Category Archives: Devotional

A youth devotion is an opportunity to plumb the depths of a deeper spiritual life by using a story, illustration, or real life experience to illustrate a Bible principle and entice the reader to apply it in a very personal way.

Bait?

One of my favorite pastimes is hiking.  

Southeast Asia has a wonderful variety of places to go. From tropical rainforest to incredible beaches, you can find it all here.  Another aspect that makes it such fun is that you meet travelers from all over the world. On a trip to Thailand, I was on a jungle trek with recently met friends from France, Germany, Netherlands, New Zealand, and England. As we traveled we helped each other across rivers, through mudslides, and across rice paddies.  But one wonders how much commitment to that friendship would exist if one of us really got into trouble.

There is a story of two teens hiking through the Taman Negara in Malaysia. If you have ever been there, you know the jungle, a tropical rainforest, is fascinating but humid, and full of the worst of insects. Mosquito repellant is almost useless as the sweat of your body dilutes it and washes it away within minutes.  Yet Mosquitoes are not the only thing wishing to suck your blood… there are also leeches and other unpleasant irritants.

Fighting off the leeches these boys were traveling what seemed a trail when they discovered a cave in the hillside.  Curious, as are most teen boys, they entered the cave, with little thought of safety or of what might lie inside.  The cool dampness of the cave was a welcome retreat from the tropical steam bath outside.  The cave was bigger than expected and soon, the dim light from the entrance was no longer sufficient for them to see more than shadows. One boy thought he heard something ahead, but wasn’t certain.  Maybe it was just dripping water or his imagination. The jungle will do that to you.  Your imagination often plays tricks with reality.

Still, they pressed on, keeping their eyes and ears attentive just in case it wasn’t imagination, in case they were not alone. Suddenly, a large shadow loomed in the distance ahead.  Two luminescent eyes reflected the dim light, accompanied by the unmistakable roar of a Malayan tiger.  Awakened from a nap, the tiger was a bit grouchy — to put it mildly.  It was his trail they had followed and this was his den.  

Scared, the boys turned to make a dash for the entrance, when one of them dropped to the floor and started removing his hiking boots– soon to be replaced by his running shoes. While tying his laces, his shocked and frightened friend yelled at him, “Aiyaa! Chapat! Hurry up… Let’s get out of here! Why do you change your shoes?  We have little chance of outrunning that tiger… we might as well face it… we are lunch…”

Getting to his feet and beginning to run the first boy replied, “I don’t
have to outrun that tiger… all I have to do is outrun you.”

Ever felt like tiger bait?  

When things get tough, your friends forget you exist or worse yet, use you as a sacrifice to enable them to get out of trouble.  You get the blame for their actions. They vanish and you get left as tiger bait, left alone to deal with the problem.  Ever felt like a friend led you somewhere you might not have gone on your own, and then when things got difficult, left you.  Maybe it was sex, drugs, alcohol, smoking, or merely a small prank. But they escaped and left you to face the consequences.  It seemed a cool, pleasant, and enjoyable break from things but it turned dangerous. and when it did, you found yourself alone.

“Be controlled and alert.  Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.” (I Peter 5:8)  But even when you haven’t been quite as alert as you should, and you seem to be alone, in the dark, facing your worst nightmare, you need not fear.  One of the greatest joys of living as a Christian is knowing that Jesus will never leave you as tiger bait. To the contrary, he has sacrificed himself that you might escape the gnashing teeth and darkness, that you might escape death and walk again in the light. “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13)  

Trust Jesus with the tigers in your life.

Be It unto Me According to Your Word

christmas_mary“When the angel Gabriel came to Mary and told her of God’s invitation to her to bear the Christ-child, there was a silence between the angel’s news and Mary’s response. In that silence, all the heavenly host became quiet and the celestial movement of the stars and planets ceased. In that silence even God himself leaned over from his heavenly throne and listened. The whole universe waited her reply. Then, when Mary said “Yes, be it unto me according to your word,” God smiled deeply while also shedding a tear, the angels began to sing, the heavenly host celebrated, and the cosmos had started once again.”

We will never know, at least not in this life, if Mary was the first one to whom this offer had been made. We will never know if God’s offer had been rejected before. What we do know is that Mary could have rejected the announcement.

I’m sure Mary may have had many ideas and expectations about what her life would be like. We all do. We knew she was expecting to marry Joseph. And then this angel shows up with a message from God that lays out a whole different plan for her future. To say that this was going to complicate her life is putting it lightly. While Scripture talked a lot about the coming of the Messiah, it didn’t include instructions for being the Messiah’s mom.

Mary is the ultimate example of a life yielded to God’s purpose. Mary puts God in the driver’s seat. But it’s one thing to see that kind of faith in a Biblical figure who lived 2,000 years ago. It’s another thing to live out that faith today, and walk in submission to God. True worship, True adoration, gives God control.

Let us rearrange our lives around the Savior. As Mary did!

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Superbowl Christians – Spiritual Lessons for Youth from the Game of Football

It’s going to be Superbowl Sunday this weekend and we’re sure your youth are excited to be watching the game. Why not make it an opportunity to share something about how the game relates to their spiritual lives? Even if you don’t watch football, the lesson is applicable to most sports. Have a great weekend!

An Illustration

While you might not think of your Christian life as a football game, the Bible does use sports to teach about spiritual truths. In Biblical times they might not have had American football games or superbowls but they did have athletic competitions.

In 1 Corinthians 9:24-27, Paul writes, “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore I do not run like someone running aimlessly; I do not fight like a boxer beating the air. No, I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.”

In Hebrews 12:1-2 we read, “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.”

In Philippians 3:12-14 Paul says, “Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already arrived at my goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”

“Similarly, if anyone competes as an athlete, he does not receive the victor’s crown unless he competes according to the rules.” 2 Timothy 2:5

The sports may be different, but you’ll find some things in common with American football if you read the verses carefully. You’ll find running, a prize, winning and losing, competition, training, goals, fighting or struggle, opposition, spectators, obstacles and hindrances, focus and rules. Even so, there tons of lessons we can learn from football.

Take It to the Next Level

COMPETITION is part of the Game

By nature, sports are a competition. But to compete you must be in the game. Just as a coach chooses players to be in the football game, God has chosen us. Our competitor is focused on our defeat (1 Peter 5:8). But we also compete against ourselves. And it is sad to say, but just like in real life football games, most of the people in the stadium sit in the stands. Then there are those who are on the team, but sit in the bench. Most of us would prefer rest on the bench (or pew) and observe the game – both with encouragement and more often with criticism about how others are playing on the field. But God doesn’t call us to be spectators, but participants. Our field is the world (Mat. 13:38), and our goal is to win it for Jesus Christ. Sure, some will have a special call to play a bigger role, but everyone is called onto the field to play. Even if you may not have a key role a particular play, you must still be ready at a moment’s notice to dash onto the field and play your part when the coach calls your number to be on the field. You must clearly know your position, train, and practice your plays to be best prepared for that moment when you might be called upon to make a difference in the game (1 Peter 3:15, 2 Timothy 4:1-5).

There are RULES to the Game

The football field is laid out in ten yard increments, has boundaries, and there are rules to the game. The boundaries are there to keep us in the game. The 10 yard markers are there not as the object, but as a point of reference as we move toward the goal. If they weren’t there, we wouldn’t know if we were heading in the right direction or running to the wrong goal. God’s laws and the 10 commandments function in much the same way. They keep us in the game and give us points of reference for gaining or losing of ground. Violating the rules results in penalties and may even take us out of the game for a while. There are turnovers and fumbles as well. Yet when we compete according to the rules, and are victorious in our efforts, we will receive a prize (1 Corinthians 9:24-27).

Our TIME on the field is limited

The clock is counting down. The game of football is played in four quarters with a set time limit. The wise player, especially the quarterback, will keep his eye on the clock and make the most of his time. The same is true for us as Christians, but unlike the game on the football field, we can’t see the clock. We don’t know how much time is left. This makes it even more important for us to value our time and make the most of it. The Bible commands us to redeem the time, to make the most of every opportunity (Ephesians 5:16) rather than waste it. In fact, if you think about the world today there is not much time left on the clock. In fact, it’s already the fourth quarter, down to the two minute warning, and now it’s up to us to play our part win another one for the coach. Things may seem dire. But in life, just like in football, nothing is impossible, everything can happen. You should not slack or give up until the referee blows his whistle and declares the Victor.

TRAINING is essential for Victory

In football there is an in season and an off season. During the off season the team works on the fundamentals to get ready for the big games during football season. They train for the big games ahead. “For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come. 2 Timothy 4:8 “Be ready in season and in the off season” 2 Timothy 4:2. “There is a season and a time to EVERY purpose under heaven” Ecclesiastes 3:1-11. There are times in our Christian walk when we experience seasons of rest. They’re not for us to be idle, but to prepare ourselves spiritually, to grow, to draw closer to God.

GEAR up for the Game

In Ephesians 6:10-18, Paul gives the team the pre-game pep talk and reminds us to check our football gear. He’s talking about gearing up for battle, but football players also gear up for the game. If he’d been thinking about football he might have phrased it this way, “Finally, be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the uniform, so that you can take your stand against the opposing team… Therefore put on all of your gear so that when the game day comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand. Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the shoulder pads of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the shoes of readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. In addition to all this, take up the face mask of faith, with which you can conquer all the opponents’ plays. Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, your playbook, which is the word of God. Let’s all commit the game to God as we kneel for a locker room prayer, that we might prove victorious in this game.”

We strive for the GOAL

It is not enough to simply be in the game. It is not enough to simply overcome the enemy. Out goal is to score one for the team. And another one. And another one. Touchdown after Touchdown. In life, the goal may seem at the far end of the field. It can be difficult to keep moving forward. It may seem that every time you run a play you get knocked down. Sometimes you may even get sacked. The solution is not to focus on where you have come from, but where you are going. “Press on toward the Goal.” Philippians 3:14 And while touchdowns are great, as Christians our goal is to do more than simply score, but to be the player the Head Coach has chosen us to be. We must be always moving forward, never fumbling the ball, and always gaining new ground. If we do stumble and fumble, we are to recover the ball quickly and press onward. If we step out of bounds, or get the wind knocked out of us, we must get back in the game and focus on the Coach. And even if you are tackled for a loss, When you are focused on Him, and run the plays He calls, you’ll find yourself moving toward the goal.

We don’t play alone, but play as part of a TEAM

Football is a team sport. You don’t win it alone. When the team is working in harmony under the direction of the coach things will happen. There’s are star players, but the star players cannot function without the core team. They need blockers, the need linemen to open up opportunities in the defences. There is an offensive team, a kickoff team, a team of receivers, and a defensive team and each are critical to a win for the team. There is no individual victory, only the victory of the team. Only when all players, from the starting quarterback, the receivers, the linemen and the person playing his part in even the smallest position work together, does the team run a successful play. Likewise, every believer has a unique role and a part to play in the Kingdom of God (1 Cor 12:4-6; 12-20)

The Victors receive a PRIZE.

It’s not Super Bowl rings, but the crown of eternal life Christ that we seek. (2 Timothy 4:7-8)

Make it Practical

Are you in the game?
No one in the crowd ever gains a yard on the field. No one in the crowd ever adds a single point to the scoreboard. The game is played and won by the players on the field, and not by anyone else. Are you in the game or a spectator? Just being a Christian isn’t enough. You are called to be on the playing field, not in the stands or on the sidelines. Are you on the field playing the game and gaining ground for Jesus Christ or are you merely watching the game? The clock is ticking away, and time is running out. Get in the game before you lose your chance forever!

Scripture References

“Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore I do not run like someone running aimlessly; I do not fight like a boxer beating the air. No, I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.”
– 1 Corinthians 9:24-27

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.”
– Hebrews 12:1-2

“Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already arrived at my goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”
– Philippians 3:12-14

“Similarly, anyone who competes as an athlete does not receive the victor’s crown except by competing according to the rules.”
– 2 Timothy 2:5

“Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”
– 1 Peter 5:8

“The field is the world, and the good seed stands for the people of the kingdom. The weeds are the people of the evil one.”
– Matthew 13:38

“But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect.”
– 1 Peter 3:15

“In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction. For the time will come when people will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths. But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry.”
– 2 Timothy 4:1-5

“Making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.”
– Ephesians 5:16

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens: a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to build, a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance, a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them, a time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing, a time to search and a time to give up, a time to keep and a time to throw away, a time to tear and a time to mend, a time to be silent and a time to speak, a time to love and a time to hate, a time for war and a time for peace. What do workers gain from their toil? I have seen the burden God has laid on the human race. He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.”
– Ecclesiastes 3:1-11

“Finally, be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the full armor of God, so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand. Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. In addition to all this, take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one. Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people.”
– Ephesians 6:10-18

“I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”
– Philippians 3:14

“There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit distributes them. There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. There are different kinds of working, but in all of them and in everyone it is the same God at work.”
– 1 Corinthians 12:4-6

“Just as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts form one body, so it is with Christ. For we were all baptized by[c] one Spirit so as to form one body—whether Jews or Gentiles, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink. Even so the body is not made up of one part but of many. Now if the foot should say, “Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body. And if the ear should say, “Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body. If the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be? If the whole body were an ear, where would the sense of smell be? But in fact God has placed the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be. If they were all one part, where would the body be? As it is, there are many parts, but one body.”
– 1 Corinthians 12:12-20

“I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day—and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing.”
– 2 Timothy 4:7-8

Having Failed Myself

“Having Failed Myself”
By Bob Perks

By some statistics many who made resolutions for the new year
have already failed at some if not all of them.

I’m here to remind you that’s okay.

Failure is an event not a person.

We put way too much emphasis on the first day of the new year
anyway.

As for setting goals, we also place too much on the first day of
the month or Mondays.

I remember when I was in sales, we struggled with getting people
to commit to something as we got closer to the holidays each year.

“Well, let me think about it.  Call me after the holidays.”

Then there was vacation time.

“As soon as I get back from vacation.”

The truth is, most people spend more time planning their vacations
than they do planning their life.

We are all procrastinators in some way.

So, when is a good time to begin?

How about right now?

Whatever resolution you may have failed to keep can be started again
and again, at any time if it is for all the right reasons.

Whether it be a change in diet, attitude, exercise, finances,
relationships or simply to read more, play more, rest more,
there is no better time to begin than right now.

Obviously, you have chosen something that you believe in.  By failing
to follow through on that belief you may be revealing the real truth.

You don’t believe in yourself enough to make it happen.

Now is the time to begin.

Permit me to ask you this question.

If you had failed God in any way when should you ask for forgiveness
and change your ways?

Monday?  The first of the month? After vacation? After you do it wrong
a few more times just to get it out of your system?

No!  God would want you to do it now.

What you failed to accomplish in these first days of the new year may
not be an actual sin against God.  Still, He wants you to be happy, to
thrive, and to be all you can be.

So, if those changes, those resolutions you made would make you a better
you, isn’t that what God expects of you?

When you were born He made the best possible you.

He then expected you to live up to it and grow into the plans He had for
you from the very beginning.

Here’s the best part.  Everyday that you wake up He gives you another
chance to begin again.  He closes the door on yesterday and opens
the door to today.

You know what you have to do.  You know why you should.  You also know that
you can.

It’s not just another day, it’s another chance.

“I believe in you!”

by Bob Perks

Bob is an Inspirational Columnist for Beliefnet
http://www.beliefnet.com/author/author_148.html
and you can visit his site at http://www.BobPerks.com

God’s WORD for Youth: Choices

“Those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it.” – Mark 8:35

What are the prizes in life worth winning? This is the question that haunts me.

I don’t want to rush through life pursuing one thing after another, only to find in the end that the only prize worth choosing is the prize I’ve managed to lose. I could spend my whole life collecting the nicest clothes, the smartest car, or the most notorious name in history and still lose my own soul.

Jesus asks me even harder questions. What am I willing to die for, or what in my life must die so that I can truly live? I may not always choose the easy ways; in fact, at times I will need to make hard choices. Some may be choices for which I even choose to die.

The path I see before me is full of choices. As a capable young adult, I look at the future and choose those vocations and avocations that are worthy of my time and calling as a person of God. I sort out what is important and put my efforts there.

Today I choose prizes worthy of my calling as a disciple of Jesus Christ.

God’s WORD for Youth: Relationships

“And let us consider how to provoke one another to love and good deeds, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some.” Hebrews 1024-25a

Relationships are critical for youth.  We can’t survive without relationships some casual, some close, and some intimate. It’s important to have shared moments and experiences and simply to be present for another person. This communion with other people is a celebration of life and God which lifts my spirits and lets me know that I am not alone. Companionship is essential if I am to continue to make progress in my journey of discipleship. Being there for someone and knowing someone understands my fears gives me strength to go on.

Each day I look for opportunities to give of myself as well as to receive what others have to share. I set aside time to be with my family, friends, and faith community. I have a primary responsibility to myself and the people I care about to spend time in their presence and to share myself with them.

I find growth and affirmation in the company I keep.

God’s WORD for Youth: Giving

“Whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones in the name of a disciple – truly I tell you, none of these will lose their reward.” – Matthew 10:42

Today I give a cup of cold water. As a disciple of Jesus Christ, this means I extend myself for other people, especially children. When I see a need, I reach out to help. I am fully aware of what’s going on around me, and I see the opportunity for service along the way.

At one time I looked at all the injustices and waited for God or someone else to fix whatever was wrong – and perhaps even to fix me. I believed that God could make everything all right and that all I had to do was sit back and watch it happen.

The truth is that God’s work takes place through me as well as through others. When I recognize my responsibility and accept oneness with all God’s creation, I take the first step toward the healing of myself and the world I live in.

Today I give a cup of cold water and become part of the healing process. Today I live in hope as a person of the light. I, like John, tell others about the light I’ve found, joyfully inviting them to explore this light for themselves. Especially when I enter into places of darkness – hopelessness, abuse, hatred, or war – I share the light that is a part of who I am as a Christian.

In the darkest corners of my life there still may lurk dark shadows, menaces, and threats. Darkness separates me from my neighbor or friend. When I step into darkness I cannot recognize the trouble within.

Today I step out of the murky shadows and experience the wonderful light that was lit when Jesus appeared in the world. In light I have hope, a new beginning!

Jesus was and is a light to the world. Only as I understand the darkness in which I once lived can I fully comprehend and experience the wonderful light of Jesus.

Today I have hope as I rejoice in the light of the world, Jesus Christ!

Road Kill Grill

Had a chuckle a couple of weeks back when this image of a dead raccoon was painted over on the Franklin Road in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, USA.  Reminded me of this menu that was circulating on the internet many years ago.

Roadkill Grill

The Roadkill Grill Menu

 

“A Taste of the Wild”

 

Appetizers

  • Fried Deer Hide
  • Rigger Mortis Tortoise
  • Awesome Possom Blossom
  • Critter Fritters
  • Bug Juice Soup

“Fender Lickin’ Good” Entrees:

  • Chunk of Skunk
  • Rack of Racoon
  • Smear of Deer
  • Cheap Sheep
  • Flat Cat
  • Wreck of Lamb
  • Squeal Parmigiana
  • Robin on the Hood
  • Alley Cat-serole
  • Baked Chicken
  • Squiche Lorraine

Canine Cuisines

(“Eat like a hog when you taste our dog!”)

  • Poodles and noodles
  • Slab of Lab
  • Cocker Cutlets
  • Ground Round Hound
  • Hushed Puppies
  • Rabbit of the Day
  • “Thumper on the Bumper”

Special:
“Guess that Mess”

  • Guess what it is and you eat free!

Desserts:

  • Road Toad Alamode
  • Armadillo Crunch
  •  
     

“Food is more fun when you hit it on the run!”

 
 

Unfortunately, many unsuspecting animals end up on the menu of the Roadkill Grill simply because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. They were in the middle of the road.

And there are many young people who are in danger of becoming roadkill too. That’s because they are “middle-of-the-road” Christians. They are neither on one side nor the other. They live for Christ when it’s convenient, then live for themselves or for the crowd when that’s more convenient. They are Christians on Sunday, but the rest of the week you can’t really tell which side of the road they are on. They are middle-of-the-road Christians.

The Bible says, “Choose this day whom you will serve” (Joshua 24:15). Also: “No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to one and despise they other” (Matthew 6:24). And further: “So, because you are lukewarm-neither hot nor cold-I am about to spit you out of my moth” (Revelation 3:16). All of these Scriptures make the point very clear. If you are a middle-of-the-road Christian, you are roadkill.


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Bible Lessons from the Olympics: Blind Focus – Im Dong-Hyun

The athletic feats of the Olympics continue to astound us. The excellent displays of speed, strength, agility, and determination continue to inspire us. But there are few who are as amazing and inspirational as the less-than-perfect Olympians. We thought we’ve seen it all. A leg-less runner pretty much topped the list. Until we heard of a blind archer. Read on…

Blind Focus

 

On 27 July 2012 at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London a new world record score of 699 in archery was set. World records are broken all the time at the Olympics. But what makes this world record unique is that it was set by someone who is legally blind – Im Dong-Hyun from South Korea.

He has only 10 percent of normal vision in his left eye and slightly more at 20 percent in his right which makes him legally blind. In competition, he refuses to wear corrective lenses while shooting, because they make him uncomfortable. Instead he relies on his muscle memory and a slight difference in color in his blurred vision. At 70 meters, he sees only a blurred yellow blob, but says he has grown used to seeing the target that way. Dong-Hyun describes what he sees as being similar to different colored paints being dropped in water. The colors are not very distinct and the boundaries between them are blurred.

In spite of his less than perfect vision, he more than proved his ability to hit his target. Dong-Hyun’s sight may be impaired, but his vision is crystal clear – to win the gold at the Olympics.

Take it to the Next Level

 

The great men of faith in the Bible didn’t have perfect vision either; far from it. They were blinded and misled by lust, fear, greed, pride and jealousy. They were murderers, thieves, liars, adulterers, vengeful and power-hungry. They were pretty much as bad as the next person. Interestingly, the word “Sin” is actually a term from archery. When it says in Romans 3:23, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,” it means to “miss the mark,” to miss the target. Like these great men of faith, we were given one shot and we all missed by a mile.

We fell short of God’s plan for our lives, we missed the target, we sinned. But can draw inspiration from Dong-Hyun who overcame his physical imperfection to win his prize. He was blind but he didn’t let his condition control his destiny. Though it certainly took courage and perseverance, what I believe are two keys to his success are:
1. Focus – He doesn’t focus on his limitations, but on his target.
2. Reliance – he relies on the feel of the bow, a steady hand, and past experience.

Focus

Like Dong-Hyun, we can choose to overcome our spiritual imperfection. As Paul said in Philippians 3:13-14, to forget what is behind and strain toward what is ahead. If we want to lay hold of all that God as in store for us, we need to shift our focus away from our sinful “disability” and focus on God’s supernatural ability.

But what made these men of faith great, what set them apart from the rest was their focus on God. Their sights were set on Him. Like them we must keep focused on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith and act, trusting that God will guide us to His intended target for our lives.

Reliance

In our attempt to live godly lives, we often depend on our own strength. We tend to rationalize, depend on conventional wisdom, try it on our own for a while and when everything falls apart, God becomes our “Plan B”. Dong-Hyun could have used corrective lenses. That would have been the logical, smart thing to do to overcome his “disability”. He might even have done better. But would his life have been as much of an inspiration if he did? We often wonder why God places limitations on us. Why do we still have to deal with sin even though Christ won us the ultimate victory, why do we still struggle with it?

God certainly isn’t a fan of doing things the conventional way. If He did, none of us would ever make the cut. We’re not perfect, we’re not the best of the best of the best. The irony is God very often chooses the weak, humble, and foolish things to show His glory through them. After all, if God always chose the “perfect people,” others would just as easily attribute their successes to their natural ability; nothing to do with what God has done.

So even though these men of faith led seriously messed up lives, once they trusted God enough to make Him the center, the bulls-eye of their lives, they accomplished amazing things. “However, as it is written: ‘No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him'” 1 Corinthians 2:9 (NIV)

Scriptures Verses for Youth Bible Study

1 Corinthians 2:9 (NIV)
“However, as it is written: ‘No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him'”

Phil 3:13-14 (NIV)
“Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”

Romans 3:23 (NIV)
“For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,”

Questions for Youth Discussion

  • Have you ever seen those circus sideshows where they try to hit a target blindfolded? How do you believe they do it?
  • Have you ever tried shooting at targets yourself? Basketball? Golf? Soccer? Archery? The rubbish bin? How good are you at hitting the target?
  • Why is it that God allows us to struggle with sin?
  • What are some common struggles that youth face? Christians in general?
  • What famous personalities do you know about that have had some pretty serious struggles?What was their story? Was it a triumph or defeat? Who did they turn to for help? What are some things they learned through their experiences?
  • Who are some of the Bible personalities who had some serious struggles? What were their stories? Was it a triumph or defeat? Who did they turn to for help? What are some things they learned through their experiences?

Application to the Lives of Youth

  • What are some struggles you have faced personally?
  • Who did you depend on in the midst of your struggle?
  • Did you overcome your struggles? Or are you still working through them?
  • Will you do anything differently, knowing what you’ve learned today?

If we’re willing to say, “God I know I’m not perfect but here I am, with all my imperfections, ready and available to allow you to work through me;” if we’re willing to make God our focus and depend on Him, willing to see beyond our past and fix our eyes on Jesus, the arrow of our lives will fly surely enough to hit God’s intended target and destiny for us. And we’ll leave our mark and legacy on the pages of history.

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Need an evangelistic Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series with an Olympic Theme?

What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
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Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
->Tell me about “Destined to Win”

Bible Lessons from the Olympics: Downhill from Here

Downhill from Here

Jean-Claude Killy, the French ski champion, did more than work hard at his sport.

When he made his nation’s ski team in the early 1960s, he was determined to be the best. He decided vigorous training was the key. Up at dawn each day, he ran up mountains with his skis on – a very painful activity. Weight training, sprinting…Killy was determined to do whatever it took to reach peak physical condition.

Other team members were working just as hard, and in the end it was a change in style, not conditioning, that set Killy apart.

The goal in ski racing is to ski down a prescribed mountain course faster than anyone else. Killy began experimenting to see if he could pare any seconds off his time. He found that if he skied with his legs apart, he had better balance. He also found that if he sat back on his skis when executing a turn, instead of leaning forward as was customary, he had better control, which also resulted in faster times. Rather than regarding his ski poles as an accessory for balance, Killy tried using them to propel him forward.

Killy’s style was unorthodox. But when he won most of the major ski events in 1966 and 1967, including 3 gold medals at the Winter Olympics, skiers around the world took notice. Today, the Killy style is norm among downhill and slalom racers. Any other “style” would be considered odd.

As Christians we are not called to conform to the world’s standards, but to God’s standards. Our lifestyle should challenge people to come to Jesus Christ and live according to His higher ways and purposes. The Christian “style” may seem odd to the unbeliever, but in the end, it is the style that will previal!

Don’t be afraid to be a little “unusual” today in the eyes of those who observe you. Your example may help win them over to a championship lifestyle.

This devotion is from “Breakfast with God.”

Get "Go for the Gold" Youth Bible Study SeriesGo for the Gold
Need an evangelistic Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series with an Olympic Theme?

What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
-> Tell me about “Go for the Gold”

Get "Destined to Win" Youth Bible Study SeriesDestined to Win
Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
->Tell me about “Destined to Win”

Bible Lessons from the Olympics: Bringing Home the Gold

The Dream of a Lifetime

Canoe racing was added to the Olympics at the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris, France.

At that time, ocean going ships were the primary means of travel between the United States and France. Athletes couldn’t hop on a jet and be there in a matter of hours like they do today. This presented a dilemma for one member of the United States four man canoe team who were expected to win the gold medal.

Bill Havens’ wife was expecting, and if he made the long journey there was a good chance he wouldn’t make it back in time for the birth of his first child. While his wife insisted he should compete, he struggled with the decision. If he stayed, it would mean setting aside his life long dream he had spent years working towards. If he went, his wife would give birth without him at her side.

His eventually decided to withdraw from the Olympics and stay behind with his wife because he considered being with her more important than pursuing his life-long dream in the Olympics.

The United States four man team won the gold in canoe racing without him. And Bill’s wife gave birth so late, that had he left and competed in the Olympics he could have still returned home without missing the birth of his son. While the world saw it as a missed opportunity, Bill Havens had no regrets. His commitment to someone he loved dearly was more important to him than a Gold medal around his neck.

But this story doesn’t end there…

28 years later, in 1952, Bill Havens received a cablegram from Frank, the son he stayed behind to seen born. The cablegram was Helsinki, Finland, the venue for the 1952 Olympic Games:

“Dad, I won. I’m bringing home the gold medal you lost while waiting for me to be born.”

Frank Havens won the gold medal for the United States in the canoe-racing event. He won the Gold medal that his father had sacrificed 28 years earlier to be with his mother while he was born.

As Christians, we also make a commitment to someone we love that is more important to us than anything the world could offer. And at the end of this race called life, we also will receive a reward we have dreamed of getting, but did not earn. This reward was not earned by our son, as was the case of Bill Havens, but by the Son of God. And he does not bring it home to us, but brings us home to receive it in Heaven.

“Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day–and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing.” 2 Timothy 4:8

Take It to the Next Level

  • What dilemma’s do Christians face as they live out their commitment to Christ, to the one they love? What struggles do you face? What struggles have you face?
  • Bill Havens sacrificed the Gold, and never expected that his son would one day receive it.  As Christians we know that our sacrifices here on earth will be honored in heaven. Do we live for the rewards or do we live the way we do because of our commitment to the one we love? What’s the difference?
  • How does knowing that God will honor our sacrifices, give us strength to make the difficult choices in life?
  • What is a commitment you need to make out of your love for Christ this week, knowing that God will honor that commitment?
  • How can you make that commitment a reality?

 

Get "Go for the Gold" Youth Bible Study SeriesGo for the Gold
Need an evangelistic Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series with an Olympic Theme?

What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
-> Tell me about “Go for the Gold”

Get "Destined to Win" Youth Bible Study SeriesDestined to Win
Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
->Tell me about “Destined to Win”

Run with Perseverance

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”  
Hebrews 12:1

There is no better feeling in the world than the joy of winning a race you were never expected to win!

Just ask Jenny Spangler. She won the women’s marathon at the U.S. Olympic Trials in February 1996, earning the right to compete at the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta.

At the time of the trials, Spangler was qualifier number 61, which meant that 60 runners had entered the race with faster times than hers. No one had ever heard of her – and no one thought she could maintain a winning pace when she passed the leaders at the 16-mile mark.

Spangler had few successes to her credit. She had set an American junior record in the marathon during college, but then she left the sports scene after a stress fracture dashed her hopes in the Olympic Trials of 1984. Abandoning the sport after she ran poorly in 1988, she returned to school and earned a master’s degree in business administration. She ran only two marathons between 1988 and 1996.

At the marathon trials, she was such an unknown that the second and third place finishers asked each other, “Who is she?” after she took the lead and held on to it.

The favorites in February’s race expected Spangler to fade, but she never did. Somewhere inside herself, she found the courage and stamina to finish strong. Not only did she make the Olympic team, but she took home first prize – $45,000.

Does the day ahead of you look as grueling as a marathon? Keep Jenny Spangler in mind as you jog through your various commitments and responsibilities. Believe you can get the job done. Run the race God has marked out before you. Keep moving!

You can end each day with the satisfaction of knowing you are that much closer to the goal!

This devotion is from “Breakfast with God.”

Get "Go for the Gold" Youth Bible Study SeriesGo for the Gold
Need an evangelistic Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series with an Olympic Theme?

What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
-> Tell me about “Go for the Gold”

Get "Destined to Win" Youth Bible Study SeriesDestined to Win
Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
->Tell me about “Destined to Win”

Bible Lessons from the Olympics: Blade Runner

The Olympic Games celebrates the athlete at their best. It is the pinnacle of human sporting achievement and you’re likely to see every Olympian striving to give their most perfect performances, many after years of challenging training. But today, our focus shifts to one particular athlete that has caught our attention. One that isn’t quite so picture perfect. We want to introduce you to…

The Blade Runner

 

South African sprinter Oscar Pistorius, also known as the “Blade Runner,” was born in 1986 in Johannesburg.

Oscar is like most runners competing in the 2012 London Olympic games. There’s only one difference. He has no legs. Born with a congenital absence of the calf bone in both legs, he had to have them amputated between the ankle and knee at the age of 11 months.

Ironically, this record breaking Paralympian’s only obstacle is the controversy he faces over his prosthetic limbs, as some critics have claimed gives him an advantage over able-bodied athletes.

In 2007 the International Association of Athletics Federations conducted research on Oscar’s prosthetic legs and found that it gave him certain advantages against able-bodied athletes. They claimed his prosthetics were lighter and had more “spring” than normal legs. Although he won the appeal, he did not qualify for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. However, he performed exceptionally well at the 2008 Summer Paralympics: he won gold in the 100m, 200m, and 400m events, completing the 400m race in a world-record time of 47.49 seconds.

In 2012, he will be competing in the 400-m and the 4 x 400m relay events, being the first double amputee runner at the Olympic games. In response to being admitted to the Olympic team, Oscar said, “Today is truly on of the proudest days of my life. To have been selected to represent Team South Africa at the London 2012 Olympic Games… is a real honor and I am pleased that years of hard work, determination and sacrifice have all come together.”

Oscar’s story of determination and perseverance in spite of his condition inspires us. He wasn’t born perfect, he had his struggles, but he chose not to dwell on the things he could not do, but kept his focus on that he could accomplish.

We have all been called to some great purpose. And there are times we may feel our past experiences, our failures, our lack of spiritual maturity, our lack of talent or skill “disqualify” us from partnering with God to fulfill that purpose. We feel “handicapped” and inadequate; that our weaknesses far outweigh our strengths.

Take It to the Next Level

Paul was a spiritual giant in his own right. He was an apostle, much of the New Testament are his inspired writings. He had performed numerous miracles in the name of Jesus, he had led thousands to God. But he had a “thorn in his flesh”. The Bible never explains to us exactly what it is in 2 Corinthians 12:7-10, but it’s often implied to be a physical weakness. He asked God to remove it. Not once, but three times. God responded to him, pretty much the same way He refers to our own weaknesses, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”

Just like Oscar whose disability strangely perceived to give him advantages over other able-bodied runners, God’s power is perfected in us, not “in spite of,” but “because of” our weaknesses. Paul’s response? “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” We COULD ask God to remove our weaknesses. Why not? He has the power to do it doesn’t He?

The funny thing is, if God really did that, what’s going to stop us from depending on our own abilities, on our own strength? What’s going to stop us in boasting about what WE have accomplished?

“Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of “the brightest and the best” among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we haveright thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh startcomes from God by way of Jesus Christ. That’s why we have the saying, “If you’re going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God.” 1 Cor 26:31 (MSG)

So, let’s not go around tooting our own horns. Let’s not hide behind our weaknesses any longer. Let us trumpet out loud that all we have comes from God. The weak, the insecure, the inadequate, we are everything God made us to be. Victorious in our weaknesses, triumphant because of His grace working through us that comes through our relationship with Jesus Christ.

Don’t feel like you’re worthless before God – you actually are! BUT our worth doesn’t come from what you’ve done, what you do, or what you will accomplish. Your worth comes because the creator of the universe chose YOU. Chose to die for YOU. Chose to work through YOU as His instrument on this earth. Chose YOU to be His heir and spend eternity with. That’s exactly how much YOU are worth.

“We are more than conquerors through him who loved us.” Rom 8:37b (NIV)

Scriptures Verses for Youth Bible Study

2 Corinthians 12:9-10 (NIV)
“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong.”

1 Cor 26:31 (MSG)
“Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of “the brightest and the best” among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we haveright thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh startcomes from God by way of Jesus Christ. That’s why we have the saying, “If you’re going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God.”

Romans 8:35, 37-39 (NIV)
“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons,[b] neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 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.”

Questions for Youth Discussion

[Teacher’s NoteWe often learn more about a person’s true character through their weaknesses rather than their strengths. The power that youth would like to have often reveals an area where they are feeling weak.]
Who is your favorite superhero? Why? What is that superhero’s weakness? Why is it that every superhero has a weakness? If you could have one supernatural power, what would it be? Why?

  • Why is it that God allows weakness in our lives?
  • Who’s your favorite Athlete? Why?
  • As a society we are more likely to look up to weakness than strength. Why?
  • What are some of the things that our society defines as a strength? As a weakness?
  • In what ways have you seen a weakness become a strength?
  • Why are youth more likely to boast of strengths rather than weaknesses?
  • How does Paul’s view of power and weakness differ from that of the world?
  • What are some of the weaknesses that youth have to deal with?
  • What understanding, or insights have you learned from your own experiences regarding weaknesses and struggles?
  • How have you seen God work in your own life during times of weakness?
  • How have you seen God work through you in times of weakness?
  • In what experiences have you seen God turn a weakness into a strength?

Application to the Lives of Youth

  • In what areas of your life are you more likely to rely on your strength rather than God’s strength?
  • What weaknesses, struggles, or constraints in your life might God be able to use?
  • What is an area where you will commit to trust God this week, even though you might feel weak or inadequate in that area? What step of faith will you take in spite of your perceived weakness?

Get "Go for the Gold" Youth Bible Study SeriesGo for the Gold
Need an evangelistic Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series with an Olympic Theme?

What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
-> Tell me about “Go for the Gold”

Get "Destined to Win" Youth Bible Study SeriesDestined to Win
Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
->Tell me about “Destined to Win”

Florence Chadwick

This coming 4th of July, we want to remember Florence Chadwick and celebrate her determination some 60 years before. It wasn’t the day of her greatest triumph, it wasn’t her most glorious moment. It was the time of her greatest defeat. It was also the time she decided never to give up ever again. As we celebrate Independence Day, let us also remember our independence from a life of sin and to never lose sight of Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.

Focused on the Goal

 

Her goal was the California coastline a 34 km swim from Catalina Island. It was no more distant than the width of the English Channel, a goal she had already conquered as the first woman to swim it from both directions. Although she was a seasoned long-distance swimmer with incredible stamina, she trained arduously to prepare herself to achieve her goal.

July 4th, 1952
Millions watched on national television, as 34 year old Florence Chadwick began her swim. The water was icy cold; the fog so thick she could hardly see the support boats alongside her. As the hours passed, she was repeatedly stung by jellyfish. Sharks had to be driven away with rifles. Yet she pressed on, determined to achieve her goal.

15 hours later
Numbed with the cold, she was ready to give up. Her mother and her trainer were in a boat at her side. “Florence. You are almost there. Don’t give up now.” Encouraged by her mother’s admonition, she continued to swim.

Failure
Fifteen hours and fifty minutes after she began her swim, the support team reluctantly agreed to pull Florence from the water. Several hours later, after she warmed up, she realized she had given up only a few hundred meters from her goal! If she had continued just a little while longer, the waves would have carried her to the beach. “If I could have just seen the land for myself, I would have made it!”. She told reporters it was not the sharks, the fatigue, or even the cold water that defeated her. She had been defeated by the fog alone. It had obscured her goal and blinded her reason, her eyes and her heart.

Never give in to defeat.
1952 was the only time Florence Chadwick ever quit. Two months later she swam that same channel. The water was still ice cold and still inhabited with sharks. Once again fog obscured her view. But this time she pressed on, BELIEVING that somewhere beyond that fog, her goal would be reached. Not only was she the first woman to swim the Catalina Channel, but she beat the men’s record by two hours!

Take It to the Next Level

 

Lessons to be learnt

The Journey
In every race there are stages. In the beginning there is anticipation, excitement, eagerness to get started. Adrenaline and energy are high. Then there is the routine. A pace is set. Things proceed as expected. Practiced experience, skill, and training prevail. Then there is the struggle, the time when you hit the proverbial wall, when there is the urge to quit and only discipline and tenacity carry you through. Finally there is the finish. The moment when the goal is within your sight and grasp, that last rush, that knowing that the end is near if you just press on a little bit more. And ultimately, there is the joy, the satisfaction that comes when you have completed that which you set out to do. The same is true of our spiritual lives. The Christian life is a journey. We’ve each been called to a journey “And let us run with endurance the race that God has SET BEFORE US” (Hebrews 12:1) And what do you do when you’ve lost your direction, when the journey is confusing? “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2)

Training
Training is essential to success. Training is not a single event, completed and done. Training is not something done once-in-a-while, when time allows. And training certainly isn’t something that is only done when you feel like it. Talk to any successful athlete in any sport and they will tell you of their discipline of training to reach “a goal”. Goals are a key aspect of training. Training always has a goal, an objective in mind. And depending on that goal, your training will be different. Swimmer, runners, and various athletes train differently. Each needs a different set of muscles, a different set of skills. Consistent training builds the muscles, the stamina, the skills to reach the goal ahead. “For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.” (1 Timothy 4:8; See also 1 Corinthians 9:24-27) And what do we do when our discipline is lacking? When the training has been neglected? When we simply don’t feel like it? “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith”

Purpose
We each have a goal. Even Christ had a goal set before him and a journey to get there. That purpose for us is to bring glory to God. It is to do what he created us to do. We are each here for a reason. We each have a place in God’s divine scheme of things. “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mothers womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place, when I was woven together in the depths of the earth. Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.” (Psalm 139:13-16) What do we do when we have lost our purpose? Or never found it in the first place? When we are clueless and lost? “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith”

Endurance
Endurance comes only when you’re willing to press on through the routine, the struggles, the urge to give up, and the pain knowing that at the end there will be joy. It’s a choice to not merely start, but to finish. It is something that is developed by constantly pushing your limits. “Run in such a way to get the prize I train my body and make it my slave” (1 Corinthians 9:24-27) What do we do when we it seems that we simply cannot go on? When our strength is failing? “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith”

Focus
It’s not enough to know that life is a journey toward a goal, to fulfill a purpose. It’s easy to get distracted, to give up, to lose the will to move ahead. We must look to Jesus, hear His words of encouragement, and follow in his footsteps. The likelihood of failure is great when we lose sight of Jesus. When the risks, the dangers, the people around us cloud our view, what do we do? “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith”

Failure
All of us find ourselves in situations in life where we seem to be in over our heads, when we’re being tested or tried beyond our capabilities, where we’re overwhelmed, where we don’t think we can do it, when we feel like we can’t go on. Whether it’s a relationship, a course in school, a job, a health issue, overcoming a fear, or recovering from a mistake/ failure, God is there with you in your situation. We all go through times when things seem beyond our ability to cope, when we have been doing the best that we can, but it just doesn’t seem like it will be good enough and we are afraid of drowning. There’s solid ground ahead. The Rock of Ages will be there for you to stand upon. Failure is not the end. It’s an opportunity to begin again with greater clarity, with more experience, with renewed determination to finish the course. “He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.” (Philippians 1:6b NAS) How do we go on? Where do we find the endurance to stay on the course set before us? “Keeping our eyes on Jesus, on whom our faith depends from start to finish.”

Witnesses
We are not alone. Crowds of winners, of finishers, have gone on before us and showed us the way. (Hebrews 12:1) There are people alongside, with you to support you now. There will be others to follow behind you. Press on for all of them. Don’t let them down. Set the pace for others to follow so that you can say as Paul said, “Imitate me as I imitate Christ” (1 Corinthians 4:16, 1 Corinthians 11:1) Most importantly, press on for Christ. “I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 3:14) How can we be a testimony to those around us? “Keeping your eyes on Jesus, on whom our faith depends from start to finish.”

Applying it to life

 

  • What is God’s purpose for your life? What is your goal? How can you find it?
  • Where are you in your Christian journey?
  • To what purpose are you training? What training do you need? How will you get it?
  • Have you lost sight of your goal?
  • Have you failed, been distracted, given up?
  • How can you start again, resting in Christ’s grace, and depending on his guidance and strength?
  • How can you stay focused on God’s calling for your life?
  • Find someone who has gone before you to be a guide. Find someone to press on alongside you, to be accountability partners in your journey. Reach out to someone you can guide, that you can encourage and support in their own journey of faith.

Scripture Reference
“Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith” – Hebrews 12:2

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What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
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The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
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What Makes an Olympic Champion?


You may never have heard of Kieran Behan before. In fact, if you don’t follow gymnastics, you probably wouldn’t know he won a few medals in gymnastics last year. You may not even think his performance was all that special in the field of competitive sports. Yet, what is truly remarkable about Kieran isn’t his achievements – it’s the story behind the man and the size of his dream.

The Dreams of a Youth

While other boys his age dreamed of soccer and playing in the big leagues, Kieran dreamed of gymnastics. Strange dream for someone coming from Ireland to have. After all, it’s not exactly known for the sport. But that never stopped him from dreaming.

He Never Stopped Dreaming

At 10, a tumour was discovered in his left thigh. What was to be a routine surgery took a disastrous turn for the worst when the operation messed up big time. He woke screaming in excruciating pain from the catastrophic nerve damage he suffered. To this day, he still experiences limited feeling in one foot. He was wheelchair-bound for 15 months. And he recounts, “The doctors said ‘you’ll never walk again’ and I had to see a psychiatrist who said you have to accept the worst. But that just drove me on; I wanted to prove them wrong. They were saying it was over but I wasn’t having it.” He never stopped dreaming. He made tremendous progress in his physiotherapy and before long was back in the gym.

Who knew, tragedy would strike twice. Within a few months, he slipped from the high bar and smashed his head, suffering severe damage to the part of his brain that controls balance. The slightest wrong movement would make him pass out. For the second time in his childhood, Kieran was back in a wheelchair, this time not just having to learn how to walk again but how to eat and make the simplest movements.

Again, the doctors said ‘it’s the end’; again, he went back to the gym. Only this time, just to spend hour upon hour trying to retrain his brain doing simple exercises like throwing a ball against a wall and catching the rebound. Some days, he could not even manage that.

He was out of school for a year and when he finally returned with a walking stick, he was ridiculed and taunted mercilessly. In spite of it all, he persisted. Through the hard work and determination, it took him three whole years to again become the athlete he was before the accident. All that time, he never stopped dreaming.

But that’s not all. In the relentless pursuit of his dream, he suffered a broken arm, a fractured wrist, and a torn ligament in one knee. And two years ago, just after he qualified to make his debut professionally at the European Championships, the ligament in his other knee snapped. “It was the nearest I ever came to quitting,” Kieran admits. “Sheer despair really but I’d been through a lot worse and knew that, whatever happened, I could always come back.” And he did. He never stopped dreaming and now represents Ireland as its first Olympic gymnast for 16 years.

The challenges didn’t just begin and end with the physical as if that wasn’t bad enough. He received no funding for his training. He worked at his father’s building site or cleaned the gym where he trained in the mornings and then flipped and jumped in that same gym in the afternoon. Thankfully, he wasn’t all alone in this. His parents and community rallied to raise the £12,000 a year he needed. Car washes, cake sales, collection jars; you name it, he and his friends organized it. A few months ago, he finally said goodbye to the times he had to carry a jar full of coins to the bank hoping there would be enough to cover the airfare to an overseas competition.

His father fondly recalls his son’s tenacity, “Through all this, he’s been the one who’s had the determination, belief and heart. We’ve all just been swept along on his wave. He’s guided us all the way. We believed every day because he believed, because he told us everything would be all right.”

And he’s still got that Olympic dream on his mind.

Take It to the Next Level

Nothing is impossible to Him who believes. God has an amazing calling and destiny for every one of us. Are there dreams we have given up on because they seemed too hard? Too out of reach? Surrounded by insurmountable circumstances? The problem isn’t that our dream is too big, too audacious. Joseph had a big dream himself and the road that took him to that dream was full of obstacles. Sold as a slave by his own brothers, framed for an indiscretion he didn’t commit, left to rot in jail. Yet in all those dark moments, he clung to his dream and the God that birthed it in him. He believed, just like Kieran did. And it was God that met Joseph’s belief and faith with His power.

But God goes one giant step further. He not only loves us, but also believes in us. He cheers us on when we’re at our weakest and most broken. He gives us the supernatural ability to believe in Him and the dreams He gives us. It is through Him, we can do what the world says is impossible. And that’s why we testify of His goodness and faithfulness, giving Him the glory for all He’s able to do. If Kieran’s earthly parents loved him so much that they would support him in his dream no matter what, how much more will God, our heavenly Father do for us?

“Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.” (Eph 3:20-21)

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What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
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The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
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Lin’s God We Trust

Jeremy_Lin_with_the_Knicks_and_reporters.jpg


Description


Jeremy Lin became an inspiration to many youth and adults when he took the New York Knicks to several impressive victories after previously sitting on the bench for most of his career. When sidelined and with him now in the spotlight, he has in both instances professed his praise and dependance on God, through the good and bad, the failures and successes – testifying that it is God who works all things for the good of those who love Him.


Illustration


He’s been called “the most surprising story in the NBA”, appeared on the covers of Sports Illustrated with the headline “Against All Odds” and the New York Times called, “the greatest tribute”, mentioned by Hall of Fame players, featured in Time Magazine and Forbes, which wrote, “Congratulations Jeremy. You have now made the cover of Time the same number of times as Michael Jordan. Linsanity reigns on.”You probably wouldn’t have thought much of him if you saw him down the street before his meteoric rise to fame. Don’t feel bad, you’re not alone. He’s been mistaken for a water boy, a team trainer, stereotypical Asian volleyball player, and perhaps much worse. At games he would hear jeers thrown at him such as “Wonton soup”, “Sweet and sour pork”, “Open your eyes!”, “Go back to China”, “Orchestra is on the other side of campus”, or in fake Chinese gibberish. Lin later says this occurred at most if not all Ivy League gyms. He does not react to it, “I expect it, I’m used to it, it is what it is.”

His coach in the Knicks didn’t take notice of him at first either. No one knows why, but he remained stuck on the bench and crashing on friends’ couches, with not much hope of it getting any better. After injuries to teammates, though, Lin was placed into the starting lineup. The Knicks promptly won six straight games, one of which ended in true edge-of-your-seat fashion; with Lin nailing the winning 3-point shot right on the buzzer.

Six straight wins later, he scored 89, 109, and 136 points in his first three, four, and five career starts, respectively, all three of which are the most by any player since 1976-77. Lin was named the Eastern Conference Player of the Week after averaging 27.3 points, 8.3 assists and 2.0 steals in those four starts with the Knicks going undefeated. NBCNewYork.com noted that “no one… in the history of basketball has done in their first four starts what Lin pulled off for the Knicks last week.”

Despite achieving the near Linpossible, he credits his parents with teaching him to play “godly basketball,” which measures success by sportsmanship, not stats. That means putting teammates first and showing respect to opponents and referees. He thanked God for the opportunities he was given and speaking about his successes, he says “I’ve surrendered that to God. I’m not in a battle with what everybody else thinks anymore.”

Has success changed him? Well, his former Sacramento Kings coach Keith Smart stated, “I knew [Lin] before he was Linmania. He’s still the same humble guy. The guy has not changed a bit, which is real special for a young man.”

Lin has spoken of his dependence and faith in God that helped to help carry him through the highs and lows of his sports career, “I’m just thankful to God for everything,” Lin said in a post-game interview. “Like the Bible says, ‘God works in all things for the good of those who love him.'”


Take It to the Next Level


  • How do you feel about the way Jeremy Lin has been public about his faith?
  • As a youth, do you sometimes feel like you have to hide your faith from your friends?
  • How often do we attribute our successes to God?
  • When all we see are failures and disappointments, how do we respond to God?
  • How can youth remain humble through their successes?

Application


It’s easy to blame God when we’re stuck in a rut and experience failure, disappointment, or just feeling sidelined in our lives. It’s easy to pray, to cry out to God to save us. But when we finally do experience a breakthrough, it’s just as easy to forget the One who brought us through.We’re not all that different from the Israelites: They called out to God, He delivered them from slavery, and once they were free, He provided for them, saw to their every need, and blessed them with a land to call their own. Sadly, they didn’t heed Moses’ warning to remember their God who gave them all these good things in the first place. Once they were prosperous, they grew proud and thought they were the ones responsible for their success. (Deut. 8:2-18).

I hope that Jeremy Lin is an inspiration to all of us, youth and adults, to live lives that are consistent in our praise and dependance on God, through the good and bad, the failures and successes – testifying that it is God who works all things for the good of those who love Him. The same God of Israel – the One that we read about in the Bible – is the same awesome and powerful God that does the Linpossible. And He’s the same God that we worship. Our God.

 

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Our “Destined to Win” series is a great follow up for youth who are new Christians or to emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum / Small Group Study has a sports theme and is great for athletes and works well as a tie in to what’s going on in the NBA and the current Linsanity.
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The Heel Grabber

Scripture: Jacob – Genesis 32

As a youth, you probably remember the story of Jacob’s ladder many times.

Jacob was sneaky. Deceitful. Conniving. Crafty. Dishonest. Selfish. His name means “Heel Grabber.” He came out of the womb wanting that which did not belong to him, holding onto his brother Esau’s heel.

Esau was rough and tough. An outdoorsman. A hunter. The “woodsy” type. His name meant “Red” and “Hairy.” Genesis 25:25 – “His whole body was like a hairy garment.” Sexy, Huh? The guy was a human “Orangutan.”

So you had “Big Red”, Esau the Ape Man and in contrast, Jacob was a spoiled smooth-skinned “mamma’s boy” who ran around hanging onto mom’s coat tails all the time. He was a “wimp.” I’ll bet he was a “tattle-tale” too! I can just hear him: “Mom, Esau hit me!” “Mom, Esau snuck some candy out of the pantry before dinner.” “Mom, Esau called me a dirty name.” “Mom, Esau shot the neighbor’s cat with his bow and arrow.”

One day, Jacob deceived his blind father (with his mother’s help). They covered his smooth body with goatskins so he felt (and “smelt”) like his hairy brother and he stole Esau’s birthright and blessing. Made “Big Red” so mad that he vowed to kill Jacob as soon as his father died. Jacob had to run for his life and the momma’s boy never saw his mother again.

But later he would wrestle with God and walk away not only with his name changed to Israel, but also his character changed. The heel grabber grabbed for God instead.

From a Sermon by Wayde Wilson

  • What changes have taken place in your own life through an encounter with God?
  • In what ways has your character changed since you became a Christian?
  • What things are still being worked on by God in your life?


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

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Kampung Living?

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A Typical Kampung House

During the early days of Singapore, the headman of a “kampung” (a small cluster of houses akin to a small village) lived in a nice house with his children. He and his family were happy, with many nearby neighbors who were true “friends.”

One day, as the headman sat on his front porch, a stranger arrived at the kampung from the jungle. The traveler was looking for a new place to live, so he asked the headman, “What kind of neighbors do you have?” The headman answered with a question of his own: “What kind of neighbors did you have at the last place you lived? “They were cranky, unfriendly, and cantankerous,” the traveler replied. “Well, I’m afraid you’ll find the same kind of neighbors here,” the headman told the traveler. So the man moved on, looking for a better place to live. The next day another man stopped at the headman’s home. That traveler also was looking for a place to live. He too asked about the residents in the kampung. The headman asked him the same question, “What kind of neighbors did you have at the last place you lived?” “My neighbors were the nicest and friendliest neighbors in the world,” the traveler replied. “Well, you’ll find the same kind of neighbors here, too,” the headman said.

So the second traveler decided to stay, and he found great neighbors. The first traveler settled a day’s journey away, and rumor has it that eventually he became involved in a feud with his neighbors. The headman knew that if the first traveler became his neighbor, trouble was likely because the traveler had a history of problems with neighbors. On the other hand, he knew that the second traveler was more likely to be a good neighbor since he had a history of positive relationships. Events proved him right.

What was the difference? The difference was in the two travelers. One was neighborly, and one was not.

A Chinese proverb says, “Do not remove a fly from your friend’s forehead with a hatchet.” The saying points out that we can say and do things in ways that harm our relationships with others. And, when people react to us in a negative manner, we blame them. But the problem originated with us. We are commanded “To love your neighbor as yourself” We each have a personal responsibility for establishing and maintaining healthy relationships.

Which traveler reflects you in the story?

A letter from your Church.

I am your church. Make of me what you will. I shall reflect you as clearly as a mirror. If outwardly my appearance is pleasing and inviting, it is because you have made me so. If you find my spiritual atmosphere to be kindly yet earnest, reverent yet friendly, worshipful yet sincere, sympathetic yet strong, divine yet humanly expressed, it is but the manifestation of the spirits of those who constitute my membership. But if you should by chance find me a bit cold and dull, I beg of you not to condemn me, for I show forth the only kind of life I shall receive from you. I have no life or spirit apart from you. Of this may you always be assured: I will respond instantly to your every wish, practically expressed, for I am the reflected image of your own soul. Make of me what you will.

Food for thought

  • What are some of the characteristics of the ideal church? The ideal Youth Group?
  • What is the current environment or atmosphere of our church?
  • In what practical ways can a person make our church, one of care and concern? The youth group?
  • What are you personally doing to make this happen?
  • Through which activities/ programs can you show this care and concern?
  • In what ways do you need to change in order to make your church one that cares?

 

Scripture
Read through the 7 churches at the beginning of the book of Revelation.

  • What were some of the characteristics, affirmations, and criticisms of those churches?
  • Which church is most like ours?
  • What are some things we can learn to make our church one of which Christ would be pleased?


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

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A Hole in your Sock?

socks.jpg

We are all too familiar with getting a hole in a sock. It’s common to children, youth, and even adults. It’s part of the journey of life along with the missing sock that gets sucked into the black hole of the washing machine, leaving behind an unwanted orphaned sock, forever abandoned. At least we can mend the hole in a sock and look forward to another cozy day together. But what do we do when we get a hole in our spirit?

Have a Hole in your Sock?

Often the first hole in a sock appears at the big toe. It’s an annoying trait of socks that holes eventually appear — usually at the most unfortunate or embarrassing times. Visit a friend and remove your shoes to enter his/her house and somehow your toe seems to know that now is a great time to break free. Whether at school gym class, or after a hard day at work, our socks get worn and soon a hole appears. We are then reminded that it is time to buy a new pair or a whole package of socks.

Have a Hole in your Spirit?

But what happens to you when you get a hole worn in your spirit? Do you go out and purchase a new spirit? Can you mend it with your sewing kit? Whatever you do, the holes continue to appear.

Often we look at external forces that are causing our spirit to get worn down when, perhaps, it might be more beneficial to look at how your own spirit might be causing the holes.

Take a hearty look at your “spiritual feet.” Take some time to wiggle your toes in the sand of God’s love and Christ’s salvation. Make sure that what you stand on will support you and not wear you down.

How does a spirit get worn down?

Many parts of our lives drain us when they could be filling us up. For a youth what could be called the prime of life can often be tumultuous as studies, relationships, and the struggles of growing up often wear at our spirit. Serving in a position in the church could be uplifting when sometimes it is not. Participating in athletics can help both spirit and body. But often the requirements for sports consume a large portion of a youth’s time. For adults, work could be edifying when often it is tedious, hectic work. Parenting, household chores, and taking care of the family can be wearing on both body and spirit. Both youth and adults go to bed, knowing that they have to wake up the next morning just to do it all over again.

Every time you make a commitment, some of your free time is going to vanish. And if you wear many hats, you will end up simply trying to get by.

Find Focus to reduce the Wear

Stop this madness. It’s time to sit down and set your focus. Our focus will determine our priorities and the manner in which we accomplish those things which are necessary. Often it is not the bad things that wear holes in our soul, but doing too many good things instead of focusing on the best. We need to recognize that some things we do have greater significance than others.

Are there any activities you could do without? What activities are using a lot of time and are not very productive in fulfilling God’s will for your life? These activities are wearing holes in your spiritual socks.

You can replace your spiritual socks by regaining focus. You can repair them by losing what is simply time consuming. Remember to walk closely with God. God will make sure that your spiritual socks are always in good repair.

Our walk with God is commonly known as discipleship. Unfortunately some of us have allowed our ourselves to become spiritually worn out and sidelined.

  • What things have you allowed to wear you down spiritually that you need to remove from your life?
  • What holes have been left in your soul that need to be mended?
  • What can be done to help you regain your spiritual focus?
  • How can you return to your Christian walk, to discipleship in your life?
  • Read 1 Timothy 1:12-17 Romans 12: 1-2 for more ideas on mending the holes in your soul.

 

Look to the cross to mend your soul

Maybe the best place to look in mending the holes in your spirit is to the cross. At the cross Jesus became very well acquainted with holes:

  • A crown of thorns was placed upon his head, the sharp thorns puncturing holes in his scalp and brow.
  • There were holes in his hands and feet where the soldiers nailed him to the cross.
  • A hole in his side spewed blood and water when the soldier speared him.

 

But it was the hole in his heart that was the biggest – a heartbroken by the sin of you and me. It was the reason he came to us, to mend the hole created by sin. Jesus died on that cross to mend our soul and spirit wounded by sin, but that wasn’t the last hole. You see, there was one more hole that Christ faced that would change everything.

They took his body down from the cross and it was placed in a borrowed hole, a tomb, by Joseph of Arimathea. Three days later Jesus left the hole and was alive. And with the conquering of the grave he proved that there was no hole too big, too deep, too painful, too dark, too impossible to overcome, that God cannot heal.

So look to the cross. Look to Jesus, for the mending of your soul. Look to him for His priorities for your life. Not only will you find healing, but also renewal. You’ll be able to move from a life of holes and a worn out spirit to a holy life filled with his joy and strength for each new day.


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

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Need a change of perspective?

A change of planes in LA, a stopover in Japan, and the tourist arrived in Singapore, like thousands before him. The flight was smooth, but the next part of the journey was a bit of a shock. “Marina Sands” the tourist requested. The taxi driver, accelerated into traffic, driving on a different side of the road behind a steering wheel positioned on a different side of the car. It seemed that drivers enjoyed honking horns incessantly and careening around corners. To the big visitor, jammed into a small back seat, the ride seemed chaotic and dangerous. A couple of times he felt he was going to die in a head-on collision.

To his relief, the wild ride brought him safely to the Marina Sands. Easing out of the cab on wobbly legs, he paid the driver and headed inside Singapore’s world famous resort. He endured a long elevator ride before reaching the top and the observation deck high above the city. Dazzled by the expansive view from the deck, he paused to take in the view. He looked straight down to the city streets from which he had just come. To his amazement he saw order and design where, only a few minutes before, he had feared for his life. Dozens of yellow and blue taxis moved together, stopping at red lights and going at green ones. What once seemed very threatening now seemed very small and insignificant. He could hear no horns at all. It all looked so safe.

To travel to any destination is an adventure. We choose a final destination and appropriate modes of travel in order to reach it. Our goal may be east, but at times we may need to travel north, south, or even west to get there. Yet in the end we arrive someplace East of the starting point. There will always be changes, stopovers, and transitions. Immersed in the traffic jam of life you have one view. But looking down from above you have another. What seemed chaos a few moments before suddenly makes sense.

The same is also true of life. As Christians we are also on a journey. As the church we are on a mission. At times the journey may not make sense. But when we see things from God’s perspective everything will fall into place.

The story of Job illustrates this point. Job lost his possessions, most of his family, and his health. Job’s wife confronted him and said, “Are you still holding on to your integrity? Curse God and die!” Job strongly rebuked his wife, and affirmed his faith in God. Job was later blessed with twice as much as he had before. Our perspective is very much a reflection of how near we are to God. Job lost everything, but rather than complaining, cursing or losing his temper, Job bowed down and humbly worshiped God. To the apostle Paul, John Mark was a liability, a man who could not be counted on, and thus a man who should not be taken along on a missionary journey. To Barnabas, whose gift was encouragement, Mark was an opportunity and a challenge. Whatever happens in life, look at things from God’s perspective and everything else will fall into place.

Isaiah 55:9
“As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.”

Philippians 4:6-8 (NIV)
“Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable–if anything is excellent or praiseworthy–think about such things.”

Whether you are a youth or an adult, the various areas of your life are greatly affected by your perspective:

  1. How you see yourself?
  2. How you see your circumstances?
  3. How you see God?
  4. How you see the church?
  5. How do you see the future?
  6. How you see others?

 

How might your views change if you were to try seeing these areas from God’s perspective?

~Ken


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

200 page e-book that explains everything you need to know when planning your very own object lessons. It contains 90 fully developed object lesson ideas and another 200 object lesson starter ideas based on Biblical idioms and Names / Descriptions of God.

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Devotional: New Car Christianity?

Congratulations. I am giving you a brand new car. It’s reliable, efficient, and runs well. It can take you anywhere you need to go.

Are you excited?

But there are a couple conditions.

  1. You are only allowed to use the car one day per week. The rest of the week it must remain at my home and you are not allowed to use it.
  2. The one morning per week when you can use it, I will come to your house and pick you up. You can ride with me in the passenger seat and follow me wherever I go. We will only go the places I want to go and do the things I want to do. After a few hours, I’ll drop you off back at your home until our special day next week when we will do the same thing.

 

Unfortunately, this is the same thing we do when we become Christians.

We give Jesus our life. We have a new life, filled with possibilities. All things are possible. Jesus can take us to incredible new places and enable us to do things we never dreamed possible. He can take us anywhere we need to go.

But when we give him our life, we place conditions on it.

  1. You can only have my life, but only one day a week – on Sunday. The rest of the week my life is mine to live as I wish.
  2. On Sunday, I’ll decide what church activities I will attend and Jesus, you can be there with me. But remember, I am in charge. I am in control. You are merely a passenger as long as it is convenient. You cannot make decisions. All the choices are mine to make.

 

Then after you have had your time with me I’ll take my life back and see you again next week. If you are lucky, I might give you a call once in a while, but only if I need something.

Have you given Jesus a car, or have you given him your life?


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

200 page e-book that explains everything you need to know when planning your very own object lessons. It contains 90 fully developed object lesson ideas and another 200 object lesson starter ideas based on Biblical idioms and Names / Descriptions of God.

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Why

By Bob Perks famous for his “I Wish You Enough” newsletter. Join it. You’ll love it.


 

I think of all the questions we ask, “Why?” may be the the most powerful.

We ask it of God…”Why?”

Then we wait patiently expecting an answer.

He does answer, but most of the time we choose not to hear Him.

It’s a filter we humans have that helps us to only hear what we want to hear.

When I ask God “Why?” I hear Him say, “Why not?”

I believe He does it because he created us to think on our own.

It forces us to come to a decision, react to it and do something about it.

But…We don’t always do something about it.

“Why?” Because taking action gets us involved. Getting involved is
not our first choice. We always want to know “Why?” but we also want
to know who to blame. Blaming someone else is easier than taking on
the challenge ourselves.

“God, why did that happen?”

“Why not?” God says.

“Someone should do something about that!” we respond.

God says, “You are someone.”

“Why me?”

God says, “Why not?”

Then we stop asking God and lose faith.

Why? Because when we don’t get the answer we want, it must mean that
God doesn’t exist. The God we want to believe in gives you everything you
want.

No, my friend.

He gives you everything you need.

But He expects you to go get it.

Look around you right now. Everything you see was once simply a thought.
The chairs, tables, rugs, computer, lights…everything.

Everything also came from the earth. God created the earth and everyone in
it…including you.

So, everything came from someone who asked, “Why?” heard, “Why not?”
but the difference was, they did something about it.

The next time you ask God, “Why?” expect to get involved with the solution.

“Why not?”

“I wish you enough!”


Personal Note: “Why?” and “Why am I here?” Are two of the most often asked questions from youth. This is a great response for youth leaders to answer those two questions. Bob has a lot of insightful thoughts on the Christian walk that I Find very useful when working with Youth. Check out his website at www.bobperks.com


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

200 page e-book that explains everything you need to know when planning your very own object lessons. It contains 90 fully developed object lesson ideas and another 200 object lesson starter ideas based on Biblical idioms and Names / Descriptions of God.

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Going over the Edge

rock_climber_abseiling.jpg

A youth sat frightened on the edge. It was only yesterday that she was taken from the valley to the mountaintop and now she was being asked to step out again. She was being asked to leave her most recent camp-out. Now she was being asked to leave her perch and abseil down the side of the cliff.

She had become well acquainted with her new position. It was predictable. It was comfortable. It was safe. She was sheltered from the uncertainties of life. She sat on the edge and looked at the rope, hanging from a tree and leading into the unknown. She looked at the equipment she was to wear. The rope was so thin and flexible. The equipment, at times, was uncomfortable.

She thought…
“This is no place for a woman to be! There’s nothing solid. You have no power over the wind. You’re at its mercy, it blowing you in new directions. Anyway, how is a woman supposed to be comfortable in that equipment and hanging from that tiny rope. Surely she had heard wrong! Everything she had known told her it was a bad idea. Everyone she talked to thought her crazy. That is except for God. As a matter of fact, it was God’s idea. That’s what bothered her. It bothered her because up to now, she had been happy where she was. Besides, she knew the type of people that did these things. They were crazy, radical, always going over the edge. They didn’t care what others thought of them, they just did things. She didn’t understand them and she didn’t want to– especially first hand! She’d rather watch! After all, the smart ones are those who don’t take risks. They are secure and stable. Aren’t they?”

Some of you can probably relate very well to this young woman. You know how she feels don’t you? You’ve been there. You’ve gone over the edge. You were uncertain, scared, having second thoughts even!

But I am talking about more than just learning the ropes. I am talking about the Christian life. You know the imbalance you can have by having one foot on the rock and the other in the unknown. You know the imbalance you can have when you have one foot in your will and one foot in God’s will. You’ve hung on to the rope for dear life. You know the butterflies that seem to swarm in your stomach when changes are in the “air”.

Hopefully at this stage of your life, changes will be in the air. Maybe you are in the midst of a decision and it has upset your entire way of life. It’s scary isn’t it. You are nice and comfortable and then you hear the call to step into the unknown. You hear the call to: … take a stand. … forgive. … change the way you live. … share Christ with someone. … sacrifice time or money or even yourself. … work in full time christian service. A battle begins within. Your heart may say yes, but your feet may say no. You may make up excuses and cling to the edge.

Walking the edge can be most uncomfortable of all.

Don’t feel alone. All of us are frightened by change. Everyone would rather stay at the edge and watch then step out into the unknown.

  • Noah did: “Build an ark? Yeah, what’s an ark? As a matter of fact, what is rain? What was that? THUNDER? Okay Lord!”
  • Abraham did: “So Lord, if I’ve got this right, you want me to take my only son up to that mountain and offer him as a sacrifice? I thought you said my descendants would be as numerous as the sands of the sea?” But early the next day he left, gets to the mountain top, ties Isaac down and then hears God say “Wait, Look behind you” BAAAAAH BAAAAH
  • Moses did: “Pick up the snake by its tail? Come on now. Everyone knows you pick a snake up by its head so it can’t bite you. Do you think I am crazy or something.” PSSSSS PSSSSS “Okay. Wow, look, it became a staff again!”
  • David did: “Goliath? You’ve got the wrong person God! I’m just a kid? But okay… How could I miss such a big target” SWOOSH! THUD!
  • Daniel did: “One way trip to a Lion’s den? “Nice kitty. Nice kitty.” ROARRRRR. “Oh, you have your jaws locked? Sorry, I don’t do dental work!”
  • Christ did: “Father, if there is any way, let this cup pass from me” “Lord, not thy will but thine be done.”

Eventually, you have to decide as they did! God’s will or yours?

All the above knew that the only thing worse than stepping out was the thought of denying God. When you step out, things won’t be as comfortable as before. The people watching make fun of you. The wind is uncertain and the rope is thin, sometimes you may have to just shut your eyes and hang on. You may even let go, or may not have the strength to hold on. Don’t worry. Christ will never let you fall. It isn’t easy, but its much safer being in God’s hands than in that of the world. God knows what he is doing. Ask Moses, or Noah, or Daniel or anyone else who has followed God.

Better yet, ask Jesus. He left His security and hung from a tree so that you might be washed clean of your sin by his blood.

Oh yeah, I last saw that young woman scaling a very impressive cliff with a gleam in her eye.


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

200 page e-book that explains everything you need to know when planning your very own object lessons. It contains 90 fully developed object lesson ideas and another 200 object lesson starter ideas based on Biblical idioms and Names / Descriptions of God.

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Spiritual Gardening

In the Beginning, the Garden

According to Genesis, life on earth started in a garden. The Bible is filled with references to gardens and gardening or farming. Psalm 1 begins with a tree planted by the water, which yields its fruit in season.  Solomon talks about the seasons of life.  Most of the parables of Jesus refer to growing things.  Jesus prayed before his arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane. Then in John 19:41 we are told the place of crucifixion on the cross, where Jesus was nailed to “a tree”, was near a garden. On Easter morning the two women mistook the resurrected Savior for the gardener.

Spiritual Lessons from the Garden

Biblical metaphors reference planting and harvesting, seeds and soil, vines and plants, fruitfulness and barrenness.  All of these carried meaningful and profound truths easily understood by people whose day-to-day relationship with growing things was fundamental to their existence. Even though many of us may be city-slickers today, most of us still have some connection to the garden and the nature beyond our doorsteps.  And those same truths are easily grasped today.  There are many lessons to be learned from the cycle of life in a garden or gardening on a farm.

Personal Truths I’ve Learned from Gardening

  • You must sow if you want to harvest.
  • You reap what you sow.
  • The life is in the seed.  You can create the right conditions for growth, but you cannot guarantee that it will sprout or that growth will occur.
  • There is a time for planting and a time for harvest.
  • There are seasons of life.
  • A plant always reaches for the light.
  • Roots sunk deep can sustain the plant through times of drought.
  • There are weeds and pests that seek to use the plant for their own ends and may destroy it in the process if we are not diligent in our care.
  • That which is left behind, which dies can be used again as nourishing soil for new growth.
  • A gardener cares for his plants and at times cuts off and prunes so that maximum fruitfulness can take place.
  • Sometimes we can get so caught up in the tending of the plants that we fail to smell, taste, and enjoy the fruits of our labors.
  • From a single seed can spring forth and abundance.
  • You sometimes you have to let some of the fields rest (lie fallow) so that that they can be more fruitful later.

Spiritual Lessons from Jesus Related to Gardening

  • Jesus knew how to prepare soil for planting – Luke 14:35
  • Jesus understood that location and the type of soil was important – Matthew 13:8
  • Jesus understood that a seed must be planted and die before new life can come forth from it – John 12:24
  • Jesus understood that the farm was often a group effort and that different people had different roles  – John 4:38
  • Jesus knew that the life was in the vine – John 15: 1-4
  • Jesus knew that the plant must be pruned to become more fruitful – John 15:1-4
  • Jesus knew that some plants might produce fruit a little slower and sometimes you had to wait before the harvest – Luke 13:6-9
  • Jesus knew that some plants, regardless of how long you waited would never produce fruit and were best removed to make way for others – Matthew 21:18-19
  • Jesus knew that even the smallest of seeds, with proper care can become a great canopy to shelter others through the storms of life – Matthew 13:31–32
  • Jesus knew that sometimes we need to simply sit back and enjoy the time God has given us, rather than worry and toil our life away – Matthew 6:27-30

Applying Spiritual Lessons from Gardening

Seeds of truth sprout in our hearts, are nourished and grow in maturity and fruitfulness.  Like the vine, we stretch ourselves toward the light and bask in the warmth of the sun.  We sink our roots deep in the Word and draw vital sustenance as branches attached to the vine and thus producing abundant fruit.  There are times for planting and times for harvest, times of quick growth and times of strengthening, times of lush active life and times of dormancy and waiting, times of morning glories and night fragrances.  The cycle of the harvest is the cycle of life – the rhythm of God’s timing and God’s care.  It is God’s timing and all our busyness and frantic activity will not hasten the ripening of the fruit or produce the sweet taste of the harvest.  We can create, and must create, the conditions and make sure all the right things are in place, but only God can make us grow and then make us fruitful.  There will be storms and blights and famine, but the same storms bring life nourishing water.  The blights and the famines make the times of abundant harvest so much more delightful.  Then, there are those delightful times, when the Spirit flows from the source into all the areas of our life and fruit is produced in ever increasing measure.

Spiritual growth takes time. Spiritual maturity is not instant. It’s a slow gradual process of growth that will continue all your years. There are no shortcuts. And even if there is life and growth, fruitfulness is not guaranteed.  Fruit appears in season when the conditions are right.  When you try to ripen fruit quickly it loses it flavor.  The same is true with us.

And for each of us there is some area of our life where you are not yielding all you could, places where you might prefer the rocks and be content to tolerate the thorns.  Tilling the soil in our hearts, pulling the weeds, breaking of the tough ground can be hard work. But God is the divine Garner and wants to produce a life of joyful harvest in you if you will simply allow Him into the garden of your life.  Invite Him in.  There is work to be done, but there will also be times to taste and see that the Lord is good. – time to enjoy the harvest of His work in your life.

Spiritual Gardening 101

Need a little help in getting started with spiritual gardening?  Need a manual on spiritual gardening?  Check out the many lessons on the website Creative Youth Ideas about spiritual growth and spiritual fruit.  There is also a youth camp / youth Bible study series shown below.

 


Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on
“Fruit of the Spirit”?

Live the Fruitful, Abundant Life Jesus Promised. This Bible Study and Camp Curriculum covers, in 7 1-hour sessions, what it takes to grow spiritually in Christ, the goal of which is to be fruitful in our Christian walk – to live a life worthy of God’s calling.
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His Love Endures Forever

By Rob Heverling (robhev@yahoo.com)

Psalm 100:5
For the LORD is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations.

Have you ever received something and didn’t deserve it.

Probably one of my favorite commercials this past Christmas was one where a girl was sitting in front of the Christmas tree tearing opening her gifts. She opens up this one gift and her eyes just light up and in that moment you knew she just got something she probably wanted for a long time but had to wait till this day to get.

After looking at the gift for about 3 seconds her appearance changes as she begins to recount the events of the past year. Apparently she had not been such a good girl. She looks at her parents and says “you spent to much take it back” Her parents look shocked as they ask her “what do you mean?”. She goes on to explain that over the past year she was not the best of kids and even goes as far to list some of the bad things she had done like forging notes because she skipped school, reading her sisters diary etc.. she doesn’t deserve the gift and they spent way to much and they need to just take it back.

Then there is a brief pause with the parents just looking at her and finally the dad breaks the ice and says “but honey we didn’t spend a lot on you” the whole thing ends with both parents looking at each other in silent victory and the girl sitting on the floor with this silly smirk on her face because she just told everyone some of the worst things she had done over the past year and still got something she didn’t deserve.

It can be a humbling experience when we receive things we don’t deserve.

I can remember times in my own life when people have given out of love because we were struggling and after just feeling like “God I don’t deserve this”. They’re were people out there way worse off then us but yet for some reason my family was thought of.

It’s one thing to receive gifts when we’ve been good, or generous, or even a hard worker those kind of gifts we will easily take and sometimes even expect. But what about when you have done nothing or when you have been rotten, miserable, hard to live with or lazy. Those are the times when we find gifts hard to take.

Maybe that’s why most people find it hard to receive the gift of God’s son. Because God gave that gift when we were at our worst. Romans 5:8 But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

He didn’t wait for us to deserve it and he didn’t try to cheapen it like the girls parents in the commercial. He sent the whole gift and he paid the whole price for us. One life for many lives Romans 5:19 For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous. Because of that one sacrifice that Christ was willing to make on the cross all of us can have the gift of eternal life.

And what do we have to do to get it? Nothing, because it’s a gift Romans 6:23 For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

The gift of the Christ is probably one of the hardest gifts for the people of the world to take because really we don’t deserve it and yet God sent him anyways. When were willing to humble ourselves and admit our mistakes like the girl in the commercial and come clean with God, then and only then can we share in this great gift that God has given. God is holding out his gift for you, all you got to do is believe it and then receive it. For one can’t truly have this gift unless they reach out and take hold of it.

John 3:16 “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.


MORE IDEAS? See “Creative Object Lessons”

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Christmas – An Earthly Stepfather for God

Scripture: Luke 2:1-5, 52

Although God was the real Father of Jesus, Jesus also needed an earthly “stepfather.”

God needed a godly man to take the responsibility to raise Jesus in the right way. He fulfilled the demands of his society as he went to his own town to register in a census. He worked in order to feed and cloth him. The task of a father is very demanding, but also rewarding. Jesus and Joseph worked side by side in a carpentry shop and “Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.”

Even today, fathers are in a sense stepfathers to they children raise.

For they do not belong to them, but to God. The task of raising a child of God is no less difficult than raising the Son of God. Imagine how inadequate Joseph must have felt raising the Son of God! ! !

Joseph made many mistakes we can be sure. No father is perfect but the Heavenly Father. We can trust that when we are inadequate He is fully able to meet all the needs and demands that raising a child requires. Many men spend considerable amounts of time away from their families because of work, but God is fully able to care for your family.

Raising children as a mother is no less difficult!

Children take a moment to be thankful for your father and mother.

Fathers and mothers take a moment to ask God to continue to help you raise your children in the right way so that they might also “grow in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.”

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Christmas – What gift would I give Him?

by Bob Perks

This holiday season I have been on a special mission.
I call it “In search of the Waltons at Christmas.”

So many people seem to be struggling this year
with family relationships. I have overheard them in the
malls and department stores.

“Well, I’m not spending much on him this year. I don’t
even like him. I’m doing this because I have to!”

One woman filled with the spirit of giving said: “I’ll
buy this and keep it upstairs. If she doesn’t have
something for me I’m not wasting my good money on her.”

Although the Waltons had typical brother/sister clashes
mixed with a few inter generational disagreements, they
were very much intact as a family. I believe many viewers
tuned in longing for that special place where all problems
were resolved in an hour.

My search recently took me to a local church where I sat
thinking about the meaning of it all. After about ten minutes
a father and young child about five years old walked in
breaking the silence and disrupting my meditative state. In
reality the peace and quiet nearly lulled me off to sleep.

“Daddy, look the manger!” the young boy said.

“Is that Santa over there?” he asked pointing to one of the
three wise men.

“No, son. They are the Three Kings bringing presents to
Jesus.” replied Dad.

“Christmas presents?”

“No. I guess you can say they are birthday presents.
Remember we told you that Christmas is really our
celebration of the birth of Jesus.”

The young boy paused for a moment seemingly satisfied
with Dad’s answer. Then, as children will do, asked the
unanswerable question that warms your heart and often
puts you in your place.

“Daddy, what are we giving Jesus for His birthday this year?”

Silence. Then drawing on the wisdom of the ages and
the creative parental genes that make us what we are,
Daddy said…”I don’t know. Ask your Mom.”

They left right after that. Peace and quiet returned to this
great sanctuary leaving me to think about what that child
had to say. If I were there that sacred evening drawn by
the light of the star of Bethlehem what gift would I offer Him?

I really had no idea. First, I can’t begin to imagine kneeling
before Him in the presence of Joseph and Mary.

But a gift from me to Jesus? What thing of value could I
possible give to my Lord?

This was a thought that overwhelmed me. I pride myself
in having the ability to at least come up with options, choices
for people who share their personal problems with me. But the
thought of me having anything that Jesus would want brought
tears of sadness for I felt I had nothing to offer Him.

So, I did what the young child had done earlier. I turned to
my Father and asked…”Oh, God what could I possibly offer
your Son as a gift? I really have nothing of value.”

I sat quietly and totally oblivious to the world. A small voice
inside my soul said “The same thing He had given you. His Life!
Give Him your life. Not sacrificed on a cross. But lived to
honor Him.”

I wept openly.

Here is my message to you celebrating the birth of Christ
and to each of you who value your faith whatever it may be.

The greatest gifts exchanged this Christmas will not be
those found wrapped under your tree or shared in sacred
ceremony dedicated to your God. The greatest gift of all, more
valuable than gold, not traded on Wall Street, not
held in vaults for safe keeping…is YOU!

You are the greatest of all gifts given to this world, your family,
and your community. Your wealth is not in your checking
account, but your actions, your life, your spirit as you live a
positive, passion filled existence. That makes you valuable
beyond measure.

My gift to you this Christmas is this message. Sorry it wasn’t
wrapped in fancy paper. It was really much too big. It is about
your life. Now live it.

P.S. “Goodnight, John Boy!”

“I wish you enough!”

© 2001 Bob Perks – Originally published 1999)

If you would like to receive Bob’s Inspirational
stories, please visit http://www.IWishYouEnough.com
and submit your email address.

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Emmanuel – God with Us

Scripture: Matthew 1:22-23 and Isaiah 7:14

Emmanuel – “God with us”

What a comforting thought. For the birth of Christ is representative of “God with us.”

From this point on in the lives of all men, God would be with us in a new and exciting way. First with Christ – the Son of God – walking with man, and after his crucifixion, the Holy Spirit living IN man. With Christ came the most complete union between God and man since the Garden of Eden.

God walking with man – what a marvelous thought.

God desires to be with us, to walk with us. Christ’s birth was the new beginning of the close communion with man that God intended when he created us.

Jesus Christ- God’s Son -GOD WITH US. What closeness, what comfort, what joy!

This is the joy, comfort, and assurance Ahaz should have had in the Isaiah 7 passage when God tried to assure him he was with him. Ahaz rejected God and decided to rely on man instead.

Emmanuel – God with us – is a promise and a truth; but it is only true for those that accept Christ and believe he is with them.

Reflect today on how God is with YOU, and as a family share what GOD WITH US means to you.

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Christmas: God Gifts us with his presence

Scripture: Revelation 22:13

As we look forward to the excitement of Christmas in a child’s eyes, this is also a time to look back and reflect on the meaning of Christmas, as it has developed over the years.

I think Rev. 22:I3, some of the last words attributed to Jesus, seem to say it all. Before anything began,
Jesus was there. When everything ends, He will still be there.

This is true in your personal life.

In everything you begin and in everything you complete, be it successful, or in your eyes and others a failure, Jesus is there.

As a result of Christmas, so it is in our lives.

From your first breath to your last, Jesus is there and you are His. This is God’s gift to you, which we call Christmas.

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Christmas: God With Us

Scripture: Zechariah 2:10

“Sing and rejoice, O daughter of Zion; for lo, I come, and I will dwell in the midst of thee, saith the Lord.”

What a wonderful promise we are reminded of each Christmas!

For we know that God, through Christ, has come and is coming again to establish his Kingdom on Earth.

Christmas is truly a joyous time. Christmas gives us the opportunity to be with family and friends. But we must make the time to share the true meaning of Christmas with those we love. It is all too easy to become overwhelmed by the secular vision of Christmas, the one that only sees Santa Claus, parties, and presents.

I urge each of you to find the quiet time you need for your family and friends – a time for prayer, singing your favorite Christmas hymns, or simply enjoying a walk in the countryside. While you are enjoying activities together, you have the perfect opportunity to share your love of Christ with those around you. Through this personal time, quiet or not, invested lovingly with those you care for, you can make Christmas more enjoyable than you ever would while being caught up in the demands of shopping and socials.

God has given us his promise. Celebrate Christ’s coming. It is truly a marvelous promise.

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Christmas: Great Things come in small packages

Scripture: Micah 5:2,4-5

In Joshua I5, the cities of the land were divided among the tribes of Israel. Bethlehem, however, was too small and insignificant to be mentioned. Although it was “too little to be among the clans,” God selected it to hold the honor of being the birthplace of the Messiah.

God demonstrates his use of the weak and foolish to be the source of his mightiest works. Great things do come in small packages.

Just as Bethlehem was considered insignificant, so perhaps did the people consider the infant Jesus as an unlikely candidate for the Messiah.

Yet, within the being of the gentle baby Jesus, resided the glory and majesty of the great Triune God.

The Word of God, in communion with the Father and the Spirit in eternity past, did not burst forth into history with great fanfare, but amidst the sounds of common animals in their stalls. And during that dark night a star shone overhead and guided the Wisemen to this newborn Savior.

We have only to remember that in the darkest night, there is a bright star, indeed the Morning Star, who pierces the darkness to say that “in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”

A small start is often the crack of opportunity for the great and powerful God. Next time you think you are too small or insignificant for God to use you, remember Bethlehem. Remember that the Savior of the world came as a small child. Remember that in the darkest night the morning Star will be there to guide your way and include you in his plan!

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Games and Activities helping youth discover the Reason for the Season.

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Christmas: Everlasting

Scripture: Isaiah 11:1 and Jeremiah 23:5

E is for Eternal, how long God’s love will last.
V is for Victory, won when Christ was born.
E is for Everything, how much we mean to Him.
R is for Rejoicing, that He saved us from our sins.
L is for Leaving, when Christ left all else behind.
A is for Almighty, for God’s power never fails.
S is for Salvation, something precious to our hearts.
T is for Tomorrow, and the hope He always brings.
I is for Incredible, how we see Him in our minds.
N is for Never, He will NEVER let us down.
G is for God, the Father, who will always love, protect and guide forever and ever, amen.

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Christmas: Everlasting Father

Scripture: Isaiah 9:6-7

King and Father

When Isaiah spoke about government, he had in mind the person of a king. The king carried the burden of authority upon his shoulders as he ruled over a nation. Yet Isaiah used titles that we would not readily ascribe to kings. One of those titles was the Everlasting Father. What did he mean by it?

Another possible translation of the Everlasting Father is “a Father forever”. God is eternal but here Isaiah also says that God cares for his people constantly.

What a beautiful and encouraging thought this is for us. Nothing can interrupt God’s love and care for us because the child was given for our salvation. Even those who are presently rejecting Jesus Christ, they can enjoy the love of God if they repent, change their minds and receive the gift of the Everlasting Father in his Son Jesus Christ.

The rule of the King is just and righteous. The law is given and upheld. No unrighteousness is over-looked. The life of Jesus Christ was the foretaste and the assurance of such reign. Jesus was loving and righteous at the same time. He enforced righteousness and offered love throughout his life here on earth. And he will do the same throughout eternity.

Remember then that Advent is not just about a glorious past event. The Everlasting Father has control over the present and the future filled with his loving care based on the justice of a holy God.

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Christmas: God becoming one of us

Scripture: Psalm 24

Why can’t we see God?

That’s a question most parents have heard; and while the theological prohibitions are obvious, I suspect most of us hold some mental picture of the Majesty of God and Heaven.

Now, hold this image for a moment, and think of Jesus leaving this grandeur, to be born in a lowly barn in Bethlehem. Think of the Mighty God becoming one of us! God, “who never slumbers or sleeps” will now need sleep! God who could be everywhere at once, will now be limited to one place at a time! The God who created all things, must now depend on human parents for daily care.

Awesome to consider, isn’t it?

But wait, now consider “The Mission” – The reason for Him becoming an “earthling” was to die! He became one of us so He could do the one thing we could not do for ourselves – eradicate sin.

After man sinned, God could have wiped us out and started over with a new creation. But no, instead He engineered an elaborate, and intricate redemption plan that cost the very life of the Son of God.

Why? Why did He care so much?

There can be no other motivation but LOVE. And if, during this season, we can grasp even a portion of this great love for us, it will cause us to shout with the Christmas angels: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth Peace, Good Will toward men.”

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Christmas: A Savior is Born

Sripture: Psalm 17:6-8

From the poetry of David we have a rich heritage that leads us to some of the most effective ways to worship God.

The striking truth found in the life of David and particularly in this psalm is not that David was simply a powerful or righteous man; the striking truth is that a man so powerful and so righteous needed a Savior. David cries out to God, “Show me the wonder of your great love, you who save by your right hand those who take refuge in you from their foes.” David, a man of power and righteousness, needed a Savior.

So it is with all men. For if the mighty need a Savior, how much more those of us who are only average or even weak.

While constantly being pursued by his enemies David learned a very important lesson. The issue is not the ability or the inability of a man to save himself. The issue is the enormity of the predicament that he is in. No man can hope to win a battle in which the odds are stacked against him. His only hope is in God. In such a situation it is God alone who saves.

And the same is true for each of us. The issue is not our ability or inability to save ourselves but the enormity of the predicament that we face. Thanks be to God that our predicament has been matched by his sending us the one who would be called “Mighty God” and He is Jesus Christ our Savior. “Born to us, in the city of David, is a Savior”

All men, no matter how powerful and righteous, need a Savior, and all men, no matter how weak and wicked have a Savior.

Take a few moments to thank Jesus Christ, the Mighty God for what He’s done for you.

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Christmas: a Demonstration of God’s Power and Grace

Scripture: Psalm 147:4-5

Praise to the Gracious and Mighty God

In Psalm 147, the grace of God was revealed when he restored his people, who had been in exile from their homeland, to Israel. Yahweh was the one who, by his grace, healed the shattered in heart, attending their painful sorrows.

The power of God is then revealed in verses 4-6 by his mastery of the stars and his unsearchable wisdom. God’s grace compelled him to “lift up the downtrodden.” God’s power allowed him to “cast the wicked to the ground.” He is truly the gracious and mighty God.

These attributes are magnified during this special season we call Christmas. The coming of the Messiah is the ultimate demonstration of the grace and power of God. In God’s mercy he was willing to send his own son into a sinful world. In his power he is able to forgive our sin and restore rebellious human beings.

Today may we “Sing Praise to God Who Reigns Above”

Sing praise to God who reigns above,
The God of all creation, the God of power,
The God of love, the God of our salvation;
With healing balm my soul he fills,
And every faithless murmur stills:
To God all praise and glory!

What God’s almighty power hath made,
His gracious mercy keepeth,
By morning glow or evening shade
His watchful eye never sleepeth;
Within the kingdom of his might,
Lo! All is just and all is right:
To God all praise and glory!

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Christmas: Everyday Praises?

Scripture: Psalm 145:1-3

Dear God,
I will exalt You as my God and King, l will praise your name forever and ever. Every day I will praise You and exalt Your name forever and ever. Great are You Lord and most worthy of praise; Your greatness no one can understand…
Yours for eternity,
David

Our praises should be like David’s, “Every day I will praise You and exalt Your name. . . ”

Although sometimes, in the hustle and frustrations of life, that may seem hard to do. Sometimes we find ourselves worshipping God only on Sundays and forgetting our faith during the week.

We remember Christ at Christmas and Easter but forget him the rest of the year. Why can’t everyday be a celebration of Christ?

We must praise God every day, lift up His name every day because he has promised us that He will never leave us!

God is so good. He knows us so well and understands the things we have to face daily. We must remember that we serve a Mighty God, His love for us endureth forever and the things of the world will pass away but we will be with Him forever. We can praise His name forever and ever.

Today as you exalt the Lord in your personal worship, let the things of the world disappear in your mind and focus all of your attention on the Eternal. Follow David’s example and write a letter or song of praise to God. Keep this in your Bible or on your nightstand and refer to it often, especially when the world begins to take hold of you.

Remember that our God is a Mighty God, a Wonderful Counselor, Prince of Peace and the Everlasting Father all year long and not just at Christmas!

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Christmas Peace

Scripture: Luke 2:14

Let’s try to imagine going back in time to that glorious event when the heavenly host met with the shepherds. We read that the glory of the Lord shone around them. This manifestation of God’s glory was so sudden and so extraordinary that these shepherds were terrified.

How many of us would behave differently? We would probably think that beings from another planet had finally arrived, and we were their first victims.

But that was not true during the first Christmas.

The angel spoke immediately asking them not to be afraid. What they witnessed was the true manifestation of the glory of God. The Good News was proclaimed about the Messiah. To top it all off, the shepherds got a preview of the heavenly atmosphere as the angels praised God saying: “Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests. ”

Here we have the hymn called the Gloria in Excelsis Deo. The angels could not contain their desire to praise God, so they burst into a chorus that gave us the foretaste of future glory that we will experience forever in the presence of a glorious God.

There is one thing for us to do. As we give glory to God, we should not forget that God wants “on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests.”

Christmas is a great time to expose others to the glory of God so that they may find peace in Him.

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Christmas: A Quiet Voice

Scripture: Luke 2:25-32

I wonder if we’ll spend Christmas in Singapore or at home this year?
The kids will be disappointed if we can’t buy them the presents they have been wanting…
It’s only a few more weeks till Christmas and we haven’t planned out the meal or even figured out exactly how we will spend it.
We have so much going on this Christmas with the choir practices for the cantata, the company parties that we have to go to, Christmas shopping, decorating … where will we get all the time?

Does this sound like Christmas around your house?

We get so busy with all of the duties and events of the Christmas season that it’s hard to find time to stop for even a moment to be silent and just listen to the quiet voice of the Holy Spirit. But that is what a man by the name of Simeon did, and a wonderful revelation was given to him. His heart was filled with joy when he got to witness the baby Jesus, sent to be the Savior of all mankind.

Find the time this Christmas season to be still and listen for your quiet voice.

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Christmas: Wonderful Counselor

Scripture: Matthew 1:18-20

During the Christmas season, music, food, decorations, and traditions bring back cherished memories of Christmas with your family as a child. There are special tree ornaments and the nativity scene. The image of “baby Jesus” being cared for by Joseph and Mary filled us with wonder.

It is still difficult to grasp the fact that the Son of God became the Son of Man, that the infant in the manger who was as helpless and as dependent upon his parents as any other human child… was also God. We know the infant Jesus was divine for an angel of the Lord told Joseph to take Mary home as his wife for “what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit” (Matthew I:20).

In order to save us from our sin, Christ had to physically take our place on the cross. He had to become man.

By being born of Mary, Christ experienced all that it means to be human – love, joy, sorrow, pain, blessing, and temptation. This means that we have a Savior who understands us perfectly, who knows how we feel. He alone deserves the title Wonderful Counselor!

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A Question Answered

mary.jpgQuestions, questions, questions. Our lives are filled with questions we ask of God. How will I find the right husband or wife? Where should I go to college? Why am I not enjoying life more? How should I serve God? How can I live for God in my job? Will I make it? How long will I be in Singapore? What will happen after Singapore? Am I living within the will of God?

Mary questioned the angel Gabriel concerning the birth of the Son of God. She could not understand that message. So she asked: “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” In other words, God’s plan didn’t fit her scientific knowledge as to the birth of a child. Mary’s preconceived ideas didn’t allow her to accept God’s plan. She didn’t reject it, but she did ask for an explanation. The Angel described the future miracle in these words: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God… For nothing is impossible with God.”

Keep on asking questions of God but don’t forget to listen to God’s words directed toward you. The Holy Spirit is present in our lives because of our faith in Jesus Christ. We can say and believe that nothing is impossible with God. This affirmation will bring God’s miracles into our lives. Are you willing and ready like Mary to say: “May it be to me as you have said.” In this way God’s answers will be worked out in your life. May this happen to all of us as we celebrate Advent.

Scripture
Luke 1:34-38


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Christmas All Year

Luke 1:67-79

“Praise be to our most precious Lord Jesus Christ, for he has come to redeem his people. ”

Christmas is supposed to be a time when families focus and reflect on the sacrifice made by our Lord Jesus Christ and the promise this holds for our lives. Yet, everyday, all we hear is how Christmas is a time of pressures… money for presents, family pressures, end of year deadlines and anxieties for the coming year. Some people seem to resent the Christmas season. “Why bother celebrating” they say, “… it’s just a day to show how much money you do or don’t have depending on the gifts you feel compelled to give.”

When young, you probably had a Christmas “wishlist” a mile long. But, it seems that as you get older, you wish for less and less. You have an inner peace from the Lord, knowing he meets your wants and needs on a daily basis. God promises that he’ll help you make the right choices in life or “carry” you whenever “you” select another pathway.

As a Christian the Lord takes care of all pressures. Sure, it’s still a lot of work to balance career, family and social obligations, but God promises “blessed are all who take refuge in him.” Christmas is a time to celebrate the warmth of love from family and loved ones; but, most of all, reflect and know that the everlasting Lord Jesus Christ died that we would know Christmas All Year.

“The Lord is faithful to all his promises and loving toward all he has made. The Lord upholds all those who fall and lifts up all who are bowed down.” Psalm 145:13 and 14.

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Christmas: Mary’s Song

Read: Luke 1:46-55

Mary certainly knew the scriptures. By any count, in this short hymn of praise to her Lord, Mary quotes from at least eight Old Testament passages, and alludes to about a half-dozen others.

In addition, Mary’s heartfelt expression reflects the attitude of several other scriptures. You might say Mary’s song is virtually saturated in scripture. Yes, Mary certainly knew the scriptures.

But who was she saying these scriptures to? Who were you speaking to as you read these verses?
It is important to reflect not only on Mary’s knowledge of scripture, but on her knowledge of the Lord. “My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour.”

You can’t help but be struck by the impression as you read these verses that Mary was speaking directly to and personally with “the Mighty One” who had done great things for her.

A. W. Tozer warned, “Scientists have lost God amid the wonders of his world; Christians are in
danger of losing God amid the wonders of His Word.”

Mary said: “My soul glorifies the Lord, and my soul rejoices in God my Savior.”

May all our spirits soar so freely this Christmas! Praise God, the Mighty One of Israel!

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Christmas: God’s Larger Vision

Luke 1:41-45

What a glorious and impossible moment! Two cousins, Mary and Elizabeth, are visiting. Elizabeth, barren, too old to have a child, is pregnant! Mary, a virgin, is also pregnant! This could only be possible through the majesty and glory of Almighty God.

Elizabeth’s son will be called John, and will proclaim the way for the son of Mary, Jesus, our Lord and Savior. Because of their faithful devotion to God, two improbable babies will be born and will change the course of history.

God’s vision extended beyond the happy meeting of Mary and Elizabeth. He was thinking of you and me even in that day a long time ago. For it is through Jesus that we can come to have a personal relationship with God, the Father of us all.

God’s plans are larger than the events of “today”. Mary and Elizabeth were simply parts of a bigger picture that only God knows.

This Christmas, we must recognize that God may use us to affect something or someone years from now. Are you preparing yourself today so that God can use you tomorrow, next week, or a year from now? Pray today that God will help to give you a larger vision of His plan for you.

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Christmas: God Speaking through us

Luke 1:13-15

Zacharias, a man in his old age and Elizabeth his wife, a woman well along in years, had never been able to bear children. Now here is an angel, none other than Gabriel (who in his own words stood in the presence of God) telling Zacharias that his wife would bear a son.

But this would be no ordinary son. This was to be John of prophesy who would go ahead of the Messiah, preparing the way for the Lord.

What future parents would not be thrilled to hear that their child was to be a joy and delight and, above all would be filled with the Holy Spirit from birth!

But wait a minute, doesn’t the Holy Spirit come into our lives at our acceptance of Christ as our Savior? We did say that this was to be no ordinary son. John was to be the fulfillment of a miracle; a man prepared by God for a wonderful mission hereon Earth, to proclaim the coming of the Son of God. He was filled with the Holy Spirit so the Holy Spirit could speak through him!

Let our prayer this Christmas season be that the Holy Spirit will be able to speak and work through us to proclaim Christ to the World.

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Christmas: A Question Answered

Questions, questions, questions.

Luke 1:34-38

Our lives are filled with questions we ask of God. How will I find the right husband or wife? Where should I go to college or university? Why am I not enjoying life more? How should I serve God? How can I live for God in my job? How long will I be in this job? What will happen tomorrow? Am I living within the will of God?

The questions go on…

Mary questioned the angel Gabriel concerning the birth of the Son of God. She could not understand his message to her. So she asked: “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” In other words, God’s plan didn’t fit her understanding as to the birth of a child. Mary’s preconceived ideas didn’t allow her to accept God’s plan. She didn’t reject it, but she did ask for an explanation.

The Angel described the future miracle in these words: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God… For nothing is impossible with God.”

There are powerful lessons for us to learn from this encounter between Gabriel and Mary.

  • Keep on asking questions of God but don’t forget to listen to God’s words directed toward you.
  • We can say and believe that nothing is impossible with God because the Holy Spirit is present in our lives through our faith in Jesus Christ. This affirmation will bring God’s miracles into our lives.

Are you willing and ready like Mary to say: “May it be to me as you have said.” In this way God’s answers will be worked out in your life. May this happen to all of us as we begin to celebrate Advent.

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Scars

“I’ve discovered something” I said.

“See, even as we get older we continue to learn,” he replied with a chuckle.

I took my dog, Phil, to the vet yesterday. When the doctor came into the room he was limping.

“Should I ask how you are doing?” I said.

“Oh, it’s my knee. They want me to really appreciate the operation I’m about to have so they delayed it another month so I could suffer more,” he replied.

It was then for the first time I actually showed my scar to someone.

“Look, I had an operation on my arm.”

My wife has been telling me that it really didn’t look bad. It was healing very nicely.

When I showed it to him and his assistant they said, “Eeeeeewe! That’s awful!”

So much for healing nicely.

That’s when I discovered something.

“Doc, when I was a kid and fell I remember showing all my friends because I thought it was “cool.” Having a scar at that age was like having a battle injury so you had to share it.”

I then pointed to a scar at the hairline on my forehead.

“That’s when I got hit with a door!” I said proudly.

“That explains so much, Bob,” he said laughing.

“Then I went into young adulthood and vanity took over. I was in a band and never wanted anything to scar this beautiful face of mine,” I said struggling to get it out without laughing.

“Now, at 59, I just now joined that group of older folks who are proud to compare operations, aches, pains and how many meds I have to take just to get through the day.”

I have overheard older folks trying to out do their friends by claiming their pain is worse or they have had more operations than the other.

The winner is the one who is in worse shape, I guess.

Then there are those at any age, who use physical and emotional scars as an excuse. The kind of excuse that holds them back, limits them, provides a crutch for why they are’nt happy or where they would like to be at this point in life.

“Too tall”…”too short”…”too fat”…”too thin”…
“my parents”…”my family”…”ever since my divorce”…”ever since we had children” and on and on.

All scars that never heal because we keep picking at them.

I swore I would never do that, yet, today I didn’t even hesitate to show Doc my scar.

It’s okay. I see it as reverting back to my childhood.

If you are of the Christian faith, I suggest that you turn to the One who bore the scars of death for you.

Then you will have no excuse.

What scars do you have?

If you would like to receive Bob’s Inspirational stories, please visit http://www.IWishYouEnough.com


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Gather or Scatter

cards2.jpg

Matthew 12:30 “He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters.

I love playing games, not all the time but sometimes. It’s easy to get burned out playing them too much so I try to only play them once in a while.

One game I never want to play again is 52 pick up. I’m sure most of us are familiar with 52 pick up. We probably learned it from our mean older brother or sister who one day approached us all nice and friendly. For a moment it seemed like they were your best friend as they asked you if you would like to play a game. Sure you said, what shall we play? How does 52 pick up sound they reply? You’re just so happy that they would even ask that you let down your guard and you say “yes”. That’s when you find out just how rotten older siblings can be. They take the whole deck of cards, all 52 and they throw them into the air scattering them all over the floor in a huge mess. As they walk away they say with a grin, “okay pick them up”.

You know as Christians we have to be careful of making messes with our lives. Jesus said “He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters.” There are lots of times in our lives when we think we’ve finally got it together. We swear that this time it’s going to be different, I’m going to live for God no matter what. But what happens? In a couple of days or weeks we find that were right back in a rut.

Why? I think the most important reason is because we fail to act on what we claim is true. In other words, we say we believe in God but it’s not evident in the way we live our lives. I mean how many times have we heard that lust is wrong? Yet we look for images on the web or the television that cause us to lust. What about swearing? We know from God’s word that it’s wrong to swear so why do we do it? And what about coveting? We know that it’s wrong too yet still we want what we want and we act as though we could never be happy till we get it.

We’re supposed to be the light of the world, the ones who carry the message of hope and love to the lost. When we tell them we’re saved and that they need what we’ve got do you think it’s going to mean anything when they see how we really live? You don’t act any better than them and you’re going to tell them they need what you’ve got. Hey don’t blame them if they don’t take you seriously because honestly neither do you.

When Christians live this way they aren’t helping they’re hurting, they’re not gathering instead they’re scattering. In order to truly change we need to stop playing the same old games with our faith. Quit doing what you know from God’s Word is wrong and do what is right. Is it easy? No! is it hard? Sometimes, but that’s the cost of sacrifice. Until you’re willing to truly give up the junk in your life. Until you’re willing to put your life under God’s microscope and say Lord help me to hate what you hate and love what you love. How much gathering do you really expect to get done? How much change should you really expect?

The reason we struggle so much is because deep down inside we really don’t want to change. Our sinful nature is at war with the Spirit inside us trying to get us to do what we know is wrong. It’s the voice inside that says it will make you feel good if you just give it a try. Your faith is what gives you the strength to live above your emotions though. It’s what should drive you to do whats right not because it feels good or because it feels right but because you know it’s right and it’s what God wants you to do. If by faith you can’t live above your emotions then I ask you how strong is your faith?

2 Corinthians 5:7-10 “We live by faith, not by sight. We are confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home with the Lord. So we make it our goal to please him, whether we are at home in the body or away from it. 10For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad. “

Contributed by Rob Heverling (robhev@yahoo.com>


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Underdogs

1 Samuel 17:45-47 ‘David said to the Philistine, “You come against me with sword and spear and javelin, but I come against you in the name of the LORD Almighty, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. This day the LORD will hand you over to me, and I’ll strike you down and cut off your head. Today I will give the carcasses of the Philistine army to the birds of the air and the beasts of the earth, and the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel. All those gathered here will know that it is not by sword or spear that the LORD saves; for the battle is the LORD’s, and he will give all of you into our hands.”

When you think of underdogs one can’t help but think of sports. Their are so many stories in the sports world of teams who were told they never have a chance of winning and yet they went on to beat the odds and end up shocking the world. I’m sure I could list tons of teams who were told they never had a chance, or why even show up? but as they say in the sports world “that’s why they play the game”.

Now to be called an underdog you have to meet certain criteria, you have to lack more skill than your opponent, you have to be weaker, or you have to make less money than your opponent. Payroll seems to be everything in the sports world these days so if your team doesn’t have a high payroll or enough star talent and you some how walk into the playoffs then you might be an underdog. If one of your star players is injured and can’t make the big game you could be an underdog. If you don’t have home field advantage and a first round bye that could make you an underdog too.

With so many possibilities out there any team could be an underdog on any given day. So why do we make such a fuss when it comes to underdogs? Why do we find them so hard to not route for? Probably because we love to hear stories of people or teams who beat the odds when everything was stacked against them. We like knowing that some times the little guy can come out on top in the end.

We all have experienced moments when it seemed like their was no use in trying, when we felt like we should just cut our loses and run. But underdogs never give up, they never throw in the towel, they always have hope leading them on. I mean that’s what being an underdog is all about isn’t it? It’s about having hope even when everyone else has given up all hope. It’s about believing in yourself and God when everyone else chooses to throw in the towel.

Take David for instance. Here’s a guy who by the worlds standards never had a chance when he went up against Goliath. I mean Goliath was huge, he was over 9 feet tall. His armor and his helmet alone weighed about 125 pounds. That’s probably more than what David weighed soaked and wet. The shaft of Goliath’s mighty spear weighed another 15 pounds. This is crazy! Who in their right mind would even want to take a shot at this giant Philistine.

Goliath would come out every day for 40 days and shout at the Israelites mocking them and how did they respond? verse 11 says Saul and all the Israelites were dismayed and terrified. They wanted nothing to do with this giant.

Luckily for the Israelites David enters the scene. David was a man who feared know one, except God that is. He knew that it was God who determined the victor not man. It’s hard to believe that of all the people who would dare to stand up against the giant it would be a lowly inexperienced shepherd boy. I mean other than protecting some sheep in the field from wild animals his resume was pretty small. It’s not like he had a long list of past experiences he could fall back on. Yet he got the job to take on this Philistine.

The king offered David his best armor but David was so young and small that he could hardly move with it on. Instead he decided he was going to take on this giant with God as his shield and protector. He didn’t need any armor because God was going to fight for him, God was going to give him the victory. I love his words in verse 47 All those gathered here will know that it is not by sword or spear that the LORD saves; for the battle is the LORD’s, and he will give all of you into our hands.”

If only we could have as much faith as David did when we face our giants. If only we believed that God could help us overcome any obstacle like David. We know what God has done in the past, we’ve seen what he can do in the present, why do we doubt what he can do in the future. He’s the same God yesterday, today and always.

The problem is that we are not the same as we were yesterday, today, and always. We allow our faith to falter, we get out of step and out of touch with God and we like the Israelites get scared when the giants come on the scene. The giants only look big when we allow our God to become a small part in our lives. When you’re not giving God the time he deserves then be sure that even the smallest of giants can look GIGANTIC.

1 Samuel 17:46 This day the LORD will hand you over to me, and I’ll strike you down and cut off your head. Today I will give the carcasses of the Philistine army to the birds of the air and the beasts of the earth, and the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel.

Thanks to Rob Heverling (robhev (at) yahoo.com) for graciously sharing this with us for the website. Drop this brother in Christ an email and let him know you appreciate him!

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3 Nails + 1 Cross = Salvation 4 All

3 Nails + 1 Cross = Salvation 4 All

by Robbie Heverling
Used by Permission

John 3:16-18 “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son.”

One of the things I remember most about going to my grandma’s house as a kid was a picture she had on the wall. It was an old picture of Jesus on the cross. There was no one else in the picture just Jesus hanging there on the cross. The sky was black like smoke and his body a pale white as he hung there in his loin cloth. You could see no blood because let’s face it nobody is going to hang a picture of a bloody Jesus in their house. He looked all alone as he hung on that cross. He looked as though everyone had deserted him. His body just hung there lifeless. The price had been paid and not one person knew enough or understood enough to know what had just happened. They still didn’t get it, they wouldn’t get it…that is not until Sunday.

I myself didn’t get it for years, I mean I knew that it was Jesus on the cross, I knew that he died on the cross, I knew that’s what we celebrated every Easter but for some reason I just didn’t get it. I didn’t understand any of it. Why did he die?

It’s funny because through the years I find that I’m not the only one who doesn’t get it, there or others. I have talked to many of people, people at work, people on the street, people who go to church and people who do not, and I ask them “Why do you think Jesus died on the cross?” and like me when I was younger a lot of them don’t know. One women told me she went to church faithfully with her parents when she lived at home and when I asked her that question she looked at me and said “honestly I don’t know, why did he die?”

I have to admit I was thrown by her answer. I mean sure I didn’t know but then again I never went to church as a kid. How could this happen? How can a person spend most of their life going to Church and miss the whole reason why we even go to Church? I mean Jesus dieing on the cross and Jesus rising from the dead is the whole reason we go to church. There wouldn’t even be a church anywhere, if these two events recorded in history would have never happened.

It was several years ago when I learned why he died on that cross. You see he came to die for us. We were lost in our transgressions and sin and the bible says that the penalty for sin is death. We were supposed to pay for our own sins and the payment was supposed to be our very lives. We were to be separated from God for all eternity in Hell because we chose sin over the creator. But it was at this moment while we were still in sin that God really showed his love for us. He did the unthinkable, He sent his son Jesus to die in our place. He allowed Him who knew no sin to become sin for us so that we could be restored to God. Jesus became sin for us, he carried all the sins of the world to that cross, he allowed himself to be beaten, slapped, punched, and whipped so badly that his flesh hung off him like tassels. He was beaten so badly that if you looked at him you wouldn’t recognize him.

The picture of Jesus hanging on the cross at grandmas house was a nice picture of the death of Jesus yet it fails to even come close to showing the true price that was paid. Imagine yourself suffering for something you didn’t do, imagine being punished brutally, then imagine yourself being led to your own execution. Jesus didn’t imagine it, He lived it for you. Then as if the beatings and the floggings weren’t enough they made him carry his cross through the streets in front of everyone to the place where he would be executed.

The fact that he was even able to carry the cross after everything he already went through blows my mind, but he did. I wonder what kind of thoughts went through his mind as he saw the place of the Skull (or the place where he would be executed) approaching in the distance. Did he still dread it or because of the pain and suffering that he was going through did he look forward to it? Did he see the end in sight or did he fear the nails. Just a little more suffering, a little more pain and it would be over, surly he wanted it to be over. When he got to the skull they threw the cross on the ground and laid Jesus bloodied body on it. I’m sure that because of the beating he took and the shock he was in there was no fighting what was next. They placed the nail at his wrist and with a loud ring you could hear the hammer strike a piercing blow. His body cringing from the pain. Again they did the other wrist and then the feet. How could they not know what they were doing?

They had the son of God right in front of them and they missed him. He walked with them, talked with them, healed them,and forgave them. He did everything he could to prove to them who he was while he lived and what did they do in return, they spit on him as he hung on the cross, they insulted him and gambled for his clothes. As Jesus hung on the cross the pain had to be unbearable. The nails pushing against the nerves in the wrists had to feel like hot metal. Slowly he would pull himself up just long enough to get some air causing searing pain in the wrists because of the nails. Then he would allow his body to fall back down to rest his shoulders from holding all the weight of his body all the pressure now being placed on the feet. For hours he repeated these motions slowly up for air, slowly down for rest until he became so tired he could no longer pull himself up again. He hung there suffering and suffocating for you and me, paying the ultimate price for our salvation. One life for the lives of many but none of this means anything if your not willing to come to the cross and see the price that has been paid. He paid it all, he did all the work, all you have to do is believe.

Romans 4:7-8 “Blessed are they whose transgressions are forgiven, whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man whose sin the Lord will never count against him.”

Romans 10:8-13 ‘But what does it say? “The word is near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart,”that is, the word of faith we are proclaiming: That if you confess with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved. As the Scripture says, “Anyone who trusts in him will never be put to shame.” For there is no difference between Jew and Gentile—the same Lord is Lord of all and richly blesses all who call on him, 13for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”‘

If you would like to receive the free gift of salvation that God has to offer pray this prayer

Dear Lord,
I know that I’m a sinner, and my sin separates me from you. Because you love me, you sent your Son Jesus to pay the penalty for my sin by dieing on the cross. Please forgive me of my sin. I except your free gift of salvation, please come into my life and help me to live for you. Amen


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Early One Morning

Early one morning I rushed straight into the day,
too much to do, no time to pray.

Problems overcame me, heavier each task,
“Why doesn’t God help me?” He answered, “You didn’t ask.”

I wanted great joy, but the day grew quite bleak.
“Why didn’t God show me?” He said, “You didn’t seek.”

I wished to enter God’s presence, used all the keys at the lock.
He gently chided, “My child you didn’t knock.”

I rose early this morning, and paused before day.
I had so much to do, I needed to pray.

Author Unknown


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Coming Home

So I bought her for 15 shekels of silver and five bushels of barley (Hosea 3:2, HCSB)

Amos was the prophet of God’s wrath in the Old Testament; Hosea by contrast is the prophet of love. Amos addressed the conscience; Hosea addressed the heart. The truth came to Amos in the desert; it met Hosea on his own doorstep.

He married a girl at God’s command, courted her, loved her, lost her. Gomer his wife left him for a life of prostitution. In the midst of a supremely painful and personal tragedy, Hosea suddenly saw it: What Gomer was to him, Israel was to God. Israel was God’s bride. A covenant had been made and God was faithful. His love was steadfast and his commitment unbroken.

But Israel, like Gomer, was adulterous and unfaithful, playing the harlot with her Baals. Then, just when judgment seems imminent, God says something unexpected and unthinkable to Hosea: “Go, show your love to your wife again, though she is loved by another and is an adulteress. Love her as the LORD loves the Israelites, though they turn to other gods… ”

Hosea’s prophecy is the record of perhaps the most difficult assignment ever handed down to a prophet. His is some of the saddest language ever spoken. As fiery as Amos in denouncing the sins of his day, he stood on higher ground when he pictured God as waiting (as he had waited for Gomer) for Israel to come home. Apparently Gomer was on her own for a while, and, needing to support herself, sold herself into slavery or became the mistress of another man.

Hosea had to pay to get her back, perhaps even having to bargain for her. He pays the Old Testament price of a slave-thirty shekels of silver. It may be that Hosea was not a wealthy man; he pays half in cash and half in barley. Gomer is no longer worth much to anybody except Hosea, but he loved her just as God loved Israel.

What must it do to God’s heart when we abandon him and his love for something or someone else? But God will not give us up. No matter how low we sink, God is willing to buy us back. If you want to understand the gospel of Jesus Christ, his view of God, his love of the human race, read Hosea. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things (1 Corinthians 13:7). God and Hosea: loving, forgiving, waiting.

Do you know someone who needs to come home? Some people fear they are no longer welcome at home. But God always leaves a light on. Jesus would make a similar point to his generation with the story of a prodigal son and a waiting Father. God is waiting.


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How To Pray For Your Children

What a comfort it is to know that our Lord prays for His own. It is of great comfort to even the very young child to know that his parents love him and care for him so much that they pray to their Heavenly Father about him. The following suggestions might be helpful as you think of praying for your child, for his needs now and in the future.

  1. That they will know Christ as Saviour early in life (Psalm 63:1 and I Timothy 3:15).
  2. That they will have a hatred for sin (Psalm 97:10).
  3. That they will be caught when guilty (Psalm 119:71).
  4. That they will be protected from the evil one in each area of their lives: spiritual, emotional, and physical (John 17.15).
  5. That they will have a responsible attitude in all their interpersonal relationships (Daniel 6:3).
  6. That they will respect those in authority over them (Romans 13:1).
  7. That they will desire the right kind of friends and be protected from the wrong friends (Proverbs 1:10-11).
  8. That they will be kept from the wrong mate and saved for the right one (II Corinthians 6.14-17).
  9. That they, as well as those they marry, will be kept pure until marriage (I Corinthians 6:18-20).
  10. That they will learn to totally submit to God and actively resist Satan in all circumstances (James 4:7).
  11. That they will be single-hearted, willing to be sold out to Jesus Christ (Romans 12:1-2).
  12. That they will be hedged in so they cannot find their way to wrong people or wrong places and that the wrong people cannot find their way to them (Hosea 2:6).

Pick one point a month to concentrate on. Within a year, you will have consistently prayed this entire list.

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Limitations

There are many reasons why God shouldn’t have called you. But don’t worry. You’re in good company.

Moses stuttered.
David’s armor didn’t fit.
John Mark was rejected by Paul.
Hosea’s wife was a prostitute.
Amos’ only training was in the school of fig-tree pruning.
Jacob was a liar.
David had an affair.
Solomon was too rich.
Jesus was too poor.
Abraham was too old.
David was too young.
Peter was afraid of death.
Lazarus was dead.
Naomi was a widow.
Paul was a murderer.
So was Moses.
Jonah ran from God.
Miriam was a gossip.
Gideon and Thomas both doubted.
Jeremiah was depressed and suicidal.
Elijah was burned out.
John the Baptist was a loudmouth.
Martha was a worry-wart.
Samson had long hair.
Noah got drunk.
Did I mention that Moses had a short fuse?
So did Peter, Paul–well, lots of folks did.

But God doesn’t require a job interview. He doesn’t hire and fire like most bosses, because He’s more our Dad than our Boss. He doesn’t look at financial gain or loss. He’s not prejudiced or partial, not judging, grudging, sassy, or brassy, not deaf to our cry, not blind to our need.

Satan says, “You’re not worthy.”
Jesus says, “So what? I AM.”

Satan looks back and sees our mistakes.
God looks back and sees the cross.

He doesn’t calculate what you did in ‘ 78.
It’s not even on the record.

Sure. There are lots of reasons why God shouldn’t have called us. But if we are magically in love with Him, if we hunger for Him more than our next breath, He’ll use us in spite of who we are, where we’ve been, or what we look like. I pray that as Christians, we will step out of our limitations into the illimitable nature of who God is. Then our passion for God and our passion to communicate Him will make mince-meat of our limitations.


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Training for the Race

Michael Phelps won 8 Gold Medals in the Beijing Olympics

The world watched with amazement as 22-year-old Michael Phelps seized 8 Olympic Gold Medals in the Olympics in Beijing. Amazingly this was in addition to another 6 Gold medals in the previous Olympic games. And the 8 Gold medal victories were not in solely personal events but also team efforts. Victory could only be achieved together. He carried his segment of the race, and could only watch as his team members each carried their own segments. – spurring one another on to ultimate victory!

Most amazing was the 200-meter butterfly where, after diving into the pool, his goggles began to fill up with water so that by the last 50 meters he could not even see his goal. After the race he tossed his goggles aside in frustration and stared at the official results. He had still won, even breaking his own world record in the process.

“I couldn’t see the wall. I was just hoping I was winning,” he later told reporters. He had simply relied on his training and counted his strokes to his goal. In one of the many news stories on this amazing swimmer, it was mentioned that he trained EVERY day for 4 ½ hours a day. This included his birthday and even Christmas. 4 ½ hours a day, 365 days a year, for four years since the last Olympics. He credited his coach with giving him benchmarks and smaller goals along the way to his Ultimate Goal of eight Gold Medals at the Olympics. For many of the Gold Medals, he was not only victorious, but broke world records by a fairly big margin in a sport often measured by hundredths of a second.

More than one swimmer had set Phelp’s defeat as their goal. “Before the 200 meter Free style, South Korea’s Park Taehwan said, “I will defeat Phelps tomorrow.” “Everyone on the planet is trying to make him work, giving him obstacles,” said Milorad Cavic, the Serbian Swimmer who was closest to defeating him and lost by only one hundredth of a second. The world deemed 8 Olympic goals as impossible. But Phelps, through daily discipline and training, found victory in every test!

I believe the same is often true in our spiritual lives. How often do we set goals yet fail to measure up? So often we are overwhelmed with the voices of discouragement. Principalities and forces in the heavenly realms are focused on our defeat. (Ephesians 6:12)

We fix our eyes on the goal, on Jesus, the Author and Perfector of our Faith. (Hebrews 12:1-3) But then when we finally stretch out and reach for our goal, our vision is hampered, and we can no longer see the goal ahead. It is at these times that the daily discipline and training carries us through. (1 Corinthians 9:25 – 27, 2 Timothy 3:16-17)

Like Phelps, if we are to achieve that ultimate goal for which God has called every one of us, we have to have incremental goals and daily disciplines. Luckily, God doesn’t come into our lives and demand that everything change immediately. His Spirit works with us in small ways, slowly transforming us to experience personal victories as well as corporate victories in the body of Christ. Many of those victories are personal, but many are also achieved only through the combined efforts of the Body of Christ as we spur one another on and exercise the individual gifts he has given us for the common good. (Hebrews 10:24, 1 Corinthians 12:7, Ephesians 4:11-12, Hebrews 3:13, Galatians 6:9)

Are there areas of your life where victory seems impossible? Are the voices of discouragement overwhelming? Do the circumstances of life seem set on your defeat? Does God’s purpose in your life seem out of focus or completely obscured? Then focus daily on your spiritual disciplines, on the Spirit’s moment-by-moment promptings and you will one day see clearly and realize fully God’s victories through your life! Present yourself daily as a living sacrifice. Keep yourself on the altar! The biggest problem with Living sacrifices is we keep crawling off the altar! (Romans 12:1-2)

Whenever you feel like giving up, read 2 Corinthians 4:7-16. As Christians, even when we cannot see the goal, we don’t have to simply “hope” we are winning. Victory is assured in Christ! Even when the world seems against us, Christ is working in us and through us! Don’t lose heart! (2 Cor. 4:16)

Don’t give up! With God, ALL things are possible. (Luke 1:37)

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Go for the Gold

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What is salvation all about? What does it mean to be saved? This sports themed Bible Study / Camp Curriculum uses the Olympic Flag to introduce the concepts of sin (black circle), forgiveness (red circle), purity (white background), spiritual growth (green circle), heaven (Yellow Circle) and (Baptism) blue circle.
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Destined to Win

Need a Youth Camp/ Bible Study Series on “Running the Christian Race”?

The race as a metaphor for the Christian life is used in several places in the Bible. This series is a great follow up for new Christians or to re-emphasize the basics of our spiritual Journey in the Faith. This Bible Study / Camp Curriculum has a sports theme and is great for athletes as well as a tie in to the youth Olympic Games.
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Growing Older?

How to know you are growing older?

  1. Everything hurts, and what doesn’t hurt, doesn’t work.
  2. Your little black book contains only names ending in M.D.
  3. You get winded playing chess.
  4. You join a health club and don’t go.
  5. You look forward to a dull evening.
  6. You sit in a rocking chair and can’t get it going.
  7. Your knees buckle and your belt won’t.
  8. Dialing long distance wears you out.
  9. Your back goes out more then you do.
  10. You sink your teeth into a steak and they stay there.
  11. A fortune teller offers to read your face.
  12. You got to much room in the flat and not enough in the medicine cabinet.
  13. Your children look middle aged.
  14. You know all the answers, but nobody asks you the questions.

“In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God’s Word all over again. You need milk, not solid food! Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness. But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil. Therefore let us leave the elementary teachings about
Christ and go on to maturity, not laying again the foundation of repentance, from acts that lead to death, and of faith in God, instruction about baptisms, laying on of hands, the resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment” [Hebrews 5:12-6:2]

HOW TO KNOW YOU ARE GROWING OLDER SPIRITUALLY?

  • Those who are spiritually mature have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil by CONSTANTLY PUTTING GOD’S WORD INTO USE.


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Impossible?

It was said that flight was impossible… until the Wright brothers attained it.

In the physical world there may be limits, but often the limits persist only in the mind of man. When someone looks beyond and dares to challenge the impossible, that barrier we call the “impossible” disperses and we discover things were not as impossible as they seemed. The only true limitation was our belief and the knowledge discovered when we dared to step outside our limiting beliefs.

Listen to these statements of professionals regarding flight.

“…We hope that Professor Langley will not put his substantial greatness as a scientist in further peril by continuing to waste his time and the money involved, in further airship experiments. Life is short, and he is capable of services to humanity incomparably greater than can be expected to result from trying to fly.” – New York Times, December 10,1903, editorial page.

“Outside of the proven impossible, there probably can be found no better example of the speculative tendency carrying man to the verge of the chimerical than in his attempts to imitate the birds, or no field where so much inventive seed has been sown with so little return as in the attempts of man to fly successfully through the air. Never, it would seem, has the human mind so persistently evaded the issue, begged the questions and, ‘wrangling resolutely with the facts’, insisted upon dreams being accepted as actual performance, as when there has been proclaimed time and again the proximate and perfect utility of the balloon or of the flying machine.” — Melville, Rear Admiral George (1901)

“…Should man succeed in building a machine small enough to fly and large enough to carry himself, then in attempting to build a still larger machine he will find himself limited by the strength of his materials in the same manner and for the same reasons that nature has.” — Melville, Rear Admiral George (1901)

“…there is no basis for the ardent hopes and positive statements made as to the safety and successful use of the dirigible balloon or flying machine, or both, for commercial transportation or as weapons of ware, and that, therefore, it would be a wrong, whether willful or unknowing, to lead the people and perhaps governments at this time to believe the contrary;…” — Melville, Rear Admiral George (1901)

“…The aeroplane must have its propellers. These must be driven by an engine with a source of power. Weight is an essential quality of every engine. The propellers must be made of metal, which has its weakness, and which is liable to give way when its speed attains a certain limit. And, granting complete success, imagine the proud possessor of the aeroplane darting through the air at a speed of several hundred feet per second! It is the speed alone that sustains him. Once he slackens his speed, down he begins to fall. He may, indeed, increase the inclination of his aeroplane. Then he increases the resistance necessary to move it. Once he stops he falls a dead mass. How shall he reach the ground without destroying his delicate machinery?” –Newcomb, Simon. Outlook for the Flying Machine. The Independent, October 22, 1903. pp. 2508, 2510-2511.

“…The popular mind often pictures gigantic flying machines speeding across the Atlantic and carrying innumerable passengers in a way analogous to our modern steamships…It seems safe to say that such ideas must be wholly visionary, and even if a machine could get across with one or two passengers the expense would be prohibitive to any but the capitalist who could own his own yacht.” — Source: Clarke, Arthur C. Profiles of the Future. New York, Harper and Row, 1962. pp.3-4.

But of course flight is common to us today. What was once considered impossible is now commonplace.

What is true for the physical world is even more applicable for the spiritual one — where for God, NOTHING is impossible. How many breakthroughs do we miss out on in our spiritual lives because of limiting beliefs. God wants to do the impossible in your life and the first step toward that is for you to believe it can be done. Only then will you discover the wonders God has prepared for you. And you will mount up on eagles wings and fly higher with God than ever before!


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Cleaning Your Room

As a teen, your bedroom is a mirror on which your personality and passions are reflected. Though it may be small it is your domain. Its Yours! Your room becomes your mansion, your castle. Inside you are King of your palace, at least until you are dethroned by parents telling you to clean it, pick it up. Three aquariums, a nursery for caterpillars that would become monarch butterflies, a chemistry lab, an enormous rock collection, an apple //e computer, and a bookshelf filled with books of science and science fiction showed my general interest in anything science. At one point mom replied that if I added another rock to my collection I’d have to start sleeping outdoors.

Of course, like all teens, the music was too loud, and at times you couldn’t see the floor. For some reason, mom never accepted the excuse that with everything on the floor “I wouldn’t get the carpet dirty.” Like most teens, I was at times sent to my room to “pick it up”. I always wanted to go outside and lift the house and reply with a sly grin on my face “where would you like me to put it?” I had this incessant habit of taking everything literally if it gave me an opportunity to be mischievous. “Put up the towels” meant tossing them in the air and telling mom they wouldn’t stay up. “Pass the mashed potatoes” was translated into passing the potatoes by you, but not stopping, or better yet, passing them to you basketball style. Unless you were prepared to catch you’d be wearing them. But in reality, for the record, it was mom who usually started the food fights.

It took some time before I understood the importance of cleaning my room. Surely my parents understood that if I picked it up, in a a few hours time it it would be cluttered again as a result of my hectic schedule. And of making my bed? What a waste of time. What was the use of making something look nice when it’s sole purpose was its destruction in a matter of hours? If I was in my room for any matter of time, I was sprawled across my bed, listening to music or reading a book. After a good night’s sleep I’d have the sheets pulled from the corners. Sheets and quilts, once nicely covering the bed, would be plastered across the room. If I was lucky I would awake on the bed in the same position in which I went to bed. Most of the time, I’d wake up somehow turned around 90 or even 180 degree and would be sleeping on the bed in the opposite direction from which I went to sleep. If my bed had been a soccer field, I am sure I would have covered the entire field every night.

Eventually I came to pride myself in a clean room, though at times our definitions of clean were different. My key concern was that it was neater then that of my two sisters. Sometimes that meant really cleaning mine, at other times, like any good older brother, it meant sabotaging theirs. My favorite method of sabotage was to hang all their dolls from the canopy bed with ropes around their necks. Often they wouldn’t have the slightest inclination I had been up to my tricks until they entered their room and let out a squeal, which precipitated a corresponding giggle from me.

I later discovered that my parent’s primary concern in cleaning my room was the development of self-discipline and responsibility. Now it seems that I have more than just a room that needs self-discipline to keep it in order. Our lives, like our bedrooms as teens, reflect on us. What passions and aspects of your personality does your life now reflect? Does it reflect a passion for God? What clutter do you have scattered about the floor? What, like your teenage bed, have you left undone? It seems things get cluttered so much easier as adults. Work commitments, family matters, bills, and personal habits need the same self-discipline and responsibility we needed as teens. Spiritually, the task of keeping our lives picked up is even more daunting. It seems there is always cleaning, fixing, changing, and maintaining to be done. Maybe its time someone sent us to pick up our lives, as our parents sent us to pick up our rooms.

Yet, may we always remember, like our parents, God always loves us, even when our room is a mess.
copyright 1997 – Ken Sapp


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Responding to Christmas

God wants to include each of us in His plan for the world. But how will we respond? When we look at the events of the Christmas story we can see a few possible responses.

DOUBT – Zechariah (Luke 1:5-22)

God spoke to Zechariah of his plan through the angel Gabriel. When first told of God’s plan, Zechariah DOUBTED it. He didn’t believe God’s promise. “We are too old.” “How can God use us?” “This is not possible” we don’t know all his thoughts, but we do know that the angel Gabriel saw doubt in his heart. Zechariah, a man of God obediently serving God in the temple, presenting an offering of incense to God, still wondered if God can do what he said he would do. Later after the promised child was born, he had learned his lesson and trusted that his child was indeed the one promised by God by confirming the child’s name as John, just as Gabriel had told him. God has great power and will do what he says!

AWE – Elizabeth (Luke 1:23-25, 45)

As far as we know from scripture, God did not speak to Elizabeth directly about his plan for her. It is never mentioned in scripture whether Elizabeth knew of God’s personal plan or whether her husband Zechariah said anything to her about the promise of God to them as a couple. She not only had no word from God, but because she was barren, she was seen as lacking God’s favour. No word from God and by her circumstances it seemed that God was unhappy with her. But when she recognised she was pregnant she immediately credited it to God’s favour upon her. Later, she met Mary, who was also pregnant and the unborn baby, John, jumped for joy in her womb and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and cried out with a loud voice “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb!” While no word from God had come to her, God used her to proclaim God’s promise and blessings to Mary! Whether she completely understood God’s plan or not, we do not know, but she was in AWE of what God was doing and humbled to be included in his plan!

SUBMISSION – Mary (Luke 1: 26-38)

Mary, when first told of God’s plan, SUBMITTED to it. She yielded her life to God’s plan and made herself available for God to use. Like Zechariah, she had questions, but her questions were different from those of Zachariah. “How is this possible?” The angel Gabriel saw no doubt in her heart, but she didn’t understand how it was going to be done. She knew, as the angel Gabriel reminded her, “With God, nothing is impossible”, and responded, “I am your servant, may it be done to me according to your Word!” and then she PRAISED God for it. She was committed to let God use her, even when she did not understand his reasons.

OBEDIENCE – Joseph (Matthew 1:18-25)

As far as we know, Joseph knew nothing of God’s plan until Mary began to show signs of the pregnancy. As he was betrothed to Mary, he was faced with very difficult circumstances. His “wife to be” was pregnant, and he knew he was not the father. From human understanding, this could only be a result of unrighteousness on Mary’s part. We do not know whether Mary had explained God’s role in things to him or not, but we do know that he responded to the difficult circumstances in a way that was righteous! While the law allowed Mary to be stoned for adultery, he instead decided that he would send her away so that she would not be disgraced. His first response to a seemingly unrighteous situation that he did not understand was that of a righteous man. It was only after Joseph’s righteous response to the situation and circumstances that God spoke to him directly through an angel in a dream and revealed his plan. Joseph responded to the plan in OBEDIENCE, took Mary as his wife, and named the child Jesus.

WORSHIP – Magi (Matthew 2:1-12)

Magi were scholars. We don’t know the details of their understanding of events, but we do know that they came expecting a “King of the Jews.” They came with the intention to WORSHIP this king. Somehow they knew that a star, seen in the sky, was a sign that this king would be born and somehow would reveal his location. We really do not know how God revealed this information to them, but somehow, likely through written texts, they had some limited understanding of God’s plan. But it is clear they only had a little of the information. They did not know all the details. Based on that limited knowledge they set out to find this King of the Jews to WORSHIP him. Then God used a ruthless King Herod to add to that knowledge and give them more precise instructions to find Jesus. They followed both the star and the instructions given to them until they found the child. In great Joy, they fell to the ground and worshipped him and then presented him with gifts! God then spoke to them directly in a dream and they obeyed the instructions given that they should not return to Herod.

EXPERIENCE IT – Shepherds (Luke 2:8-20)

The shepherds were ordinary men going about the everyday realities of their occupation. They were not scholars or priests. We do not even know whether they were religious or not. It was not in a morning worship service in the temple that God revealed himself! It was late at night while they were watching over their flocks in the field that God revealed his plans to them through an angel. God not only revealed his plan, but also gave them signs to guide them. Their immediate response was to quickly go and see for themselves what God was doing! They immediately dropped what they were doing and quickly went to EXPERIENCE the baby Jesus who was to be a Saviour for them personally and to all people. They told everyone about the plans of God as revealed and promised to them! They then went back to their jobs tending the flocks, but they had experienced God’s work firsthand and responded by glorifying and praising God. No doubt that for many of those shepherds, that encounter with God and Christ would be an event that defined them and continued to be talked about for the rest of their lives, whether they were going about their jobs, or when with family and friends.

????????? – YOU?

How does God speak to you? Directly? Through dreams? Through knowledge, wisdom, or scripture? Through events and circumstances? Through other people – the righteous or even the ungodly? Or maybe like Elizabeth, does it seem that God has forgotten you? Why is God silent? Where are the blessings the scriptures have promised in your life? Does your life seem ordinary as you go about the daily routines of your job? The Christmas story reminds us that God speaks to us in many different ways and circumstances. And even should he remain silent, God’s promises remain true. God wants us to join Him in his plan for the world! How will you respond to God’s plan for you?

Will you doubt? Will you respond in humble awe that God has included you? Will you submit your life to him as his servant? Respond in obedience? Will you respond to what God has revealed to you, even if you do not know all the details or how it will be done? Will you overflow with Worship and Praise as you experience Him for yourself and His purpose in your life?

This Christmas, what is God saying to you? What will your response be?

(c) Ken Sapp – Christmas 2007

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A Parent’s Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father, Make me a better parent. Teach me to understand my children, to listen patiently to what they have to say and to answer all their questions kindly.

Keep me from interrupting them, talking back to them and contradicting them. Make me as courteous to them as I would have them be to me.

Give me the courage to confess my sins against my children and to ask them forgiveness when I know that I have done them wrong.

Grant that I may never vainly hurt the feelings of my children. Forbid that I should laugh at their mistakes or resort to shame and ridicule as punishment.

Let me not tempt my child to lie or steal. So guide me hour by hour that I might demonstrate by all I say and do that honestly produces happiness.

Reduce, I pray, the meanness in me. May I cease to nag, and when I am out of sorts, help me O Lord, to hold my tongue. Blind me to the little errors of my children, and help me to see the good things they do.

Give me a ready word to honest praise. Help me to grow up with my children, to treat them as those of their own age, but let me not expect of them the judgments and conventions of adults.

Allow me not to rob them of the opportunity to learn for themselves, to think, to choose and to make decisions. Forbid that I should ever punish them for my selfish satisfaction.

May I grant them all their wishes that are reasonable,
And may I have the courage always to withhold a privilege which I know will do them harm.

Make me fair and just, and considerate and companionable to my children that they will have a genuine esteem for me. Make me fit to be loved and imitated by my children.

Amen.

Author: Garry C. Myers, as quoted by Abigail Van Buren in “Dear Abbey.”


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Consecration

“This blessed life is not an attainment, but an obtainment. The soul must fully recognize it is God’s gift in Christ Jesus and cannot be gained by any efforts or works on our own. God can bestow the gift only upon the fully consecrated soul, to be received by faith and great thankfulness.

I once tried to explain consecration to the physician in charge of a large hospital. ‘Suppose in your rounds a patient entreats you to take his case under your special care in order to cure him, but at the same time refuses to tell you his symptoms or take your prescribed remedies. He tells you, ‘I am quite willing to follow the directions that seem good to me, but in other matters I prefer judging for myself and following my own directions.’ What would you do?’

‘Do!’ the doctor replied indignantly. ‘I can do nothing for a patient unless he puts his whole case into my care and obeys my directions. Doctors must be implicitly obeyed, if they are to have any chance to cure their patients.’

‘That is consecration,’ I continued. ‘God must have the whole case put into His hands, and His directions must
be implicitly followed.’

‘I see it!’ he exclaimed. ‘And I will do it; God shall have His own way with me from henceforth!’

An entire surrender of spirit, soul and body to His control in a life of inevitable obedience may look hard to a soul ignorant of God. To those who know Him, it is the happiest and most restful of lives. Could we but for one moment get a glimpse into the mighty depths of His love, our hearts would spring out to His will and embrace it as our richest treasure.”

Source: Hannah Whitall Smith
“The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life”


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Higher Up!

If you tear down a sparrow’s nest the bird will soon build the nest again in the same place as it was before. However, if you pull the nest down a couple times, the sparrow will seek a new place–a location that is higher up, and beyond your destructive reach.

Sometimes God’s creatures are wiser than Christians. Too many Christians form dwelling places in this temporal world – places of security in money, relationships, power, fame, and status – only to see them pulled down time after time. Yet after each brief interval of hurt, frustrations, and pain, they begin building all over again in the same places.

They never realize that through their affliction the Lord is directing them to put their security higher up – not building here, but in heaven.

Copyright 1999 by Ken Sapp


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New Car Christianity?

Imagine that I gave you a new car. It’s a nice car, it runs well. You’d be excited wouldn’t you? A nice new car to drive around. But there are a few conditions.

  1. You can only have the car one morning a week. The rest of the time it stays at my house and you can not use it.
  2. Oh yeah- by the way, that one morning a week I will come to your house and pick you up. You can ride in the passenger seat. We will only go where I want to go, and after a few hours, I will drop you off again until the next week.

Yet this is what many of us do in our relationship with God. It’s not a car we give to God, but our life. But we place conditions.

  1. You can only have my life for a few hours on Sunday.
  2. I’ll keep control, You are just a passenger.. you cannot make decisions. I’ll decide what church things I will attend and you can be there with me. Then after you have had your joy ride with me I’ll take my life back and see you again next week.

Is this your life?


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Who’s your Ninevah?

Jonah is one of my favorite Bible characters.

Out of his comfort Zone
Jonah was faithfully serving God, living among his own people and sharing God’s words for them. Then God suddenly asks him to do something that was a little outside the norm.

In the Old Testament, Israel witnessed to the world by serving God and living for Him, setting themselves apart for Him. They did not go to the world, but instead the world, enticed by their faith and prosperity, came to them. When God asked Jonah to go to Ninevah, that was simply “not the way things were done”.

Instead of proclaiming the words of God to his own people, as most prophets were called to do, Jonah was to go to a new place, Ninevah, and tell them about God. At the time of Jonah, Ninevah was a large Gentile city, about 60 miles in circumference with a population of about 600,000 people.

Hostile Listeners
Ninevah was the capital city of
Assyria and was renowned as one of the most cruel and brutal nations in the ancient world. They thought nothing of burying their enemies alive, skinning them alive, or impaling them on
sharp poles under the hot sun until they died of sunburn and exposure.

Unwelcome Message
Furthermore, Jonah’s message was not to be one of “God’s Love”, but of “God’s Judgement.” Its one thing to tell others about God’s love, but to tell of God’s judgement is not a welcome message people want to hear.

Jonah’s Response?
Add it up and we can understand why Jonah would run! Outside his comfort zone, hostile listeners, and an unwelcome message.

Looking at Ourselves
How often our lives are overturned because God asks us to do something that was simply not comfortable, or worse, against the norms. He calls us to deliver his words, but it’s not to someone we want to tell. And sometimes his message is simply not welcome.

Who is your Ninevah?
We can’t be content to live our lives as Christians and hope the world will come to us. The New Testament “Great Commission” was to go into the world and make disciples of ALL nations. Are we willing to get out of our comfort zone to do so?

That’s the story of Jonah. We see his struggle, his failures, and we can understand. We also see God’s grace and compassion in dealing with his children, as well as, his over arching purpose to offer redemption to everyone – even the worst of us. I may not find myself in the belly of a whale, but I know I often do a little “belly-aching” when it comes to obedience in my own life. I have also seen God go to extraordinary means to get my attention, offer me his grace, and lovingly encourage my obedience to his call!

The life of Jonah is full of lessons for all of us. To explore these lessons yourself, or with the youth you work with, check out “A Whale of a Tale”, my Bible Study curriculum based on the life of Jonah. It’s great for youth camps or for a Bible study series.

Click here to find out about my youth Camp Curriculum “A Whale of a Tale” on the book of Jonah.

It is Finished?

“It is finished.” The implication of the Greek word is “This is complete.” It is accomplished, fulfilled, completed. Then you can put an exclamation point after the phrase. There is no question mark. Redemption is complete. You can’t add to it. You can’t subtract from it. It doesn’t need something added to it. Jesus accomplished perfect redemption for men. He completed what we could not even begin. His blood was shed. It’s more than all the blood of all the sacrifices ever offered.

Hebrews 10:8-14: “First he said, “Sacrifices and offerings, burnt offerings and sin offerings you did not desire, nor were you pleased with them” (although the law required them to be made). Then he said, “Here I am, I have come to do your will.” He sets aside the first to establish the second. And by that will, we have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all. Day after day every priest stands and performs his religious duties; again and again he offers the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But when this priest had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God. Since that time he waits for his enemies to be made his footstool, because by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.”

Christ finished the task God purposed him to do. God finished his work on the Cross so that his redemption might be complete in our lives.

Have you completed the task God has for you? Can you say “It is Finished. I have completed what God has given me to do? God’s plan and purpose for my life have been accomplished. God has used the minutes, hours, days, months and years that have been entrusted to me and God’s will and purpose have been done in my life.”

John, standing at the foot of the cross, relays to us Christ’s final words. They are words, not of despair, but of triumph – “It is finished.” His redemption for you and me is complete. There is nothing we can do to add to it. There is nothing we can do to earn it. Nothing can take it away.

All that is left for us to do, is in gratitude and love to let him to continue to reach out to a lost and dying world through us. To proclaim God’s offer of redemption triumphantly to anyone who will place themselves at the foot of the cross. Our prayer is that God might finish His purpose through us as well!

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In God’s Hands

“Into thine hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.” (Lk 23:46)

It has been suggested that since the Lord’s last words were “Father into thy hands I commend my spirit”, His first words at the resurrection would have been a continuation of the Psalm 31:5 from which He had quoted: “Thou hast redeemed me, O Lord God of truth”. But David didn’t say Ps. 31:5 on his deathbed. They were not words of despair. It was not a final giving in after a time of struggle. Instead, it was an expression of David’s desire to commit his soul to the Father in gratefulness and praise.

It’s so difficult to place our lives into the hands of someone else. The apostles must have been quite disturbed to hear Jesus first words from the cross “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mk 15:34). Those words, taken from Psalm 22, words begin with David’s feelings of despair but end with words of thanksgiving for victory.

When Jesus said, “Father, into your hands,” He knew He was in safe keeping because He was in His Father’s hands. He knew God would never drop Him and He was safe and secure. Jesus speaking of us said, no man would be able to pluck us out of the hands of God. Paul said the same thing in 2 Timothy 1:12: “For the which cause I also suffer these things: nevertheless I am not ashamed: for I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day.”

We do not need to fear. We are in the hands of God. We must make the same journey from isolation and despair with God’s seeming lack of help – “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” to commitment to allow God to finish his will in us – “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit”.

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Thirst?

At times in Christ’s life, we see both His humanity and His divinity. When Jesus said that He was thirsty…we see His humanity.

The Son of God the divine Creator of the rivers and oceans of water said, “I thirst.” The Son of God who makes the rain to fall from the sky and the fountains to burst forth from the depths of the earth said, “I thirst.” The one who said, “I am the water of life and anyone who comes to me and drinks, out of his innermost being will flow rivers of living water,” Thirsts.

The words of Jesus not only show us his humanity, but they were also a quote from Psalm 69:31. “I thirst and they gave me vinegar to drink.” It was an obscure passage. But John the Apostle, from the foot of he cross, heard the detail, and saw it and recorded it.

Psalm 22:15 from which Christ’s first words on the cross were spoken hints at this as well. “My strength is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth.” Some have suggested it was not to alleviate Christ’s thirst or relieve the suffering that he makes his request. Instead, it was to momentarily relieve the dryness in his mouth so that His next, and final triumphant words might be uttered clearly and triumphantly.

As we approach Easter, we are reminded that Christ suffered as one of us, yet was also divine. He knows true suffering. On the cross he clearly identifies himself with us, and suffers with us, in our place so that on Easter morning his divinity might clearly burst forth! God knows what you are going through. Don’t be afraid to cry out to God. He hears your cries. He knows your thirst. And he offered himself as living water that you might never thirst again. He offered himself to death on the cross that you might live forever with him in paradise.

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Feeling alone?

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
This phrase feels very familiar. I wonder how many times we have asked God the same question. Where are you? Where were you when this happened in my life? Why did you abandon me in my greatest time of need? Why don’t you do something? I am hurting here! Where is your comfort?

Yet at the same time, we know that God is working according to his eternal purposes. We know it, but it doesn’t make it any easier. We still have those feelings. There are times we all feel abandoned, isolated, as if we are going through things alone. We know that God cares but sometimes it is hard to reconcile the reality of the moment with the truths we know. And we’re not alone in these feelings.

King David wrote these exact same words in Psalm 22: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” His words continue: “why are you so far from saving me Lord? Why are you so far from my groaning? Why do I cry out to you, but you do not answer?” King David had these feelings in his heart that God had forsaken him, abandoned him, deserted him.

Job also experienced many personal tragedies. He lost his farms, his animals, his children, his wife, his health, and his friends. Job lost everything. And he also felt as if God had abandoned him, deserted him. Job even went one step further and was angry with God.

Yet God still loved both David and Job, even in the midst of their crying out to him in frustration and hurt. God still loved Jesus when Jesus expressed those feelings and he also loves us when we express them.

This Easter, remember that God can handle your feelings. He understands. He cares. Be honest with him. And in the end all things will work out. As someone I know says, “In the End, everything will work out. If it hasn’t worked out, its not the end yet.” God’s work isn’t finished yet. That comes later!

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Thinking about others in time of great pain

“Woman, your son; Son, your mother.”
Jesus is in the middle of incredible pain and yet he is thinking about others. So many times when we are in pain we seem to take it out on others. Not Jesus!

“Woman”
Imagine as a mother what Mary must have felt to see her son on the cross. In reality, we can’t even begin to imagine what it would have been like. It must have been the most gut wrenching event of her life. Every parent feels the pain of a child, and crucifixion is considered one of the most painful ways to die ever devised by man. Yet she was with Jesus at the foot of the cross. I am sure she felt every nail and was gripped by sadness.

“Son”, “Mother”
God knows us each by name, but Jesus did not use the name of John or Mary. He referred to them by terms related to a family relationship. His request is very simple…. take care of each other as a mother and son. In times of great stress and distress we need support from family and friends. And with the family of God, we all have a new, much extended family.

Thoughts for Easter
I wonder if you are going through a painful experience in your own life. Are you looking for sympathy or looking after others. Are you focused on your own pain, or the pain others are experiencing? Instead of focusing on your own pain this Easter, remember those around you. There may be people suffering, that in the midst of your own pain, you hadn’t noticed were hurting. Their pain may seem insignificant compared to yours, but for Jesus it was important that those near to him were comforted in times of great distress.

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Paradise

Today you will be with me in paradise.” (Luke 23:43)

“Today”
Jesus makes a huge promise to the sinner next to him on the cross. Today you will be with me in paradise. Immediately. Instantly. Now. Not tomorrow. Not in a hundred years. Not in a in a thousand years. Not in a in a million years. Not at the second coming of Christ. But today. Immediately. I don’t understand what awaits us after we pass through the doors of death, but I know eternal life awaits beyond.

“Today, You”
You. That means you and me. We will be in paradise with God when we die. I don’t believe Christ’s promise is only towards the thief on the cross but Christ’s promise is directed towards you and me as well.

“Today, You will be with me”
With me. The emphasis in the Bible is not on being reunited with our loved ones from earth though I also believe that will happen. The Bible focuses on something even better… We will be with Christ, we will be in God’s Presence.

“Today, You will be with me in paradise”
We will seen the face and glory of God. We will be with loved ones. There will no war nor starvation nor evil for these things will have been all destroyed. It will be paradise! I can’t explain and any explanation will fall far short of the reality. Its beyond anything we can comprehend.

God loves us and he wants us to know that we will be with him. His presence is what really matters. Its his presence that makes it paradise. But God also promises his presence with us today. Are you able to see the presence of God in your life today! Its only a foretaste of what it will be like when in paradise, when the overwhelming presence of God is truly revealed in all his glory! Don’t wait… it can begin today!

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Forgiveness at the Cross

“Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” (Luke 23:34)

“Father”
These are the first recorded words we have from Jesus on the Cross. He begins with a prayer to our intimate heavenly Father. He does not address his beloved disciple John, nor the grieving women who followed him nor the religious leaders, nor the sinners on each side, nor the gawking crowd below. Jesus did not look at the people around him, but up to the Father above. He will only be able to see the people around him in proper perspective when he focuses on the Father first. Are our first thoughts toward God in everything?

“Father, forgive them”
But there’s more. While in excruciating pain, Jesus asked God to forgive his tormentors. I don’t know about you, but in the midst of the pain, especially when I am on the receiving end, I find it difficult to think about forgiveness. Christ’s pain wasn’t even over yet, it had just begun! The people on the receiving end of God’s forgiveness certainly didn’t deserve it. They didn’t even ask for it. It wasn’t even a past event. More was to come. Yet he still asked the Father to forgive them. What amazing grace! What amazing love! This may be the most powerful example of grace and forgiving love in the whole Bible.

“Father, forgive them for they know not what they are doing.”
Did the soldiers, the gawkers, the Jewish leaders, the angry spectators, fully comprehend the consequences of their actions? We don’t know all the reasons they were there on that day at the cross. All we need to do is to think about ourselves a little — How often do we actually think through the repercussions of what WE do? We may think we are doing the right things. We have noble ambitions. We may be protecting the truth. Standing up for righteousness. Making sure the wicked don’t go unpunished. Our reasons may even be less than honorable or outright rebellious. In the end it doesn’t really matter why they were there. They thought they knew what they were doing, but in the eternal scheme of things they had no clue!

But Christ’s concern wasn’t the “Why?” When faced with persecution, with trials, with pain, our first response is to ask God “why?” Maybe we want to understand to have a reason to grant forgiveness! But Christ’s didn’t need a reason. True love doesn’t need a reason. His first response was reconciliation, forgiveness, grace!

That’s the first and final conclusion of the cross – grace – God loved us first, taking the initiative to reconcile with us, even at the greatest possible cost to himself.

May this Easter season be a time of reconciliation for all of us! Don’t ask for an explanation. Don’t try to understand. Don’t wait for someone to ask you for forgiveness. Don’t focus on what is happening down here. Focus on your heavenly Father. Look up in prayer on their behalf. When you do, you will find the grace to take the first loving steps toward loving forgiveness for those around you, regardless of what they are doing, or why they are doing it. Simply forgive and leave the rest up to God!

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Easter: God doing the Impossible

The life of Jesus is bracketed by two impossibilities:
a virgin’s womb and an empty tomb.

Jesus entered our world through a door marked “No Entrance”
and left through a door marked “No Exit.”

And for all who feel it is impossible to overcome the situations facing them
—sickness, death, divorce, persecution, loneliness, despair, addictions—
Jesus stands at the human door marked “No Way” and knocks.

-Peter Larson

I wonder what impossible situations you are facing this season? Relationship issues? Ministry Issues? Parenting Issues? Job? Finances? Spiritual burnout? Or any of those seemingly impossible situations mentioned by Peter Larson in the above quote?

Whether they are minor or major, Jesus has an answer!
Even for those that seem impossible, God has an answer!
Isn’t that the real story of Easter? God did the impossible, to reconcile us with him!
And he promises that he will do impossible things in us and through us?

Only a few years back I was in one of those impossible situations, like the stone rolled in front of the tomb, a door was closed in my life that I thought would never be reopened. It was one of the darkest moments of my life!
It was a time when I was confronted with some harsh realities of my life, a time of personal despair and for a while I lost all hope.

Many of those, treasured as close friends – deserted me. But by God’s grace a few very special saints persevered with me and saw me through until the grace of God could bring a ray of hope to a new day, to a new chapter in my life.

Easter morning came to my life, and every day I am more amazed with the grace, the love, and the sacrifice Christ made to bring about Resurrection and Reconciliation, not only in my life, but in the life of every single sinner who will trust Him!

And just when I find myself back in a locked room, like the disciples after the crucifixion, focused within instead of the world outside, he suddenly appears and reminds me of the holes in his hands and feet and side – of the sacrifice he made for me. And he reminds me HE IS ALIVE.

Not only is he alive, but he wants to live through me to bring his love to a world outside that desperately needs it. He asks me to put aside my doubts and simply trust and obey!
He’ll take care of everything else!

I wonder what it is that you consider impossible in your life?
Easter reminds us that God makes a habit of doing the impossible!
Will you trust him with the impossible in your life this Easter?

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Planning for Prosperity

In a few days time, Chinese people in Singapore and over the world will be celebrating the start of the Chinese New Year.

For several days before the eve of Chinese New Year, Chinese housewives clean and redecorate their homes and shop for waxed duck, Chinese Sausages, mandarin oranges and traditional cakes. They will not sweep during the first few days of the new year because they believe that they might sweep out the good luck. Everything from the decorations, flowers, and even food eaten has special significance for inviting luck and blessings for the new year.

It is believed that the first few days of the New Year will effect the rest of the year. So everything is done to ensure a prosperous future. What you do and how you act during the period is crucial in determining how the rest of your year will go. So, eating the right foods, such as black moss seaweed, which is a homonym for exceeding in wealth, and dried bean curd, which is another homonym for fulfillment of wealth and happiness, is a must.

Decorations like pineapples representing wealth, bamboo signifying strength and longevity, red paper with calligraphy scripts and verses speaking of blessing and prosperity are placed all over the house, over doorposts, and on the front doors.

Officially the holiday lasts for three days, but is traditionally celebrated for 15 days. Singaporeans often take the entire week off from work to celebrate, visiting relatives and friends. Everything has to be just right to set the stage for an auspicious New Year.

A Chinese New Year’s Eve feast doubles as a family reunion, bringing people from all corners of the world back home. Meals are decadent with a spread of symbolically lucky foods. Hong Bao, or red and gold paper packets stuffed with money, are passed out to the younger folk as an auspicious start for a prosperous new year.


Take It to the Next Level


In the Bible, Peter also spoke of things that will insure a Christian will be spiritually prosperous. Like the Chinese New Year, a little house cleaning and what we nourish ourselves with become important.

1 Peter 2:1-17
Peter call us all to a life of holiness (cleaning up our spiritual house) and love in 1 Peter 1:13-25. Verse 23 mentions being born again or born anew. “New borns” must grow into maturity. Much of a parent’s responsibility lies in nurturing and creating an environment for this growth to occur.

Peter begins by assuming that his readers are like newborn babies. Most newborns are passive about everything but getting their nourishment. They enthusiastically go after milk. Peter relates this enthusiasm for nourishment to a new Christian’s desire for spiritual nourishment that will lead to growth in Christ.

That nourishment is pure, spiritual milk. The word milk is part of the figure of speech that goes with newborns. The word pure is genuine – not thinned down milk and refers to the Word of God.

Since you have already tasted and discovered that the Lord is good, the command to long for more spiritual nourishment should be an easy command to obey. The fact that Peter talked about desiring the word in verse 2 and tasting the Lord in verse 3 reminds us that this growth is in our relationship with Christ.


Application


I wonder how many of us are as enthusiastic about the pursuit of God as the Chinese are about the pursuit of good luck. Our reward is not prosperity for a year, but life eternal. Are we willing to do a little personal house cleaning to insure a life of holiness? Is there evidence of spiritual fruitfulness in our lives? Do we have that hunger for the word like new born babies craving milk?

As a closing, you may wish to hand out red packets (you may be able to get stacks of these in your local Chinatown) with scripture verses inside that will encourage your youth in their pursuit of spiritual maturity, and remind them to make this year one where they grow in wisdom and favor with God.



Chinese New Year is celebrated by at least 1/3 of the World’s Population but the entire world needs to hear the message of the Gospel.
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Heroes?

Last night, I watched another episode of “Heroes”.

For those of you who haven’t heard of the series, it tells the interrelated stories of a an ever growing group of individuals who possess a special genetic marker that manifests itself as unique, special superhuman abilities. “Ordinary people discovering extraordinary abilities.”

Their abilities include things like the ability to fly, to read other people’s thoughts, superhuman strength, the ability to somehow communicate with machines, to warp time, to paint the future, to be invisible, to be indestructible, and to cause people to forget certain memories. At first it may seem similar to X-Men, but the attraction of the show lies in the fact that these people are ordinary people like you and me who are startled at discovering these special abilities and trying to figure out how to use them, some for good, some for evil. They are also discovering that they are not alone and beginning to join together on a mission to save the world from disaster.

The recent season of “Heroes” has began to look into a cryptic symbol which has been recurring throughout the series. It’s been seen as a tatoo, a necklace, a symbol on an ancient Japanese sword and many other places. Recent episodes revealed the symbol as being a combination of two Japanese characters, 才 (sai) meaning ‘great talent’ and 与 (yo) meaning ‘Godsent’.

Makes me think about our own lives as Christians.

We are also ordinary people, discovering the extraordinary. We each have a purpose and have been gifted with special talents and skills – “God sent” – to fulfill that purpose. It’s a purpose that is bigger than any individual. Like the famous quote from the series” “Save the Cheerleader, Save the world.” We are also called to save the world, one life at a time. As Christians we have a special marker, the blood of Christ, that allows us to grow and manifest special talents and skills to fulfill an ultimate destiny, a supernatural purpose. We don’t know all the details, and there are a lot of things going on that are unseen, and as yet unrevealed, but through the Scriptures, God has painted visions of the future for us, and with the Sword (of the Spirit) we can make a difference in that future in so many lives. We have not yet fully realized all we can become in Christ, but are on a process of daily discovery. Everyday the supernatural interjects itself into our natural lives. Yet so many around us just don’t see it, are unaware, are going about their lives with absolutely no clue that anything is happening or that a impeding disaster is just around the corner.

As we are given glimpses of the awesome things we are capable of in Christ, are we complacent to sit back and enjoy life or do we have a sense of urgency to use them to make a difference? Do we take our special position and abilities for granted or do we use them for the benefit of others? Worse, do we use them for our own self-interest?

If we could hear others thoughts, would it change the way we live? What if others could hear our thoughts? God hears our thoughts!

If we could choose to forget certain events and experiences, would we? Would we be the same people if we did forget?

If no one could see us, would we be tempted to do things we normally would not do? Would we have the integrity to be the same person when no one can see us? Yet scripture tells us God sees us all the time!

Are we on a mission to save the world, even in the midst of a journey to discover ourselves and what God can do through us?


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Spectator Sport?

Someone once described a football game as twenty-two men on the field badly in need of rest being watched by seventy-two thousand people in the stands badly in need of exercise.

While football may be a spectator sport for most of us, Christianity certainly should never be. We must get involved in the action. God is the coach and he challenges us to get on the field and play the game.
We don’t have to be the MVP, we just need to play the position God gives us. Everyone makes mistakes on the field. But God gives us the “grace” to make mistakes, while not losing sight of our goal.

There will be opposition, there will be progress and at other times we may lose ground. But we must never give up striving for the Goal God has for us.

Philip. 3:12-17
Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. [13] Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, [14] I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.

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False Predictions

We are often quick to make judgments about people. We say that we believe in forgiveness and the transforming power of God, but then so often, the church acts as if we do not believe it. People who make mistakes are forever labeled by their mistakes. We believe God forgives and forgets, but while we say we forgive them, we seem unable to forget. Listen to some of the predictions or judgments that were made about some very famous people. Can you guess who is being referred to?

  1. “We don’t like their sound, and guitar music is on the way out.”
  2. “We don’t need you. You haven’t got through college yet.'”
  3. ‘Far too noisy…Far too many notes.’
  4. ‘I watched his countenance closely, to see if he was not deranged … and I was assured by other senators after he left the room that they had no confidence in it’.
  5. “You ain’t going nowhere, son. You ought to go back to driving a truck.”
  6. “You better learn secretarial work or else get married.”
  7. “It doesn’t matter what he does, he will never amount to anything.”
  8. “You have a chip on your tooth, your Adam’s apple sticks out too far and you talk too slow. “
  9. “Can’t Act. Slightly Bald. Also Dances.”

Answers

  1. Decca Recording Co. rejecting the Beatles, 1962.
  2. Rejection of Apple Computer Inc. founder Steve Jobs on attempts to get Atari and HP interested in his and Steve Wozniak’s personal computer.
  3. Emperor Ferdinand of Austria referring to Mozart, 1786.
  4. U.S. Senator Smith of Indiana, after witnessing a demonstration of Samuel Morse’s telegraph, 1842.
  5. Jim Denny, manager of the Grand Ole Opry, in firing Elvis Presley after a performance, 1954.
  6. Director of the Blue Book Modeling Agency, advising Marilyn Monroe, 1944.
  7. Albert Einstein’s teacher to his father in 1895.
  8. Universal Pictures executive to Clint Eastwood
  9. Review of Fred Astaire’s Original Screen Test, January 1933.

Fortunately, God has much more accurate predictions about our future.

Jeremiah 29:11-14 (NIV)
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. I will be found by you,” declares the LORD, “and will bring you back from captivity. I will gather you from all the nations and places where I have banished you,” declares the LORD, “and will bring you back to the place from which I carried you into exile.”

So as you start the New Year, listen to God. Don’t listen to the voices of discouragement, but to the great encourager, the one who knew you before you were even born. The key to realizing God’s plan for you, of release from whatever captivity you may be in, of restoration to God and his place for you is to seek Him with all your heart. When you do, you not only find him, you also find yourself!


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Thanks, Forgiving Day

THANKS, FORGIVING DAY

“It’s happening already!” he said to me.
“What?”
“The last I looked it was July 4th and now suddenly it’s the holiday season,” he said smiling.
“I’m not ready for this at all,” I told him.
“Oh, it may have come too fast, but I’m always ready for my ‘Thanks Forgiving Day!'”
“You mean Thanksgiving Day?”
“Oh, that too!”
“I’m confused!” I said.

“Well, Thanksgiving Day isn’t celebrated on the same day around the world. I’m not even sure if some countries have such a day. So I celebrate Thanksgiving Day with my family and friends in America. However, the day before Thanksgiving, I celebrate ‘Thanks, Forgiving Day’ with all my international friends as well as those here at home.”
“Do you travel that much?”
“Oh, no. I’ve never had that luxury. I met all of these wonderful people on the Internet.”
“I call them ‘friends I’ve never met’,” I said proudly. “I too, have many from around the world.”
“Well then you must celebrate it, too.”
“Tell me about it.”

“Well, on Thanksgiving Day I give thanks for all the blessings in my life. Good health, love, friendship, work, the food I eat and everything I value.”
He paused for a moment, took a deep breath and sighed with great satisfaction that his life is so blessed.
“But on ‘Thanks Forgiving Day’, the Wednesday before, I make an effort to ask for forgiveness for any wrongs I have done. Even the smallest things that may have gone unchecked over the past year. You know, those little things that may have hurt someone’s feelings and I didn’t realize it. But also the big things which may have caused a hurt or lost friendship. I simply ask everyone to forgive me and thank them for opening their hearts to me again.”

I stood there listening to this wonderful man. He was one of those people whom you immediately trusted. His voice, his demeanor, were warm and welcoming.

It was a wonderful thought. A gesture that gives hope to the world. To think that in some small way we could undermine all of the hate and anger in the world by humbly asking to be forgiven even when we have done nothing wrong. The act itself is a reflection of the greatest love God has for us.

“So will you join me?” he asked.
“I just did!”

To you, my friend, reading this message: When I awaken each morning my heart sings a grateful tune to God for giving me still another chance to make a difference in this world.

On this — my Thanks, Forgiving Day — I humbly ask for your forgiveness if I have slighted you in any way during the past year. I treasure your presence in my life and if you would forgive me, I would be forever grateful. Thanks!

by Bob Perks
Used by Permission

Bob is an Inspirational Columnist for Beliefnet
http://www.beliefnet.com/author/author_148.html
and you can visit his site at http://www.BobPerks.com


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Ruled by Fear

I came across the following one day…

Articles of incorporation of the Springfield Militia

  1. This Company shall be known as the Springfield Militia.
  2. In case of war, this company shall immediately disband.

(From the Civil War SongBook, published circa 1965)

What causes you to fear? How do you respond to fear? Do you fear the threat of being ridiculed, of losing a friend, of being unpopular, of losing the things you treasure. Too often we a fearful for the wrong reasons. We worship the gods of Power, Popularity, and Possessions instead of the Person- Jesus Christ. When these other gods are threatened we lose our backbone and bow down in fear of the future instead of fear of the Father. Then we lose more than just our treasure, we lose a piece of ourselves.

But praise to God there IS NO FEAR if you are standing in Christ.

“Finally Be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes….Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything to stand. Stand firm then…” (Ephesians 6:10, 11, 13)

May we pray as Paul prayed….
“Pray also for me that whenever I open my mouth, words may be given to me so that I will fearlessly make known the mystery of the Gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains. Pray that I may declare it fearlessly as I should.” (Ephesians 6:19)


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Chili Crab

Crab.jpg

While living in Singapore I have loved the ethnic variety of the food. One of my favorite foods is Chili Crab. The crab, from which the delicious food is made, is a very unique creature whose entire life is characterized by change. As the crab matures, it breaks out of its hard crusty shell and begins the process of forming a new one. Its life is marked by a passage through successive shells until a shell is built so durable that it cannot be broken. This shell stops growth and then becomes the crab’s coffin.

Life for the crab continues as long as he dares to break his shell. Since his growth is limited by the shell, significant growth occurs when he is in-between shells. During this time he is extremely vulnerable and growing. Old shells are not necessarily good or bad. As a matter of fact, when a new shell is being formed there is tremendous room for growth. The security and comfort gained through the new shell enables the crab to grow and become strengthened in preparation for the next shedding of a shell. Yet there does come a time when any shell limits growth and must be shed if the crab is to grow. It is also significant that once a shell is shed and the crab grows, it can never fit back into the old shell again.

Churches as well as individual Christians can learn much from the life cycle of a crab. Significant growth occurs when our security shells are broken and we are made vulnerable- thus forced to trust God more. Jacob is an example of one who passed through a succession of shells. Leaving home broke his shell and he became vulnerable before God, making the Bethel experience possible. Years later he repeated the same process with Laban. Significant growth took place when Jacob was between shells. Had Jacob not left the security of 20 years of fruitful labor with Laban he might never have become the man of God we so highly respect. You can trace a similar pattern in almost every biblical character.

You have surely experienced the same paradox in your own life as I have. Sometimes we need the loving tap of a friend on our shells to realize that we have become confined and need to break out of a shell of comfort, a bad habit, or other qualities in our life that have confined us before the shell gets too hard and becomes a coffin. Sometimes all we need is encouragement. At other times it may be God, through trials due to job loss, death, illness, and marital difficulties or financial loss that leads us to a state of brokenness. As the shell is broken, we become vulnerable and are forced to trust God more deeply.

Has your spiritual growth become stagnant. Learn from the crab. Maybe there is a shell in your life that you need to shed!


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New Shoes

tevas.jpg

I recently bought a new pair of sports sandals. Actually I really needed a new pair quite some time ago but was perfectly content with the old ones. They served me well. We’ve been to a lot of places together. In work and play, we have been constant companions. We’ve been to relaxing tropical beaches and on rigorous hikes. We’ve also gone through a lot of trials and stress together. Imagine supporting a 100kg American on your back for just a few minutes! They’ve been carrying me almost every day for the last couple of years.

Forget the fact that the straps are frazzled, the bottoms are worn smooth, and one sniff by the city sanitation department would leave you with a citation for air pollution.

A pair of shoes becomes something of an old friend. Over time they have personally adapted themselves to my uniqueness. They are worn in all the right places. Wearing them is like a soothing massage rather than necessary equipment for my journeys. Unfortunately, the sole of my sandals became completely detached and there was nothing I could do to repair them.

So now I am wearing a new pair of shoes. I contemplated getting some brand-named Air Jordans. Of course everyone knows if you wear the same basketball shoes as Michael Jordan you will jump just like him. But I went back with the same brand I had before… just a newer, improved model. Even change has its limits sometimes!

Even though I psyched myself up for the new shoes, I wasn’t surprised when they were awkward on my feet and abrasive to my ankles. They have worn blisters on my feet on more than one occasion. They will be uncomfortable for some time, but as my old shoes are forever gone, I couldn’t go back to my old comfortable ones.

In spite of the awkwardness and abrasiveness, I have to press on. The change, though it has its painful moments, is a necessary step in my journey.

No one would consider a change of shoes to be among the most significant events in life. But basic principles seem to be surprisingly similar in any area of change, including those changes that need to occur regularly in our lives and churches. Change rarely, if ever, comes easily or automatically. Often change only occurs when we find ourselves in a situation where we are not given a choice. Its either change or be forever stopped in your tracks. Changes initially tend to be awkward, even abrasive. It always takes a little time to settle into any change.

Several months later, guess what? The new shoes will become increasingly comfortable. And in time change will again be needed. Then the process begins anew.

Is there something in your life that needs to be renewed?
Have you been resisting change because things are comfortable?
Has your soul become detached and stopped you spiritually dead in your tracks?

Maybe its time for you to make that change in life you have been resisting! Things might be a little awkward or even abrasive for a while, but its a necessary step for you to move forward in the journey God has prepared for you!

This devotional on New Shoes and Change could be easily adapted as an object lesson or Children’s sermon.

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Wile E Coyote

Wile-E-Coyote.jpg

To this day, one of my favorite cartoons is the Warner Bros “Road Runner” series. Some days I feel like the Road Runner and some days I feel like the Coyote.

Wile E. Coyote (Carnivorous Vulgaris) is based upon a description of a coyote in Mark Twain’s book “Roughing It” which refers to a coyote as being starved and hungry enough to chase a roadrunner.

Road Runner (Accelleratii Incredibus), based upon a bird from the American Southwest, is too fast to catch and too skinny to make a decent meal. He seems completely oblivious to his danger and always escapes the clever Coyote’s carefully orchestrated plans.

According to Chuck Jones, the cartoon’s creator, in “Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of An Animated Cartoonist,” they adhered to some simple but strict rules with the cartoon:

  1. The Road Runner cannot harm the Coyote except by going “Beep-Beep!”
  2. No outside force can harm the Coyote – only his own ineptitude or the failure of Acme products.
  3. The Coyote could stop anytime – if he were not a fanatic.
  4. No dialogue ever, except “Beep-Beep!”
  5. The Road Runner must stay on the road.
  6. All action must be confined to the southwest American desert.
  7. All materials, tools, weapons, or mechanical conveniences must be obtained from the Acme Corporation.
  8. Whenever possible, make gravity the Coyote’s greatest enemy.
  9. The Coyote is always more humiliated than harmed by his failures.
  10. The audience’s sympathy must remain with the Coyote.

The coyote, with knife and fork in hand, becomes so single-minded, so fixated on his pursuit of Road Runner that his whole existence is defined by it. To make matters worse, he has an exaggerated belief in his own ingenuity and in the scientific methods and instruments of the ACME Corporation. He’s forever coming up with increasingly elaborate and seemingly foolproof schemes in his ceaseless pursuit of the Road Runner.

Amusingly, Murphy’s Law, “Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong, and at the worst possible moment” seems to intervene on every occasion as each attempt to capture the Road Runner fails, by some inherent flaw that Wile E. Coyote never anticipates. All his attempts end in disaster. Yet, nothing happens to Wile E. that he does not bring upon himself. The Road Runner merely responds to coyote’s doomed schemes with his characteristic “Beep-Beep”.

Sadly, if Wile E Coyote ever did catch the Road Runner, it is doubtful that the puny little bird would satisfy his hunger.

Like the Coyote?
Our lives become defined by our pursuits. But many of those pursuits are more difficult to grasp than the Road Runner. We come up with elaborate schemes to satisfy the hungers in life only to be left empty and frustrated by our failures. Too often we like to blame these failures and other misadventures in life on the devil. But like those of Wile E Coyote, most of them are self-initiated. While Coyote’s failures usually do little more than humiliate him, the disastrous consequences of a fall in real life do more than damage our ego. In fact they can cause great harm not only to ourselves, but also to others around us. And even when we do manage to take hold of that which we have been pursuing, the end result is often less than satisfying.

Are there things in life that you fanatically pursue with the reckless abandon of a half-crazed coyote to your detriment? (family, careers, money, power, popularity, etc)

Instead of chasing after the Road Runners in life, let them run off into the sunset and chase after God instead. As the apostle Paul said “I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 3:12-14) “Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:33) When we pursue God, he will satisfy the hungers we have in life like no Road Runner ever will. Better yet, he wants to be caught!


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A Happy Heart

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The Bible says,
“A happy heart makes the face cheerful, but heartache crushes the spirit.” -Proverbs 15:13

A cheerful heart is good medicine. Laughter, as an expression of joy, is essential to our physical and emotional well-being. Dr. Hendrie Weisinger’s manual on anger management, “Dr. Weisinger’s Anger Work-Out Book”, warns that if our daily total is less than fifteen laughs, including three belly laughs, we are under-laughed.

Laughter and humor are essential for coping with life, for relieving tension, and for keeping things in perspective. A noted theologian wrote that we resolve the ambiguities of life with faith and humor. When it comes to daily living, around the office or the home or the classroom, we need a combination of faith and laughter in abundance!

Followers of Christ know full well that some days do not bring much happiness. But we experience joy that no circumstance can touch. In an increasingly despondent world, believers can lead lives of joy mixed with laughter. As Grady Nutt said, “Laughter is God’s hand on the shoulder of a troubled world.”


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Are you a vessel?

If you were describe yourself as a vessel what would it be? Why?
jug.jpg

  • A vase
  • A bowl
  • A cup
  • A jug
  • A glass
  • A can
  • A plastic bag
  • A jar
  • A wok
  • A pot
  • A pan

A Vessel
All can be found in the kitchen. Some are new, some are well used. Some have chips and dents and others are merely for show. Some are blackened by the stove, while others are polished and shiny. Some for daily use, some for guests. Some for preparing and some for serving. Yet all are useful… Different vessels for different purposes.

Read 2 Timothy 2:20-22

  • What materials are the different vessels made of in this passage? What might they represent? What purposes?
  • Why is a clean vessel important?
  • How do clean and holy relate to each other?
  • How do we make our self useful to God?
  • What is the one condition that prepares us for EVERY good work?
  • How does verse 22 relate to being prepared?

Sitting on the Shelf?
Prepare yourself as a vessel to be used by God. Don’t wait… Don’t just sit on the shelf.

An apprentice demon was to be sent to earth on its first mission. His mission was to neutralize the effectiveness of Christians. In discussing his strategy with Satan he said, “I Know… I’ll try to convince Christians there is no such things as sin and then they will have no reason to share the Gospel.” Satan replied, that may work for a few, but not most. Even those most enslaved by my influence have moments of insight when they realize the destructiveness of sin,” “Well then.” the apprentice responded. “I’ll convince them there is no hell” “Good thinking!” Satan replied. “That their friends and family members will suffer eternal punishment is a great motivation for Christians to witness. Yet, the idea of judgment is so ingrained in most men I think it too will be ineffective in preventing Christians from witnessing, “The young demon thought for a moment: then a look of devilish glee spread across his face. “I’ve got it!” “I’ll convince Christians that there is no hurry. They can keep their doctrines of sin and hell, I’ll just convince them that they need not think about it and inconvenience themselves today. Of course you can share with him, but it will be fine to put it off to next week… for the vast majority of Christians that next week will never come,” “You have done well!” replied Satan,,. “Many will go to hell with us simply because their Christian friends plan to share with them–tomorrow.”

Pray that God might give you the desire to make your life available as a vessel to be used by Him each and every day, without delay, that you might be useful to him!

“We have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all surpassing power is from God and not from us.”
– 2 Corinthians 4:7

Copyright 1998 by Ken Sapp


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Seasoned with Salt

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If you were to describe your life as a spice or seasoning, what would it be?
What seasoning does your life bring to the world? Why?

Read Mathew 5:13; I Peter 3:15-16; 2 Tim 4:2
We often use salt as a pinch of zest for our food. Salt adds flavor and it also creates thirst. In the days before modern medicine, salt was often used to disinfect a wound and to preserve food. In Matthew 5:13, Jesus was warning his disciples to avoid two errors:

First, he was saying that Christians must not forsake the world and go into isolation only looking inward. Why? Salt will do no good unless it is rubbed it. Only then will it function as an antiseptic. We are to be in the world so that the world may benefit by our difference from the world.

Second, Jesus was saying that Christians must also avoid the error of being one with the world and embracing its values and ways. When you accept Jesus’ call to be the salt of the earth, you give flavor to the world around you. You bring a taste of God to others os that they can taste and see that the Lord is good. You help preserve God’s goodness in the events and people you encounter.

Go back and reread Matthew 5:1-12 again.

  • How do each of the eight qualities listed act as salt in the world?
  • What are eight ways that Christians are in danger of losing out saltiness in comparison to these things? (For example the first speaks of humility and we might lose our saltiness by being prideful.)
  • Which of these areas do you find yourself losing your saltiness?

1 Peter 3:15-16 talks about seasoning our conversation with salt to create a desire to know God. In what ways might you do this?

What might you do to become more effective as the salt of the earth?
How might your church or youth group be more effective as the “salt of the earth?”

Pray that God might make the following verse true in your life…
“Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders: make the most of every opportunity, Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.”
– Colossians 4:5-6

Copyright 1998 by Ken Sapp


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Placing Lights

If you were to describe your life as a light, which might you choose and why?

  • A lighthouse
  • A floodlight
  • 100 watt light bulb
  • A flashlight
  • A flashlight with dead batteries’
  • A penlight
  • A bonfire
  • A campfire
  • A candle
  • A spark
  • Other?

“Where do you place lights?”

A young lady working in a factory became frustrated with the immorality around her. She went to her pastor for counseling one day and began to tell him how difficult it was to work in a factory with so many non-Christians.

“Pastor.” she said, “You lust don’t know how hard it is to go to work on Monday morning and hear all the stories about the partying that took place the weekend before.”

Her pastor replied, “Where do you place lights?”

The girl, barely hearing the question, rushed on saying, “And you can’t imagine how terrible it is work with people who smoke and curse all day!”

“Where do you place lights?” he questioned again.

This time the girls hesitated with a puzzled look on her face and continued on “Pastor, you couldn’t possibly know how hard it is to work with a bunch of men and women who come in after the weekend and talk about their sexual exploits and affairs.”

Again the pastor challenged the girl. ‘Where do you put lights?”

The conversation continued on until the girl stopped in frustration and responded to the question. “Well. I don’t know where you place lights–in dark places I guess!” When the words had barely left her lips, it was as if a light had come on, for the girl understood the point her pastor was making. She was to be God’s light in the factory where she worked. She left her church that day with a vision in her heart for what she could do to reach her coworkers for the Lord. In the next several months she led several of them to the Lord.

If we are going to win our friends to Christ we must start sharing outside the four walls of the church. If we refuse to tell them about Jesus on their own ground, in the work place and in homes, many of them will never hear the good news of salvation.

Read Matthew 5:14-16, and 1 Peter 2:12.
What common theme is there in these verses?

Matthew 5:1-12 sets the foundation for what it means to be the “light of the world.” Of the 8 qualities listed here, which do you desire most in your life? How might these eight qualities relate to being the “Light of the world”?

  • Is your life a light on a hill?
  • Do you live a life that causes others to glorify God?
  • How might you shine brighter for Christ?

Pray that God might make the following verse true in your life:
“And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”
– 2 Corinthians 3:18

Copyright 1998 by Ken Sapp


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Fearing Failure

In “Shepherd Leadership”, authors McCormick and Davenport remind Christian leaders to allow for second chances and gently restore the fallen. They write:

Thomas Edison filed an impressive 1,093 patents with the U.S. Patent Office, and behind each one of those 1,093 successes lay hundreds and sometimes thousands of failures. Edison mastered the art of recovering from failure with lessons in hand and sought to pass it on to his workers. Near the end of his career, a former worker, Alfred Tate, penned the following letter to his former boss: “Above all you taught me not to be afraid of failure; that scars are sometimes as honorable as medals.”

Fear of failure can paralyze and defeat us. But failure is in fact a great teacher if we know how to learn and apply its lessons. Edison learned the value of failure. He never let it discourage him to the point of quitting. All of us will fail, but we must never let failure be final.

“Brothers, if someone is caught in a sin, you who are spiritual should restore him gently. But watch yourself, or you also may be tempted. Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.”
– Galatians 6:1-2


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Appearances

“But the LORD said to Samuel, “Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.” (1 Samuel 16:7)

God warned Samuel against judging by appearance alone. When we judge by externals, we easily overlook outstanding people who lack the particular physical qualities society currently admires. Outward appearance doesn’t reflect what people are really like or their true worth.

When the time came to anoint a successor to Saul as king of Israel, Samuel was confident he knew a king when he saw one. Eliab, Jesse’s oldest son, was the clear choice.

To God, and hopefully to our church, there is a complete acceptance of people regardless of these outward things, and a love that turns that insecurity into peace. Samuel should have remembered that God judges by faith and character, not appearances. Since only God can look within the human heart, only he can accurately judge people. Many people spend hours each week maintaining their outward appearance; we should all do more to develop our inner character. While everyone can see your face, only you and God know what your heart really looks like.

“Your beauty should not come from outward adornment, such as braided hair and the wearing of gold jewelry and fine clothes. Instead, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight.” (1 Peter 3:3-4)


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The Smell of Durian

If you were to describe your life as a fragrance to the world, what would it be? Why?

  • Boy’s Locker room
  • A rose
  • Incense
  • Fish market
  • Fresh baked bread
  • Cinnamon and Spice
  • Sewer
  • Freshly picked peach
  • Durian
  • Socks
  • Potpourri
  • Roasted Meat
  • Cigarette Smoke
  • Other?

 

durian.jpg
Each of these scents probably created images in your mind associated with the smell. One item in the list, Durian might be new to you.

How is the “King of Kings” like the “King of fruits?”
Durian has been called the “King of Fruits” and is native to Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei, although it can grow in any similar climate. Alfred Wallace, the natural historian who co-originated the theory of Natural Selection with Charles Darwin, describes the taste of durian in his book The Malay Archipelago: “A rich butter-like custard highly flavoured with almonds gives the best general idea of it, but intermingled with it comes wafts of flavour that call to mind cream-cheese, onion-sauce, brown sherry, and other incongruities.”

Anyone who loves Durian likes the smell. Their mouth may water at merely the smell. Many others can’t get past the smell to even try to taste it, and may even describe it as smelling “like something has died.” Paul compares Christians to a fragrance much like that of Durian.

Read 2 Corinthians 2:12-16

  • How can the same gospel be either the smell of death or the fragrance of life?
  • What determines the character of the fragrance?
  • How can you spread the aroma of Christ in your home, in school, in the workplace, and in the neighborhood?
  • What images might the fragrance of your lifestyle have on others?
  • How can you become more “the fragrance of Christ” to others?

 

Notice that Paul says “through us,” meaning it is not through angels but through the church-through Christians, through those who Jesus said are the salt of the earth and the light of the world–that the knowledge of Christ comes to the world.

A Fragrance
We must remember the purpose of the fragrance. It is like your reputation in that it precedes you. You don’t need a letter of recommendation. Our lifestyles become our letter. But the letter by itself isn’t enough. The fragrance by itself is not enough. It is merely to open the door so we can share the Gospel, share the knowledge of Jesus Christ.

  • In what ways can your life be an open door to the sharing of the gospel?

 

Pray that God might make the following verse true of your life:
“But thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumphal procession in Christ, and through us spreads everywhere the fragrance of the knowledge of him”
– 2 Corinthians 2:14

Copyright 1998 by Ken Sapp


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Two Talents

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A master went on a long journey and called his servants together and gave each a certain amount of money –a talent. One got five talents, the other two, the last only one. After a long period the master returned and saw what they had done. ‘The one with five had five more, the one with two had two more, the one with one had buried that one and got a stinging rebuke from the master. (Matt. 25:14-30)

Most of us can probably identify with the guy who got two talents. He represents the ordinary guy in the world who is about average in talents, abilities, and opportunities.

What he was not:

  • He was not a complainer. It would have been an easy thing for him to look at the one with five talents and gripe and groan about his measly two. However, this guy never complained. He realized that complaining never lessens the disparities of life and only, makes them seem worse.
  • He was not a comparer. He did not look down on the one with only one talent and bolster his own self esteem through prideful comparisons. He was not like the person who feels jealous of the one who has more and superior to the one who has less.
  • He was not a controller. The sin of the one-talent-servant was the controlling, selfish attitude where he thought his talent was to be horded and not invested. The two-talent guy was not like that. He knew that you can never achieve anything really important without some element of risk.

Now, what he was:

  • He was a carer. He cared about the master and the master’s will. He knew his master’s business and worked to please him. If we know and want to do the Lord’s will we will be like him. The real motivation for service for God is simply our heart’s response to His love for us. All other motivations, such as guilt and fear, will fade before long. The one who cares about God and His will, keeps on serving.
  • He was a completer. He finished the task the master gave him to do. When the master returned he did not find him lazing about but working faithfully doing what his master had for him to do. We are like him if we take seriously the tasks God has for us to complete and set our hearts to them, keeping on for God’s glory.

What tasks and talents has God given you?
Don’t complain.’ Don’t compare. Don’t try to control it all. Place each situation each day in the hands of God and move on. Let the past be the past and trust God for a wonderful future. And God will be there with you each step of the way.


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High Flying Acrobats

“Ladies and gentlemen! Step right up and direct your attention to the high flying acrobats in the big top! “
No circus is complete without the daring young men and women of the flying trapeze. People are fascinated, not because it is difficult to hang onto the bar, but because of that one second when the performer lets go of the old bar and reaches for the new one. In that instant the acrobat’s whole being is focused.

His thoughts are focused on the bar –
not about what he was doing yesterday, or
what he plans to do tomorrow.

His eyes are focused on the bar –
not looking down, or
backwards or up.

His entire body is in motion toward the bar –
knowing he cannot turn around and go back,
he cannot steady himself on solid ground.

He is committed to seize it when the timing is right and move forward.

Progress in life comes when an opportunity – a choice, a possibility to change – swings into view. To grasp the new bar we must let go of the old, swinging from one trapeze to another. Sometimes we are simply hanging on for dear life, not going anywhere, and trying not to fall. Other times we are moving forward, then backwards; stuck in the swing of a cycle, making no significant progress. Yet there are also times when we look ahead in the distance, and see another trapeze bar swinging toward us. It’s empty, and we know it has our name written on it. We know that in order to move forward we have to release our grip on the present, well-known bar and move to the new unknown one.

Each time it happens we pray we won’t have to grab the new one. It doesn’t matter that in all our previous leaps across the void of the unknown, we have always made it. Each time we are afraid we will miss, that we will fall and crash against the harsh realities of life. We have no guarantee, no net, no insurance policy, but we do it anyway because we have decided that to keep hanging onto that old bar is no longer on the list of alternatives. And so for an eternity that can last a microsecond or a thousand lifetimes, we soar across a gap of uncertainty reaching for an opportunity.

This gap is called a transition and it is in these gaps that life is experienced in its fullest. Transitions in our lives are incredibly rich places. They should be honored, even treasured. Even with all the struggles, fears, and feelings of being out-of-control that accompany transitions, they are still the moments when we feel most alive and experience the greatest spiritual growth.

Its time to let go of that which holds you back,
to trade your security for opportunity,
to begin the transition to progress in your spiritual life.

When you do so, you’ll discover that high flyers are not found only in the circus.

Copyright 2003 by Ken Sapp


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Cracked Pots

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A water bearer in India had two large pots, each hung on each end of a pole which he carried across his neck. One of the pots had a crack in it, and while the other pot was perfect and always delivered a full portion of water at the end of the long walk from the stream to the master’s house, the cracked pot arrived only half full. For a full two years this went on daily, with the bearer delivering only one and a half pots full of water in his master’s house. Of course, the perfect pot was proud of its accomplishments, perfect to the end for which it was made. But the poor cracked pot was ashamed of its own imperfection, and miserable that it was able to accomplish only half of what it had been made to do.

After two years of what it perceived to be a bitter failure, it spoke to the water bearer one day by the stream. “I am ashamed of myself, and I want to apologize to you.”

“Why?” asked the bearer. “What are you ashamed of?”

“I have been able, for these past two years, to deliver only half my load because this crack in my side causes water to leak out all the way back to your master’s house. Because of my flaws, you have to do all of this work, and you don’t get full value from your efforts,” the pot said.

The water bearer felt sorry for the old cracked pot, and in his compassion he said, “As we return to the master’s house, I want you to notice the beautiful flowers along the path.”

Indeed, as they went up the hill, the old cracked pot took notice of the sun warming the beautiful wild flowers on the side of the path, and this cheered it some. But at the end of the trail, it still felt bad because it had leaked out half its load, and so again it apologized to the bearer for its failure.

The bearer said to the pot, “Did you notice that there were flowers only on your side of your path, but not on the other pot’s side? That’s because I have always known about your flaw, and I took advantage of it. I planted flower seeds on your side of the path, and every day while we walk back from the stream, you’ve watered them. For two years I have been able to pick these beautiful flowers to decorate my master’s table. Without you being just the way you are, he would not have this beauty to grace his house.”

Each of us has our own unique flaws. We are all cracked pots. But if we will allow it, the Lord will use our flaws to grace His Father’s table. In God’s great economy, nothing goes to waste. So as we seek ways to minister together, and as God calls you to the tasks He has appointed for you, don’t be afraid of your flaws. Acknowledge them, and allow Him to take advantage of them, and you, too, can be the cause of beauty in His pathway.


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Compassion In Your eyes

A number of years ago in Northern Virginia, an old man stood by a river bank waiting to get across. Since it was bitterly cold and there was no bridge, he would have to “catch a ride” to the other side.

After a lengthy wait, he saw a group of horsemen approaching. He let the first pass, then the second, third, fourth, and fifth. Finally, there was only one rider left. As he drew abreast, the old man looked him in the eye and said, “Sir, would you give me a ride across the river?” The rider without a moments hesitation said, “Why certainly, get abroad.”

Once across the river, the old man slid to the ground. Before leaving the rider asked, “Sir, I could not help but notice that you permitted all the riders to pass without asking for a ride. Then, when I drew abreast you immediately asked me for a ride. I’m curious as to why you didn’t ask them and why you did ask me?”

The old man quietly responded, “I looked into their eyes and could see no love and knew in my own heart it would be useless to ask for a ride. But, when I looked into your eyes, I saw compassion, love, and the willingness to help. I knew you would be glad to give me a ride across the river.”

With this the rider very humbly said, “You know, I’m very grateful for what you said. I appreciate it very much.” With that, Thomas Jefferson turned and rode off to the White House.

If you had been the last rider, would the old man have asked you for that ride across the river? When people look at you do they see Christ?

– Zig Ziglar


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The Musician

For half a lifetime he wandered the empty night, alone and hopeless, until a simple melody pierced the darkness and caught his attention. Making the melody was a young man, a musician, with a sensitive ear, and an even more sensitive heart. The musician walked the same street, but he walked, not by sight, but by sound. As he encountered people he saw beyond their masks. He heard the sounds of their voices and felt the rhythm of their heartbeats. He saw each life as an instrument and within each heart a potential melody. And though one man hid behind his sunglasses, the musician heard his heart. Rather than trusting his vision, he used his music to pierce through the empty shell, and like the clapper in a church bell, encouraged the sound of love to ring out from the
darkness.

As that love rang out, the musician was himself touched. He realized he could do more than just listen to the music of others — he could do more than simply share a melody. With his sensitive ear, and his more sensitive heart, he could help tune other instruments and help other hearts make a melody. He discovered that a solitary note in a lightless reality could be added to his own, and two notes provide a wonderful harmony. They compliment each other. As the harmony grows, new notes are shared and in time a melody of praise and worship fills the air!

A solitary figure stumbling down a darkened street is replaced by two musicians dancing in the sunlight as the sound of their music drives away the darkness. They know their most significant achievement is their song. Sometimes their moving melodies diverge and at other times they are again rejoined in harmony. Sometimes the timing is out of sync and the notes are flat. There may be moments of discord, but the music continues and, with it, others draw near to listen. Soon, they also join in the song as each rings out in his own special way. In time, as each plays his part, the Composer’s manuscript will be heard as he intended–as a grand symphony of Praise and Worship.

Take note When you can’t see in the dark, you can follow the music!

THOUGHTS?
Do you feel you are stumbling alone in the dark?
Would you describe yourself as the musician or the man hidden behind the sunglasses?
What is it you hide behind?
Do you judge others by what you see (i.e. by appearances) or by their heart?
Do you see the potential in others or do you focus on the flaws?
Is your life a melody of the love of God?
Are you a solitary note? Do you bring discord or harmony?
Is your life out of tune or out of sync?
What is your part? What melody have you been chosen to play?
The most significant thing you can do with your life is praise and worship of your Creator!
When your life becomes a song of praise and worship you will be unable to stop yourself from singing out, and will boldly proclaim his love to all you meet. Have you lost your song?
What needs to happen in your life, for you to get back in tune, to become and instrument of praise and worship?

Copyright ©2000 by Ken Sapp. All Rights reserved!


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Pearls

“Give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:18, niv).

Into the shell of an oyster a tiny grain of sand finds its way. The intruder, though small, is a source of irritation and pain to the soft body of the oyster. Unable to rid itself of the unwelcome pebble, the oyster seeks to reduce the irritation by coating it with layers of soft, iridescent mother-of-pearl material from its own shell. Over time, the oyster transforms a painful irritation into a beautiful pearl of great value.

Most of us have irritations, “grains of sand”, or annoying “pebbles” that come into our life on a regular basis … many of which can be very frustrating and even painful.

But every one of these annoyances gives us a chance to grow. Some will require great patience, others tough love. Some will require our turning the other cheek, some confrontation, and some kindness and understanding. For example, addicts need to be treated with tough love. Bullies require us to maintain healthy boundaries. Cheaters need to be confronted. Manipulators need to be managed. Control freaks need to be resisted, guilt throwers need to be challenged, and toxic people may need to be avoided, and so on.

With God’s help, if we so choose, we can turn every one of these annoying pebbles into pearls or we can allow them to make us bitter. For it’s not what happens to us that matters, but how we react to what happens. What we do about it is what matters—and that’s a choice we make either consciously or unconsciously.

A pearl is a victory over a problem. Problems have value. We grow and mature in the midst of difficulties. We learn skills for life. Every irritation that comes into our lives is an opportunity for a pearl culture. The more
irritations, the greater the number of pearls we may possess. All one has to do is welcome the problem, perceive it as an educational experience, and cover it with love, the most precious part of us. Irritations will be smoothed out.
You’ll be richer for peacefully handling your problems.

Ask God, to help you see an opportunity for growth in every annoying situation.


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Well Established

When an old farmer was asked about his spiritual well being, he described his Christian experience by saying, “Well, I’m not making much progress, but I’m well-established!” One spring when he was hauling some logs, his wagon wheels sank down to the axles in mud. He tried everything he could, but he couldn’t remove the wagon from of the mud. Defeated, he sat atop the logs, viewing the distressing situation. Soon a neighbor who had always felt uncomfortable with the farmer’s wornout testimony came along and greeted him, “Well, brother, I see you’re not making much progress, but you must be content because you’re well-established!

Many Christians dream to be like the wagon and the farmer. They want to be well-established before they allow God to bring about the spiritual progress he desires. The journey God has prepared for them waits while they are content to be stuck in the mud. “Let me establish some order in my life first.” “I want to get my family in order.” “I am engaged and I want to wait until I’ve settled down into married life.” “I have a new job and I want to settle down in it first.” “I want to wait until my children grow up.” “I want to wait until I settle down and retire” But the truth of the matter is, they will spend their entire existence settling down into the mud of life until the only time when they are truly settled down – 6 feet under in a grave. But even then, they won’t truly be established… because the graves will one day release their dead and all will go before the judgement seat of Christ. “I wonder if we will use the same excuse then… I never served you, never progressed in my Christian life, but I was well established.”

“Do not be amazed at this, for a time is coming when all who are in their graves will hear his voice and come out — those who have done good will rise to live, and those who have done evil will rise to be condemned.” (John 5:28-29)

Author: Copyright 1999 by Ken Sapp – Permission granted for non-commercial use.


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Walking Like a Pigeon

Have you ever wondered why a pigeon walks so funny? According to an interesting article in the Detroit Free Press, a pigeon walks the way it does so it can see where it’s going. Because it can’t adjust its focus as it moves, the pigeon actually has to bring its head to a complete stop between steps in order to refocus. This is the way it walks: head forward, stop; head back, stop. Don’t laugh — that’s how it goes!

In our spiritual walk with the Lord we have the same problem as the pigeon. We have a hard time seeing while we’re moving. We also need to stop between steps — to refocus on where we are in relation to the World and the will of God. That’s not to say we have to stop and pray and meditate about every little decision in life. But certainly our walk with the Lord needs to have built into it a pattern of “stops,” which enable us to see more clearly before moving on.


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Uneasy

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Do you feel uneasy when it comes to religion and spirituality? Do issues of faith and morality create fear?

The women who went to the tomb on the first Easter Sunday were terribly frightened by what they found–or
rather, by what they ‘didn’t’ find, for the tomb was empty (Matt 28:6)!

Fortunately, God understands when spiritual matters invade the safety of our world. He offers help to overcome our fears and deal with whatever has come our way. For Mary and Mary Magdalene, He sent an angel to comfort and enlighten them about the reality of Christ’s resurrection. He also sent an angel to Joseph, the earthly father of Jesus, when he was troubled by his fiancee’s miraculous pregnancy (1:18-25).

So it was for many others in Scripture, who were no less troubled by spiritual events and truths than many of us are today. In addition to angels, God’s help has included other people, dramatic and even miraculous demonstrations of His power, direct promises, and the enormous comfort of His Word. These helps show that God appreciates the impact of spiritual light suddenly shining in a dark world. He helps us overcome the shock not
only of what He has spoken, but ‘that’ He has spoken.

The question remains, Will we respond to His message? No matter how awkward we may feel about matters of faith, we dare not avoid them. God opens up these scary places in our lives only because He wants to restore us
to Himself.

Source: The Word in Life Study Bible- page 1704


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A Quiet Place

“There is a quiet place far from the rapid pace
Where God can soothe my troubled mind.
Sheltered by tree and flow’r there in my quiet hour
With Him my cares are left behind.
Whether a garden small or on a mountain tall,
New strength and courage there I find.
Then from this quiet place I go prepared to face
A new day with love for all mankind.”

Author: Ralph Carmichael


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Hot things Hot

A youth goes into a store and sees a shiny object. She asks the clerk, “What is that shiny object?” The clerk replies, “That is a thermos.” The youth then asks, “What does it do?” The clerk responds,?”It keeps hot things hot and it keeps cold things cold.”
The youth says, “I’ll take it!”
The next day, she walks into work with her new thermos.
Her boss sees her and asks, “What is that shiny object you have?”
She said, “It’s a thermos.”
The boss then says, “What does it do?”
She replies, “It keeps hot things hot and cold things cold.”
The boss said, “Wow, what do you have in it?”
The youth replies, “Two cups of coffee and a Popsicle.”

Unfortunately a lot of us are like this in our spiritual lives. We want to be both hot and cold, both worldly and spiritual. In trying to walk the line we wind up with neither… we wind up a lukewarm mess! Revelation 3:15-16 says “I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm–neither hot nor cold–I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”

So what’s in the thermos of YOUR life?

Author: Ken Sapp


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A Successful Life

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The LORD was with Joseph, and he was a successful man (Genesis 39:2)

The Life of Joseph

The fact that this verse refers to a cocky youth who has just been betrayed and sold into slavery by his own brothers seems a contradiction.

It wasn’t enough for him to be his father’s favourite. He had to rub it in. When given a dream that he would rule over all of his brothers as well as his parents, he told everyone about it. Then he told them all again, just in case they didn’t get it the first time. Eventually, his brothers sold him to some Ishmaelites just to be rid of him.

In a single day, his circumstances completely changed. A bright future seemed ruined. From living a privileged existence, he suddenly faced separation from home and parents, shame, pain, and disappointment. The dream that he would be ruler was replaced by the reality of slavery. Imagine the feelings and the doubts. But it was this very experience that would start him down the road to become the leader God intended him to be. It has been said, “Whenever God wants to give us a gift, he wraps it in struggles and difficulties.” In James 1 we are reminded that “the testing of our faith produces perseverance, and perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking in anything.”

Over these difficult years Joseph suffered betrayal and learned many hard lessons. From pit, to prison, to palace, his responses in difficult situations molded his character. It would have been easy to choose bitterness and resentment-toward God and everyone else, especially toward his brothers. But Joseph chose a different response to his circumstances. “The same sun that softens the wax, hardens the clay.” Its our response that reveals our character. Joseph was keenly aware of God’s hand over all the years of his life. (Gen 50:19-20) Joseph responded with dependence upon God, and his confidence in God allowed him to survive and prosper where most would have given up and failed.

Being sold into slavery, Joseph developed competence and organization serving in the palace. Framed as an adulturer, and imprisoned, he used his ability to discern dreams and solve problems for the benefit of others. Forgotten in prison, he quietly trusted God and was ready when God created another opportunity for him to display the wisdom of God. His wise preparations for the seven years of famine not only provided for Pharoah and Egypt, but evenually the blessings rested on his family too! And finally, when faced with the return of his brothers who, “hated” him, he dealt with them with integrity, compassion, and tender forgiveness.

Joseph’s obvious commitment to God and blessing by God, and his demonstrated wisdom won the hearts and trust of everyone he met: Potiphar, the warden, his fellow prisoners, even Pharoah, and ultimately his own brothers.

Has life been less than fair with you?

Consider Joseph’s experience: betrayed and deserted by his family, exposed to repeated sexual temptation, punished for doing the right thing. He endured long years of imprisonment and was forgotten by those he had helped. Study Joseph’s positive response to each setback. Rather than ask “Why me?” he determined to be God’s man, whatever came next. His response was always noted by those who were around him; they sensed that God was with him. In Genesis 41:33 and 39, he was referred to as a wise and discerning man. Pharaoh said to his servants, “Can we find anyone like this, a man who has the spirit of God in him?” (Genesis 41:38)

Success never went to his head. His change in character was not a gift or an accident. It developed. When faced with great trials and difficulty, Joseph chose to live a life of gratitude and not resentment, conscious of God’s daily protection, love, and grace. We would do well to follow in his steps when faced with the circumstances of life.


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