Script

Transcendence captivates: a life without legacy ceases the moment one draws his or her last breath.  Oral tradition transports knowledge throughout generations, but, often, the realm of influence endures to one family or one culture.  Beauty dwells in antiquated items that pass the tumultuous trials of time, demonstrating the unity of mankind to the eyes of individuals zealous to solicit the mysteries of the past.

Writing surpasses the laws of time and space through imbibing the memoir of mankind that spills throughout generations; characters and themes from ancient literature swallow one’s conscious and emit the universality of the human condition.  The concept of writing overwhelms me—the beauty and dignity of literature fascinate me.  Authors like Donte, Milton, Shakespeare, Austen, Steinbeck, and Poe communicate incommunicable expressions through their writing and leave generations drowning in awe over their masterpieces.

I write because I desire future generations to understand what it was like to live in the beginning of the twenty-first century and to realize that, though times and places drastically alter, God’s unity graces all people; mankind’s ability to relate to passages of literature written thousands of years ago proves that, despite circumstantial differences, man remains unaltered.  In 2017, at the age of 95, my great-grandmother passed away and left her Bible and her travel journal to my family.  While her lifetime dramatically differs from my own, I recognized so much of today’s ideas within her writings from the 1940s.  Though I knew her little in her life, I learned much from her death.  Her notes act as interlocutors between the past and the present; through her words, I examine the ripple of changes within three generations.

When I perish, I hope people to learn things I would never speak.  When people delve into my personal notes, I want them to understand how I had questions as they do and to realize I felt as they felt, and, most importantly, I want people to examine the details of how Christ restored in my life.

Drops of Reflection

I scarcely remember the woman I was at the beginning of the previous year.  Physically, not much has changed, yet a different reflection emerges from the mirror.

Days approaching the new year pleads for a sort of self-examination.  There is something enthralling about conclusions that render the mind searching for answers to questions I didn’t realize I had.  For example, what has changed?  What was I doing last year at this time?  What were the things I dwelled upon?  What did life feel like during preceding times?  Then, almost without noticing, my mind slips back into the present: What do I feel now?  What am I pondering now?  What am I learning?  What have I done more recently?  Who am I today that will ultimately become who I was in a matter of moments?

A puzzling feeling grips my neck and gives me a headache as I try to discern the past so that I may understand the present and brigade toward the new year.  So much unknown abides in 2017.  The past is the known and experienced, but 2017 brings escapades I cannot begin to have a knowledge or understanding of.  My headache subsides as I recall Proverb 20:24; “A man’s steps are from the LORD; how then can man understand his way?”  There is a gentle and overcoming reassurance in knowing that in the unknown, we have a known God.

Being able to recall memories from the past year is a precious thing; how glorious is it to be able to reflect upon what God has shown us throughout our lives.  Last December I began studying Isaiah, and, thankfully, the Lord included a tidbit here about reminiscing on the past.

“Do not call to mind the former things,

Or ponder things of the past.

Behold, I will do something new,

Now it will spring forth;

Will you not be aware of it?

I will even make a roadway in the wilderness,

Rivers in the desert.”

Isaiah 43:18-19

I love verb tense of verse 19.  The author does not state, “are you not aware of it,” but uses the future tense, “Will.  This encompasses a promise that requires faith. He tells us, then promises we will be made aware.  Our job is to trust and put our hope in Him, our Deliverer, as He makes away through wilderness and the desert.  Revelation 21:5 parallels these verses, reading “And He who was seated on the throne said, ‘Behold, I am making all things new.’ Also He said, ‘Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.’”  Living in the realization that God is faithful and true forces us to understand that the only option is to trust God with our futures.

The past is straightforwardly that—past.  The woman I was last year did not struggle with what I do today, nor do I currently struggle with what I did back then.  Circumstances have changed, thoughts, feelings, and actions have all changed since a mere year ago, and the same will be said by the end of 2017.

I am not the same woman from years prior, but am being made new through sanctification in Christ.  The woman I was 365 days ago had a relative idea of what 2016 would be like, but would not begin to comprehend the depth of the year.  Today I sit, in blissful ignorance, of the future that looms in 2017, confident in the God who will carry me through the year.

For Further Reading:

Proverbs 3

Psalm 140:12

Psalm 34:4

Matthew 6

Lamentations 3

Deuteronomy 32:4

II Timothy 2:13

Confessions from a Willful Pessimist

Life and death are enthralling.  With monumental events, may they be tragic or filled with joy, often assign our minds into boundless, ever-enthralling thought.

For me, these thoughts were prompted by brimming anticipation for my niece, Klaire, to arrive in world.  Engrossed in my own mind during the past few weeks, I spent many restless nights reflecting on subjects, in prayer for this sweet, new life, and contemplating the future.  My old youth pastor in Arkansas told me I was a “dweller,” or someone who is constantly thinking.  He was doubtlessly correct about that!  Klaire was born Sunday night and our friends and family celebrated and rejoiced over her precious first breaths, and excitement lingers in all of our hearts.  I was overjoyed, yet my consuming thoughts persevered.

These prevailing thoughts have made me curious about what the Lord is trying to teach me.  Wednesday, my Community Group Leader, Kate, shared something her mom told her: “God speaks in whispers to show that He is near.”  It can be difficult to discover insight when diverse topics circumnavigate your mind, and trying to discern can become daunting.  It was not worry that apprehended my conscious, simply menial thoughts.

“Splendor and majesty are before Him;

strength and beauty are in His sanctuary.”

Psalm 96:6

As I read Psalm 96, thoughts that permeated my concentration began to vanish from my mind.  I had forgotten the glory of my God.  I was pondering the life that He gives, yet I forgot the splendor of who He is and what He gives.  “Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice; let the sea roar, and all that fills it,” Psalm 96:11.

I too often forget to rejoice.  Joy and happiness are hard ones for me.  I love studying to a fault; I’ll study God’s word and my textbooks all day long, and, though I find much enjoyment in doing so, I regularly forget to simply be happy.

Happiness comes as a second nature to me, not that I’m overflowing with sorrow, I will just become so concentrated on what I learn that I forget to gleam enjoyment from it.  It’s a subtle happiness that I forget to express.   When I left for college, my family gave me a sign that reads “Today I choose happiness.”  I hadn’t ultimately comprehended this characteristic about myself; I have divorced my knowledge from emotion.

I concluded my study for the day through reading Proverb 9, and reread two verses I know well, “Leave your simple ways, and live, and walk in insight…The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom, and the knowledge of the Holy One is insight” (Proverb 9:6,10).”

I realized an area where I was being unfaithful to the Lord that night.  By compartmentalizing what I learn and how I feel, I was depriving myself from gaining insight.  I could not unearth any insight from my thoughts because I was going about it the wrong way.  I disconnected the emotional part of myself because I wanted to learn so much—I forgot the importance of why we learn.  We learn to change ourselves, to reshape our minds, to modify the ways we think and feel about particular subjects.  I wanted to be numb in my quest for knowledge and understanding, but without emotion little understanding can be obtained.

 

 

For Further Reading:

Ecclesiastes 3

Psalm 96, Proverb 9.

Romans 12:9

Colossians 2:8, Hebrews 10:23

Isaiah 30:15-18

Psalm 139:23

An Endeavor for Kindness

Kindness can be unbelievably hard to come across.  Being kind to a stranger takes minimal effort—effort which is often ignored—but, it can become a more trying conquest to be kind to the ones whom we know well and love most.

It’s almost too easy to become tart with someone who talks behind our back, a close friend who we have recently been in conflict with, or simply someone who habitually annoys us.  It’s so easy to give up on these types of relational interactions, not understanding someone else’s motive, but we are so quick to forget our own shortcoming when judging our own companion.

We do this to God repeatedly, yet He is so kind to us.   He allows us to deal with consequences of sin—separation from Him—but He does not leave us there.  Even when we willingly choose to sin—to hurt God, again, during moments when we know better—He does not abandon us.  Yes, He is a just God who becomes angry in us and in our sin, but He does not abandon us.  Hosea 2:14 says “Therefore, behold, I will allure her [Israel], and bring her into the wilderness, and speak tenderly to her.”  This was written during a time of Israeli peace and prosperity.  Unfortunately, this prosperity led to moral decay: the unfaithfulness of God’s people.

While Israel was amidst sin—paralleled to our own sin—God said He would allure them.  He makes Himself known, and draws us back.  He allows us to trek through the wilderness to remind us of His constant love.  Hosea reveals a back and forth conversation: God permits Israel to choose sin and to experience its consequences, yet God reveals so much of His love, faithfulness, and grace through their unfaithfulness.

Even in our reproof, He is tender.  He is tender time after time, forgiving us of our own sin, and shaping us to become more like Him.

It’s a profound grace, a surreal kindness.  It’s beautiful; it inspires awe.  This is our God and King, the only Lord.  And He loves us, He serves us, He sent His Son to die for us.  Us: a people who sin against Him frequently for the sake of our own desires.  Us: a people who ignores His instruction and hinders His love from entering our lives.  Us: who can barely manage to be kind to those who love us the most when they need us to show them the greatest love.  Us: who choose selfishness over serving the Lord who has given us all that we have and will have.  Us: His ungrateful children.  Us: His children.  Us: His beloved.  Us: the ones whom God loves.  And yet we pursue sin against Him and curse His name.

We ought to love and forgive and show a profound grace like He does, even to the people who “least” deserve it in the moment.  To the sibling who’s “crossed the line, for the last time;” through those long and drawn out arguments with a spouse; to that one friend who takes and takes, but never invests in a relationship.  Those situations are opportunities to shower grace and to give love, not just nuisances.  Kindness is lacking, and tenderness is needed.

Yet, for some reason, we make it so hard to give.

 

 

For Further Reading:

Hosea 2

I John 3:1

Romans 2:4

Ephesians 3:32

Proverb 3:3

Matthew 9:13

Micah 7:18

Isaiah 30:18

Romans 6

Out of Options

She held a baby the law forbade her to keep.  During his first three months of life, she loved him in secret.  Her beautiful baby boy, a child she could never show another.  His every noise–every cry, every yawn, every coo–she had to harbor.

The amount of faith and courage she had was surreal.  For twelve weeks–weeks when a baby learns to smile, laugh, babble–God allowed her to softly, quietly, delicately raise her sweet son.

But after those weeks, she could no longer conceal him.  Thus she began making a papyrus basket; she would not give up.  Moses’ mother knew she could be punished at any moment or that an Egyptian could discover her son and kill him, but she refused to stop.  With the basket completed, she navigated to the Nile to say goodbye to her beloved son.  She placed him in the river, relinquishing her child’s life to the Lord.  She didn’t look back–she couldn’t–but Mariam, her daughter, remained vigilant over that basket.

Mariam witnessed a miracle that day, one that began there and spanned decades after those moments.  Moses’ carefully crafted cradle sailed into Pharaoh’s domain, and Pharaoh’s daughter happened to see it in the distance.  When the content of the basket was revealed–a beautiful baby boy–Pharaoh’s daughter was filled with compassion.  She knew this was a Hebrew infant; a child of a race whose sons’ lives were being executed by her father’s decree.  But this Egyptian woman would not allow this baby to die.  Instead, she named him after the way she found him, Moses, meaning “drawn out.”

At the appropriate time, Mariam used her voice to inquire whether she should find someone to nurse Moses, and Pharaoh’s daughter delegated her to do so.   Filled with joy, I’m sure Mariam ran to find her mother.  Because of her mother’s faithful surrender, the Lord blessed her.  She chose not to kill her son as the law said, but protected him until she was desperate.  Not only was she reunited with her son, but she got paid by the kingdom to take care of the child she earnestly hid from them!

She got to see him through childhood, to watch him grow up.  All of that because she had the faith to place him in the river.

Jochebed, Moses’ mother, remains nameless until a genealogy is given in Exodus 6.  In Hebrews 11:23, the author defines Jochebed’s actions disclosing, “By faith, Moses, when born, was hidden for three months by his parents, because…they were not afraid of the king’s edict.”  After protecting him as long as they could, Jochebed and her husband Amram faithfully placed Moses into one of the world’s most dangerous rivers.  The amount of faith they had perplexes me!  They did not know the outcomes of Moses’ fate, but they trusted in the Lord and He delivered them out of their affliction!

I cannot comprehend the situation, but I can understand this: our God is miraculous.

“And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob.  God saw the people of Israel–and God knew.” Exodus 2:24-25.

 Not only did God deliver Moses, but He used Moses as a forerunner to deliver His people!  He used Moses’ messy and broken life to bring His people out of a sea of suffering.

All this because his mother had the strength to place him in the river.

 

For Further Reading:

Exodus 2

Psalm 34:19

Hebrews 11

Acts 7

Jeremiah 32:27

Psalm 77:14

You’re Making Revival

“Come and hear, all you who fear God, and I will tell what He has done for my soul.” Psalm 66:16

Every so often, I venture out to grab a cup of coffee and read God’s word in a different setting.  The past few times I’ve gone, though I have chosen a different location each time, I have sat across from fellow believers who likewise are studying the word!  This morning, I heard a young man, assumedly in high school or college, discipling a younger boy (about junior high aged), and was filled with joy!

Over the last few weeks, I have seen young people seeking out and studying who God is all over!  This generation is eager to know Him and He is moving everywhere.  This might be a dark time in our nation and in this world, but He is still working all around us.  I’ve seen so many people of my generation professing the gospel and teaching it to those around them!  Like the verse in this Psalm, we should be telling those around us what the Lord has done!  Believing, showing, proclaiming that Christ is enough.

We may feel far from persecution, but our brothers and sisters—our church—is strongly being persecuted.  Some of my favorite verses are found in John 16; in this chapter, Jesus explains the Holy Spirit to His disciples and tells them that He will soon leave them.  Knowing their hearts, He said “You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy” (John 16:20).  Later, verse 22, He mentions that they will see Him again and they will have joy that “no one will take.”  Jesus affirms that He will return to the Father soon and the disciples react saying “Now we know that You know all things and do not need anyone to question You; this is why we believe You came from God” (John 16:30).  Jesus informs the disciples that they will be scattered and assures them that the Father is with Him (John 16:32).  The chapter concludes with Jesus saying “I have said these things to you, that in Me you may have peace.  In the world, you will have tribulation.  But take heart; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).  Time has passed on, and not all suffer as the disciples did, but persecution still exists and new persecutors, namely ISIS, have come to invoke fear from believers as they terrorize our body of Christ.  But they cannot stop our God.  Job declared “I know that You can do all things, and that no purpose of Yours can be thwarted” (Job 42:2).

In Acts 4, Peter and John defend that they “cannot but speak of what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20).  After that, they prayed for boldness to speak of the Lord (Acts 4:29), and so they did.  Their faith, and others of the time, gave us the 27 books of the New Testament, and now faith has spread around the globe!  Today and these past few weeks I have been able to watch Christians fall in love with God in coffee shops across America!  As I learn more about Him I continue to grow in my love for Him, as do those studying with me!

Our generation is eager and searching for God, and our lips utter His glory, we should exclaim “Come and see what God has done: He is awesome in His deeds toward the children of man,” (Psalm 66:5) as the generations before us did.

I am encouraged by this revival awakening in my generation.  No matter what, “When reviled, we bless; when persecuted, we endure; when slandered, we entreat” (I Corinthians 4:12-13).  God is moving, and we can choose to follow and serve Him, or we can choose to “shrink back” out of fear.  Either way, God’s will shall endure, and Christ will be victorious.

 

For Further Reading:

II Corinthians 4:8-12

Hebrews 10:39

Romans 8:19-27

Isaiah 48:10-11

I Thessalonians 5:18

Micah 6:8

You Taught, I Listened

This year I’ve had the privilege to listen to world-famous speakers such as Pastor Alistar Begg, Pat Williams, Brian Kilemade, Pastor David Nasser, and so many others.  I’ve also been able to listen to our wonderful pastors Grant Ethridge and Tim Whitney, Chip Dean and my dear friends Tyler LeClear, Zachary Goodwyn, and Joel Austin preach the gospel!  These men continually allow God to use them to teach many people about His glory.  I have hundreds of pages of notes on messages from these men and many other men and women.

I’ve been traveling quite a bit lately, and I love the plane rides because I have so much time to study!  On these past few trips, I’ve been reading through my most recent book of notes which started March 30th.  I wrote down a theme from each message and found four prevalent themes: Leadership, Communication, Adversity, and Serving.

Dr. John C. Maxwell taught that “Leadership is nothing more than influence.”  A grand leader must be characterized by integrity, communication, boldness, having the competence to learn from failure, and defined as a servant.  It is a struggle to live out one’s life for the Lord.  As He shows love and grace, so we must also.  There is no strength or growth without faith and struggle.  We are ambassadors for Christ (II Corinthians 5:20), showing and leading the world towards Him.  Pastor Tim Whitney asserted “Our actions can change peoples’ opinion of God.”  What seems like a daunting statement—and it is a serious matter—we aren’t on our own in this.  Regarding Ephesians 2:10, my friend Tyler simply stated: “God has already created the good works, all we have to do is live them out.”  Each day we should strive to lead others to Christ in “such a manner that others could get saved” (Pastor Chip Dean).

Communication influences just about every situation.  Something I find difficult to learn is the ability to be vulnerable.  It’s uncomfortable to share what your deepest thoughts are, but often it is that which is needed.  It’s okay to ask for help.  Chris Deaton, an RD at Liberty University, spoke saying that one must “understand that we are flawed, troubled people, and that God designed us to have deep, genuine relationships.  This process of becoming vulnerable takes patience, as I’m learning.  Patience in oneself and patience with others.  It takes courage to show this type of love, and it is worth it.”  Vulnerability brings people closer, creates an authentic relationship, and sharing our weakness can help others understand how you can grow together and serve God to your best abilities.  Author Annie Downs defines courage as “the quality of spirit the mind is in while enduring fear.”  It is these little acts of bravery and endurance that can change relationships tremendously.

The products of suffering are praise, glory, and honor.  The delayed gratification we must endure produces boldness.  No matter what, our God is King.  In times of hardship, we must remember that God’s truth holds us.  Christ has given us peace (John 14:27), which is the “inner wholeness in the presence of Christ” (Pastor David Nasser), and, because of this, we can have joy, “delight in God for God” (Pastor David Nasser), amidst the trials of this life.  “For this is a gracious thing, when, mindful of God, one endures sorrows while suffering unjustly” I Peter 2:19.  This struggle is God’s grace being displayed in your life.

Through these times of conflict and times of peace, we must serve the people God has placed in our lives.  As Christ came to serve, we must do likewise (Mark 10:45).  Pastor Tim stated that pretending someone did not hurt you is not a product of forgiveness; we must behold “extravagant forgiveness” and bless those who have hurt us (Matthew 5:43-46).  God has gifted us beyond what we deserve, and Pastor David Stone reminds us that we can serve using our spiritual gifts, personality, abilities, and experiences to spread God’s love and His grace.  Pray to the Lord; give and give thanks, for He is a merciful God.  Serve and give love.  Give mercy to those hard to love and remember who has shown you great mercy.  Persevere when it is hard and you feel as though you have accomplished nothing.  “What we do does not go unnoticed by God.”—Tim Whitney.  Serve faithfully.

Be aware of the influence you have.  Take risks to show the love of Christ.  Never give up on the ones who you pray for—a task I find somehow hard to continue.  Prayer is powerful.  Open up to those around you and join me in the pursuit of becoming vulnerable.  Endure the hardship and trust in the Most High God.  Make your mission to serve Christ and His people.  Give and forgive.  Make serving come naturally, and allow the Lord to work in you.

 

For Further Reading:

I Corinthians 9:24-27

I Peter 4:8,10

Romans 5:1

Ephesians 4:1-2

It’s the Little Things

Life is filled with different stages or seasons.  For me, this one is called cleaning.  From moving out of the dorm—shout out to the many schools I didn’t choose that don’t have a “white glove” check—back into out house, then to another room of the house, I’ve done quite a bit of cleaning, and I love it.  Cleaning reveals a lot of who one is, or, more accurately, who one once was.  When one cleans, he find things: the messes of his past.

You find things that were important to you, yet you allowed them to go unsought of for weeks or months or years.

Last week I found two distinct items, my first prayer journal, and my letter box.

Oh my word.  Praise the Lord for the work He has done in my life!!  Reading through that journal was hilariously painful.  To reread what I thought was important so many years ago or the things I struggled with was so interesting.  It felt like I was reading someone else’s life.  There were difficulties completely forgot about, some things I was happy to have forgotten.  All in all, it made me so thankful for God’s work in my life haha.  It was a good reminder to do as Paul wrote, “Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect,” Romans 12:2.  The Lord is phenomenally faithful!  He has done so many astounding things in my life that I forgot what our relationship was like in the beginning.  Reading that journal made me realize that he has brought so much restoration and healing to this broken, wretched soul.  Not by anything that I did, but because of His sweet grace (see Ephesians 2).  When I started that book in 8th grade, I never would have imagined all that God would do and is continuing to do in my life.

And then I found my letter box!  I love reading and writing, and I have kept every note/card/letter that anyone has written me.  I love them!  My letter box is 1-foot-tall, about 2-feet-long, and what I didn’t remember is the fact that the box is completely filled with letters!  When I moved for college I started a new box and didn’t open this old one for a couple years.  I expected the box to be halfway filled, but to my surprise it was entirely full.

God graciously places people in our lives to encourage and teach us numerous things.  Psalm 31:7 says “I will rejoice and be glad in Your steadfast love, because You have seen my affliction; You have known the distress of my soul.”  By his love and “His divine power [He] has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness,” I Peter 1:3a, and that includes the people He has placed in our lives.  Each relationship we encounter is an opportunity to bring God glory!  These notes and letters were given from some friends that were only in my life for a season and other friends who continue to keep in touch.  I am so grateful for the people He has allowed to enter my life; their impact on me can stretch farther than I even realize.

The second part of I Peter 1:3 asserts that we discern life and godliness “through the knowledge of Him who called us to His glory and excellence,” how extraordinary is our God not only to give us these small reminders and revelations, but 66 books to reveal His glory!  Shane and Shane wrote a song about Psalm 98 and one lyric reads “What they know by faith, we know by name; Jesus is King.”  We get to study the entire Bible!  It is far better and its value is vast beyond my boxes of letters.  God gave us a collection of thousands of pages of letters!

Seek out what the Lord is doing in your life and look for ways He uses others to impact you!  Cherish those around you.  They’ll know us by their love (John 13:36).  We have opportunity to share who He is each day!  His love never ends and His mercies are new every morning (Lamentations 3:22-23).  How wonderful and freeing that is to hear!

Before I headed back to school last August, I wrote myself a note on my dry-erase calendar reading “enjoy the time you get, because time is running out.”  Now, that note reminds me that we do not know how long people will be in our lives, and we cannot imagine what God will do though these sweet relationships.

These little reminders proved to be timed splendidly when our college pastor, Tim, and his wife Meghan announced that they will be moving soon.  Saying goodbye is hard; my mom says that we aren’t meant to do it, for we are eternal beings.  But the most beautiful part about this goodbye is knowing that the Lord will be glorified through Tim and Meghan wherever they go.  And He has called them to go spread His glory!  What a glorious goodbye.

Be open to how the Lord is using others to change you, and give love as Christ has.  Our Heavenly Father desires greatness—sanctification—in our lives, and He uses people in our lives to bring it about.  Some to encourage us and to be the church, striving towards Christ with us, and some to teach us to rely on Him.

 

For Further Reading:

Titus 3:4-7

Psalm 31

John 15:12-15

II Corinthians 13:11

Psalm 143:5-6

Proverb 27:17

Psalm 90:12

Truth and Promise

Studying the book of Numbers has taught more about God’s grace and power than I had expected.  I love the Old Testament because there is so much history, and reading these texts help one better understand both the context and various meanings found in the New Testament.   One of the things that the young adults’ pastor at my church often reminds us of is the fact that those of the New Testament were living in the Old Testament times and customs.

The story of Caleb, Joshua, and ten other spies of Israel is one I have come to know well.  It tells of days where the Israelites escaped Egypt and were waiting to enter the promise land: Canaan.  God allowed the Israelites to spy out the land, and the Israelites chose one man from each of the the twelve tribes.  In Numbers 13:2 the Lord tells Moses, “Send men to spy out the land of Canaan, which I am giving to the people of Israel.”

The Lord was testing them.  He stated that He would give them the land, and He allowed them to examine it beforehand.  Could the Lord have been anymore clear with His words?  He gave them the opportunity to see and to trust Him more, but they failed to do so.  Ten of the spies returned and gave a “bad report” (Numbers 13:32), telling the Israelites that the people of Canaan are “strong, and the cities are fortified” (Numbers 13:28).  The ten spies claimed that Israel could not overtake the city, and, to be fair, they were quite right.  God told them that He would give it to them, not that they could take the land without Him.  “But Caleb quieted the people…and said ‘Let us go up at once and occupy it [Canaan], for we are able to overcome it,’” Numbers 13:30.  Caleb understood what God had promised, and He was ready to take captive God’s plan, but Israel lacked faith.

Once they saw the land He promised, they grew afraid of man.  They displaced their holy fear of God and gave it to their enemies.  They lost sight of their Deliverer and became consumed by their terror.  A Psalmist wrote “The LORD is on my side; I will not fear.  What can man do to me?” Psalm 118:6.  Because of their unbelief, God would not allow any from that generation to enter into the promised land, and they had to wander in the desert for forty years.  How heartbreaking.

His words are pure (Psalm 12:6).  God’s words are free from contamination of any kind; unmodified by any mixture.  He has no ulterior motive or deceit against His people.  Why must we fear what He has promised to give us?  Jesus once spoke to his disciples saying “Why are you afraid, O you of little faith?” (Matthew 8:26).  Jesus calmed the storm that influenced them to fear, and all that the disciples could do was “marvel” at Him (Matthew 8:27).  In Him there is truth and promises beyond what we deserve; we must not fear the people or circumstances that surround us.

 

 

For Further Reading:

Psalm 18:30

Isaiah 41:10

II Samuel 22:31

Philippians 4:6-7

Proverb 30:5

Camping

Oh it was so beautiful!  My friends Hannah, Matt, Nathan, Tyler, and I went camping in the mountains.  There’s something noteworthy about being submerged in God’s creation far from the typical use of technology.  Creation’s beauty reveals the beauty of our Savior and King.  The waterfalls flow with grace and yet they rush streams of power and splendor.  The mountains reach the heavens and, though they can become strenuous, the view of below is worth each drop of sweat to the top.

The Lord is so gracious to allow us to see this beauty, to reveal to us His created order.  Yet these glimpses of beauty are partially hidden.  In order to see some of the most awe-striking sites, we must search for them.  We must take advantage of what He has given us and explore the area to find it’s great treasures.

I woke up early and was able to sit by the river and study His word.  The passage for today was Psalm 8, the first verse proclaiming “O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is Your name in all the earth!  You have set Your glory above the heavens.”  It goes on to say, “When I look at Your heavens, the work of Your fingers, the moon and the stars, which You have set in place, what is man that You are mindful of him; and the son of man that You care of him?” in verses 2 and 3.  Verse 9 concludes the chapter as it began “O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is Your name in all the earth!”  I was humbled.   Surrounded in the work of His hands, all I could do was marvel.  With all that He created, He labels us as the “apple of His eye,” Zechariah 2:8.

We are so undeserving of this title and the honor of bearing His image, but He made us worthy.  He sent Christ in order that our relationship with Him can be restored.  Even after all of our ugly mistakes and sins against God, He makes “everything beautiful in its time.  Also, He has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end” (Ecclesiastes 3:11).

And there I sat in the woods, with dear friends back where we had set up camp, waiting to indulge in and explore God’s glory together.  Everyday we are given this opportunity, but we must simply look.

 

For Further Reading:

Galatians 3:26-27

Jeremiah 32:17

Romans 11:36

Psalm 121:1-2

Ephesians 2:10

Amos 9:6