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.

April 21, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you have a hope-filled day. I plan to go to Women’s Bible study this morning and then we are having friends over for dessert and fellowship.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
I hope when you are reading this that you are a person of hope! We can ask ourselves the questions, “Can I change? Will the things I’m concerned about be better tomorrow?” If we are praying persons, the answer would probably be, yes. I believe that tomorrow is a new day with a fresh start, but we also have to be willing to learn from our past failures and have faith to believe the Lord can weave them into something beautiful in the future. We don’t have to be fixated in the past, because we know God is in control.

None of us go through life free of pain or problems. Just read the the Psalms, where the authors share their sorrows and despair, but also their hope and joy in knowing God is present. We may have tears as the writer of Psalm 126 shares, “Those who sow in tears shall reap with shouts of joy! He who goes out weeping bearing the seed for sowing shall come home with shouts of joy, bringing his sheaves with him.” When we go to the Lord in our tears and sorrow, something often happens to us: we begin to sense hope rising in our hearts. We may not know what God will do, but we put things in His hands and we have to be ready for anything.

The Lord listens to the cries of our hearts, but He is also in charge of the larger story of our lives. He does what is best and according to His Father’s plan, and we need to patiently wait. In Rom. 8:25 we are reminded, “But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” It is quite amazing how the Lord can take even our past and weave it into our larger story, strengthening us for the future. God’s love for us is gives us hope no matter what we go through in this life, for we have all of eternity with the One who died and rose again for us.

Challenge for today: When you feel overwhelmed by problems of life, share with the Lord and find hope in Him to work it all out for His glory.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

 

Defiling the Land

Through the prophet Jeremiah, God  accused Judah of defiling their land.  The last few summers here in Northern Minnesota the fresh, crip, clear summer days have been defiled by smoke pollution from the forest fires in Canada. There have been clean air advisories, warning people to stay inside because of the bad air.  It is defiled (polluted).  Like Judea, many in our day, can not see how spiritually defied our land has become.  God had given us a fertile land.  “I brought you into a fertile land to eat its fruit and rich produce.  But you  came and defied my land and made my inheritance detestable” (Jer. 2:7). As a nation we are no longer fertile (filled with hope and promise). 

The prophet was pointing to their worship of idols as the source of pollution.  But they were living in denial. In dramatic fashion, the prophet says, “How can you say, ‘I am not defiled; I have not run after the Baals'”?  Then in vivid imagery the prophet asks them to look at the evidence, “See how you behaved in the valley; consider what you have done.  You are a swift she-camel running here and there, a wild donkey accustomed to the desert, sniffing the wind in her craving – in her heat who can restrain her? Any males that pursue her need not tire themselves; at mating time they will find her” (Jer. 2:23-24).  In the next verse comes their rely.  “I can’t help it.  I’m addicted to alien gods, I can’t quit.” 

The people are pictured like a “camel in heat” who is crisscrossing her tracks as she wanders aimlessly about. “It is a description of an animal consumed by carnal lust.  In like manner Judah eagerly sought out its idols.  The idols did not have to seek the people.  They were acting like people obsessed, running after their desires until their shoes wore out or they were consumed by thirst.  Their response to his appeal was, ‘It’s no use!’ Like a person hooked on drugs or alcohol, Judah had no desire to give up its gods in spite of warnings of the consequences.” (Huey). 

Jeremiah warned Judah not to follow the example of Israel, even though they saw what happened to Israel.  Jeremiah says, “Israel treated it all so lightly – she thought nothing of committing adultery by worshiping idols made of wood and stone.  So now the land has been polluted.  But despite all this, her faithless sister Judah has never sincerely returned to me.  She has only pretended to be sorry” (Jer. 3:9).  Later God warned Jeremiah of the people going, “backward and not forward.” ( Jer. 7:24). 

God called Jeremiah ” a tester of metals.”  He would be testing the will of the people.  “They are all hardened rebels, going about to slander.  They are bronze and iron; they all act corruptly” (Jer. 6:28).  But his refining would not be successful, for “wicked are not purge out.  They are called rejected silver, because the Lord has rejected them” (Jer. 6:30).  They saw the prophets as a bunch of windbags.” “Nothing bad will happen to us, neither famine nor war will come our way. The prophets are all windbags. They speak nothing but nonsense” (Jer. 5:12-13 MSG).

Today our spiritual air is polluted with many idols and other gods, because we followed our passions.  We are going backward and not forward.  God has been testing our culture, finding it to be “rejected silver.”  We reject the voice of God, saying those folks are a bunch of windbags.  We continue to follow the stubborn inclinations of our hearts.  Could God be saying, “I have spoken and will not relent.  I have decided and will not turn back” (Jer. 4:28).   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 20, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you had a wonderful weekend. Yesterday we ran out of bulletins at church and I noticed church was full. Then, my second thought, oh I hope we have enough goodies for the coffee time. Thankfully we planned enough!  Today I plan to go to Aldi’s and Exercise class and make a new dessert.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Would people around you say that you are a patient person, or would they say you need to grow in this area? The Bible has a lot to say about patience, perhaps because it is the deepest expression of love. In the “love chapter,” I Corinthians 13, Paul starts out first by saying love is patient, and then goes on to say what love is not: it is not arrogant or rude or insistent on its own way or envious, etc.

So much in life we really can’t control, and we often have to wait and be patient. We see this every day when we are waiting in the check-out line, or to get into a concert, or waiting for a diagnosis from our doctor. We may recognize anger and resentment in the times we don’t get our way and circumstances are not what we would choose. We may get irritable, frustrated and sometimes even blow up!

We might say patience is surrender to disappointments, frustrations and limitations. We accept what is and endure it. Jesus showed great patience as He endured so many trials and knew He would be going to the cross. He was patient with His disciples who didn’t always get what He was trying to teach them and often failed. Many times, they must have all required patience when they were hungry, tired, and had no time to eat and rest because of the crowds.

We all have need for patience, and such times demand the giving of ourselves for others. We surrender in love to their needs and wait in trust that the Lord will supply all of our needs…and He does, often in such recognizable ways that we know it can only be Him. So let patience do it’s work in our hearts, as we trust our needs will be met in due time and in His way.

Challenge for today: May you put others first and yourself second as you allow the Lord to do a beautiful work in you.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

April 18, 2026

Dear Ones,
Happy weekend! Wow, the weather has been so unpredictable and changeable lately that we are never sure if we will actually get our walk in on the Paul Bunyan. I plan to clean the apartment this morning and do some baking as I serve tomorrow at church.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
God has designed us for community, not in being the Lone Ranger. We learn to live our true selves by living with others for the Lord teaches us so much through them. Is it always easy? No definitely not but it is a wonderful learning tool when we are joined with a community of faith. Even if we were blessed to have Christian parents whom we could trust, we still need to us learn to transfer that trust over to God in faith.

Hopefully we are nurtured by the people of God as found in the church, which is an expression of God’s presence. We learn to love as we are in loving relationships and experience the Body of Christ as we learn to give of ourselves. Sometimes it is also challenging and frustrating as there may be conflicts but learning how to handle them helps us to grow. Pastor Richard Plass and Paster James Cofield share ways that can help us to live well in community, rather than idealize it and be disappointed.

First of all community confronts our selfishness and exposes it. All of us have a selfish bent and it begins to show itself when with others in a close way and we need to acknowledge it. Also as we live with others in soulful relationships we learn to surrender and serve and be patient and to also forgive and pray and love. Others ahead of us in the journey can teach us much if we are open. We learn to suffer as well and find comfort in community. When one suffers we all suffer! We learn how to bear one another’s burdens and our moral character is internalized. We can’t fool others when we are in community as our false self will be exposed, and so we live in humility and gratitude. Others see us as we are and still love us in the Lord. We are all dependent on God and in humility we say Thy will be done, not mine.

We are all called to live not for ourselves but beyond ourselves and to show up for others.

Challenge for today: Recount the way the community of faith has helped you to grow and be open to how you can help bear the burdens of others as well.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy

April 17, 2026

Dear Ones, Hope you express your faith in new ways today. Our daughter came yesterday for an early lunch and we all said yes to the new recipe I tried! Emoji
Devotions from Judy’s heart
My eyes of faith are being opened more while reading Professor Justin Bailey’s book as he shares how we filter our lives through the gospel when we know the Lord. We learn also from those who have gone before us, reading of their victories but also their sins and God’s grace that is greater. So many witnesses and saints to learn from! How do we carry that forward?

As I read, I wonder what I will leave behind for those after me as I am getting along in years. Al and I pray daily for many, including our family and their families, that each one will embrace the faith and live their lives for the Lord. Will they see how faithful God has been to us, how He has never failed us and always provided for us? But it is also important that they carry the past forward to the next generation.

Of course, we will not all express our faith alike. I pray those after us will live their lives for His kingdom in the way the Lord desires. There are the times we come together in shared faith as we recite the Apostle’s Creed or the Lord’s Prayer, etc. and our prayers are shaped by scripture. When we pray and fellowship with others, we see what we would not see if we kept to ourselves. The Bible study at Northern Lakes is one made of people from different walks of life, denominations, experiences, and we all grow more as we mingle together each day. We miss so much when we fail to share our lives together, but we can learn and grow as we pray for one another, repent, face trials, and stand with one another.

Challenge for today: Reflect on Paul’s word to the Corinthians in I Cor. 16:3, “Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, act like men, be strong. Let all you do be done in love.”
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

April 16, 2026

April 15, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you have a joy filled day. I am excited as Al and I have a Date Day to go to a book sale which both of us are interested in and then out to Culver’s for lunch. If I am home in time I will go to crafts and Bible study later.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Think upon the words with me that I just read from Zephaniah 3:18, “The Lord your God is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness; He will quiet you by His love; He will exult over you with loud singing.” When our children were young we played a tape of many scriptures put to music and this was one of them. Today these words are even more meaningful, for doesn’t it just blow your mind to think that the Lord is rejoicing over you and over me with gladness and loud singing?

Yet, how can He rejoice over us when we fail?  He sees our sins, and yet when we repent He welcomes us into His arms of forgiveness with loud singing and great joy. Yes, He is making us into a new creation, but we are far from perfect in our daily living as we tend to get in the way ourselves. I can only think of our children when they were little and confessed when they did something wrong. I was so glad that they admitted and were sorry for whatever they had done! Sometimes it takes a while to get to that place, as it is easier to rationalize our behavior and even blame others. But when we truly know we have done wrong and ask forgiveness, our souls are forgiven and healed and our relationship is restored.

What about when we sin in our thoughts without actually acting on them? When we bring that before the Lord in honesty and repentance, He rejoices. I want to be an open book before the Lord and not hide or rationalize my sinful behavior. When I am real with Him, it seems my heart knows peace and rest. Just as we love our children even when they are naughty, the Lord still loves us and offers forgiveness and feels joy over us.

Challenge for today: Spend some quiet moments with the Lord, and thank Him that He loves you and exults over you with loud singing.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

April 14, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you are enjoying the spring like sunny days! We enjoy the walks on the trail! Today I hope to do lots
of baking and some studying.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Many people today are overly busy and overworked and live under pressure. It can happen to each one of us when we give in to demands of others rather than seeking to know what God has planned for us each day. How can we really love others when we are all tired out from running the world by our constant activity. Even when we go on a vacation, we almost need another one when we return as we wear ourselves out trying to do everything. That is not what the Lord planned for us.

 In fact, He wants us to have a Sabbath Rest which is really a holy day. That means one day a week we relax, we enjoy a day of rest from our regular jobs, go to church, take a nap, read a book, watch a game, and be free of obligations. The Lord told Moses in Exodus 31:14- “Above all you shall keep my Sabbaths, for this is a sign between me and you throughout your generations, that you may know that I, the Lord, sanctify you. You shall keep the Sabbath because it is holy for you.” He goes on to say it is a solemn rest, holy to the Lord. We might say it is a day to enjoy the Lord, pay attention to His presence, and accept the rhythm He has for us. We work 6 days but on the 7th we rest.

Al and I visited a Trappist Monastery and the monks have 7 scheduled times of reading and singing the scriptures that begin at 3:45 a.m. and the last one is 7:40 P.M. What a beautiful rhythm to remember the Lord throughout our day and into our night. But we also can stop and take a few moments during our day and evening to be mindful of the Lord, like taking a couple 5 minute breaks to center on Him and offer up a prayer.

Challenge for today: Pause several times during your day to be still and know that the Lord is present with you. (Psalm 46:10)
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

A Modern Mystic

I have been reading a book by Dr. David John Seel entitled “Aspirational Masculinity.”  It has been very informative as I continue to process what it means to be a man, living for Jesus in this new year (2026).  He acknowledges that masculinity is in a state of flux.  Even though men are listening for the male voice of others, they are not at all confident in knowing what a man actually is and how he should behave in our day.  Men wonder who they can  follow or trust with their “life aspirations.”   

Dr. Seel asks an intriguing  question, “What if men must lose their autonomy to find their authenticity?”  How are men to behave in a society, where men are  “being minimized, erased, and blamed.”  The crisis of masculinity in the author’s understanding is more a crisis of personhood.  Seel notes, “a man who is fully alive, is a man who is living his life in Christ; a man both aware of his Creator and dependent on his Creator for a re-created inner life.” He  lives in reliance on the indwelling presence of Christ.  Masculinity is about becoming someone new.

Dr Seel focuses is on being rather than doing . “Masculinity is not a noun, something we are, but a verb, something we are in the process of becoming, by living in the inner spiritual presence of God within us.”  Jesus’ incarnational presence in our lives makes the difference. Jesus is not an idea but the actual presence in our life.  “It is this mystical spiritual relationship, living life in Christ,” maintains Seel, “that animates all else in our live and brings it into a unified focus.”  God did not come to make us marginally better persons, but a whole new kind of person.  “An aspirational male,” maintains Dr. Seel, “is a new kind of creature, not merely a nicer male.” He quotes C. S. Lewis: “Our real selves are all waiting for us in him…Until you have given up yourself to Him you will not have a real self.”

Dr. Seel has a challenge  for men.  “Are you ready to live as a “modern mystic,” embracing the deeper meaning of life?  How does this fit with your goals?”  Men will ultimately find their security and significance in the inner presence of Christ.  It is this dynamic that makes men whole men, able to embrace their full masculine self.  Dr. Seel is firm in his conviction: “There is no other way to find ourselves as men.”  I agree with Seel in his observation of men viewing talk about “the presence of Christ within” as rather weird.  “This is a mystical spiritual relationship, but it is no less real or objective because of it.  Our problem is our cultural bias for materialism and scientific empiricism.”  

An aspirational masculinity is based on a choice to “align ourselves with our true nature and with the true nature of reality.”  We align with something outside ourselves, giving us the ability to find who we really are. Our personhood is unified in Christ.  The four components of manhood  – spirituality, identity, work and marriage are harmonized and empowered in Christ.  “This is the coherence we all most desire in our lives.” We can aspire to such a lifestyle.

I find Dr. Seel a fresh breeze in the affirmation of the masculine.  1) His insistence of “self-abdication,” 2) Personhood in Christ – a totally new man.  3) Masculinity being more “verb than a noun” – more about becoming than doing, 4) Embracing the mystical – life of Jesus within,  5) Find meaning  in a unified lifestyle – God, self, marriage and work,  6) Balance of head and heart – the objective and subjective.

 

April 13, 2026

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a wonderful weekend. We enjoyed Teen Challenge at our church yesterday and so miraculous what the Lord does in so many of their lives. Today Al and I have our annual checkups at the Doctor so have to miss my exercise class etc.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Greed is very evident in our culture today, where people want more and more, far beyond actual needs. Growing up it was never about the money, but more how much could be given for the Lord’s work. When we were young my folks lived within a tighter budget, but through the years dad was successful and put all of us through Christian school and college. They could have moved to the fancier suburb of Edina, but they remained in their modest two-bedroom house in south Minneapolis. Al and I, on the other hand, went to our first church and were fortunate enough to move into the large parsonage, but we were probably the poorest family in Edina. If I remember correctly: after surviving seminary on a part time salary, we had only three hundred dollars in our bank account when we moved to our first house…but we always had enough.

In Prov. 28:25 it says, “A greedy person stirs up a fight, but whoever trusts the Lord prospers.” We are probably all tempted by greed at times, but a good way to keep it from overtaking us is to give to others from a generous heart. We can give more than money: we can give of our time, acts of kindness, showing appreciation and encouragement to others who serve us, etc. The more we give away the less we will be tempted by greed. Jesus told the crowd in Luke 12:15, “Take care! Protect yourself against the least bit of greed. Life is not defined by what you have, even when you have a lot.

The more we give away, the more room we have for joy to fill us. I remember my folks so excited as they took a trip to see a missionary family home on furlough that they had supported each month. They were thrilled that they could give to their needs and to further the gospel. We might ask ourselves when we see others getting a new car or boat, etc.: do thoughts come to us that we would be happier if we had one too? Or do we rather give generously to the youth going on a mission trip? Let us have a generous spirit, and as Jesus said in Luke 6:38, “Give away your life; you’ll find life given back, but not merely given back—given back with bonus and blessings. Giving, not getting, is the way. Generosity begets generosity.”

Challenge for today: Ask the Lord to show you any ways that you are greedy, and give to others from your heart.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy
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