Turning Cross

Sharing The Lord's Grace

Justice - When you get what you deserve
Mercy - When you don't get what you deserve
Grace - When you get what you don't deserve


Spreading The Word

Sharing a web page, poem or story from The Lord's Grace web site.

The best way to send a web page to a friend is to use our referral.

     When you click on the link "To Share" at the bottom of any web page a referral form will open up. The referral form has a place for your name, email address, up to 10 names, email addresses for your friends and your own message. The program running the referral form will send an individual email to each of your friends with your message and a link back to the web page you want them to see. And they will be able to find all of the other good stories that are on this web site.

     If you need help with a lot of email address try Classic Clipboard Limited Edition to add the email address with one click. If you do a lot of "Copy and Paste" you can save over 3000 clips for future use. download here

To send by your Email program.

     Open the web page that you wish to send to your friend(s) then Click the "Send Email" button. If you are sending the issue to just "one" friend, simply put their email address in the "To: field", then click "SEND".

     It's considered "bad e-mail etiquette" to send or forward mail to more than one of your friends by adding all of their addresses to the "To: field" or "Cc: field". They probably don't know each other, and they may wish to protect their privacy by not revealing their e-mail addresses to strangers. (Forwarded messages usually make the rounds of the Internet as they travel from friend to friend to friend, so everybody's e-mail address may wind up in the hands of somebody you don't even know.)

     The solution? It's much better to place the recipients' addresses in your e-mail program's Bcc: field, not the To: field. "Bcc" stands for "Blind Carbon Copy". Everybody listed in the Bcc: box still receives the message, just as if they had been listed in the To: box. However, the message's recipients won't see the e-mail addresses of the other recipients.

     Unfortunately, Outlook Express doesn't usually show the Bcc: box as an option when sending mail. To turn on the Bcc line in Outlook Express, try this:
     Open any message stored in your Inbox.
     Choose All Headers from the View menu.
     Close the message.
     That's it. You probably won't see anything exciting happen.
     But the next time you try to send or forward a message, you should be able to see the Bcc spot, ready for use. The Bcc area should then be available for use on all your future messages.
     If, by some twist of Computer Fate, the Bcc: area suddenly disappears, repeat those steps to put it back in place.
     There's another perk to using the Bcc feature when sending messages: Should the recipients decide to forward that message to their own friends, the previous recipients' addresses won't be listed along with the message, preserving their privacy and giving the forwarded message a cleaner look.

Another handy tip.

     With E-mail Stripper you can clean up all of those messy ">" characters from your emails.  download here

Copy & Paste

     If you "Copy and Paste" the text of a web page to an email message, please copy & paste the URL of the web page to the message. Some of these stories and poems are copyrighted.