

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.
I will get more personal and share what the Lord has been teaching me through the trail. The first thing that comes to mind is to slow down and be patient. I have long legs and walk faster than Al so I quickly learned that I had to slow my gait and walk in harmony with Al. If I am going to hear what he is saying, I need to walk in unison with him and am learning to do it more with less reminders.
The second lesson comes closely on the first as I need to not only walk slower but actually stop and visit along the 2 ½ miles that we walk. Now my husband is an extravert so nearly every person gets a greeting and often we actually stop and visit a short while. At first this was hard but gradually I could see the Lord’s purpose as he has brought many people into our lives and some with burdens. The first one was a man I have written about who had just lost his son and was grieving. We all knew it was the Lord that brought us together at such a pivotal time and he has become our friend who we pray for daily, as well as, his wife who is in an Alzheimer’s unit now.
Another lesson I learned is God may interrupt our schedules because of needs of others, as in the day we saw an aged woman who was lost and carrying groceries and did not know how to get back to the Assisted Living. She was headed the opposite way on the trail and we wondered when it would be discovered she was missing. We were able to convince her to turn around and brought her back to where she belonged and thanked the Lord she was safe.
Just recently I learned how the trail is a place to learn and grow from others and we often talk to a professor who we met. He shares his writings with us and we discuss them and grow through the exchanges and learn new things.
Every now and then, I feel the Lord smiling as he sends a friend along who walks slower than Al and the two of them visit as I get to walk as fast as I want, and even jog a bit. I sometimes sing and pray and get home in time to have Al’s supper waiting.
The trail has been a blessing, and I never know how long it will take to walk it on a particular day because it depends on what the Lord has in store for us. Perhaps a new friend, a lost soul that needs direction, or it could be He wants us just to praise Him and enjoy the beauty of nature.
The Lord has His ways of teaching us and He has used the Paul Bunyan trail to open my eyes more to His ways. In Isaiah 30:21 it says, “And your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, “this is the way, walk in it,” when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left.”
We can only love the souls of others when we know the Lord ourselves. Whatever we do for others, whether it be providing a big need or something small as listening to them, we are really doing it for the Lord. It is His power at work in us, to even give us the desire to reach out and touch others with His love. But in our reaching out to others we must never get so busy that we neglect the feeding of our own souls. As we read the Word, our own souls are fed and thereby we are given the strength to no longer live for ourselves but to live for Him. II Cor. 3:15) It is also helpful to pray the scriptures for certain verses will penetrate our hearts and also silence our own thoughts to think His thoughts.
When we open our hearts to others, we also open ourselves up to pain, as well. Sometimes those we help hurt us and we must expect pain as a follower of the Lord, for think what they did to Him. Sometimes people walk roughshod over our hearts, but let that not deter us from opening ours. We never know what God has in store for us, for often He surprises us. One such experience some time ago, I met a lady in a wheelchair at church who was legally blind. We exchanged names and she had heard I supplied clothes to different people, so she asked if I would find clothes for her. Since I worked at Share and Care then, I started looking for clothes in her size and brought them over to her at Assisted Living. But the Lord had much more in mind, for I spent time with her and we shared the Lord and prayed together. I have come to love her and each time we go to the lake I visit her; and since she now has more clothes than she can possibly wear I just bring her baked goods and root beer to celebrate with others and we spend the whole time sharing and praying. I always feel uplifted after my time with her.
The Lord has put each of us in a particular place to help us to grow in Him but also to help those around us. Let us keep our hearts open first to God’s love and then to others.
Eugene Haas writes about what it means to be selfless, and he describes such a person as being open to God and doesn’t have an obsession with self-concern, self-image, and self-gratification but each moment is celebrated as God invites them to empty themselves so others can be enriched. A beautiful example is Mary who didn’t count the cost, for after the angel told her she would bear the Son of God, she said, “Behold I am a servant of the Lord; let it be according to your word.” (Luke 1:38)
God wants all of us to grow in selflessness and move beyond ourselves to show His unconditional love to others. Freedom in the Lord is not simply to do what we want without restraints but to be free from our egos and consider others. The apostle Paul was so focused on the law and all the rules and when he was set free in Christ, he ends up saying he has made himself a slave to all, so he might win them to Christ. Let us all desire to be set free from our ego to live a self-emptying life for Christ and for others.
The Lord is to be our source and strength, not others. Even though they may be close to us, the pressure on any person for our happiness is too much, for only the Lord can fill that place. David sang in Psalm 28:7, “The Lord is my strength and my shield; my heart trusts in Him and I am helped therefore my heart exalts, and with my song I shall thank Him.” There were many people in David’s life that would certainly have been disappointing, including King Saul and his own son Absolum etc. Our expectancy and our hope must be in the Lord. (Psalm 27:2)
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The Lord asks us to do many things that we may not want to do, but if we want to walk by the Spirit, it means surrendering to what He shows us to do. It doesn’t depend our feelings and emotions but rather on we know from scripture and what the Spirit prompts us to do. We don’t need to ask ourselves if we “feel” like doing something that God asks us for it is more a matter of choosing to do what we know God asks of us. I was reading Joyce Meyer’s devotional and she said it well, that if our feelings vote ‘yes’ but our hearts say ‘no’ we need to tell our feelings they don’t get to vote! Feelings are immature and most often don’t vote what is best for us. Many times, the enemy toys with our feelings to get us to do things we know are not what God says. We can’t trust our feelings so let us not let them vote! How many of us reap disappointing consequences when we lead with our emotions and not by the spirit. Our feelings may say that what our neighbor said to us was uncalled for, so l will just tell him what I really think and let him have it! Or it can even be that our emotions tell us to keep working when we need to quit, rest, and not neglect our family. Feelings are not reliable so let us obey the Lord even when we don’t feel like it, and I find our right feelings usually catch up. Let us choose to obey!
It says in Gal.5:16, “But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desire of the flesh.” May we not let our emotions dictate our faith but walk in obedience.
Of course, we should always be open to praying with other believers, and it is good to have communal prayer, helping us realize we are not alone but part of the family of God. We pray Sunday mornings as we say the Lord’s prayer together, and also join in praying for those on the prayer list etc. There is much power in those prayers when we pray together. Of course we are to pray alone as well, and I often pray the Jesus Prayer, “Jesus, Son of David have mercy on me a sinner.” It was also the prayer of the blind beggar in Luke 18:13. Some like to pray the rosary and others like Lectio Divina where scripture is read 4 or 5 times, first to get the gist of it, then to meditate on it and see what seems to jump out, then to pray in response and then to just sit in silence and reflect on it. Some also move on to act in some way on the passage. Another way that Albert Haase, a Franciscan priest mentions, is how he reads the scripture several times and then asks what the passage speaks to his history, and to his head, to his heart and finally to his hands to take some action.
Imaginative prayer is also done by those who read the gospel and put themselves in the story of a certain character and scene. What would it feel like to be the prodigal or the elder brother and it may trigger feelings from the past to share with a spiritual director. Or you may like to pray what I remember by the acronym ACTS. Start with Adoration and a prayer and then proceed to Confess our sins of commission and omission before going on to Thanksgiving as we remember God’s gifts to us and conclude with Supplication. That is a time to ask for prayer needs and intercede for others. There are many more ways to pray but it is up to us to find our own unique ways that open us up to a closer relationship with the Lord.
It’s not healthy to stuff our emotions and deny them but we need to welcome them and deal with them and share with the Lord. Only thereby can we let them go can and say goodbye to them. We just come as we are to the Lord and tell Him how we feel. Maybe as we read a Psalm it is David or another expressing to God what we are feeling in our heart now and we can make his prayer our prayer. So often David is in a tight spot and fleeing for his life and he calls out to God to be his shield, his refuge, his safe place. Psalm 103, “O Lord many are my foes! Many are rising against me…. But you, O Lord are a shield about me, my glory and the lifter of my head.” It is helpful to memorize some of the Psalms and they can become our words to the Lord of what is in our heart. Maybe we have experienced a wonderful blessing from the Lord and we are filled with such thankfulness that we turn to Psalm 103 and “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name! Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.”
Let us pray from where we are at the time, not gloss over things, but speak to the Lord what is in our hearts. Sometimes it doesn’t seem very pretty, but it is real and when we give the Lord those things He will sort them out and bring us to a new place.
We need to discover God in the present moment, not having a fixation on the past or thinking only of the future. Let us experience the NOW and know that God is present in it where we are at. We are also to be full of gratitude, realizing everything we have is a gift from Him. That should help us to live with open hands to help and serve others who God brings into our lives, knowing they have unique gifts for us in return also.
Let us be humble to know our brokenness but also aware of God’s grace He offers daily. He knocks at our heart’s door and desires to transform our lives, so we see things in the colors of grace and are open to the wonder of His presence.
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