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.

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December 27, 2021

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a blessed Christmas! We are home now from 2 days at the hotel with about 40 relatives and it was a wonderful time. So many good talks together and everyone also sharing about their families after our Christmas feast! We shopped yesterday at Mall of America and found the sales too. Emoji Thank you for prayers as we went home in lots of snow and icey roads about 1/2 way. Grateful to be back home safely!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Christmas is a reality, not just a story that we tell to children; Jesus really came and He makes all the difference in the world. This reality of His coming changes our lives in the deepest and most profound ways.
I was reading today from Psalms 33:21-22 (God’s Word), “In Him our hearts find joy. In His holy name we trust. Let your mercy rest on us, O Lord, since we wait with hope for you.”
Our joy is in the One who came and gave Himself for us. Jesus is God’s gift to us and He gave us the most precious gift ever; when we come to know Him, we experience a peaceful rest in our spirit and live in hope.
I am a bargain hunter and I do not like paying full price when I know it was on sale previously or will be on sale in the near future. But God did not hold back His best Gift for us and it came at an enormous price… He did this so we would be set free and come to know His love and joy. But this gift is something we are to receive; it is not just for those who try to live a good life, or those who are rich and famous…it is for the poor, blind, and all who know they are sinners and need a Savior. 
And when we receive this Gift we are not to hide it but to tell others the gift is also for them. When I find something of value, I love to tell my friends so they can get in on it too!
I think of the shepherds and how after they found baby Jesus, they went back to their flocks glorifying and praising God. I’m sure they couldn’t keep this wonderful news inside and told others all along the way.
As we begin a New Year, let us also ask God for boldness to share the Good News of His wondrous Gift.
Challenge for today: Seek to share the Lord with someone who God places in your life today.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

 

Coach Bronco Mendenhall

As a football fan, I read with interest the news that coach Bronco Mendenhall recently resigned as head football coach of the Virginia Cavaliers.   It came as a shock to the administration and especially the fans – particularly because the team won nine games and went to the Orange Bowl in 2019, and the university’s program has been quite successful with Mendenhall as coach.

The coach said it was 100% his choice. “He has done an exceptional job of not just transforming the program, but elevating the expectations for the program,” noted Virginia Athletic Director Carla Williams. Referring to Mendenhall’s impact on the players, Williams said, “He is more than a football coach, and the impact he has had on these young men will be a positive influence for the rest of their lives.” 

Reading between the lines, I take it that Coach Mendenhall is a man of integrity, with a wholesome character that rubbed off on his players.  But in terms only a coach could have expressed, Mendenhall said that after “31 years of straight football…I need to step back from college football.”  He felt he had to “reassess, renew, reframe, reinvent with my wife as a partner [my emphasis] our future and the next chapter of our life.”  He and his wife Holly were celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary this year, so he felt this was the best decision for him to make.  Even his wife was shocked.  But the coach felt he needed to do this to be “the very best person I can be moving forward.” 

Wow! I really admire this coach!  You could tell in his short video on Twitter that sincere words were coming from a man who had his priorities straight.  Not many coaches would walk away from a successful program to “renew, reframe, reinvent, and reconnect in his marriage.”  I tip my Kansas State football cap to the coach.  I wonder: how many coaches would walk away from the fame and glory that accompany a successful football program?   

What can we learn from the Coach Mendenhall’s example?  First, he certainly is an exemplar in establishing the right priorities for marriage.  He thought of his wife as a “partner in the next chapter of our life.” 25 years is a milestone in any marriage.  In the next phase of their marriage, he wanted to his wife’s input as his “partner” as he attempts to “reframe, renew, and reinvent” his marriage.  That takes some serious relationship work on his part. 

Men, I encourage you to include your wife in all those transitions in life and have the courage to include her as an equal partner in reevaluating your marriage.  It could be an anniversary, the empty nest, or even a physical move.  For my bride and me, it was our recent move to a senior apartment away from the lake. It was a mutual decision. I thank the Lord since the move was more difficult for me than it was for my bride. Judy helped me to “step back” and continually reevaluate the decision we had made together.

Secondly, the coach had the courage to say to the world, “My marriage is more important than my coaching career.”  My hunch is that the coach was more concerned about improving his marriage of 25 years than becoming more successful with the “X’s and O’s” of the game of football.  He was not willing to sacrifice his marriage on the altar of the Virginia Football program.  Men, tending to the demands of your marriage is more important than the demands imposed on you by your chosen career.    

December 25, 2021

Dear Ones,
We will be leaving this morning to go to the hotel in the cities to gather with the relatives to celebrate Christmas. We missed doing that last year so it seems even more special this year. We look forward to our big meal together and time to fellowship and catch up… We pray that we will all remain well also.
For devotions today I want to share a poem that a friend, former Board Members of Canaan, wrote and sent us. Hope you will enjoy it and remember the significance of the Christmas trees you will see. Have a most wondrous Christmas and your challenge today is to simply enjoy Christmas in whatever circumstance the Lord has you in right now and to give Him thanks.

Christmas Tree by Robert Althoff

 What do you see when you see a Christmas Tree?

With the tinsel placed just like the shining sea

The lights of colors that gleam in the night

And the top with the Star glistening bright

 
The meaning is much ,much more

Than the lights and ornaments galore

It is about the Star of whom the people did sing

“Glory to God in the Highest” to the Newborn King

 

The tree made of wood and branches spread wide

Could make the cross on which Jesus, our Savior, died

The color green represents life everlasting

This life can be yours if you just ask Him

 

The lights are as the Light of the World, the True Light

Shining with colors so beautiful and bright

The tinsel hanging with so large of an amount

Like God’s mercies un-ending to count

 

Bows and garland wrapped around the tree

Is like God’s Grace that warms you and me

Some ornaments are glowing crimson red

Reminds us of the blood for us He shed

 

Give Jesus your heart and happy you will be

His gift of life has made us free

How beautiful are all the wonderful trees?

None so beautiful as “God’s Christmas Tree.”

December 24, 2021

Dear Ones,
Happy Christmas weekend! Hope each of you is blessed in a special way as you gather with family and friends etc to celebrate the birthday of the King of Kings. We are going to Ann’s this morning and stopping on the way to see a friend at Birchview. Nice to be able to see all 3 grandsons as Lars flew in from San Antonio for 10 days. We plan to get home in time to go to our church and then tomorrow will pack up for the hotel. Lots of food to get together!
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Do we want to live a life for God, or are we wrapped up in ourselves and thinking of what is best for us? If we look around us, the happiest people are those that are helping and serving others. The apostle Paul found contentment but not because everything in his life was rosy and good, but in serving the Lord and the giving of his life for others. That sounds beautiful but it is not always easy to live that way. Paul says in Philippians 2:13(NRSV), “for it is God who is at work in you, enabling you both to will and to work for His good pleasure.”
Sometimes we may not feel like obeying the Lord, and we need the power of the Holy Spirit to motivate us and help us to carry through to do what God asks of us. Maybe we are called on to bring a meal to a sick family, or to take care of someone’s children while the mom goes to the Doctor, or to fix the plugged-up sink of a widow. If we choose to obey, the Lord will come along side of us and give us the desire and will to do His will. And afterwards we are left with the sense of God’s pleasure and His presence with us.
When we walk with our friend David, he often remarks about how the Lord must increase in our lives and we must decrease. It’s really a choice and either we expect to be served or we are willing to serve others. But as Jesus’ followers, He is to become greater and we become less. It’s like John the Baptist; he was only the forerunner and knew when to get out of the way for the One who was to come. We also need to step aside and allow Jesus to be seen.
Paul goes on to say that we shouldn’t murmur but rather shine out like stars in the world. Others should be able to tell by our lives that we belong to the Lord. I think the secret is for us to humble ourselves and decrease that the spotlight will be on the Lord.
Challenge for today: The next time you receive credit for a good deed, give the glory to the Lord!
Blessings to you at this holy time and prayers and love, Judy

 

December 23, 2021

Dear Ones,                                                                                                                                                                Hope you are having a good day as you prepare for Christmas. I cleaned the apartment this morning, went to Super One and downstairs for coffee etc. We plan to walk with friends this afternoon and are going to the Lake tomorrow to celebrate Christmas Eve day with Ann’s family; all 3 grandsons are home! Emoji 
Devotions from Judy’s heart                                                                                                                           This is a hard Christmas for so many people who have lost loved ones, as they feel the emptiness of their presence no longer with them.  Many of you have prayed for my cousin Susie who died and like us, you also have friends who have lost their spouses and children. As families go through grief, tears spill out unexpectedly when they are flooded with memories of times past when their loved ones were present. If you are one of them, then perhaps Dena Johnson’s prayer may express to the Lord what you feel.                                                                                     “Lord Jesus, 
 I am so overwhelmed. My heart is heavy, burdened. The losses this year are crushing me, overcoming my peace and joy. I know you tell us you are close to the brokenhearted, but I don’t feel you. I feel lost, hopeless, abandoned.                                             I know this is a season, a season that has a beginning and an end. But right now it feels like it will never end. I need hope, hope to believe you will truly restore me, strengthen me. I need hope to believe you will one day have me put together and on my feet for good. I need a vision of the future you have for me, a future of hope and blessings from you.                                                                                                                                                 It’s so easy to become distracted, to focus on the many losses I have experienced. Forgive me. Help me to put my thoughts, my attention on you. Help me cling to you, to your word, to your promises. Help me be fixed on you because I know it’s the only way to enjoy your perfect peace.  As I walk through this holiday season, give me a fresh glimpse of who You are. Help me remember the suffering You experienced as You watched your Son on the cross, a gift given just for me. Help me remember with joy and wonder the amazing gifts we have simply because you gave, a precious baby born that Christmas morning. Help me focus my heart and mind on Immanuel, God with me.                                                                                                                                                                                      You are my hope, my only hope, for Christmas and every day on this earth. May I always carry your hope with me.   In Jesus’ Name I pray. Amen pray.                                            Challenge for today: Pray for those who are grieving and thank the Lord that He is our hope.

December 22, 2021

Dear Ones,
Hope you are having a good day and keeping warm. I  got blueberry muffins made for the men’s group tomorrow and went to Exercise class this morning. We hope to get a walk in and go to Bible Study tonight. In between we are getting ready for our Christmas gathering and I am making a sweet potato dish now. 
Devotions from Judy’s heart
This morning I went downstairs at 6:20 am to our entryway, intending to wait for a friend who said she was coming with a gift for me on her way to work at the hospital. She is a chaplain and God uses her to touch so many people’s lives, including mine. I love when we bump into her on the Paul Bunyan trail and we have church right there as we share the Lord together. At Christmas she gives me lovely gifts for writing devotions for her ministry, but it her presence that is really the gift to me. Her boldness, kindness and compassion, and love for God speak volumes to me.  And today, I must have just missed her but her beautiful gifts were left behind.
Just before she came, I read from an old tattered devotional book of Billy Graham, and he wrote about how God gave a Person as a gift to each of us, and of course that is the Person of Jesus. We don’t always think of a person as a gift but Jesus is the ultimate gift of all times. Graham shared a verse from Romans 8:32, “He that spared not his only Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not…freely give us all things?” God gave His very best to us in His Son and he loved us so much He gave His life for us; nothing can compare with that! If we receive the gift of Himself in faith, He changes our life forever; we will never be the same!
 The Lord also gives us those special relationships with others who know Him and they are far more valued than any physical gifts. These friends are the ones who pray for us, who stand with us, and who encourage us as we share the Lord together.
Maybe our circumstances seem less than ideal during this time of Covid, but when we have the Lord, we have the Gift of all gifts. Graham shares the story of a little 6- year-old boy who answered a knock at the door one day. It was his daddy that had just returned from Southeast Asia. He didn’t ask his daddy what he brought him, but he simply threw his arms around his daddy and said, “Oh Daddy, this is the best Christmas present ever!”
There is not greater gift than Jesus and He is the one who loves us unconditionally and gives us hope, and He is coming again soon!
Challenge for today: Take time to appreciate the most wondrous Gift and give Him thanks.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

December 21, 2021

Dear Ones,
Hope you wake to a peace-filled day. Christmas is only days away and is there a  family tradition you have that is meaningful to you? Our family gathering may be over 40 relatives at a hotel and I love that we can catch up with one another and go home knowing more how to pray for each one. 
Devotions from Judy’s heart
As we get closer to Christmas, we have to make a conscious choice to make Jesus our first priority. It is easy to crowd Him out as we rush to buy the perfect gifts for others, bake special pastries, plan gatherings, go to Christmas parties and programs etc. Debbie McDaniel writes a prayer that can help us put the focus where it should be, on Jesus, and make room to keep Him first.
“Dear God,
Help us to keep our focus first on Christ this season. Please forgive us for giving too much time and attention on other things. Help us to reflect again, on what Christmas is really all about. Thank you that you came to give new life, peace, hope, and joy. Thank you that your power is made perfect in our weakness. Help us to remember that the gift of Christ, Immanuel, is our greatest treasure, not just at Christmas, but for the whole year through. Fill us with your joy and the peace of your Spirit. Direct our hearts and minds towards you. Thank you for your reminder that both in seasons of celebration and in seasons of brokenness, you’re still with us. For you never leave us. Thank you for your daily powerful Presence in our lives, that we can be assured your heart is towards us, your eyes are over us, and your ears are open to our prayers. Thank you that you surround us with favor as with a shield, and we are safe in your care. We choose to press in close to you today…and keep you first in our hearts and lives.
In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”
Challenge for today: Pray this prayer from your heart and choose to put Him first.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy

December 20, 2021

Dear Ones,
Hope you had a wonderful weekend! Christmas is coming soon! Today I made a big G.F. spaghetti type dish and bars incase our grandsons stop by, and went to Aldi’s and my exercise class. Burr it is cold out! 
Devotions from Judy’s heart
The faith of a child is beautiful and perhaps they can tell the Christmas story better than anyone. At this time of the year there are children’s Christmas programs happening in churches all throughout our nation; parents and grandparents and friends who may not go to church regularly during the year, will come from miles away to see their precious ones act out and retell the Christmas story. It can soften hearts and bring tears to the hardest skeptics.
I remember as a very young girl waiting for my turn to sing a solo on a verse of When He Cometh and I was terrified at the time. But somehow, I got through it and the memory is still very vivid! It was not like that for a young girl at our church yesterday, when we had our S.S. program.  My heart was so touched by her comfort and ease of being upfront and joy was written all over her. She was dressed like one of the angels with a sparkling crown and was excited to sing and say her part. She just kept smiling to her parents and grandparents all in the front row. There was no self-consciousness but rather a freedom to just express what was in her heart. So beautiful! 
Towards the close of the program, the congregation sang, “Go Tell It On the Mountain..that Jesus Christ is born.” Why aren’t we all like this little girl that freely wanted to share the Good News with others, for it is the best news of all time?
The Apostle Paul was not ashamed to share Christ and says in Romans 1:16 (Message), “It’s news I’m most proud to proclaim, this extraordinary Message of God’s powerful plan to rescue everyone who trusts Him, starting with Jews and then right on to everyone else!” We have the most wonderful message to proclaim to others and let us do it with boldness and joy. There are preachers today that believe God will raise up this present generation of youth to bring in the greatest revival today.
Let us pray for the youth to have a holy boldness, but also include ourselves in that prayer, so we may all freely share the Good News.
Challenge for today: Pray for opportunities to joyfully share the Lord with others.
Blessings on your week and prayers and love, Judy

 

The Empty Manger

I saw something the other day that seemed to be an appropriate metaphor for our holiday season. While waiting for my wife in our local bank’s parking lot, I noticed a manager scene in which the baby Jesus was missing. Mary looked adoringly into an empty manger while Joseph pointed to it. It seemed to be saying, “We have canceled the reason for the season,” almost mocking the story of Mary and Joseph.  

How appropriate the empty manger scene is in contemporary culture.  We no longer have the so-called “Christmas wars,” when we used cry “foul” because Christ had been taken out of Christmas programs. “God with us” has been canceled altogether.  “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel – which means, ‘God with us.'” (Matt. 1:23).  This is no longer the narrative.  

The good news that the shepherds were so excited to share is no longer being sung in malls and public squares. “”Do not be afraid. I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10-11). Christmas carols are no longer giving witness to the good news. As a result, we have to produce our own version of the good news, which often ends up being, “Let’s try harder next year.”  

We now have to be cautious to whom we dare wish a “Merry Christmas.”  The word “Christmas” is seldom heard in the dominant culture. The message, of course, is that we can go on to have “Happy Holidays” without any awareness that Christmas has its origins in celebrating the birth of God’s only begotten Son as a baby born of the virgin Mary.  

What can an empty manager at Christmas teach us? 

First, be intentional in celebrating the ultimate meaning of Christmas in your daily life.  Enjoy the festive nature of this time of year.  But don’t forget the real meaning. Tell the story as it has been told for over 2,000 years.  Have the courage of young Joseph, who believed the message given him regarding the young woman he would marry.  “She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins” (Matt. 1:21). Tell the story especially to the younger generation, before it fades from their memory.

Second, remember you are part of a greater story.  Don’t forget that Jesus came to bring his kingdom presence into our lives.  It’s sad to see how small and self-focused our collective national consciousness has become.  Get out of your small story and celebrate the life you have within the life of the Trinity. “We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us.  And our fellowship is with the Father and his Son. We write this to make our joy complete” (I John 1:3-4).   

Third, live out gratitude. It is God’s love for you and me that sent His one and only Son into the world.  God took the initiative so we would take initiative with others. We live among many lonely people who live with a sense of abandonment. They have no clear identity.  Who really cares for them?  God showed his love by becoming one of us: “This is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (I John 4:10). 

 

 

 

December 18, 2021

Dear Ones,
Hope you are enjoying the weekend and not overly busy with Christmas preparations. I look out my window to more snow but very beautiful. This morning I made a couple Mexican pies and took a neighbor friend to the Dollar Store. Our grandson is due here any minute.  Later this afternoon we will be going to the Soup kitchen to serve. Yesterday we had a big turnout for the Birthday party. 
Devotions from Judy’s heart
All of us need healing in our lives as we have had experiences that wounded us, words that hurt us, and were raised by imperfect parents. But we aren’t always aware of the wounding of our souls and need the Holy Spirit to work in our hearts and bring healing where needed.
I have often sung the song, “Come Holy Spirit I need Thee/ Come sweet Spirit I pray/ Come in thy strength and thy power/ Come in your own gentle way.” It is an invitation for the Holy Spirit to go to work in our hearts and free us from those hidden hurts and bring inner healing…even to those deep places.
I saw Christian Home Decor company online today and one of the Biblical framed posters said, “Holy Spirit You are Welcome Here.” What a reminder to the family who pass by it many times a day and a witness to others as well.
As I write this, I feel warm and cozy as our furnace is in the closet close by. Three years ago when we first moved to our apartment home, I would experience cold air pouring out on me as I would sit at my desk. I put insulation around the door etc. but it didn’t help much. One day we had to get maintenance as the furnace didn’t seem to work well and it was discovered that a piece was left out when they put the furnace in four years before. The piece was ordered and when it was installed, it made all the difference. I don’t need the space heater anymore and I am very comfortably warm as I write. The truth is I had no idea we were missing a part and yet the evidence was there in the cold air.
There are hurts in our lives that may have happened so long ago that we have only a faint memory of, and yet they affect our present live. We may have exaggerated responses to things, read more into situations than is there etc. They are signs that we need healing and we can ask the Holy Spirit to do a deep work. He may use our pastor or counselor or mentor to aid this process but it is the Holy Spirit who reads our hearts and knows what piece is missing.
It says in Psalm 147:3 (Message), “He heals the heartbroken and bandages their wounds.”  God is right there and listening and ready to help and heal our deepest wounds. May our prayer be as the second verse to the song goes, “Come like a spring in the desert/ Come to the withered of soul/ Lord let They sweet healing power/ Touch me and make me whole.”
Challenge for today: Welcome the Holy Spirit to heal your heart!
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
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