Month: April 2025 (Page 2 of 4)
Lord, we thank you for the promise of new life and the hope that Easter brings. Your mercy and grace shine brightly on this day, illuminating our lives with the warmth of your love. May we never forget the incredible sacrifice of Jesus and the profound significance of His triumph over the grave.
On this sacred day, fill our hearts with the joy of the resurrection. Help us to experience the transformative power of your love, renewing our spirits and strengthening our faith. As we celebrate together, may the message of Easter resonate deeply within us, inspiring us to live as reflections of your grace and compassion.
As we rejoice in the miracle of Easter, we lift our prayers for those who may be struggling, lonely, or in despair. May your comforting presence be with them, bringing healing and hope. Use us, Lord, as instruments of your peace and vessels of your love in the world.
In scripture we read of special times the Israelites were told to celebrate, and soon we will celebrate Good Friday and Easter. We want to never forget but rather to celebrate Jesus’ sacrifice for us. Pastor Sharon Miller writes about how everyone needs to celebrate and it can become one of the spiritual disciplines in our lives. She mentions how God created everything in 6 days and then celebrated on the 7th day by resting. His first miracle was at a wedding celebration when the wine had run out and he turned the water into wine. Jesus also celebrated Passover meal with his disciples before he was crucified. Sharon also mentions the wonderful celebration we have to look forward to in the future and that is the marriage feast of the lamb. In Revelation 19 it says, “Hallelujah! For the Lord our God the Almighty reigns. Let us rejoice and exult and give Him the glory, for the marriage of the Lamb has come and His bride has made herself ready.” As the church we are the bride of Christ and we can look forward to this wondrous celebration one day.
Another celebration we may not have given much thought to is our identity in Christ. We celebrate that we are chosen by God, we are adopted, forgiven, redeemed. We can fully trust everything we read in the Word about how we matter to God and He loves us unconditionally, He forgives us and even forgets our sins. We are beautiful in His eyes and every day we can celebrate who He made us to be. There is no one else like us!
Let us take time in our lives for celebrations! In June Al and I are going to celebrate our 60th wedding anniversary and we give praise for all these many years that God has given us together to love each other and to serve and love Him.
But Jesus wants to heal our soul through union with Him, and He welcomes each of us to come to Him. He is always available and wants to restore us and make us whole. Only He can take the broken pieces of our lives and create beauty out of the ashes. It’s such a wondrous thing for we can end up feeling just like a new creation.
Satan on the other hand, wants to destroy us and lies against God’s love and healing power. We don’t have to live fragmented lives forever but can give the broken pieces to the Lord and let Him heal us and make something beautiful of us. He wants to re-create all things in us! John Eldredge shares that our part is to invite Him in and seek union with the Lord in the damaged parts of our souls. We give Him access and it’s an added blessing if we have a prayer partner, pastor or counselor to share our hurts with and receive healing prayer. We don’t’ have to understand everything but simply ask Jesus to meet us in the place of our need and be open to His loving presence and healing power. No one knows us better than Jesus and when we turn to Him with all our heart, He will bring us into oneness and heal our fragmented parts. He came to bind up the broken hearted and to proclaim freedom for the captives. (Isaiah 61:1)
When we have fears, compulsions and struggles that surface needing healing, Jesus knows how to access them and restore us. We can ask the Holy Spirit to shine His light into those dark areas and invite Jesus to be with us in that place in our past. He will cleanse our wounds and His blood brings healing and integration. Why continue to live with the hurtful wounds when Jesus is waiting to hear our cry for healing.
We all need a safe place, an emotional, psychological and spiritual place of refuge. When our kids were young we lived on the Iron Range in the parsonage that bordered on the woods. Bears were not uncommon. Al built an igloo with three kids helping and it was big enough for us to all sit inside. One night he lit a candle and we had our family devotions there together. The igloo gave us protection from the elements and we all huddled together and talked to the Lord.
Jesus is our perfect habitat and we live in Him and He in us. We get nourished as we spend time in His presence for we were made for Him. He is our home and our safe place. He breathed life into us and He wants us to not be anxious but to rest in Him. We might know many scriptures and facts about the Bible and still miss knowing Him in an intimate way as our heart’s longing. When we come to Him with all our heart and hear His voice to our heart, we have found home. Psalm 91:3 says, “He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, ‘My refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’” When we trust in Him we are safe!
“America and the West stand at a civilizational inflection point.” These are the opening words in a guest article by Dr. John Seel at Aaron Renn’s blog. “We are amid a 500-year historical geo-political inflection point,” observes Seel, “in which a Negative World is becoming an outright hostile world.”
There are four primary shifts believers face; Shift One: Christian to Post-Christian. Our world is divorced from any reference to the sacred. “We have shifted from societies based on fate and faith to one based on fiction.” What is distinctive today “is that it is a negation against all sacred orders and the verticals in authority that mediate the sacred to society….[this means] we cannot simply return to older approaches as they are no longer relevant to our cultural situation.”
Shift Two: Classical Liberalism to Nietzschean Nihilism ( Individual Rights to State Power). “Social solidarity requires shared social beliefs. When these are abandoned….. then politics naturally defaults and devolves to the will-to-power in a world where the leadership class believes in nothing…..This is the experiential definition of nihilism.”
Shift Three: Global West to Global East. “The combined reality of these first two shifts is the growing global awareness of the spiritual and political demise of the West….The West is no longer seen as a desired model for the rest of the world.” The West has become the spiritual problem not the spiritual solution. “We are amid a global realignment that is lost on the State Department because it is blinded by our own Western spiritual corruption.
Shift Four. Enlightenment Rationalism to Post-Enlightenment Enchantment. “We are rejecting forms of Enlightenment rationalism in favor of a more enchanted form of spirituality.” There has been a rebirth of older and new forms of enchantment, such as neo-paganism and the occult. Seel warns, “If we react to the rise of the occult with more rationalism, more courses of apologetics and worldview, more abstract dogmatism, we will miss an opportunity and be further marginalized culturally.”
These changes in our world will soon change our lives. Seel give three reasons. Reason One: These realities are going to be the context of discipleship for our children. “We may be dead before the full weight of these shifts are felt culturally, but they will be the lived reality for our children and grandchildren.”
Reason Two: Our entire approach toward missions is going to have to change. “The West represents the most strident global unreached people group……..Almost every ministry organization is going to have to learn to reframe, explore, and network their missional strategy.”
Reason Three: These changes will greatly challenge our collective sense of identity. We are going to experience tension between our political geographic citizenship and our spiritual citizenship in heaven. “We’re going to have to develop a greater sensitivity to our Western and Enlightenment accomodation to the gospel.” We need to have the orientation of being missionaries.
Dr. Seel give this challenge: “We are as a Western Christian church at an historic inflection point. We are at a point of decision. To meet our moment, we will need the courage to face these realities, the humility to see God’s leading, and the discernment to balance innovation with historic orthodoxy.
Personally, I believe Dr. Seel is “spot on.” Here is my challenge to men. Reset your perspective on our nation. Biblical beliefs are irrelevant, in a culture where the last word is with the elites. The West is the spiritual problem. Yet there is a deep hunger for God. Therefore, we must be motivated for the sake of our families. Our nation is a mission field and we are now missionaries in a foreign land.
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