Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
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.
It is important for all of us to live with purpose each day. I keep telling Al I want to finish strong! I don’t want to just exist, but I want to make a difference for His kingdom. Hopefully that is in all of our hearts and we need to ask the Lord what His purpose is for us. After all, He has given each of us the gifts to accomplish what He planned for our us to do with our lives. So why not ask the One who created us? Al and I taught on spiritual gifts in each church where we have been, and it was so exciting when people discovered their gifts. They began to know why they reacted a certain way, and not necessarily like someone else. They got joy out of using their gifts and discovered their unique motivations. Of course, it is not enough to just know your gifts but to use them for His glory. As we do this, we will feel useful for His kingdom and have purpose in our lives that results in joy and sense of fulfillment.
Each day we make a choice if we are going to fulfill the desires of our flesh and go our own way or if we are going to go God’s way and accomplish God’s purpose in our lives. Let us live with His purpose in mind.
Challenge for today: Ask God to reveal how He has gifted you and be purposeful in how you live the day for Him.
I was reading today from John’s gospel, and John was closest to Jesus when He was on earth. He called himself, “the one whom Jesus loved.” ((John 13:23) We can all add that for ourselves also, for He loved us enough to die for us! It’s one thing to know that in our minds but does our heart really grab hold of that? If we receive His love, then we will want to naturally share Him with others, but we have to know His love first in our own hearts. We can’t give away something we have not received ourselves.
Andrew was one of the first disciples who heard John the Baptist tell who Jesus was and you know what he did? It says in John 1:41, “Andrew at once founds his brother Simon and told him, ‘We have found the Messiah (which means ‘Christ’). Andrew brought him to Jesus.” The next day Jesus found Philip who then found Nathanael and of course the list goes on and on. When we find Jesus, we want to share Him with all who will listen. Let us not keep the good news to ourselves but as the song goes, “Go tell it on the mountains, over the hills and everywhere! Go tell it on the mountain that Jesus Christ was born!”
I read a devotional from “Trusting God Day by Day” and it spoke to me about the importance of trusting and moving on with the Lord. Deuteronomy 32 verse 11-12 says, “Like an eagle that stirs up its nest, hovers over its young, spreads its wings to catch them, and carries then on it’s feather, so the Lord led his people.” The mama eagle wants her eaglets to be able to fly but for the first 3 months, she feeds them and they rest in their comfortable nest. But after that she starts dismantling the nest and taking out the soft animal fur, feathers etc. and they begin to get pricked and uncomfortable by the sticks and thorns. She pushes them out of the nest and when they start falling, she is there and swoops under them and catches them. At first, they may wonder what is going on but eventually they understand that mama isn’t being mean but wants them to fly. Eventually rather than rest in the prickly branches of the nest, they learn to fly.
Are there times we feel like the Lord is saying to us, “Time to move on!” But we know that we must face the unknown and not sure if we will like it or will we miss the old. That is where trust comes in, for we put ourselves in the Lord’s hands and have to get out of our comfortable “nest”. At first it feels like we may fall and crash but His wings are there to catch us and help us. As we get acclimated and out of our former rut, we find that flying is fun, we can move ahead and not be in the cramped nest. Let us not hold back when the Lord is nudging us to move on but trust that His wings are always spread to catch up and help us as we learn to fly.
I was reading today from John’s gospel, and John was closest to Jesus when He was on earth. He called himself, “the one whom Jesus loved.” ((John 13:23) We can also add our names to that ourselves, for He loved us enough to die for us! It’s one thing to know that in our minds but does our heart really grab hold of that? If we receive His love, then we will want to naturally share Him with others, but we have to know His love first in our own hearts. We can’t give away something we have not received ourselves.
Andrew was one of the first disciples who heard John the Baptist tell who Jesus was and you know what he did? It says in John 1:41, “Andrew at once found his brother Simon and told him, ‘We have found the Messiah (which means ‘Christ’). Andrew brought him to Jesus.” The next day Jesus found Philip who then found Nathanael and of course the list goes on and on. When we find Jesus, we want to share Him with all who will listen. Let us not keep the good news to ourselves but as the song goes, “Go tell it on the mountains, over the hills and everywhere! Go tell it on the mountain that Jesus Christ is born.”
During wilderness times, the Lord may be trying to get our attention and bring us to a deeper level of relationship with Him. So how we respond is important and we need to listen and to obey. Of course, we have only to look back at the children of Israel who were in the wilderness for 40 years as they were being readied to go into the Promise Land. Wow! I don’t have that many years left! It says in Deut. 8:2, that “He did this in order to humble you and test you. He wanted to know whether or not you would wholeheartedly obey His commands.” It is important for all of us to be open as to how the Lord would teach us and test us and be responsive to how He wants to accomplish this. We may be tempted to compromise, quit or take shortcuts but then we will miss letting the wilderness work what the Lord wants to do in us.
To make the most of this Wilderness time, we need time to be alone with the Lord, be in the Word and ask Him to speak to us as we keep our eyes on Him. What is He trying to remind us of to help us stand against the enemy? May we be willing and open that the Lord can awaken us and plant deep truths in us, helping us to rely solely on Him as He guides us through this time. If we do, we will find that He will transform our wilderness into a beautiful fruitful place.
I read what author Eugene Peterson had to say about these verses as they are not opposites that are contradictory but rather what real life is all about as God puts together. Everything that happens is part of God’s time so then it is the right time, whether it be now to cry and then later to laugh, He is with us in both times of sorrow and joy. Now if you are like me, I would prefer to have the good times rather than times of suffering, but God is with us in each of those times. If we leave Him out of either one of those times, we miss the closeness of His presence and what He may be teaching us.
Let us not exclude certain times in our lives for they may be significant in our growth and maturity. We need both. God is with us in times of health or times of suffering. Lately I have had to pay more attention to my health and getting treatment each week. I can say I am learning things I was not aware of before and have greater empathy for others who have chronic conditions and live in pain. God is also with us when we are working as well in our leisure and if we look forward so much to the time we won’t have to work, we miss what He is teaching us daily in our work. May we be in the season God has us in right this minute and grow closer to Him.
May we practice putting others before ourselves and we will experience incredible joy. Let us ask the Lord to open our eyes to see the needs of those around us. Some may have physical needs that we can meet, and others may have emotional or spiritual needs. If the Lord lays it on our hearts, let us respond and do as Jesus said in Acts 20:35, ”It is more blessed to give than to receive!”
Now prayer isn’t that we always have feelings of joy and peace and comfort but sometimes it can be like feeling the well has run dry. We want to go back to those warm feelings, but God is beyond our human emotions and even when we feel like we are in a desert, He can speak to us. Our part is to open our hearts to Him however He comes to us. He is the one who is in charge and will move us on in our spiritual journey as He knows we are ready. Often the dryness is a sign that we are about to turn a corner and get ready for what is coming. Sometimes it is just good to sit in His presence quietly without saying anything but just be with Him. Almost the moment we do, distractions come to us, and we can just dismiss them. But if we fear we may forget something for later, we can keep a pad and pen handy to write down.
Prayer is not something we force, but is a gift of grace that we receive when we open our hearts to Him. Like Haas wrote, “The goal of all prayer is a prayerful surrender not only of the heart whose door is wide open to God but also the will that is eagerly prepared to respond to any divine invitation or request. “
© 2025 Canaan's Rest
Theme by Anders Noren — Up ↑
Recent Comments