A Heartfelt Mind-Meld: The Desert

“The whole congregation of the sons of Israel grumbled against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness.  The sons of Israel said to them, ‘Would that we had died by the Lord’s hand in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the pots of meat, when we ate bread to the full; for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly…” – Exodus 16:2-3 (truncated)

How often do we accuse God of leading us into the wilderness to die?  “It would have been better for You to leave me in the slavery of my sin…”

No matter where you are, there will be (or is now) a time in your life when the Spirit will lead you into the desert.  It is not to break you but to bend you.  It is not to crush you but to humble you.  It is not for evil but for good, for love!

God has never sent us into the depths of despair but while ready to pull us out.  The problem, though, is that most of us want Him to pull us up when we think we’re ready, when we think the trial is over, when we have deemed it enough.  Yet we often forget: you are not the Master, dear reader.

Years ago, I learned something about how knives are hardened.  In the final stages of the creation of a knife, just before the final edge is put on, the steel is hardened.  To do this, it is raised to an incredible, intense temperature.  When it reaches this intense temperature, it is then trust into a frigid, freezing vat of oil or water.  From here, the knife is reheated and re-frozen (pardon my parlance).  This process can happen multiple times, until the right hardness is achieved.

Once the knife is properly hardened, it can have a final edge and be ready for regular use.  Without this hardening, the smallest use of the knife could take the edge off or, worse yet, nick the knife!  A knife, to be effective, must withstand the pressures it will be put under, which vary with the knife’s purpose.

In my own trials, I have found that the Father will sometimes allow me to be heated until I can bear no more (or so I think), and then I can be suddenly dunked in a freezing solution which leaves me shivering from the cold.  I have even experienced this roller-coaster in rapid succession.  But my knowledge of knives reminds me that He is building the character in me that He desires for me to be useful for the plans He has in mind (Jeremiah 29:11).

Whether you are merely in the desert, or on an up-down roller-coaster, like a newly created knife, know that the Master Smith is behind it all.  He has the designs for where you will go, what you will be used for, and how this process is effective.  He may even be using you to train another, encouraging them by your endurance or chiding them by your faithfulness or giving them wisdom by how you listen and share what He has given you.

Don’t fear the desert, and do not despise His craftsmanship, but grab Him in a bear-hug, and trust in His absolutely incomprehensible love!  He loves you, dear reader!  He sent His Son, Jesus, who died and rose again just to make a way to a relationship with you!  Let Him show you what He has planned!

“But a natural man does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually appraised.  But he who is spiritual appraises all things, yet he himself is appraised by no one.  For who has known the mind of the Lord, that he will instruct Him?  But we have the mind of Christ.” – 1 Corinthians 2:14-16

Vires et Honorem – 1 Corinthians 15:10

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Observation on Electricity and God

I was contemplating electricity today and how, in the electronic world, so much of what we have never goes away. Think about the fact that you are right now reading this blog on a browser. To read this, your browser had to download some data from my server to your computer. Now, you may have it set to clean up after you, but even if it cleans up the contents of this page after you exit, that data will remain, in some amount, for someone who would have the tools to mine it off your computer.

So, let’s take that thought; electricity is so powerful that It remains behind to some degree in everything it touches. Electronics wear out. Light-bulbs burn out. And computers retain large amounts of data even after they’ve been wiped. So, as we think about this, remember that everything in our world reveals something about the creator, whether created by man or by God.   Electricity is an interesting force because it also reveals the power of God, not explicitly, but as a revelatory force.

Here we have electricity in our world: We create it through massive generators powered by water, steam, gasoline, etc. We create generators that can produce massive amounts of electricity which can be stored, can be sold, can be purchase, and can be used to power many different devices. We then manufacture devices that run on electricity, and through them, we are able to do countless activities that, otherwise, would not be even remotely possible.

Take, for example, the fact that you are reading this, whether on a phone, tablet, PC, or Mac. You are reading this on an electronic device, and I am able to share my thoughts to you through an electronic device. All of this is possible because of the power of electricity. Without it, I’d have to hand-write or mechanically print these posts and get them carried to you on some other medium that would be much more difficult and limited.

We have command and control, to some degree, over electricity. This is very much like how we as human beings exist in our world. We have power and consideration over our choices. We can decide to go to the grocery store or go to a bar. We can decide to go to church or go to a seedy establishment. And we are even, as science tells us, a type of electrical generators. We take the matter we consume (food, water, other liquids, etc.) and turn it into electrical power which powers our brains, conveys signals to our muscles and so forth.

Electricity is not confined to our generators but occurs naturally in the forms such as static electricity or powerfully in the form of lightning. Just think about the last time someone shuffled their feet across a floor and touched you; it hurt, right? Imagine the electrical storms that happen in many parts of the US. When lightning strikes someone, even if it does not kill them, it leaves a mark. We can’t even manage to generate the same amount of electricity in a single bolt of lightning, but it happens naturally.

In the same way that we generate electricity to power an electrical world but natural electricity occurs via lightning and such, we also generate a degree of electricity ourselves, but God is an even greater power source for us.

When we plug something into the wall, it is able to do so much. If it is able to handle additional power, it could do more. But if the power provided to it was insufficient, it is “under-powered” and cannot do its intended job. In the same way, if we take an item that is intended to be used on the US power grid, and we try to plug it into a European power grid, presuming the plugs were right, without an adaptor, that device would be over powered and fry. Why? Because it is not submitting to the power it is being given. The device was designed expecting so much power and too much power causes it to overload because it can’t submit to the power. (This is not a free-will/predestination argument, so please don’t take the analogy too far. Just roll with me.)

In a similar way, if we are not submitted to God, not standing within Christ, we fry in the presence of God because His justice could not be restrained against our sin. In this place, we are not functioning as we were designed and are running in an under-powered state. But when we submit ourselves to Christ’s Lordship, through accepting His sacrifice in our place, we can receive His power in our lives, enabling us to do as He has always desired of us.

Everyone in this world seems to want to make a difference, or at least, most do. I’ve often heard Ghandi’s quote, “Be the change you want to see in the world.” But just as the human-created power only goes so far (without the use of substations and such to boost the power), so our human efforts can only go so far, usually insufficiently. On the other hand, lightning can strike miles apart with the same deadly force in each direction. Lightning does not need a substation or a boost, but is naturally occurring. Similarly, God’s power, worked out through our submission, can move the world!

When we give our lives over to Jesus, and allow Him to transform us into His image, we get the privilege to have God work through us, living in the intended, constant communion with God. We are then enabled to bless others through the blessings He gives to us.

Noodle on that, will ya?

Vires et Honorem

1 Corinthians 15:10

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Thoughts on Discipline and Fatherhood

In our world, we often approach parenting in a mechanical, managerial way. Now I doubt anyone has ever explained it that way, but, frankly, that’s often how I see these books on parenting and books on raising children as if we view our households as a corporation and our children as employees to train.

And while there is some truth to the analogy (such as a household budget being like corporate budgets), the reality is far deeper. Our children are not given to us to merely raise. As believers, our children are given to us to disciple. That’s a difficult concept for most people because most of us have never been discipled ourselves. But in reality, our children are given to us to be disciples. And while, in a human sense, they are disciples of us, we would be remiss to not make them disciples of Jesus.

With that statement comes a heavy responsibility, but not heavy in the sense of weighing on us harshly or weighing us down. It is a serious, even sacred, responsibility.  Jesus said His yoke is easy and His burden is light, and in that very truth, we can hold some confidence that Jesus will not abandon us in the raising of our children. In fact, in my own life, I have watched as my weaknesses, my failures, have been turned into success and glory by His hand alone. I am, by far, not a perfect parent. Yes, some may say I’m better than most, but really, I’m no different. The only difference between me and most other Dads is that, frankly, I don’t get any other choice. I don’t get the option to not feel like it; I don’t get the option to say I had a bad day at work because there is no one else to pick up the slack.

And I think there is something within that, as I found myself often being viewed as an example to other people…I believe there is a challenge God wants to give to all men, all fathers, all Dads; when we have a bad day at work, yes, you’re going to bring some of that home. I don’t care how perfect you are. But when we bring that home, we need to give it into the hands of God Almighty. We need to remain vigilant in our lives for correct from him, whether it comes from our wife, or the Spirit within, or even from our children!   You see, they are ours to disciple, and yet, they’re also His disciples! And we have a sacred trust to bring to them Christ in the flesh!

When we mess up, we have a duty to apologize and ask for their forgiveness, to exemplify to them humility, honesty, and forgiveness. I will never tell anyone that you cannot teach your kids about Santa Claus or what-have-you. But I will caution you to be very careful that you do not lie to your children. In my own, unique situation, my children often ask me questions that I cannot answer or questions whose answers are more than their young brains can handle or heavier than their young hearts could hold. In those situations, I have promised them that I will not lie to them, but sometimes, the answer is “I don’t know,” or “I can’t tell you that right now.” Understand that being honest with your children does not greatly constrain you; there are some things you will not be able to or simply cannot tell them.

Think about this: what is discipline? It is disciple-ing. We are giving our children nuggets of truth and wisdom.   We are correcting them when their path goes astray. We are seeking to provide encouragement, to provide insight, to discipline so that they can get back on the path.

It has been said that how a child views their father will greatly affect how they view God. Men, take that as a solemn and sacred exhortation! God has given you children not to reflect yourself, not to live vicariously through them (as some do), not to finally achieve that scholarship or trophy or championship win that you never did. He has given us children so that we may grow. Let that sink in for a second. He has given us children so that we may grow.

You see, when we are in the world, living out our lives, everything is possible. We can pack up in a moment and go on to some new adventure. We don’t have to think about others or reason a complete plan because it’s just us. Then we add a wife, and the adventures get a little bit smaller because we need to provide security and safety for her, a rock upon which she can stand. But it is still you and her. And then suddenly, you add this helpless little being, this reflection of your genetic material, and I would argue a reflection of your spiritual material. As my own children have grown, I have noticed many of my own struggles have become evident in them as well. They wrestle with many of the same demons I wrestle with, in their own child-like ways. God has given them to me because I understand that struggle. I know that struggle. And because I have grown and need to grow!

In our Ameircan world, we often go to the next level, in our careers, relationships, possesions. We seem to always be seeking some unattainable goal.   I think Paul hits the nail on the head when he says, “Laying aside all temptations, and the sin that so easily ensnares , we reach for the pricesof the upward call of Christ.” Men, that.means.our.families!

These little beings. These little bundles of sin.   They are such a blessing and so much fun, and in a second, they turn around. Ha ha. One minute, life is great, and the next minute, they are ready to tear someone’s hair out. One minute, they’re happy and life is grand, and the next, they are screaming because they’re hungry.   One minute life is great and grand, and the next, someone has stolen every bit of joy they will ever have in their life. They are drama, and we are drama! We must disciple them, in concert with God, submitted before the Almighty, so that our children can see Him when they look at us.

We must train them to read the Scriptures, their Bibles. We must train them to know the Lord of their life, Who died and rose from the dead just to have a relationship with them!

I challenge you, men, do not merely raise your children. Don’t just provide a home and food and clothing. Disciple your children! Teach them what you have learned, and, perhaps, as appropriate, how you have learned it!

There’s the old saying, “Do As I Say, Not As I Do.” Part of that is teaching our children why we encourage them to do things we never did, why we encourage them to step up in ways we never did/could. So that they can understand that we are not just blowing smoke, trying to tell them to do something we won’t, but that we are encouraging them to be disciples of the Almighty and to learn from their Father, and to seek out other men who can teach and encourage them in the same, beyond what we can teach them or our limited experiences.

And then there comes the day when we have to let them go. True, they will always be our children. They will always be a part of our lives. But we have to prepare them for the day when they need to take the reins of their provision, of their shelter, and of their lives. So that when that day comes, they are not seeking unknown, unexpected things…so that they are not thrust into a world of temptation and sin that they are woefully unprepared for, but that this transition becomes as expected and normal as when they get up in the morning and get their clothes on. That the day comes, and we hand them the reigns and they gratefully take them…not rending them from our hands, not scared to accept them, but ready. Yes, there will be some fear, but the picture remains.

Go! Lead your families! And disciple your children with all diligence and humility, following the example of the One, in humble submission to the Father, our Father!

Vires et Honorem

1 Corinthians 15:10

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Musings on Music

Well, this definitely falls under the classification of random musing! I also find it deliciously conflicted that I’m musing on music. Ha ha! Well, here we go!

In the last year, I have run into many people that have reminded me of the mathematical qualities of music. After all, there are whole notes, quarter notes, half notes, etc. And music results in frequencies that are both predictable and determinate. At the base of mathematics is logic and reason. After all, 2+2=4 because there is a reasonable building of 2 on 2 resulting in the logical conclusion of 4.

As such, we can conclude that music, while being mathematical, is also logical. After all, musical theory is based on logical structures of music, shown to flow naturally and properly. If you’ve spent much time in music, you can usually predict (with some accuracy) where the flow of a piece will go. Put more specifically, if I hear the arrangement of the previous 4-6 notes, I can make reasonable estimations of where the next notes will fall. Granted, the possibilities are greater than one possibility, but they are far from incalculable, if I know one thing: was the piece composed for the pleasure of the listener or to promote dissonance.

Mind you, I am not expert on music. This is merely my experiences either from being the son of a music major and a personal love of music or from those I have known who have taken the time to teach me details of musical theory and such.

But here’s an interesting collision. Music evokes emotion. In fact, composed properly, it can evoke specific emotions. A composer can lead a person to feel passion, anger, grief, irritation, etc. Granted, each person will interpret the composition through various lenses, but it is still very likely that the piece will evoke the intended emotion.

So, here’s where this gets most interesting. As I have made clear on this blog, and in real life, I see this world through a lens of what’s termed general revelation. By this, I mean that I believe God has revealed Himself throughout His creation.   As such, anywhere I look, and I can find some attribute of God in what He has created. There is always some fingerprint of the Artist on His masterpiece.

Today, as I was listening to a much-loved composition, I noted that while it was music, which is considered mathematical (thus logical, as shown above), I was also emotionally affected by it.   As such, I came to a personal conclusion that music reveals an interesting aspect of God. In this incredible medium, which affects so many people and can aid memory recall tremendously, we find a poetic mystery. Logic and emotion are wonderfully entangled in a unique and moving way.

Rarely does pure logic affect the emotional state of a person. Rarely do emotions mix well with logic.   Yet, in the mystery of music, the two are entwined, logic granting emotional response and emotions built by logical structures, in the forms of notes, rhythm, and movements. Normally, emotions must bow to logic or logic is tainted by emotion.   In many cases, emotion and logic being mixed usually results in one or both being compromised.

Yet, in music both are really needed to properly convey whatever thought evoked the piece. And, as if miraculously, both come together in what might have appeared as an impossible relationship. The notes of the piece, the rhythm, any lyrics, and all movements combine together to evoke emotional responses, which, even in the simplest, can cause us to remember lyrics even decades later! Words that hold little specific meaning to us can become imbedded in our minds because the tune was catchy.

I think this is why music has become such a powerful medium.   It is one of the few things in this world that most reflects God Himself. (Yes, I am making that statement carefully.) We can see evidence of His love, attributes of mercy, power, beauty, etc. But in music, we find a unique intertwining of logic and emotion, a medium that expresses itself through the air, a force which can have a profound effect on one or many at any given time, and an expression which conveys some aspect of the author. It is a profound expression, which points to the reality that only in a world with a profoundly expressive God could we get such an expression. (I could go on to argue this, but I’ll leave it as a simple statement for now.)

Enjoy the music! =)

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Observations on Sacrifice

I was considering something today, thinking back over my life, thinking what I would do differently if I had it to do over again. I live my without regrets, but I do reflect and acknowledge that there are things that should have been done differently. And it is by this that this blog post becomes important.

Sacrifice. We don’t know, in America, what sacrifice truly is. Often, we think sacrifice is not going out to dinner on our one night that week, not buying our morning Starbucks for a week or one day a week. We don’t, typically, understand going without meals for several days, not eating so your children can eat, eating two times a week so your children can eat four times. These are sacrifices that others have to make, and we don’t often have to.

In the blessing we have lost an important attribute. Sacrifice.

When I was courting my ex, I thought that I could not live my life well, if I did not marry her. I thought this transient status of courtship could not survive some years. I felt that it would be leading her along. And perhaps, I would have been, if we dated for several years. But the reality of was much deeper than that. The reality is that if we had spent those years cultivating our friendship and truly getting to know each other, understanding each other, perhaps the character flaws that lead to the death of our marriage would have surfaced or would have been non-existent. Perhaps, the relationship would never have survived as mere friends.

It occurs to me that, had I taken more time, we could have found ourselves in better places. Having such directionality to my life could have caused me to purpose myself, similar to how the marriage did, but in a better way. Without having to support a wife, without having a bifurcated focus, it could have pushed me in a way that honored God more directly; paying off my debts, accumulating a safety-net of savings, etc. Thus, when the time came to provide for my bride, I would have been more capable than I was those years ago.

Instead, the hard-knocks we should have encountered in our courtship were encountered in our first years of marriage, as a layoff lead to financial hardships, as the opportunities for jobs lead to moving to a more remote area, separating us from family. While all this appeared to strengthen us initially, it eventually proved to be more damaging than either myself or our families realized.

For some years prior, God had led me down paths that had shaken me, breaking me in various ways, always pushing me to grow. Consequently, I failed to realize that the new difficulties were too much for my ex. I was ignorant of the ways such struggles were impacting her, and she chose to keep it to herself. Our foundation began crumbling because it had never been properly laid.

Instead, if we had chosen to sacrifice, giving up that which we so desired and wanted, and established a plan, striving to achieve the goals, knowing that it would take some time, perhaps more time than we wanted. Even still, ultimately achieving those goals would have been a greater blessing than either of us could have realized.

As I think about these things, I look at where my life is now. I realize how much I could have done with the resources God gave me. I could have had these experiences that I did, but I could have had them in a much smarter way.  It would have been difficult, but that difficulty could have worked out insufficiencies in my life, areas where I needed to, frankly, grow up!

Look for the things that God has asked you to sacrifice on. Rather than looking at them as some sort of deprivation, as something that God or society has held you back from, see the Master’s blessing. See what God is saving you from, what He is protecting you from. And let that sacrifice be your meager offering to an infinite, loving, powerful, compassionate, gracious, merciful God who cares more for you than you can ever think possible!

For me, with all my mistakes, He has still given me beautiful children whom I am blessed to care for. He has broken me until I’ve submitted to His incredible will (brokenness is not bad, see here). And He has granted me the opportunity to let my mistakes teach me and, through the mediums of our time, to give others the opportunity to learn from my mistakes.

Before I leave this topic of sacrifice, I must say that if you have never given yourself to Jesus, if you have never made the ultimate human sacrifice of placing yourself down at the foot of the cross, giving up your sin for His salvation, then today is your day, dear reader! Do not close the window, do not leave this blog, without letting go and giving your life to God’s service, not as some religious or patronizing act, but as a true sacrifice in thankfulness for what He has already given to you, Himself, His Son’s life, broken and bleeding for you, risen again as the victorious Savior He is! All you have to do is cry out to Him, admit your sin, and as Romans 10:9 says,” that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.” And then live, just live, in that thankfulness, serving Him, not in some religious piety, but in an honest sacrifice of love to the God who loved you first!

Vires et Honorem – 10 Corinthians 15:10

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No-Win Scenarios

“I don’t believe in no-win scenarios.” – Capt. James T. Kirk

When I was growing up, I often heard, “Nope, can’t do that!”  I didn’t hear it from people trying to tell me what I could or could not do in a career.  It’s not like I was held back from my dreams or even held from the things I wanted.  Instead, I was the guy who was outside the social circles.  I was not the popular kid!  I’ve always been better in my head than with my body.  I could work a math problem, but I couldn’t catch a football.  I could even program a computer, but I can’t throw a baseball into a guys mitt with any regularity!

So, I started working on the questions people put down.  “God can’t exist.”  Oh, really?  LOL!  “You can’t switch out of Psychology mid-term and go to Trigonometry.  You’ll never pull off the grade!”  Ha ha!  Watch me!  =D

You get the point.  I don’t believe in no-win scenarios…mostly.  There are some scenarios that extremely violate the laws of physics or specifically violate some particular logic sufficient to consider them a closed-case impossibility.  However, these are fewer than most people like to admit.  In most any situation, there is a way that it works.

This philosophy has guided me for many years, but mostly from a selfish, “I won’t let you lose” attitude!  And then, I came across a stunning reality in the midst of my world-collapsing.  My attitude had a truthful root (and a lot of selfish roots that I had to let God pull up!).  This truthful root is reflected in my life verse…

And looking at them Jesus said to them, “With people this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” – Matthew 19:26

In our day-to-day world, the impossibilities of life are constantly confronting us.  From every corner, we can see another monster that waits to devour us.  Whether your a single parent or just another person trying to find their place to make an impact, challenges are a fact of life!

I started fighting those facts of life by my own will, but now I find that I can fight them by His Spirit.  When I began to challenge the impossible, I could challenge the perceived impossibles.  I took on what others wouldn’t, found the path that others missed, put together the disparate pieces that others had dismissed.  But in Christ, I can conquer even the insurmountable!  I can believe that people can change because I know the One who can change them!  I can step into the unknown because I know the One who knows all things!

You see, what I once did out of rebellion, I can now do out the power of my Savior!  It is no longer a question of what I am capable of, but what He is capable of!

I don’t believe in no-win scenarios.  My God is bigger than that!

Vires et Honorem – 1 Corinthians 15:10

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A Solid Quote from C.S. Lewis on Being…

The question is not what we intended ourselves to be, but what He intended us to be when He made us. - C.S. Lewis

The question is not what we intended ourselves to be, but what He intended us to be when He made us. – C.S. Lewis

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A Heartfelt Mind-Meld: Dark Days and Comfort

Did you know that to comfort also means to strengthen? Did you know that a comfort is something that strengthens you? I definitely didn’t! I thought comfort was something that simply made you feel good, not something that was supposed to remove your weakness.

That puts a unique spin on many of the verses in the Bible that talk of being comforted or comforting. One day, I was bemoaning my present singleness, and an interesting exchange occurred between me and God. (Yes, I talk WITH God. No, I’m not insane…well, at least not dangerously insane! LOL!) Whether it was my own mind or God, I don’t truly know, but I am pretty sure that I wouldn’t just think of this. I digress; God’s question to me was why I wanted a spouse so badly. He asked me what was wrong with where I was right now. That’s when I realized, I wanted a soft, cushy life. I wanted my kids to get good grades, grow up to be model citizens, and I wanted life to be a simple walk through until the grave and then go be with Jesus. I wanted…I wanted Heaven on Earth.

Don’t gloss over that!   I really did want Heaven right now. I wanted the end of all pain and suffering, all hell to be contained! And that’s not what He has promised us here. He has promised to be with us. He has promised not to leave us. He has promised to strengthen us. He has promised that His yoke is easy and His burden is light.   He has promised us persecution.

Ouch…those last two seem at odds with each other, but only from a worldly perspective. From a Biblical perspective, they are actually one and the same. Is persecution fun? I guarantee you that Pastor Saeed Abedini would tell you that it is quite painful and discouraging. I know he would tell you it is not easy. Was Jesus mistaken? Did He misspeak about His yoke or His burden? No.

I forget who the pastor was, but I heard a pastor the other day on Grace FM (a radio station in most of Colorado that brings Worship and the Word to listeners, www.897gracefm.com) who was speaking on how Jesus, enduring horrendous beatings, was able to, in part, endure the cross because He was looking to the resurrection. We have a similar comfort as we look to Heaven. We can endure the hardships of this life because we look to Heaven.

As I sit and write this, I have been struggling with my own pains. Life has been very busy, and it’s gotten to me. I felt, frankly, almost claustrophobic. And in the midst of this, I began to spiral into my own frustrations and pains. And in the midst of that, I did what so many of us have done; I began to question why God would allow this! And in that moment, God began to speak again.

Why do we blame God for such things? Because He doesn’t stop it…wait. We blame God, but who’s causing the pain? Well, I don’t want to give too much credit to the Evil One, but the reality stands that in our morally anesthetized culture, we have allowed strongholds of sin in our lives, in our hearts and our minds. And when God grabs ahold of us, He will begin to take down those strongholds as we surrender to Him. But the Evil One will not let go of us that easily!

Just like a child who gets mad at his father for discipline, we are quick to blame God when we have created the problem. Could God have stopped us? Yes!   But like a father who doesn’t stop his child from a mistake, God lets us do things because He wants our love by choice, not compulsion. And yet, like any good father, He is right there when we’re willing to learn by love, rather than hard knocks.

Our journey, our walk on this Earth with Jesus will not be easy. His yoke is easy, and as we look to Him and Heaven, we will find that true. But in the day-to-day, we will find ourselves sometimes pushed to trust Him in the fiery furnace, to believe He will come through in the lions’ den, and to hold to His word, His morals, if you like, in the midst of deadly persecution.

Surrender to Him, look to Heaven, and walk in faith. He loves you, friend. Keep that in mind. And gird yourself with His armor and fight!

Vires et Honorem – 1 Corinthians 15:10

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A Heartfelt Mind-Meld: He trains my hands!

Blessed be the Lord, my rock, who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle;” – Psalm 144:1

I have a friend who is a military/war buff.  He signed up on 9/11, and he loves to serve his country, though he currently does so at home due to injury.  I remember how he talked of this verse in relation to actual physical war, but I want to bring your attention to a different war.

“For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places. Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm.” – Ephesians 6:12-13

My dear reader, we have a totally different war that we are fighting.  Daily, we, in the US (at least), are now bombarded with talk of ISIS, a group that is barbarically murdering people in the style once reported of the Crusaders, namely, “convert or die…horribly!”  We hear of markets collapsing.  We know more and more people out of work.  We watch prices rise, and we wonder how we will raise our children in this seemingly-desolate-wasteland of a world!

We wrestle not against flesh and blood, though.  And thanks be to God that He prepares my hands for battle!  For some of you, that will be a real battle, as your hands are prepared to handle many types of weapons to meet the foes on the field of battle.  For fellows like myself, my hands are failing me.  Daily, I am introduced to another limitation of my feeble hands.  And that’s ok!  God prepares my spiritual hands, and if, one day, my physical hands are worthless, my spiritual hands will still engage in battle!

But how does this relate to you?  You are engaged in a battle now for your soul and your children’s souls.  If you don’t have kids right now, your future children could be at stake.  I don’t purport to know the details of anyone’s future, but I know that I wish I’d thought about my children long ago when I chose the woman I was going to marry and have babies with.   So, let’s think about your future children, if you don’t have any now.

Post divorce, there are many great temptations.  Some are simple: “I want sex!”  Others are more complex: “If God was really in control, why did my world crumble like this?”  But within each of them is a threatening enemy ready to sink his sword into your belly and end your “woes,” as it were.  You may think it’s just sex, but then you find yourself embroiled in some sort of twisted scene because your ex got jealous and is taking it out on you, or perhaps you managed to father a child by that momentary tryst.  Maybe you go deep into asking whether God is in control, and rather than seek the truth, you jump into “God’s not in control!  Screw Him!” and you run into other sins, perhaps over-consumption of alcohol?  Perhaps you’re even raising your kids, but you don’t spend time with God and your example is anything but Godly?  At any turn, there lies an enemy to try and derail our life of service to Christ.

Recently, I partook in a charity ride that challenged me to temperatures below what I had done (approaching freezing), mileage I had done, but elevation double-and-half-again of my highest efforts.  In short, I was pushing myself way beyond my limitations.  As I took on the first half of the challenge, I began to realize I was woefully under-prepared for these grades.  I had intended to push myself on my stationary at home in the weeks leading up to the ride, but one thing led to another, and it didn’t happen!  On this course, I felt every failure to train!  In the end, I had to quit (my body literally refused to work) just 6.5 miles and 500 feet from the end of the course!

I missed the congratulatory cheering of crossing the finish line.  I missed the blessing of saying, “I did it!!!”  I missed out because I allowed myself to be swayed.  Granted, one could argue that I have three kiddos to manage.  Another could argue that I was insane trying to train for that with kids and a job and everything else.  Still, I know the truth; I failed to plan for the event, and it showed!

How often, in our own lives, do we take on a challenge without considering the cost?  How often do we tell ourselves sweet lies so we can continue down a course that will end in destruction?  How often are we trying to make it by on our strength when God has asked us to do something in His strength?

“If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple. Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple. For which one of you, when he wants to build a tower, does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if he has enough to complete it? Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation and is not able to finish, all who observe it begin to ridicule him, saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’ Or what king, when he sets out to meet another king in battle, will not first sit down and consider whether he is strong enough with ten thousand men to encounter the one coming against him with twenty thousand? Or else, while the other is still far away, he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace. So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions.” – Luke 14:26-33, emphasis mine

God was quite gracious to me on my ride.  A SAG vehicle (Support-And-Gear) picked me up because my legs were cramping from the quads, to the hamstrings, even the calves.  I ended up back at my hotel in a hot tub for two hours.   At the end of things, I spent a few days with specific knots in my quads and calves at the site of the most intense crampings.  It could have been far worse!

And in our own lives, I find God will often do that, providing a rescue in the midst of the battle we picked with no consideration of if we could win.  Still, there will be bruises, wounds, and possible losses if we run ahead without considering the Lord’s request!  We are called to not lean on our own understanding but to trust Him with everything!

Consider where you are running ahead of God, or where you are running under your own strength rather than His.  Let Him train your hands for the spiritual battle ahead of you; don’t turn to the right nor to the left, but stay straight on the narrow road, that He may be your guide and work wonderful miracles through your life!

Surrender!

Vires et Honorem – 1 Corinthians 15:10

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The Calling of Ezekiel

Years ago, I struggled with speaking the truth when I knew it was just going to be rejected.  Tonight, I struggled in the same way, and as I did, I heard the same thing I heard some 10 years ago, reminding me of this deep truth.

And he said to me, “Son of man, go to the house of Israel and speak with my words to them. For you are not sent to a people of foreign speech and a hard language, but to the house of Israel— not to many peoples of foreign speech and a hard language, whose words you cannot understand. Surely, if I sent you to such, they would listen to you. But the house of Israel will not be willing to listen to you, for they are not willing to listen to me: because all the house of Israel have a hard forehead and a stubborn heart.

Ezekiel 3:4-7


“Son of man, I have made you a watchman for the house of Israel. Whenever you hear a word from my mouth, you shall give them warning from me. If I say to the wicked, ‘You shall surely die,’ and you give him no warning, nor speak to warn the wicked from his wicked way, in order to save his life, that wicked person shall die for his iniquity, but his blood I will require at your hand. But if you warn the wicked, and he does not turn from his wickedness, or from his wicked way, he shall die for his iniquity, but you will have delivered your soul. Again, if a righteous person turns from his righteousness and commits injustice, and I lay a stumbling block before him, he shall die. Because you have not warned him, he shall die for his sin, and his righteous deeds that he has done shall not be remembered, but his blood I will require at your hand. But if you warn the righteous person not to sin, and he does not sin, he shall surely live, because he took warning, and you will have delivered your soul.”

Ezekiel 3:17-21

In case that is too long for you, here’s the summation: If God puts the truth on your heart, and you don’t speak, He WILL hold you accountable for not speaking.  Stand strong, those who reject you have already rejected Him, as long as you speak the truth in love!

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