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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Oct. 6th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

As I went for my prayer walk I was aware of how the leaves let the wind just blow them freely about until they land on the ground. Some try to hang on and make it though part of the winter but maybe they miss the joy of the free fall.  I wonder how many times we are like those tenacious leaves that hang on and want to be in control. But are we ever really in control?   When we hang on so tightly and don’t release our selves to Him, we miss the wonderful freedom God has for us.   In  II Cor. 3:17 it says,  “Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is freedom.”  But when we let the Spirit blow us where He wills, it takes trust on our part as we don’t know where He will take us.  Fresh in my mind is the freedom Kurt and Brenda are experiencing now. They left if up to the Lord if they should move and the Lord gave a clear answer to their prayers. They didn’t get blown all the way to Chicago but are landing near the roots of their present tree. May each of us release ourselves daily so the Spirit can move us as He wills.

Inviting the good and the bad

As I was working on the sermon for Sunday from Matthew 22:1-14, I was reminded of something that David Benner pointed out about this text.  It is the parable of the wedding banquet.  The king prepares a banquet for his son.  He sends out his servants to tell those who have been invited to come because the banquet is ready.  But they refuse.  “They paid no attention and went off” to do others things.  In Jesus’ day it was unheard of to turn down an invitation to the wedding banquet. 

So the king sends his servants out to invite anyone they can find to attend the banquet. “So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, the bad as well as the good, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.  Benner suggests that we use our imagination to visualize an invitation to bring our whole self to the banquet.  That is, be honest and open before God about who we really are.  There is both the good and the bad in our personal make-up and story.  We are conditioned to bring only good parts of who we are into the presence of God.  But he invites us to bring all that we are; that good, the bad and the ugly.  I know that I spent many years hiding the bad.  It made for an unreal relationship with God, in which I never experienced his unconditional love and mercy for me

By bringing the bad into the banquet one can find a new freedom and acceptance before God.   Our tendency, which is the result of a life long conditioning is to always present our best face or side to others, including God.  So what happens to the bad.  It gets buried.  But the bad is still a part of who we are.  This is reality.  God sees all of who we are.  He waits for us to bring both the bad and the good to the banquet.  Again, men I tell you from experience, it is not until we bring our whole self into the presence of God, that we can experience and know his unconditional love.  When you experience acceptance in all your shame and vulnerability, you will know that you are home in the presence of a loving Father, who calls you are his beloved. 

A new insight that come to me as I pondered the bring of the good and bad into the presence of God, is that this invitation is to a celebration.  What does this mean for us as men?  I know for myself  it means that I can come as I am, both with the good and bad, and celebrate in the presence of the Father.  The parable also includes a guest who came without wedding cloths.  This never happens at a banquet put on by the king.  Wedding garments were provided for those who did not have them.  For us this means that we can come to the banquet, with the good and bad, and know that we are robed in the righteousness of Christ.   Jesus makes me worthy to be with the king.  The king accepts me as I am, because of what Jesus has done for me.  He covers me.  I can really celebrate in the presence of the king, because of Jesus.  To me this is joy, knowing that I am free to be me, with all the good and bad, in the presence of the king because it has nothing to do with me, but it has all to do with what Jesus did for me.

Oct. 5th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

Devotions from Judy’s heart

This afternoon Al and I began our preparation for winter, including cleaning out the chimney and wood stove, piling wood on the porch, etc. We know winter that is coming even though it was a warm sunny day today.

As I was taking my prayer walk I thought of how important it is to prepare for the Winter Time of our lives as we look forward to eternity.  Eugene Peterson said we should pray every day for a good death. How do we prepare? If you have suggestions, I will print and pass on to others who get these daily e-mails. It seems like at this time of our lives we tend to revert back more and more to our beginning years, as we become more dependant on others and accept their help. Being a “grateful receiver” helps!  We start thinking of what we will leave behind, just like putting away the deck chairs and summer things.  We begin putting aside those things that we want to leave behind for those we love.

We focus more on what is ahead of us and not on our aches and pains, knowing we will soon receive a new perfect healthy body. We may do some cleaning up ( as the chimney cleaning) and make amends with people who we have been hurt by or whom we have hurt. We may spend more time appreciating the little things in the present, as we are not sure how long we will have. The more I think about it, the more I believe we should live that way every day, even before the winter season comes upon us.

Oct. 4th

Devotions from Judy’s heart,
Today I went for a prayer walk and the road was brilliant with color. Some of the leaves have turned golden, others bright red, and some orange etc. They are preparing to let go and fall to the ground as the wind blows upon them. I thought of how we are all in process of “shriveling” too and one day will die and be put into the ground.  But even though we may get wrinkled, we can still shine forth with His presence that lives within us. This was so evident when Grace and I visited her friend Helen who is in her 80’s and getting wrinkled, but is so aglow with the love of the Lord. One glorious day, in God’s perfect timing, the wind of the Spirit will usher each of us who know Him, to our real home in glory.  May the last of our days show forth the beauty and glory of the Lord in our lives!  And even as the fallen leaves provide compost for the soil, the memory of the lives of the saints that have gone before us enrich our lives even now.

Oct. 3rd

 Devotions from Judy’s heart

“Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain.” Ps. 127:1
One thing we have noticed on our trip was the variety of homes and their locations. We saw some lovely mansions built on high bluffs without a single tree near. Being from MN I can hardly imagine doing that as we love being surrounded by a forest of trees. In fact we like it that our house cannot be seen by people from the lake who are fishing.  But those who stand out on the cliffs for all to see would probably feel “suffocated” if they lived where we do!  There was a time in ministry when we were more up front and seen, but now the Lord has us more hidden and it feels right. Al calls us a monk and a nun in the woods. People who come to Canaan are often those whom God is bringing into a more quiet contemplative time alone with Him.  We’re not all alike or serve in the same place but we need to pay attention to where the Lord would have us dwell in each season of our lives.  But may our homes be filled with the fragrance of Christ just as “Mary poured perfume on Jesus feet and the house was filled with the fragrance.” John 12:3

Oct. 1st

Devotions from Judy’s heart

We are told to seek the Lord while he may be found and to call on Him while He is near. “Is. 55:6.  Have you sensed the Holy Spirit prompting you to do something, respond in a certain way, or say something to someone you had not planned? How good it feels when we obey promptly and feel the Lord’s smile on us. We need to respond at the very time when the Holy Spirit moves upon us. When we don’t act on His prompting the moment passes and we may no longer sense that same leading. The moment is gone! I notice with our little grandson, John Mark, how he readily responds to his mom or dad when they tell him to put away his toys etc. It gives his parents pleasure when they don’t have to coerce him but he obeys right away. I think the Lord gets pleasure when we are quick to obey too!  I wish that were always true in my life but so many times I question etc.
In the prayer from Daily texts from Mount Carmel Ministries I read this prayer that I want to be my prayer: “Gentle Spirit, your love moves us in directions of your choosing. Sometimes I feel the movement and sometimes I don’t. Give me a sense of awareness so that I can seek to move as you would have me move, to live as you would have me live. Open my life to the riches of your treasure today.”

Sept. 30th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

“From the rising of the sun to its setting my name is great among the nations, ’”says the Lord.

As we watch sunrises over the mountains it is a reminder of the end of night and hope bursting into being. If we have lost our hope in what seems like an impossible situation, we may feel daybreak will never come. But in the Lord, no situation is hopeless, for we can cast every care on our all-powerful God who will sustain us and never let us fall.( Ps. 55:22).  We can have hope ( not merely wishful thinking) but deep down trust in Him who will hold us fast in what may seem to the world to be hopeless. “The sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its wings. (Mal 4:2). With healing comes hope bursting with peace, knowing all is well with our souls.

Sept. 29th

Devotions from Judy’s heart

On our trip we have seen such beautiful scenery each day and sometimes it is just breath taking. But most of the time we are not looking out our rear view mirror but straight ahead out our spacious windshield. We will miss all that God has for us if we keep looking back. There is a song that goes something like this: “I look not back, God knows the fruitless efforts, the wasted hours, the sinning, the regrets. I leave them all with Him who blots the record, and graciously forgives and then forgets.”  If we keep looking back through our rear view mirror, just think of how much we miss.  It says in Isaiah 43:1 “Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See I am doing a new thing!”  It is good to reflect on our past, just as it is good sometimes to use that rear view mirror. But let us not dwell there and open our eyes to the new.

Sept. 28th

Devotions from Judy’s heart,
Yesterday when we were traveling on mountain roads, a big logging truck was right on our tail. He was so close to our back end and started to make us nervous. The speed limit for trucks was set slower than that of cars but he was reckless and going way over the speed limit. All of a sudden he passed us and we felt very relieved to not have him breathing down on us. I thought of how uncomfortable it is when we feel pushed by others on our spiritual journey? Maybe they expect so much out of us before we were ready?  Or maybe we recall pushing someone else in their Christian walk to be in the same place we are or to see things our way?  I know pastors are vulnerable to parishioners pushing something they want for the whole church.  Maybe it is a concern to them but they think the whole church should move that way. We must guard against pressuring others rather than letting the Holy Spirit do the wooing and prompting. He is gentle and guides us, but doesn’t push us. He also knows when we are ready for His next move in our lives.

Velcro or Teflon Personality

Last sunday the gospel text that I preached on was from Matt 18:21-35.  It is the parable of the unforgiving debtor.  I sensed the urgency of communicating the joy and freedom of living “a lifestyle of forgiveness.”  After over forty years of being a pastor among Lutheran folks, I know there are many who live in a deep, dark cave of their own making, because of unforgiveness.  Church people can be some of the most unforgiving people on the planet, because they think their good behavior can cover their dark side.  My greatest challenge has been forgiving church people. But at the ripe, old age of 70 I sense that I have been able to embrace a lifestyle of forgiveness.  It has not been easy. I know I will be tested in the future.  There were years when I lived in the “far country” of anger and resentment because of my unforgiving spirit.  But by the grace of God I have tasted something of the freedom and joy of living in forgiveness.  I pray that each man who is reading this blog today will know the freedom of forgiveness.

We have the choice, says Father Albert Haase, of either being “a velcro personality” to which all hurts stick or “a teflon personality to which all hurts slide right off.   For the velcro personality, “treasured emotional wounds and scars become like fish bones stuck in the throat.  Even the smallest bones can be excruciating,” observes Father Haase.  The teflon personality might not forget, but they choose to forgive.  They decide it is better to stop picking and nursing the scab.

Father Haase paints a sad picture of the velcro personality. “It takes a lot of emotional and psychological energy to keep a wound open, to keep a grudge alive.  And the more we work to keep it alive, the more emotionally drained we become as the grudge saps us of our strength.  The longer we allow a wound to fester, or the longer we keep picking its scab, the more bitterness, anger and self-pity poison our blood and eat at our hearts.”  I personally identify with the experience of Ann Lamott when she describes her experience. “I went around saying for a long time that I am not one of the Christians who is heavily into forgiveness – that I am one of the other kind.  But even though it was funny and actually true, it started to be too painful to stay this way… In fact, not forgiving is like drinking rat poison and waiting for the rat to die.”  I had a hard time admitting that I was drinking rat poison.  I had to come to the place of humility and repentance before the cross.

Why do I say before the cross.  When I look up at the Lord Jesus on the cross, I see him taking into his body my sin, opening the way for my forgiveness.  “He canceled the record of the charges against us and took it away by nailing it to the cross” (Col 2:14).  Granting me forgive, was very costly.  But Jesus did it all so that I might be set free from my sin.  He paved the way so that I might have a forgiving heart.  Paul tells us in Ephesians, “be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven you” (Eph 4:32).  When Jesus lives in my heart, he is the one who is forgiving others through me.  He gives me the ability to have a telfon personality.

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