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: December 2010 (Page 3 of 3)

Dec. 11th

Devotions from Michael Molinas in the book, The Spiritual Guide

In the center of our being is the place God wants to dwell. He manifests himself in ways that are above our understanding and senses.  If we desire to hear His voice to our hearts we need to die to our selfish nature and avoid attachment to things that are not of God. May the prayer of our heart be to come before Him seeking only His divine will! “Come…busy yourself only to His pleasure. Come…interested only in His desire. Come…waiting with perfect submission to receive whatever He has ordained.” As we do this, peace will flood our inward being and we will experience joyful rest.

Dec. 10th

Thoughts based on an article by Benner and Moon in Conversations Magazine

God is in the present moment but how do we experience His presence in our moment-by-moment daily life?  We can start our day by asking him to help us discern His presence in the events of our day. And at the close of the day, review and reflect on the events, recognizing His divine presence. He may show up in surprising ways like in the brokenness of our lives, in the world around us etc. We may need to ask for forgiveness for the times we move away from Him but also  give thanks for when we were aware of Him. We can also ask for the grace to be even more open to Him tomorrow. God is at home in the world and in the midst of the affairs of our lives.

 ‘Our job is to allow ourselves to be loved and then to hold others in love and to pass on to them what we have received from God. “

Dec. 9th

Devotions based on an article by Benner and Moon in Conversations Magazine

God is love, so we can know God only in love. As we taste God’s love and allow it to touch us, we come to truly KNOW Him.  This knowing comes from stillness before God and one’s own self. “Only when we love Him enough to prefer His ways to ours, his language to ours, and His will to ours, only then will we discover Him.” Our job is to consent to the action of God in us. Union is God’s responsibility. Our responsibility  is to turn to Him in openness and trust.  As we do, we receive the inflow of grace and let it flow through us. The rest is up to God. Doesn’t that cause us to sigh in relief…it’s not all about keeping rules etc but opening up to His grace in our lives.

Dec. 8th

Devotions based on an article by Benner and Moon in Conversations Magazine

Prayer is more than praying and asking for things and saying things to God. “Prayer is communion with God, a communion initiated by God, who has already come to us and who is openly attentive to us and communicating to us before we begin to pray.”  So it would be good if we start with stillness and attentiveness to Him and not words. God is already present with us so let us talk less and listen more. So often we think of prayer as a form of communication but it really a way of being. It is begins with God who is in us, and allowing Him to flow into our being. We need to take our hands off the controls of our spiritual life and open ourselves to God and to meet God in the midst of our experience. As this happens our life becomes our prayer.

Dec. 7th

Devotions based on an article by Benner and Moon in Conversations Magazine

We may say we desire to be open to God but so often our ego wants to be in control or we think we have to DO something. But it is really a matter of our heart when we open it to God’s love and life. As we come to know His love we in turn trust Him and respond in grace.  Prayer is not something we do but it is the natural language of the soul. A deep communion grows from the fact that we and God belong together.  “Once you taste this oneness and experience even for a moment the sense of being sufficiently open to God to allow Him to flow through you, desire, not will power, becomes all that is necessary to lead you forward.” Let us desire Him above all!!

Being Beautiful

As some of you know who read the posts on this blog, I am a Lutheran Pastor.  I have been at it for 40 years.  One of my great joy within the Lutheran Church these days is the research that Finnish theologians have been engaged in as they present new insights into  the theology of Martin Luther.  The “Mannermaa school” of Finnish theology under the leadership of Tuomo Mannnermaa has created a lot of interest in rethinking how we have interpreted Luther.  For example, Mannermaa maintains that love, not “faith alone” is the actual key to understanding Luther’s entire theology. “Faith without love remains an abstract principle principle in Luther’s thinking.” 

I say all this to introduce a pharse from Luther from Mannermaa’s book, “Two kinds of love: Martin Luther’s religious world.”  Listen to thes words from Luther. “Therefore sinners are beautiful because they are loved; they are not loved because they are beautiful.”  What does this have to do with men and their spiritual life.  A great deal.  God love according to Luther, “does not find but creates that which is lovable to it, it is not determined by the attributes of its object.”  In other words, God loves each of us in our sinful mess, just as we are.  We can do nothing.  We can only receive this love.  We can do nothing to clean ourselves up.  Rather the love of God does the cleaning up for us.  Luther declares, “This is the love of the cross, born of the cross, which turns in the dirction where it does not find good which it may enjoy, but where it may confer good upon the bad and needy person.”  Wow, isn’t that great. 

Men, there is, of course, much that we need to do in cooperating with the grace of God in our lives.  We need to practice the spiritual disciplines, we need to be servants in a dying work, we need to be spiritual leaders in our families, etc.  But prior to all this and more then what we do, we need to receive the love of God into the inner recesses of our hearts.  What a great thought.  I am beautiful in God’s sight, because I have received his love.  Yes, men you are beautiful.  Just sit there, ponder this thought and simply receive it.  Once a man trully realizes that God wants to be active in his life, no matter how messy it might seem, something happens to brakes the hold of shame and guilt that a man harbors in his heart.  It is like the light goes on and he can see.  It is like a veil is lifted

Listen to these words from the Message.  “Whenever, though, they turn to face God as Moses did, God removes the veil and there they are — face-to-face!  They suddenly recognize that God is a living, personal presence, not a piece of chiseled stone.  And when God is personally present, a living Spirit, that old, constricting legislation is recognized as obsolete.  We’re free of it!  All of us!  Nothing between us and God, our faces shining with the brightness of his face.  And so we are transfigured much like the Messiah, our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him’ (II Cor. 3:16-18)  There you have it.  As we turn to Jesus, His Spirit at work in our hearts makes us beautiful.  Don’t try to figure it out.  Just let it happen.

Dec. 6th

Devotions based on thoughts from Michael Molinos in The Spiritual Guide

There are two kinds of humility: one false and counterfeit and the other true.  False humility is seen in those who go out of their way to speak often of how bad they are and call themselves miserable. They may take the lowest places, dress poorly, speak submissively, speak often of their faults etc.  Such conduct is not going to convince God they are humble.

True humility never thinks of humility. It is an inward thing. Those who have it act patiently and live in God. They do not care to be thought well of by the world and are content with what God gives them…even when that means suffering.

When others  attack them they don’t have to defend or respond. They can’t be hurt by others but only by their own pride.

Replying to things said about us is evidence our self yet reigns and grows out of pride. If we think we have made progress in humility, chances are we haven’t. “True humility abides inwardly in the quiet of a man’s heart. It abides there and rests there.” Let us walk in true humility and desire to know His greatness and recognize how much we need His grace.

Dec. 4th

Devotions from thoughts by Michael Molinos in The Spiritual Guide

Sometimes we feel far from what God wants us to be.  We may tell the Lord we want to draw closer to Him for we realize there is much of our soul that is not yet possessed by Him. But to know His pure love means the cross and denial of ourselves, which is totally voluntary. It means accepting all things that come into our lives with humility and seeking only to fulfill His divine will.  We are most happy when we die to our self-nature and find His perfect peace and pure love. “The believer who leaves ALL to find the Lord begins to possess all for eternity.”  When we are new believers doing things for Him is a delight.  As we go on in our Christian life, suffering becomes part of our life as we die to ourselves. When we die to our self- nature we can’t be hurt by someone else.  We realize that God has permitted this grievance to fall into our life to humble us and cause us to turn to Him. But as we do we find great inner peace and joy. Any self love which reigns in us stands as a hindrance to peace.

Dec. 3rd

Devotions based on Michael Molinos, The Spiritual Guide

All of us want our soul cleansed but do we rejoice in the way the Lord often brings tribulation into our lives to bring that about?  Great good comes from Tribulation but I don’t suppose any of us pray for that.  In the midst of trials we can  exercise the most wonderful acts of love and charity, as we are being refined. Can we get to the point where we rejoice in the midst of trials knowing that it brings us nearer to the Lord?  Perhaps we are nearer to God more than any other time in our lives when we feel He has deserted us. The sun may be hidden behind the clouds, yet the sun has not changed its place, nor lost its brightness. The Lord allows a painful desertion of His presence to purge and to polish and cleanse us. Then we will have a clear opportunity to give our whole self to Him without thinking of our personal gain…but only to be His delight.

Dec.2nd

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   Devotions from thoughts by Michael Molinos in The Spiritual Guide

Obedience to be perfect must be voluntary, pure and cheerful. Most of all it must be internal. It means we don’t consider the personal gain for ourselves but only for the gain of God. When it is internal we are ready at any time and without resentment to do His will. I find I have often obeyed what I think the Lord wanted for me but with reservation and even at times complaining.  Pure obedience to Him must come from the heart. Often we fall and it is humbling. But in reality it is a miracle of His grace that we don’t fall every moment. The enemy tells us that when we fall that we are not grounded in God and he wants us to despair and give up. But we need to acknowledge our fall and trust in His mercy and goodness. Again and again we must do that. The Lord lets us know that it is His mercy which frees us and keeps us humble. Let us have confidence in His forgiveness and mercy.

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