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.

The 6th of January

I recently heard Amy Grant’s new single entitled, “The 6th of January (Yasgur’s Farm)”  I felt some nostalgia, as the song took me back to the 60’s when I was just a new convert.  The song didn’t have a preachy tone, rather it was almost contemplative, causing older listeners to reflect on their story and the present narrative of in our nation.  It did not ask us to do anything, but rather to ponder what might have been lost.  The last phrase of the song, leaves us with a challenging question for our conflicted time.  “I look ahead and realize we’ve lost our way.”  

I identified with the song because Amy Grant was a contemporary Christian artist, who was a part of my spiritual journey.  She now is older, having endured some difficult times on her journey.  Anyone who grow up with Amy Grant and lived through “Woodstock” will immediately be taken down memory lane, reflecting on the culture of the 60’s and its affects on our day.  

Here are some of the lyrics.  The first verse: “Maybe it’s the time of year/ Or maybe it’s the time of man/ 60’s playlist and a beer/ I’m suddenly 16 again/ What’s the future hold in store/ What’s it hiding up its sleeve/ All that wide-eyed hope/ Were we so naive.”  This seems like a longing for the past and a questioning of what was once experienced.  For those of us who are older, our response  is tied to our memory of the “old days” while those who are younger can only wonder what is being communicated.

Here’s the chorus: “Hey mister where’s the road to Yasgur’s farm/ He stares at me with pity and alarm/ Says that crowd left here long ago/ Scattered all to hell and Harper’s Ferry/ On the 6th of January.” Yasgur’s farm was the site of “Woodstock (1969)” and the summer of love.  Harper’s Ferry is identified with the civil rights movement.  Of course, January 6th refers to the confusion regarding the protest in our nation’s capital.  

The second verse includes the following,”I’m shopping for some groceries/ Muzak piped in overhead/ They only play the melody/ I hear the words John Lennon said/ Asking me to imagine/ As I fight this cart with crooked wheels.”  The bridge to the song seems to leave us wondering; “And we’re driving home and the radio plays/ What’s going on – Marvin Gaye/ Is it right on red or left on MLK/ I look ahead and realize we’ve lost our way.” 

 From the Message we read in I John 1:3-4, “We saw it, we heard it, and now we’re telling you so you can experience it along with us, this experience of communion with the Father and his Son, Jesus Christ.  Our motive for writing is simply this: We want you to enjoy this, too. Your joy will double our joy!” As a seasoned follower of Jesus, I share with my readers the joy of having communion with  the Father and his Son, Jesus Christ, since before the “summer of love.”

When I listen to Amy Grant, I do not have regret, sorrow or any longing for the “old days.”  Jesus has carried my wife and I, as we raised our family, during those  turbulent times brought about by “the summer of love (1968). To those who are younger, wondering what Ms. Grant sings about, I say, “keep your eyes on Jesus,” He is “The Way.”  Yes, “imagine” Jesus.  He will see you through.  I am living proof of what  the Lord has done in one man and his family.  Keep looking to Jesus and a future with Him.

 

 

 

February 16, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you had a great weekend and celebrated Valentines Day.  This morning I am going to do food prep and go to Aldis and exercise class. My question this week is: When have you taken a big risk and step of faith and done something you felt the Lord was asking of you? What happened? 
Devotions from Judys heart
Have you ever done something risky that set you on a course that turned into something big and exciting? I have been reading about ordinary people who felt God calling them to leave family and comforts to risk everything to go where He was sending them. They took one small step, and God led them into a life of sacrifice and adventure. These pioneer missionaries were huge risk-takers, and counted everything as loss for the sake of gaining Christ. (Phil.3:7-9)

Familiar to most of us is Jim Elliot, whose brief life among the Auca Indians of Ecuador ended with his martyrdom, along with four other fellow missionaries. He had written in his journal, “God, I pray Thee, light these idle sticks of my life that I may burn up for Thee. Consume my life, my God, for it is Thine. I seek not a long life, but a full one, like you Lord Jesus” His life was short, for he died at only 29 years of age, but he considered the salvation of the lost more important than his comfort or his very life. His wife Elisabeth wrote a biography of her husband and then carried on his work with the very people who had murdered her husband.  

I read of others who made sacrifices and took the risk to go where they felt called by God. C.T. Studd was considered the best English athlete of his day. He experienced a renewal of his faith at a crusade and felt called to Africa as an evangelist. Then there was Mary Slessor, a worker in a textile factory in Scotland who, when she came to faith, became active in street ministry, witnessing wherever she went. God laid a burden on her heart to go to Nigeria, to a bloody, cannibalistic, savage tribe. Later she built a mission house, a school and a church, rescued orphans and even adopted some of them. God also used her for intervening in tribal affairs and she became their tribal mediator. Then there was William Carey, a cobbler: when he came to the Lord, he became a lay preacher with a passion for world missions. He went to India and started a school and a college. He mastered many languages and translated the Bible into six of the languages and parts of the Bible into twenty-nine others.

The list could go on and on, of those who took a step of faith and risked their lives. They didn’t put limits on what God could do through them. For us also, the ultimate sacrifice is to give our whole selves to God. Who knows what He will do through us?!

Challenge for today: When you see a need around you, pray about it, and ask the Lord if he wants you to take a step to meet that need.  (It could be an unsaved neighbor, a youth program that needs help, a soup kitchen coordinator, etc.)  
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

February 14, 2026

Dear Ones,
Happy Valentine’s Day!  I plan to clean and then my Valentine is taking me out for lunch to El Tequilas. EmojiEmoji Both Al and I were blessed by the funeral yesterday of a dear friend whose love for the Lord touched so many of our lives. 
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Recently in our Thursday Bible Study, we discussed how we could influence others for the Lord, and it kept coming back to loving them first. Our relationship with the Lord is most important, of course, but then we are to love others as we love ourselves. That means showing kindness, patience and mercy to them, not holding grudges, listening to them with an open heart, etc. How do we do this when we so easily become irritated with others?

We are blessed to see lots of love being expressed both here in our apartment complex and at church. Some can no longer drive, so others volunteer to give them a ride to their appointment and even stay with them during it. Others bring treats and meals to people who may be sick. Some take others shopping or out to eat, etc. Recently at the Women’s Bible study at church one member expressed a need to travel to the cities for an eye appointment and she didn’t want her daughter to have to take off work to bring her. Several said they could meet that need and one gal called her up saying she would take her there, stay with her, take notes from the doctor, and bring her home again. She was so overwhelmed with her kindness, she just bowed before the Lord in thanksgiving.

Loving others takes humility and a desire to live out God’s love. Only the Lord can give us His agape love that is unconditional, sacrificial, and seeks the best in others. It helps to remember that we are all part of God’s family and we are to treat each other as beloved family. Even as we have received grace, we are to offer grace to others. Jesus said in John 13:34, “Let me give you a new command: Love one another. In the same way I loved you, you love one another. This is how everyone will recognize that you are my disciples—when they see the love you have for each other.”

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord to open your eyes and heart to the needs of others, and be led by the Spirit to answer when prompted.
Blessings on this Valentine’s Day. Love, Judy

February 13, 2026

February 12, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a great day! Today I plan to do food prep and get some cupboards cleaned. This afternoon is Bible study on the book of Acts.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Friendships are very important in our lives and can actually extend our lives when we have healthy, close relationships with others. A person typically has three to five close friendships, but that number keeps declining, and 49% have three or fewer. Sadly, today many are lonely, and 12% have no close friends at all. I was reading an article by Pastor Mark Moore, who writes about how isolated people are today and how sad that is, for God has designed us for relationships.

Scripture verifies importance of relationships, for Paul writes in Romans 12 that when we know the Lord, we become members of the One body in Christ, and individually members of one another. We are to live in harmony with one another, and rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep. That takes relationship! The kind of friends we have is very vital, as we share interests and hopefully godly attitudes. I find that where I am weak, a friend may be strong, and as wise King Solomon said in Prov. 27:17, “Iron sharpens iron, and one man sharpens another.”

Moore shares how we need to have friends who can give us godly counsel. They can build us up and help us discern what God is saying to us. I know when I e-mail a certain friend, she will speak truth and not tell me what my flesh may want to hear. In each church we have been, the Lord has always seemed to give me close friends that have the prophet gift or the exhorter gift to encourage me, but to also show me the way of truth. Friends can make us better, and they are gifts to us from the Lord. They can stand with us when we go through hard times and point us always to the Lord. King David had Jonathan as a close friend who sacrificed for him, even to the point of the throne.

Most importantly of all, may Jesus be our best friend! He calls us friends if we do what He tells us to do. (John 15:14)

Challenge for today: Give time for your most important Friend (Jesus), and also for Christian friendships He brings into your life.

Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

February 11, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a great day. The funeral yesterday was a blessing as we saw the difference one man made as he used the
opportunities God gave him to share the Lord every chance he got.
This morning I am going to Exercise class and then Craft class and Bible study tonight.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
I just finished reading a book (The Healing Path) by James Finley, a clinical psychologist, spiritual director, and former novice under Thomas Merton. His life from childhood was so devastating and full of traumatic wounds that I wondered how he ever survived. It began early in his life, as he listened to the cries of his mom as she was beaten by his alcoholic father. When he was twelve years old, his mom asked him to stay awake at night and sit at the top of the stairs and listen. If he thought his dad was killing her, he was to run to the neighbors and ask they to call the police. I marveled as I read that he saw how God can emerge as a silent presence, One that carried him forward and sustained him in the midst of the worst difficulties of life.

Al and I have been to the Abbey of Gethsemani many times, and Al has visited the grave of Thomas Merton, who was a vital help to Finley. Upon graduation, Finley went to Gethsemani and was to become a priest, but left several years later due to trauma that happened there. He married, had two daughters, taught, led contemplative retreats, and went on for doctrinal studies at the same seminary in California that Al later attended. All the while he was helping others, he had so many deep wounds of his own for which he didn’t seek deep professional help until later in life, after a divorce and remarriage. What surprised me was how God greatly used him even in his deep woundedness to help many. It brought to mind the clay pots that have cracks and holes in them that let the brilliance of light shine through even brighter. We are all on a healing journey, for we all have cracks!

God’s presence can also sustain us through the darkest times, and even awaken us in deeper ways to God’s love and healing power. There are times we are unsure of what is going on and we need discernment, much like in Thomas Merton’s prayer, “My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think that I am following your will does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you. And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing…” May our desire also be to please the Lord all the days of our lives.

Challenge for today: When you go through dark times, know He is with you, and may your deepest desire be to live to please Him.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

February 10, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have an amazing day!  We had a fun Valentine party last night and a full house again. This morning I plan to bake cookies, go to Aldi’s and then to a funeral of one of the members at our church who recently died.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Isn’t it amazing to think we are created in the image of God? It says in Gen. 1:26, “So God created humans in His image, in the image of God He created them, male and female He created them.” We are superior to the animals, just a little lower than the angels, and we were meant to reflect God and represent Him to others. It’s awesome when you think that we were always meant to live in relationship with God who created us and knew us from the beginning.

Professor Stephen Seamands writes in his book, Follow the Healer, that we were intended from the very beginning to live out God’s purpose for us in relationship with Him, others, the world, and ourselves.  That means we trust and obey God, are open to fellowship with others, have purpose and security, and live in harmony and service. We are not only delivered from our sin, but meant to be renewed in the image of God.

Jesus didn’t just cure diseases, but He healed people to restore them and conform them to His image. As a nurse I saw people treated for their sicknesses, but not necessarily for their whole being. Their symptoms may have gone away, but maybe they were still left depressed and anxious. Jesus healed the whole person rather than just the particular disease, like the woman who hemorrhaged for twelve years. Jesus not only stopped the bleeding, but spoke healing words to her, “Daughter, your faith has healed you. Go in peace and be freed from your suffering.” (Mark 5:34). She went home changed inside and out.

Jesus wants to do the same for us so we can be set free and renewed in His image. Let us go to Him in faith, like the woman who touched the edge of His garment, and be restored.

Challenge for today: Choose healing for your entire being, and renewal in God’s image.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

 

House Full Of Deceit

Jeremiah was called by God to  warn the people of Judah.   One of the words he uses to describe their lifestyle is the word “deceit.”  Deceit in today’s culture is described as “the practice of deceiving; concealment or distortion of the truth for the purpose of misleading; duplicity; fraud; cheating.” In 5:27 the prophet accuses the wicked of living in houses “full of deceit.” “The wicked lie in wait like men who snare birds and  like those who set traps to catch people.  Like cages full of birds, their houses are full of deceit” (Jer. 5:26-7). 

These wicked men were compared to hunters luring unsuspecting birds into a trap. The poor were helpless in resisting their schemes.  “Like cages filled with small birds used for sacrifices their houses were filled with the possessions acquired by their deceitful practices” (Huey).  The Message describes it well, “My people are infiltrated by wicked men, unscrupulous men on the hunt. They set traps for the unsuspecting.  Their victims are innocent men and women. Their houses are stuffed with ill-gotten gain, like a hunter’s beg full of birds.” (Jer. 5:26-7).

It seems that deceit was all pervasive in the culture.  “From the least to the greatest, all are greedy for gain; prophet and priest alike, all practice deceit” (Jer. 6:13).  The amplified says, “Everyone deals deceitfully.” The prophet laments their attitude, “They cling to deceit; they refuse to return” (Jer 8:5).  The ESV says they are in “perpetual backsliding.” The prophets and priests alike, “all practice deceit” (Jer. 8:10).  But they refused to change.  The Lord declares, “You live in the midst of deception; in their deceit they refuse to acknowledge me (Jer. 9:6).

It has begun to cause conflict in relationships.  God warns them of social disorder due to their deceitful practices.  “Friend deceive friend, and no one speaks the truth.  They have taught their tongues to lie; they weary themselves with sinning.  You live in the midst of deception; in their deceit they refuse to acknowledge me” (Jer. 9:4). Their tongue were like, ” a deadly arrow; it speaks with deceit.  With his mouths they all speak cordially to their neighbors, but in their hearts they set traps for them” (Jer 9:8).  

Above all, in Chapter 7, Jeremiah points out the deception of their worship.  “Do not trust in deceptive words and say, ‘This is the temple of the Lord.'” (Jer. 7:5).  In their worship, they were, “trusting in deceptive words that are worthless” (Jer. 7:8).  The people felt they were safe, “safe to do all these detestable things” (Jer. 7:10)  The Lord was watching as his house became “a den of robbers.”  

God told Jeremiah not to pray for them any longer.  For the people, “did not listen or pay attention; instead, they followed the stubborn inclinations of their evil hearts” (Jer. 7:24).  They were going, “backward and not forward” (Jer. 7:24).  God warned Jeremiah, “When you tell them all this, they will not listen to you, when you call to them, they will not listen” (Jer. 7:27).  Their worship was deceptive:  false and only going through the motion.  Why!! Because, “Truth has perished; it has vanished from their lips” (Jer. 7:28)

With all the deception in our culture, we need vigilance in our worship of God.  It can become rote and filled with worthless word, where  we, “only pretend to be sorry” (Jer. 3:10).  We have nothing to boast about. “But those who wish to boast should boast in this alone: that they truly know me and understand that I am the Lord who demonstrates unfailing love and who brings justice and righteousness to the earth, and that I delight in these things” (Jer. 9:24)

February 9, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you enjoyed this Super Bowl weekend! We enjoyed the game and Al looked forward to the snack items almost as much as the game. Today we have a pastor/missionary coming for a day of retreat.  Later we have a Valentine supper party in the community room.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
How many times do we hear people say, “I just don’t have time! I am so very busy!!!!” All of us can be over-busy, and life gets hectic as we go to work, rush to appointments, do our daily chores, try to take in our children’s activities, etc. In fact, it can get so busy we leave out God, church, Bible study and prayer and say, “I just don’t have time.” But truthfully, we all have the same amount of time and it is how we choose to spend it.

Leaving God out of the equation is the last thing we should do, for our time should revolve around Him and what is on His schedule for us in our day. My husband has studied Greek and there are two Greek words for time. One is chronos, and that would be the time we measure on a clock, or the days and weeks on a calendar. But the other word is kairos, and means the right time, purposeful time that God fills with meaning. I think we all have had kairos moments when we just suddenly know we are to do something right now, like call someone or stop and do something that is crucial; later it all seems to fit together. We can see God’s hand and we get insight as to what He is doing. I love kairos moments and thank the Lord when they happen.

But we all can have more kairos moments, when we make time to be quiet and pay attention to what God wants us to do. Instead of rushing, we take time for some moments to be still, open and listen. Often when I do that, I find I suddenly receive ways to actually save time in my day by doing it God’s way. Our day often gets interrupted by company and sometimes I stress as to what I have to serve, especially when they come unexpectedly. But then a suggestion comes to mind like a light bulb, that gives me something simple that will work just fine. Let’s not use the excuse that we don’t have time for God, but give Him our best and let Him direct all of our day.

Challenge for today: Seek God for fresh insight (kairos moments), asking for His help to see the bigger picture and live with purpose.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

 

February 7, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a great weekend. Today I am going to clean and do food prep and then we are going to a birthday party. My cousin is also stopping by on her way to the lake. We had a very cold and windy walk outside yesterday and hope today is warmer.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
How many of us have done something rather sacrificial, but our attitude wasn’t what it should be in the giving of it? We did the right thing, maybe something expected of us, but our heart was not in it. I rather think in the God’s eyes, it cancels out any reward for whatever we did, and the person receiving may also sense it was not a free gift from the heart. In Jer. 17:10, it says, “I, the Lord, search the heart and examine the mind, to reward each person according to their conduct, according to what their deeds deserve.”

How many of us have also been shmoozed and received gifts with strings attached? We may have thought the giver was making a sacrifice, but later realized there was an expectation connected with their gift. Our motives are important, and how we give or respond is important, for the Lord is very aware of the intentions of our hearts. In Prov. 16:2, it says, “All the person’s ways seem pure to them, but motives are weighed by the Lord. I was recently convicted when I remembered times I have given to the Lord because I felt I needed to, not because I really wanted to. When I think back on times as an introverted pastor’s wife I went to speak to some group, I didn’t respond by thanking the Lord for the opportunity, but more like, “Lord, just get me through this!” I didn’t jump up and down to give children’s sermons either, but rather did it out of obedience at the time, and no one else volunteered to do it.  There is regret when I look back, but I also am thankful the Lord has forgiven me. I want to serve Him out of love for Him and for others.

When we do things out of selflessness, it brings glory to Him. Let us serve from genuine love.
Challenge for today: Dare to pray Psalm 139:23-24, “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! And see of there be any grievous way in me and lead me in the way everlasting.”
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
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