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After All These Years

7/23/2015

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It’s hot and very humid here in the south.  Deep into July now, all of nature looks faded and nearly spent, as if it should be later in August.  There’s that school’s-about-to-start look to the foliage even though we are a month away from the first siting of a school bus that’s loaded with bleary-eyed children who have been used to sleeping in for a couple of months. 

I enjoy all of the changes in nature as each season shifts to the next and each seed, plant and tree seems to effortlessly go about the business of its own cyclical growth pattern.  People tend to notice this more in the spring when so many things are bursting into life, though changes occur throughout the entire year, each phase containing a beauty all its own.  Ah, the beauties and wonders of this world that God created for us to enjoy make me excited to see what visual delights await us in the New Earth!

During my prayer walk, as is my habit, I tend to pay particular attention to the wild undergrowth along the border of the path I walk.  It’s here that little white flowers (or hot pink or yellow ones) stand out brilliantly amongst the tired colors of summer’s overgrown weeds.  Once a vibrant shade of green, these weeds are now turning various hues of yellows, tans or browns as they have gone to seed.   

Seeing all of the changes surrounding me made me think of how change is inevitable in our lives, too.  But is it change itself that we – dare I say it – fear?  Many would say yes.  Most shrink from the thought of anything that would interrupt their current lifestyle and will do all they can to keep change from taking place, particularly if the change is not so pleasant.  Yet it is said that variety is the spice of life, right?  Or is the security of the mundane changelessness more desirable?  

Fickle creatures that we humans are, we crave routine (how else will you know where you are?), yet get restless in the sameness of life as days melt into the day-after-day-after-day routine without anything new, big, different or exciting happening.   Even those who love rigid routines will get bored with such a predictable life after a certain period of time.  Then there are those other people who seem to thrive on change (and lots of it!) and would stagnate with a life driven by even the merest hint at routine.  

Regardless of which type of lifestyle you’d prefer, change is inevitable and will come to us all.  But I surmise that it isn’t necessarily change itself that we shy away from, but rather the idea that we won’t have someone to stay consistently next to us through all of the changes that this life consists.  Change is stressful (whether the change is good or not); the thought of having to be alone can be devastating.

“Be strong and courageous.  Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.” (Deut. 31:6)

Moses shared these words with the Israelites when he had to tell them that he (Moses) was no longer able to lead them.  He had been with them every day for forty years, but could not be with them when the next change occurred for them:  entering into the Promised Land.  Apparently the Israelites were fearful on hearing this, as he had to reassure them with the words ‘be strong and courageous.’  

How could they ‘be strong and courageous?’  Because the Lord himself was going with them and would not forsake them.  

And He kept His word.

Shortly after the death of Moses and just before Joshua was to lead the Israelites across the Jordan River to enter the Promised Land, God encouraged Joshua by telling him something similar. 

“As I was with Moses, so I will be with you; I will never leave you nor forsake you.”(Josh. 1:4-6)

And He kept His word.

After all of these years, He still keeps His word.  He does not change …

“Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.” (James 1:17)

... and He will never leave you.

“Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.”” (Hebrews 13:5)

Change in this life will happen.  Travel with the One who does not change and will never leave you.  He makes the journey all the sweeter.  The choice is yours.  He’s waiting for you.

“…And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” (Matt. 28:20)



(For more information about forming a relationship with the Lord, see How You can Find Him located at the top of this page.)


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When You Can't, He Can

5/1/2013

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In the aftermath of any life-altering event, it’s challenging to think or hear clearly in the never- ending din of society; when the return to life-as-normal has to be resumed though your soul cringes at the merest thought of it and huddles in a corner while it whimpers
that it isn’t ready to face reality just yet.  Even so, you gradually unwind from your huddled position and slowly begin to press onward as you go through the motions of taking care of routine business matters: bill-paying, grocery shopping, yard work, etc.  All the while, you share a half-hearted shallow discourse with others who cross your path, using pat, non-committal phrases as you ensure yet another well-meaning soul that you are doing ‘okay.’  (Doesn’t that word speak volumes?!)  You return to work only when you have to and thankfully end up losing yourself in the many familiar details of your job.  Here
at work, people cannot see the numbing pain that is masked by your smile and your diligent – though rote - productivity, yet they could see it if they chose to look closely into your eyes.  

Resuming life-as-normal is a daunting task after any traumatic event.  Life was already challenging to deal with when it did not contain a life-altering event. Inundated with high emotions and stress, we look to have our life made easier by the electronic products that
we have grown accustomed to.  Yet the more our lives have been flooded with them and all the knowledge that comes with it, the more our vision has been clouded to the point where life feels more complicated and overwhelming than ever.  The technology we look to every day that was meant to give us more free time and greater ease of living while supplying us with the means to draw the world-wide community closer to us has instead made us a society rife with pseudo relationships, enslaved us to apps and social networks, and created a Pavlovian response in each of us so that we immediately reach for our phone whenever we hear a ding, or bell, or some other (usually annoying) sound announcing that we have been sent a text, an email, or a push notification relating to a breaking story, all the while hoping that it’s someone reaching out to us in this turbulent season of life who will lend us comfort or supply at least one answer to the many questions we have.  For all of our communication capabilities, we struggle to find even one person to turn to in time of need and wonder if anyone anywhere cares that we are struggling each day to simply survive.

When you can’t deal with life in all of its craziness, what should you do?    Return to the basics and begin by trusting in the One who will not disappoint.

When you can’t find where you fit into life, Jesus will never reject you when you come to Him.

John 6:37 (AMP)
“All whom My Father gives (entrusts) to Me [Jesus] will come to Me; and the one who comes to Me I will most certainly not cast out [I will never, no never, reject one of them who comes to Me].”

When you can’t find inner contentment or tranquility, set your mind on Christ.

Isaiah 26:3 (AMP)
“You [God] will guard him and keep him in perfect and constant peace whose mind [both its inclination and its character] is stayed on You, because he commits himself to You, leans on You, and hopes confidently in You.”

When you can’t clearly see the direction to take or the decisions to make, He will guide you.

Isaiah 42:16 [NIV]
“I [God] will lead the blind by ways they have no known, along unfamiliar paths I will guide them; I will turn the darkness into light before them and make the rough places smooth.  These are the things I will do; I will not forsake them.”

When you can’t see how you can pay the bills or supply clothes and food for you and your family, He will provide.

Philippians 4:19 [AMP]
“And my God will liberally supply (fill to the full) your every need according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus.”

And when you can’t calm the anxious thoughts that race through your mind, share them with Him.

1 Peter 5:7 [AMP]
“Casting the whole of your care [all your anxieties, all your worries, all your concerns, once and for all] on Him [Jesus], for He cares for you affectionately and cares
about you watchfully.”


When you can’t see how sense can be made of this mess, He will make it all work out, somehow and in His time.

Romans 8:28 (NIV)
“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”   

Trust in the One who will never leave you to handle this life on your own.

Deuteronomy 31:8
“The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.  Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.”

When you can’t, He can.  The choice is yours.  He’s waiting for you.


 (For more information about forming a relationship with the Lord, see
How You Can Find Him located at the top of this page.)


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Weary Traveler

1/14/2013

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Recently, it was necessary for me to drive several hundreds of miles from home ….. by myself …… during the nighttime.   Though this was a first for me to drive such a great distance alone, it was not a fearful thing for me to do as I knew that if others could do it, then so, too, could I.

For a number of days prior to the trip, I tried to find as many
positive features to this lone journey as possible.   After all, it isn’t often that I get that much quiet time by myself.  I looked forward in anticipation to spending time praying about anything or anyone that came to mind.  I also looked forward to singing along with some of my favorite tunes.  (And don’t we all sound good when belting out a favorite melody while alone in a car? 
If nothing else, we are certainly entertainment to those who may look at us through our closed windows and see all of the facial expressions and gestures we exhibit while we bellow at the top of our lungs.   But I digress.)

The first half of the trip went quite well.   Many prayers were prayed, countless conversations held with God and numerous praises were sung to Him.  As the hour grew later and my eyes grew tired and blurry, the enthusiasm I had felt at the start of the trip began to wane.   All I thought of was the distance I had yet to travel and how I would love to sleep for at least a full day. 
Then, halfway through to the border of the next state, patches of wispy fog moved in and gradually grew more dense as it populated additional areas along the way.  By the time I
managed to cross the state line, the fog had turned very thick and had completely covered the surrounding area.  Ahead of me, for mile after long mile, the only things visible for a few feet in front of me were two parallel lines of painted white dashed road lines against black asphalt, a wall of fog and an occasional glimpse of a hazy deer along the berm.  The only way to get out of the fog was to concentrate on staying in between those mesmerizing white lines.  I had to trust that there truly was more to the road beyond what I could immediately see and that it
would lead me to safer conditions eventually.

Nearly hypnotized from the limited visibility and the consistent
flash from the white lines as they whisked by hour after hour, I was reminded that we are all travelers in this life.  None of us can see into the future nor can we see what obstacles may lie in wait for us there.   Just as the lines on the highway had to be trusted that night, we too have Someone who can be trusted to light the way for us as we travel along life’s road.

2 Samuel 22:29
“You are my lamp, O Lord;  the Lord turns my darkness into light.”

And He will faithfully guide us until journey’s end.

Psalm 48:14
“For this God is our God for ever and ever; he will be our guide even to the end.”

Weary traveler, is there some ‘fog’ in your life that makes you doubt the road ahead or obscures the next step you need to take in the journey?  Trust in the Guide who will always lead
you in the right path and will never leave you alone during any part of your trip.
   
Deuteronomy 31:6
“Be strong and courageous.  Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.”
         
He’s waiting for you.

(For more information about forming a relationship with the  Lord, see
How You Can Find Him located at the top of this page.)

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Crisis Point

11/13/2012

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Crisis.   According to one online definition, a crisis is “a time of intense difficulty, trouble, or danger.”  If you are human – and I highly suspect that you are – and are at least in the teenage years or older, you have had a   minimum of one, if not several, already in your life.  Over the course of your lifetime you will likely experience several more.  

Yet hope is not lost.  God, in His wisdom and great love for us, knew that this would be so as far back as the Garden of Eden when mankind had their first and greatest crisis.

At the time of creation, God made a lovely environment – a garden spot – and put the man He had formed in it.

Genesis 2:15 (Amp.)
“And the Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to tend and guard and keep it.”

God also created a wife for Adam and together they lived in and took care of the garden and all of the things in it that God had created for them there.   Life was going well until Genesis chapter 3 when Satan spoke through a serpent  that also lived in the garden.  He (Satan) deceived Eve by implying that God was unfair because He was withholding something from them when He forbade them to eat the fruit of two trees in the garden.  These trees were the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.  Eve believed Satan, ate of the fruit and then shared it with her husband. 
 
Genesis 3:8 (NIV)
“Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and they hid from the Lord God among the trees of
the garden.  But the Lord God called to the man, “Where are you?””


Adam and Eve heard the sound of the Lord as He was walking.  The implication is that God walked so frequently in the garden that the sound of His tread was recognizable to them.  This day though, instead of joining Him to talk over the days’ activities or simply walk with Him while He saw what work they had performed that day, they hid from Him because they were ashamed.

When they had eaten the fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, several things happened at once:   They recognized that they were naked (i.e. exposed);  in their  disobedience to God, the first act of sin was committed which caused a chasm in  their relationship with Him; the ruling of the Earth was immediately transferred from Man's authority into Satan’s hands; God cursed the serpent (i.e. Satan) and He cursed the ground; there would now be greatly increased childbearing pains for the woman; and man would have to eat by the sweat of his brow.  As if that were not enough, God, in His great compassion for them, had to exhibit tough love and banish them from the garden He had created for them so
that they would not also eat the fruit of the Tree of Life, which would cause them to forever live in their now-fallen state of separation from Him. 
 
Talk about a crisis!  The knowledge Adam and Eve had gained through their acceptance of Satan’s deception cost them their home, their dominion over the earth, and eternity with their Creator.

All was not lost, however, as before God banished them, He clothed them in animal skins so they would not be exposed, and  He also gave them hope that, while this crisis would now be passed down to every member of humanity from this point forward, He had a plan.

Genesis 3:15 (Amp.)
“And I [God] will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her Offspring; He will bruise and tread your head underfoot, and you will
lie in wait and bruise His heel.”


God gave them assurance that a plan was already put into motion that would not only rescue them, but also us from this crisis state.  This plan would come about through the Offspring of woman spoken of in the verse above and was in the form of Jesus Christ, God’s only Son. Because of Him [Christ], we no longer have to be separated from God through our inherited state of sin.  He is still our only Hope today to have a right relationship with our  Creator.

Romans 7:27
“Unlike the other high priests, he does not need to offer sacrifices day after day,
first for his own sins, and then for the sins of the people.  He sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself.”  (emphasis mine)


Do you find yourself facing a crisis today?  You do not have to face it alone.  Just as God called “Where are you?” to Adam and Eve, He’s calling also to you today.  He’s waiting for you to answer.

 
(For more information about forming a relationship with the Lord, see
How You Can Find Him located at the top of this page.)


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Constant Vigil

10/25/2012

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The longest awaited dawn is one that is preceded by a night of watchfulness over a sick family
member.

I sat alone – a solitary sentinel – in the darkened hospital room that was lit solely by the glow of the LED lights of the many buttons on several pieces of medical equipment.  The
whoosh whoosh sound from the various machines acted both as a comfort and as a constant reminder as to why I was here.
 
It’s challenging to see a loved one’s fever-wracked body in a tug-of-war hour after hour as it works hard to fight off infection. Throughout this particular battle, mine were the loving hands that, time and again, placed a cool compress onto the heated brow; mine were the many prayers - filled with both petitions and thanksgiving - that were whispered into the dim surroundings; and it was my hand that held the hand of the one in discomfort as an assurance of a steady presence so they knew that they knew they were not in this fight alone.

Many, including our Lord, have endured these ‘bitter watches of the night.’  Yet none were so bitter, or so vital, as was this particular night for Him.

Matthew 26:36-38
“Then Jesus went with his disciples to a placed called Gethsemane, and he said to them, “Sit here while I go over there and pray.”  He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee along with him, and he began to be sorrowful and troubled.  Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of
death.  Stay here and keep watch with me.””


Jesus, ‘sorrowful to the point of death,’ desired the comforting presence of His friends while He entreated His Father in prayer for another possible way for mankind to be reconciled to God other than for Him to have to walk the painful path to crucifixion.

Yet His friends could not stay awake to keep watch with Him while He agonized in prayer.  Twice He returned from praying only to find them asleep.  You can almost hear the deep disappointment He felt when He asked them in verse 40 of Matthew 26,
“Could you men not keep watch with me for one hour?”

Jesus, full of compassion, knew how heavy the eyes of His friends were and He also knew the emotional challenges the next three days held in store for them.  While the humanness in Him longed for someone to watch with Him, the Godliness in Him knew that no one could walk this path with Him.  So He went quietly a little way away from them – for the third time – to once again converse alone with His Father.  
 
In full submission to the Father’s will, Jesus prepared Himself to face the only way the sin-debt of mankind could be paid so that we could truly be in right relationship with Him.  He then willfully, with purpose, accepted the path that led to His death. 

And as dawn broke three days later, He arose from the grave the Victor over sin and death.  We could now be free from the bondage of sin and would never again be alone or without hope.

Unlike Jesus’ human friends, we are assured that God never sleeps ….

Psalm 121:4
”Indeed, he who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”

... and that He is a constant presence.

Deuteronomy 31:8
“The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.  Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.”

What is it that you are facing alone today?  Jesus longs for you to know the assurance of His constant presence and wants to accompany you along life’s journey, through all that it may hold.  The choice is yours.  He’s waiting for you.

(For more information about forming a relationship with the Lord, see
How
You Can Find Him
located at the top of this page.)


 


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    Welcome to my site!  My name is Robin. I'm a Christian writer with a heart-desire to share how I have found (and continue to find) God in the everyday.  Thank you for joining me on this adventure!

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