Archive for Word-Filled Wednesday

Romans 8:1-2-World Filled Wednesday

romans8_1-2

I remember coming across the following at one time:

A PASTOR’S RESUME

A church was in need of a pastor for some time but was having trouble getting one; but not because pastors weren’t applying, but because the congregation always seemed to find fault with the pastors.

Most pastors were rejected when the people just read the résumé.

Some didn’t have enough experience, some too much, some not enough education, some too much and so on.

One day a board member, who was getting very tired of this, decided to do something.

So the next Sunday, he got up in the pulpit and announced that he had another résumé to share with the congregation.

Most of them sat back, folded their arms and began to listen; ready to see what faults they could find on the new applicant.

The board member began to read and the résumé went like this…

“Dear church members;

I am writing to apply for position as your pastor.

My experience is more along the lines of evangelist but I believe I could fill your position adequately.

I’ve never attended any bible school per say but I have a lot of field experience.

I don’t have a degree on my wall, or a wall for that matter; I’ve traveled around most of my life, renting and doing odd jobs to support myself and preaching wherever I was invited; churches, streets, even jails. As a matter of fact, I’ve been thrown in jail several times and been involved in a few public squabbles.

I’ve been accused of being anti-semantic, anti-authority and causing disturbances almost everywhere I go. But I did have a few conversions to Christianity during my ministry as well as a few healings. Thank you for considering my application.”

Most of the people looked up at the deacon with smirks of condemnation while others chuckled out loud.

One man stood up and still laughing asked the deacon,

“Does this guy actually expect us to seriously consider him for our pastor? Just what’s this fellow’s name any way?”
The deacon replied that the letter was signed – The Apostle Paul

You could have heard a pin drop.

Author unknown

Yesterday, I shared the following quote, ”

“Nothing humbles and breaks the heart of a sinner
like mercy and love.
Souls that converse much with sin and wrath,
may be much terrified;
but souls that converse much with grace and mercy,
will be much humbled.”

~ ~Thomas Brooks (1608 – 1680) ~

Have you ever noticed that if someone is a Christian and the fear that they sometimes have about sharing their testimony? It’s almost like they are under pressure to present a picture perfect testimony that doesn’t make people uncomfortable, but also, fear of what others would think….yet as Christians, we have come to this part of our journey, understanding….”we’ve all sinned and were bought for a price by our Father’s Son, Jesus Christ”.

None of us is free from sin.

Yet…sadly there are many who no matter what they are doing now, are condemned, often by the very brothers and sisters that they seek, with trust, with hope and with need for strength and encouragement.

Imagine if  instead of forgetting our sins, our Father continually threw our past at us or disqualified us from ministering, serving, being?

None of us would be worthy yet….

“Have you thought about His (God) handling of the gospel? God needs to get a message out to the human race, without which they will perish…forever. What’s the plan? First, He starts with the most unlikely group ever: a couple of prostitutes, a few fishermen with no better than a second-grade education, a tax collector. Then, he passes the ball to us. Unbelievable.” — John Eldredge

Anyone who becomes a follower of Christ has a past.

A past that we realized that we were sinners and needed Christ who paid the ultimate price for our sins.

Maybe our human pasts differ to how we eventually came to Christ, but it is all bound by common ground: sin.

Yet…..we are quick to hold grudges, condemn, throw people’s pasts into their face, though they are not who they were then and didn’t our Father not condemn us but….forgive.

Forgive.

Forgive.

There are those who are broken.

There are those who are hurt.

There are those who are lost and we know the old adage that hurt people hurt others……but it means for us….we need to love  them a little bit more where they cannot or unable or know how….we need to forgive for they don’t know, may not know or have not known what it means to forgive or be forgiven, and we need to pray, because if we don’t pray for them….how do we know someone else will.

Just like our Father loved us a little bit more because we didn’t, could not, was unable or knew how….

Just like our Father forgive us, because we didn’t know, did not know and never knew what it was like to just forgive….

And He prayed for us…because He knew we needed to be prayed for and over………

Our Father, who art in Heaven, thank You for Your great mercies…and prayers…our hearts, our lives, reflect and glorify You by doing the same as You have done for us…..


Come join me and everyone else for “Word Filled Wednesday“;

Tis Not the Season to Complain-Word Filled Wednesday

Watching images of “Black Friday” and listening to people around me, it’s hard not to wonder if people take “Deck the Halls” to literally as they push and shove and grimace.

We had wrapped up watching one of many versions of Scrooge and I couldn’t help but wonder, “Notice how many people tend to turn into one and not with money, but with emotions and time”.

Being weird as I am, I turned to reading “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens instead and and love this thought shared by Mr. Dickens,“It is a fair, even-handed, noble adjustment of things, that while there is infection in disease and sorrow, there is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good-humour.

If ever there is a time we can use to share the “Good News” the most effectively, is this time of season of love and joy and words of hope and peace, yet it seems so easy to get caught up in everything else but that.

Phillipians 2:14 (NKJV) implores us to,”Do all things without complaining and disputing….“, but as we elbow each other in the stores  and share how we really don’t look forward  to spending time with family or friends.

Are we shining our lights in the world or are we  just blaring our car lights and honking our horns sending the message, “Look out and get out of the way or you’ll be run over”?

Maybe I’m looking at the world through “Mary Colored- glasses” as others put on their “Martha Colored glasses” while trying not to run over poor Mr.Smith in aisle 10, but it just seems that the holidays have lost their cheerfulness in lieu for competitiveness.

We compete against each other.

We compete against time and as if we are in a race against the sun to beat it before it sets again on another day, but through it all, it’s hard not to want to put up a yield sign in the middle of the busyness and say out loud to everyone, “Slow down, relax, enjoy…really..it’s not a race”.

Is it really important that we decorate our homes in such a way that puts Martha Stewart to shame, buy that outrageously priced gift and through it all, roar at everyone like hungry lions?

“Relax………..”

….that you may become blameless and harmless,children of God……

I mostly write this as I observe loved ones and others around me complain and say that “…they don’t have time”, “…they’re too busy”, “…can’t enjoy”, and yet this is “supposed” to be the happiest time of the year.

I just find it funny as the holidays get closer, the stress seems to go up and the less goodwill there seems to be.

In the end, how do we not hurt ourselves more by assigning busyness in lieu of priority.

We sit restless while on vacation and complain we are bored and then when we work, we complain we need vacation and can’t wait for the holidays, but when the holidays come, then complain we can’t wait for the holidays to be over and so the cycle continues….

Maybe it’s time, this holiday, any day, to put an end to the complaining and remember our Father’s urging to “Do all things without complaining and disputing….” and enjoy the blessings that He has to offer at any time.

He is not a box that open and closes at one time of the year or on a set day or time, but every day and every time, and if all we had was Jesus and nothing else, can we find contentment and enjoy Him for Him without the trappings of the season?

Be like the shepherds that night in Bethlehem :

8 Now there were in the same country shepherds living out in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. 9 And behold, an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were greatly afraid. 10 Then the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy which will be to all people. 11 For there is born to you this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord. 12 And this will be the sign to you: You will find a Babe wrapped in swaddling cloths, lying in a manger.”
13 And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying:
14 “ Glory to God in the highest,
And on earth peace, goodwill toward men!”

(Luke 2:8-14, New King James Version)

All the more when we walk about this holiday season, work to resist the urge to growl and instead embrace the urge ,”…..And on earth peace, goodwill toward men!””.


Come join us at “Word Filled Wednesday”, a weekly meme that occurs every Wednesday.

The purpose of Word Filled Wednesday, has been to share God’s Word, through photo or a graphic image combined with scripture. WFW is a love offering to Christ; A remembrance to His Word,It’s all about Him.

Word Filled Wednesday

Come Join us at "Word Filled Wednesday",every Wednesday, at Internet Cafe Devotions!

Feeling Weary?-WFW Post

***Originally published on April 23, 2008****

This raccoon spoke volumes to me when we came across it’s cage during a recent visit to the zoo.

As I watch this lil critter sleeping, I was reminded that God never gives us more than we can ever really handle; He gives us enough but then He does want to bless us by pulling back to and taking some time not only for ourselves but to spend time with Him.

So often we tend to feel incomplete if our schedules aren’t filled from Monday to Saturday and find ourselves often stopping and wondering where are we in the midst of the whirlwind and it’s usually then that God goes…Rest. Just rest and listen.

The greatest worship we show to God, isn’t often how much time we can spend…in a sense we may unintentional be either wasting time, or avoiding time with Him, but in how we prioritize.

I learned that recently as faced with new experiences and obligations with church, on top of balancing duties at home that I realized that the seesaw was not really balancing as well as it should be and on one end I was putting more than really needed to be and the other was losing.

I praised God that He was using that time to show me that He was calling to us a wonderful experience but at the same time…pulling on the brakes and going whoa whoa whoa….doing great, just don’t get to ahead of yourself.

Like the raccoon…We were reminded that sometimes there is too much of a good thing.

I was shocked when I looked at our calendar and it went from each weekend, nothing really happening to something happen every weekend and on top of that spilling into the week, and during the day I was balancing doing this and that…

What was awesome was that on one hand, God gave me a great taste of what I could do and never thought I could and on the other, I could feel Him leading me to rest….rest like the raccoon and it’s not all that bad sometimes…Lol.

In the whole process what really amazed me as I’m swinging on the couch like that raccoon was in his or her little bed…that even at the end of a busy day….a lil rest time isn’t a bad time.

God has big plans and wants us to be at our most alert and fittest, but part of that is learning our limitations and learning to just …..rest.

I feel Him holding me back some right now and I feel Him going…Hey let’s talk a little bit..Hang back….Time to slow down a little…Got some big things coming up and need to get you ready for it.

Thank You Lord for knowing me better than I know myself and Thank You Lord for always finding ways to humble me and reminding me that I’m not ready to climb this mountain or that. I’m still training and I need to rest those muscles as much as I need to work them.

(Jeremiah 29:11-13 NKJV) For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the LORD, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope. {12} Then you will call upon Me and go and pray to Me, and I will listen to you. {13} And you will seek


If you would like to join “Word Filled Wednesday” or find out more, drop by

The Internet Cafe Devotions” to learn more or share your own “Word Filled Wednesday”.

It's okay to rest-Word Filled Wednesday

My previous post, I wrote about planning….planning for school…organizing the home, making time and (hahahahaha) my belated “Word Filled Wednesday” post reminded me so much of how we keep ourselves slaves to things that can keep us distracted and even distracted from the freedom that our Father has given us.

Time.

Blogging.

Obligation.

Social Media.

These are things that was shared in this month’s issue of “The Good News” that I received this morning in the regular mail and as I read the article, “The Danger of Distraction”?, I was reminded of what was being laid heavily on my heart and just how fast as a society that we are living.

Anyone who knows me personally,, knows I’m bad with cell phones.

I mean bad as in, I’ve lost them even in the closet. The other day when I forgot to bring it with me, my husband “tsk tsk” me and said I need to have it always with me and it got me to thinking, “What did we do before we had cell phones and running errands”?Sometimes a phone call meant coming home and checking the answering machine for messages. These days, it means getting a text message or notification that someone’s posted a message.

Call me very silly or old fashion, but I think I miss the days when time was just a little slower and we seem to get more done. These days, what comes first in our lives? The morning coffee or checking the email or our phones?

Think about Moses.

He spent 40 years as a shepherd, tending his flock in the desert. How many of us can last an hour without checking our email or have our cell phone with us? It’s almost NOT the norm to go camping without a signal or gps.

David.

He was a shepherd boy too. Life as a shepherd was pretty slow, not very exciting and pretty solitary with a lot of time to think. Nowadays, everywhere we go, there is music blaring from the ceilings, the t.v. is on, unless we are in the movies, the cellphones are ringing or if someone doesn’t even care to turn it (the cellphone) off then, going off in the movie theater.

Remember going out to eat and meaning face to face conversations with no phone interruptions from work? Work waited till the next day or until you came home for the evening and the answering machine light looked like it was ready to burst from all the messages.

Even Jesus, our Father’s Son, went out into the wilderness. No communication from anyone. Just Him and solitude. Paul went out to the desert for three years to prepare himself to do work for our Father.

The article shared something that is lost these days, “With all these men, something about the calm and quiet of the wilderness purged their minds of life’s distractions. In their solitude, God could fill them with purpose and passion. In the calm of quietness came conviction.”

 4But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end: many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased. (Daniel 12:4, King James Version)

Technology is amazing and can be a blessing, but it can also be a double edge sword too. At one point, it can eventually be so much that it distracts us more than be of help.

I’m one to talk, but at the same time, it’s also a reason as I’m working to prepare for school and working on organizing my home, taking note too, how much time is too much for spending time online?

Via the “Good News Magazine“, in it’s article, “How can You Deal with Information Overload?”, a series of questions were asked:

Do you have a stack of journals, magazines and books on your desk that you really should read, but haven’t gotten to?

Ever feel frustrated because you don’t know how to use features on your cell phone, laptop or PDA?

Are you concerned that your job marketability is declining because your industry knowledge is getting out of date—but you just don’t have time to take the classes to stay current?

Do you often find yourself in conversations with others who bring up events in the news you’re unaware of—and you feel embarrassed admitting you don’t know what’s going on?

If you answer “yes” to any of the above questions, you’re experiencing information overload!

I thought it should have asked too…”Do you find yourself unable to have time to read the Bible?”, “Are you tired from juggling too many different schedules” , “Do you find the house often messy?” to name a few other questions that it should ask.

Notice how we tend to have time for everything but the things we really should do?

The article went on to share:

This state of having too much information to digest is known as information overload. Almost everyone suffers from it to some degree. It can cause stress, anxiety, fatigue, frustration, reduced productivity, an inability to concentrate and feelings of being overwhelmed and overburdened—eroding work efficiency as well as personal health and family life.

“There are only so many details in anyone’s life that can be handled comfortably,” Dr. Barreau says. “When that limit is exceeded, circuits begin to shut down. We refuse to process any more.”

When we find ourselves at that road, it’s time to go into the wilderness or our Heavenly Father would find a way to bring the wilderness to us. Don’t worry, this doesn’t mean you will have a grizzly bear in your kitchen, just make some coffee and biscuits and bacon and eggs and hubby will be back to normal, but it does mean that our Father will find a way to make us step back and refocus and prayfully, re-align ourselves back to where He wants us to be.

Remember Martha?

No.

Not Martha Stewart.

Different Martha-less scary cheery.

   38 Now it happened as they went that He entered a certain village; and a certain woman named Martha welcomed Him into her house. 39 And she had a sister called Mary, who also sat at Jesus’ feet and heard His word. 40 But Martha was distracted with much serving, and she approached Him and said, “Lord, do You not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Therefore tell her to help me.”
41 And Jesus answered and said to her, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled about many things. 42 But one thing is needed, and Mary has chosen that good part, which will not be taken away from her.” (
Luke 10:38-42, New King James Version)

Technology is great, but living in an area that is prone to hurricanes and having been through, I learn a quick lesson. It doesn’t take much and we don’t have the Internet, the computer, the cell phone or electricity at all and it’s those moments..those times in the wilderness that we need to learn to lean on what is more important.

Without electricity, our blogs become computer bytes that are non-retrievable, our cellphones, our computers, reduce to just man made metal and wires that can be damaged by water and rust, but our Father. Our Dear Father.

Never.

Ever.

He is always there.

He is the Rock that can never be torn down.

42 But one thing is needed, and Mary has chosen that good part, which will not be taken away from her.” (Luke 10:42, New King James Version)

MHC (Matthew Henry Commentary) shared this great commentary that really reinforced to me what has been tugging at my heart and as I read this month’s articles in the “Good News Magazine” just a reminder that we.have.to.take.time.

Time with our Father.

Time with our Family.

Time with our Fellowship with others

Time with our Friends.

But a balance in all of it.

As MHC shared,

Balancing work and reflection is tricky. Most people in Western cultures are forced to live harried lives. Often their full schedules are full of “good” activity, labor that has merit. One of the demands of a full schedule is that the activity be prioritized. Some things come high on the list; others must wait. Sometimes priorities have to be shuffled at the last minute to meet needs. The account of Martha and Mary is about such priorities, especially when the options are good ones.

This short passage is capable of being misread in a couple of ways (Alexander 1992:167-86). First, it is not about women; it is a passage on discipleship. Its point is not that women can get too easily caught up in the busy work of keeping the home. What is said to Martha about Mary would be equally true if Mary were male or even a child. The fact that two women dominate the story would have been shocking in the first-century context, where men often dismissed women as marginal, but the account is designed to make a point about all disciples. Second, the point is not that activity like Martha’s is bad. The choice Jesus discusses with Martha is between something that is good and something that is better. Life is full of tough choices, and Jesus is stressing the relative merits of good activities here. For conscientious people, such choices are often the most difficult and anxiety-filled.

Martha receives Jesus at her home as he travels from one village to another. John 11:1, 18 and 12:1 tell us that this home was in Bethany, so Jesus appears to be a few miles outside Jerusalem when this encounter occurs. This is one of several meal scenes Luke will narrate. Besides the host and the teacher, the other protagonist is the host’s sister, Mary, who sits at the Lord’s feet listening to what he said. This is reminiscent of the Jewish saying in m. `Abot 1:4: “Let your house be a meeting house for the Sages and sit amidst the dust of their feet and drink in their words with thirst.”

Just as the Samaritan’s activity in the previous parable was surprising, so is this portrait of these women with Jesus. Why would a teacher spend time teaching only women? In the first-century culture the question would be inevitable. The fact that Jesus commends Mary and has a meal with Martha shows that Jesus is concerned about all people.

Martha is not comfortable with Mary’s approach to Jesus’ visit, since she could use another hand in the kitchen. She requests Jesus’ aid: “Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself? Tell her to help me.” We know that Martha’s viewpoint is questionable not only because of Jesus’ reply but also because the text says she makes the comment while being distracted by all the preparations. In fact, in Greek she asks the question in such a way that the Lord is expected to give a positive answer (note the particle ou). The Lord does care, and Martha fully expects him to tell Mary to get up and help.

But as is often the case when Jesus is asked to settle a dispute, he refuses to side with the one who asks that things be decided in a particular way (compare Lk 12:13; Jn 8:4-7). Yet he responds tenderly and instructs in the process. The double address “Martha, Martha” indicates the presence of caring emotion, as such an address does elsewhere (6:46; 8:24; 13:34; 22:31). Jesus questions her not because of her activity but because of her attitude about it: “You are worried and upset about many things.” By comparing what she is doing to what Mary is doing, she has injected unnecessary anxiety into the visit. “Only one thing is needed.” With this remark Jesus sets priorities. “Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her.”

Jesus commends the hearing of the word at his feet. To take time out to relate to Jesus is important. The language of the passage recalls Deuteronomy 8:3 (Wall 1989:19-35). In a sense Mary is preparing to partake in the “right meal” (Deut 6:1-8). What she has done by sitting at Jesus’ feet will remain with her. This meal will last. Jesus is not so much condemning Martha’s activity as commending Mary’s. He is saying that her priorities are in order. To disciples Jesus says, “Sit at my feet and devour my teaching. There is no more important meal.”Looking to God: A Call to Pray (11:1-13)

Being tired.Being worn out. We are of no service to our Father, to our family, to our church, to our community if we don’t learn to stop with the distractions and balance it out.

Or as hubby would share if the kids had too much ice cream, “Too much of a good thing isn’t always a good thing and can sometimes cause a stomache ache”.

So can the same be said when we don’t take time out for real, time out, go into the wilderness and spend quiet reflection with our Heavenly Father.


If you would like to join “Word Filled Wednesday” or find out more, drop by

The Internet Cafe Devotions” to learn more or share your own “Word Filled Wednesday”.

Psalm 1:2-His Word

There is really no subsitute for God’s word…No taking of anyone else really, over what is in the bible and for anyone and not just a select few, but anyone to read, to cherish, to hold close to heart and to seek.

From the Matthew Henry Commentary it is shared:”To meditate in God’s word, is to discourse with ourselves concerning the great things contained in it, with close application of mind and fixedness of thought. We must have constant regard to the word of God, as the rule of our actions, and the spring of our comforts; and have it in our thoughts night and day. For this purpose no time is amiss. (Ps 1:4-6)”

It’s not about what we think or feel, because feelings change and can often lie to us what is really there, but His word, is a strong foundation that never changes, has never changed and will never change.

In a reality, there really is just two ways of life…God’s way or our way, and from what happen with Adam and Eve, we already have seen what happen that choice led to.

From,”Psalm 1: Two Ways of Life“, it is shared,

“Passivity toward God and His Word leads to activity in sin and finally to overt activity against God. That is a law of life.

How do people scoff at the Word of God? (a) By blatant ridicule or rejection. But there are other ways. (b) By indifference. We think we have better things to do with our time. (c) By substituting one’s own ideas, experiences, emotions, feelings, or traditions for the Word and its principles. (d) By listening to the Word proclaimed, but then ignoring it. In essence we scoff at the Word when we fail to obey it and order our lives accordingly (cf. Prov. 1:22 with 29-33).

These verses pose a warning to us. They teach us how little by little we can step out of the place of blessedness and into the place of misery and cursing with horrible consequences.”

It is shared though later that,there is hope and it is in and through His word….as the article continued,

“The man who experiences great blessing is one who has a love affair with God’s Word. He/she is a person of the Scriptures. I would emphasize how remarkable this is. Note that that quality which characterizes the life of the blessed above everything else which could be mentioned is one’s relationship to the Word of God.”

“…..one’s relationship to the Word of God.”

He wants to have that relationship and for us to really know what Him and His word has to say and what He desires for us and the blessings that it offers….

Boils down to a simple choice.

One way.

Or the other.

Bearing Fruit-Matthew 13:22

What is unfruitful in your life? It’s funny the things that we discovered are unfruitful when we take the time to check our lives and the world along with the ultimate truth, His word.

Not too long ago, I read and review a book called, “Present Perfect” in which the author shared the following:

From, “Present Perfect” ,
For us ordinary Christians, trying to remain aware of God’s presence moment-by-moment seems like a hyperspiritual pipe dream. If you’re inclined to feel this way, it might be because like everyone else in modern Western culutre, you’ve been brainwashed by what is called “the secular worldview”.
In this view of the world, what’s real, or at least what’s important, is the physical here-and-now. When we’re brainwashed by this worldview, we experience the world as though God did not exist, for we habitually exclude Him from our awareness. We may still believe in God, of course, but He’s not real to us most of the time.
Because of this we go about our day-to-day lives as functional atheists. We may pray and worship God on occassion, but these are “special times,” isolated from our “normal,” secular day-to-day life.”-Chapter One, Mere Christianity, “Present Perfect” .

I hate to think that despite anything and everything that I read and feel, that I maybe a “functional atheists”, after all, that has to be very harsh words, but this verse, Matthew 13:22 (NKJV), convicts and challenges us to ask ourselves, “What in our lives, in what we do, say, read and see” bearing either good fruit that is a praise to and in our Heavenly Father, or bears bad fruit that only deadens and numbs us from His Glory and who and what He is.

From the MHC is shared the following thoughts on this passage:

The parable of the sower.

Jesus entered into a boat that he might be the less pressed, and be the better heard by the people. By this he teaches us in the outward circumstances of worship not to covet that which is stately, but to make the best of the conveniences God in his providence allots to us. Christ taught in parables. Thereby the things of God were made more plain and easy to those willing to be taught, and at the same time more difficult and obscure to those who were willingly ignorant.

The parable of the sower is plain.

The seed sown is the word of God. The sower is our Lord Jesus Christ, by himself, or by his ministers. Preaching to a multitude is sowing the corn; we know not where it will light. Some sort of ground, though we take ever so much pains with it, brings forth no fruit to purpose, while the good soil brings forth plentifully. So it is with the hearts of men, whose different characters are here described by four sorts of ground.

Careless, trifling hearers, are an easy prey to Satan; who, as he is the great murderer of souls, so he is the great thief of sermons, and will be sure to rob us of the word, if we take not care to keep it. Hypocrites, like the stony ground, often get the start of true Christians in the shows of profession. Many are glad to hear a good sermon, who do not profit by it.

They are told of free salvation, of the believer’s privileges, and the happiness of heaven; and, without any change of heart, without any abiding conviction of their own depravity, their need of a Saviour, or the excellence of holiness, they soon profess an unwarranted assurance. But when some heavy trial threatens them, or some sinful advantage may be had, they give up or disguise their profession, or turn to some easier system.

Worldly cares are fitly compared to thorns, for they came in with sin, and are a fruit of the curse; they are good in their place to stop a gap, but a man must be well armed that has much to do with them; they are entangling, vexing, scratching, and their end is to be burned, Heb 6:8.

Christ does not say that this good ground has no stones in it, or no thorns;but none that could hinder its fruitfulness. All are not alike; we should aim at the highest, to bring forth most fruit. The sense of hearing cannot be better employed than in hearing God’s word; and let us look to ourselves that we may know what sort of hearers we are. (Mt 13:24-30)

I hope and pray and seek and give myself to our Heavenly Father, that my thoughts, what I seek, what I am, is not determined or measure by what the world condones or desires, but by what our Heavenly Father desires.

For our lives to bear true fruit, it should seek, not after the world, but after Him, and part of that, is not going with the world, that often, like bad soil that is everywhere, doesn’t allow a plant to grow and eventually bear fruit, but instead, wither and eventually become part of unfruitful bad soil, but instead, going with that of our Heavenly Father, though there maybe patches here and there, at least, we know we can grow and be nurtured with nutrients, that will strengthen and help us grow in His light and in the process bear fruit


 

The purpose of Word filled Wednesday is to share God’s word (no famous quotes or other literature — only the beautiful word of our Father) through photo’s & a Bible verse!

If You’d like to join us for Word Filled Wednesday,post your photo and Bible verse and hop on over to AmyDeanne’s @ The 160 Acre Woods to share the link to your blog.

Psalm 56:8-Bottle of Tears: Word Filled Wednesday

A dear friend shared this during a discussion we were having and I couldn’t take my mind off of this verse. 

It was just a reminder to me, how much our dear Abba, our Father in Heaven, loves us so much that in times when we, any of us, are in pain, in sorrow, in grief, He is there. 

Our tears collected and brushed from our eyes and Him, yearning, calling, pulling us close, telling us there is hope, there is love, there is a promise that He does and will deliver. 

There were times when I thought the tears would never end and there are times when I see Him, seeing me through, and through it all…a reminder…we’re never alone through anything. 

“You have collected my tears…….” a vivid reminder.  The full scripture is: 

 8 You number my wanderings;
         Put my tears into Your bottle;
         Are they not in Your book? (Psalm 56:8, New King James Version

Matthew Henry Commentary shares: 

The heavy and continued trials through which many of the Lord’s people have passed, should teach us to be silent and patient under lighter crosses. Yet we are often tempted to repine and despond under small sorrows.

For this we should check ourselves. David comforts himself, in his distress and fear, that God noticed all his grievances and all his griefs.

 God has a bottle and a book for his people’s tears, both the tears for their sins, and those for their afflictions. He observes them with tender concern.

 Every true believer may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and then I will not fear what man shall do unto me; for man has no power but what is given him from above. Thy vows are upon me, O Lord; not as a burden, but as that by which I am known to be thy servant; as a bridle that restrains me from what would be hurtful, and directs me in the way of my duty. And vows of thankfulness properly accompany prayers for mercy.

 If God deliver us from sin, either from doing it,or by his pardoning mercy, he has delivered our souls from death, which is the wages of sin. Where the Lord has begun a good work he will carry it on and perfect it.

David hopes that God would keep him even from the appearance of sin.

We should aim in all our desires and expectations of deliverance, both from sin and trouble, that we may do the better service to the Lord; that we may serve him without fear. If his grace has delivered our souls from the death of sin, he will bring us to heaven,to walk before him for ever in light.

Sounds like what we all seek in our lives.

We have good days and we have bad days. No one is perfect but it also doesnt’ mean that we have license to continue to sin or to be bound in sin. Instead we should place our hope, not in anyone else but our Heavenly Father and not put the world or it’s petty wants before Him.

He holds us close. He seeks to free us from the bondage of sin. It can’t get any better than that.


 

 

  

  

  

  

  

I invite you to join and participate in Word Filled Wednesday. Right now it’s being hosted at Penny @  pennyraine.com/blog/

Be Still—Mark 4:39–Word Filled Wednesday

PhotobucketHow easy in the busyness of life we forget to just….be still.

Not many of us can go away on a retreat but during “A Women Inspired”, I was inspired to create a personal retreat in my own home using inspiration from “5 Minute Retreats” shared on “Marsha Musings“.

I have a small wicker basket that I keep my bible, life journal a candle and “My Upmost for His Highest” in while looking for a hymn book to add to it, but the biggest thing is just embracing the importance to take time for ourselves and really learning to slow down.

More than anything, just learning to take time when time is needed.

Be it away from blogging, facebook, twitter, and just learning to establish boundaries and  manage commitments so it doesn’t overwhelm but rather balance.

Peace.

Still.

Funny how the simplest thing is always the hardest thing for us.

Feeling a bit tired?

 Overwhelm?

Constantly on the go?

 Maybe it’s time to take a breather…find and carve a little personal retreat at your home, even if it’s just at the kitchen table, pour a cup of coffee or hot tea, and re-energize yourself by having some quiet time with our Heavenly Father and His word.

Peace.

Be Still.

Listen.

Instead of being on the go, use this time instead to stop and listen to what our Heavenly Father. Five minutes. Hour. Sometimes, part of simplifying life is simply….being still.


 Today’s hostess is Lori  @  allyouhavetogive.com . If you’ll like to participate in WFW, it’s pretty simple. The purpose of Word filled Wednesday is to share God’s word (no famous quotes or other literature — only the beautiful word of our Father) through photo’s & a Bible verse!

So find a scripture that touches your heart and drop by this week’s hostess to leave a link to your blog.

Matthew 13:31-32Word Filled Wednesday

Photobucket

Matthew 13:31-32 (New International Version)

The Parables of the Mustard Seed and the Yeast
31He told them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. 32Though it is the smallest of all your seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and perch in its branches.”

What a reminder of Spring.

The promise of new life and not far from now, we will be reminded of our Heavenly Father’s Son’s Ressurrection.

I did a little look into the signficance of why a mustard seed? After all…it is beautiful, it captures the heart, but it’s not roses.

I mean, when we are brought flowers from our loved one, it’s usually roses or something more ornate, but the mustard seed? When it blossoms…it is everywhere, it’s so ordinary and sometimes easy to miss, but for the birds, it is attractive and gives them a place to rest and it stands out from everything else.

Why?

From,”Parables of Jesus”, the writer shared,” …the message in the parable was hidden to many. Human nature looks for great things. It looks for self-importance, esteem of fellow men, pride and grandeur. Not so the kingdom of heaven. Even the disciples were not entirely free of this human trait, as they debated among themselves who should be the greatest. Jesus reproved them and made clear that the greatest were those who served. [Luke 9.46-48]

Our Father does not say, build me a tower and I will love you. Our Father does not say, if you’re not missing any teeth, I will love you. Our Father does not care what degree we do or do not have, or how well, or not so well we can speak.

Our Father loves us for us. All of us. Our imperfections. Our gifts (and we all have gifts, we just have to see them from His eyes and not from side to side eyes).He just loves us.

Just like we just love our kids for who they are, but His love, really. His love is just bigger, grander but simple.

What is humbling about what our Father’ Son did for us is as the writer shares,”Jesus, without whom the kingdom of God could never be established, was despised and rejected and finally crucified by his generation. They looked for glorious things and he offered them a mustard seed!”

It’s kinda like, waiting for a celebrity to pull up in a stretch limosiune, but instead He shows up in a beat up truck and saying, “Here I am”.

Wouldn’t you get that all too human,”Oh, not really what I expected”.

Yet…this is what He shares with us how simple and yet grand His kingdom would be. I was humble by a conversation I was privy to. Everyone was talking about the mansion they were getting when they got to Heaven and what type of crown they might get and one person said,”I’m just happy if I go to Heaven and clean the toilet. It doesn’t matter what I get because at least I’m going to be in Heaven”.

Oooo.

Talk about missing the point.

What if we go to Heaven and the mansion we have there, doesn’t match up to what we thought either.  What if we don’t even get a mansion, but maybe just a humble home. Are we going to go. “Oh”.

Or are we going to just be thankful to just be in Heaven, with Him, our Father.

Have faith like a mustard seed and see what blossoms.

It’s not roses but that’s okay.

The thing is…it’s not about what we are going to get or have that is the whole point. It’s about Him. Our Father.

When you think about it…a mustard seed. When it grows….it’s a wildflower. A humble, lost among many simple wildflower, but to the bird…it’s everything.

So should be our Father’s kingdom, so should, just be our journey and passion to with Him.

It’s not about what are going to gain in the long run, but, really just about being there with Him. That should be enough.

Nothing can really compare to the glory and joy of our Heavenly Father.

‘To see a world in a grain of sand
                  And a heaven in a wild flower;
                  Hold infinity in the palm of your hand
                  And eternity in an hour.’-William Blake


Welcome to this week’s “Word Filled Wednesday”. If you would like to join up, drop by this week’s hostess: Susan @  susan2956.blogspot.com/

Word Filled Wednesday

PhotobucketIt really is no secret that I have my good days and I have my bad days.

 Truth is, what the not so hidden secret is that I’m an imperfect human being.
Okay, shocker I know, so it really surprises me of people who tend to think that I am perfect, have it all together, or should have it together without taking in the fact that I don’t hide the fact that, hey, “I’m a broken vessel that only in and through our Heavenly Father, that I rest my hope and prayer in.”

From the MHC (Matthew Henry Commentary) it is shared about 1 Corinthians 11:30-33:

Daring Escapades (11:30-33)

…… Consistent with his determination to play the fool, Paul chooses an incident that demonstrates weakness rather than strength. If I must boast, he states, I will boast of the things that show my weakness (v. 30).

 The form of the conditional denotes fact: “since I must boast” (ei + indicative).

 Paul has been forced to become a braggart by the exigencies of the Corinthian situation. The church is being led down the garden path by some smooth-talking con artists. Paul will do whatever it takes to help the church to see this–even to the extent of boasting as his rivals do.

When asked to provide a vita, we tend to pick things that make us look good in the eyes of others. Paul turns instead to what makes him look bad.

 He also chooses an episode that caused him no little personal humiliation–a quick exit from the city of Damascus under cover of darkness. His account is prefaced with an oath. The veracity of what he is about to say is at stake: The God and Father of the Lord Jesus, who is to be praised forever, knows that I am not lying (v. 31). Oates are used toice earlier in this chapter (11:10, 11; also see 1:18).

 In fact, Paul tends to use them whenever he suspects that the truthfulness of his claims might be questioned (as in “I assure you before God,” Gal 1:20; “God is our witness,” 1 Thess 2:5). Paul’s oath in 2 Corinthians 11:31 is made even more weighty by the additions the God and Father of the Lord Jesus and who is to be praised forever. The former phrase occurs elsewhere only in 2 Corinthians 1:3 (see the commentary) and Ephesians 1:3. The latter phrase is a Jewish expression of reverence and adoration (Bratcher 1983:128).

Truth is, I am nothing without our Heavenly Father and I am nothing if it isn’t for and about Him. I can speak all the most eloquent or not so eloquent words in the word and it all falls to dust, if my life, does not straightforward reflects Him and that includes the fact that life is not always going to be perfect-there will be trials and tribulations and there will be well, just boring days, but what all matters is that it is all about giving it to Him and trusting our Father through it all.

Sometimes this is done easily-Other times it’s not.

From “Eyes for the Unknown” by Ron Rose, the writer shares what I think eloquently speaks how we have to embrace our weaknesses as well as our strengths,

Life after the fall is filled with roadblocks, they will continue till Jesus comes. If someone tries to sell you some misguided teaching that Christianity gets rid of the roadblocks, politely disconnect.

 If you breathe you will experience Roadblocks.

God uses them to direct life, to change things, to move us to the next chapter in our story. Sometimes he moves them, but most of the time HE transforms them into road signs; road signs that point us in a new direction.

My imperfections, my weaknesses, defines me more than I feel my strengths do, because it is in my weaknesses that our Heavenly Father shines through more and it is through my weaknesses that my faith in Him is strengthen, sometimes easily and sometimes after much difficulty, but in the end, I have no one, not even myself to give praise to, except our Heavenly Father.

It is because of that, that I am slowly learning, the truth of our growth and spiritual maturity can be easily hid behind a false smile but the reality that our spiritual growth and who our characters are, are refined and definied by the weaknesses that teaches us both strength, humility and completely reliance in our Heavenly Father.

If I give praise to our Heavenly Father only when life is going great, I feel I give a false impression of Him, because He is there for when we are down as much as when we are up in the world and that’s what the world needs to know too.

He is ALWAYS there.

He is not a fair weathered friend or whose only there for the ‘good times’. He is there for the storms, the rocky days adn sometimes just the boring average day and it doesn’t mean you and I are not insignificant but rather we are significant.

So life is everyday?

So life is stormy?

So life is rocky?

Thank You Heavenly Father for everyday because You are there no matter what.

As for me. Back to my boring life. LOL


If you are interested in joining us this week for “Word Filled Wednesday” drop by Lori  @  allyouhavetogive.com who is hosting “WFW” this week to participate with the rest of us.

Content Protected Using Blog Protector By: PcDrome.

© 2008-2012 Sunflower Faith All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright