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.

Month: November 2010 (Page 2 of 3)

November 20th

Devotions based on Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Custody

We are told in Phil 2:12 to cultivate and complete our salvation with reverence and awe. ( AB) Action steps are ways to work out our salvation if we are serious about our soul care. Our culture says to work more do more etc but let us not be hijacked by people and messages of the world at the expense of our souls.  Caring for our souls is a need in every season, every culture, and every soul. We should be careful to recognize warning signals that our soul gives us such as stress, depression, lack of joy strife, dryness, anxiety, preoccupation with daydreams, more time spent using technology etc.  We may need to admit to God all the areas of our life that are out of control and ask Him to help. .  We should also note the positive aspects of our soul which includes peace, contentment with life, spiritual aliveness, and exuberance about life. We can be inspired by preachers or our spouse can help us but no one can care for our soul like we can.

We must choose to be true to ourselves. Being true to our soul will look different than what that would be for another. What works for us may not work for someone else. But let us be intentional and explore the ways that are life-giving for us and stay with that.  Then every so often we should evaluate our experiences, go on retreats, ask ourselves if we are making choices that bring us closer to Him. “We flourish and thrive when we give the soul what the soul requires to live.”

November 19th

Devotions based on Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Custody

Love is the acid test of Christian spirituality. It is the proof that we love God.  Either we are growing to be more loving or we are not growing at all in our souls.  Soul friendships are the place where love is fostered, nurtured, and given. It is also the primary place where love is received. It is the place where our soul connects in love, to love, and to be loved.   In everyone’s life there is a great need for a soul friend. In this love, we are understood as we are without mask or pretension. May we learn about this love from I Cor 13 “ Love never gives up. Love cares more for others than for self. Love doesn’t want what it doesn’t have. Love doesn’t strut, doesn’t’ have a swelled head, doesn’t force itself on others, isn’t always “me first”, doesn’t fly off the handle, doesn’t keep score of the sins of others, doesn’t revel when others grovel, takes pleasure in the flowering of truth, puts up with anything, trusts God always, looks for the best, never looks back, but keeps going to the end.” (MSG) Let us think of ways we can be a soul friend to another!

Holding it All Together

I have been preparing a sermon for this Sunday based on Col 1:15-20.  This is one of the best descriptions and summaries of Jesus to be found in the New Testament.  Some think that Paul borrowed an early Christian hymn to express these wonderful words about Jesus.  This text is difficult to preach on because they are so packed with meaning and significance.  So I have decided to use power point to introduce each phrase of this hymn, make a brief remark, and then ask the congregation to just sit and reflect on each of these phrases.  I am going to encourage them to let the Word of God speak to them in the context of their everyday life.

In this post I would like to make two observations that I have been thinking about as I meditate on this wonderful text.  The first is the beauty of Jesus.  Thinking about the beauty of God and more specifically the beauty of Jesus is not an easy concept for me.  I have never been encouraged or challenged to look at the beauty of God.  But as I have worked with this text, I have come to a small measure of appreciation for the beauty of Jesus.  Beauty observes Eugene Peterson, “is evident and witness to the inherent wholeness and goodness of who God is and the way God works…The distinctive thing about beauty is that it reveals…the depth of what is just beneath the surface, and connects the remote with the present” 

Simply meditating on these words, without have to understand or figure out all of what is implied, only stretches my imagination and helps me to see how awesome is the Lordship of Jesus.  You can’t put it into words.  You have to just take it in and let the reality of the revelation do the work in your heart.  Men, if you have not considered the beauty of Jesus, I encourage you to use this text and just let these words sink into your soul.  I assure you that you will be caught up in the greatness and majesty of our God. You will in some measure be able, “to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord and to seek him in his temple.” (Ps 27:4)

The second point from this text that I have been impressed with are the words of verse 17.  “Jesus holds all things together.  The message says, “He himself is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”  I guess for me I need this word, for myself personally and as I contemplate the condition of our culture.  I need Jesus to hold it together for me.  This means a daily humbling of myself, recognizing my total dependance on him.  When I have no idea of how it is going to work out, He will hold it together for me.  Culturally I place my hope in the kingdom of God, knowing the Lord Jesus Christ will hold it all together.  Our culture may collapse, but what is lasting will endure and hold together, because Christ is at the center.  So men, put your trust in the one who hold it together for you.

November 18th

Devotions based on Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Custody

  “A soul friendship is an open place for another soul to emerge, a safe place for the action of friendship making, which is no easy task.” Sometimes we mistakenly assume that one broken person plus another broken person equals a whole. But our math is wrong. One broken person plus another broken person just equals more broken people.  What we really offer another is our wounds, our fears of being rejected, our history etc.  But when we experience God in our midst soul friendships happen. We offer ourselves to one another and feast in the fellowship that can transform us.  Friendship is really a movement from me to we.  To be present to you means that I must be prepared to be temporarily absent from me. My selfish desires to be heard and understood must be put aside for the sake of the other. It’s not about just me. It’s about us!  We move from the journey alone to the journey together.  “When we love one another deeply from the heart we move out of our own hearts into the sacred space of our friends- where peace and fear coexist, where trust and doubt find an equal dwelling place, where secrets are so embedded and darkness so great that we long for someone to bring us light.” In soul friendships we move out of the darkness and into the light of not only each other’s presence but His presence-the true light.

November 17th

Devotions from Stephen Smith’s book , Soul Custody

When we live only for ourselves we become alienated from others and also alienated from ourselves. Our deepest and truest self is not an isolated self but finds its meaning and fulfillment in community. In a soul friendship we die to our false self and learn the joy and grace of being accepted as we truly are. The author mentions levels of friendship that correspond to the chamber of the heart. Chamber One is the surface level of connecting to another person. Here we just share basic information about each other. Chamber Two conversations go a bit deeper. Here we share common interests and affinity. Chamber Three is where we share some of our story-good along with the bad.  We try to be reciprocal in what we give each other and also receive.  Chamber Four is the place that holds secrets that no one knows; our hurts, our wounds etc.  Soul friendship is the journey of sharing all the chambers of our heart with all the chambers of another’s heart and discovering God in the midst of it all. Chamber 4 is the place that good friends, tested and proven friends explore together. It is the chamber that yields great rewards of personal transformation.  It is challenging and requires trust, safety, and an invitation to go there. Even Jesus selected only a few good friends to share his most intimate secrets and for most of us we are able to share with only a very few too.

November 16th

Devotions based on Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Custody

“A mirror reflects a man’s face, but what he is really like is shown by the kind of friends he chooses.” Prov 27:18 TLB

There is nothing quite like sharing the journey of life with a person whom we love and from whom we receive love!  Our loneliness melts away as another person offers us love and companionship, giving us the sense of being cared for deep in our souls.  But in our culture today many try to connect with others on Face Book etc without ever really  looking into the eyes of another soul to see and be seen, to know and be known, to discover and be discovered. We are more isolated today socially and many people say they have no one to confide in.  Our souls were not made for pseudo-friendships. When we settle for them we are choosing to settle for far less than we were made for.  True friendship and building of authentic community was exemplified in the New Testament. Jesus said we are to love one another, accept one another, serve one another, and confess to one another.  God’s presence with us is what transforms an ordinary friendship into soul friends. We are present to each other as we are in the presence of God.

November 14th

Devotions from Stephen’s Smith’s book, Soul Custody

 We all need to discover how we can make the body-soul connection in our lives.  Some people take prayer walks and can be a good therapy for our soul and body. Some may do it by running or going to the gym.   They founder of the YMCA, Dwight Moody, saw that caring for the body was a way to care for the souls of men and women.  It still continues to help people live well through the development of spirit, mind, and body. How we treat our body is how we treat our souls. To honor our souls means to honor the body in which our soul dwells.  To abuse or neglect our body is to do violence against our souls. Sometimes we may become disappointed with our bodies and can become over whelmed with self-rejection.  We may listen to the voice of self-condemnation that can speak more loudly than God’s voice that we are His beloved.  We need to recognize, face and refute the lies about our bodies and believe the truth. He already accepts us and we can stop striving. If we try to be perfect by the world’s standards we will fail. But when we receive the truth that we are fearfully and wonderfully made, we will want to care for God’s remarkable creation. One day we will have new bodies but as we treat our bodies with honor and respect on this earth it is an act of worship and an act of faith.

November 13th

Devotions from Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Cusody

God never intended for us to separate our bodies from our souls.  In fact, learning to care for our bodies is a way of being hospitable to our souls that live within us. The soul is the place where everything comes together- physical needs, spiritual needs and intellectual needs.  So neglecting our body can actually  hurt our spiritual lives. Our body is our “soul address”. Our soul lives at this address and we need to honor our bodies. How many times do we stop to appreciate how our bodies have served us and gotten us to where we are now?  In Scripture our body is referred to as the Temple of the Holy Spirit. It is the place where God chooses to dwell. Our body-whatever shape, size or appearance is the place where God chooses to dwell. “Our bodies matter because our sacred soul dwells in our physical body”.   Spiritual disciplines help us make the body-soul connection.  Nearly all spiritual disciplines involve some physical response. We kneel, we bow our heads, we dance etc.  “A disciplined life in God is a life in which we make space for God-even in our bodies.”  Let us abstain from things that harm our bodies and do what will help them and therefore nourish our souls.

November 12th

Devotions from Stephen Smith’s book, Soul Custody

To find our true vocation we must pay attention to what moves us. We need to ask ourselves when do I feel passion rise within me?   “ Work is more than mere work when we realize, this is what I was made for-this is what I must do.” Some of us may have to try several lines of work before we discover what fits us.  Each job becomes its own school of the soul to teach us, to inform us, to point us forward to the next step.  Our lives’ work is really a composite of all the jobs-good and bad, success or failure- that teach us, make us and shape us for our calling.  We need to pay attention to what we learn in each one about ourselves and our roles. There is not cookie –cutter approach for our souls for each of us is different. It may help to explore our inner soul with a spiritual guide or a trusted friend. Let us live our questions and pick up unturned stones and look under them for the truth. As we discern the truth about ourselves and our callings, along with our passions, interests and giftedness, God will open doors for opportunities and orchestrate how it all comes together.  Often this convergence doesn’t happen until we are in our 50’s and beyond. Let us all watch for the light on our path and move forward. May our work be worship for as we live for a greater purpose than ourselves and a greater calling than our egos, we give glory to Him.

Limping Man

Again I am quoting from Wes Yoder’s “Bond of Brothers.”  I agree with Kenny Luck, who is quoted on the jacket of the book: “He says things in this book I have never heard anyone say about men and, more to the point, about me!”  Yoder maintains that often when a man is silent, he is fearful of revealing thethings that are most important in his life.  Often this can be traced to the silence of our fathers, in which case the silence is perpetuated from father to son.  Yoder believes that, “Men feel something most of us cannot describe.  It is a sense of being responsible for something we cannot control, for something we do not know.”  This is the manifestation of a “limping man.”  “We suspect,” observes Yoder, “our fathers knew something they could have told us but did not.  Whatever it was they did not tell us, we wish they had.  We see their limp, and we feel ours.”

I know this is very true of my relationship with my father.  I tried, I hope, in an honorable manner to have my father share some of his heart with me.  I wanted to know some of the secrets that were locked in his heart, so that I could understand myself better as a man.  But for some reason, my father was not able to brake his silence.  It well could have been that Yoder was describing my dad when he says, “Sometimes the loudest expression of a man’s longings is his silence, and it is that silence in generations of men that turns the world, for many, into an orphanage.”  It has taken me many years to come to peace with the simple fact that I will always be “Albert’s one and only son.”  My father was a classic expression of a silent man.  But I learned to love him and to accept that fact that I would never know his story.

So how do men break the silence.  We need a group of trusted friends, who will listen to the story of our lives.  Listen to the advise of Yoder.  “Uncover what a man is not talking about and you may just discover what he cares about most…..men aren’t talking much about things that matter, and our silence is quite disturbing.  But what you need to know about men is that they are more than willing to talk when they have the respect of those who are willing  to listen, provided the topic isn’t one more thing they really don’t care about.”  It is in the trusted circle of other men, who are braking their silence, that you will find support to tell you story of pain and lose, in  not knowing your father’s story. 

In the circle of trust, men are able to find affirmation and respect for being uniquely male.  Their story telling will be different from their wives and the other women in their lives.  As a matter of fact, men have learned to be silent because deep within they sense that a woman cannot share the pain of not being “fathered.”  But in the group of brothers, we are able to affirm each other, the way home to our heavenly Father, where our true affirmation is found.  It is in the company of other brothers that a man “will find his voice.”  Their in his presence we are able to find healing as his love and care fills in the gaps of our “lost stories” with our fathers.  The loving light of his presence brings healing to those dark and hidden places in our souls,  that we on our own are afraid to uncover.  To recover our true masculine soul, we must go to those places of pain and find healing in our Father’s  presence. I close with one  more quote from Yoder.  He quotes Ps. 18:35, “‘Your gentleness made me great.’  These five words buried in the Psalms provide a brilliant meditation for men.”  In a trusted circle of men this can be applied first of all to our heavenly Father and then to trusted male friends, as we tell our stories to regain our authentic male voice.

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