Communion: Hair, Wrinkles and All
http://www.westwindschurch.com/resources/sermons/communion--hair-wrinkles-and-all/
The Eye Rolling Optimist
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Such a LONG time...
I have missed blogging. I have never been very consistent in posting. I have been ...well, I would say busy, but I am as busy as I want to be. If I say tired...who isn't? (Especially if you have a kid, or two or three) I just have had other priorities. That is the truth of it.
I haven't stopped reading my Bible or books or thinking. I just haven't been blogging :)
Recently I have been thinking a lot about the "missing link". I am not talking about cro-magnon man or "Lucy" or the illusive Sasquatch that roams parts of the North American back country (or so "they" say, whoever "they" are). Nope. I have been thinking about the missing link as it relates to my spiritual life.
I seem to be discussing a number of different topics or reading the blogs of people much more insightful than me and I have been asking the same question of myself over and over - "Aren't we missing the point?". Whether we are discussing being "seeker sensitive" or the perils of "social drinking" or stretching the boundaries of the Church or "freedom" I always seem to come back to the same place.
I remember the Music Machine and probably anyone growing up in the church during the late 70s and early 80s remembers it too. There was one song "Love love love makes people happy. Love love love makes people kind. Love makes people do the things they know they ought to do." And I cannot remember the rest. Sorry. The point was that we are supposed to love others.
I can already hear people click the "back" button to get out of this page. We have heard it all before. the song wasn't unique and it isn't like anyone who has gone to church hasn't heard a message about love. Even if the only time you have stepped into a church has been to attend a wedding you have probably heard someone preach on 1 Corinthians 13. The Love Chapter.
I have been reading through 1 Corinthians and I have just realized how intertwined love is with holiness. What do holiness and love have in common? Both are only remotely possibly if we have a deep DEEP understanding of God's love for us. Truly.
We can make all these plans to feed the hungry and clothe the homeless, we can start social programs but if we don't have love it is ashes.
We can claim freedom and pursue our own dreams and desires and gain wisdom and such but with out love it is all meaningless.
If we really love God our desire is to please HIM and HIM alone. If we really love peoplein response to God's love we put them first - that means ahead of our own dreams, our own desires, our own plans, our own freedoms, even our own ideas of "what makes sense".
We start pursuing God and staying as close to Him as we can, instead of seeing how close our "freedom" can take us to the edge of right and wrong. Less self, more Savior.
Our focus becomes less and less on programs and processes and more and more on people and seeing them and loving them for who they are - not who we think they could be or should be.
We start loving people with the realization that if there is something that is difficult to love about someone, it is telling of a work that needs to be done in our heart - not theirs. After all, God - perfect and holy - loved us. Loving an obnoxious person or a smelly person or whoever has nothing to do with the person - it has everything to do with us as individuals and our own relationship to God.
Like forgiveness...it doesn't matter if the person who hurt you ever recognizes what a jerk they have been or how much damage they did to you. What matters is that you forgive them so God can start to heal you and free you from the power that person had over your life. It doesn't matter what a person is like - self-centred, loud, obnoxious (all words used to describe me before) - we are to LOVE others.
It is all ALL ALL about God and our relationship to Him. If we truly love Him then we will be able to truly love others.
I haven't stopped reading my Bible or books or thinking. I just haven't been blogging :)
Recently I have been thinking a lot about the "missing link". I am not talking about cro-magnon man or "Lucy" or the illusive Sasquatch that roams parts of the North American back country (or so "they" say, whoever "they" are). Nope. I have been thinking about the missing link as it relates to my spiritual life.
I seem to be discussing a number of different topics or reading the blogs of people much more insightful than me and I have been asking the same question of myself over and over - "Aren't we missing the point?". Whether we are discussing being "seeker sensitive" or the perils of "social drinking" or stretching the boundaries of the Church or "freedom" I always seem to come back to the same place.
I remember the Music Machine and probably anyone growing up in the church during the late 70s and early 80s remembers it too. There was one song "Love love love makes people happy. Love love love makes people kind. Love makes people do the things they know they ought to do." And I cannot remember the rest. Sorry. The point was that we are supposed to love others.
I can already hear people click the "back" button to get out of this page. We have heard it all before. the song wasn't unique and it isn't like anyone who has gone to church hasn't heard a message about love. Even if the only time you have stepped into a church has been to attend a wedding you have probably heard someone preach on 1 Corinthians 13. The Love Chapter.
I have been reading through 1 Corinthians and I have just realized how intertwined love is with holiness. What do holiness and love have in common? Both are only remotely possibly if we have a deep DEEP understanding of God's love for us. Truly.
We can make all these plans to feed the hungry and clothe the homeless, we can start social programs but if we don't have love it is ashes.
We can claim freedom and pursue our own dreams and desires and gain wisdom and such but with out love it is all meaningless.
If we really love God our desire is to please HIM and HIM alone. If we really love peoplein response to God's love we put them first - that means ahead of our own dreams, our own desires, our own plans, our own freedoms, even our own ideas of "what makes sense".
We start pursuing God and staying as close to Him as we can, instead of seeing how close our "freedom" can take us to the edge of right and wrong. Less self, more Savior.
Our focus becomes less and less on programs and processes and more and more on people and seeing them and loving them for who they are - not who we think they could be or should be.
We start loving people with the realization that if there is something that is difficult to love about someone, it is telling of a work that needs to be done in our heart - not theirs. After all, God - perfect and holy - loved us. Loving an obnoxious person or a smelly person or whoever has nothing to do with the person - it has everything to do with us as individuals and our own relationship to God.
Like forgiveness...it doesn't matter if the person who hurt you ever recognizes what a jerk they have been or how much damage they did to you. What matters is that you forgive them so God can start to heal you and free you from the power that person had over your life. It doesn't matter what a person is like - self-centred, loud, obnoxious (all words used to describe me before) - we are to LOVE others.
It is all ALL ALL about God and our relationship to Him. If we truly love Him then we will be able to truly love others.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Be The Dirt
I recently was asked to preach in our Sunday morning service. Normally I am working with the children separately, but this Sunday we were all together which was really cool. Anyway, our Kids Church is looking at the parables over the course of the summer so I continued down that path taking a look at the parable of the sower. I haven't posted anything on my blog lately so I thought I would share this. It is long...it was a sermon...so be forewarned.
13 That same day
Jesus went out of the house and sat by the lake. 2 Such large
crowds gathered around him that he got into a boat and sat in it, while all the people stood on
the shore. 3 Then he told them many things in parables, saying: “A farmer went out to sow his seed. 4 As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path,
and the birds came and ate it up. 5 Some fell on
rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the
soil was shallow. 6 But when the
sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no
root. 7 Other seed fell among thorns, which grew
up and choked the plants. 8 Still other
seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop—a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was
sown. 9 Whoever has ears, let them hear.”
When Jesus sees the sick man and the faith of his friends he says, “Friend, your sins are forgiven.”
God wants our friendship with Him to be
real.
Does going to church make you a
follower of Jesus? If your parents (or
kids) are followers of Jesus does that mean you are too? How about if you say you are a Christian?
Does that make you a follower of Jesus?
To all these questions the answer is "NO!".
So what makes you a follower of Jesus?
If you receive God’s
amazing gift of love by believing that Jesus is the Son of God
and that he died for you,
taking the punishment once and for all
for all the times we have
disobeyed God,
and that Jesus came back
to life beating sin and death for all time
and that you allow Jesus
and his love to take root in your heart and change your life. That makes you a follower of Jesus.
It’s a run on sentence
that makes it all sound pretty simple, doesn’t it?
And it is...for most
people under the age of eleven. There is
a reason why Jesus tells us to be like children. With each passing year as we get older (not grow up, but older) we add
our excuses, our guilt, our disappointment, our jaded view of the world to
taint the simplicity of such a beautiful, amazing, fantastic truth and it
becomes almost a fairytale ... to most of us. We stop seeing it as Good News and instead it
becomes wishful thinking...a vague dream we hope will come true.
We forget how deep and
how wide and how complete and how real God’s love is.
Is God’s love dependent
on what we accomplish?
If we disobey God does He
stop loving us?
NO - “This is love, in
that while we were still sinners Christ died for us...”
God loves us whether we
are strong or weak, a wall flower or a superstar, a sports nut or a gamer, Star
Wars or Star Trek, Marvel or DC, Starbuck’s or Tim’s, successful or on the
brink of foreclosure, obedient or a spiritual failure.
And His love is BIG –
HUGE and Specific. God loves us, yes.
But more importantly God loves YOU!
You personally and
completely and intimately. He knows who
you are, what you think, how you react, your doubts, your fears, your hopes, yours
joys...He knows you. He should, He made
you.
He knows all about each
one of us and still loves us.
God loves
us with a NEVER STOPPING, UNBREAKING, ALWAYS and forever LOVE. HIS LOVE DOES NOT DEPEND ON US... GOD’s LOVE
IS BECAUSE GOD IS.
Do all the painful,
horrible things we see and experience negate God’s love? Do they make it less? NO, God’s love is even
more apparent in those circumstances to those who have allowed it to sink deep down to the very core of who they are. But I am getting ahead of myself.
Today we are going to be
talking about the importance of being the dirt.
Not dirty – no kids...and maybe some adults ...you still have to take
baths and brush your teeth. Today we are
going to hear about the parable of the sower and we are going learn that we
need to ...BE THE DIRT.
Over the past few weeks
and in the weeks to come we are looking at the Parables in Kids’ Church. The stories Jesus used to explain the Kingdom
of God not just to little people, but to all sorts of people.
The parables are found in
the first four books of the New Testament – Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Together these books are called The Gospels –
which when translated means Good News.
Fantastic news.
The Parable of the Sower
is found in Matthew 13:1-23. It comes in
two parts; First, the story and then the explanation.
Some of you may be thinking...so what does
God’s love have to do with the parable.
Well, let’s take a look
at the first part of the Story.
So first we saw the Sower
and he scatters the seed all over. The
seed that falls on the pathway, (what
happen to that seed?) where the ground is hard is stolen away by birds. The seed that falls on the stony ground is
happy at first but then the sun comes up (what happens to that seed?) and the
plants wither because their roots do not reach the water or nutrients
below. It dies. Then we see the seeds that fall into the soil
that is laced with weeds. The seeds
sprout up and grow but soon the weeds grow up and choke out those plants. They die as well. And last, there is the seed that falls on the
good soil. The seeds dig deep and the
roots reach down into the soil and they grow up and multiply, producing a huge
crop.
When I was growing up in
Quesnel you could get a job with local farmers as a rock picker. What do you think the job was?
That’s right. There is no mystery to the job. No job description required. The farmers knew that rocks were no good if
you were trying to plant a field. The
soil needed to be soft and receptive to the seeds that would be planted.
In the same way every
spring and throughout the growing season my grandpa would work hard in his
garden to remove all the weeds. The soil
need to be cleared of anything that might encumber the vegetables and fruit he
was planning to grow.
When you first look at
the parable you might be tempted to think that this is some goofy farmer, even
wasteful, tossing seed here and there.
But God certainly isn’t
goofy and most certainly isn’t wasteful. The parable of the Sower reminds us of
God’s love is intended for everyone. The
seed is spread over all the soils, just as it has been made available to each
of us. For you and me no matter how we choose
to respond. Our response determines what happens to the seed – it
doesn’t alter God’s love.
His love is lavish and to
some it may seem impractical, even fool hardy but thanks be to God that His
extravagant, over the top love is available to everyone – He already decided
each one of us would have an opportunity to respond to this GOOD NEWS, to His
amazing love. We just have to decide how we are going to respond to it.
We need to choose what
soil we are going to be like. So again I
say be the dirt.
Let’s look at the second
part of the parable...the explanation.
18 “Listen
then to what the parable of the sower means:
19 When
anyone hears the message about the kingdom and does not understand it, the evil
one comes and snatches away what was sown in their heart. This is the seed sown
along the path.
Those who
do not understand the message are the ones who are like the path. So worn down, so firmly and consistently
trodden down that the concept of the GOOD NEWS cannot be understood, let alone
received.
Sometimes
people hear the message of God’s love but are so broken and so jaded that the
understanding of God’s love does not come.
They hear the message and wish they could believe it. They not only have a tough time believing God
exists but if He does, why on earth would He bother with them?
The
pessimism and doubt dictates the response to the Good News which is...no
response at all.
20 The seed
falling on rocky ground refers to someone who hears the word and at once
receives it with joy. 21 But since they have no root, they last only
a short time. When trouble or persecution comes because of the word, they
quickly fall away.
These people
hear the Good News and even get excited about it but don’t let it root deep
enough.
The seed
never obtains any depth.
How many
of you like wind storms?
I love
them, especially, when the power goes out.
But have you ever gone for a walk after a really bad wind storm? Sometimes you see trees that have been
uprooted.
It is
interesting to look at their root systems.
They are usually much wider that the tree itself.
In order
for a large tree, or any tree to survive a winds storm the roots have to run
wide but they also have to run deep.
If the
roots don’t run deep enough, the winds will push that tree until the shallow
system rips through the surface of the soil.
We are
the same way.
The Good
News gets planted. We let roots spread
out. We go to church regularly. We go to special functions, we give to
missions - maybe even volunteer here and there.
We have
nice w i d e root systems.
Look at
this picture of what an entire week of food for one North American family looks
like all at once.
What are the first thoughts that come to your
mind? It is a lot of food, isn’t it?
Now what
if I told you, you have to sit down at that table and eat it all. How long do you think it would take? And
don’t say a week.
You have
to eat all you can in about 60 minutes.
How many
of you would accept that challenge?
Pretty gross.
That’s
how a lot of people approach their relationship with God. They go Sunday morning and try and jam as
much Spiritual food into their lives as they can in one sitting.
Now, what
if I showed you a nice meal? One meal.
In fact, it’s not even a full meal. A high carb carrot muffin with cream cheese icing and a good fresh coffee. Sounds good right? Tastes good too.
It is a
large snack. A lot of caloric bang for
your buck. That is what church is. It is meant to be a boost. A large “spiritual” snack so to speak.
It is
meant to encourage you in your relationship with God. Not be your relationship with God.
So, you
better enjoy your muffin. That’s all
you’re going to get for the next week.
Obesity
is a growing concern for the physical health of North Americans, whereas
starvation is the biggest spiritual health concern in this day and age. It seems that spiritually speaking we are
malnourished.
So many people
make a decision to follow Jesus and are so excited and then church becomes a
social club, an affiliation. Don’t let
this be you. Be the dirt.
Make sure
you are pursuing God every day. Eat your
veggies and read your Bible. Pray every
day. Give God every day.
This is
not guilt-inducing religious pressure. This
is a practical and disciplined approach to healthy living.
As a
parent I try to ensure my kids are
eating vegetables and fruit, protein, and starches. I want them to be strong and healthy. They have to eat every day or their bodies
will not grow and develop properly.
If we
aren’t pursuing our relationship with God every day, our root system will not
reach any depth. When storms come we
will be uprooted.
When the
heat of the day beats down on us we will wither. Our roots need to run deep so when we face
persecution for what we believe or trial for following Biblical truths – however,
whenever and for whatever reason it comes or whatever it looks like we will
remain rooted firmly in Jesus.
22 The seed falling among the
thorns refers to someone who hears the word, but the worries of this life and
the deceitfulness of wealth choke the word, making it unfruitful.
Life
dictated by circumstance and distracted by the desire for more.
I love
Spy Movies.
Good Spy
Movies. Tom Clancy Movies. Borne Movies.
The New Bond Movies. MI Movies. In these movies satellites play an important
role. They allow the good guys to see
what the bad guys are doing.
In Tom
Clancy’s Patriot Games they are trying to take a look at a training camp in the
Middle East from CIA headquarters in the US.
The problem is the bad guys know when the satellites pass overhead so
they all go into their tents.
Jack Ryan
figures this out pretty quickly and is able to get a different satellite
re-tasked.
They are
able to reprogram the satellite to focus on this particular area at a different
time of day so they can see what they need to see. Retrieve the information they need and take
action.
A lot of
us struggle with weeds. We face a lot of
hard stuff. A lot of painful and scary stuff.
Our tear
blurred eyes are often filled up with all that’s going on around us so we will
close them and close our hearts.
Slowly,
we become more and more overwhelmed. We
shut our eyes for longer periods of time, thinking just for a moment I need
peace.
Our
hearts shut down for longer and longer stretches and find it harder and harder
to open up. It becomes harder and harder
to wake up – like frost bite – our hearts find slumber easier and easier.
Recently,
like most people at one point or another, I was feeling a bit overwhelmed with
life.
I had
this picture in my head. I was
surrounded by people. My kids, my
husband, the kids from VBS and the church, their parents, all my volunteers,
neighbours, even people I didn’t know.
And everyone needed something.
They
weren’t being mean or even overly demanding they just needed or at least that
is how I perceived the situation ... well with all of them it was quite
overwhelming.
And in
the midst of all these people I was trying to figure out who to help
first. So many people and I was frozen,
unable to respond.
I noticed
there was a ladder next to me and a hand reaching down. God grabbed my hand and lifted me up and I
was able to see what He saw.
Who
needed to be helped first and how they needed me to help...if they actually
needed my help.
My
satellite was re-tasked. My heart was
refocused. Not on the people. My heart was refocused on God. I was looking up and I saw what I needed to
see.
Throughout
the past decade and a half I have been reminded over and over again of a song
we used to sing when I was in college. “Be Magnified”.
Verse 1
I have made You too small in my eyes
Oh Lord, forgive me
And I have believed in a lie
That You were unable to help me.
But now, Oh Lord, I see my wrong
Heal my heart and show Yourself strong
And in my eyes and with my song
Oh Lord, be magnified
Chorus:
Be magnified, Oh Lord
You are highly exalted
And there is nothing You can't do
Oh Lord, my eyes are on You
Be magnified,
Oh Lord, be magnified
Verse 2
I have leaned on the wisdom of men
Oh Lord, (Please)forgive me
And I have responded to them
Instead of Your light and Your mercy
But now, Oh Lord, I see my wrong
Heal my heart and show yourself strong
And in my eyes and with my song
Oh Lord be magnified
I have made You too small in my eyes
Oh Lord, forgive me
And I have believed in a lie
That You were unable to help me.
But now, Oh Lord, I see my wrong
Heal my heart and show Yourself strong
And in my eyes and with my song
Oh Lord, be magnified
Chorus:
Be magnified, Oh Lord
You are highly exalted
And there is nothing You can't do
Oh Lord, my eyes are on You
Be magnified,
Oh Lord, be magnified
Verse 2
I have leaned on the wisdom of men
Oh Lord, (Please)forgive me
And I have responded to them
Instead of Your light and Your mercy
But now, Oh Lord, I see my wrong
Heal my heart and show yourself strong
And in my eyes and with my song
Oh Lord be magnified
That
needs to be our heart’s cry every time we face hardship...every time “Be
Magnified oh Lord”.
Help me
to see You instead of this circumstance.
Help me to be overwhelmed by your love instead of being overwhelmed by
the world.
We need to root out the weeds that start to
choke the life out of us and it doesn’t start by taking things out of your
life. It starts by making sure God is IN
your life.
If God
holds the proper place in our hearts other things will hold proper place as
well.
The Goods
News reminds us that life without God isn’t life at all and that His grace IS
enough.
I am
reading a book right now by Mark Buchannan called the Holy Wild. In one chapter he talks about the
significance of the forgiveness of sin. He
focuses on the story of the friends who bring the sick man to see Jesus in Luke
5:19-25.
The very
sick, bed ridden man is carried to the house where Jesus is teaching. The home is so crowded the men cannot
enter. Their desperation drives them to
the roof. The tear it open and lower
their sick friend down to see Jesus in hopes that he will be healed.
When Jesus sees the sick man and the faith of his friends he says, “Friend, your sins are forgiven.”
Mark
Buchannan tries to imagine what the men were all thinking. They wanted a miracle.
(He writes)They wanted to see dead nerves
spark to life, stiff flesh grow supple, wilted muscles stretch and
tighten. They wanted to see the man
dance a jig, toss a ball, do a handstand, pick up a stone...
Listen
to what Jesus says,
“That you may know that the Son
of Man has authority to forgive sins…I tell you, “Get up, take your mat and go
home.”
Jesus does it to vouch for a GREATER AUTHORITY that He possesses, a more
staggering power He wields – the ability to forgive sins.
To reform sin-ravaged hearts. To
cleanse leprosy-numbed souls. To cure
pride-blinded spirits. To cleanse folly
– choked minds. To make us holy. To make
us whole.”
When we
allow the GOOD News to sink deep in our hearts the forgiveness of our sin
defines, more than anything else WHO GOD IS.
It
reiterates that He is HOLY, HE IS LOVING, HE IS JUST, and HE IS GOOD. When accept God’s forgiveness and it roots
run deep down in us we begin to understand the heart of God. God’s desire for us is to live... to really
LIVE. Not just merely walk through
life. BUT TO LIVE.
Amy
Davies is working in a home for disabled children in Nepal. In addition to her work with the children she
also volunteers with disabled adults in another care home where the situation
is even more desperate.
We live
in a country where if your child is injured you have access to physicians who
will do what they can to help your child get well. If the injuries cannot be repaired we have
access to physiotherapists, prosthetics, counselors - who are able to able to
help make life workable. Liveable. Not easy, but easier. Wheelchair access,
CNIB, War amps, Zajacks Ranch, all these and many more organizations try to
help people live full lives despite the physical challenges they face. Where Amy is – help is limited and hard to
access.
Can you imagine if we started praying and people started getting healed? Burn victims have their skin restored glowing and smooth, backs are straightened, muscles toned and strengthened. Fingers and legs regrown. Cataract clouded eyes brightened and see. Can you imagine? We would be blown AWAY! But those miracles would be chaff, fluff, and temporary fixes in the light of eternity.
Can you imagine if we started praying and people started getting healed? Burn victims have their skin restored glowing and smooth, backs are straightened, muscles toned and strengthened. Fingers and legs regrown. Cataract clouded eyes brightened and see. Can you imagine? We would be blown AWAY! But those miracles would be chaff, fluff, and temporary fixes in the light of eternity.
Jesus
forgives sin. That is the miracle.
The man
who is bedridden sure he might get up and walk but his self worth is still
related to his own ability. His future
is still dependant on mere flesh and bone and is finite.
But when God steps in eternity takes over and that is A MIRACLE!
Our value
lies in God’s love for us.
The
burned woman realizes she IS lovely because HE LOVES her. The paralyzed man doesn’t walk HE SOARS! When Jesus enters our hearts He was us to see
really see. “I once was lost but now I
am found, was blind but now I see!”
We need
to re-task our satellites. Our focus
needs to shift from the world around us and what it says we should want and
what it says we need to the God who loves us and provides all we need.
When we
let His love into our hearts, when it roots deep down in our hearts the weeds
don’t have a chance. We stop being
consumers and are consumed - by Him.
Be
the dirt.
23 But the
seed falling on good soil refers to someone who hears the word and understands
it. This is the one who produces a crop, yielding a hundred, sixty or thirty
times what was sown.”
A life of
faith and love, rooted deep in God’s Word and His love.
Buchanan
shares this story
The
number of Christians martyred in the twentieth century far outstripped the
combined number of martyrs in the 19 prior centuries, and in the infancy of
this millennium there is no sign of the bloodshed abating.
And the Jews,
their suffering didn’t begin in Germany in the 1930s and ‘40s. It was only consummated there. Persecution of the Jewish people began four
thousand years ago and has carried on since, almost without interruption.
Yet
strangely, it’s these very ones-those who have suffered most deeply, generation
after generation-who are often the first to testify to God’s love. I think of my friend Helen, a Russian
immigrant whose Baptist family perished in one of Stalin’s concentration
camps.
She
escaped into Germany, just a girl, and found herself conscripted into forced
labour under Hitler.
She came
to Canada after the war and was attacked by her cousin, the one person she trusted,
the man who had promised her and the government that he would take care of her.
Her life
has been a graveyard of loss, a scrap yard of betrayal. But ask her any day what she knows, and
she’ll tell you, “God is good. He loves
me.”
Her
conviction about that hasn’t come by toting up her days of wounds and wars,
weighing them against her days of laughter and bounty, seeing which tips the
scale.
Her
belief has a taproot: God simply is who He says He is, regardless of what her
troubles might have tempted her to think or surmise.
She is
part of that great cloud of witnesses who, living by faith, refuse to reduce
God to their own experience, to limit His love by the evidence of their own
circumstance.
When we
understand, really get it, our faith sustains.
It runs deep. To our core.
Like
Ironman’s arch reactor – God’s love and our understanding of it - powers us... No
matter what challenges we face we will have strength because we have God. It is a God sustained power that never faulters - never.
Our life
is marked by strength but even more so by a joy that to other people just does
not make sense. We don’t run around like
a bunch of giddy lunatics, but the peace and the hope we experience is not of
this world. It is beyond their
understanding.
10 The
disciples came to him and asked, “Why do you speak to the people in parables?”
11 He
replied, “Because the knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has
been given to you, but not to them.
12 Whoever
has will be given more, and they will have abundance. Whoever does not have,
even what they have will be taken from them. 13 This is why I speak
to them in parables:
“Though
seeing, they do not see;
though hearing, they do not hear or understand.
though hearing, they do not hear or understand.
14 In them
is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah:
“‘You
will be ever hearing but never understanding;
you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.
15 For this people’s heart have become calloused;
they hardly hear with their ears,
and they have closed their eyes.
Otherwise they might see with their eyes,
hear with their ears,
understand with their heart
and turn, and I would heal them.’
you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.
15 For this people’s heart have become calloused;
they hardly hear with their ears,
and they have closed their eyes.
Otherwise they might see with their eyes,
hear with their ears,
understand with their heart
and turn, and I would heal them.’
16 But
blessed are your eyes because they see, and your ears because they hear. 17
For truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see
what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.
We are
very lucky, fortunate, blessed, however you want to describe it. We have access to God’s Word and knowledge of
His love.
We can
read our Bible and pray.
We can
gather and share what God has done for us and what He continues to do in our
lives.
We can
remind each other and encourage each other with God’s love.
We His
children. God’s children. The CREATOR of HEAVEN AND EARTH IS OUR FATHER
and HE LOVES us. He loves YOU and we are
blessed!
1John 4
reads, 9 God has shown His love to us by sending His only Son
into the world. God did this so we might have life through
Christ. 10 This is love! It is not that we loved God but that He
loved us. For God sent His Son to pay for our sins with His own blood.
If we let
the seed of God’s word root deep into our hearts no one and no thing will be
able to steal it away.
The
circumstances we face may be painful, even unbearable, and threaten to scorch
our very souls but we are not alone and we will be reassured by God’s love.
We will not be overcome by the worries of this
world, but we will remember that Christ already over came this world and has
made us over comers!
We will focus
not who we are or what we face but instead focus on WHO GOD IS! GOD IS GOOD!
GOD IS UNCHANGING! GOD IS JUST! GOD IS FAITHFUL! GOD IS LOVE!
37 No,
in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38
For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor
demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither
height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate
us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
16 But
blessed are your eyes because they see, and your ears because they hear. 17
For truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see
what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it.
Be the
dirt... Some of us need the seed of
God’s love to reawaken in our hearts.
There is still life in that seed.
Some of
our hearts need to soften and allow the roots of God’s love to run deep
down.
And some
of us need to retask. To refocus on
God. To let Him be magnified. To be overwhelmed by God and His grace and
His mercy rather than the world around us and the weak and insulting
God-substitutes it tempts us with.
Let us
recommit as a believers, as a church, as families and as individuals to see with our eyes, hear
with our ears and understand with our hearts and turn, and allow Him to heal
us.
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