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.

Liminal Leaders

This was the title of an article by Dr. John Seel.  He believes we are living through a “civilizational inflection.”  The West is gravely ill.  The disease is spiritual. The need is repentance not policy. “The patient,” suggests Dr. Seel, “still breathes, but the pulse of purpose is gone.  We are a zombie culture, animated yet dead.”

A culture cannot heal if it refuses to name its disease. Being influenced by Phillip Rieff,  Dr. Seel sees our culture as severing its link to the sacred.  Culture is a living organism that shapes and informs our lives.  Many believe we can resuscitate our culture, but Seel warns, “to confuse resuscitation for what is really needed resurrection is the final illusion of a dying civilization.”     

 “The sacred once ordered the social from above; now politics dictates culture, and culture manufactures its own religion,” notes Seel.  This reversal is mostly complete and is catastrophic.  “God created man in His image.  Now man perceives he can create God in his image or replace God with AI colonized by algorithms.” We have dethroned transcendence, while  enthroning ourselves. “We have retained the moralism of religion without its metaphysical grounding.”  Rieff saw such practices as “deathworks – cultural creations that invert the meaning they inherit.”

The result for our culture is a “dark enchantment – the return of pagan imagination under technological conditions.  The world is not disenchanted; it is enchanted by idols.”  The cure for such dark magic is divine enchantment.  We need “liminal leaders” – “men and women who can live between the lightning and the thunder, reading the weather of the age and preparing the ground for what comes next.”  

A liminal leader will exhibit four virtues: 1) “vision” – “The capacity to see beyond collapse toward renewal.”  2) “Courage” – “the willingness to act without institutional permission.” 3) “Humility” – “the conviction that renewal begins with repentance, not strategy” and  4) “Exploration” – “the willingness to seek what they do as not yet know.”  It is leadership that is restorative.  “It resists both despair and distraction.  It builds dense networks of meaning, small communities of faithfulness, and institutions ordered by truth rather than lies.”

“We are living through a liminal period of withering,” notes Seel.  It is a, “500-year inflection point,” in which “the ideas of modernity are imploding, the institutions of modernity are paralyzed, and the instruments of modernity (namely AI) are exploding.”  We are the first civilization without a shared sacred symbolic. It is a time for watchful discernment and courageous leadership. 

 I accept the challenge of Dr Seel.  “There has rarely been a more exciting time to be alive as a follower of Christ than now. Ours  is a turning point.”  We live in “the pause between to lightening and the thunder.”  We live close to the coming storm.  Seel quotes C. S. Lewis, “You can’t go back and change to beginning, but you  can start where you are and change the ending.”     

Our culture has a deep spiritual sickness.  May I  have “the courage to resist its idols, to honor objective reality, and the imagination to rebuild on foundations of transcendence.” As I pray, “Come, Lord Jesus,” may I not focus the turbulent weather patterns of the present age, forgetting the kingdom reign of King Jesus, as the unifying narrative of our time.   

Dr. Seel’s article is a prophetic call for men to come forth.  I write this blog to encourage men to be “liminal leaders.”  “The age is changing. This time, it truly is different.  The question is whether we will merely survive the transition – or sanctify it.  May we stand, liminal and luminous, as witnesses to the sacred in an age that has forgotten how to bow.”   

  

 

 

 

 

March 16, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a good weekend and weren’t buried in snow. Our S.S. was cancelled but we got to church as roads got cleared quite quickly. Today I plan to go to Aldie’s and exercise class and tonight we have a St. Patrick’s Day party here!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Recently, I have read several articles about AI and it seems there is a big gap between natural intelligence and artificial intelligence. Marcus Schwartling, senior editor at AI and Faith writes how natural intelligence is a God-given gift that helps us understand and reason about reality, one another and ourselves. But he writes that, “By contrast, AI is the subdiscipline of computer science concerned with building models to perform tasks often associated with natural intelligence, like solving a puzzle or summarizing a text.” The two are not interchangeable or equivalent.

AI provides informational knowledge, and is dependent on the data and information available to it. But the Bible’s definition of knowledge is more than organized data and contextualized information; it is rooted in people experiencing life in relationship with God and others. Jesus said in John 13:34 that we are to love others just as He has loved us. AI can’t empathize and provide companionship with others for it isn’t human. In fact, our technology today is resulting in more loneliness instead of bringing people together.

Our culture is one of self-sufficiency rather than interdependence. Everyone is busy and posts online rather than meeting together for lunch or coffee. Even phone calls to hear another familiar voice is getting scarce as people grab their phones to text instead. We are missing out today on deep friendships and being known by others and we find it hard to have a sense of belonging. Just because we note we have many followers doesn’t mean we have many close friends. We need real connections, face to face, sharing our lives listening to one another and processing things. We all want to know we matter and that takes living life in relationship with others.

Challenge for today: Share offline today with a friend even if it is brief and let them know they matter to you.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

March 14, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you are having a good weekend and keeping warm. I plan to clean the apartment and later we are going to a Birthday party. It is a big birthday and worthy of a gold crown! The question this week is: Do you feel your actions flow out of your love for the Lord or more about your self-satisfaction? Would those close to you see evidence of your growth in the Lord?
Devotions from Judy’s heart
How mature are we spiritually in our walk with the Lord? We may say we have known the Lord for twenty years, and yet still be like a two-year-old toddler who is doing the same things over and over again, not growing or becoming more like Jesus. Pastor/Dr. Peter Scazzero writes about what it means to being emotionally healthy spiritually and helps us to see the symptoms that display our need to change if we are to mature.

We can be doing a lot of work for God, but it may come from a place of satisfying ourselves rather than Him or even doing things He has never asked of us. Our prayers can be more about doing our own thing, rather than seeking to do what God wants. We may also not admit or deal with our anger, fears, shame, hurts and other emotions, which can only hinder us from being able to love God, others and ourselves. When we also fail to allow the Holy Spirit to strip away our false self, our true self cannot come forth and mature. Another symptom that Scazzero mentions is denying the past and how it impacts our present. Yes, we are a new creature in Christ, but we need to go back and break free of destructive patterns in our lives that hinder us from growing. We must be careful not to compartmentalize our lives into what is secular and what is spiritual, for the Lord wants to be part of our whole lives and actions throughout the day. When conflicts in relationships come up, we need to deal with them in honest and loving ways. We also don’t cover over our weaknesses, but admit them and ask for His help.

We need a deep interior life if we are to grow in the Lord. We may do a lot of work for God but He wants us to pray, enjoy His presence and to delight to be with Him. Our worth comes from God’s unconditional love for us, not what works we do. We serve others as God directs us, not trying to single-handedly meet all the needs around us. When we do things that flow from our life with God, we experience joy.

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord to shine His light in the hidden places of your heart,  and let Him remove and heal all that hinders your life with Him and others.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

March 13, 2026

Dear Ones,
Happy weekend to you! Hope you are keeping warm! I’m not sure how much snow we got during the night but 3″ were predicted along with a strong wind… Al is glad we live in a place where it is plowed and shoveled already when we get up!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Have you ever felt like you were living a parable, and that your actions had a deeper significance? One day I was noticing the areas on our walls and woodwork that needed attention, even though I had scrubbed them. What they needed was fresh paint where they were worn thin or had dark marks. I wondered at first why had I not seen this earlier, but I had not paid close attention. I felt like the Lord was saying to me that there were areas of my heart that need attention. I couldn’t fix them myself and needed help.
I wondered at first how I was going to find the exact paint colors for the walls in each room if I was to fill in the dark spots. But someone else had the answer, for our handyman had the exact colors of paint for each room in our apartment that needed a fresh touch of paint. It brought to mind that we need someone beyond ourselves to fix us and to bring out our true colors. My own attempt to try to cleanse the area was not enough, for I needed the fresh coating of paint to cover it completely. This reminded me of Christ’s robe of righteousness that covers all our sins and makes us new. I turned to Isaiah 61:10, “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord; my soul shall exult io my God, for He has clothed me with the garments of salvation; He has covered me with the robe of righteousness.” What a wondrous gift!

Just as the paint covered the nicks and the dark blemishes, on occasion sandpaper has to be used first before applying the paint. Perhaps all of us have those areas that need a little extra prompting by the Holy Spirit, so we can ask for help and that deep healing can come. We must welcome the hand that brings the scrubbing, for then healing can follow.

After applying the exact paint to the areas in need, I looked around the apartment with new eyes. Everything seemed to shine and I was so thankful, while aware that this wasn’t the end: for soon I would need to tell the handyman again, “Please bring those paints!” We need the blood of Jesus every day of our lives and His blood covers ALL of our sin.

Challenge for today: Be sensitive to the Holy Spirit when He shows you areas of sin, repent and ask for His cleansing.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

March 12, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a day of sunshine! We hear more snow is coming our way. Today is Donut Day here and I hope to do food prep, studying and writing. Later we have Bible study.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
When Al and I were scoping out churches after a move, we visited a large church one Sunday morning, planning to go to Sunday School first. We were directed according to our age, and they not only offered a class to those more recently retired, but another class for older retirees. Somehow it didn’t seem to promote family togetherness, by separating us from enjoying others in different age brackets. We didn’t go back, but found a church where there was a mixture of ages for Sunday school with some who are in high school up to those who may be reaching 90.

I recently read an article by Chris Poblete, editorial director for Christianity Today pastors, and he writes on my favored view of sharing across the generations. I believe we too often separate people into peer groups rather than having them mix together. But don’t we learn and grow by others different from us: some who are ahead of us in our spiritual journey and some to whom we can serve as an example as they are only beginning their spiritual journey? A Barna Report last year showed that only 18% felt that their church helped them connect across the generations.

We are united by the Lord and He is our common denominator. Think of some lonely teen that might just be helped most by an older couple taking him under their wing and inviting him to enjoy some special times with their family. Or God using a Christian to speak into the life of a younger person who has tuned out their parent but is open to another voice. It takes courage on the part of both young and old to be open to others in a different stage of life. How many seniors would be thrilled to have a young person show them how to navigate on their computer after they share a meal together? And what wouldn’t a young adult give to just have someone listen to them, and encourage them to help find answers on their journey.

Like Poblete wrote, church shouldn’t be like a buffet where we choose what is familiar and favor what confirms our instincts as we connect with peers who share our same stage of life. When we do that, we miss having others stretch us and help us mature in our spiritual walk. Jesus prayed in John 17:21 that we may all be one, just as He and the Father are.

Challenge for today: Be open to learn from someone who has walked a little farther than you, and also be willing to walk with someone who can learn from you.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

March 11, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a blessed day. Al is going to Men’s group and I am going to make Rice Krispie Bars and go to Exercise class, Crafts and Soup Supper and Bible study. We hear more snow is coming tomorrow. Emoji
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Jesus said, “Whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” (Matt. 16:25) How many times and ways do we try to save our lives and to live it all on our own? I would venture to say often! In fact, every time we take our lives into our own hands using our self-made ways, we fail to find true joy and peace in the Lord. How much better to find our identity in Him and desire to walk closer with Him! As we do that, He often exposes our hidden sins and it is humbling to see how much we need His mercy and grace. We might even call it a gift when we become aware of our great need and dependency on Him.

We are all called to live lives of continual death and resurrection. We die to self and all those things we have hung on to and find our life in the Lord. I often have to pray, “Lord I desire…” but then add, “…but only if you want me to have it, Lord!” Recently our grandson, who will be attending college in the fall, was waiting to hear if he had made it into a certain fraternity that he was interested in. The bottom line was: only if it was part of the Lord’s plan! He waited, praying for God’s will, and his family, Grandpa and I prayed, each of us wanting God’s will. Our son told Grant that God answers in three ways: “Yes, not yet, or God has other plans for you.” It was so exciting when the answer came and he was asked to be in the fraternity, knowing it was from God’s hand. But if the answer was no, we could still rejoice, for our grandson died to insisting on what he wanted, in order to receive whatever God wanted.

Our lives were also never meant to do good deeds with the purpose in mind to win God’s favor so that He does what we would like. No, it takes faith and trust in Him, when we don’t know the outcome but sincerely die to what we think is best while we wait for Him to give us His best. Every day is to be a day to lose our life for His sake. We can be assured, just like the Psalmist who prayed in Psalm 73:23-24a: “Nevertheless, I am continually with you; you hold my right hand. You guide me with your counsel…”

Challenge for today: Spend some time thanking the Lord for His hand on your life, even when it doesn’t go according to your plan.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

March 10, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you have a wonderful day! What a surprise out our window as there are several inches of fresh snow! I plan to do some food prep and touch up painting in the apartment and later we are going to friends for dessert, fellowship and prayer!
Devotions from Judy’s heart,
Have you noticed how the Lord often doesn’t show us His whole plan but only a partial picture? I wonder sometimes if we saw the bigger, long-range picture, if we might get discouraged and think the task is too difficult, or that we can’t possibly do something so complex.  But He gives us just enough so that we will trust Him for the rest. We only need to take the first step.

I found that true recently when I was doing some spring cleaning and I realized all there was to do, but thought I could just start in one of the bathrooms by washing the doors, woodwork, walls, cabinet and shower. It didn’t take that long so I decided to do the other bathroom, and then why not do the woodwork in the hall, living room and dining area? I knew our bedroom blinds needed dusting and the windows to be washed so I decided to hit that next. The hardest part was just getting close and high enough, so I used a ladder and also stood on my desk. As long as I had the ladder out, I decided to do the living room windows, door and blinds as well. When Al went for a walk, it was the perfect time to do his study, which only had three long windows and then attack his bookcases that I knew were dusty. I was finishing with a smile on my face at just the very moment he came back from his walk. I had gotten far more done than I had anticipated and it started with only one small step of doing the bathroom.

I don’t know about you, but sometimes we say “yes” to something that seems rather small and it turns out to be much more than we had imagined. If the Lord had told us in the beginning, I want you to be the head of this organization, we might have said “No!” But instead, we started out just helping in one small project. Or what if you consented to go on a short-term mission trip where you were needed because of your language ability? A couple years later, you may be commissioned as a full-time missionary to that country, all because the Lord put those people into your heart during that short visit.
When we are obedient in the little things, the Lord can trust us with more. Let us take the first step in faith and trust Him to give us all that we need to complete His call.

Challenge for today: Meditate on Proverbs 3:5-6: “Trust God from the bottom of your heart; don’t try to figure out everything on your own. Listen for God’s voice in everything you do, everywhere you go; He’s the One who will keep you on track.”
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

Boy Trouble

Variety magazine reported recently that Disney has “boy trouble.” Bill Winters believes, “They’re going to have to ditch an ideology that sneered at masculinity.”  Disney is losing the interest of Gen Z men (13-28), whom they describe as  a “lonely, gaming-obsessed group who were hampered in their formative years by COVID-19 lockdowns.”   Winters points out that Disney has part of the diagnosis correct, but the corporation needs to realize  young men have become alienated even more by an ideology that is undermining what was once celebrated by Disney.  They need to change the stories they tell. 

Winters maintains, “they’re going to have to ditch an ideology that sneered at masculinity, chivalry, righteous honor, power for noble purposes, the warrior ethos – all these things that coded as toxically male – and accepted these attitudes are actually good and necessary for any healthy society and worthy of exploring in entertainment.”   

“This ideology was obviously anti-men,” insists Winters.  There is a need to return again to tradition.  Traditional stories stick around for a reason.  One of the  moves Disney can make in Miller’s opinion is “to return to traditional storytelling.”  This means, “courageous heroes, nasty villains, and incredibly high stakes for believable characters who wrestle with timeless challenges like family, romance, revenge, redemption.”

“Gen Z males,” insists Miller, “are hungry for brotherhood and purpose.  They want demanding missions where success is deeply consequential not just for them but for the people they care about.”  Young men are looking for stories that contain these three elements, “authentic brotherhood, transcendent purpose and patriotism.”  

Miller is optimistic about the future of Disney.  But they will need to work at renewing and reviving our great institutions. But like the rest of America, Disney must be, “willing to do the hard work of renewing and reviving our greatest institutions.”  He sees Disney’s crisis as a blessing in disguise.  “Really, Disney’s ‘boy trouble‘ crisis is a gift for the company…..If Disney starts telling authentic, powerful stories that men actually want to see, they will capture a rising demographic and participate in a renewal of American culture in a way worthy of the greatest institutions.”

For a Christian the greatest story is telling the “Good News.”  Jesus came to show us a better way to live. He came to defeat the power of evil.  He calls men to radical commitment.  “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me” (Matt. 16:24).   

The Good News calls for young men to be involved in brotherhood.  There is no greater brotherhood, then a group men  committed to the cause of Christ.  Early after high school, in my surrender to Jesus, I found the need for men in my life, who  were intentional about  their walk with God.   This is still true in my 80’s.  The modeling of godly men is vital for me to stay in the fight. We are in combat together, as we rescue people from darkness. 

The Good News certainly provides a transcendent purpose. Jesus taught us to pray, “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”   I am eternally thankful for “the Good News” of Jesus and his kingdom.  I have given full allegiance to this story.  It is the same yesterday, today and forever.  It has eternal consequences. 

I have been blest to live in a country where the story of Jesus has shaped a lot of our culture.  “How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news” (Is. 52:7). It is inspiring to be surrounded by men who are excited about sharing the good news in our troubled culture.   

 

March 9, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a great weekend!! Love this beautiful mild weather and the snow has once again melted. Today I plan to bake cookies and go to Aldi’s and my Exercise class.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Not everything gets fixed in our lives and not everyone gets healed, for the Lord is sovereign and wise to know what is best so that each one to will bring glory to His Father. We have a tendency to believe that someone with disabilities should be fixed and healed, but perhaps life in a wheelchair brings Him more glory, like that of Joni Eareckson Tada. She has helped so many as she teaches and preaches from her wheelchair, and has also sent wheelchairs to those in need all over the world… and yet she has to be very dependent on others for her daily needs.

We may like to think of ourselves as independent, self-made people, but the truth is we are made for communion with God and to care and love one another. We become whole together, not as separate beings. A Scottish professor of theology, John Swinton, writes how Adam lost a rib to make relationship possible with Eve. The first incision was made from love not caused by sin, and it was the cost of communion with another.

Not all people are healed and their suffering is very real, but not without hope, for one day Jesus will wipe away all mourning and pain will cease. (Rev. 21:4). We wait for the day when we will all be whole, living without pain and suffering. But in this life Jesus didn’t always choose to heal, and He Himself had scars from his crucifixion. Swinton, a former nurse and mental health chaplain, recognized how disability doesn’t negate our belovedness as a person. The message from the church sometimes has been that people with disabilities are a problem to be resolved and often they feel excluded. But even when included, they want to be received as part of God’s good creation. Others can learn from them, seeing God’s power made perfect in weakness. (II Cor. 12:9)

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord how you can help others be included in the Body of Christ and what you can learn from them.

Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

February 7, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you are having a great weekend! It looks like we got some fresh snow in the night as everything is all white again. Tonight is the time to turn our clocks ahead as Daylight Savings Time begins. I plan to do food prep, scrub floors and study today.
Devotions from Judy’s heart                                                                                                                     When the days of our life are over, how would we like to be remembered? It’s a good question to ask ourselves, as it will influence how we live today and each day of our lives. Do we want to live it for the Lord and His kingdom, or is life centered on ourselves, what is comfortable and pleasing to us?

Recently, a good friend whom I have known for many years went home to be with the Lord. She could be described as one who always showed up. I met Florence when we lived at the lake and both of us worked at Share and Care, a place where people come to get clothes and house goods very cheaply and visit the food shelf. No matter when I helped there, Florence was always there working tirelessly and helping others get what they needed. When I asked her for something specific that I needed, she searched on all three floors and always seemed to find just the right thing. Even after we moved away, she sent things to me through our daughter.

Florence didn’t have an easy life, and yet was aware of the needs of others. Her son and granddaughter were living with her when I first knew her, and she provided a place for them, babysitting, etc. When Al retired, we went to the church where she had been a member for many years, and whenever there was a gathering, Florence was there and usually behind the counter serving. She came early and was often the last one to leave, and I don’t remember her ever complaining she was tired, not even after hours of making lefse! Whatever the need was, whether it was to help with the women’s group, quilting, or decorating the church, etc., we could count on her showing up. She had a great sense of humor as well, and could be seen in style shows, and fun skits, etc.

Florence had some health needs, and there many times through the years I thought she wasn’t going to make it, but somehow she would recover and be back serving others. We often referred to her as the Energizer Bunny. In life, our importance is not in an office we hold, or how much we accumulate, but to serve however the Lord directs. I will always remember Florence. She was an example to me of a faithful servant of the Lord who always showed up and one day will hear the Lord say, “Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much. Enter into the joy of your Master.” (Matt. 25:23)

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord how you might serve Him, and then show up!!
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

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