‘The Big Fall’ into sin – again!
July 10, 2015
1 Corinthians, Anxiety, Forgiveness, Grace, Husbands, Wives God's Sovereignty, Heart Growth, Love, Marriage, Sanctification, Sin, Smokies, Time, Worry Leave a comment
God always has the better answer
June 30, 2015
Colossians, Devotional Bites, Holy Spirit, Prayer, Sanctification Daily Weighing, God's will, Holy Spirit, Jesus, Scales, Tempter, William Gurnall 1 Comment
“To weigh or not to weigh?”
I didn’t for 2 mornings. Freedom.
Morning came. And the tempter had whispered right before bed: “What’s your reward for any restraint in the evening if not for the potential measure of success the next morning?”
Wish I hadn’t listened. Result? Self-absorbed.
Confessed to God. Repented.
Looked up at “Christ ..in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” Col 2:3
Gave ‘it’ to God to tell me what to do.
The answer came via 16th century pastor William Gurnall. The Holy Spirit nailed me. Turns out I’m a liar! I had prayed this morning, “Your will be done in my life, Lord!”
And ignored that His will for my life is my sanctification, growing Jesus-like, not weighing X or Y.
God’s protective glasses enhance sight
June 28, 2015
Matthew 6, Persecution, Psalm 16 Eyesight, Gladness, Good and Evil, Health, Joy, King David, Light and Darkness, Peace, Pilgrims, Solar Eclipses, Worldview 2 Comments
I’ve never been tempted to glance or gaze at an eclipse. But were I to, I’d be sure to use protective glasses. As dangerous as a solar event might be, gazing at the world with the naked eye is far more so. Especially perilous is this unfiltered sight during our current upside-down times when the majority of institutions consider ‘good’ what God calls ‘evil’. (see Isaiah 5:20)
Yet often I unwittingly and quite stupidly look at the world around me without protective glasses.
I’m talking about spiritual glasses, God-glasses:
- Psalm 16:18 – 19 I keep my eyes always on the LORD. With him at my right hand, I will not be shaken. Therefore my heart is glad, and my whole being rejoices; my flesh also dwells secure.
What can we draw out of King David’s example and implicit counsel? Much!
Keeping our two eyes on God at all times:
- requires looking toward God no matter what is going on in the world.
- implies that ‘shaking’ or troubling instability is normal.
- enjoins agreement between the eyes to look primarily and firstly at God.
- assumes glasses are meant to assist BOTH eyes to see the same thing, equally well.
- indicates seeing God PLUS! Since there is no mention of stumbling or blockage of visibility, looking at God is a kind of looking through or by means of God, but safely and accurately to where one is going. It includes a correct understanding and truthful contextualization or framing of what is going on around. In the natural world, people use the sun for this purpose. Other than those special eclipse-viewing occasions, one doesn’t just gaze AT the Sun. We see BY means of the Sun.
- results in a glad heart, a rejoicing self, a peaceful body. Viewing the world THROUGH the filtering knowledge of God is mental and emotional sanity and physical health.
What alternatives are there for understanding all things, if you reject God-glasses? Without access to the Creator’s view of the world, one is left to take in and make sense of everything through unprotected eyes. Jesus diagnosed this condition and warned, “But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness..” Matt 6:23a
- resulting in harm
- resulting in poor vision and no sense of location OR direction
- resulting in fear and depression, due to unfiltered content
- resulting in confusion in moral issues
- resulting in suspicion of others, isolation during this life, and loneliness
- resulting in resignation because of ignorance of Holy Spirit power and other resources available to the spirit-born Christian
- resulting in cynicism when unable to glimpse reflections of God’s goodness and glory
- resulting in forever death with concomitant permanent isolation
So why doesn’t everyone take advantage of these glasses? Is it because it’s difficult or costly to secure a pair?
Not difficult for those empty or poor people, the ones who know their vision is lacking or harmed.
But if you think you don’t need any glasses to see fine….
And you’re more concerned by how you might look goofy in the world’s estimation wearing God-Glasses…..
At the least it’ll cost you your pride, your already-mapped out plan for your life and your reputation. At the most, it could cost you your pilgrim life.
Question: How badly do you want to see correctly? How badly do you want true and lasting health and happiness?
What makes you happy?
June 21, 2015
Contentment, Happiness, Jeremiah, Proverbs, the Heart, Trusting God, Wisdom Data, Declaration of Independence, Definition of Marriage, Gender, Improv, Measuring, Pursuit of Happiness, Racial Identity, Skills, Subtitles, Teaching French, TPRS Leave a comment
We all want to be happy. Even our birth announcement as a new sovereign nation enshrined the pursuit of happiness as one of the top 3 values of the former colonies.
But how do you define ‘happiness’?
If you look at our culture, that concept changes almost daily. It used to be ‘choose your own sport or extra-curricular activity in school’ to ‘choose our own profession or college or place to live’. Now it’s choosing your own definition of marriage, your own gender and even your own racial identity.
Since the definition of happiness seems to shift so frequently, are you and I even in a fixed position to judge what makes for lasting happiness? The Bible asserts in multiple places, “No! Don’t trust your heart or your mind.”
Jeremiah, spokesman for God said, “The heart is more deceitful than anything else and desperately sick-who can understand it?” (Jer 17:9)
Therefore, in light of that truth,it makes good sense that the Book of Proverbs counsels us NOT to: “…lean on our own understanding” Prov 3:5 Rather we are to…“Trust in the Lord (not us)..”
Here’s where God recently has shown me the truth of His Word.
For years I have taught French using a methodology called TPRS Here’s a link to a useful explanation.
I have worked on the skills which are more akin to improvisational theater than anything I’ve experienced. Workshops, personal coaching, 7 national conferences, teaching blogs have all helped to train me to improve my teaching.
But early on, I absorbed ‘being a skilled TPRS teacher’ as a tool for measuring my worth. I saw the professionals who could ‘do TPRS’ with such ease, enjoyment and results (aka – engaged students who participated without hesitation).
As a result, I instinctively started judging my school day as a ‘good day’ if the kids responded with their creative energy and focused attention. And it was a ‘bad day’ if I didn’t feel them eating out of my hand, so to speak. With that much self-imposed pressure, driving to school would cause me to get anxious and nervous. My daily question quickly grew to be: Would I be able to ‘pull it off’ again? My faithful husband prayed daily for me.
Yet, I never questioned the wisdom of this method of self-justification. And my happiness continued to wax and wane according to my ‘success’ with this skill. And I measured success by my students’ responses to my teaching each day. But then I realized something about my on-going ‘morning mood’ and connected it to the following truths from God’s Word.
Psalm 1a, 3a – “Happy is the man…..whose delight is in the Law of the Lord and on His law he meditates day and night”
Psalm 41:1 – “Happy is the man who considers the weak/powerless/poor…..“
What a different way to look at happiness! So here is what occurred to prompt me to SEE these verses in a new light.
In the couple of months between spring break and the end of the school year, I began to notice that I actually FELT happy during my drive to school each day. That sense of peaceful contentment had kind of snuck up on me. As I began to analyze the WHY, I saw that I was no longer measuring my day, my worth as a teacher by how well I taught my French classes. In other words, I had stopped evaluating my skills and my students’ response to how I taught. That was part of it, for sure. More significant was the impact that change of focus had on my unconscious thoughts while commuting.
Bu there was another change. I don’t know when it started, but sometime I consciously decided NOT to check email or any social media before I arrived at school. That meant from the time I arose I either listened to podcast sermons while feeding the cats, exercising, and driving to school or I was reading my Bible over breakfast. I was feeding, meditating on Truth. And what I took in not only made me feel happy; it also caused me to be more in tune with my colleagues and students at work. Many around us often feel weak, powerless and poor. It’s a feature of this world broken by sin that everyone is battered and suffers. Hence, souls are more fragile than we realize.
Freed from the compulsion to ‘prove’ myself each day, I have apparently allowed myself actually to enjoy teaching students and interacting with my colleagues. Schooldays turn out NOT to be all about me and how well I teach. I’ve stopped using my classes to measure my skills.
I do thank my good Father for this wiser and healthier perspective. Furthermore, He has given me a contract to teach again in August. And to top it off, this summer doesn’t quite feel like a temporary pass from the galleys, but a continuation of a life learning to put into practice George Mueller’s advice to all Christians. That is – to make oneself happy in the Lord first thing in the morning. Link here about George Mueller.
Now if I can only transfer THAT revelation to other areas of my life where I’m still imprisoned by the need to calculate how well I am ‘doing’!
Question: What’s an area of your life where you have been ‘sprung’ from one of your former SUBTITLES and the burden of maintaining it?
Thanking God for a sleepless night
June 7, 2015
Fear, Future Grace, Gifts, Matthew, Prayer, Promises, Romans, Thanksgiving, Worry Anxiety, God's Sovereignty, Grace, Karma, Lactose-intolerant, Prayer, rest, Sleep 6 Comments
Romans 8:28: And we know that God works all things together for the good of those who love Him, that is for the good of those who are called according to His divine plan.
Like many of you, I don’t take a solid night’s sleep for granted. Each morning when I arise after a night with only ONE visit to the bathroom, I consider that God has given me a gift.
But Monday night last week included 3 interruptions due to foot and leg cramps. As a result, I arose the next morning knowing I was going to be drawing on God’s energy for my commute to school. (I drive 50 minutes each way by interstate).
But two events occurred as a result of that sleepless night that have caused me to thank God FOR it.
I’ve been puzzling over how NOT to be anxious after praying for something I want to happen. Here’s the situation. My mother worried a lot about family when they travelled. Yes, she was a Christian, but old patterns of thought linger. I absorbed her angst and it has fed these fears even to this day. Last weekend, one son and his wife had been driving back from a late-night wedding and I had prayed for their safe arrival all day long. Even though I asked God to protect them, I still struggled with how to be free from anxiety after praying.
During my sleepless night when I was awake from 12:30 to 3:30 am lying in bed thinking about EVERYTHING, God brought Romans 8:28 to mind as the remedy for anxiety and fear once you’ve prayed.
Here’s how my mind processed this promise of future grace. Yes, we are to pray for situations. Then we are to let them go and trust God when He vows emphatically to work ALL circumstances (even if the ‘worst’ outcome happens that I’m praying against) together for the good of …….
In the darkness of the night, God shone light on His Word and gave me relief. It’s like He sprung me from my self-imposed prison cell of fear. Yes, I want my kids to be safe and I will pray for that. But I will let go and rely on God’s better promise to guide and direct even the ‘bad’ stuff for the good of my loved ones and for His glory.
That in itself was worth the sleepless night.
But then God answered another prayer of mine. I’ve been having stomach problems and googling remedies for feeling bloated and nauseous each day. Here’s how God took care of that! The evening after my sleepless night, after I had arrived safely home but foggy with fatigue, I was fixing Mike’s and my yogurt mixtures for the next day. I put certain colon-friendly fruit in his and certain low-fiber fruit in mine. Because I was ‘punchy’ with fatigue, I mistakenly switched the yogurts, leaving mine in the frig and putting his in my lunch box for the next day.
At 10 am the following morning when I opened up my snack, I spotted the ‘wrong’ Greek yogurt mixture. Besides feeling bad for Mike, I was bummed that I had brought the high-fiber version. I decided to put it back in our teachers’ frig and rummage for a Zone bar I could eat instead. Not consuming that ‘dairy’ – well, you guessed it, eliminated my stomach problem for the day. Bingo! All of a sudden it hit me that I might be dairy-intolerant. Sure enough, a few days without the yogurt confirmed my hypothesis.
Here’s the remarkable take away, though. And this is HUGE for me. It seems that God is sovereign even over OUR mistakes. Do you know how freeing that is? Even when you mess up, God works all things for your good (if you are His son or daughter by the new birth). Yes, we want to do what’s right, but we don’t live by karma. We live by grace and in a Kingdom ruled by a loving and good God who has ALL the power and ALL the wisdom and is ALL perfect and righteous.
So I’m saying to you and to me – give up the ball and chain of striving for perfectionism. We are imperfect creations. We are going to make many mistakes. But mistakes are not sovereign. God is. We don’t have to carry the burden of being good, of being right. Jesus beckons us to trust Him and give up that yoke.
Matt 11:28 – Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.
If we’re not living by faith, how are we actually going through life?
May 31, 2015
Faith, Galatians, Righteousness, the Law Biblical Faith, Charlie Brown and Lucy, Chuck Colson, Galatians, Law, Nancy Pearcey, Strength, Walking by Faith 2 Comments
Now it is evident that no one shall be justified before God by the law, for “The righteous shall live by faith.” – Galatians 3:11
I’ve heard that truth for years but it still puzzles me. It seems to run off the tongue of Christians like butter spilling off of hot pancakes. Just what does God mean, day to day, by living by the law v. living by faith?
Here are my specific questions:
- Who are the righteous?
- What makes them righteous?
- Am I righteous? If not, how do I become righteous?
- What does ‘to live’ mean?
- What does the preposition ‘by’ mean and look like?
- What is included in faith?
- Where do we get that faith?
- Faith in what, in whom?
- How much faith do we need to ‘live’?
I’m not going to take time in this reflection to walk through, step by step, what ‘righteousness’ as defined by God encompasses. I want to focus, instead, on what a life lived ‘by faith’ looks like, practically.
So ask someone else or search for yourself how the following facts are actually true. But in a nutshell Galatians 3:11 can be paraphrased like this:
When God declares that a man, woman, boy or girl is legally ‘justified or righteous’ that person is immediately enabled to live moment by moment – ‘ek pistis’ (by faith). Of course something possible to do doesn’t mean we won’t be needing instruction and lots of practice.
The first step in grasping the concept of this new ability is to understand what that preposition ek/by actually means: The list below is copied word for word from the Blue Letter Bible.com Link here
By can mean:
- Out of/from – a place of divine power
- Proceeding from
- From abiding with God
- From the roots of
- Utterly from
- Alive after having been dead
- In a supernatural sense
- From the divine (new) nature
- Fueled by the new nature and disposition derived from one’s (new) origin
- As having one’s prototype in God and being wrought in the soul by His power
- Out of the material of_________(what ever follows the Greek word ‘ek )
- From the power on which any one depends, by which he is prompted and governed, whose character he reflects
- From the supply out of which a thing is taken
- Of the whole which anything is a part
If you were to draw a Venn Diagram, a circle that represents the entire life of a man declared righteous by God, that circle (his new life henceforth) would be placed inside the larger circle called Biblical Faith in God.
Our follow-up question should be: Where do we get that faith? Do we have to gin it up ourselves?
Thankfully, no! This faith is a gift from God, entirely. It’s alien to us before we are brought to new life spiritually. Biblical faith is given only to those God graciously chose before He created the heavens and the earth.
And once He has implanted that divine, supernatural faith in us, it is ours forever.
So, how now shall we live? Chuck Colson and Nancy Pearcey wrote a book with this title Link here
But if we take the plain text of the Apostle Paul in his letter to the Galatian church, we are to live from what I picture as the King’s Royal Cupboard of Faith.
As newly adopted sons and daughters of the King, we are given a set of keys to this cupboard that will never run out of spiritual grace for all our needs.
Are you scared? Go to the cupboard and help yourself to God’s strength that is meant specifically for us to use – Psalm 37:39
- “But the salvation of the righteous is from the LORD; He is their strength in time of trouble.”
Are you hard pressed to return kindness for your officemate’s meanness to you? Go to the cupboard and fetch divine might to respond with undeserved grace – Matthew 6:11-12
- “Our Father….give us this day our daily bread (sustenance so that we can then)….as we forgive others”
Are you beset by worry? Go to the cupboard, by prayer, and fill up on God’s strength to hand over each specific circumstance that is weighing you down? – Psalm 112:7
- They will have no fear of bad news; their hearts are steadfast, trusting in the LORD.
Are you struggling feeling enslaved to an ingrained habit of overeating/ sarcastic putdowns/ complaining/ impulse purchases using Amazon’s one click shopping/ addiction to social media / speeding / procrastination…….: Go to the King’s cupboard of faith and draw on strength to exercise self-control – Galatians 5:22-23
- But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.
This is what it means, I think, for the declared righteous (the born-again Biblical Christians) to live by faith.
The alternative is to live the ‘old way’, guided by self-centered feelings/desires/habits/patterns. And we all know the genius of THAT!
Make it obvious, Lord
May 24, 2015
Acts 14, Prayer, Psalm 5 God's guidance, Good News, Joni Eareckson Tada, Paul, Prayer, Righteous Path, Smoky Mountains, Spiritual Forces of Evil, Straight Path Leave a comment
Psalm 5:9 – Lead me, Lord, in your righteousness
because of my enemies—
make your way straight, before me.
How kind of God to give us the specific words to pray for obvious, ‘in-your-face’ guidance and direction.
If you’re anything like me, you don’t want to have to GUESS what God wants you to do! Therefore, it is doubly good news that our Heavenly Father tells us to pray for a straight path that is unmistakable. Does that mean the path will be easy? or provide us with a constant view of the destination? Not necessarily. Come with me and take a moment to think about what a ‘straight path’ implies:
- In the photo above, can we see any obvious stopping point or terminus? No. But we do see enough of the path to walk on for probably 5 more minutes. From past experience, God gives just enough light for the next step. I certainly WANT more, but I’m learning that this is God’s way and He is giving me practice in trusting Him.
- A straight path is not necessarily a level path. Sometimes the way ahead is UPHILL. We live in the Smoky Mountains of Western North Carolina. In our cove, the incline is about 13 % on average. So when we walk DOWN the half mile to get the newspaper, we have to walk back UP. It’s hard. And it doesn’t FEEL like it has gotten any easier in the 2 years we have lived here. My point is that even straight paths are difficult. Somehow knowing that ‘hard is normal’ make it easier to accept
To amplify this ‘Life is difficult by design’ truth, I’ll share with you a verse that Joni Eareckson Tada spoke about this week on her radio broadcast Link to the radio page of her website. She told the story of Paul undergoing a sudden furious stoning that was meant to kill him. Paul’s own analysis of this murderous attack was that this was God’s training. So Paul explicitly used it in his instruction of new believers:
- Acts 14:21-22 – after being stoned and left for dead (acute suffering) Paul taught the following, with Barnabas accompanying Him – “They preached the gospel in that city (Derbe) and won a large number of disciples. Then they returned to Lystra, Iconium and Antioch, strengthening the disciples and encouraging them to remain true to the faith. “We must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God,” they said.
One final thought about God’s provision of the righteous path, the God-glorifying path: He will show us how to live, where to go, what posture or lifestyle to adopt in the face of enemies. That we will live among enemies is a given! What sort of enemies are these?
As many wise Christians have counseled, we should not be collecting enemies needlessly because we are jerks! But there WILL be enemies set on our destruction if we are showing our true colors as redeemed, forgiven, beloved children of the King. As long as we are sons and daughters who fearlessly, with joy, share news of available freedom from guilt and adoption as a sibling of Jesus we will be opposed. Satan and his spiritual forces of darkness DON’T consider what we herald as good news. And they sow lies as often as they can, through whatever means they can, both IN the church and in secular society.

















Readers’ Comments