Canaan's Rest

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.

January 21, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you are keeping warm during this cold weather. Today I plan to bake cookies on a stick and go to Exercise class, Crafts and Bible Study tonight.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Which one of us can predict how the Lord will act? How often does He surprise us by acting in a completely different way than we imagined He would? We may have certain expectations and then see things happen that aren’t anything like we visualized. Perhaps it is because the Lord sees deep into the heart of the matter and does what He knows is best. It must have been shocking to the people around Jesus that knew his parents and saw Him grow up; then later they saw Him do miracles even on the Sabbath. He also preached and taught with great wisdom, ate with sinners like Zacchaeus, and told the Pharisees what was really going on in their hearts which differed from their outward pretended behavior.

None of us can put Jesus into a box and think we know what He will do next. Our part is to trust, pray and ask, but as we all know, the answers don’t necessarily come as we hoped. Neither do they necessarily come quickly. We may even wonder if He heard us and is concerned over what is happening. But in the waiting, He also does a work in our heart, and it may cause our roots to go deeper into Him as we wait and wait.

Jesus is not predictable, which means we can’t be sure if He will answer our prayers in a certain way. So we need to hold things loosely and let Him surprise us rather than grumbling that He didn’t answer the way we wanted. Let us be as David who said, “I will keep my eyes on the Lord. With Him at my right hand I will not be shaken.” Psalm 16:11.

Challenge for today: Keep an open mind and heart to whatever way the Lord chooses to answer your prayers and meet your needs.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

January 20, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you are keeping warm with this frigid weather. I am going to make a Korean dish and go to a Women’s Bible study this morning. We plan to go to friends this afternoon for dessert and fellowship!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Isn’t it refreshing to be around upbeat people who are thankful and full of praise to the Lord, not just when things are going well but especially when going through hard times? We can teach our children and others to face problems and defeat the enemy by praising the Lord in the midst of whatever adversity we encounter. I saw a T-shirt with the caption in big letters, “God is so good to me!” It doesn’t mean everything in my life is necessarily wonderful, but we know His love never ceases and He has our good in mind!
I was reading from the book of Jonah when he was crying out to God in the belly of the big fish after being swallowed and entangled in seaweed. He prayed and God answered. It says in Jonah 2:9, “But I’m worshipping you, God, calling out in thanksgiving! And I’ll do what I promised I’d do! Salvation belongs to God!” Even the sailors who threw him overboard worshiped God as they beheld His power.
David also takes refuge in the Lord, who was his rock and heard his cry for help. He says he will ever sing praises to His name and make music to the Lord. (Psalm 61) So many times David was in a tight spot but he called on the Lord, praised Him and thanked Him. That is a powerful thing to do and defeats the enemy. What a witness that is as well to our family, when we don’t complain but seek the Lord and praise Him, even before we know how He is going to answer. Let us be examples as it says in Psalm 79:13: “Then we, your people, the ones you love and care for, will thank you over and over. We’ll tell everyone we meet how wonderful you are, how praiseworthy you are!”
Challenge for today: When the enemy attacks you, confuse Him by praising the Lord and thanking Him for His goodness and mercy.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

The Great Feminization

Helen Andrews had a very insightful article in Compact entitled, “The Great Feminization.” She theorizes, “Cancel culture is simply what women do whenever there are enough of them in a given organization or field.” She is applying feminine patterns of behavior in institutions where women were few in number until recently.  Andrews observes, “Everything you think of as wokeness involves prioritizing the feminine over the masculine: empathy over rationality, safety over risk, cohesion over competition.” 

Could this be overstated.  Maybe!  According to Joy Pullmann we are experiencing a “swap.”  “We have feminization where there should be masculinity, and masculinization where there should be femininity.”  Women are pushed to act like men and men to act like women. The result suggests Pullmann is, “social transgenderism,” making men and women dysfunctional.  Instead of being too feminine, “women are not feminine enough, and men are not masculine enough.”  I agree with Pullmann that men have violated, “their natural male duty to protect the weak.”  “Men need” notes Pullman, “to shed their internalized transgender roles just as much as women do.”

Andrews goes on to state, “Female group dynamics favor consensus and cooperation.  Men order each other around; but women can only suggest and persuade.  Any criticism or negative sentiment……needs to be buried in layers of compliments.  The outcome of a discussion is less important than the fact that a discussion was held and everyone participated in it.  The most important sex difference in group dynamics is the attitude to conflict…..men wage conflict openly while women covertly undermine or ostracize their enemies.” 

“Men” according  Andrews, “tend to be better at compartmentalizing than women, and wokeness was in many ways a society-wide failure to compartmentalize.” Men tend to reconcile more readily with opponents and learn to live in peace, while women are slower to reconcile in conflict. 

Andrews goes so far as to believe the Great Feminization is a threat to civilization. Others, of course, believe it is more “an organic result of women outcompeting men.” But could it be more the artificial result of social engineering.  Andrews wonder if the window to do something about the Great Feminization is closing.  If wokeness is the result of demographic feminization, then it will never be over as long as the demographics remain unchanged. 

I have written about the feminizing of men since the early days of this blog.  I credit Leanne Payne for opening my eyes.  When  men do not lead, take responsibility, and initiate, they surrender their position in family and society.  Women who were not meant to lead or initiate will fill the void.  The result will be women being in the wrong place not able to give proper leadership.

Part of the solution for wokeness in our culture is  godly men receiving their affirmation as men from their heavenly Father.  There is a hole in the soul; an ache that is always felt, when men live as orphans away from home.  We all are prodigals  until we come home and hear the voice of our heavenly Father say, “You are my son in whom I delight.” 

The result will be affirmed men. They are secure in their gender identity and role.  In the tension  between the genders men can express “fairness” rather than harden resolve on positions. They appreciate the opposite in the feminine, celebrating equally gifted and empowered women who complement their masculine.  They see women as their equal, being fulfilled their femininity.  Rather than scapegoating, men will assume their leadership responsibilities.  Affirmed men are able to navigate “the gender wars” because they are submitted to the God who made male and female.    

  

 

January 19, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a great weekend. Burr it is cold outside and Al and I walked in the underground over the weekend. Today I plan to go to Aldi’s and my exercise class and make zucchini/salmon patties etc.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Sometimes I wake up with a song playing in my mind and I try to pay attention as it most likely is a message the Lord wants me to take to heart. One Sunday morning, the words to O Lord most Holy struck me and reminded me of who God is. “O Lord most holy, O Lord most mighty, O Loving Father, We praise forevermore.” He is holy, mighty and loving, and the words go on to ask for help to know Him and love Him and to grant us truth, love, guidance and protection. I think we all want that.

The next verse that follows is asking for His help to “Rule though our willful hearts; Keep Thine our wand’ring thoughts; in all our sorrows let us find our rest in Thee: And in temptation’s hour save through Thy mighty pow’r. Thine aid O send us. Hear us in mercy, O Lord, we pray.” How important it is to rule our thought life for it likes to wander all over, especially when we want to sit in quiet and just listen to the Lord. But as our thoughts center on the Lord, we will find rest from all our worries, anxieties and fears. When we are tempted, it is His power that we need to overcome and He has promised to help us when we call to Him.

The song closes with “Show us Thy mercy, so shall we live and sing praise to Thee.” We all need His mercy and grace to daily die to our self-life and to live for Him. We are giving up our selfishness to worship and live for Him who is love, truth and peace. Why do we hang on to our selfish concerns when we can rest In Him? Let us open our hearts wider to Him and let Him rule in every part of our lives.

Challenge for today: Give praise to the Lord and ask for His help for you to let Him rule in your life.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

January 17, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a wonderful weekend. We enjoyed celebrating Ann’s birthday yesterday and thankful she got home safely with the snow. Today I am going to make smothered porkchops and clean the apt etc.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
How many of us have wondered if we will be provided for and if we will have enough? During Covid, we bought more than we needed at the store as we weren’t sure if there would be a run on toilet paper, meat, or many other things. We were left with fears of survival and just having a normal life again. It is especially a problem for children who did not receive nourishment and comfort from their mothers, for they grow up anxiously wondering if they will have enough. Since they lack emotional attachment-love, they miss the feeling of being seen, celebrated, and bringing joy into the world. God has made each of us to receive resilience and immunity through our mothers as our need for their love is met.

Many today suffer from mother deprivation, and it shows up later in our lives as mother wounds and a lack of ability to attach. John Eldredge, author and counselor, writes about children with compulsive tendencies to steal who all had mother deprivation. One family who adopted such a boy, had to lock things up every night in the house as he would steal, which was likely the result of unmet needs in his young life.

Although deprivation makes human attachments very hard, there is healing and hope for our souls. I love Isaiah 49:15-16a, “Can a mother forget the infant at her breast, walk away from the baby she bore? But even if mothers forget, I’d never forget you—never. Look, I’ve written your names on he backs of my hands.”  God loves each of us and is the source of all mothering. No matter if we got the mother-love we needed, Aldredge writes, “We need to come home to the mother-love of God, regardless of what we learned from our earthly mothers.”

There is hope for meaningful attachment love, as when we know the Lord we are like branches that are attached to the vine and draw our nourishment from Him. It is His life that flows through us each day. (John 15) God’s love can even flow to those empty places inside of us, including the place of mother need. We can invite Him into our need for that love and nourishment. A few words of the prayer given by John Eldredge follows:

Challenge for today: If you lack that mother-love pray the following, “Lord, I need a deep, bonded love with you. I need attachment here in the place of my soul you created for attachment. Come, healing God, and heal me… I invite you into my need for primal love and primal nourishment. Nourish me here, just as you promised… I invite you into my need for the primal blessings of my being, my existence…I forgive my mom, I do. I forgive her and release her…Fill me with attachment love and fill me with the assurance of abundance. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Hope you have a good weekend and prayers and love, Judy

January 16, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a day of knowing how much you are loved! Ann is coming today and we are going to celebrate her birthday and spend it however she would like. I have a meal ready to go and her Nova Scotia cake!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
I venture to say not many of us know how loved we are by our Heavenly Father. I mean really loved: not for what we do but for who we are. Do we believe He enjoys us and we are His beloved? He loved us first and that is the reason we can love. Maybe we have a hard time believing how much He loves us and miss the enjoyment of really knowing His love in a deep way. One of my favorite Psalms I memorized long ago is Psalm 103 and verse 11 says, “For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is His steadfast love toward those who fear Him.” Can we ever imagine the immensity of God’s love towards us? I doubt it. When we have godly fear and receive Him, nothing can separate us from His love.

The enemy does all he can to cause us to doubt God’s love as he wants to steal our joy from us. He tries to distort God’s grace and love and wants to shame us. Pastor Francis Chan has written a book called Beloved to help us find unshakable assurance of God’s love. His mother died giving birth to him and his dad rejected him and gave him to his grandma to raise until he was five years old. His dad gave him no affection at all, but God is the healer of broken lives and he is now happily married with seven kids and five grandkids who all love the Lord. God restores what the enemy tries to steal from us.

We can go to the scriptures that speak of God’s love, especially when the enemy speaks lies to us and attempts to make us feel like we are worthless. We can meditate on Jeremiah 31:3, “I have loved you with an everlasting love; therefore, I have continued my faithfulness to you.”  Paul says in Romans 8 that nothing can separate us from God’s love, not even death or any kind of powers. In fact, death is our homecoming call, when we will be united with the Lord forever. Sometimes it helps to share our doubts with another Christian when we have trouble experiencing God’s love and receive prayer. Let us not live in doubt of our Heavenly Father’s love, but pray to experience it in new ways.

Challenge for today: Pray daily that the Holy Spirit would spill to overflowing God’s love into your heart.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

January 15, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a wonderful day. This morning I plan to make another Nova Scotia Cream cake and a new chicken/broccoli dish to have tomorrow for Ann’s early Birthday. We are going to shop a bit too all the while her car is getting worked on.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Today we see so many people that are self-absorbed with their thoughts, mostly on themselves, their comfort and pleasures. Such lives that fail to look outward and serve others will be left feeling unfulfilled and without purpose. But when we receive the Lord, we find we are to give and to serve others; generous people are truly happier, healthier, live longer and flourish.

When we help others, our own hearts are healed. Every day we can ask the Lord to help us know how we can serve Him, how we can give and make a difference. It can be small things like sending out a card to someone struggling or bringing food to an impoverished family. Joy grows when we share with others, as Jesus said in Luke 6:38, “Give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.”

Think of it! We have only one life to live!  We can’t start over and take back all the years we have squandered living for ourselves. Whatever material things we earned can’t go with us into the next life, so we need to live now with purpose. Let us be generous, using what we have to help hurting people and point them to the Lord. One day we will have to give an account of our lives and what we did with the gifts God gave us. Will there be those in heaven because of something we said, something we gave, something we did? I hope so! Let us live our lives with eternity in view and our hearts set on living each day for the Lord.

Challenge for today: Choose one thing you can do to help someone else today and point them to the Lord.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

January 14, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a blessed day. Al will be off to Men’s group and coming home in time to preach next door. I plan to do food prep and go to my Exercise class and Craft time and later Bible Study at church.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Today I would like to share with you about the Dark Night of faith, as some of you have shared in your responses that you feel dry and not excited about church or reading the Word, as God seems more distant. The way you have known God seems shut off and you feel something is wrong with you and you are alone. It could be that God is taking you through the Dark Night and moving you on in your walk with Him, from image to reality, from possessiveness to love, from control to hope. What seems like darkness is really excessive light, much like looking into the sun. God is not going away from you, but breaking through to you more strongly than before. You are not falling apart, but becoming firm in your faith. Instead of the images you have of God’s existence and inward focus, you will find God exists independent of your feelings and helps you turn outward.

God is infinite and cannot be captured in any concept, thought, or image. When we were children, we saw pictures of Jesus blessing the children or as a shepherd with the sheep. As we mature in our faith, we move beyond images and pictures, for God is beyond images and is reality. I read an example of a mother fish in the ocean whose baby fish ask her, “Mother, what is water? Show us water!” Of course, we know they are immersed in water and yet don’t have a concept of water. So let’s say she sets up a PowerPoint projector and shows them pictures of great waterfalls, the ocean, etc., and they receive a concept of water. She tells them that they know more about water now and they can just swim in it and let it flow through them. When the Powerpoint is turned off, the little fish struggle to believe they are swimming in the water. For them it is like the dark night of faith. Likewise, our imaginations give us pictures with the Powerpoint of God, but these are simply images. Faith is moving beyond the images and ideas of God, as we come to believe what we cannot see and go deeper into God. Mother Theresa lived for fifty years in this state, though those around her were unaware as she turned outward to serve the poor.

You don’t choose when you go through the dark night, but it is wonderful to know in faith that God is doing a deep work. It may feel lonely, but remember God is breaking through and flowing into your life more strongly than ever before. God exists and the reality is not dependent on our feelings. We no longer depend on Powerpoint images, but swim in reality of His love.

Challenge for today: Trust and accept that what is happening to you is purifying your faith.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

January 13, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you purpose filled day! I plan to bake and study and also have fish given to us by friends.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
These past days I have been reading a book that Al ordered on aging and how to give our lives and our deaths away. I am discovering that our lives and our deaths don’t belong just to us, but also to our families, those we love, and the world. If our lives are filled with anger, bitterness and shame, we leave that behind and it becomes a burden to our loved ones. But if we are a positive and loving godly presence, we leave a peaceful spirit behind when we die. Henry Nouwen, a spiritual writer, shares how to prepare ourselves for our death in such a way that our dying will leave a gift behind for others of a sense of warmth and a feeling of peace. For much of his life, even though loved and affirmed by others, he did not take in the love. It wasn’t until late in life when he was in a coma that he experienced God’s love and was changed. For all of us, only as we surrender to God’s love can we truly give our lives and deaths away.
The author of Al’s book suggests writing our own obituaries or spiritual will. We can ask ourselves: did we do what God wanted us to do in our life, and did we find our purpose? We also ask: to whom do we need to say we are sorry and then whom do we need to bless before we die? Also, the four most important things we need to say to our loved ones before it is too late: “Please forgive me,” “I forgive you,” “Thank you,” and “I love you.” I remember my brother making calls before he died to ask forgiveness of others, and we all can do that even when we don’t know how many days we have left.
Writer St. John of the Cross felt there were three major stages in our lives. First we struggle to get our life together, next struggle to give our lives away, and finally we struggle to age with grace and give our deaths away as a gift to others.  We start life with the comfort of home until adulthood, when we leave to find out who we are and our place in this world. We mature, become responsible, have families and make contributions. During the third stage, we want to live so that our death will be a blessing to our family, church and world as we die in peace, reconciled and grateful.
Challenge for today: No matter what age you are, begin preparing to leave behind a warm nurturing spirit for all those you love and who have loved you.
 Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

The Furnace of Affliction

In Isaiah 48, the prophet confronts the exiles of Judah with their unbelief in God’s intentions for their future.   The Lord questions the exiles’ unenthusiastic response to his message.  “For a long time now, I’ve let you in on the way I work” (Is. 48:3 MGS).  He called them “stubborn” having neck muscles of iron and foreheads of bronze. They seemed to have more faith in their idols’ assumptions. “You have my predictions and seen them fulfilled, but you refuse to admit it (Is. 48:6).

God, knew their history of unbelief.  God reminded them of the past, when he had made them aware of his divine plan. “That is why I told you what would happen; I told you beforehand what I was going to do. Then you could never say, ‘My idols did it. My wooden image and metal god commanded it to happen'” (Is.48:5).  The people had  attributed the course of events to some agent other than God.  But Isaiah reminds them  that God moves sovereignly through history according to his divine purpose. 

In verse 6 God tells of a “new thing.”  As the Message puts it, “I have a lot more to tell you, things you never knew existed.  This isn’t a variation on the same old thing.  This is new, brand-new, something you’ve never guess or dream up.” (Is. 48:7-8 MSG).  God was in control, as He moved in new ways.  But the prophet was accusing them of being poor listeners.  They had a history of ignoring what God was telling them, while assuming they knew better.  

But God had been patient with his people even though they had been poor listeners.  He told them, “For my own name’s sake I delay my wrath; for the sake of my praise I hold it back from you, so as not to destroy you completely.” (v 9).  Instead of putting their trust in almighty God, the people of God trusted more in their own assumptions about the future.   God wanted his people to trust him with their future.

 Gaven Ortland, points out in his commentary on Isaiah, “God is never defeated. He has a purpose even in the painful upheavals of history.  He has resolved not to punish us as we deserve, but to bring his glory to triumphant finality in human history.  It is God’s glory alone  that guarantees our future.” 

The prophet declares God is using their present situation to refine the people.  He asks, “Do you see what I’ve done?  I’ve refined you, but not without fire.  I’ve tested you like silver in the furnace of affliction.  Out of myself, simply because of who I am, I do what I do.  I have my reputation to keep up.  I’m not playing second fiddle to either gods or people” (Is 40:10-11 MSG). The punishment of invasion and exile is compared to the smelting process designed to remove impurities from fine metals like silver. 

As followers of Jesus, during this confused time, followers of Jesus need to cultivate a “listening ear” to what God is saying, rather then voices generated by unbelief, due to the idols of our day.  God has been patient with us.  He has held back his anger, for the sake and honor of his name.  He knows the rebellious nature of our response to his Word.  

Our heavenly Father is up to something new.  It is beyond our comprehension at this time.  Part of the process is our being refined.  But God promises to rescue us for his sake.  He states, “I have my reputation to keep.  I’m not playing second fiddle to either gods or people” (Is 48:11 MSG).

 

 

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