Challenge for today: Pray for a soul mate and be open to whom God would send.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
Page 53 of 369
But even when we will to go God’s way, we need His help to do it. Left on our own we may not follow through or we may quit before we accomplish what He has instructed us to do. As we choose to do His will, He gives us grace and desire to follow it. In Proverbs 16:9, it says, “A man’s mind plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps and makes them sure.” Let us go God’s way and embrace His plans and find joy in His will.
Each day for me it was something different I felt the Lord would have me do, but I would like to share one instance in particular. I was asked by Jane to serve coffee for our Octoberfest Party, and many had signed up for it. I had told Al ahead of time that we needed to sit by another couple as I probably wouldn’t have much time to be with him since I was serving. (At the Birthday parties my helpers and I don’t usually get to sit down so Al eats with others.) When I got there that night to put the coffee on, help was needed to get the food ready and then to serve it to each one at the tables and about 5 of us helped. It didn’t take long and since Jane had told me to wait to serve coffee until dessert, I was able to enjoy supper with Al and another couple. After the live entertainment and fun, Al and I and many others stayed to help clean up and what I noticed was the joy, especially of Jane who planned the whole dinner and entertainment and got people to help. She is not able to be on her feet long and uses a cane and yet she bought all the decorations and ingredients for the food and assigned people to bake and do things. In the end, many people were used to serve, decorate, bake, help in various ways and we all had a most enjoyable time.
Serving is God’s way of helping our own hearts, as we all tend to selfishness. We need to set aside what we think will make us happy and choose to do what the Lord directs us to do that will leave us feeling fulfilled. It may be as simple as sending someone a card, making a meal for a sick friend, or bringing a word of encouragement to someone who is down.
Challenge for today: Set aside thoughts of self-pleasing and dare to ask the Lord how you can serve someone else today.
Blessings on your day and prayers and love, Judy
I like what Dallas Willard says about them. “The disciplines are activities of mind and body purposefully undertaken, to bring our personality and total being into effective cooperation with the divine order. They enable us more and more to live in a power that is, strictly speaking, beyond us, deriving from the spiritual realm itself, as we ‘yield ourselves to God, as those that are alive from the dead, and our members as instruments of righteousness unto God’”.
Our part is to slow down and make space for the Lord to do His work of transformation in our hearts. We can’t transform ourselves for even if we do all the spiritual disciplines, we may become self-righteous and controlling and forget we are to live by grace. The disciplines are simply an aid to help us in growing to be like Jesus. He empowers us by His Spirit and disciplines help us to access that power.
Tomorrow I will name some of the disciplines, many that Jesus modeled in his own life like prayer, fasting Sabbath, solitude, rest, scripture etc. But like John Mark Comer writes that “anything can become a spiritual discipline if we offer it to God as a channel of Grace… God works and we work. God has a part and we have a part.”
In an article entitled “Men only want one thing” in Comment magazine, men are referred to as being like “timber.” “Will they be shaped into good, sturdy beams and joists that will shelter, support, and protect? Or will they shape themselves in their own wild ways, producing knotty. weak, and crooked lengths that don’t do anyone any good?” May we be “good timber.” The author, Nathan Beacom, suggests “there’s something about America today that doesn’t jibe with the male psyche.” The author believes monasticism offers keen psychological insights into the psychic and moral wounds of men.
Beacom offers a spectrum of manhood. One the one end is “the tough man.” “For many men this tough guy leaves festering wounds of inadequacy and insecurity that can lead to all kinds of pathological behaviors.” On the other end of the spectrum is “the sophisticated ally.” “The ally tends to talk down his own sex in an effort to set him apart from the negative strands of masculinity.” Then there is the “full man,” having the moral ideal of a man expressed in gentleness and goodness. “Failing this, strength, size, speed, aggression, and active sexual desire remain – but untutored and undisciplined.”
The author favors a “gentle man,” who is an integrated man, “both iron and disciplined on the one hand and gentle and patient on the other…….[which ] finds a harmonic resonance with the Christian monastic tradition.” The Rule of Saint Benedict, “contains sharp and enduring psychological insights into the process of taking the raw material of masculinity and shaping it into good manhood.” The Rule identifies “three key developmental strands that are lacking in our culture today: fatherhood, brotherhood, and discipline.”
First is fatherhood. “Manhood is passed in only one real way: from man to man.” The rule sees the self-willed man who sets his own law based on his desires. “This is the shepherdless man, the hedonistic man, the destructive man.” “Cultivating good young men requires that we support structures that prioritize male-to-male mentorship.”
Secondly, along with the fatherhood of the monastery is its “brotherhood.” “By intentionally living among brothers with a common vision, men set a higher standard toward which they could encourage each other and against which they could measure themselves.”
Finally, there is the life of abstinence, of asceticism, of discipline. The monks know “asceticism (spiritual discipline)…..is not a simple refusal of good things. Rather, it is a way of disciplining the soul and a chief weapon in the battle against the self.”
Beacom goes on to offer a simple formula for the duties of manhood: “protect, provide, and establish.” “We need,” the author suggests, “the moral equivalent of monasticism.” What does this mean? “We need to be intentional about cultivating male spaces for brotherhood and mentorship in the path of virtuous living.”
The author closes with these words. “Our men must be gentle, and they must also be men. The idea of a gentle man embodies a fullness of vision that embraces all that is positive in men, including their unique ways of displaying gentleness, tenderness, and charity. We cannot have one without the other……..the tradition of the monastery embody some of what is best in the combination of manhood and gentleness for all men.”
The early monastic movement was an attempt to flee from the world in order to save it. The monks made a significant contribution in preserving western culture. Could the monastic model be modified so as to rescue men from our present dying culture, in order to help men to be “good timber” in our day? Could it be that men banding together, might find a model among the monks?
“Dear God, we pray for justice and fairness in all aspects of the election process. Let every vote be counted accurately and every voice be heard. Protect the integrity of our democratic system and make sure that the election is conducted with honesty and transparency.
Micah 6:8 urges us to: ‘act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.’ Help us to live out these principles in the election season. May we strive for justice not only in our elections but in all of our society. We pray for those in positions of power and responsibility to act with fairness and impartiality May they be guided by your righteousness
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
Devotions from Judy’s heart
The second Psalm I read today was Psalm 77 that Asaph who was one of David’s chief musicians wrote on a night he feels very upset and faint. I noticed the Psalm is full of “I’s” as he tells how he can’t sleep all night and says, “I cry aloud to God… I think of God and I moan; I meditate and my spirit faints…I am so troubled I cannot speak etc. But then I notice things change as he switches the focus from himself to the Lord and begins worshiping Him. He goes from asking if God has forgotten him to recalling all of God’s wonderful deeds and His goodness during the difficult times. He starts meditating on the Lord and how He led His people through the Red Sea and worked wonders.
God can help us shift our focus as we also go through desperate times. We can share how we feel but then remember how faithful He has been and all that He has taken us through before. Listen for God’s voice as He will lead us through our own Red Sea to see His mighty hand and work His miracles.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
The second Psalm I read today was Psalm 77 that Asaph who was one of David’s chief musicians wrote on a night he feels very upset and faint. I noticed the Psalm is full of “I’s” as he tells how he can’t sleep all night and says, “I cry aloud to God… I think of God and I moan; I meditate and my spirit faints…I am so troubled I cannot speak etc. But then I notice things change as he switches the focus from himself to the Lord and begins worshiping Him. He goes from asking if God has forgotten him to recalling all of God’s wonderful deeds and His goodness during the difficult times. He starts meditating on the Lord and how He led His people through the Red Sea and worked wonders.
God can help us shift our focus as we also go through desperate times. We can share how we feel but then remember how faithful He has been and all that He has taken us through before. Listen for God’s voice as He will lead us through our own Red Sea to see His mighty hand and work His miracles.
Recent Comments