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Not Me, Lord

Then Pharaoh gave this order to all his people: โ€œEvery Hebrew boy that is born you must throw into the Nile, but let every girl live.โ€ Exodus 1:22

Whenever I picture Moses, Charlton Heston comes to mind.  For those of you too young to know that reference, Mr. Heston personified Moses in the blockbuster 1956 movie The 10 Commandments.  He was sweaty and swarthy and muscular.  He was bold and without fear.  Some of his final scenes show him standing fiercely on top of a mountain, wind blowing his impressive white beard and long gorgeous hair as he calls on the name of God.  A hero.  A rescuer.  A man not to be trifled with because God was with him.  As usual, the big screen skips over a few of the finer points of history for the sake of the storyline.  Like the fact that Moses, even though God Himself had been his rescuer many times, really didnโ€™t want the job of Israelโ€™s savior.  Of being the leader of the new beginning for an entire people.

But Moses said to God, โ€œWho am I that I should go to Pharaoh and bring the Israelites out of Egypt?โ€ Exodus 3:11

That interaction alone might lead the reader to think Moses well, heโ€™s just being humble.  But by my count Moses tries to turn God to someone much more suited, much more capable than him eight times!  I canโ€™t! What if!  Iโ€™m not!  Why should I?  Sound familiar to anyone out there?

Moses answered, โ€œWhat if they do not believe me or listen to me and say, โ€˜The Lord did not appear to youโ€™?โ€  Exodus 4:1

My BSGs (Bible Study Girls) and I have embarked on a new study by Shirley Giles Davis called, God. Gifts. You.  In our first week we were asked: โ€œWhere are you hearing God, but your excuse for delaying sounds a lot like โ€œLord, Iโ€™m afraid.โ€?โ€  Moses afraid?  Not that guy.  God saved him from death as a baby.  God placed him in the care of royalty.  God gave him incredible opportunities for gaining knowledge and physical strength.  He saved him from capture.  Thereโ€™s no way Moses was afraid of yet another challenging new beginning, right?

Eight times.  Standing in front of bush that was talking to him even!  I donโ€™t know about you but if I told my husband when he walked in the door from work that one of my bushes in the yard was on fire and speaking to me about going to the governorโ€™s office demanding, โ€œlet my people go!โ€ heโ€™d be very, very concerned.  In fact, this was a point of discussion with my BSGs.  Not burning bushes mind you but whether or not God still speaks audibly to us.  And if he does, do people think we are crazy?  Itโ€™s an unfortunate state we are in that some pastors and biblical teachers try to assure us that God doesnโ€™t speak out loud to us anymore.  We must discern His word in other ways.  And while I agree we need to use Godโ€™s character, gleaned from His written Word to verify the voice we hear I completely disagree that we no longer hear His audible voice.  I know.  Iโ€™ve heard Him.  Some of my BSGs have heard Him.  To me the real question is now that youโ€™ve heard Him, what are you going to do about it?  Are you going to accept the challenge of this new beginning or find another excuse?

Moses, although a pretty amazing and instrumental piece of Godโ€™s plan, stumbled even with Godโ€™s past provisions clearly given to him and the promise of Godโ€™s presence and help spoken to him.   Moses, sometimes called the โ€œLesser Jesus,โ€ is so often seen in parallel with the Messiah.  Their birth stories are almost identical with a king demanding their death.  Moses was to rescue people from slavery.  Jesus from the slavery of sin.  Moses led the Israelites through the parted waters toward the promised land.  Jesus is our living water giving us the promised land.  Moses was tested.  Jesus was tested.  So, whereโ€™s the problem with his hesitation?

But Moses said, โ€œPardon your servant, Lord. Please send someone else.โ€ Exodus 4:13

If you remember from Noah or even Abraham when called they went.  And in Isaiah 6:8 Isaiah raises his hand proudly and says, โ€œme Lord, send me!โ€  Itโ€™s hard for a lot of people, I believe to relate to those guys.  We regular folks sometimes are more like Moses.  We list our reasons Godโ€™s plan wonโ€™t work.  We arenโ€™t smart enough, strong enough, likeable enough, talented enough.  But like with Adam, if God wants us in His service He wonโ€™t let go.  He wants us to be part of a new beginning.  And so, he nudges us to the right people and places.  He puts other saints in front of us to help open doors.  For Moses?  He said, โ€œFine, Iโ€™ll give you Aaron to use as your spokesperson.โ€

But hereโ€™s the thing.  Even though Moses is the one remembered and exalted, it was Aaron that got to wear the priestly, holy robes.  It was Aaron that was allowed into the most holy place.  Think if Moses had responded like Isaiah โ€“ โ€œMe! Me! I can do it Lord because you have rescued me so many times!โ€  Moses wouldโ€™ve been allowed into the whole glory of God, the first priest of Israel.  True, his relationship with God was pretty amazing.  But God clearly wanted even more for him.  

His new beginning, as Moses led the Israelites toward the promised land, would require him to call on the Lord for strength and rescue many times.  I find it interesting that Moses had to listen to all the people constantly complaining to him about why he took them down this path.  Do you think he occasionally thought, โ€œThat sounds a lot like I was with God.โ€? 

Friend, whether itโ€™s a nudging or a clear directive from God I want to urge you to step up in faith and raise your hand.  To use all your resources (prayer, scripture, pastors, teachers) plus Godโ€™s past intervention in your life to discern what He is asking of you.  In your new beginning when you step out in faith you can then say โ€œI overcame my fears and allowed God to take my weakness and turn it into strength.โ€  This blog and podcast was my big step. Let Him work a New Beginning in you and He will let His glory shine brightly through you!

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Written Word

Moses was there with the Lord forty days and forty nights without eating bread or drinking water.  And he wrote on the tablets the words of the covenant โ€“ the Ten Commandments.  Exodus 34:28

As a college student, I majored in journalism with a minor in English.  You could surmise I enjoy the written word so much I wanted to make a living at a job that required a lot of writing.  I dreamed of one day writing a novel or even a regular column in a magazine.  And although neither of those has happened (yet!) my eventual career path in public relations saw me using those skills in abundance. 

The degradation of the written and spoken word these days drives people like me a bit batty.  Not only do people rarely speak face to face but they also donโ€™t write much.  Text messaging has broken all the basic rules of the written word with shortcuts such as โ€œlolโ€ and โ€œbrb.โ€  But I suppose itโ€™s just another step in the evolution of Godโ€™s gift to us of language and the written word.

Write them (the Commands) on the doorframes of your houses and on your gates,โ€ Deuteronomy 11:20

There are currently around 6,000 different languages spoken around the world. Itโ€™s been estimated that it would have taken at least 100,000 years for a single language to have diversified that much. That would take us back to the middle of the Stone Age according to BBC Science Focus magazine.  But archeologists have found languages written in Mesopotamia dating back to the 8th millennium BC.  God has been at work helping us communicate with each other for a very long time!

When we think about Moses writing the Bible about 1500 years before Jesusโ€™ birth, we should sit in awe at the beauty of it all.  The poetry, symbolism, logic, history and storytelling have guided millions upon millions of believers.  Iโ€™ve marveled with my Bible study ladies at the sophistication level of the apostleโ€™s letters to the churches.  Their ability to use the written word to educate, admonish and encourage people for thousands of years must be the envy of any author.

God has always provided what we, as humans, need to survive and thrive in this world.  His gift of language and the written word has catapulted us ahead of all the biological life on Earth.  I thank Him not only for the Bible but for all the poetry, novels, history books, songs, letters, phone calls, conversations and yes, text messages that have been made possible because of His love for us.

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Courage

Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.โ€ Joshua 1:9

Thereโ€™s certainly a lot of courageous people in the Bible. After Mosesโ€™ death, God commands Joshua to take the Israelites into the promised land โ€“ not knowing what to expect.  God reminds Joshua that with every step, He will be just ahead of Joshua paving the way. 

The dictionary definition of courage is: mental or moral strength to venture, persevere, and withstand danger, fear, or difficulty.  But that doesnโ€™t really do โ€œcourageโ€ justice.  Thereโ€™s plenty of people who build up their courage to do really stupid things.  And without consulting God on our next steps how can someone really โ€œwithstandโ€ fear and difficulty?  

Courage is one of those mysterious uniquely human gifts.  A gift that is frequently used wrongly when the Holy Spirit isnโ€™t involved.  I find when Iโ€™m telling myself to be brave itโ€™s a signal that I need to start praying.

Be strong and take heart, all you who hope in the Lord. Psalm 31:24

Awhile back I challenged a group of friends and acquaintances to embark on what I called The Boldness Challenge.  I asked each of them to make a list of five things theyโ€™d like to accomplish.  And then, they were to start working on each of them, reporting in occasionally.  For some it was digging deeper into their faith. For another it was completing the John Muir Trail.  From starting a business to learning to fly, the lists were incredibly diverse!  One list included forgiving certain people in their lives. Each person had been putting off tackling a dream or a goal.  All of them would need Godโ€™s courage to move forward.

Iโ€™m so thankful that when I know Iโ€™m going to encounter a difficult situation or embark on a new and scary adventure I can count on God for the mysterious courage.  The Holy Spirit wells up inside me and gives me the strength to take that step forward.

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Music

Instead, be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Ephesians 5:18-20

Thereโ€™s no consensus in archeology as to when humans first started creating music.  One theory is that it must correlate with the creation of language.  When you think about it that makes sense โ€“ we go about our days humming, whistling, or like my dry cleaner, putting our conversations to some mysterious tune.  Scientists have found ancient flutes dating back around 300,000 BC.

What scientists will never answer is why do we have this thing called music and from where does it originate? From a Christian point of view, we know that God gifted us with so many human-specific attributes (although birds do have lovely songs!) such as the creation of music.  The first known โ€œhymnโ€ detailed in the Bible dates from somewhere around 1500 BC.

Then Moses and the Israelites sang this song to the Lord:
โ€œI will sing to the Lord,
    for he is highly exalted.
Both horse and driver
    he has hurled into the sea.
โ€œThe Lord is my strength and my defense;
    he has become my salvation.
He is my God, and I will praise him,
    my fatherโ€™s God, and I will exalt him.  Exodus 15:1-2

That praise song to the Lord goes on for 16 more verses!ย ย Wouldnโ€™t it be amazing if we had a recording of the exiles singing this?ย ย ย As I write this, Iโ€™m listening to a beautiful Spotify playlist called โ€œrelaxing piano Christian.โ€ Whatย continues to amaze me is that year after year, decade after decade, and centuryย after century this beautiful gift of music finds new ways to stir our hearts and minds.ย ย I thank God for the notes He has placed out in the universe for us to sing, to play and to hum.ย ย And I look forward with anticipation for each new songโ€™s foray into His mysterious ways.

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The Great I Am

God said to Moses, โ€œI am who I am. This is what you are to say to the Israelites: โ€˜I am has sent me to you.โ€™โ€  Exodus 3:14

This week Iโ€™ve been reading a lot about going ahead of God.  Thinking I know the right way, the right answer, and moving forward on that path without first seeking God.  I was reminded of when I was asked to be our elementary schoolโ€™s PTA president.  At the time, the elementary school was the largest in the district with over 1,000 students.  And it was about to undergo a major construction program to build more classrooms.  That meant a lot of turmoil with the way kids were dropped off at school, where classes would be held and how many of our PTA programs would take place.  I told the committee I could do the job but I didnโ€™t think they would want my style of leadership.  I wasnโ€™t an โ€œinsiderโ€ and didnโ€™t have any qualms about squashing old ways of doing things.  Yet they returned to me multiple times asking me to take the job.  And I did.  

Youโ€™ll notice in this story, like we do in so many Biblical stories of failed leaders, that I havenโ€™t mentioned consulting God.  Because I didnโ€™t.  That is, until after I said, โ€œyes.โ€  I believe it was the next day after I agreed to the job that I had my first of many conversations with the Almighty about this decision.  It went like this, โ€œLord, Iโ€™ve done this thing.  Please help it not be the wrong decision.โ€  In other words, I went ahead of Him and now wanted Him to fix my mess.

And God was with me throughout the two years of my term.  He was there when I cried myself to sleep.  He was there when I had parents screaming at me over the phone.  And He was there when people who I thought were friends turned their backs on me.  But He didnโ€™t take away the consequences of my decision.  

Thank God that most of the time when Iโ€™ve failed to let God lead my life it hasnโ€™t resulted in some horrible final outcome.  He has picked me up and dusted me off.  And after too many times of being on that same wheel Iโ€™ve decided to take a different path.  To trust that God is the Great I Am.  The One who has the best laid plans.  Who can make my path much more smooth if I just consult Him first.  If I release my need to be the most knowledgeable, not just about my life but otherโ€™s.   

I praise God today, on this final 30th day, for being I Am.  For being the Lord Almighty.  The God of our fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac,  and the God of Jacob.  

If youโ€™ve ever seen the Jim Carrey movie Bruce Almighty youโ€™ll see a man who takes this idea of control to the extreme.  He wants to be in charge of his life and no one knows better than him.  So God sort of turns over His powers to him.  And what a mess he makes of it.  At first he thinks answering prayers is so cool and then when he becomes inundated with millions of prayers he just gives everyone what they ask.  And as we know, God doesnโ€™t give us all we ask.  He gives us what we need.  The movie is hilarious to be sure but it speaks to our innate need to be in control.  To take over the job of I Am.  

We can shake our heads at characters like Saul who stop seeking Godโ€™s direction and make every mistake possible.  But how many of us today will do the same?  How many of us yesterday forgot to place God at the top of our consultant list and instead called our friends or family for advice?  And then probably did what we originally wanted to do anyway?

โ€œFor my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord.โ€ Isaiah 55:8

Friends, God is God and we are not, thankfully.  His thoughts and ways are so much better than ours.  If we truly believe this and accept Him as our creator, as an active participant in our lives, then we need to seek His plans for us.  Letโ€™s all start right now by thanking Him for being the Great I Am.


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God’s Guardrails

For I command you today to love the Lord your God, to walk in obedience to him, and to keep his commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase, and the Lord your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess. Deuteronomy 30:16

I grew up not wanting to have children.  In my isolated world I experienced a parenting style that used harsh, physical, anger-fueled discipline.  I didnโ€™t know there was any other way and knew it wasnโ€™t what I wanted impose on any children.  So often as we become our own people, cleaved from our parents, we take the elements of parenting we donโ€™t like and try to do the exact opposite.  However, I also acknowledged as a new adult that the harsh discipline kept me from a lot of dangerous behavior.  So where was the balance?

If you take a brief walk through the history of parenting youโ€™ll see a modern conflict similar to the one I was having.  The harsh disciplinary view of old was met face on with Dr. Spock and his more โ€œloosey gooseyโ€ style.  But as the Spock kids became the radical children of the 60s and 70s parents searched for a middle ground.  One psychologist, Dr. James Dobson took up the challenge.  He brought parents back into the position of authority but done with love.

Discipline isnโ€™t, by definition, a bad thing. Studies have shown that the most effective way to foster healthy relationships with children and give them the ability to learn and utilize self-control is through positive discipline. 

Lauren Steele, Fatherly.com

We humans need fatherly guardrails.  Itโ€™s a proven fact since the beginning of time.  We need to remember that when Moses came down the mountain with the 10 commandments they were NEW rules.  New guardrails of how to worship God, how to treat other people, how to be respectful within our families, and how to protect ourselves from well, ourselves.  

The Old Testament has a shadow story woven throughout.  Yes, we follow the woeful Israelites through trials, tribulations and successes.  But put in context God is constantly showing them how to live differently than all the other nations around them.  Nations that He created as well but saw how they overwhelmingly desired to live outside His guardrails โ€“ rampant sexual exploits, child sacrifice and more.  He was testing them all, just like today.  Free self-reign or accepting governance by God.

I praise God today for His guardrails.  For the 10 Commandments He gave us to live within.  Because just like our children we prove over and over that without them we can get ourselves into a lot of trouble.  Without His guidance, His narrow path, we wander off into parts unknown, get lost, live in fear and despair, and ruin not just our lives but the ones we love.

When I met my husband and told him why I didnโ€™t want children he assured me weโ€™d figure it out.  He wouldnโ€™t let my past keep me from a full future.  Thankfully as we took the journey, we met God along the way.  I may have pushed up against those guardrails a few times but He always calls me back to the center of the road.  


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Are You Ready?

 โ€œSo do not be afraid of them, for there is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. 27 What I tell you in the dark, speak in the daylight; what is whispered in your ear, proclaim from the roofs. 28 Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell.โ€ Matthew 10:26-28

One of my friends has found herself in an unexpected teaching opportunity.  She and her husband were active participants in a Bible study held at my house for about 5 years.  My observation was that he wasnโ€™t progressing in his faith journey.  He seemed a bit stuck.  He was definitely a man of faith and attended church regularly.  But he kept listening to the worldโ€™s half truths about Jesus.

A year passed after that study group disbanded and my friend came to me asking about doing another study group.  She was particularly concerned about her husband.  They were no longer attending the same church and with the study group having disbanded her husband was without the counsel of other Christians.  We decided to start a new group but it would be just women this time around and it left her concerns about her husband unanswered. 

Over the course of last year my friend has made amazing strides in her faith progression.  Just last week I listened to her as she was able to answer a difficult Bible study question with a great analogy โ€“ making it all clear to the rest of us!  Like the glee I had while watching one of my Girl Scouts successfully learn to build a fire I jumped for joy at my friendโ€™s insight!  I loved it!

And God has answered her prayers about her husband.  It wasnโ€™t the answer she was expecting.  You see, the teacher he needed was her.  Her husband has watched her transformation with awe.  She is living out the Word.  And he started asking her questions about Jesus.  After church (their new one) they go for breakfast and sit and discuss the sermon.  He relies on her for further insight and instruction.  

 โ€œBut 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, 16 keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.โ€ 1 Peter 3:15-16

My friendโ€™s teaching opportunity was close at home.  And at the start of Jesusโ€™ ministry, He too started close to home.  The first recorded teaching by Jesus was to His cousin, John the Baptist.  Jesus asks John to baptize him but John recognizes Him as the Messiah and tries to convince Jesus it should be the other way around. 

Jesus replied, โ€œLet it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness.โ€ Then John consented. Matthew 3:15

Jesus knew His audience.  As a devoted man of God, John was well practiced in what it meant to achieve holy righteousness.  And so he accepted Jesusโ€™ reasoning.

When you follow along Jesusโ€™ teaching path, youโ€™ll find it to be not only slow and patient but tailored for each person or group of people He encounters.  And thatโ€™s the joy in teaching.  No matter what we teach itโ€™s important to know the delivery method.  At first, Jesus reached out to His cousin, then His cousinโ€™s followers and their friends.  And the tipping point, after performing quiet acts of healing and word of them spread, was the Sermon on the Mount.

But even after He preached to large crowds, He would encounter individuals and specifically set aside time to teach them.  To tell them about the glory of God and the forgiveness of sins. 

To the learned He spoke with confident knowledge of Moses and Isaiah.  To the poor and lame, He taught through love and compassion.  To the average man and woman, He used parables containing everyday elements like farming and relationships.  And to the disciples He opened their eyes to the mysteries of the Kingdom.  Each time He sought the โ€œah haโ€ moment for which every teacher longs.  The moment when the light comes on inside.

โ€œYou are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. 15 Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. 16 In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven. Matthew 5:14-16

I once was leading a small Bible study and the topic of โ€œevangelizingโ€ came up.  It usually makes people squirm.  One participant said she just didnโ€™t feel ready to talk to people about God.  And yet sheโ€™s been a Christian for about 50 years. What if we erase the word โ€œevangelizeโ€ and replace it with sharing or teaching?  What if instead of picturing ourselves standing before the Pharisees or Sanhedrin we picture ourselves sitting with our children or a friend?  And sharing how Jesus has brought us peace and joy in times of trouble.  That should at a minimum be expected of us.

My friend I mentioned at the beginning has come a long way.  About a year ago, her adult son started asking her questions about God and Jesus and she felt unprepared. She had prayed for many years that her son would turn to Jesus.  And now he was asking her questions.  So, what did she do?  She sought instruction, she prayed, and she was bold.  And at her next opportunity to teach a family member, her husband, she was ready.

โ€œOur lives should reflect the love and goodness of Jesus but we should pray that the Lord would give us opportunities to share the gospel with people who come into our lives.โ€  

Pastor Adriel Sanchez, Core Christianity Podcast

Jesus didnโ€™t want to keep His life offering amongst a small group of people.  So yes, He lived a good and faithful life but He didnโ€™t stop there.  He reached out to people.  He shared through teaching the most important lessons we will ever learn.  He prepared for this task.  And when His time came, He was ready.

The question is, are you ready?  

Your role as teacher may be needed right now.  For your children, your spouse, your neighbor, a struggling believer or searching non-believer.

Have you worked on the other steps so you can teach, like Peter says, with gentleness and respect?  Have you put yourself in positions to be a humble servant and therefore interacting with non-believers in positive ways?  Are you studying His Word so when confronted with half-truths or outright lies about God you can stand firm like a warrior?  God has already tested you in all these areas.  Heโ€™s tested me.  What is your report card?  In what areas do you need to ask for Godโ€™s help today so you can be ready?


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Awaken

So then, let us not be like others, 
who are asleep, but let us be awake 
and sober.  
1 Thessalonians 5:6

I just finished a study on the book of Numbers.  It finds Israel wandering about the desert grumbling, complaining and disobeying God at every turn.  And God gives mercy over and over at Mosesโ€™ pleading.  Until He doesnโ€™t.  Thereโ€™s so much death in this book because of the unfaithfulness.  Some because God allows the Israelites to try their own path, leading to deaths during wars.  And some because God rains down His punishment with plagues.

Itโ€™s so easy for us to read what happened thousands of years ago and judge the Israelites.  They were asleep to Godโ€™s ways and character.  

At the end of one of my commentaries was the statement that from Godโ€™s point of view there are only three locations in the Israelite journey and only three locations in our own journey.

  1. Egypt: the land of bondage
  2. The Wilderness: the land of unbelief, doubt and falling short
  3. Canaan: the land of inheritance

The question for us is, which location do we currently find ourselves in?

Throughout the Bible we find an underlying message about growing in our faith.  The sooner we recognize where we are and why we are there, the sooner we can move along on our journey.  

For I know that good itself does not 
dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature. 
For I have the desire to do what is good, 
but I cannot carry it out. 
Romans 7:18

This statement by Peter is so self-reflective.  He has one foot in the wilderness while reaching with the other into the land of inheritance.  He actively searches his heart and soul, asking God to reveal the blemishes and the blind spots.

We can spend a lot of time, like the Israelites seeing what God is and does.  We can hear the good work He does in others.  But do we, like Moses, truly understand Godโ€™s actions?  Do we still ask โ€œwhyโ€ and wishing we could go back to Egypt?  Or do we ask God to do even more work in us so that we are constantly changing, stripping away our old selves for His glory?

We want to be awake, vivacious, alive in our faith journey.  We need to not just know โ€œofโ€ God but truly know Him โ€“ His character, how He works and how much He loves to see us grow.

You either obey, ignore or resist.  

Warren Wiersbe on the will of God

We humans like to blame the outside world for being stuck.  For not reaching our full potential.  We blame our church for not inspiring us.  We blame our circumstances for not having time for God.  We blame fellow Christians who have hurt us.   But the Holy Spirit resides in us.  It is a personal journey lived out for all to see.  King David, in Psalm 51 does some deep reflection on where he is in his faith journey.

For I know my transgressions, and my 
sin is always before me. Against you, 
you only, have I sinned and done what 
is evil in your sight; 
Psalm 51:3-4

The Israelites blamed Moses and God for not quickly and without hardship reaching the Promised Land.  They lacked Davidโ€™s self-reflection.  They sat for so many years in the Land of the Wilderness.  It took me almost 20 years of wandering to finally wake up and begin understanding God.  So, I have no place to judge them. 

If you are stuck itโ€™s time to look inward.  Itโ€™s time to shake off your sleepiness and do a deep dive with God into your own heart.  Only then can He lead you to the Land of Inheritance.

Bible, bible study, Christian, Christian Church, christian encouragement, christian men, Christian women, Faith, Jesus Follower, Uncategorized

The Quiet Mind

The Lord will fight for you; you 
need only to be still. 
Exodus 14:14

I am not a โ€œstillโ€ person.  If something feels lacking in me, I do a personal inventory and then come up with a plan to fix it.  But I finally realized that my relationship with God needed to be approached differently.  I sat on the edge of my bed one day years ago and cried out to God like the unbelieving Israelites: โ€œWhere are you?  Iโ€™ve done a lot of stuff to make you happy but you just arenโ€™t here for me!โ€

Me, me, me, me.  What โ€œI have done for God.โ€  The Israelites were constantly complaining to Moses about having sacrificed leaving their homes in Egypt only to find themselves without food or water.  They romanticized their old lives โ€“ one which they were prisoners to pharaoh.  And in the verse today they found themselves at the edge of the sea with no obvious way to cross.  From behind, pharaohโ€™s men were approaching to kill them all.  And the complaining began.

Moses reminds us to be still.  To stop fretting and complaining about our situation.  To stop whirling our minds around worldly solutions.  To stop grasping at fixing things ourselves and working so hard on our sanctification path.  Be still.

That day I complained so loudly to the Lord and He spoke even louder back to me.  โ€œWhat have you really done?โ€ He asked me.  In my frenzied, โ€œdoerโ€ world I thought that I needed to take the bull by the horns and join more Bible studies, volunteer more at church, wear my cross around my neck more often.  But what He was telling me was to stop and pray.  To stop and just believe.  To stop and listen to Him.

The Lord will fight for you and me.  We need to stop and listen to what He actually wants us to do.  For the Israelites it was to pray and then, in faith, step into the water.  For me it was to set aside my โ€œto doโ€ list and dive deep into His Word every day.

The Lord has fought for me.  And when I listen, He tells me when to break camp and when to settle in.  Make stillness a priority today.  Let the worldโ€™s problems swirl around the outside while you sit with Him.  Heโ€™s got this.  

Bible, bible study, Christian, Christian Church, christian encouragement, Christian women, Faith, Jesus Follower, Uncategorized

Tiny Yet Mighty

Throughout the Bible we are taught how the least becomes the most, the youngest becomes the greatest, and the weak become strong.  In my journey of studying the Bible Iโ€™ve flipped past seemingly insignificant books as I searched through the powerful messages of the Gospels and the insightful letters to the Corinthians and Ephesians.  And we all know from popular culture about Noah, Moses and even Job.  But what about those tiny books with odd names like Philemon, Obadiah and Jude?  What can four short paragraphs in 3 John even tell us?

When you do a Google search for โ€œthe shortest books in the Bibleโ€ you find five books:

  • 3 John: 219 words
  • 2 John: 245 words
  • Philemon: 335 words
  • Obadiah: 440 words
  • Jude: 461 words

They are all tiny yet mighty books placed purposefully by the ancient church in our Bibles.  They are fascinating to read, not just in their lessons but for their glimpses into the real lives of the prophets and disciples.  They speak of trials, friendships, conflict, success and failure.  They show the good work of the people of God โ€“ spreading His love and messages.

These five books remind us that as one tiny person in a world of millions we can play an integral part in Godโ€™s plan.  We can switch from saying, โ€œwho am I?โ€ to โ€œI am here, Lord, send me!โ€  Their lessons include picking role models, how to deal with conflict, true hospitality, forgiveness, social change, handling false teachers, and so much more.

Please join me in this five-week study as I glean life lessons from these powerful, yet tiny books of the Bible.  Each week, starting February 15, three lessons will be discussed from one of the books and posted on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

Be sure to follow emboldened.net to receive your posts via email.ย ย I look forward to having you join me on this Tiny Yet Mighty adventure!