May 29, 2014

Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah

Guide me, O Thou great Jehovah, Pilgrim through
this barren land; I am weak, but Thou art mighty,
Hold me with Thy powerful hand. Bread of heaven,
Bread of heaven.  Feed me till I want no more;
Feed me till I want no more.
 
Sometimes you just need a good OLD hymn to remind you of who we really believe can lead us out of whatever predicament we are in!  William Williams, the son of a wealthy farmer, was on his way to becoming a doctor in the 1700s when he heard the gospel and his life was changed to become an itinerant preacher.  He considered himself a "pilgrim" and lived a very hard life, but wrote over 800 hymns, including our one for today.  This hymn, by the way, was sung at the funeral of Princess Diana of Wales.
 
Do you feel like a prilgrim in a barren land?  Do you feel weak and powerless?  Do you feel like nothing nourishes you, but only depletes?  Job, in the midst of a major predicament, said about God: "he knows the way that I take; when he has tested me, I will come forth as gold." (23:10)  Some of our predicaments are His testing, some are our choices, some are just allowed for our growth or someone around us and some are just to draw others to Himself.  The question is: who are you letting guide you through them?  The world has lots of solutions:  strive harder, take more control, go shopping, buy a prettier car, build a bigger house...is that the path you are taking?
 
In last week's Sunday School curriculum on Ezekiel, this was written:
 
"God's Spirit can teach, guide and change us
only to the extent that we listen to and obey
His voice."
 
Not to sound weird, but sometimes the voices in my head speak so loudly I couldn't hear the Spirit of God if He shouted.  If we are to seek the "Bread of Heaven", we must be intentional about what we say yes to and what we say no to.  Isaiah 30:18 says "He longs to be gracious to you...", but it also says we must wait for Him.  Do we make decisions without waiting?  I'm afraid I do...I want to be more intentional about allowing His guidance to be my rudder and not allow the things I want to happen guide me.
 
For further study:  Exodus 15:13, Nehemiah 9:19-21, Psalm 48:14, Psalm 73:23-24, Isaiah 43:2,  Isaiah 58:11, ohn 6:48, John 16:13, 2 Cor. 6:16, James 4:8.
 
Be blessed in your understanding of God's word.
 
Love,
Holly


May 20, 2014

Seek first the kingdom of God... - Matt. 6:33


What we see depends mainly on
what we look for
John Lubbock
Sometimes my "seer" - that part of me that gets obsessive about something I want - gets very misguided.  And that's probably a little more generous than I ought to be.  Regardless of what the world tells us we should be looking for, truthfully, "the heart is deceitful above all things" (Jer. 17:9).  Unless we set our hearts on looking for righteousness, we will never find it.  And unless the Holy Spirit inhabits your heart, it cannot be set on anything good.
 
Jesus knew that would be the case so, in the Sermon on the Mount, he taught his disciples about seeking after important things and letting the other stuff come to us - things like food, our bodies and our clothing. He knows exactly what we need every minute of our lives.  Oh we have surely gotten offcourse, haven't we - or is it just me?  In another passage in Luke 12:15-21 Jesus tells a parable about a man building bigger barns to store all his his crops.   Does that sound familiar?  Do you see all the new storage places going up?  That man's life was taken in an instant and ours can be as well.  My desire is not that our children will have to get rid of the stuff in my barns!
 
Max Lucado in TRAVELING LIGHT says:
 
Heaven doesn't know you as the fellow with the nice suit
or the woman with the big house.  Heaven knows your heart...
When God thinks of you, He may see your compassion, your
devotion, your tenderness or quick mind, but He doesn't
think of your things.
 
So I have to honestly ask myself today:  "what am I seeking first today?"...because that is likely what I will find.
 
For further study:  Deuteronomy 4:29, 1 Samuel 16:7, 1 Chronicles 28:8-9, Isaiah 55:6, Matthew 5:6, 2 Cor. 7:1, Romans 14:17, 1 Timothy 6:6-11, Rev. 21:6-7.
 
Be blessed in your understanding of God's word.
 
Love,
Holly
 


May 13, 2014

Seek the LORD while he may be found - Isaiah 55:6


Seek the LORD while he may be found;
call on him while he is near
 
Our faithful prophet Isaiah had had many years of calling mankind to return to his sovereign God, the One who made a people for His own, the One who would have mercy upon His own and would have an everlasting love for His people.  But for many years those same people worshipped other gods, and sought to live independent and separate from their Maker. Later in Chapter 64, he talks about the clay and the potter and that "we are the work" of His hand.   I think we see in our verse for today that the time to receive this "indescribable gift" (2 Cor. 9:15) is not forever.  The clay becomes hard and unworkable after a while; we lose our sensitivity to spiritual things. 
 
The word "seek" is used other places (Deu. 12:5, Ps. 9:10, 105:4) to describe going to worship in the temple...but these were exiles and had no temple, so this was to seek God Himself and his way of life.  These people were complainers and grumblers...Isaiah wanted them to see the blessing that would come if they would repent and yield.  God wants a grateful and obedient following...He doesn't want resentful and grumpy people.  The choice is ours.  One day He will say to us: "is that your final answer?".
 
What are you seeking after today?  A thrill, a release from pressure, a bigger house, another pair of shoes...or the things of God?  This same Chap. 55 talks about God's thoughts not being our thoughts or His ways our ways.  In order to "think with the mind of Christ" (Phil. 2:5) we must receive this greatest of all gifts He offers us...today!  Our salvation is a gift from God...we have been given a choice to receive this gift or to reject it.  We say "no thank you" when we live according to the world's standards and not Biblical ones; we say "no thank you" when we harden our hearts to the people He has put in our lives; we say "no thank you" when we are sexually impure or idolize the things of this world.  We say "no thank you" when we do not receive the gift of Jesus Christ as our personal Savior.  It is only His indwelling Spirit that does that incredible work in us that we cannot do ourselves.
 
I don't want to be like the people in Romans 1 who God finally gave over to their own lusts...they "exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshipped and served created things rather than the Creator".    The time ran out for them...I will choose TODAY to trust Him, to call on Him and to the best of my ability to discern and do exactly what He calls me to do.   How about you?
 
For further study:  Deu. 4:29-31, Psalm 66:18, Proverbs 27:1, Isaiah 29:16, Hosea 10;12, 2 Cor. 9:15, Ephesians 2:8-9, Hebrews 3:7-16, James 4:8, 1 Peter 4:17
 
Be blessed in your understanding of God's word.
 
Love,
Holly

May 7, 2014

LOVE - 1 Cor. 13

One of my deepest joys in life is to be a mother.  It wasn't something I always wanted to do and it took me several months to even feel the least bit comfortable with the role.  I remember days of saying to Don "my life is over" when he would come home from a very normal day of work.  Our poor Andrew was my guinea pig and he seems to have survived in spite of it!  Motherhood is a very current subject in our household since our youngest son and his wife will become parents later this year.  Of course pink purchases have also been one of my current joys as a future grandmother!

In a recent study on motherhood, I was delighted to discover that as women we are really all made to be mothers in that we are designed to produce life (Gen.1- 3).  Staci and John Eldredge in their book CAPTIVATING say:

All women are not mothers, but all women are called to mother.
To mother is to nurture, to train, to educate, to rear.  As daughters of Eve,
all women are uniquely gifted to help others in their lives become more
of who they truly are - to encourage, nurture and mother them toward
their true selves.  In doing this, women partner with Christ in
the vital mission of bringing forth life.
 
It is important to note that we do partner with our Lord in this role...I could have never done it without the LOVE that comes as a fruit of the Spirit.  Remember, "we love because He first loved us".  Three lovely examples of how faith in the Lord provides for mothers:
 
--Shiphrah and Puah (midwives) who rescued the children who were to die in Egypt because they feared the Lord and then were given their own families because of their faithfulness  (Ex. 1:15)
-- Hannah - prayed for a child and then, because "the Lord has granted me what I asked of him" gave him back to the Lord in service (1 Sam. 1:27-28)
--Mary - sweet mother of Jesus, who upon finding out she was going to be a mother was willing to face ridicule because it was a "word from God" (Luke 1:37).
 
Jim Brickman says in his song "A Mother's Love":
 
There is no power like it on this earth
No treasure equal to its worth
The gift of a mother's love.
 
In 1 Corinthians 13 we see that LOVE is patient and kind, not envious or boastful, doesn't dishonor or is self-seeking, not angry or spiteful, doesn't delight in evil but rejoices in the truth, always protects, always hopes, always perseveres.  Sounds like a mother's love...but it is really God's love at work in us...our greatest of all gifts!  Happy Mother's Day, friends!
 
For further study: Gen. 1:26, Exodus 20:12, Leviticus 19:3, 1 Samuel 1:27-28, Prov. 31:27-31, Isaiah 40:11, Isaiah 66:13, Matthew 23:37, Titus 2:4-5, 1 John 4:19, 1 John 5:2.
 
Love,
Holly