Thursday, April 30, 2009

Are You Resting??


Read Psalm 23

Many offices in the world today are busy places where things sometimes feel like they are moving at breakneck speed. This often involves meeting after meeting, hallway conferences, and an avalanche of e-mail.
In the midst of this extreme busyness, I sometimes feel the need to escape, to decompress. My response? I create a quiet place. On those days when I have no lunch meeting or a break in the day, I retreat to the quiet of my car. I grab some lunch and sit in my car, where I can read, listen to music, think, pray—and be refreshed.
I think this is the essence of what the shepherd-psalmist points to in Psalm 23:2. He sees the Good Shepherd bringing him to “still waters”—that is, waters to rest by. It pictures a quiet place, a retreat from the pressures of life, where you can rest in the presence of the Shepherd of your heart and be strengthened for what lies ahead. Even Jesus withdrew to a solitary place to pray and commune with His Father (Mark 1:35).
We all need retreats in our lives, not only because of the overwhelming nature of life, but because of our dependence on the resources of the Master. In our fast-paced days, it is essential to find a place of solitude, “a place of quiet rest, near to the heart of God.”
It is often difficult to do because it goes against every fiber in you to sit and do nothing but get rest. Many people are sick so often because they do not take the time to stop. Often people take “vacations” to find rest, but they return more exhausted because they filled their schedule to the hilt to get in all they can. The only vacation that is real rest is to do just that; vacate. Get away from everybody, and find the still water and lay down in the hammock, and rest.
It is in those quiet times that the Lord’s spirit will rush over you and refresh you. You may begin to quote some scripture you learned, or you may start to whistle a song. Whatever you end up doing, you cannot do any of it without vacating. Where is your quiet place?

There is a place of quiet rest,
Near to the heart of God,
A place where sin cannot molest,
Near to the heart of God. —McAfee


“The minute anyone's getting anxious I say, You must eat and you must sleep. They're the two vital elements for a healthy life.”
-Francesca Annis

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Tugging the Heart of Daddy


Read Romans 7

I find my son, and any little boy for that matter, an interesting case study. My son is a neat little boy that knows how to tug your heart strings just right. At one moment you want to punish him for something he did and then the very next minute you want to wrap him in your arms and laugh with him.
He has a habit of knowing just when to apologize. In fact, he is so accurate; I am not sure what is going to happen as he gets older. He will step on every last nerve, and then when he realizes he stepped on one too many, he says in the sweetest voice, “Daddy, Mommy, I’m so sorry that I misbehaved, I love you.” Your heart melts and you have to force yourself to discipline him at that moment. I know what some of you are thinking. You’re saying to yourself, “That little boy sure has his mom and dad wrapped around his finger.” Well, you might be right, but you might be wrong. It may just be the heart of a parent being tugged by their child.
I wonder when the last time you tugged at your Daddy’s heart. I can almost picture God saying the same thing I say to my son, “If you’re sorry, then do not act that way again.” Invariably, we walk from our place of repentance and do the same thing again. We are not alone. Paul described this problem in Romans chapter 7. I believe we are just like my son and his dad when it comes to our relationship with God.
We do something wrong, and then we say we’re sorry and we love the Lord, but then we go and behave in the same manner. Have you ever wondered why God was so willing to forgive us for all of our mistakes? I know why now that my son does the same thing that I do with my heavenly Father. God’s heart melts when we apologize and love him. He may still have to discipline us, but His heart melts, and we then feel His love again.
I find it impossible to stay angry with my son. He is just a little boy that gets carried away. I know I will discipline him, but at the same time love bursts from my being every time he says, “I’m sorry daddy, I love you”, and I know that Everlasting Father’s love bursts from Him when we do the same. Have you told Him today how much you loved Him and how sorry you are for failing Him? When you do, get ready for His love to flood your soul.

“Instead of a clear call for repentance we have been offered warms words of sentimentality for those who have shown no godly sorrow for their actions.”
- Peter Akinola

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Look to the Lord


Read Luke 15:3-7

I thought I would share another poem with you today. I found this when I was when I was a youth pastor, so its’ primary focus was on teens, but it obviously can apply to all.

Poor lukewarm young person
Why do you still sleep?
While it is yet day
Turn to Jesus, for you He will keep.

You have thought life is nothing
So I will tell you once again,
The devil is a liar
Wanting to devour you in his den.

If you will give yourself today,
All to Jesus; heart, soul, mind and strength
He will give you all the power
To live victorious with no angst.

In Holy Ghost fire you will walk
Wanting to share with all your friends
That Jesus will keep you all
In any storm, safe unto the end.


Far too many of us are trying to make it on our own. We try our own resources, strength and ability, but when we utterly fail, we lose all hope. Why not try Him first? Turn to Him now, and not worry about the rest.

“Never forget that God tests his real friends more severely than the lukewarm ones.”
- Kathryn Hulme

Monday, April 27, 2009

True Power


Read Psalm 66:4

“Keep on traveling on. Keep on . . .” sang the sanctuary choir. They had just sung the first five words of their Sunday evening concert when everything went dark. All power was gone. Well, not all power. Not true power.
The choir kept singing. Flashlights were found to shine on the chorale as they sang their entire repertoire without accompaniment. Midway through the concert, the director asked the congregation to sing along. It was goose-bump time as God’s name was lifted high in that darkened church. “Hallelujah” never seemed so heavenly.
When I read the above story, it reminded me of a phrase that I heard in Bible College. It was, “Power cannot go from the rushing water to the high tension wire without first going through the power house.”
I am sure, as any group would, before the concert; everyone had worked hard to make sure all the electrical equipment was working. There were probably sound checks upon sound checks. Lights were triple-checked to make sure everything was operating at an optimum level. However, I think that the best thing that may have happened was for that power to go out. As a result of a lack of natural power, God’s power was highlighted. God’s light, not electric light, shone through. Jesus was praised. It was probably not the ideal situation, but because God was present, there was more power present than ever needed.
Sometimes our plans break down and our efforts fall short. When things happen that we can’t control, we must “keep on traveling” and remember where the real power for godly living and true praise comes from. When our efforts falter, we need to keep praising and lifting up Jesus. It’s all about Him anyway. God’s great power deserves our grateful praise.

“What is a soul? It's like electricity - we don't really know what it is, but it's a force that can light a room.”
- Ray Charles

Sunday, April 26, 2009

I Can See Him Clearly Now...


Read Psalm 35:22-28

I wish I didn’t have to wear glasses. I wish my eyesight was perfect, but unfortunately, I can’t see clearly past the edge of my desk. I am thankful for the man or woman that invented glasses. When I place these glasses upon my face, I see clearly because the things that are blurred are magnified to become clear.
Each of us is a lens that magnifies what we live for. People can look at and through our lives and see what is really important to us. The athlete magnifies his sport, his team and his winning record. The musician magnifies the instrument he plays. The scholar magnifies his discipline. As God's people, we should magnify the Lord. When people see us, they should have an easier time seeing Him. We should not make the vision of the Lord unclear, but we should make it much clearer.
The carnal man, however, wants to magnify only himself. Notice the phrase in verse 26, "who magnify themselves against me." Whenever you live to magnify yourself, you are always against someone else. This means competition. And God doesn't want us to live competitively. When we live in competition, we end up comparing ourselves to others. No one can compare to Jesus Christ so we all become failures. However, when we magnify Him in our life, He becomes the identifiable focal point, and then He becomes our comparison, and all will see Him, not us.
Our great desire should be to magnify the Lord, not ourselves. David said, "Let them shout for joy and be glad, who favor my righteous cause; and let them say continually, 'Let the Lord be magnified'" (v. 27). The Apostle Paul said, "Christ will be magnified in my body, whether by life or by death" (Phil. 1:20). Are you magnifying the Lord today? Can people listen to your words, look at your life, and measure your actions and say, "She belongs to the Lord. He belongs to the Lord"? It's important that people see the Lord, not us.
The most important quality of a lens is cleanliness. When the lenses of my glasses get dirty, I see the dirt. So I have to clean them. When we are dirty, people see us rather than the Lord. Let's keep our lives clean today. Let's magnify the Lord together; He is worthy of all praise.
Christians are on display before the world. What an opportunity and responsibility you have to impact others for Christ! If you love the Lord, you will want to magnify Him. Watch your words and actions. Are you living for Jesus? Keep the lens of your life clean so that He may be magnified through you.

“Do not expect the world to look bright, if you habitually wear gray-brown glasses.”
- Charles William Eliot

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Learning Through Suffering


Read Acts 7:30 - 34

This passage demonstrates a long wait in preparation for a great mission. It is important to understand that when God delays, He is not inactive. He is preparing His instruments, He is maturing our powers; and at the appointed moment we shall arise equal to our task. Even Jesus of Nazareth, God manifest in the flesh, was thirty years in privacy, growing in wisdom before He began His work.
God is never in a hurry but spends years with those He expects to greatly use. He never thinks the days of preparation too long or too dull. Moses spent 80 years before his ministry started. He went through 40 years of Egypt so that he would know how to deal with the Egyptians. He went through 40 years in the field and then God led him to his mission. He must have suffered through amazing obstacle to get where the Lord wanted him.
The hardest ingredient in suffering is often time. A short, sharp pang is easily borne, but when a sorrow drags its weary way through long, monotonous years, and day after day returns with the same dull routine of hopeless agony, the heart loses its strength, and without the grace of God, is sure to sink into the very sullenness of despair. A paper cut that hurts for a moment is no comparison to an amputation. Joseph's was a long trial, and God often has to burn His lessons into the depths of our being by the fires of protracted pain. "He shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver," but He knows how long, and like a true goldsmith He stops the fires the moment He sees His image in the glowing metal. We may not see now the outcome of the beautiful plan which God is hiding in the shadow of His hand; it yet may be long concealed; but faith may be sure that He is sitting on the throne, calmly waiting the hour when, with adoring rapture, we shall say, "All things have worked together for good."
I believe that there are too many people that have prayed their way out of the classroom of suffering without ever realizing that if they prayed for endurance instead of deliverance, God would fill them with wisdom from on high. Many people have to take “remedial” suffering class because they prayed themselves into deliverance before the lesson that was being taught was grasped. We need to pray, “Thy will be done” in the midst of suffering instead of “Get me out of this mess.” Like Joseph, we need to be more careful to learn all the lessons in the school of sorrow than we are anxious for the hour of deliverance. There is a "need-be" for every lesson, and when we are ready, our deliverance will surely come, and we shall find that we could not have stood in our place of higher service without the very things that were taught us in the ordeal. God is educating us for the future, for higher service and nobler blessings; and if we have the qualities that fit us for a throne, nothing can keep us from it when God's time has come.
Don't steal tomorrow out of God's hands. Give God time to speak to you and reveal His will. He is never too late; learn to wait. "He never comes too late; He knoweth what is best; Vex not thyself in vain; until He cometh--REST." Do not run impetuously before the Lord; learn to wait His time: the minute-hand as well as the hour-hand must point the exact moment for action.

“Patience is passion tamed.”
- Lyman Abbott

Friday, April 24, 2009

humility...


Read Luke 1:39-56

The passage in Luke allows us to see two remarkable women, one older and one younger, teach by example a lesson too easily lost. They teach about the amazement that every person should have in sharing the blessings of God. It is, however, an amazement that can be felt only in a heart of humility.
Elizabeth was amazed to find herself in the presence of Mary, the mother of her Lord. Elizabeth was an older cousin to Mary. Therefore, it was out of a heart of humility she said that she did not deserve to be there.
Mary, on the other hand, was amazed at the fact that God had chosen her to serve Him in this special way. Her feelings were clear; God owed her nothing. Yet she had received everything from Him. Out of a heart of humility she acknowledged His work in her life.
Humility is a natural result when one truly recognizes the awesomeness of God. These two saints felt honored by God and expressed a deep sense of respect for Him. Their relationship with God was not a casual one, as if He were a friendly neighbor. To them, knowing God was an honor.
The apostle Paul stated in his letter to the Philippians a desire to know Him in all aspects of His life. Both the victories and the sufferings were desired to be known by Paul. It is when we are humble enough to identify the need to know Jesus Christ that we see Him in the light that He shines forth. John said in his gospel that to know Him was to have eternal life.
Society has taken for granted the aspect of the holy. Churches have become gathering places for social activity and a place of leisure. While those things are not wrong in and of themselves, they become wrong when that becomes the main focus of the church. The church is a place where the awesome, powerful and terrible presence of God is to be found. Are you too casual about the things of God? Awe is easily lost when familiarity with the Almighty is taken for granted. Keep a heart of humility and be amazed like Mary and Elizabeth.
Humility can be hard to obtain and even more difficult to keep-especially when we think we are humble. Aim low! Stay humble.

“Humility is the only true wisdom by which we prepare our minds for all the possible changes of life.”
- George Arliss

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Dear Friend,


Read Matthew 26:36-46

When I was a child, there was a certain excitement about 4 p.m. everyday. What was it? The mailman came. I looked earnestly to see if my Highlights magazine, or my Disney book club had shown up. I was thinking about that when I read this letter from someone very important. It went something like this.
“Dearly Beloved, How are you? I just had to send you this letter to tell you how much I love you and care about you. I saw you yesterday as you were walking with your friends. I waited all day, hoping you would walk and talk with me too. As evening drew near, I gave you a sunset to close your day, and a cool breeze to give you rest. Then I waited, but you never came. It hurt me, but I still love you because I am your friend. I saw you fall asleep last night, and I longed to caress your face, and ruffle your hair, so, I shined a little moonlight upon your pillow and your face ... Again, I waited, wanting to rush down so we could talk. I have so many gifts for you. You woke up late this morning and rushed off for the day. My tears were in the rain. Today you looked so sad; so alone. It makes my heart ache because I understand how you can hurt so much. My friends let me down too and hurt me many times. I still love you very much. I try to tell you when you walk by the still waters. I whisper it in the green pastures where the leaves and trees breathe color into your view. I shout it to you in the echoes of the mountains, the roar of the rushing streams, and give the birds love songs to sing. I clothe you with warm sunshine and spread sweet aromas into the air. My love for you is deeper than the oceans and bigger than the widest mountain and higher than the sky. My love goes beyond the greatest want or need you could ever have. We will spend eternity together in heaven. I know, though, how hard it is on earth. I really know, because I was there too, and I want to help you. Just give me a call, night or day, and ask me -- talk to me. It is your decision ... I have chosen you, and because of this, I will wait. I truly love you.

Your friend,

Jesus

“Enough said.”
- Unknown

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

A Simple Conversation


Read Genesis 3:1-6

“Forgive me friend, for the decision I made that fateful day. I was not thinking of you—my thoughts were only of myself. I am Eve, mother of all the living. If I close my eyes, I can still remember the sweetness of walking with God in the cool of the day. That was before my heart flirted with temptation; before I made my fatal error. Adam and I knew that the serpent was crafty. I underestimated, however, the seductive power of his voice. I thought I could handle a conversation with him. How wrong I was.”
“Conversations require cooperation. To cooperate, you must grant authority to influence. The serpent’s influence was deadly. The more I spoke with him, the more reasonable his words became. Then I started to doubt what I formerly knew as true. I began to wonder if God’s ways were in my best interest. I questioned if God really meant what He said about the tree. Suddenly the serpent’s words became an option: perhaps I could eat and not die. I imagined how good the fruit would taste—though the garden was filled with delicacies. I considered how pretty the fruit was—though the garden was flooded with beauty. I thought of how wise I could become—though I walked with the Author of all wisdom. Yes, the serpent was deceptive but I held the power of choice. I chose to hold a conversation with him. I chose to make his words an option. I chose to elevate my desires above God’s will. Ultimately, my choice altered human history. All choices do.”
It is with this thought that we must be careful, not only to what we say, but also, to what we hear. Everyone has probably been in a situation where it would have been more prudent to walk away than to stick around. This is dangerous because it offers an opportunity for negative, draining and oftentimes, sinful thinking to enter your mind. It is the reason that Paul admonished us in Romans 12:1-2 that our minds should be transformed. He understood that the conversations that cause decisions not only affect the people within the conversation, but it affects anyone that comes in contact with the people within the conversation. Where do you want your family to be 5 years from today? Could it be that the conversations and decisions that are made this week will affect the destination? Take some time today, and pray that God will give you the wisdom to walk away from conversations and decisions that could prove fatal.

“It is all right to hold a conversation but you should let go of it now and then.”
- Richard Armour

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Comforter


Read John 14

I was thinking today, “What would it be like if I wasn’t married?” I know that sounds strange, but sometimes I do strange things. In fact, I am not strange; I am unique. Anyway, I realized what a miserable life I would have if I did not have that lovely woman and sons to come home to (especially MY wife). It doesn’t matter if we sit and talk or are in our separate areas of the house. The noise of someone else being there, and someone I love dearly, is enough for me to know that loneliness cannot last long in my life.
However, loneliness will creep into every life at some point. Believers are never truly alone, though, because God has given us a permanent companion—the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost. He is the Helper who is with us forever. No one can truthfully promise always to be available to another person; the realities of time, distance, and even death can separate two people who would prefer to face difficulties together. Thankfully, by sending His Spirit to live inside us, Jesus Christ keeps His promise never to leave or forsake us. (Hebrews 13:5) This means that our Companion is greater than any human friend. He is more than adequate to meet our every need.
The Holy Ghost’s foreknowledge allows Him to prepare our hearts and our minds for any situation. We need never dwell in uncertainty or inadequacy. Human beings were never meant to live alone. God designed us to be complete only when we are indwelt by His Spirit, which occurs upon our salvation. We can choose to ignore the Holy Ghost, though. For example, some people stubbornly attempt to live the Christian life in their own strength or skip Bible reading when they find it inconvenient. That kind of life is marked by discontent: peace will be fleeting, and loneliness will feel like the heart's permanent resident. The Holy Ghost is our "Parakletos," or companion, who "walks beside." If we hold Him at arm's length, we distance ourselves from everything that the Lord wants to provide. If we ask the Spirit to guide our steps and open our minds to God's ways, He is available. Sometimes, like knowing my wife is at home, it is a comforting thing to know that Christ is right by my side, even if I am not talking to Him. I can hear his “noise” in my life, and I know I’m safe from that heart wrenching, isolated or cut-off entity, called loneliness.

“Loneliness is proof that your innate search for connection is intact.”
- Martha Beck

Monday, April 20, 2009

Finding God's Will


Read Genesis 24:1-14

Probably the most asked question from believers in the world is, “What is God’s will?” Have you ever been in a place where you knew you were lost, but you couldn’t find the place you were on a map? When I was in college, several friends and I went to a wedding in Chicago. I had my car filled with geographically challenged people; they had no directional information except that we were in Chicago. The two other cars whose passengers knew where they were going decided to leave us in the dust. It wasn’t until we were well into Wisconsin that we figured out that we were lost.
It has been that way in our spiritual lives at times, as well. We keep walking, and it just seems that everyone and everything has passed you by. You find yourself buried in a corner giving God ultimatums for direction. There is a way for you to find what God desires of your life. The first principle for receiving God’s guidance is knowing God’s Word. We must have a thorough knowledge of God’s will and purposes to help direct our actions and decisions. That knowledge of God’s will comes primarily from God’s Word. God’s Word reveals God’s plan, principles and purposes. Knowledge of these is essential to even beginning to receive God’s guidance. It is Abraham’s knowledge of God’s word that leads him to make the first step in the right direction.
The second principle for receiving God’s guidance is commitment to God’s will. It is one thing to know what God’s will is through His Word and another thing completely to be committed to doing His will without compromise. One of the conditions under which Abraham received God’s providential guidance was his complete commitment to doing God’s will. This story reveals to us that God guides us when we are committed to His will and not our own, no matter how difficult it sometimes is to do.
The third principle for receiving God’s guidance is trusting in God’s Ways. Trust is absolutely essential if you are to be led by God because you will never maintain your commitment to obeying Him and waiting on Him unless you really trust in Him. You must trust that He will provide everything necessary to fulfill His will for your life in His own way. This is what Abraham did. He trusted God to providentially provide a wife for Isaac from outside of Canaan, even though that was extremely unlikely.
The fourth principle for receiving God’s guidance is to pray for God’s Wisdom. The servant did not just assume that he would recognize whom God had provided as a wife for Isaac. He prayed for guidance and wisdom. Do you desire God’s guidance? It is never too late to begin to learn His Word, commit to His will, trust His ways and pray for His wisdom. In fact, why not spend some time right now doing just that.

“I believe we must seek God's will, never presuming to identify it with our own program or power.”
- David E. Price

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Trying to Catch UP!

Read Micah 7:8

The difference between a champion and an “also-ran” is the champion fails to give up. I have often heard in interviews of those that have overcome great odds to become a champion at anything say, “Well, on those days that I didn’t feel like training, I forced myself one more time, and this is the outcome.”
You will never accomplish anything in life, both naturally and spiritually, without first finding a determination in you to fight through the times when your physical body and its emotions are telling you to quit. You must keep moving forward or you will begin to go backwards.

One step won’t take you very far,
You’ve got to keep on walking.
One word won’t tell people who you are,
You’ve got to keep on talking.

One foot won’t make you very tall,
You’ve got to keep on growing.
One trip to church won’t tell you all,
You’ve got keep on going.

People often get frustrated because they cannot or will not see what God is trying to do in their life. It is at those times that one must continue moving toward Him, and suddenly, He will appear. The only way you will fail to please God, is if you give up trying to please God. Many people, including King David, fail God from time to time, but the way to stay in communion with God, is to get up and keep on trying.
Are you about ready to give up? Is life getting so overbearing you want to scream? Is your mind ready to explode? Do you question whether it is all worth it? Keep on pushing toward God because what I have found out is that when it is really bad, God is preparing you for something phenomenal. Hang on for the ride of your life!

“Patience and perseverance have a magical affect before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish.”
- John Quincy Adams

April 18

Read Matthew 1:18-21


One of my favorite Bible characters is Joseph. Not the one with a coat of many colors that saved the house of Jacob from famine. Not the one that took care of the body of Jesus Christ after His death. I like Joseph, the step-father of Jesus Christ.
Joseph is not given the accolades that his dear wife Mary receives. He is not as famous as the Virgin Mary. He is not even as famous as Joseph, son of Jacob or Joseph of Arimathea. There are not great volumes of books written about this man that was asked to raise the humanity of the Creator. Can you imagine what your heart would do if God asked you to teach Him how to read and write and work with the tools of carpentry. How daunting would it be for you or me to be asked to take the materials that were created by the spoken word of God, and to teach the creator to make a chair? I admire this man named Joseph.
He had every right, according to the law, to have Mary put to death. Notice that God sent an angel physically to Mary, while Joseph simply had a dream with an angel in that dream. How many of you would awake from a dream and accept the responsibility that was going to be placed upon the shoulders of this man.
Joseph did not have any training in how to raise God manifest in flesh. There were no seminars that he could attend to get answers to his many questions on fatherhood, especially the fatherhood he was to partake in. There were no parenting books he could read to prepare him for raising God. He just trusted God.
I believe that Joseph must have lived with this mindset:

If God can hang the stars on high,
Can paint the clouds that pass by,
Can send the sun across the sky,
What could He do through you?

If He can send a storm through space,
And dot with trees the mountain’s face,
If He, that sparrow’s way can trace,
What can He do through you?

If God can do such little things
As count our hairs, or birds that sing,
And control the universe that swings,
What can He do through you?


I believe that there are some modern day Josephs that will allow God to send something into their lives that is so much bigger than them that they tremble in fear. I also believe, however, just like Joseph, there are those that trust Him enough to raise up His dream in their life. Are you a Joseph?

“And in that time, I lost my dad and had kids of my own. It was like, OK, I get it now. I know what fatherhood is all about. And you look at your parents differently.”
- Paul Reiser

April 19

Read Luke 18:15-17, Galatians 4:1-7, James 1:27

There is a saying that goes something like this, “If you want to see what kind of a father he is, look at his kids.” This saying is very accurate, but it has one fatal flaw in it. In 2007, there are too many kids that have no consistent father figure in their life. Since the 1960’s, the divorce rate has climbed so staggeringly, that it is more likely to see a divorce than a healthy marriage. We are at a point, and have been there for some time, where children have “become” adults and yet, they still have never had a father-child relationship. Most have never had any kind of relationship with their father, let alone the kind of relationship that God designed for the father and the child.
God has designed the role of the father to be multi-faceted. He did not intend for the father to simply be a masculine, hard working, “putting the bread on the table” individual. His desire was also for a father who is loving, caring and sometimes even childlike. The best childhood anyone could ask for is having parents that love and care for them. God is so specific when it comes to the role of the father because it is a picture of the relationship He desires with each one of us. It is so important to God that James writes that the care of the fatherless is pure religion and undefiled.
We see Christ’s attitude toward children in Luke when in His very hectic date book, he takes time out for the children. What a father. Galatians lets us know that we can have that intimate father-child relationship with him. “Abba” is the equivalent of calling Him, “Daddy.”
So, whether you are a man trying to be a father, a woman raising children without a father or an adult that never had a father, or a bad father, you have the opportunity to find that father-child relationship today. God is holding His arms out to you right now. At your computer or lazy boy (wherever you are reading this), He is patiently waiting for you to call out, “Abba, daddy”, and He will swoop you up in His arms and tenderly hold you and love you. And if you listen close enough, maybe He will sing you a lullaby.

“It has to be real, and I think a lot of the problems we have as a society is because we don't acknowledge that family is important, and it has to be people who are present, you know, and mothers and fathers, both are not present enough with children.”
- James E. Jones

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Reflections


Read Deuteronomy 6:4-9

I was waking my son up to go to his grandmother’s this morning. It was amazing to see the reaction he had when I tried to shake him out of his dreams. I thought I was waking his mother up. It is amazing to see the similarities in looks, expressions and personality between a child and a parent. In our household, we know that all the bad traits he gets from his mother, and all the good ones from me!?!
We spend our formative years trying to imitate those that have the most influence in our lives. For a child, that is usually a parent. As we get a little older, it may be a teacher or aunt or uncle. Irregardless of who we are trying to pattern our lives after, we are trying to do so. Think back over your life, and try to identify those that have influenced the way you think, act or express yourself. The biggest influence in my life, looking, back, is a man by the name of David Norris. Presently, he teaches at the Urshan Graduate School of Theology in St. Louis. For me, it started when I was the ring bearer in his wedding. I left St.Paul, MN and traveled to Dover, DE mostly because he was the main instructor. Since then, I have found myself trying to respond to crisis the way I saw him and his wife respond. I know the pattern in the way I teach is from him. I especially know this because my wife gets equally frustrated with me as she did with him in Bible College. We tend not to give too many answers, but allow the student to find the answer. I got that from him.
Having said all of that, I would remind you that somewhere, someone is watching you. They are trying to pattern their life after you. Are you providing an appropriate example? Are they seeing Jesus Christ in your life? I do not mean to put pressure on someone, but if you’re honest with yourself, you looked at someone in your life, and now it is your turn to allow someone to look at your life.
When someone sees your expression, are they seeing your natural or spiritual parents? When you look at the next generation, are they seeing you in their expression? The Hebrews understood the need for examples, and that is what we read in the passage today. Remember, if the young people and children cannot look to you as examples, they will find someone else to follow.

“Children need models rather than critics.”
- Joseph Joubert

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

A Debt Too Large


Read Isaiah 35:10

Taxes. What a dread! This is the dreaded day when you officially give of your income to the government. However, it seems we are taxed on everything. A pack of chewing gum. A toothbrush. Toe nail clippers. We are taxed on everything. In fact, I often get upset when I hear politicians complain about certain companies and businesses, such as gas prices. If they would just lower the taxes that are paid on those things, the prices would come down!
However, there is a debt that I owed that I could not hope to pay. The tax on my sin was beyond human remuneration. I could not hope to pay for the opportunity to enter heaven. The price for my sin was so enormously high; I would have spent my life in a debtor’s prison.
Then Jesus stepped on the scene. He walked like I walk. He talked like I talk (except He probably did it in Greek or Hebrew). He slept like I sleep. He ate like I eat. He felt like I feel. He drank like I drink. Jesus knew exactly how we operate from day to day because He did so as well. The book of Hebrews says we have a high priest that can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.
With that knowledge of who we are in mind, Jesus saw it fitting that He would suffer the consequences of our sin. The Bible says that He became sin for us. All of your sin and all of my sin was sitting on the shoulders of the Lord when He struggled up to Golgotha. What a sight it must have been. All of our debt being taken to the “IRS” to be paid off. When Jesus stated, “It is finished,” He was releasing the debt so that we could be free of the charges that were due.
In this tax season, take a moment to gaze back at Calvary and thank Him for paying the tax for your sin.

“I've been held responsible for taxes I know nothing about.”
- James Brown

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

There is a Time...To Everything


Read Ecclesiastes 3

As you can tell through this month’s devotions, I enjoy poetry. I am not always very good at it, but I do enjoy it. I wrote this poem around 1991. I wrote this to my wife (when she was not my wife!). I find that the words apply to marital relationships, friendships, and even our relationship to God.

Seasons

As the seasons God created
That change four times a year
So our lives are changing
Together, I hope, my dear.

As the summer comes to the fore
We tend to relax in peace
So it is in our relationship
It grows in relative ease.

Then as the fall comes along
And the winds begin to blow
So it is with us together
Upstream we seem to row.

And as the winter begins to storm
The sleet, the snow, the cold
All of our time together
Can seem to grow too cold.

But as the spring begins to burst
And the colors begin to mesh
Once again the two of us
Will grow, brand new, refreshed.

So be not filled with worry
When unsure feelings start to rise
Just give it all some time, my friend
I know you’ll be surprised.


We often get worried and scared when God just doesn’t seem to be found. Remember, it just may be the winter season in your walk with Him, and spring is just around the corner. It is when God seems to be the furthest away to get excited because it signifies that something brand new in your relationship is about to develop.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Nothing Occurs to God


Read Romans 8:28

You awake to a flat tire on your car. After 45 minutes of changing that tire in your dress clothes, you head for your destination. At the end of the block your car stops, and you realize that you are out of gas. After a one mile trek to the gas station you return to find your vehicle towed because it was parked illegally (dah!) You finally get home and call your wife to pick you up. The two of you, and she is so pleasant about this side trip in her day, head to the impound lot to pick up your car. After you empty the gas from the spare can into your car, and after you have paid the impound lot to release your vehicle, you finally head to the office. After being two hours late, you enter your office in a panic. The presentation that you are scheduled to give the board of directors is in 15 minutes and you were going to spend the morning preparing. Now you are totally unprepared, and the meeting is minutes away. Then it occurs to you. The chairman had called yesterday and rescheduled the meeting for the next day. After all the turmoil and grief, you were not really in a hurry anyhow.
I don’t know if you’ve ever had a day like the one described above, but you probably have had one similar. After thinking about what I just wrote, it occurred to me that nothing occurs to God. We prepare for broken down cars, broken water pipes, a leaking faucet and all of the other little challenges of life. God thinks about hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, and keeping the Earth spinning at the appropriate speed, on the appropriate axis while the entire time listening to our cries to lose weight.
It didn’t occur to God that your loved one passed. It didn’t occur to God that your home was destroyed by a tornado. Nothing occurs to God. He has everything in control. When you can come to the conclusion that nothing occurs to God, you can trust that He knows what He is doing. If you are in the middle of a tempest, God knows where you are. God sees you in the midst of your agony because it didn’t just occur to Him. He prepared a comforter for you at that very moment which is the Holy Ghost, and through His Spirit God has you right in the palm of His hand. And where else would you rather dwell?

“The marvelous thing is that for thousands of years people have continued questioning and searching and ultimately concluding that reasons for certain occurrences are not given to man to know.”
- Robert Vaughn

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Memories...


Read Hebrews 13:7, 17

I am writing this devotion on a Wednesday morning, and I am feeling a little nostalgic. I was thinking of my Grandfather and Grandmother that is in the heavenlies. What an inheritance they provided for me. I remember all the times spent with my grandmother at my uncle’s cabin or driving to Pierz, MN to see her sisters. I remember the 10 minute jobs for my grandfather that turned into 3 day fiascos.
What I remember the most about them, however, was their faithfulness to God. I remember sitting in their living room (usually while she was making Swedish pancakes) and picking up her Bible and looking at it thinking, “If I could just be like her someday.” I remember my grandfather leading all the children in the Sunday School (he was superintendent forever) in such a simple, yet for a 7 year old, deep prayer to the Lord. As I was thinking about them, I remembered a poem that a friend named Brenda Orfer wrote way back in Bible College that I pulled out, and I want to share it with you now.

Happy memories walk the hallway of my mind,
Memories of exciting occasions and joyous times.
The picture of your smiling face is framed within my heart,
And my love for you grows fonder though now we are apart.

More than just a father, you were my dearest friend;
But as the cliché says, “All good things come to an end.”
The days, the weeks, the months and years continue to pass by,
Slowly fading the hurt and sorrow hidden deep inside.
How I wish that I could see you as I gaze the heavens above,
With tear stained eyes that blur the clouds and send you all my love.


Brenda (Hartley) Orfer

"[Memory is] a man's real possession...In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor."
Alexander Smith (1830 - 1867)

Saturday, April 11, 2009

A Breath of Fresh Air


Read John 3:8

There is nothing like going outside for the first time in the morning. Today, I left for work and there was a nice southerly breeze that was so refreshing. It just seemed to wake me up a little and prepare me for my day. The sweet aroma of springtime made me fully alert and ready to face another day.
There have been those times when you step outside and wish that you could run back under the warmth of your covers, but today was not one of those days. I knew it was going to be a good day today (the day I am writing this). Everything was in place. The car started, the irrigation system was working at the church and I was fully awake. What more could I ask for.
Living for God is like stepping outside into a fresh springtime breeze. His presence clears the air of the pollution and you smell the sweet aroma that comes from being with Him. The warmth of the Spirit moving in you, and the tenderness of His hand holding you provides the strength for whatever is coming your way. When in the presence of the Lord, you are fully alert that the great Creator of the universe is standing right beside you. Anything is possible when you are in the breeze of the Spirit.
What do you need from Him today? What aspect of your life is twisted in knots and needs to be straightened out? What heart ache are you experiencing at this very moment? If you will just find the breeze of His presence, you will feel the full assurance of His control, and it will be a good day.

“There is no certainty; there is only adventure.”
- Roberto Assagioli

Friday, April 10, 2009

Smile Awhile


Read Deuteronomy 30:19, Joshua 24:15

I read this somewhere and I thought I would share it with you.

Outside my window, a new day I see
And only I can determine
What kind of day it will be.
It can be busy and sunny, laughing and gay,
Or boring and cold, unhappy and gray.
My own state of mind is the determining key,
For I am only the person I let myself be.
I can be thoughtful and do all I can to help,
Or be selfish and think just to myself.
I can enjoy what I do and make it seem fun,
Or gripe and complain and make it hard on someone.
I can be patient with those who may not understand,
Or belittle and hurt them as much as I can.
But I have faith in myself,
And I believe what I say,
And I personally intend to make
The best of each day.

You control what your day will become. How you think is how you will respond in all situations and how you respond will dictate your adventures. It is amazing how people are drawn to others that, even in circumstances that would leave someone in a bad mood, carry a smile. A simple smile that is genuine softens all others around and individual. Remember the old song, "Smile a while and give your face a rest..." How about it? Are you smiling yet?

“Our lives are not determined by what happens to us but how we react to what happens, not by what life brings us but the attitude we bring to life.”
- Wade Boggs

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The I AM Still IS!


Read Philippians 3:10

This Sunday is Easter. We will celebrate the resurrection of our King. It is exciting to know that Jesus is not a dead god that we can purchase on the back shelf of a specialty store in the local mall, but that He is alive and in control.
With so many philosophies in the world today, I am glad that I know Him. The Creator of all things became a man so that I could be redeemed. He is not some entity in the far off distance, but He is a friend that sticks closer than a brother. He is not some unknown, but He is known through the revelation of His spirit. He is all powerful. He is all loving. He is just. He is righteous. He is the great physician. He is the beginning and He is the end. He is the lion and he is the lamb. He is lily of the valley and the bright morning star. He is the chief cornerstone. He is the living water. He is the bread of life.
He is the bridegroom. He is the way. He is the truth. He is the life. He is wonderful. He is counselor. He is the Almighty. He is the mediator. He is the branch. He is the everlasting Father. He is the prince of peace. He is goodness. He is mercy. He is everything and anything you need Him to be in your life. The I AM of the Old Testament is still the I AM for whatever we need today.
I do not know what you need today, but I want to remind you of this one fact; the stone at Jesus’ tomb was just a pebble to the Rock of ages inside.

“A man can no more diminish God's glory by refusing to worship Him than a lunatic can put out the sun by scribbling the word, 'darkness' on the walls of his cell.”
- C. S. Lewis

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Happy Searching!


Read John 3:16

The alarm clock rings and we frantically search throughout the house for that basket of candy that the Easter Bunny hid for us. We look in dryers and closets. We look in bedrooms and fireplaces. That Bunny was good at hiding that basket of goodies. However, when we found that basket, excitement would rush over us (as well as all the sugar).
We do not celebrate Easter for the bunny and the candy, but there are still some baskets that we must search for. It is not enough for someone to just attend church, pay their tithes and offerings, live a good life, and not find the basket that is hidden somewhere in your life.
He was not willing that any should perish. Somewhere in the DNA of your being lies a desire to find God. He made us that way. He desires that we begin the search. No matter how frustrating it may seem to be at times, there are dimensions of Him that we have not ever tapped into. He wants to lead us into greater realms of His glory, but we must be willing to spend some time searching for Him.
He said, “Seek, and you will find; knock and it shall be opened.” Notice whose responsibility it is to start the journey. There is a hidden treasure in the field of His glory that has your name written all over it. He placed it there from the beginning of time and has been adding “goodies” into it from time to time.
He has added the law, grace, love, mercy and all things good throughout the years, and so when we find Him on this Easter Sunday, we find it all.
Happy searching!!

“A faithful friend is a strong defense; And he that hath found him hath found a treasure.”
- Louisa May Alcott

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

A Servant


Read Philippians 2:5-11

I received a package of things from my grandmother that passed away about a year ago. It was some odd shaped cups. To anyone else, they would probably be meaningless, but they mean a great deal to me. When I was little, I used to serve the family these cups filled with coke. It was dispensed from a little tap that my grandparents owned, and I would take everyone’s order and they would all receive a glass of coke (no matter what they ordered). The coke was dispensed from this small sized glass bottle into these little odd shaped cups and I would, with an apron and all, serve my family. I look back on home video of those days and I see myself (in some UGLY PINK PLAID PANTS, MOM) and understand a little of how I became who I am today.
I had, as examples in my life, true servants. From my grandparents to my parents to my uncles and aunts, an example of true Christian servanthood was lived out before me. There is nothing more powerful than a servant. When Christ was about to pay the ultimate price on Calvary, He called for a dinner. We know this as “The Last Supper”. He could have thrown a big celebration where there was singing and feasting and an all around great time, but the first thing He did was bow himself before mere men and served them by washing their feet.
Paul admonished us in his letter to the Philippians to have the same mind Christ had. Do you desire to serve those that are under you or those that seemingly deserve no service? If so, you are fulfilling the mind of Christ. We are called to serve those less fortunate than we are. Whether it be sending a meal to their home or raking leaves from their yard, true servants we are to be.
Now, every time I enter our living room, I see those cups and they remind me to serve someone else. Is there a reminder in your life that we are to be servants? If not, I challenge you to find some way to trigger the servant mentality into your life, for when you do, Christ will be revealed in you.

“If we do not lay out ourselves in the service of mankind whom should we serve?”
- John Adams

Monday, April 6, 2009

The Word of God


April 4

Read Hebrews 4:12

My son just had a birthday. There are two times a year that I dread. Christmas and his birthday. Why? Invariably, he receives a gift from his mother or some other well meaning individual that requires some assembly. This birthday, it was a lego set. THANK GOD FOR MY NEPHEW CHARLIE! The instructions were useless. Unless you have a degree in art interpretation, the drawings caused more confusion than help. Needless to say, I (Charlie!) persevered and he enjoys the toy completely.
My life is sometimes like that lego set. I don’t know about you, but there are times when I think someone needs to have a doctorate in all areas to untie the knots that I have gotten into. How does the church line up with my family, how does my family line up with my job, how does my wife fit into the picture are all questions that are asked from time to time in this journey called life. How do we fit everything together to make some sort of sense to us and to those around us?
The best owner’s manual ever created is the bible. That instruction packet for the lego set went into the trash because it didn’t provide the proper answer. The psychologist, psychiatrist, the counselor and anyone else that is supposedly trained in the area of human confusion fall way short in accomplishing what I oftentimes need fixed. My marriage will not be fixed with a do-it-yourself guide found at Home Depot. My family will not be united by the five-language instruction packet at the local Wal-Mart. What I and my family need is a good dosage of “What saith the Lord.”
I challenge you today to reenter the world of scripture. Treat the Word the way it was meant to be treated, as the bread of life. The Bible is the manna in the wilderness to feed you and nourish and guide you. When you love the Word, you will be consumed by it. When you are consumed by it, you will begin to apply it. When you apply the instructions in the Owner’s manual, you will find the puzzle pieces of your life begin to take form and a great picture of art will be the product.

“No one ever became, or can become truly eloquent without being a reader of the Bible, and an admirer of the purity and sublimity of its language.”
- Fisher Ames

April 5

Read Ephesians 2:5-8

The number five in Scripture stands for grace. On this fifth day of the month, I feel like talking a little bit about grace.
Grace is a gift of God that has no parameters to bind it. It is a gift that allows the light of truth to squeeze between the cracks of darkness and illuminate your life. Grace calls you by name when all of society fails to recognize your talents. Grace covers you with His blood when the stains of this world mark your life with grief. Grace is the twinkle of the star in the vast expanse of the universe reaching all the way to where you are, just to let you know that he is in control.
Grace is the warm embrace of a loved one in the midst of the cold season of your life. Grace is the thank you card received in the mail when you thought no one realized you were even alive. Grace is the laugh of your child in the middle of a tension packed afternoon. Grace is the ability to smile when all you feel is a frown. Grace is a dance when all you feel is down. Grace sees beyond your faults and reveals your strengths. Grace is the ability to do what God desires even when your natural mind cannot comprehend it.
Grace is free. Grace costs everything. You cannot earn grace, but He paid the price for grace at Calvary. Grace is what saves us. Grace is what keeps us. Grace delivers us. Grace sustains us. Grace provides for us.
Grace. Isn’t it amazing?

“There are things God does for me daily, and it throws me into brain lock, because I know in my heart I don't deserve that kind of grace. I don't deserve that break.”
- Willie Aames

April 6

Read Lamentations 3:20-27

I was born on August 10, 1970. For my golden birthday on August 10, 1980, I received a brand new ten speed bike. After all of my cousin’s “hand-me-downs” through the years, I finally had a bike all my own. It was silver with a black line down the cross bar. It had a normal seat and handle bars unlike the yellow and purple banana seat and high handle bars of my cousin’s bike that I had been riding. It was going to be a great way to get where I was going. I remember the joy it gave me when I took it up on the street for the first time, and realized how easy it was to gain momentum with the different speeds. I thought I was so cool.
There is something about receiving new things. I love the smell of a new car. I love the excitement of entering your home for the first time. I love the feel of new golf clubs. I love getting great gifts like that ten speed bike. When I received the gift of a “yes” answer to my question, “Will you marry me”, I was walking on cloud nine. Yes, there is something about getting great things in life. The most important things in life, however, are not things.
I am glad the Bible says that I can receive mercy new every morning. Mercy is that entity that releases you from the debt you owed because someone else paid the price. Christ paid the price at Calvary, and that payment is new everyday. No matter what today is like, tomorrow’s mercy is new. No matter what thoughts have plagued your mind, the payment is new at the dawning of the sun. No matter the turmoil you are in now, when the sun breaks the eastern horizon, His mercy is brand new.
There is no “hand-me-down” mercy. For each one of us, His mercy is new and fresh and available. I do not remember what actually happened to that awesome ten speed bike, but after almost 27 years, I imagine that it has corrupted into rust dust. It was two months earlier in that year, June 16, 1980, that I received the gift of the Holy Ghost. I remember how awesome that felt. I knew that it wasn’t a “hand-me-down” either, and I DO know where that gift is because it is renewed everyday within my soul.
Have you received your mercy for the day yet?

“I am a most noteworthy sinner, but I have cried out to the Lord for grace and mercy, and they have covered me completely. I have found the sweetest consolation since I made it my whole purpose to enjoy His marvellous Presence.”
- Christopher Columbus

Thursday, April 2, 2009

It's Spring!!


Read Genesis 1:14, Daniel 2:21

I love the springtime. The scent of fresh flowers and the breeze through the window is so refreshing. I get rejuvenated in the spring. I get the itch to hit a golf ball. I long to sit on my deck until the late evening. When we lived in Kansas City, we knew we had from about now until June 1 until it is too hot to enjoy anything outside. After June 1, I tended to run from air conditioner to air conditioner. The spring offers me the opportunity to enjoy the outdoors. Q – What does the spring do for you?
Can you imagine if God had not created the seasons? As much as I love spring, I would not want it to be spring twelve months of the year. I like it when it gets warm enough to enjoy the lake or the pool. I love seeing the bright colors of fall, and I even love a new fallen snow. I am thankful for the seasons.
I am also thankful that God saw fit to give us seasons of life. Life would get very dull if we only had one season. There are some things in my life that I am glad dies at the first freeze of the season. I am also glad that God refreshes it and delivers new life in the springtime of life. You see, God designed us to change. We are not static people. Daily, we change without even recognizing it. Think about the way you were and the way you thought 10 years ago. How about 20? I know I have changed.
Do not spite the seasons of your life, but rather enjoy where you are at knowing that the season will soon change and God will allow you to see new things shortly.

“Expect to have hope rekindled. Expect your prayers to be answered in wondrous ways. The dry seasons in life do not last. The spring rains will come again.”
- Sarah Ban Breathnach

Your Place in HiStory


Read Ecclesiastes 1:1-11

I hate being late. In fact, if I am a part of something and it begins at a certain time, it is my philosophy that you must be at least fifteen minutes early. I get rather short when I am running late (I know that is hard to believe!!). Oftentimes, I need to slow myself down because I get so rushed and worried about being late that I tend to forget some things. I have to remind myself that history will not end if I run a little late.
History was one of my favorite subjects in school, and it is still something I enjoy reading about and learning of. The adage that says, “All history repeats itself”, surprisingly is quite accurate. Solomon was correct when he stated in Ecclesiastes, “There is nothing new under the sun.”
We often forget that we are but a speck in the grand scheme of history. When you consider the amount of years that most of us might have and compare that to the history of the world, we become miniscule specks. We are but a dot on the horizon of time.
The exciting thing about that is simply this; all of history is HisStory. From the first glimpse of the firmament to the grand entrance of the New Jerusalem, everywhere and everyone and everything is His. He has been telling a story so profound and unique that it has taken thousands of years to write. Most biographies are a few hundred pages long, not a few thousand years long. Throughout history, God has been trying to tell everyone about who He is. He has been revealing the most intimate details of His heart to mankind.
Think about this; your life is the telling of His story. You play a dynamic part in the telling of who God is. Without you, a page would be missing from the annals of HisStory. What a tragedy it would be if God was unable to complete His biography if you were not here. The next time you get depressed, or struggle with life, remember that He is writing through you all of His story to the world. What an honor to be mentioned in the same breath as Mary, Joseph, Peter and Paul. We are just another chapter letting people see Jesus Christ.

“People are trapped in history and history is trapped in them.”- James A. Baldwin

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

The Fool Hath Said There Is No God!!


Read Genesis 1, Psalm 14:1, Psalm 53:1

A fresh dew. A budding flower. A tender leaf. An aged Oak tree. A spring shower. A summer thunderstorm. A winter snowfall. A sunrise over the still waters of a lake. A single fish jumping. A hummingbird outside the kitchen window. A cool breeze on a hot summer afternoon. A warm breeze on a cool autumn afternoon. A bright rainbow following the rain. The scent of spring. The colors of autumn. The grandeur of icicles hanging from the rooftop. The power of a lightning strike. The roar of thunder.
The amoebas. The ants. The grasshoppers. The chipmunks. The squirrels. The cat. The dog. The parakeet. The pelican. The lion. The tiger. The puma. The alligator. The crocodile. The hippopotamus. The rhinoceros. The elephant. The giraffe. The monkey. The ape. The chimp. The dove. The hummingbird. The butterfly. The caterpillar. The fly. The eagle. The swan. The lizard. The crappie. The walleye. The northern pike. The salmon. The sting ray. The dolphin. The hammer head shark. The killer whale. The man.
The fingers. The toes. The nose. The senses. The arteries. The heart. The mind. The nervous system. The digestive system. The eyes. The ears. The mouth. The blood. The immune system. The arms. The legs. The face. The teeth. The pancreas. The spleen. The stomach. The intestines. The DNA. The tongue. The hair (or lack thereof!). The will. The emotions.
The lame, raised. The marriage, restored. The child, reunited. The anger, relinquished. The sin, cleansed. The wrath, erased. The judgment, paid. The hope of glory. The righteousness imputed. The blind eye sees. The deaf ear hears. The withered hand claps. The tearless, cry. The hopeless, hope. The empty, filled. The hurting, rejoice. The suffering comforted. The lost found. The depressed, sing. The wayward find the way. The weak made strong. The loveless love. The lonely, laugh. The heartache, embraced.
Truly, it is the fool that hath said there is no God.

“Man is a masterpiece of creation if for no other reason than that, all the weight of evidence for determinism notwithstanding, he believes he has free will.”
- Georg C. Lichtenberg

Hello Again!

March 24

Read I Peter 5:7

Every person has situations in life that may seem to be impossibility, but when you face impossibility, you must leave it in the hands of a specialist. Refuse to calculate. Refuse to doubt. Refuse to work it out by yourself. Refuse to worry.
Instead, say, “Lord, I’m walking in something that I can’t handle. I feel like everything around is crashing in, and I am about to suffocate. I know that I should have come to you sooner, but in my immaturity, I have tried to figure it all out on my own. I have utterly failed. I know you are willing and able, so please take it out of my hands. It is impossible for me, but it is as nothing with you.” Persevering in the face of tragedy, or just our mindless mess-ups in life, can only carry success when we are willing to place that type of confidence in Him. In spite of our adversities, all He desires is that we talk to Him, and allow Him to assist us.
Now, our problem is that we hold onto our problems. If your Swiss watch stops working, hopefully you don’t sit at home with a screwdriver working on it yourself. If I did that, there would not be a soul on earth that would be able to fix it, and God may even have to discard it and start over. Hopefully, you take it to a specialist. If you tried to work on it and then took it to a specialist, they would look at you and wonder what in the world you had done.
I am not very good with leftovers. I don’t mind eating leftovers, but if you ask me to prepare leftovers, my stomach would twist in knots. Thankfully, the Lord works wonders with leftovers because that is what we tend to give Him in most cases. We make all the mistakes, and then in our attempts to fix our mistakes, we get things tied into a million knots and then dump it in His lap and say, “Here, Lord, do something!”
In our journey of life, we do not have the luxury to make a bunch of mistakes before we cry for help from Him. We must, right from the start, let Him know that we do not possess the talents, finances, or desires to do what He wants. Then, we must allow Him to make up for that which we do not have. On two occasions the Lord spoke through the gift if tongues and interpretations to me. The first happened in a homiletics class (the study of preaching). It was an early morning class on November 16, 1989, and someone had just finished a “practice” sermon when the presence of the Lord moved in and took over. The second time was in a leadership training session on November 1, 1996. What is it about November? Anyway, the Lord spoke these words to me and the others that were present, “Do not get worried with your inabilities, short comings and inconsistencies because I will make up for those. If you will allow Me, you will even see Me add things to your ministry.” I have lived off of those words many times. When I lose track of where I am, I open the front cover of my Bible and see where I wrote those words down, and I cling to them with all of my might.
We must remember that God desires all of us to be successful in this journey to heaven. Every step and pathway we take must be ordered by God, with His strength and with His spirit leading the way.

March 25

Read Romans 8:4-17

Hollywood, California. All kinds of young people from every culture, kindred, social status and income brackets have gone there. From the four corners of the earth, people have attempted to walk into that city frantically seeking success, fame and fortune. For most, however, the quest is a futile one.
Only a few have actually “made it” to the sidewalk along Hollywood boulevard, where embedded bronze symbols bear the names and faces of the famous. It appears that these men and women, in worldly terms, have mastered their destinies. And yet, upon passing that street and looking at the symbols more closely, one cannot help but be touched with a sense of irony. The same sidewalk that the coveted star has been firmly laid is cluttered with debris, splattered with mud and ground-in patches of gum.
In stark contrast, the city I look for is a city designed by the Master Creator of all time. In His architectural drawings is a promise that “I lay...a sure foundation.” God’s sidewalk will never fade away.
The reward of walking up the path toward this city that is established by the hand of God is only found in His Word. There is no journey that you could take that will provide more intrigue, adventure and thrills than the journey from here to glory. The rewards of entering that city will be so grand that our finite minds cannot begin to comprehend. There is no bronze star waiting to be laid in concrete by the hands of man and tarnished by the passage of time. Rather, the redeemed of the Lord—those whose lives have been sacrificed to God, walking up the path that God has chosen and whose lives are built upon the foundation of God shall shine forever. We will receive crowns and mansions, and more importantly, rest. We will be able to step off the transit of life and dwell with Him forevermore.
Too many people are trying to find their way based upon the monuments of worldly success, but if we are basing our successes upon worldly monuments, we are traveling the wrong paths. Will you stop for a moment? I mean right now. Before you get up from your chair and computer, even before you log out of your email. Stop, and evaluate the monuments of success that you are striving after and make sure they are the paths that God is leading you in. I can’t wait to see your “star” in the greatest city of all time and eternity, the New Jerusalem.

March 26

Read Hebrews 10:24-25

Although it is intensely personal, there is nothing self-centered about genuine worship. Remember, God is seeking true worshippers. If believers are to maintain a consistent lifestyle of continuous worship, we need to be involved in weekly corporate worship. Individual and corporate worship feed off each other. The sources of most people’s problems lie in one of two things; either they are not worshipping six days a week individually or they are not worshipping once a week with an assembly. We need both.
Living in the “heavenly places” doesn’t allow for an easy-come, easy-go, casual, flippant attitude that our society carries. You can walk into all kinds of churches, in all kinds of cultures, and all kinds of denominations, and find teachings that claim that to live for God is easy and casual. I heard a saying once, and it has stuck in my spirit ever since. It goes like this, “It is easy to live for God hard, but it is hard to live for God easy.” It is obviously clear; spiritual success and life in His dimensions requires investment in our relationship with God and with others.
A pastor went to see a man who didn’t attend church faithfully. The man was sitting before a fire, watching the warm glow of the coals. It was a cold winter day, but the coals were red hot, and the fire was warm. The pastor pleaded with the man to come to church, but the man didn’t seem to get the message.
So the pastor took the tongs from beside the fire and opened the screen. He casually began to pull the coals apart so that they were not touching the others. In a matter of minutes the coals were very cold. “That’s what happening in your life,” he told the man, “As soon as you isolate yourself from God’s people, the fire goes out.” The man got the message.
It is on the ascent to heaven that we must remind ourselves that the church is not made of brick and mortar, but in whom God dwells. There is a song that says, “I need you, you need me, we are a part of God’s family.” He dwells in the worship of His people. It is only through close contact with His people that the fires of the Holy Ghost are able to burn. Worship made in the church leads to worship in the individual, and that will make the experiences of heaven all that it should be.

March 27

My family recently went through a major transition in life. We left a secular job to go full time in the ministry. I love it. I had dreamed about it for years, and everything is going great. One thing that I have had to do now though to plan, in detail, my future finances. When I was with the postal service, it was easy to plan for retirement because you just put a certain amount of money into a prescribed plan that was taken care of on your behalf. Now, I am dealing with the brokers that are planning my life insurance and health insurance and retirement savings. I have had to ask, what will I leave my wife and son if God would happen to call me home? I know that sounds morbid, and most people do not like to talk about that part of their futures, but it is something that all of us must take into consideration.
Have you ever thought about what you are going to leave behind after you die? Most people think in terms of possessions—money, property, stocks and bonds. While all that is well and fine, and necessary, what about the intangible things? What type of spiritual principles will you have placed in the people you love the most so that when you are gone and they are looking for help, your investments into them can be drawn upon?
You may think that it is impossible to leave something of a spiritual nature in the hands of others. You may think that they have to grasp it on their own. I admit that you cannot give your experience to someone else, but you can hand down your faith. You can leave your sense of moral values, your understanding of the principles of scripture. You can leave the principles in scripture that assisted you in your walk with God.
If you are a godly parent, look at what you have to give your children. You may not be able to leave them even a small amount of money but if you have loved God and practiced scripture, and you have loved them unendingly, you will leave them a faith that will sustain them in difficult times. It will keep them during every heartache and in every trial of life. If you are not a parent there are people everywhere that you can invest something in that will allow them to find the right path in life.
I remember when my grandmother passed away. I never received any money from her passing. I received a porcelain train that I always loved and a neat painting that she had. I love those things, but what she gave me was greater than all the riches this lifetime could hold. She was the one that bugged my father when he was away from the church playing hockey, to get me to Sunday school. It was a faithfulness I saw in her through years and years of teaching the nursery class. It was her strength in the face of crisis that I remember vividly. When I get to heaven, I will be able to thank many people that paved the way for me, but it will be my grandmother Cele that will have invested the most and left me with a legacy that I am now instilling in her great grandsons. I cannot wait to take them by the hand and walk over to her mansion and introduce them for the first time. What she left me lives on still today.
Most people do not tie the handing down of these things as worship, but it is true worship. Worship is allowing what God has put into your heart to flow into someone else. My grandmother was a true worshipper.

March 28


I remember the excitement that had built up. Excitement with a hint of anxiety. Today was going to be the birth of my child. My son turns 6 years old today. I cannot believe time has gone that fast. It seems like just yesterday.
My wife and I were not supposed to have children. We had resigned ourselves to that fact, and began looking at other options. We received a phone call one day from someone in Virginia that would like for us to adopt a baby. It would be an open adoption that would only cost us the court costs of paper work instead of the tens of thousands of dollars that was asked when we looked at adoption agencies. It was going to be a quick turn around. From the time we received the call to when we were supposed to pick the baby up was just a matter of days. We would fly to Virginia and bring our new baby home. We went and bought baby items so when we returned our home would be ready. We even pick out a name. Donevan. It was a mix of my father-in-laws first and middle name.
I remember vividly, the phone call we received shortly after the first one. Devastation, heartache and misery washed over our home. Donevan’s birth mother had fallen and he didn’t survive. Even now, years later, I get a little emotional about it. My wife and I were heartbroken. We thought God was working everything out, and suddenly we were back at zero. I even had an aunt that offered to give me the money to go through an adoption, but our hearts were unsettled.
Until father’s day, 2002. I normally did not enjoy father’s day. I loved all my “kids”, our young people through the years, but it wasn’t the same thing. It was on that father’s day, at the Gregory Hills Church of God Holiness gymnasium, where we were holding our services, that Pastor asked to pray over Tricia and me. He said he felt that God was going to bless us with a child. We were excited and yet, understandably, very wary. However, God came through. We found out in August of that year that indeed, we were pregnant.
I remember the day we shared it with The Life Church. They all had been praying for so long, and we knew they desired for us to have children, almost as much as we did. The church broke out in worship. It is vividly etched in my mind.
That led us to March 28, 2003. My Dad and Mom’s anniversary (they celebrated at Everett’s in Lee’s Summit after the birth). When the doctor placed that little child into my hands was one of the greatest moments of my life. A miracle was born.
Thank you for letting me share this day with you. I would like to remind you that God sees where you are at and what you desire. Hold to your desires because you never know when God will perform the miracle that will change your life forever.
Oh, by the way, I love Father’s Day now!

March 29

Do you hunger for Jesus Christ? Do you desire to spend time alone with Him in prayer? Is He the most important person in your life? Do you eagerly turn to the scripture to learn more about Him?
To discern where you really are with the Lord, recall what has saddened you recently. Was it the realization that you don’t love the Lord enough? That you can’t honestly say that the greatest thing that ever happened in your life was when you first met Him? Was it a conviction that you have failed to worship Him with your full heart? Is it a lack of desire to serve Him? Is it the momentary slip of the tongue that has hurt someone?
Or have you been saddened and depressed over a lack of human respect, criticism from an authority figure, financial problems, lack of friends, your bulging waistline? Have you entered the arena of self pity because no one seems to care about you? Are you depressed because your children will not listen, and it seems that you have lost control?
On the other hand, what has gladdened you? Is it reflection on your acceptance by God into His arms? The afternoon you were able to get away with the Bible as your only companion? Maybe it was the thrilling awareness that God loves you unconditionally just as you are and not as you should be? Could it have been the simple blooming of the flower that made you realize that God was in control? Was it the little note left in the almost illegible handwriting of your 5 year old?
Our thoughts will dictate our emotions. Our perception will dictate our thoughts. Our surroundings will dictate our perceptions. What are your surroundings? Maybe you need to just take a drive into the country for a little while and look on God’s creation. It is at those times of high stress and anxiety that we need to step away and readjust our perception so that our thoughts will be adjusted and then our emotions will follow along. When our lives are governed not by a network of laws and circumstances, but by the fire of the Spirit that burns within….when we respond to His call, which is not, “Come to the party,” but rather, “Come to ME.” When we are able to get to the point where this takes place the limitless power of the Holy Ghost will be unleashed with astonishing force.

March 30

In the view from the mountain top experiences, we will see God in all of His power and might. We see His power in a whole new light. We see His power in the creation of the universe and the creation of mankind. He created the heavens and the earth instantly, out of nothing, without tools, just a word. View the power that scattered the stars and the planets that are spread out in space for billions of light-years. Consider the power that creates the human body in a mother’s womb. Then think of the power that holds matter together, the power that sustains the universe, in preserving His creatures and in answering our prayers.
We see His power like never before in floods, fires, earthquakes, storms and wind. We see it in the salvation of the sinner, the healing of sickness and in all other forms of miracles. We see it in the faithfulness of the elder, seemingly too tired to lift their hands in worship, do so one more time. We see it in the spring time of life when all the leaves turn green and the flowers begin to bloom. We see it in the eyes of your child when they say, “I love daddy.” We see it in the tear stained faces of a family that has been reunited. We see it in the embrace of two friends.
Our hearts will be filled with awe and worship when we see His omnipotence from our mountain top experiences. Everything else looks so small and insignificant. The things that were overwhelming us seem like a flea. The waves of the sea of life that almost overturned your ship look like a ripple left behind by a thrown pebble. The giant that was standing in our view appears to be the size of Tom Thumb. It is amazing to see that God can do anything, and that He has no problems, but that He is still able to cope with all of our problems.
The interesting thing about the view from the mountain top is that we can see all around us. We can see all of the things that we have come through in our climb, and we also can see the things that we sacrificed are all of a sudden at our disposal. When we sacrifice to God, there is a promise that He will give back to us, and it is when we get to the top that we see how He has given back. It is also at the top that we see a picture of the dream that He wants us to have. It is amazing what we can accomplish when we see the “big picture”. Enjoy the mountain top, and remember it so that when you descend back into the valley, your vision and perception do not change.

March 31

Read John 13:15

“When you come, bring a towel.” The title to this message still stands out to me after 17 years. An instructor where I attended Bible College was preaching on the washing of the disciples’ feet by Jesus, when she turned and said those words. I cannot tell you what those words meant at that time, but today, they mean everything.
Not long before His death, Jesus gathered His disciples together for some last minute instructions. To begin the lesson, He used a teaching aid (which my instructor so appropriately used that evening). To illustrate the extent to which the Son of God would serve mankind, Jesus wrapped a towel about His waist, bent down, and cleaned the filthy feet of His friends.
Are you a member of the towel brigade? Do your children see you stoop to wash – with an attitude of love? Is your husband or wife a recipient of your servant’s heart?
In everything that I have done in my life, I am reminded of watching my parents’ minister in a local assembly. They epitomized servant hood. They were always available to assist in helping people become all that they were designed to be in Jesus Christ.
I am trying, and not always succeeding, in trying to live after my parent’s example, the example of my Savior, and those words spoken by the preacher, “When you come, bring a towel”. Try to think of someone that you can spend some time serving today and then wrap a “towel” about your waist and see how it feels to walk in the footprints of the man from Galilee.