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 3 of 3)

NOvember 10

Devotions from Judy’s heart

 When we left home in Northern Minnesota on Sunday, the trees were almost bare. The farther south we have come the more leaves and color we have seen. By the time we got here to Charleston the leaves are at their peak.

I thought of how barren it is when we live on the surface ( north) and don’t go deep ( south) into our hearts. Life is then dull and superficial. But when we allow our minds to sink into our hearts, life becomes rich and full. We are like  the colorful leaves at their peak.  Eph 1:18 says, “I pray also that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which He has called you, the riches of His glorious inheritance in the saints.”  May our hearts be enlightened and flourish at their peak!

November 9th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Today I noticed how many signs we saw along the road and even ones put into the mountain sides. Some were warnings, some were informational, some were points of interest, some were invitations to eat at a restaurant etc. We were especially alert to the ones for hotels as it got dark and we were getting tired. But I thought of the spiritual signs and how aware of them are we?  One sign we saw today said “Jesus is coming again, R U ready!”  Jesus wants us prepared for His coming again and has given us signs. In Matt 24 He tells his disciples as they were sitting on the mount of Olives, what signs to look for: wars and rumors of wars, famines, earthquakes, persecution of Christians etc. etc. Mark 13 gives more signs like the gospel being preached to all nations, being betrayed by your family, false prophets performing signs, the sun and moon darkened, stars falling from the sky etc. Let us be alert and on guard, paying attention to the signs so that when He comes we are watching and waiting and ready!

Tebowing

If you are like I am, as a committed Christian guy, I am pulling for Tim Tebow.  I want him to succeed as the quarterback of the Denver Broncos.  But I agree the jury is still out as the whether or not he will make it as the starting quarterback.  What I find interesting is the public fascination with Tebow.  There are many of us who admire him for his strong faith and his willingness to be so public regarding his convictions.  There are others who respect him for his character, what the people in pro football call ”’the intangibles.”  Others pay attention and just don’t know what to make of Tim Tebow.  The fans in Denver wanted him to have his shot at quarterback.  Time will tell if he will remain a favorite with the fans as a player.

As a result of his bowing, on one knee, and praying on the sidelines next to his fellow teammates while they waited for Matt Prater to hit the 52-yard field goal that gave Denver an 18-15 victory in overtime, a new trend called “Tebowing” has sprung up.  According to Tebowing.com the word means, “to get down on a knee and start praying, even if everyone esle around you is doing something completely different.”  My questions to the guys who read this blog is this, “Why this sudden phenomenon of Tebowing?”  What do you think?  Are you in favor of the practice?  Would you practice Tebowing?  I have asked myself that question.  I also wonder what skeptical nonbelievers thinks of all this.

For me, Tebowing has made my evaluate my public witness for Christ.  Should I have a bolder witness for Jesus?  Am I more concerned about what others might think of say?  What is appropriate in a pluralistic culture such as ours?  I know that words of Mark 8:38 from The Message give me pause to wonder about my public witness. “If any of you are embarrassed over me and the way I’m leading you when you get around your fickle and unfocused friends, know that you’ll be an even greater embarrassment to the Son of Man when he arrives in all the splendor of God, his Father, with an army of the holy angels.”  I have to admit that I feel embarrassed in some secular settings.  Jesus is not rejecting me for my weak public witness, but I could be embarrassing him.   

But I do think that Tim Tebow is a challenge to all of us men.  We are to be public witnesses to our faith.  We are to have courage and boldness.  We are to be ready for opposition and ridicule. Jesus said this would happen. “If you find the godless world is hating you, remember it go its start hating me.  If you lived on the world’s terms, the world would love you as one of it own.  But since I picked you to live on God’s terms and no longer on the world’s terms, the world is going to hate you” (John 15:18-19 – The Message).   After the game against the Detroit Lion, one lion’s lineman, Stephen Tulloch, celebrated tackling the Denver quarterback by dropping to one knee and imitating Tebow’s “Tebowing” prayer pose.  Tight end Tony Scheffler added salt to the wound by performing the move following his touchdown in the first quarter.  You can be sure this will not be the end of how people react to Tebowing.

I personally rejoice in the fact that here is a young man who has the courage of his convictions.  He is honest and sincere.  He wants to use his national platform to be a witness for Jesus.  So I take Tebowing  as a challenge to godly men who live in a more and more hostile culture.  Let’s examine our public witness.  Let’s allow ourselves to ask some hard questions about wanting acceptance and favor, while not seeming to be out of place.  For each of us, there has to be a line as to how far we go to be polite and “politically correct.”  When do we witness about Jesus by simply telling our story.  I believe you will be hearing more about Tebowing among your friends who are NFL football fans.  What a great opportunity to give a simply witness to your faith in Jesus.

November 8th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

I don’t like good-byes as it is hard to let go of what was and yet to savor it. We had to say good-by to the dear congregation in Nevis and our hearts were filled with gratitude for the 15 months the Lord gave us with them.

It was a special day with Al’s sermon preparing them for the next pastor, a pot luck, beautiful cake, cards and a special number dedicated to us by the choir.( I almost lost it then).  Afterwards we began the first leg our journey  to South Carolina and we saw a few leaves on the trees that refused to let go. It was a reminder for us to move on into the next chapter of our lives.  We must let go of the wonderful past and float to the ground like the leaves, letting the Spirit carry us where He wills. “One thing I do: forgetting what was behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” ( Phil 3:13-14)  We want to let go and press on for the new things He has for us, with hearts full of thanks. We feel so richly blessed.

November 7th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

When Al was gone on Saturday to St. Scholastica, I decided to have my devotional time with the Lord by the wood stove.  As I looked up while sitting in the recliner, I was aghast at how dirty the vaulted ceiling was and the ceiling fan. I don’t know how it escaped my notice but as I reflected, it had been a while since I had tried to clean there. I thought of how we need to deal with the sinful things the Lord reveals to us in our lives. We can’t deal with everything all at once or it would be too much for us. But when we see what needs changing, God’s grace is already there to meet us and we need to act on it. I remember once a friend asked me to pray for her as she wanted to get rid of a bad habit. She had lived with it for some time and wanted to be set free in that area. We prayed and God’s grace was upon her and she said she never had the desire for that bad habit again. Now it is not always that easy, but grace was there and we need to receive that grace when God is putting His finger on things in our lives. Maybe others can see what needs changing even before we do,( like people who may have seen my dirty ceiling)  but when we see we need to act. I went out to the garage and got the long extension pole and cleaned away and afterwards I had to vacuum again. Sometimes our messes affect others too, but how wonderful when we get clean and are freed. “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.”…..”Restore to me the joy of your salvation and uphold me with a willing spirit.”  Ps. 51:10 & 12

Nov. 5th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Life is not always comfortable and pain free, but our struggles can teach us so much about…..endurance, faith, trust, perseverance etc. We can become stronger through our trials if we get our eyes fixed on Him. IN Heb. 11;27 it says of Moses, “He endured because he saw Him  who is invisible.” When we lived in Brunswick my favorite thing was to walk the long winding prayer trail through the woods to the river. Often I would stop at a deer stand and sit high in the tree where I got a far reaching view. It is amazing how much our perspective can change when viewed from above.  Things look so different when we ask to see more from His high perspective. Let us lift our eyes above our daily struggles to see Him who always has his eye on us and worthy of our trust. PS. 141:8 “My eyes are toward you, O God, my Lord.”

Nov. 4th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

This week I have made 5 trips to our church in Hackensack, and as I traveled, I noticed the power line poles along the road are in the shape of a cross. What a wonderful reminder of the power of the cross as it says in I Cor. 1:18 “For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”  We need to be connected to the power line of the cross.  I can think of so many hymns about the cross as well and how important it is to embrace the cross. I have many crosses in my jewelry box and one lady from our church wears 3 of them all at once. Can we fully comprehend what it cost the Lord to die for us and to think He would have done it just for one of us? Let us ask Him to keep us connected to the cross and let His healing power and love flow into us. As it says in one hymn, “My past with its sin and stain; My guilt and despair, Jesus took on Him there, and Calvary covers it all.”

November 3rd

Devotions from Judy’s heart

 I have been helping to make Lefse lately and last time I did the grilling and turning of them. I had 2 griddles going at once and 2 or 3 people rolling and giving me their Lefse to brown and turn. I had to keep a close watch on each of them or they could get too done and not be good for the sale.  I thought of the balance of giving and receiving….both are important but they have to even out. Someone who only receives,can soon become a self-centered person. On the other hand, one that only gives may become proud and self sufficient. Each one of us may tend to go off balance in one of these areas more than the other. I think I have more trouble receiving.  There are many scriptures on giving and we are to do it without reluctance or under compulsion for God loves a cheerful giver. (II Cor. 9:7) But what if we did not receive God’s grace, God’s mercy, and all of His good gifts to us through others too?  We would be off balance and burned out. So let us be good givers and receivers.

“A glorified bag boy”

We all know about the ponzi scheme of Bernie Madoff.  It was worth more then $60 billion.  But now in prison Madoff says he works in the one of the stores of his prison as “a glorifed bag boy” for $170 a month.  He believes he deserves to go to prison and to he punished.  As I read part of Barbra Walters’  interview with Madoff I thought of the words of scripture, “God opposes the proud, but give grace the humble.”  I wondered if Madoff is experiencing the grace of God after his fall to the bottom.  It is hard to imagine how far he has fallen.  But remember; a man can be lifted up in the arms of grace and mercy when he as been humbled and repents of his wrong doing.  I pray that for Bernie Madoff.  He has ruined the lives of countless people because of greed and arrogance.  Proverbs tells us, “There is a way that seems right to man, but its end is the way of death.”

In prison Madoff says,  “I feel safer here than outside.  Days go by.  I have people to talk to and no decisions to make…I know, that I will die in prison…I lived the last 20 years of my life in fear.  Now I have no fear…nothing to think about because I’m no longer in control of my life.”  What do you make of this comment?  Here is a man who lived in the lap of luxury as one admired for his investment skills.  He was rich and well connected.  People trusted him with their life savings.  Yet he lived in fear.  Fear of what?  I suppose it had to be the fear of being found out.  His whole enterprise was a lie.  He had to deny his very soul.  Jesus tells us, “What kind of deal is it to get everything you want but lose yourself?  What could you ever trade your soul for?”  Bernie Madoff had to deny his very soul, while living in fear of others and probably himself.  Men, let me testify that there is nothing quite like the incredible freedom of being a man of integrity.  In other words, what you see is what you get.  What peace there is to be able to look others straight in the eyes with a “clear conscience.”  Bernie Madoff was haunted by his secret life.  Men, don’t go down that path. Don’t compartmentalize your life.  You will begin to lose your soul, that is, the person that you really are created to be.  Bernie Madoff was a fraud and he knew it.  That’s why he lived in fear, fear of his past and great fear of the future.  Now in prison he has less fear of the past, because he is “locked up,” but he most be haunted about the future.

We also have a small window into his family life.  After his son, Mark committed sucide in Dec. of 2010 Madoff’s daughter-in-law, Stephanie blamed him.  She said, “I’d spit in his face” if she saw him.  His wife visited him in prison after the sucide, where they had a very emotional meeting.  She said to her husband, “let me go.”  They have not spoken to one another since.  To me, this is the saddest reality of life in prison.  Bernie Madoff is in prison, separated from the rest of the world he once knew.  He says, “Ruth (his wife) hates me.  She has no one.”   He said, “Not seeing my family and knowing they hate me” is hard matter to deal with as he lives alone in prison.  Let me ask you men, is this worth all the deception and duplicity of a $60 billion ponzi scheme. 

Again I say loud and clear to whoever reads this blog, that your life is made up of relationships.  It’s how you live with God, others, especially your family and yourself.  So my encouragement to men today, is to pay attention to your relationships.  Be a man – stand up – and live open, honest, repentant and transparent lives before God, others and yes, yourself.  Don’t be like Bernie Madoff, allowing yourself to be cut of from the life of your soul.  I have found that living as honestly as I am able with those closest to me is the most humbling aspect of my walk with Jesus.  But as I cry out for mercy, He give me grace to live with integrity and honesty.  Listen to these words of Jesus. “Unless a grain of wheat is buried in the ground, dead to the world, it is never any more than a grain of wheat.  But if it is buried, it sprouts and reproduces itself many times over.  In the same way, anyone who holds on to life just as it is destroys that life.  But if you let it go, reckless in your love, you’ll have it forever, real and eternal” (John 12:24-25 – The Message).

Nov. 2nd

Devotions from Judy’s heart

On my prayer walk I often walk by a new cabin that has a rusted metal wild boar at the entrance to their road. To me it seems very unwelcoming and rather startling each time I pass. It caused me to think of what it means to be a welcoming presence in the Body of Christ. Are people “put off” ( startled)  or welcomed by our presence?  In our present church we had a Meet and Greet time for a new prospective pastor that will be voted on soon. Al is also preparing the congregation where he is interim, to welcome their new pastor coming soon. I know it made such a difference when we moved to a new congregation when they welcomed us with open arms. Some were waiting at the parsonage to unload our van, even set up our appliances and arrange our furniture. It helped knit our hearts to theirs right away. It is important to ask the Lord how we can be there for another.  How can we go out of our way to make someone else feel comfortable and to think of their needs above our own?  How can we best show His love to those He has placed in our lives?  I think Rom. 15:7 says it perfectly, “Welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God.”

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