Canaan’s Rest represents a quiet place “set apart” for the purpose of hearing God's voice, growing in intimacy with the Lord, and being renewed in soul and spirit.

Month: August 2010 (Page 3 of 4)

August 12th

8-12 Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book The Inner Voice of Love

Today’s devotion is on knowing we are welcome. Henri acknowledges that his greatest fear is not being welcome in this life and also not being welcome in the life to follow after this. He had thoughts at times that it would have been better if he had not lived. He did not want to give in to the forces of darkness that said he was not welcome , and desired to trust the voice of love that says, “ I love you, I knit you together in your mother’s womb.”  Ps. 13:13   Everything that Jesus says to us can be summarized in the words, “ Know that you are welcome!”  He offers us his most intimate life with the Father and wants His home to be ours. He is preparing a place for us in His Father’s house. The enemy wants us to believe our life is a mistake and that there is no home for us, so we have to keep unmasking that lie. Instead let us  think, speak, and act according to the truth that we are very welcome!

August 11th

Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

The more clearly we see that our vocation is to witness to God’s love in this world, the more the attacks of the enemy will increase.  We may hear the enemy say we are worthless, unattractive, undesirable, unlovable, and have nothing to offer. The more we sense God’s call the more we sense in our souls the battle between God and Satan. We don’t need to fear but to deepen the conviction that God’s love is enough for us and we are in safe hands.  As we do this we will discover that his attacks are powerless. It is important  when we doubt God’s love, that we return to that inner spiritual home and listen there to His voice of love. Only when we know we are intimately loved can we face the dark voices of the enemy without beings seduced by them. The farther our outward journey takes us, the deeper our inward journey must be.  Only when our roots are deep can our fruits be abundant. The enemy is there to destroy us, but we can face him without fear when we know we are held safe in the love of Jesus.

Awakened

Donald Miller has written a very stimulating book on growing up without a father entitled “To Own a Dragon.”  He shares his own journey of being a man who needed to be fathered.  He makes this observation, “The thing I believe about manhood now is that it lives within the male from a very early age, and sometimes it gets awakened, and sometimes it doesn’t.  It doesn’t matter how old you are – a man is a man is a man.”  I can really relate to this observation by Miller when I reflect on my story and the story of most men I have known.

First, my sense of maleness was definitely dormant in my growing up years.  My father was not present emotionally in my life.  I saw father as someone that was outside my sphere of relatedness.  He was “out there” being a good provider, but in his absence, leaving me wondering and longing for the male voice in my life.  I didn’t realize this at the time, but my confusing regarding who I was, and the insecurity I had about my personhood, pointed to the need of a guiding voice.  Because of this, my sense of what a healthy male should be, was not awakened.  I had to go searching for an identity and understanding of myself.  Like most other young boys, I found this need met with my peers, who had to same issues

Secondly, I am so thankful to God that my sense of maleness was “awakened.”  This happened in my 20’s.  First, I came to know God in a personal way.  My relationship with God began to define who I was.  Secondly, God  brought into my life a woman, who became my wife.  She saw the potential for godliness in me.  For that I will always be thankful.  Thirdly, God provided some wonderful male models for me over the years.  Richard Rohr calls them “male mothers.”  They fed my father hunger with father energy, while being a godly influence. 

I say all this to encourage the readers of this blog.  You might not feel awakened in your God given maleness.  But as Miller states, “It doesn’t matter how old you are – a man is a man is a man.”  I want to strongly encourage you to come humbly before your heavenly Father through the Lord Jesus, sincerely asking  (even crying out to him) for the affirmation the only your heavenly Father can give you.  Hear whjat I say to you, “You are able to be fathered by your heavenly Father, through Jesus.”  

Don’t be afraid to allow yourself to be awakened.  For some of you, it might be a little frightening at first.  But resist the temptation to flee back into your immature male place of protection.  Come forth and allow yourself to be spoken to by your heavenly Father.  He will bring you forth.  I think of the wonderful words of Jesus to Lazarus, “Lazarus, come out.”  These are God’s words to each wounded and searching male soul today.

August 10th

Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

Henri writes about the fear of death. That fear is connected with the fear that we are not loved. As we come to know that we are loved fully and unconditionally, we will also come to know that we don’t have to fear death.  Love is stronger than death.  Gods’ love was there for us before we were born and will be there for us after we have died. Jesus called us from the moment we were knitted together in our mother’s womb. It is our vocation to receive and give love.  He has overcome the power of death so that we can live in freedom. We need to claim that victory and not live as if death controlled us. Our soul may know the victory but our mind and emotions must accept it too.  Let us remember the victory has been won and the powers of darkness no longer rule. Love truly is stronger than death!

August 9th

Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

All of us have experienced pain in our lives and it is often linked to some of our early childhood experiences.  We are called to bring that pain home. For if the wounded parts of us remain foreign to our adult self, our pain will injure us as well as others. We need to incorporate our pain into our selves and let it bear fruit in our heart and the hearts of others.  When Jesus said for us to take up our cross He is encouraging us to embrace our unique suffering and to befriend our wounds. We are to let them reveal to us our own truth. Once we have taken up that cross, we will be able to see clearly the crosses that others have to bear, and be able to reveal to them their own ways to joy, peace and freedom.

August 7th

Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of  Love

Sometimes we blame others for difficulties we experience in relationships but we can also end up blaming ourselves. .  But self-blame is not a form of humility, it is a form of self-rejection. It is a form in which we ignore or deny our own goodness and beauty.  When a friendship does not blossom or a word is not received, we can blame it on ourselves. This may be both untrue and hurtful. When we do this we idealize others, and make ourselves emotionally dependent on others to fill our expectations. This can make them withdraw from us and thus begins a downward spiral of self-rejection and neediness.   Let us avoid all forms of self-rejection. Let us acknowledge our limitations but claim our unique gifts and live as an equal among equals. This will set us free and enable us to give and receive true affection and friendship.

August 6th

Devotions based on Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

Each one of us must decide to whom we give access to our inner life. If we just allow others to walk in and out according to their needs and desires we may feel tired, irritated, resentful and used.  We might think of ourselves as the lord of our castle and surrounded by a moat. The drawbridge is the only access to the interior of the castle. We can decide when to draw the bridge and when to let it down. Without such power we can become victims of enemies and strangers and will not feel at peace in our castle.  There may be times when we keep our bridge drawn so we can be alone or only with those to whom we feel close. We must not allow ourselves to become public property, where anyone can walk in and out at will. It will cause us to feel we are losing our soul. As we must claim for ourselves the power over our drawbridge, we will be peaceful, joyful, and able to share that with others.

August 5th

Devotions from Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

Sometimes in our friendships we look for proof and concrete responses of their caring.  But when we really know we are loved by God, we can allow our friends the freedom to respond to our love in their way. They have their own histories and their own ways of receiving love. They may be slower, more cautious, and more hesitant.  Even though their way may be unusual and different  than our way, it is authentic for them. We can trust that those who love us want to show their love in a real way, even when their choices of time, place and form are different from ours.  We need to allow our friends the freedom to respond as they want and are able to. May we let their receiving be as free as our own giving. Then we will become capable of feeling true gratitude.

August 4th

Devotions based on Henri Nouwen’s book, The Inner Voice of Love

Today’s devotion is on friendship and the importance to seek friends to whom we can relate from our center, the place where we know we are deeply loved. Friendships happen when we accept ourselves as deeply loved and then are able to love others in a non-possessive way. “Real friends find their inner correspondence where both know the love of God. Their spirit speaks to spirit and heart to heart.”  True friendships are lasting because true love is eternal. This kind of friendship is a gift from God and is stronger than death. In this sense, true friendships continue beyond the boundary of death.  When Jesus died, the disciples’ friendship with Him did not diminish but it grew because the Holy Spirit made it more intimate than before his death. .When we have loved deeply, that love can grow even after the person has died.  Every true friendship has no end for there is a communion of saints that exists among those, living and dead, who have truly loved God and one another.  Those whom we have loved deeply and have died also live on in us. 

Let us remember that the love we give and receive is a reality that will lead us closer to God as well as to those whom God has given us to love!

The Sheltered Man

In his short book “The misunderstood man” Walter Trobisch talks about “The sheltered Man.”  This is the man who feels safe and secure.  “He can be a shelter to others because he himself is sheltered.  He is no afraid even if at times he should lose or suffer defeat.”  A sheltered man can simply get up again and then just keep on.  He has come to peace both with his weaknesses and strengths because he knows that he is accepted by his heavenly Father. He will not flee, especially from his emotional responsibility in his family 

Trobisch maintains that a sheltered man “has a roof over his head,  He knows where his home is.”  That is, he is secure in his relationship and identity as a man.  He can say with the Psalmist, “For you have been my refuge, a strong tower against the foe.  I long to dwell in your tent forever and take refuge in the shelter of your wings” ( Ps 61:3-4).  Because he is sheltered this man will not manifest  three common characteristics of an insecure man.  First, he will not run away, second, he will stand, and three, he will fight.

As I write this post, I am thinking of the chorus to a song by Sanctus Real entitled “Lead me.”  The chorus goes like this – “Lead me with strong hands/stand up when I can’t/ don’t leave me hungry for love/chasing dreams, what about us.”  It a plea from a wife and children for the man of the house to stand and be strong.  Near the end of the song are these words, “I’ll show them I’m willing to fight and give them the best of my life.”  In this song we have a plea for the man to be present; not to run away, but rather to stand and fight

Men, it takes a secure man in the Lord, one who is resting in the love of his heavenly Father not flee emotionally, but to stand and fight for what is best for his loved ones.  That fight will most likely be with his own “inner complusions.”  For most of us men it is easier to run from conflict, rather than stand and fight.  How do we fight.  Our weapons are love and humility.  We love without knowing the outcome and we go forward in humility, knowing that we are totally dependent upon the grace of God. Remember, we love with the love of God.  Love, “always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perserves” (I Cor 13:7)

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