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.

October 14, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a blessed day! Al and I have an appointment this morning and later I plan to do food prep etc. It is so beautiful to see the hostages who are being united with family again and can’t help tears of joy for them.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
The third person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, is often neglected and we don’t hear a lot of sermons on His work or His place in our lives. But before Jesus left this earth, He was very intentional to teach His disciples about the work of the Holy Spirit. When He was no longer with them as in the past, He knew how important it would be for them to receive the gift of the Holy Spirit who would live within them.
I like what Professor Stephen Seamands has to say about the Holy Spirit’s place in our lives. Jesus referred to the Holy Spirit as Paraclete which means Comforter, Advocate, Counselor, Helper. He said the Holy Spirit would be with us and glorify Him. He is the personal presence of Jesus in all those who know Him. That means although Jesus is in Heaven now, He is also present with us through the Holy Spirit. He lives in us, and more and more we become like Jesus, as His character is being formed in us.

But it also leaves us with the responsibility to carry on the ministry of Jesus by sharing Him with others through preaching teaching, healing, serving, using the gifts He has given us, etc. Paul tells us in I Cor. 14:1 to “Pursue love and earnestly desire the gifts of the Spirit.” We are to study the gifts and use the gifts He gives us, not put them on the shelf and forget about them. You can find key gifts in Rom. 12:6-8, I Cor. 12:8-10 and 28-31, and Eph. 4:7-12. The gifts are meant to build up and strengthen the Body of Christ and bring healing.

It is important to pray for the anointing of the Holy Spirit so we can minister to others in power and authority to heal. That means we first surrender ourselves to Him, let Him fill us afresh and obey as we let the Spirit lead us.  We recognize we are not in control but the Holy Spirit is, and our Father wants us to experience in a deep way the person, power and presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives.

Challenge for today: Surrender yourself to the Lord and ask for a fresh anointing of His Holy Spirit, and be surprised at what He will do.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

Old Guys Rule

Have you ever seen one of those “old guys rule” shirts or hats.  I am an old guys rule fan.  I have several shirts.  Often when I have been wearing a shirt, other guys will greet me, wearing their attire.  I realize, wearing such a t-shirt makes me very suspect with the younger generation, especially young women.  I accept the challenge, because as an “old guy” myself, I want to be counter-cultural.

I went to the Old Guys Rule site to learned a little more about the brand.  It was started by a surfer in California, by the name of Don Craig.  “Old Guys Rule was created to embrace a new breed of guys who have incredible energy, a passion for life, wisdom gained from years of experience and the time to spend doing the activities they enjoy.  Old Guys Rule should be worn as a badge of honor for a life well-spent, but not nearly over.”  Shortly after Don started his brand in early 2003, he realized the “Old Guys Rule” motto extended beyond the surfing community to men from all walks of life who saw age as a “Badge of Honor,” not an impediment.

The phrase, “Old Guys Rule” cries loudly in behalf of  patriarchy.  Culturally, patriarchy is seen as “a system of society or government in which men hold the power and women are largely excluded.”  Patriarchy is “a system of oppression that affects women’s live negatively, highlighting the need to challenge and dismantle it.”  Ouch!!  Wearing my shirt, puts me in the cross-hairs of the feminists in our culture.  Yet I insist on wearing my shirt as a “badge of honor” now that I am 84 and happily married for 60 years.  Besides, my wife approves. 

As a follower of Jesus, I have a different view of patriarchy.  In the story of the Bible, we find God choosing Abraham as the first patriarch.  God told him, “All the families of the earth will be blessed through you” (Gen 12:3).  Matthew’s lineage of Jesus begins with these words, “This is a record of the ancestors of Jesus the Messiah, a descendent of King David and of Abraham” (Matt. 1:1).  Since I have been adopted by Jesus into God’s family, I can trace my spiritual heritage back to father Abraham, and since I was born a man and am married with three adult children, I belong to the biblical patriarchy.  This is the reality I accept.

As a follower of Jesus, I embrace the term “Old Guys Rule” as a badge of honor.  It has not been an easy road to travel as a patriarch.  In my early marriage to Judy, I choose and she accepted my being the head of our family.  This summer, my three grown children and their spouses, gathered to celebrate our 60th wedding anniversary.  I shared as the patriarch of my family.  I acknowledge, accept and lean into that role.  By God’s mercy and his abundant grace extended to me as a fallen man, I  have humbly journeyed all these years as a patriarch.  There have been bumps on the trail and wrong turns for which I ask forgiveness.

But with all my heart I have wanted to set the spiritual tone for my family.  I have sought to be both “tough and tender.”  My life verse in this role has been Ps 71:18.  “Now that I am old and gray, do not abandon me, O God.  Let me proclaim your power to this new generation, your mighty miracles to all who come after me.”   I wear my “Old Guys Rule” t-shirt as a “badge of honor” as I journey through the 4th quarter of my life.    

 

October 13, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a great weekend. I am starting out the week going to the dentist a 7:45! Not my favorite way.
 Emoji Afterwards I may get to Aldi’s and go to my exercise class.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
I want to finish strong, and I hope that is your desire as well. Jesus is coming again one day and we are to be patient during this waiting time. James says in James 5:7-8, “Meanwhile, friends, wait patiently for the Master’s Arrival. You see farmers do this all the time, waiting for their valuable crops to mature, patiently letting the rain do its slow but sure work. Be patient like that. Stay steady and strong. The Master could arrive at any time.”

We probably have all had a time that we wished Jesus would come soon, preferably  today! Maybe we were in a hard situation and wanted the Lord to come quickly and rescue us from the painfulness of it; but instead, He lets His rain fall on us as He strengthens and encourages our hearts. It’s wonderful to be in the Word and hear good preaching, but growth also takes place in those times of struggle, as we are so aware of our need for the Lord. We don’t want be known as quitters when the going gets rough, but rather resolute to be strong in the Lord’s strength. We know the best is yet to come!

I want to share another response I got from an author friend when I asked you all a question in my former devotions. She said her writing has been on hold for a bit because her husband had a heart attack and dealing with hospital stays and doctor visits. Her words, “He had seven stents put in. In the helicopter, he realized that he might be on his way to Glory, and he said he felt like a kid in the back of the station wagon on his way to Disney World! He was excited and ready to depart…but then he remembered me. The Lord felt it was more needful for him to stay. He’s doing great and feels good and so we praise the Lord for that and for the continued time to serve him here.” In her P.S. my friend said, “No dark time for me. If the Lord took my husband, I would praise Him. He decided to let me keep him longer, I praise Him!!”

I love the anticipation of her husband realizing he could be with the Lord any minute that day in the ambulance. We never know when the time will come for each of us, but let us be ready so we can say, “Come Lord Jesus!”

Challenge for today: Surrender all and eagerly await His coming for you!
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

October 11, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you are enjoying the weekend. I plan to make stir-fry using up the fresh veggies and also make another fresh quash pie.  Kurt will be heading home from the lake after catching fish, having bonfires and saunas and closing up the cabin.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Recently, I asked the question for the week, Have you experienced a dry time when you lacked warm feelings toward the Lord and experienced a Dark Night as the Lord was doing His purifying work? I had many responses but I want to share with you one from a young mother that blessed me and that I think will bless you and speak to your heart too.

“I have experienced both dry times and distant cold times with the Lord. During Covid I lost the room I was renting from a family because I was a retail worker and they were concerned that I might put them at higher risk of contracting the virus. Many believers I knew and loved also shared concerns about my presence because of their elderly loved ones. A non-believing coworker opened up a spot in her home for me to stay 3 months. I felt so lonely and I couldn’t visit my mother who was suffering with dementia. In that dark time, I would walk a lot. My coworker lived in Duluth, so I would walk down to the water and sit on the cold rocks in the darkness of early morning. One particular time that I did this, I was journaling and crying. I was cold and lonely on that day in March. As the tears slowed, I remembered seeing the sky begin to lighten.

The sun began to rise over the vast waters of Lake Superior and as the rays of light shone brighter, their warmth touched my tearstained cheeks and the heat permeated into my face. It was as if the Lord was slowly permeated into me and I felt a renewed hope that I wasn’t alone. I might be without human companions, but never am I without my Jesus!

God was using this time in my life. In the loneliness I found myself drawn to the One who is omnipresent, and “ever present in our time of need.” I was seeking Him, and He (true to His word) let Himself be found by me. “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. Matt. 7:7 So remember that…“Weeping may last for the night, But a shout of joy comes in the morning.” Psalms 30:4-5 NASB

When we keep seeking Him above all other things, He will fill us with His Joy! In the dark, there is a Light! I would encourage all who are enduring the night to keep firm in the faith, and to keep reaching out to God even if He seems silent.

A quote I appreciate from that time in my life reads, “If dependance on God is the Goal, then weakness is an asset.” -unknown  And as Elizabeth Elliot wrote, “This hard place in which you perhaps find yourself is the very place in which God is giving you opportunity to look only to Him, to spend time in prayer, and to learn long-suffering, gentleness, meekness – in short, to learn the depths of the love that Christ Himself has poured out on all of us.”

Keep crying out and reading out to God, but remember that His knows the path to walk and it’s a hard road at times filled with dry patches, dark nights, and perhaps silence, but never are you alone. Like a good friend, the Lord is waiting to hear all that you have on your heart, and in the moments of silence He is giving you the opportunity to be raw, honest, and vulnerable. Then the light will break through the darkness. It will burst into a radiant glow and it will brighten your countenance, and His loving warmth will permeate into your soul!”

Challenge for today: Meditate on one of the verses shared and put one to memory

 Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

October 10, 2025

Dear Ones,
Happy weekend!! Hope you have an enjoyable one. We are having friends over today and not sure what I will serve. I have made a dessert that is in the freezer, but yesterday I decided to use the big squash given us to make a pie. I let Al sample it and he thought it was good, but he changed his mind when he found out he would get the rest of the pie if he said it wasn’t so good! Emoji
Devotions from Judy’s heart
I have just read the book of James in one sitting which really didn’t take very long, and it helped me see the bigger picture of what Jesus’ brother James wrote to the Jewish church. James became a believer after Jesus’ resurrection and writes words of exhortation, comfort and encouragement as well as reproof. Our Sunday School class was given the homework to read any book of the Bible (most will maybe choose short books) each day for a month. Since our brains learn from big to small, it is good to get the overall picture first and then we will remember the smaller details better. Hopefully, we all pray before we even open our Bibles and ask the Holy Spirit to speak to us, keep our minds from drifting and our focus on Him.

So often we may read a few verses of the Bible and then follow with more the next day. But that was compared to watching a movie and stopping to pause after each scene. How frustrating that would be! Now there are also times we need to just take a small portion of scripture and slowly feed on it and digest it, but we also need times to read the whole book and get the big story of what it is saying to us.

When I read the book of James, I could relate what he wrote to our world today. He tells how we should face trials with joy for we are being tested of our faith, and to be doers of the Word. He warns against showing partiality by giving attention to the rich and ignoring the poor. Also, loving our neighbor as ourself, seeking wisdom from above, asking rightly for what we need, being humble, resisting the devil, not judging or boasting, but doing the right thing. He warns the rich and also tells us to be patient in our suffering. Instructions are given in praying for the sick and confessing our sins to one another. I could go on and on, but you can read for yourself. So much wisdom in just one small book and much for me to practice.

Challenge for today: Take time to just sit and enjoy reading a book of the Bible in one sitting and pause afterwards to ask the Lord how it applies to you.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

October 9, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a love-filled day. Al will be off to church early this morning for Men’s group and I plan to do food prep and have donuts waiting for him. We have Bible study today and we love our closeknit group.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Do we make the choice daily to live in God’s love, or do we get caught up in our hate culture? While reading John Eldredge’s book Experiencing Jesus. Really. he shares why hatred is pandemic and is poisoning our relationships with others. He quotes the Time magazine cover story “Why We’re Losing the Internet to the Culture of Hate.” I’m sure we have all seen examples on the news of anti-Semitic people harassing and attacking others just because they are Jewish.

Personally, I have never read such hateful remarks as have been posted on Facebook. It was especially true during Covid-19 when many dared not put their opinion online as they feared the hateful reaction. People were offended and took sides. Families and congregations were split, and some lost their jobs, etc.

I grew up in a day when we could freely express our opinions and listen to others respectfully, not hate that which was different from us. We learned from one another, and at times discovered we weren’t actually so far apart, for there were issues we agreed upon.

But when we know the Lord, we are to be people of love. I John 4:16 says, “We know how much God loves us, and we have put our trust in His love. God is love and all who live in love live in God, and God lives in them.” Hate has no place other than to hate evil. There will always be people that will offend or hurt us, but we don’t have to get into the blame game, which the enemy loves. Instead we are to forgive everything and forgive all. We can always call on the Lord to give us His love, to renounce hatred and to forgive. Others will know from our openness and love that we belong to Jesus.

Challenge for today: Close the door to hatred and offense and open the door of your heart to love and forgiveness.               Blessings and love, Judy

October 8, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you are set for a new day! We never know what each new day holds. I plan to make cookies, meatloaf and egg dishes, go to Exercise class and then Craft class. Kurt will be dropping in the afternoon on his way to the cabin and later we have Bible study.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Let us not hold back from the Lord but to give Him our whole selves, with a desire to keep growing closer to Him. If that is our true resolve, we must let go of the old, even that which was good and from the Lord in the past, so that we may embrace the new He has for us now.

The Lord has been speaking that message to me in several ways lately, and Al has also shared that in Bible Study. And then to make sure I got His message, I happened to read Jean Nestler who wrote about letting go so we can grow. She used the portion of scripture of the valley of dry bones in Ezekial 37, with which you are probably very familiar. The valley was a dry place full of old bones and was a place of separation and consecration. It was a lonely, humbling place, stripped of things, and Ezekial was asked to prophesy to the bones. I will leave you to read the rest of the chapter to find out what happened when he obeyed and the bones started rattling.

Maybe that is a word for you also today, to let go of the old and embrace what it says in Isaiah 43:19, “Behold, I am doing a new thing: now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.” You might also make the words that Jean prayed yours also:

Holy Spirit, come with power. Breathe into every dry place. I yield completely to You. I surrender the old, and I make room for the new. I break agreement with fear, with despair, and with delay.

“I declare: Though this valley is my proving ground, I will not die here! Let every dead dream and every buried promise come alive with Your resurrection power. Where there has been barrenness, let rivers of living water begin to flow!

“I ask for the atmosphere of Heaven to invade the atmosphere of my life. Flood me with Your Spirit! Let the rivers of living water burst forth from within me. I speak to my spirit: Rise up in the power of the Holy Spirit! It’s time to hope again! It’s time to live again. In Jesus’ name, amen.”

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord to help you release the old to Him and welcome the new thing He desires to do in you.
Blessings to you on your day and prayers and love, Judy

October 7, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a joy filled day. We had a fun Octoberfest party last night and a nice turnout.  My day is beginning with a 7:30 dental appointment, which is not my favorite way to start the day. I hope to get some baking and some shopping in before Women’s Bible study.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
How do we put what we believe into practice? Would others know that we are Christians by our attitudes and actions? We are meant to live out what we believe, for we are new creations in Christ. (II Cor. 5:17). It’s more than just practicing spiritual techniques and disciplines, although they are good, it is that what we do flows out of who we are in Christ.

One of my favorite verses is I John 1:7, “If we walk in the light as He is in the light we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Jesus cleanses us from all sin.” Jesus is our source and His light illuminates us, enlightens us and gives us a passion for Him and for others. If we try to go out on our own, we will fail miserably because our own selfish love will run dry and we need His love flowing through us to touch others.

It’s important that we all take time to be nourished, so that what we do in our day flows out of love for God and not for the purpose of pleasing others. We are to do things for His sake and not for our own. We may do spiritual practices but if they don’t affect our attitude and how we treat others, they are empty. Instead they should help us to do our work with love and purpose, and infuse us with His love for others. Haven’t we all at times done things for others because we feel we have to and not because we get to share His love with them. What a difference it is when our hearts are full of His love and we can hardly refrain from doing something for someone else.

We each have our own calling from the Lord and it is important that we discover what that is and do it no matter the cost. He has given us the exact gifts we need to accomplish His work, so let us live for Him each day of our life and live it with purpose.

Challenge for today: Ask a friend to share with you specific gifts he or she sees in you that you may or may not be using at this time in your life.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

The Body Remembers

In my opinion, Anthony B. Bradley, is a very keen observer and advocate for the growing crisis of fatherlessness in our nation.  One of his conclusions is “presence matters.” He writes, “boys need consistent, caring male presence not just for guidance, but for their emotional regulation, identity formation, and even biological resilience.”  Boys don’t thrive on lectures or discipline alone.  Boys will grow up when men show up, build something with them, spend time listening and calling them into maturity.  The role of men in nurturing and resilience-building is vital. The science is clear: presence matters.” 

He challenges the church.  “If the church wants to respond seriously to the crisis of fatherlessness, the boy crisis, and the breakdown of male development, it begins here: support the fathers and embed the boys in intergenerational relationships in the life of the church.  Create a culture where men see the spiritual formation of the next generation as an ordinary, expected part of Christian maturity.  And when you baptize a child, mean it.  There must be a clear rite of passage into the adult community – long before high school graduation.” 

We usually see parenting in terms of love, guidance and support.  But in recent research, “the influence of fatherhood may go even deeper – into the very wiring of a child’s stress response system.”  Cortisol, the body’s primary stress hormone, plays a central role in the regulation of mood, immunity, and long-term health.  This effect is specific to fathers.  Bradley observes, “maternal engagement, though crucial in other domains, did not predict changes in cortisol levels….The benefits of engaged fathering cut across lines of ethnicity, gender, and family structure…….fathers have a biologically measurable impact simply by showing up – in small, consistent ways.” 

Shared activity is more than just pleasant memories.  They are physiological investments.  “They tell a developing nervous system something critical,” observes Bradley. “You are not alone.”  Repeating this message by a father will shape a young man as he meets the world with steadiness, confidence, and calm under pressure. “If father presence is a public health concern,” Bradley observes,  then “the father can make a difference.”  His advice, “Engage. Invite. Share life. The body remembers.” 

Bradley is blunt in his challenge to the church.  The programming in most churches is not built for the current crisis of boys and men.  “It wasn’t built for boys having to navigate a world saturated in social media messaging.  It wasn’t built for the kind of spiritual formation your sons actually need.”   

I began learning in the early 80’s about male presence, from Leanne Payne.  She taught me that masculinity is more caught then taught.  She spoke about “father hunger” in the lives of young men.  I never know the longing in my soul was really a “father hunger.”  I was in my early 40’s, finding myself being drawn to godly men, who I respected,  wanting to simply absorb their spiritual presence.  It was more about who they were and not what they had to say.  It was my hunger for a Godly father figure.

At this stage in my life, as an old timer, I can only affirm what Bradley is vouching for among men, “Engage, Invite. Share life.  The body remembers.”   These are relational words.  Filling the needs of father hunger, will take on going relational interaction.   Bradley’s words, “the body remembers” is of significance.  Young men need to be with older saints on a regular basis, so they can absorb what God has formed in the life of an older man.  In our day we call it “spiritual formation.”  It simply happens when older men take a vital interest in young men. 

October 6, 2025

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a wonderful and restful weekend. This morning Al and I are going to the funeral of a friend from church who we have prayed for these past months and now is home with the Lord… no more pain but we will miss him. Later we have an Octoberfest party here at Northern Lakes with German food. The question this week is Have you experienced a dry time when you lacked warm feelings toward the Lord and experienced a Dark Night as the Lord was doing His purifying work?
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Don’t we all wish warm, passionate feelings we had on our honeymoon were with us each moment into the following years of everyday life? But perhaps most of us have found looking back that we were more in love with being in love than the person we married behind those warm feelings.  We probably also discovered that those feelings were partly about ourselves rather than loving our mate unconditionally. We have only to look at the divorce rate, for it verifies that the honeymoon often later turns into a relationship of disillusionment.

We are all selfish by nature and need the Lord to purify our hearts, changing us to become humble, caring and more like Him. Sometimes the Lord uses a purifying process called the dark night of the soul, when our world seems to be turned upside down, in order that we become purged and cleansed.  St. John of the Cross describes this as a season from God when, after we have experienced consolation, pleasure and passion in the Lord, it is suddenly all taken away. We experience instead a time of dryness, boredom, disillusionment and insecurity, much like a dark night.

We might wonder: why would God do this to me? We miss the honeymoon of those days with passion and intensity in our relationship with the Lord. But it is all part of God’s plan to help us get beyond ourselves, our fears and selfishness and even getting hung up on the good feelings themselves. It’s a process of dying to self where everything gets crucified, including our warm feelings and security. We feel like we are falling and unable to hold on to something that feels solid. But in reality, when we are free-falling, we get closer to the Lord, beyond our selfishness and illusions. We come to know truth and to love beyond self-interest. In fact, we come to know real love after the honeymoon has passed.

Challenge for today: Be open to all the ways the Lord would bring purifying to your life, and seek Him not yourself. Read Philippians 1:9-11.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy
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