Saturday, January 19, 2013

Prayer Changes things


Pray – talk to your Father.
Pray - and work for the good.
Pray – You’ll find that it profits.
Pray – You’ll be understood.

If we talk to our maker we’ll find comfort there,
and strength and resilience, as those burdens we bear.
When corruption engulfs us, and the evils wage war,
the Father who hears us will even the score.

Work and pray for God’s people.
God will work by your side.
He will build up your muscles and lengthen your stride.
He will multiply effort.
He will magnify strength.
He’ll make greater your forces, and enable restraint.

If we pray, we will act.  If we trust our Father to help us, we won’t be afraid to act.  Prayer changes things – not through the words we say, but through our connection with the only one who can change things. 

Thank you Father.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

God's Fire and Gentleness


Do you know much about Elijah – God’s prophet?  He was the one who would show Israel God’s displeasure about their idol worship.  Elijah told the king of Israel at that time, Ahab, that there would be a drought until God decided to end it.  Elijah ran away from Ahab then and God provided for him. 

After three years God called Elijah to go to Ahab and show him God’s power.  He planned to help the Children of Israel return to the worship of the one true God.

God’s instructions were that Ahab was to bring the prophets of Baal and Ashtheroth to Mount Carmel. This is where it gets exciting.  Elijah had the Israelites get two bulls and let Baal’s prophets choose the one they wanted, cut it into pieces and put it on an alter with wood, ready for a sacrifice.  But he said not to set fire to it. Elijah would do the same to the other bull.

He told the prophets of Baal to call upon their god to produce the fire. Elijah said he would call upon his God to do the same thing.  And the god that answered would prove he was the true God.

The prophets of Baal called out to him. But there was no response.  This went on all day.  They cut themselves, danced and cried out – but no response.

Then Elijah repaired the altar of the Lord, and dug a trench around it, cut the bull into pieces and laid it on the wood. Then he had the people fill four large jars with water and pour it on the bull and on the wood three different times. 

Elijah stepped forward and prayed: “Lord, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Israel, let it be known today that you are God in Israel and that I am your servant and have done all these things at your command.   Answer me, Lord, answer me, so these people will know that you, Lord, are God, and that you are turning their hearts back again.”

Then the fire of the Lord fell and burned up the sacrifice, the wood, the stones and the soil, and also licked up the water in the trench.  Can you just picture that? 

The true God had spoken. 

Elijah climbed to the top of the mountain and prayed.  When Elijah’s servant saw a cloud as small as a man’s hand rising from the sea, Elijah sent him to tell Ahab to hitch up his chariot and go down before the rain stopped him. 

The Bible says, “Meanwhile, the sky grew black with clouds, the wind rose, a heavy rain started falling and Ahab rode off to Jezreel.  The power of the Lord came on Elijah and, tucking his cloak into his belt, he ran ahead of Ahab all the way to Jezreel.” 

Quite a guy huh? 

Well, he was good at running - and when Jezebel found that Elijah had had all her prophets killed, she threatened to kill him.  He was afraid and ran for his life again.

Do you wonder how many times God had to prove His strength and power and His care before Elijah stopped running?

God told Elijah that he would provide, and He did.  God told Elijah that He would cause a drought, and He did.  God told Elijah that He would send the rain, and He did - but Elijah still ran away from Jezebel.

Are we any different from this man?   Elijah was afraid of Ahab and spent a good deal of time worrying about whether Ahab and Jezebel would hunt him down and kill him even after God showed His care for Elijah and his power. 

How many times have we basked in God’s care and provision and still worried about tomorrow?  Is that any different?
 
When we think about God’s power and His care for His people, don’t you think we should give up worrying? 

Matthew 6:25-34
“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they?...


1 Peter 5: 6-7 
Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: Casting all your care upon him; for He careth for you.

I love that last part – ”casting all your care upon him; for He careth for you.”

I know that it’s not always easy to give Him all of our cares, but when we look back on our lives and see the times He has provided for us, the times that His power has conquered the evil in our lives, and the times He has carried us, we will be able to stop worrying about what is around the corner of this day because He cares for you!

His arms are strong enough.
They can hold you up when you weaken.
They will carry you when your strength is gone.

But He’s so gentle that you may not even know when it’s His strength that takes over.  You’ll just feel the burden less as life goes on.
You’ll be able to smile a little when you greet tomorrow’s dawn.   

As we go along this path of life, we may learn to recognize His strength in our trials.  We may learn to recognize His touch and see His footprints as He carries us.  Sometimes it’s just an “I wonder if that was God?” moment, or sometimes we know with all of our heart that it was His touch.

He carried Elijah; He proved His strength and power.

He’ll carry us.

Friday, January 4, 2013

It's a New Year


Another Christmas has come and gone

Let us talk of what we’ve seen. 

The angels sang of Jesus birth
announcing peace to all the earth.

The shepherd bowed then at the sight.
They found the child that wondrous night.

He came to earth as Mary’s son, the promised, long awaited one.

We hear of Jesus wondrous birth 
and sing of glorious peace on earth.
We praise the baby in the hay, and pause to celebrate the day 

and then we pack it all away

 

The trees and lights and treasures fair, 
we put the crèche with Jesus there.
For one more year we put away the trappings of that special day.

But

If we take God from His manger bed and see the holy life He led
and watch the Son of God and see Him die upon that cursed tree.

Christmas might be just the start
of Jesus living in your heart.


This is the last poem in the book, "These My Christmas Dreams." It’s the very last page – it’s the end.  Have you come to the end of Christmas?  Should Christmas have an end?  As we put our decorations away, as you get things back to normal, try to think of what normal should really be.

Should we leave the decorations out all year?  I’m tempted to do that. 

Should we try to duplicate that Christmas feeling?  Sometimes we can have the joy of Christmas at other times of the year. 

Should Christ have a more prominent place in our day-to-day lives?  Will He?

Today I sat by the wood stove and thought about the visits with our family – We have a lot of fun with silly gifts like the kazoos we gave all the grandkids, and the package of 4 mousetraps that Ron received in his stocking.  But the best gifts were the love and acceptance from friends and family. 

But now the house was quiet and I had time to think deeply.

I thought about the gift that God has given us – all of us.  A savior was born 2000 years ago.  God’s gift of salvation came wrapped as a tiny baby.  I wondered just how I would use what I’d been given this Christmas.  What would this life of mine involve now – or better yet, who that life would involve now. 

There’s another Christmas gift that God promised us. John 10:10 says, "I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly." 

Abundant Life - what does that gift look like?  The dictionary defines abundant as:  marked by great plenty, ample, or bounteous. 

Jesus’ Christmas gift to us is abundant Life.  Would that be “a great deal of  money, many years on earth, lots of friends, excellent eyesight, or perfect health?” 

I think we’ll find that it’s really none of those things.  

You probably know about Joni Erickson Tada, who was injured when she was 17 in a swimming accident that left her a quadriplegic for life.  She had asked Jesus how she could have a closer walk with Him and He showed her.  She surrendered her will to God, and for the past 30 years, Joni has had a world-wide ministry helping other quadriplegics, and she’s ministered to those of us with sound bodies as well.  I love listening to her sing.  I love listening to her upbeat way of looking at life.  God has blessed her ministry and her life – with abundance.

I have some friends who have lived a long life.  They are in their 90s and above.  Is that an abundant life – plenty of years?  It is a certainly abundant in time, but compared to eternity – maybe not.

What about money?  Do you think that those with a bounty of things and money automatically have an abundant life?  Some people spend way to much time thinking about how rich other folks are and envying them.  All I have to do is think about my warm bed and dry place to live and food to eat – and I definitely see abundance – but is that what Jesus meant?

Let’s look at another person – we sing the song, "Blessed Assurance" written by Fannie Crosby.  The music was written by Phoebe Knapp.  Fannie was blind and very poor.  Phoebe was rich but they were apparently good friends.

Fanny was visiting her friend Phoebe, who played a new melody she had just composed. "What do you think the tune says?" she asked.
"Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine", answered Fanny Crosby – and it was.

Phoebe’s life was abundant, not because of her wealth, but because she used her talent to minister to all of us with that beautiful music.

Fannie’s life was abundant, even though she had neither wealth nor sight.

One of the verses in this song says, “Perfect submission, perfect delight, visions of rapture now burst on my sight.” She who had no sight could yet see the visions of rapture in her imagination.  And she gave us the words.

What makes an abundant life, then? Is it Jesus himself? He came to bring us abundant life, but sometimes we think in terms of the material or the physical, but it’s our spiritual life that becomes abundant with Jesus running things.  Our spiritual life, our prayer life, our minds and hearts belong to God if we believe on Him.  They are the most important parts of living.

I pray that this year I will use well His gift of abundant life. 

Tomorrow, when I start to “undecorate” my house, I will not be putting Jesus away for another year.  He will not be living in a box in the attic; he will be living in my heart.


I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.
(Galatians 2:20)

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Christmas Peace


If you've read "These My Christmas Dreams" you'll recognize this, but I felt it was so appropriate this year, so I'm putting it in the blog - hope you don't mind the reprint.




Was there peace in Bethlehem 2000 years ago?
When the Christ, the holy Son of God, was born – did stillness flow?

Were the streets of Bethlehem peaceful and serene,
with quiet steps and whispered words -
a special Christmas scene?

People will tell you there was no peace in the city there -
with soldiers marching,
merchants selling,
beggars pleading,
voices yelling – no peace found anywhere.

But deep in my heart, I picture instead
peace for the Child
in his rough manger bed.

I believe that 

In the stable God harbored our Savior with peace.
He protected and watched Him that night

In the sheepfold, He proclaimed to the shepherds his peace,
As Bethlehem’s sky burned with light

In her heart, I believe, God gave Mary his peace,
though trials surrounded Christ’s birth

And I believe that He came to bless us with the peace
that transcends what we see here on earth.


Our world sounds a little like the town of Bethlehem when Christ was born, with soldiers marching, merchants selling, beggars pleading, voices yelling – no peace found anywhere.  We have politics and wars and unrest in the world.  Considering the way the world celebrates the Christmas season our lives get busier and busier.  We shop and cook and entertain, we plan and worry about the cost and then we sometimes wonder where the peace can be in all of this.

Do you think that possibly we’re looking in the wrong places?  Do you think that possibly we’re expecting the wrong type of peace?  Christ talked of HIS peace.

He said, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give you, I do not give you as the world gives.  Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”

John 14:27

It would sometimes be so nice to shut out the world, to be unable to hear the clamor and the noise.  Sometimes we can do that for a time, but the world continues to intrude.  Where can we go to get away from the feelings of unrest – only to God. 

As I sit by my woodstove on a cold, wintry night I see snow covering the windows.  The wind is howling and whipping the trees.  It rattles the fire, and sparks fly up in the stove.  All around me a white blizzard whirls, just like the snow globe you had as a child.  But with this blizzard comes a small picture of the peace Christ gives.  I’m warm and comfortable in front of my stove.  It warms my bones.  It warms my heart.  It’s beautiful to see and it continues in spite of the wild world outside.  God’s peace is a peace in the midst of the storm.  It’s not dependent on what’s going on outside my heart. 

In Luke 24, the writer tells us about the time when Jesus was sleeping in the boat when the storm came up.  The disciples were frightened – they thought they were going to drown.  They woke him and He calmed the storm. God was in charge of the storm.  He’s in charge of the storms in your life, too.  Go to Him.  Ask his help.  He’ll calm your heart if you accept his peace. 

 “ I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace.  In this world you will have trouble, but take heart!  I have overcome the world.”

John 16:33

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Ministry


I was speaking at one of the assisted living facilities in town the other day.  We were talking about paths and roads.  

The faces on those lovely people were a study in what happens when God touches lives.  Some were radiant with joy – some tender and caring – some interested and thinking deeply; but almost every one of them reflected God’s work in the lives of His children.
   
As we read verses from the Bible that were sometimes familiar, I saw lips moving with a remembered verse – always with such a strength of understanding that it made tears come to my eyes. 

Heads nodded when the Word told of God’s direction and care.  When asked to recite along with the reading of the 23rd Psalm, almost every one of these beautiful people knew every single word – in the King James Version.  (It’s my choice for memorization as well.)

When we sang beautiful hymns of the faith, many of them didn’t even need to look at the words – they knew them.  They knew them because they had lived them.  They knew that the straight paths, the narrow paths, the paths lightened by God’s righteousness, were the paths that they had traveled over many years. 

The smiles on their faces as we talked about Jesus being the only path, the only way to the Father - to our eternal home, showed me that they knew everything I’d been talking about.  But the smiles and nods also told me that they appreciated being reminded.

A ministry?  Oh yes!  But they were ministering to me.  These beautiful faces drew me closer to the one who had sustained them for years.  These friends helped me to see that the closer you get to “home,” the more you’re aware of what home really means.
Beautiful!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Mining Silver


I was thinking about silver the other day when I saw the beautiful silver edge on the clouds.  God’s creation captures my imagination more than anything else.  So I decided it would be fun to talk about silver, and what the Bible has to say about it.

Through the ages silver has been used for many things including coins, jewelry, mirrors and medicine and electronics.  Silver is a bit pricy these days – not as costly as gold, but if you own a bunch of silver you’ve made a good investment. 

There are references to silver in the Bible - from Genesis through Revelation.  Genesis starts out by telling us that Abram had it in abundance and that people were using silver as money, even when Joseph was in Egypt. See Genesis 42:25.

And later silver was used in the tabernacle and in the temple. 

Silver when used generously is something good and when it is used to glorify God it pleases Him.  But as costly and beautiful as silver is, David tells us that God’s laws (instructions) are more precious than silver and gold.  He says, “The law from your mouth (God) is more precious to me than thousands of pieces of silver and gold.” Psalm 119:72

And Godly wisdom, we are told, is more profitable than silver.  Solomon, the wisest King wrote in Proverbs 3:13-14 

Blessed are those who find wisdom, those who gain understanding, for she (WISDOM) is more profitable than silver and yields better returns than gold.

Silver, can be used in an evil way.  The Bible says that the love of money is the root of all evil.  When we use silver in a way that does not please God it can become tarnished – maybe you remember polishing the silverware when you were young.  There was that black stuff that came off on the polishing cloth.  Our lives can become tarnished and unlovely, but with the work of the Holy Spirit they can be made as bright as a freshly polished silver spoon.

1 John 1:7 tells us,But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin.”
 An interesting way that the Bible used Silver is by comparing the person who is lost with a missing silver coin in Luke 15.  

"Suppose a woman has ten silver coins and loses one.  Doesn't she light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it?  And when she finds it, she calls her friends and neighbors together and sys, "Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin.'  In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents."

What a touching view of our God – comparing himself to a women who sweeps her house and searches diligently to find her lost coin.  God searches for us and then there is rejoicing in heaven when we repent.

The Bible has a lot to say about silver, about how we use it, God warns us about its misuse.  He compares it with wisdom and his law, and he uses it as a symbol of a lost sinner.

I wonder if God thinks it’s as beautiful as we do?  Some of the most beautiful silver is found in things that God made for our enjoyment. 

The dew on the flowers shines like silver in the morning light. 

When you look at the silvery moon, do you see God’s hand molding it? 

When you see the silver lining on a cloud, do you think of Christ’s coming return - on the clouds – I do.

And some of the most beautiful silver I see is on the heads of the people I see around me.  Silver in a person’s hair is a sign of wisdom and remember that God knows the count of the hairs on the heads of his people. 

Proverbs 16:31 tell us that, “Gray hair is a crown of splendor; it is attained in the way of righteousness.”

Proverbs 20:29 says that, “The glory of young men is their strength, and gray hair the splendor of the old.

Here’s a little poem I wrote for my friends with silver hair. 


Silver - God’s handiwork!  God’s gifts to us.

The daylight fades as the clock unwinds
and the moon paints the night with a silvery hue. 
Then the sun awakes
and dips the leaves
of flowers and trees with silvery dew.

Silver silhouettes the cottony clouds,
as it streaks through the sky, cutting heaven in two,
and you hold your breath,
as you watch and learn
that the silver shows God’s love for you.

Then you pass by a mirror and you smile hello,
the face in the silver-backed mirror smiles too.  
It shows the years
and the silvery hair,
a crown of respect God has given to you.

In God’s world, in His children, the moon and the dew,
the silver God mines shows He cares about you.
It’s a blessing, a wonder, and a gift from God’s hand
like a goblet of silver or a bright wedding band.
God gives to His children extravagantly,
these gifts full of love, abundant and free.

Diane Gruchow October 2012


Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Prayer


Years ago we had an elder in our church that, whenever he began a prayer, would say, “Let us be in an attitude of prayer.” 

I was thinking about prayer the other day and wondered what that elder was thinking of when he said it - what would an attitude of prayer look like? 

Let’s see – maybe you would be on your knees, with your head bowed and your hands clasped together.

Or would you standing with your hands raised up to heaven?

Would an attitude of prayer demand that your eyes be closed?

Or maybe it doesn’t matter.  An attitude of prayer may only encompass what is in your heart and mind as you pray. 

There isn’t a formula for prayer – prayer is talking to our Father, the God of the universe.  There’s not “one” special way to pray, but let’s discuss some of the attitudes that we should have as we pray.

Think about the way a toddler acts when her daddy comes home from work.  The bright smile on her face shines as she runs to her father with arms raised to be picked up and hugged.  Think of her words, “Daddy, Daddy!” and the excitement and love they convey.   

Do we get that excited to be in the presence of our heavenly Father?  Do we look forward to being with Him in prayer?  Do our faces shine as He reveals Himself through His word and the works of His hands?  I know that when I look up toward those mountains, and the bright blue sky, I do get excited to think about the awesome God who created it all.  And when I’m reading His word and listening to the prayers of David, and the love that was displayed when Jesus healed the blind man and spoke to the woman at the well, I do get excited about how real God is to meI hope my face shines as I praise for the King of the universe.  Is my attitude one of gratefulness and praise?

The Bible says in 1 Chronicles 16:8 – 9   

Give praise to the LORD, proclaim his name; make known among the nations what he has done.  Sing to him, sing praise to him; tell of all his wonderful acts – would that attitude be adoration and gratefulness?

Of course, we aren’t always able to run to our father with a bright smile and outstretched arms.  There are times when our attitude of prayer is more sober.  There are times when we come to our Father looking for forgiveness, when we know we have let Him down, and our sins have become a wedge between our Father and ourselves.  It’s always important to clear the air, so to speak, to come to God in an attitude of repentance and humility, and ask His forgiveness.

In the Lord’s Prayer we read – Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us. Would that attitude be repentance?

Or Isaiah 30:15 tells us - This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says: “In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength. . .   Would that attitude be humility?

There are times when in prayer we ask God what His will is in a particular situation. That’s where His word is so important.  We talk to God, and He talks to us through the Bible – His word.  

But, what is our attitude as we listen to His word?  Is it one of openness and obedience, or do we come with preconceived ideas about what we want to do, and are we just looking for God to condone something that may not be the best for us or may even be against his will, or do we come with the will to be obedient to what we find in His word. 

Many times we are asking for healing or help for ourselves or our loved ones.  If God didn’t care about our health or happiness, Jesus would not have healed the sick.  His ministry on earth would have been entirely different, but He does.  God does heal.  He does intervene and help.  The Bible talks a lot about praying for people.  We have an obligation to pray for those who need God’s help.

Ephesians 6:18 tells us in part.  “. . . always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people.”

But there is more to this attitude of prayer.  .  . A final word would be “yielding.”  God does tell us to ask.  So what should be our attitude in the asking?  Jesus prayed to His father, before He was crucified.  He asked God to take away the cup of suffering He was to endure.  But He ended with “Not my will, but Thine be done.”  That should always be our attitude in prayers of request. 

In the Lord’s prayer, we read.  Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.

I believe that some people pray with the attitude that says, “God promised that He would answer my prayer, so He HAS to do what I ask.”  That is not so.  God is God.  He is in control.  We are not.  He is a loving Father though, who will grant a request that is in accordance with His will, and is best for His children.  I think of my own children and how many times I said, “No” or “Not yet” because it was best for them.  Would God do less? 

In I John it says, “This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.”  ASKING ACCORDING TO HIS WILL = YIELDING!

Yielding, what a great attitude to have when praying to the almighty God.

So we’ve talked about Praising in gratitude, Repenting in humility, Asking with openness and obedience and Yielding.    PRAY.  This is NOT a formula.  We don’t have to tick off the list of attitudes we must have.  We just need to remember who it is we’re talking to, and we need to remember who we are.  We’re talking to the almighty creator of the universe, but who is also our loving, caring, Father. 

And us – well, we’re sinful, that’s for sure, but since Christ died for our sins, we also have access to the Father.  We are His adopted children, and He listens to our prayers.

We are all so different and at different places in our walk with Him.  So, some of us really need to recognize His power and strength as the Creator and Sustainer of the world, to see His strong arm in events when we pray.  But some of us have a deep need to remember the tender side of God – the side that holds us and cares deeply for each one of us.

You are the one talking to God, be yourself, and learn to know him and lean on him.

PRAY