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.

Rejected Silver

Jeremiah, the prophet was given  a ministry of speaking for God to a people who were hardened in their sinful ways.  Jeremiah was sent to shake them up.  “See, today I appoint you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and tear down, to destroy and overthrow, to build and to plant” (Jer. 1:10).  That is quite a calling.  But God promised to give Jeremiah strength, enabling him to endure their resistance. “Today I have made you a fortified city,” the Lord told Jeremiah, “an iron pillar and a bronze wall to stand against the whole land – against the kings of Judah, its officials, its priests and the people of the land (Jer. 1:18). It sounded like Jeremiah would be facing significant opposition.

The people would not listen to Jeremiah.  He would agonize as he saw the impending judgment  the people would face from the invading Babylonian army.  He is  open and vulnerable about his spiritual state.  “Oh, my anguish, my anguish! I writhe in pain.  Oh, the agony in my heart! My heart pounds within me, I cannot keep silent.  For I have heard the sound of the trumpet; I have heard the battle cry.  Disaster follows disaster; the whole land lies in ruins.  In an instant my tents are destroyed, my shelter in a moment.  How long must I see the battle standard and hear the sound of the trumpet” (Jer 4:19-21).  He knew he would share in the consequences of the coming invasion from the north.

Jeremiah was not comfortable in his preaching. “To whom can I speak and give warning?  Who will listen to me?  Their ears are closed so they cannot hear.   The word of the Lord is offensive to them; they find no pleasure in it.  But I am full of the wrath of the Lord, and I cannot hold it in” ( Jer. 6:10-11).  He know his message would be an offensive to people who had become comfortable in their religious practices.  But the message burned in his soul.  “The words are fire in my belly, and burning in my bones.  I’m worn out trying to hold it in.  I can’t do it any longer” (Jer. 20:9 MSG). 

He was  frustrated with the religious leadership.   “Unspeakable! Sickening! What’s happen in this country? Prophets preach lies and priests hire on as their assistants.  And my people love it.  They eat it up!  But what will you do when it’s time to pick up the pieces? (Jer. 5:30-31 MSG) He accuses the people of defiling the land with their religious practices.  “The priests never thought to ask, ‘Where’s God?’ The religion experts knew nothing of me.  The rulers defied me. The prophets preached god Baal and chased empty god-dreams and silly-god -schemes” (Jer. 2:11 MSG). 

God was making the prophet “a tester of metals.” (Jer.6:27).  The people are like ore, “that you may observe and test their ways.  They are all hardened rebels, going about to slander.  They are bronze and iron; they all act corruptly”.   Jeremiah as the refiner would not succeed.  “The refining goes on in vain; the wicked are not purged out.”  In the end they would be called “rejected silver, because the Lord has rejected them.” 

Those in our culture, who have the Word of God burning like fire in their heart, will certainly experience frustration with the rejection and down right hostility. Ultimately, God would destroy the nation of Judah in an invasion of the Babylon from the north.  Ironically, only a remnant that were willing to be taken into exile would survive.  I wonder if God is preparing a remnant to survive in the days to come?  May we not be considered  “rejected silver.”

  

April 6, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you had a wonderful Easter weekend. We were so blessed to have clear roads all the way to the lake and went to the church breakfast, worshipped at Leif’s church and had a feast for dinner at the lake with Ann’s family.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
We are not in control even when we think we are. We can have well laid plans, and at the last minute an incident will change everything… like a groom hurrying to the church on his wedding day who is in an accident that ends up with him in the hospital instead. Or more recently, some Easter plans to travel and spend with family canceled because of snow, sleet, and tornadoes. God has to continually remind us that He is the One who is in control and we are not. The weather is unpredictable, for it can change at the last minute and our detailed plans go down the drain.

The good thing is, we can rest in the sovereignty of God and place complete dependency on Him. He is worthy of our trust. When we try to control, we get worn out and disappointed, for things still happen that were not in our plans. Like I suspect many dinners planned in detail for Easter with guests not able to get there.

Lately I have been reading from Isaiah, and in chapter 30 it tells of the Israelites’ rebelliousness and unwillingness to look to the Lord for their help. They took things into their own hands and sought protection from Egypt instead. But the Lord tells them Pharaoh will be of no help and they need to look to Him. “For thus said the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel, ‘In returning and rest you shall be saved, in quietness and in trust shall be your strength. But you were unwilling…’” The Message version says in verse 15, “Your strength will come from settling down in complete dependence on me—the very thing you’ve been unwilling to do.”

Why does it take so long for us to learn that we can completely depend on the Lord, and not depend on our own strength or look to others rather than Him? Things may not go the way we had in mind or planned, but it will ultimately be the best.

Challenge for today: Rest in the Lord and completely depend on Him even when it is not going according to your desired plan.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

April 4, 2026

Dear Ones, A blessed Easter weekend. Hope you keeping warm and safe with all the snow and some who are reading this who are facing tornadoes further south. We had a wonderful Easter Drama last night at church to help us prepare for Easter. Tomorrow we hope to be going to Hackensack for Easter breakfast and church, and then on to the lake for dinner with Ann’s family. But we will have to see how the roads are and hold everything loosely.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Most of us who know the Lord would say we want to be led by the Spirit and follow God’s will for our lives, but do we always want that? If we are honest, there are times more often than not, that we want our will foremost. Sometimes we may need to begin praying that the Lord would help us to first be willing to do His will, and then listen carefully.

This week our son and two of his buddies had planned to go to the Silver Chateau (cabin), and were excited as always to stay for several days. Kurt had been checking the weather even last week and all looked good, so plans were laid. But as he was preparing, he happened to listen to John Eldredge talking about God’s will, with a powerful example of why the Lord spoke to him and hindered him from a trip he desired. It was a big disappointment, but later he learned that location experienced wildfires and they would have been in danger. Not long after listening, Kurt checked the weather again and this time it had had radically changed, and lots of snow and sleet were in the picture instead of the nice weather that had been predicted before. He called and asked us to pray, and asked the Lord to show him without a doubt if he and his buddies should continue with the trip. GOD’s will be done! The next day he called and said there was no doubt, as the snow was coming, roads would not be good and he really needed to be home on Saturday night with company coming for Easter. It was his answer and though he was disappointed, I have an idea that when the guys do get together next it will be an extra-meaningful time.

I also prayed when I was asked to speak to our women’s group this week, and hoped He would say NO. But like Kurt, I prayed for God’s will. He led me to do it and was with me, gaving me a scripture as well that became my focus as I prepared.

So when we say, “Lord, I want your will,” we need to mean it from our heart. Jesus prayed the most difficult prayer in Gethsemane, “My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me. Nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will.” If He had disobeyed His Father, we would not be celebrating Easter tomorrow. Lord, we owe you everything, our very lives!

Challenge for today: Spend some time thanking the Lord for the sacrifice He made and for His resurrection power.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

April 3, 2026

Dear Ones,
A Blessed Good Friday! We plan to go to Stations of the Cross this afternoon and then to church tonight, all dependent on the weather. It was very snowy going to church last night and this morning it looks like a winter wonderland out my window.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
During this Lenten time, our thoughts go to Jesus’ death for us on the cross and all that He suffered for us to be set free of our sins when we repent. For the thief on the cross who had lived a sinful life, it was only 9 words that he said to Jesus before his final death that changed everything, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” (Luke 23:42)

I read what Pastor Jentezen Franklin had to say about the thief’s words that helped me understand more the depth of his simple prayer. Up to that time he had been mocking Jesus but something must have happened in his heart in his final moments as he knew he would soon die. The word remember in Hebrew means to restore what has been broken or to put back together what has been torn apart or separated. Franklin writes that the thief wasn’t asking Jesus to simply think about him when He got to heaven, he was really saying he was torn apart by sin and when you come in to your kingdom, put me back together and restore me. Jesus responded by saying, “Today you shall be with me in paradise.” Jesus was not only promising reconciliation but immediate paradise! What a change must have happened in this dying man’s heart!

It reminded me of a story told to me over coffee time at church a couple Sundays ago by a friend sitting next to me. She and a friend regularly go to a nursing home and sing for them and share Jesus. She had gotten to know a patient who was 102 years old over the course of her visits. This patient knows she hasn’t got a lot of time left and my friend asked her if she knew Jesus. She had never accepted Him but when asked by my friend if she would like to receive Him, she was ready and prayed the sinner’s prayer. Just like the thief on the cross she opened  her heart to Jesus and is now ready whenever she is called home to spend eternity with the Lord.

Isn’t it amazing and wonderful that the Lord hears our prayers and forgives us and restores us, no matter if it is our last breath. May we be faithful witnesses to show the way to all those the Lord brings across our path.

Challenge for today: Use the opportunities the Lord puts before you each day to point others to Him, and when prompted ask if they want to accept Jesus’ invitation!
Blessings on your Good Friday and prayers and love, Judy

April 2, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a blessed day. We wondered how much snow we would wake to, but hard to tell out our window but at least a few inches. More coming too. Today is Donut Day, Bible study this afternoon and communion service tonight.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
During this Easter season as we meditate on Jesus’ death and resurrection, I have often wondered about who Simon of Cyrene really was. He carried Jesus’ cross to Calvary, but did he just happen to be an innocent bystander who was commanded by a soldier to help Jesus? Did he know Jesus or had he heard about Him? We don’t have any specific answers to those questions, nor have I ever heard a sermon on Simon, so I was interested to read what Mark Roberts of Fuller Seminary had to say.

Cyrene was in what is now known as Libya in North Africa and about a thousand miles from Jerusalem. Simon was a long way from home, probably going to Jerusalem for Passover. Jesus didn’t have strength to carry his cross after his beatings and a soldier demanded Simon help and carry it. We don’t hear anything more of Simon in the Bible, so did he stay and see Jesus crucified? We don’t know, but it must have had an effect on him to carry the cross behind Jesus and see His suffering.

When we come to know the Lord, it says in Romans 6 that we have united with Him in His death and resurrection, and our old self gets crucified so we are no longer a slave to sin but alive to Christ. That means daily we die to self so we can live for Him. In a real sense, we all bear our own cross as we put Jesus first and ourselves last. Today, many are suffering persecution or have painful health issues as they bear the cross for Christ. I have friends who live in continual pain without complaint, even though they have gone to many doctors. I count them as bearing their cross for the Lord.

Let us practice Jesus’ words in Luke 3:24-25, “If anyone wants to follow in my footsteps, he must give up all right to himself, carry his cross every day and keep close behind. For the man who wants to save his life will lose it, but the man who loses his life for my sake will save it.”

Challenge for today: Be willing each day to die to self and live for Jesus.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

April 1, 2026

Dear Ones,
 Hope you have a good day and get prepared for lots of snow. I plan to bake cookies, go to Exercise class and Crafts and have possible company.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
When we received the Lord into our lives, it is doubtful we really understood the depth of our sin and our rebellious nature. Like little children, we were excited over our new-found joy of knowing the Lord and the fellowship with other believers. But then came the time for weaning: we experienced dryness and emptiness, and may have tried in our own strength to regain the zeal for the Lord we had at first. The problem with that is that we may depend on our own strength apart from the Lord rather than abiding closely in Him. I often say to the Lord, “You are in charge, I depend on you and I need you!!” Sometimes I know that more deeply than other times.

We are not able in our own strength to defeat our sinful responses, even though we may try harder. But the Lord wants us to acknowledge what is going on in our hearts and the struggles we face and call on Him for help, rather than trying to fix ourselves. Often we may pray what we think sounds spiritual and good, but is not what is truly in our hearts. Instead it is freeing to share with the Lord our brokenness, our rebelliousness, our lack of love and tell Him we need Him and His forgiveness. When we tell Him everything and don’t hide anything, we find we open the door to His forgiveness and draw near to Him.

Let us quit trying to change ourselves and failing. Instead, let us be honest with the Lord, face and speak the truth about the dark areas of our hearts, and humbly ask for His forgiveness and grace. We will then come to really know we are accepted by the Lord for what He has already done for us not for what we do. We can go forth to live a life out of gratitude for what Jesus did for us, and not have to prove our worth. We are loved so much that Jesus gave His life for us, and our worth is in Him.

Challenge for today: Thank the Lord that He loves you just as you are and live with gratitude that His grace covers all!!
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

March 31, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you have a blessed day. We had a good turnout for the cardmaking party yesterday and a time of fun and fellowship. This morning I plan to bake and a good friend is coming.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
We hear a lot about Spiritual Formation today, and we may think of it as ways and disciplines used to help us grow spiritually. But it is more than the right techniques, for spiritual formation is really about who God is and what He has done for us. We come to know Him and His holiness as we put our faith and hope in Him, and love Him and others as we love ourselves. We might think of our formation as the fruit of our relationship with Him, for He is to be our goal first and foremost.

Daily we need to be filled with the Spirit as it says in Eph. 5:18, not filled with more techniques and disciplines, but with the Spirit. It is a work of God and He is the one doing the action of filling us up, and the result is fruitfulness and growth. We can’t fill ourselves by other means, even if it is worship or ministry or studying. We need the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts anew.

We come to the Lord just as we are and in the truth of His love. In our own strength, we are unable to transform our own lives to be like the Lord, but we simply open our hearts to Him in truth. The ancient spiritual writer, Bernard of Clairvaux, said we are to be like a reservoir that is filled with the Spirit and is being filled with love, wisdom and knowledge. The result is we then pour it forth in all we do. We might say the proof is in the pudding, or in our attitude and actions. We learn our transformation is not from spiritual disciplines and self-effort, but the fruit of God’s life in ours. It may show up as a quick willingness to forgive those who hurt us rather than getting angry.  Or instead of trying to fix ourselves, we become receivers of God’s grace and mercy. Let us put the Lord first and foremost in our lives and open ourselves to the continual filling of the Holy Spirit.

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord to show you whenever you put something before Him, and seek Him first. Matt. 6:33
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

Confused Excuses

“Confused Excuses” is the title Christopher Wright gives to Jeremiah 2:20-37.  I found it in the “Bible Speaks Today.”  Some self disclosure – I have made a commitment to understand the prophet Jeremiah, so that I might share some of what God has to say through the prophets for our day.  It is hard work.  But I want to be obedient to the Lord.  Jeremiah has been a real challenge for me to grasp both in its content and making application for our day. 

Anyway, as for Jer. 2:20-37,  Wright makes this observation regarding this passage. Jeremiah records seven direct quotations from the people.  In this way, Jeremiah “cleverly exposes how they swing back and forth between brazen denial of sin and abject acceptance of it.  Their words are simultaneously self-excusing and self-condemning.  The confusion is astonishing.  But it is simply what happens when people become so embroiled in sin that they can no longer think straight.”

In v. 20 the people reject God, “I will not serve you.”  But then in v. 23 they claim “I am not defiled; I have not run after the Baals.”  But then in v. 25 they admit what they denied in v. 23, “It’s no use! I love foreign gods, and I must go after them.”   In v. 27 they seem to view the sexual symbols of fertility as both providers and protectors, “You are my father,” and “You gave me birth.”  But then in the same verse they cry out to God to save them, “Come and save us!” 

When reading v. 25, “It’s no use! I love foreign gods, and I must go after them,” along with v. 35, “I am innocent; he is not angry with me” these comments reflect an addictive attitude. Wright notes, “their sin is compulsive, something over which they have no control.”  “These insights of Jeremiah,” contines Wright, “show that the psychology of addiction is not confined to individuals, but can come to characterize a whole community.” 

Wright then gives us God’s perspective.  “God’s response (v. 35) shows  that such a hollow defiance will simply not stand up in his court.”  God says to them, “But I will pass judgment on you because you say, ‘I have not sinned.'” The Message translates verse 35 as follows: “Don’t look now, but judgment’s on the way, aimed at you who say, ‘I’ve done nothing wrong.'” Could it be that God is judging our culture because of all the excuses we are making for our behavior?

A good question to ask ourselves, “Do we ever try to excuse or defend ourselves before God?”  In our day the rhetoric is usually tilled toward blame rather than responsibility.  Being even more introspective, do we consider how our excuses appear to God?  I have to ask myself, “Do I come before my heavenly Father as someone who is totally dependant on His mercy and grace or am I wanting help with my own ‘self-improvement’ projects?”  

Even more searching is the question, “How is addiction to sin demonstrated in people’s lives today?” A good thing can become an idol when it becomes the ultimate thing.  What is the focus of our time, talent and treasure? Is God the ultimate reality or one of the idols of our culture?  Earlier in Chapter 2, God asks, “What fault did your ancestors find in me, that they strayed so far from me?  They followed worthless idols and become worthless themselves” ( Jer. 2:5). 

Living as we do in a spiritual vacuum, our creator God is being replaced by a lot of other gods.  What becomes foremost in our hearts is our God.  Any worthless idol, will according to Jer 2:5 cause us to become worthless ourselves.  

  

 

 

March 30, 2026

Dear Ones,  We begin Holy Week and may this be a special time for us all as we focus on Jesus’ death and resurrection. Today I plan to go to Aldi’s and Exercise class and then have a Women’s Day Out with card making that will take place in our community room.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Have you ever gone through a season in your Christian life when your mind wanders in prayer and you feel dry and question: where is the Lord? We ask why is this happening? Is the enemy attacking me in my thoughts? Or could it be the Lord is seeking to do a deeper work and showing me what is in my heart? He could be using this dry time to show me the truth of what is hidden in my heart, those areas that are full of selfishness and pride and all sorts of undesirable things.

There is so much we hide in our hearts, and God wants us to come clean with those things that need to go to the cross. We can’t fix ourselves, for only the Lord can forgive us, cleanse us and set us free. But He does want us to share the broken parts of ourselves with him so He can make us new. It feels good to come clean with the Lord, speak honestly with Him, give Him all our baggage and not try to worker harder to get free of our guilt. He already paid the price for our sin!

It is wonderful if we also find a spiritual mentor to help us through some of these times. Many others before us have gone through dry times and dark nights, and they can help us understand and guide us through. Instead of feeling we are going backward, we discover that the Lord is doing a deep work in us and calling us closer to Him. We are to be honest and open with Him, and also with others along the way as He directs. Our pride wants to hinder us from that, but let us be willing to humble ourselves so we can draw close to the Lord and set free.

Challenge for today: Be honest with the Lord and let Him search your heart. (Psalm 139:23-24)                                                                               Blessings on this Holy week and prayers and love, Judy
     

March 28, 2026

Dear Ones, Happy weekend! May you have time to relax and be refreshed!  Today I plan to do food prep and to clean the apartment and walk on the Paul Bunyan Trail.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
All of us must be on guard against faulty thinking. It can do great damage in our lives, as it limits what we can experience and can leave us feeling hopeless, guilty and lacking peace. Mark Twain said, “It isn’t what you don’t know that hurts you, it is what you know that isn’t so.”

Oh, how much trouble we can get into when we think we know what is going through the minds of others and make sweeping statements! Maybe we are meeting a friend for lunch and she shows up very late, so we conclude she doesn’t consider us important. Later we find out she was held up helping someone who needed aid. Or maybe we wonder why a co-worker fails to answer our e-mail and we assume he doesn’t respect our leadership, but the truth is he was sick and neglected to check his e-mail. We can also blow things out of proportion in our minds, and because we made a minor mistake, we say that we are a total failure.

Often we can get stuck in our thinking and believe nothing will ever change. We may not have faith to believe someone in our family will not always be a problem or that one day we will have a good marriage. But the truth is, the past doesn’t predict our future. Jesus can bring change in our lives and we can learn, grow and stop repeating old patterns. But we have to give up our faulty thinking and not follow feelings that are misleading. We need to stop reading the minds of others, assuming we know that they are thinking, for we may be way off. Also, we must be willing to do something different when what we are presently doing is not working.

Rather than complain of our circumstances, let us get a new mindset and allow the Holy Spirit to bring change in our thinking that aligns with truth. Paul said, “Take every thought captive to obey Christ.” II Cor. 10:5

Challenge for today: Be done with faulty thinking and making assumptions about others without finding out the facts.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
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