picturesque, very old town with impresive architecture. We arrived a little late in the day, but still had time to go to one of the wine shops, and taste some of their wines, and but a couple bottles. In an earlier post, I mentioned Haut Brion wine. Well, I saw the real Chateau Haut Brion wines here. The prices ranged from 350 euros (year 2000) to 1448 Euros (1961) There was also the real Chateau Margaux, year 2000 selling at 490 Euros. You wouldn't want to spill a glass of one of these wines!
Labels: Four-Wheeling, France, Lompnieu
Labels: Four-Wheeling, France, Lompnieu