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: November 2011 (Page 2 of 3)

November 21st

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Yesterday I read from Romans 14:13 ,”Let us no longer pass judgment on another, but resolve instead never to put a stumbling block in the way of another.”  We are to show understanding love. While at my brothers, I helped him tie his shoes, start the fire in his gas fireplace, carry a few things etc. All very simple things but when your arm is in a cast it becomes difficult. His handicap is very visible and I would do anything to help my brother. But most people around us ( including ourselves) have handicaps. Many of these are not visible to see with our eyes but we may need inner healing and help psychologically. My devotional book had a prayer that is good to pray often. “Great and forgiving God, thank you for teaching me how to live with my neighbor. Without your help, I easily pass judgment on them instead of showing them understanding love, and forgiveness. Keep me from doing harm to others by what I do or don’t do. Show me how to use kindness and gentleness to bring hope and healing.”

November 19th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

This morning I read in Luke 21 about the poor widow who put in 2 small coins in the temple treasury. It was all she had to live on!  What a contrast to the Biltmore Estate we toured yesterday with the enormous oak dinner table that seated 38, the 43 bathrooms, the bowling alley, the swimming pool, etc with over 1800 workers to keep the estate beautiful.  It was truly lovely and we enjoyed seeing the lavish furnishings in each of the over 200 rooms. But I must say I actually preferred the simple style of the monastery with its peaceful atmosphere. One feels so close to the Lord. When I think of the hidden life of solitude and the prayerfulness of the monks, it stirs my heart. They own nothing and yet they are so rich. One does not need an abundance of things to be happy but rather to commune with the Lord and receive His lavish love.   The words of the song came to mind that I learned as a child, “ A tent or a cottage why should I care. He’s building me a mansion over there…. He has riches untold!  Let us seek true riches that last forever!

November 18th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Today we were in the Blue Ridge at sunrise and there was a mist covering the mountains.  It was hard to know where the mountains ended and where the heavens began. We were literally in the clouds. I felt like shouting,  “Be exalted O God, above the heavens, let your glory be over all the earth.” (Ps. 57:10-11. ) I thought of how we must be ready for the unexpected as the temperatures went from 70 degrees when we left Charleston this morning to  25 degrees and snow in the mountains.  How  important it is  that we are ready for the unexpected. It says in Luke 21:36, “ Always be on the watch and pray.” We had to dress differently today than yesterday and had to drive slowly in the snow. But what if we had insisted on wearing our short sleeved shirts like we did yesterday when it was then in the 80’s?  We would have been freezing today!  As it says in II Tim. 4:2, “Be prepared in season and out of season.”  We had heard the forecast and were prepared today for this new season and so thankful in our winter coats. May we be prepared in the spiritual sense too and be watchful and prayerful.

November 17th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

I think this trip is showing me once more how to live in the present moment. On our way to Charleston, we didn’t have a rigid time schedule and we stopped along the way at places that sparked our interest.  We went to
“The Cathedral of All Souls” which was a historic Episcopal  church in Asheville, N.C>  We took time to view all the stained glass windows etc. and sat in quiet. We took in the Cultural Center of Arts too. Sometimes we are in such a hurry on our journey, that we miss the most meaningful things along the way. Faster may not be better. We took a little extra time and experienced more of the little things that add up to make us rich and full. As we start our journey homeward tomorrow we plan to do the same. Let us make each day count!

“O God, teach us to count our days that we may gain a wise heart.” PS. 90:12

November 16th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

While at Ann’s on Saturday I had a moment of intense gratefulness one noon.  I was mixing cookies and had just been melting some butter on the stove. There was soup warming up on one burner and someone had put a casserole dish on the back burner too. When I had finished mixing the butter and sugars for the cookies, I transferred the bowl to the adjacent counter.. All of a sudden there was a big explosion. The rice casserole dish exploded, sending glass all over the kitchen. Had I still been at the stove, I would have had glass in my face and maybe all over. Oh how thankful I was that I was right where I was at the time. I wonder if we know in even a small way, how often we are protected from harm. Afterwards I thought of the verse from one of my favorite Psalms, 37:7, “You are my hiding place; you will protect me from trouble and surround me with songs of deliverance.”  All day long I was giving thanks!

“Courageous”

The folks who produced the Christian films, “Fireproof” and “Facing the Giants” have produced a new film entitled “Courageous.”  If you haven’t seen it men, I encourage you to go and take your wife with you.  Every father needs to go.  Judy and I have seen it.  It’s about four cops in Albany, Georgia.  They do a great job at protecting and serving the community.  They are courageous and they uphold their duty no matter what.  But at home they are not the fathers they should be.  As fathers, these cops decide to make a change.  They pledge to embrace the principles of biblical fatherhood, and live as courageously at home as they do at work.

The producers of the film emphasize the connection between the failure of the fathers and crime.  “If fathers just did what they were supposed to do,” says one of the cops, “half the junk we face on the streets wouldn’t exist.”  As Charles Colson on his “breakpoint” blog noted in his reveiw of the movie, “Our prison systems are full of people who never had the example of a courageous father – or any father at all.  Over 70 % of long-term prison inmates comes from broken homes, and young men raised in fatherless households are at least twice as likely to be incarcerated as those from intact families.” As Colson goes on to say, “Take it from someone who has witnessed the destruction of failed fathers for over three decades: you’ve got a duty to your children.  And you can change the course of their lives and society.

Casting Crowns has recorded the song “courageous” to go along with the movie.   I have already used it for one of my “Wildman” Saturdays.  I encourage you men to download the song and let it sink into your heart and spirit.  Here are some of the words from the song.  I personally find them convicting as a man and father.  “We were warriors on the front line standing unafraid, but now we’re watchers on the sidelines while our families slip away.”  Wow!  The implications are that the warrior will fight for his family.  The chorus reinforces this truth. “We were made to be courageous and we’re taking back the fight.  We were made to be courageous and it starts with us tonight.  The only way we’ll ever stand is on our knees, with lifted hands.  Make us courageous, Lord, make us courageous.”  There you have it men.  It’s time to be a warrior, by starting on your knees at home. 

I want to quote one more phrase from the song. “We will reignite the passion that we buried deep inside.  May the watchers become warriors.  Let the men of God arise.”  I like this phrase.  It speaks right to the heart of the vision of “wildmen.”  A wildman is someone who has allowed himself to get in touch with his real passion for God.  I want to tell you men; it is there within you.  The problem is that we have ignored that deep passion, while fiddling around with lesser passions, that will never give us to energy and desire to serve God.  Listen men, God has put into your heart the desire to be a warrior for him.  He has put deep in you the passion to be their for your family.  He is asking you to stand and be courageous.  As the song says, “In the war of the mind I will take my stand.”

A very effective part of the song is the segment in which you hear the voices of children singing.  Guess what they are singing.  They are singing a paraphrase of Micah 6:8, “And what does the Lord require of you?  To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with hour God.”  The Message puts it this way. “It’s quite simple: Do what is fair and just to your neighbor, be compassionate and loyal in your love, and don’t take yourself too seriously – take God seriouly.”  I never thought of it as beginning at home.  Yes, God wants us to be warriors and it begins at home.  So let’s be courageous, by doing what is fair and just, while walking humbly with God, not taking ourselves to seriously, but rather taking God call on our life seriously.  Remember, “the only way we’ll ever stand is on our knees with lifted hands.”

November 15

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Tonight we feel the joy of the lost lamb that was found or like the woman who found her lost coin after lighting her lamp and sweeping her floor. Today we took the grandkids to the Charleston Aquarium and had such a fun day. But when we got to the car to go home, Al said he didn’t have his billfold! Oh my, the stress we all went through and prayers went up immediately.  We went back to the Aquarium and combed the place as best we could. We started thinking of the consequences since we are only on the first leg of our journey and need our credit cards, Driver’s license to get back in to the Base etc. The kids were very cooperative and felt bad for grandpa. We had planned to stop to eat on the way home but instead went right home. But to the joy of all of us, Ann met us at the door to tell us Al had left his billfold on the table and never had it in his pocket. We started cheering and thanking the Lord with all of our hearts, and went out to celebrate. I felt like the woman in Luke 15:9 who called together her friends to share her joy.  “Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin. In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents.”  What we found was important to us, but not like the joy of a lost soul who is found!

NOvember 14th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

It’s often the little things in life that mean so much and are remembered. Each morning we wake up to the smell of coffee at 5:30 am. as Leif sets it the night before. Also on Friday when we came home from the Boone Hall Plantation, we were all tired from walking for hours and being out in the cold and wind. But when we stepped inside, the house was filled with the aroma of chicken baking. Leif had a yummy supper in the oven and we didn’t have to do a thing. In fact, we all headed for a nap and still had plenty of time to get ready for the International Home School event..  When we feel prompted to do something for others, we need to heed the voice of the Spirit. Sometimes it is a word of encouragement or may be an act of kindness that seems small, but to the other person it may make all the difference in the world. So let us be sensitive to the Spirit and “Keep in step with the Spirit” (Gal. 5:25) and walk in love.

November `11th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Today we have been at the Boone Hall Plantation and saw so many people dressed in costumes and telling stories as if they were a person that lived long ago. I thought of how often we may play a part or fill a role but are not our real self with others. We may even dress the part, trying to appear to be someone we truly aren’t. As a pastor’s wife, I’m sure I have fit into a role many times that was not truly me.   I find the more I grow in my spiritual life, the more I become my authentic self.  And to me that is freedom. For “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.” Gal. 5:1. Let us live in authenticity and freedom!!

NOv 11th

 Devotions today is from our son Kurt. Hope you enjoy!

Our pastor had an interesting sermon last week and I thought I would share my notes.  The series is Called “The Legacy of Life” and the 2 big ideas of this particular series is:
        1.) My number one opportunity to leave a legacy in this world is my home
        2.) Family is God’s number one tool for helping us become more like Jesus

The big idea for this Sunday was: Every life teaches a lesson.  My greatest gift to my family is me.  The life I live is my legacy.  

My initial reaction to this was one of “Oh man, what will my story be? and how will I be remembered by my family and friends…..by those that know me best?”  I thought of a funny motivation parody poster that showed a picture of a haunting, half sunken ship in a harbor, left for years with a caption at the bottom that read “it may be that the purpose of your life is a warning to others”  :  )

Here are the 3 points:
1.) VALUE your life lesson –  The life you live will speak to your family and friends for generations after you die.  He gave several examples of this, one was what he called the Hall of Faith in Hebrews 11 that speaks of Abel’s gift and how it was better than Cains and “how his faith speaks even though he is dead.”  I think this is true with members of my family.  I think of my Grandmother that is now in heaven, but her example of faith, stewardship and giving still speak to me.

2.) EXAMINE your life lesson –  2 Corinthians 13: 5 says “examine yourselves to see if your faith is genuine”
He said we should ask ourselves, our friends, our family and God.  He even asked if there would be one word to describe you what would it be?  I know what I would like it to be, but is it?!

3.) CHANGE your life lesson – Mark 10:27 says “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God”

He made me laugh when he said in a very matter-of-fact manner “if you could fix you, you would, but you can’t, so you won’t”.   Jesus is in the life-changing business.  What I can’t change, Jesus can change.  Repent and believe that he can change you. If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature!

  How will you be remembered?   What is your legacy?
        Kurt

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