Archive for the ‘Reflection’ Category

Mother’s Day and Mixed Emotions

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Post By April Motl

 

Mother’s day is today and for many the day is full of joy and celebration.  Still, there are those who might have a few mixed emotions on this holiday.  The idyllic imagery of motherhood often doesn’t match up with the reality of life — the reality that the relationships involved with motherhood are often far more complicated than we would wish.

The sting of emptiness.  Mother’s day can be hard for those without children, those who have birthed children but the children have since been adopted, those who have buried their children and those who have experienced abortion.  The emptiness can sting our hearts as we watch happy families celebrating their beloved mommies, and we feel painfully left out. We can journey into the dark hallway of “why me?”

While it may sound simplistic, God fills empty places.  I have personally watched Him reach through holes in my life to touch others with hope and healing.  And I have seen Him put broken pieces back together in ways that simply took my breath away.  He sees your hurt and He cares. (1 Peter 5:7, Psalm 145:16, Isaiah 54:1)

Mistakes Made.  Then there are those who are mothers, but perhaps have not been able to embrace the task with excellence.  Sometimes life’s circumstances and baggage pull women’s hearts in ways that make them unable to give love, attention or care to their little ones.

God’s mercies are new every morning! Ask God and your family for forgiveness. Then walk in the Lord’s grace. Don’t be afraid to ask for help in your high calling as a mom. Find someone who can mentor and encourage you as you seek to remedy your past mistakes. (Lamentations 3:22-23, James 5:16, Titus 2:3-5)

The sorrow over estranged or rebellious children.  Many parents struggle under the heaviness of heart that accompanies children who have gone astray.  I have watched women who have been successful in every other area of life become utterly paralyzed with grief because of a grown child’s drug addiction, abandonment of their family or other hurtful choices.  A mom recently told me that after her son had an affair and consequently divorced his wife, she felt as if he had been unfaithful to her as well and the entire family, not just his wife.

Many grandparents are raising their grandkids because their own children have been unable to do so.  My husband and I are deeply grateful for the ways our grandparents stepped in to fill in the gap for our parents.  And while there is great good that come from such a situation, it isn’t without grief for those grandparents who long to see their own children making healthy choices.

In these situations, remember: God is sovereign. He turns the hearts of kings, so keep praying! Know that the Lord understands your sorrow because He has watched with grief as His children rebelled against Him. Nothing is too hard for Him, so hang onto hope that your children will one day walk with their Lord. After all, if you aren’t praying and believing for them, who is? (Proverbs 21:1, Isaiah 1:2, Jeremiah 32:27)

The sadness over a mother who wasn’t a mom.  I heard a comedian making light of this topic. He was joking about how as a good son you are supposed to get your mom a card for Mother’s Day, but if she really wasn’t much of a mom, how do you find a card that doesn’t rub it in or just straight out lie? While the routine was funny, the reality of it isn’t. I know kids who have been left on street corners by their mom, or dumped with strangers. The pain from abandonment, rejection, and abuse can affect you long into adulthood.

God is big enough for the hurt and disappointment, and His love can heal any mistakes our parents might have made.  These verses have meant a great deal to my heart over the years: Psalm 27:10, Isaiah 49:15-16, Jeremiah 31:3, 2 Corinthians 6:18.

The grief over a mom who has passed away.  Mother’s Day is hard for those who are missing their moms. No one can replace her, and Mother’s Day is a keen reminder of her absence.

Jesus’ response to the grief over the death of a loved one was to cry (John 11:35). He has compassion on our sorrow!  Death wasn’t part of His original design. He doesn’t like it anymore than you do!  He has, however, not left us without hope! We have hope for life in heaven with Him and our family of believers.

Give your grief over to the Lord (Psalm 147:3, Psalm 116:15, 1 Corinthians 15:51-52).  Also, if you are missing your mom, there just might be a mother out there who is grieving over a child.  Pray for the Lord to use you in the midst of your pain — you might be surprised at what He does!

At the end of the day, we have to trust that our loving and sovereign Lord has something for our good and His glory planned for us.  We don’t get to pick our moms, and we don’t get to pick our kids. None of us are perfect, so we are guaranteed to bump into each other a bit. We can choose to be disappointed and bitter with life’s lot, or we can hang on to hope that God is up to something good. We can fall on our knees and ask God to do a new work in us so that we might be godly moms and women from this day forward.

Regardless of our mistakes or the mistakes our moms made, God’s grace is big enough to cover it all — and that is definitely worth celebrating!

April Motl and her husband, Eric, minister at their church in Southern California where he is a pastor on staff.  April is the founder of In His Eyes Ministries; a teaching ministry devoted to helping women see their life from God’s perspective. For more information about the ministry visit www.InHisEyesMinistries.com.

 

Daily Deeds of Kindness

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The Exciting Photography of Dick Duerksen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Deeds of Kindness

“Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.”
Matthew 5:16

In the final days of Jesus’ life, he shared a meal with his friends Lazarus, Martha, and Mary. Within the week he would feel the sting of the Roman whip, the point of the thorny crown, and the iron of the executioner’s nail. But on this evening, he felt the love of three friends.

For Mary, however, giving the dinner was not enough. “Mary came in with a jar of very expensive aromatic oils, anointed and massaged Jesus’ feet, and then wiped them with her hair. The fragrance of the oils filled the house” (John 12:3). . . .

Judas criticized the deed as wasteful. Not Jesus. He received the gesture as an extravagant demonstration of love, a friend surrendering her most treasured gift. As Jesus hung on the cross, we wonder, Did he detect the fragrance on his skin?

Follow Mary’s example.

There is an elderly man in your community who just lost his wife. An hour of your time would mean the world to him.

Some kids in your city have no dad. No father takes them to movies or baseball games. Maybe you can. They can’t pay you back. They can’t even afford the popcorn or sodas. But they’ll smile like a cantaloupe slice at your kindness.

Or how about this one? Down the hall from your bedroom is a person who shares your last name. Shock that person with kindness. Something outlandish. Your homework done with no complaints. Coffee served before he awakens. A love letter written to her for no special reason. Alabaster poured, just because.

Daily do a deed for which you cannot be repaid.

—from Great Day Every Day

Precious Savior, we pass people every day who need a demonstration of your love. May we search for ways to show extravagant gestures of gracious love, and outlandish acts of kindness. Make us people who set a goal of doing daily deeds for which we cannot be repaid. Set our hearts on fire for people who do not know you. Consume us with compassion for the desperate and downtrodden. Let us pour our lives out in love . . . just because, amen.

Since you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit in sincere love of the brethren, love one another fervently with a pure heart…
I Peter 1:22

God Is Always The Same

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By Max Lucado

 

 

 

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

God will always be the same!  No one else will.

Lovers call you today and scorn you tomorrow.  Companies follow pay raises with pink slips.  Friends applaud you when you drive a classic and dismiss you when you drive a dud.

Not God.  God is always the same.  James 1:17 says, “With God, there is no variation or shadow due to change.”

Catch God in a bad mood?  Won’t happen.  Can your fear exhaust his grace?  A sardine will swallow the Atlantic first.  Do you think he’s given up on you?  Wrong!  Did he not make a promise to you?  What he says he will do, he does.  What he promises, he makes come true.  God is not a human being, and he will not lie.

God is never sullen or sour, sulking or stressed.  His strength, truth, ways, and love never change.  He is the same yesterday and today and forever!

The Movement Continues

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I Was Hungry  Matthew 25:35

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The belief of French philosopher Voltaire: The Bible and Christianity would pass within a hundred years. He died in 1778. The movement continues.

The pronouncement of Friedrich Nietzsche in 1882: “God is dead.” The dawn of science, he believed, would be the doom of faith. Science has dawned; the movement continues.

The way a Communist dictionary defined the Bible: “It is a collection of fantastic legends without any scientific support.” Communism is diminishing; the movement continues.

The discovery made by every person who has tried to bury the faith: The same as the one made by those who tried to bury its Founder: He won’t stay in the tomb.

The facts. The movement has never been stronger. Over one billion Catholics and nearly as many Protestants.

The question. How do we explain it? Jesus was a backwater peasant. He never wrote a book, never held an office. He never journeyed more than two hundred miles from his hometown. Friends left him. One betrayed him. Those he helped forgot him. Prior to his death they abandoned him. But after his death they couldn’t resist him. What made the difference?

The answer. His death and resurrection.
For when he died, so did your sin.
And when he rose, so did your hope.
For when he rose, your grave was changed from a final residence to temporary housing.

The reason he did it. The face in your mirror.

The verdict after two millenniums. Herod was right: there is room for only one King.

Waiting on God: Patiently

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Photo By Darrel Oberkramer

“Rest in the Lord, and Wait patiently for Him.”
Psalms 37:7

I must be honest with you. Ever since I was a little lad, I hated to wait. I had to wait to get a big boy’s bike, wait to be a Cub Scout, wait to enter Boy Scouts, wait till I was old enough to have a paper route, wait till I was 16 to drive, wait till it was time to date, to marry, to vote, to own a business. Wait-Wait-WAIT!
Now that I’ve become a Christian, I’m waiting on God. Like Peter, I’m ready-now, today! But are we? If the truth was really known, I believe it is God that is waiting on us.
A lot of us try to make things happen quickly. We look for the fastest, easiest way to get things done, because we just don’t want to deal with the true preparation that God is waiting for. One of the surest ways to know if you’re operating in the flesh, is if you’re frustrated much of the time.
We need to get a new mindset. Plan to wait. Expect our desires, plans and prayers to take longer and cost us more than we ever thought. We need to get into our thinking, that God is more interested in our character development than in our special requests. Our God is waiting to be our LIFE and our JOY!
It doesn’t sound complicated, but we make it complicated. Why? Because instead of God being our real LIFE and JOY, we allow clever counterfeits to come in as substitutes that displace God and put Him on hold. Substitutes like focusing on our churches and church work instead of Him. Promoting our doctrines and our unique theology without Him as the center. Letting our evangelism and outreach become more important than our in reach. We even allow worldly things to carry a higher priority than our oneness with God. Our homes, our social life, our businesses and occupations, our recreation and entertainment all these varied diversions create a scenario in which God’s real program for us becomes STALLED. He wants to walk side-by-side with us. So now He has to get our attention.
Luke says, “In patience possess your souls.” Because God does not at once, or as soon as we wish, do our bidding, it gives us the divine opportunity to become impatient or inquire of God the reason for the delay. It is in this, “Waiting upon God,” talking with God, that our eyes become open to His wise and sovereign will for us. Hopefully, to see that the sooner and more completely we yield to His program for our lives, the more surely His intended blessing can come to us.
This waiting is to teach us our absolute dependence upon God’s mighty working, and to make us, in patience, place ourselves in His will for our lives, under His direction. In the meantime, God tolerates our slowness and bears long with us. That’s why James says, “Let patience have its perfect work.”
This letting, “patience have its perfect work,” takes faith, courage, trust, rest, belief, obedience, surrender and dependence. All of this is compressed into the one-word, “WAITING on God.” Because so few of us have found God as our true LIFE and Joy, that’s why we are found waiting. Waiting in developing a saving faith, a living-active trust, a Godly rest and a perfect acquiescence. This is what our waiting is really all about. This is what God wants us to get in tune with. That’s why most of us seem to be in this holy exercise of waiting.
Don’t feel bad. Moses waited 40 years, David some 16 years, Joseph I believe was 13 years waiting and what about poor Abraham. Talk about waiting, he was 100 years old before the promise child appeared. God was weaving the same golden thread into all these men’s lives. God and God alone must become their LIFE and JOY! They all had a future, but God had the plan. Each needed to wait in anticipation, in hope, not taking matters into their own hands. So also with you and me. We each have a future, but God has our plan. “Therefore I will look to the Lord; I will WAIT for the God of my salvation; My God will hear me.” Micah 7:7. God hears us and He’s trying to tell us to live in total reliance on Him. Are we willing to go through the process??? Yes, it’s going to take much longer than we’d like. But when we get on board with His real program, then, “I the Lord will hasten it in its time.” Isaiah 60:22.
Father, teach us all how to wait. We all need a direct divine teaching from His Word and His Holy Spirit for our lives. In the common course of everyday life may we look to You to teach us our path. May we wait for instructions. May there be a habitual looking upwards all the daylong. So let’s give God His glory by resting only in Him, by trusting Him fully, by waiting for Him. This honors Him; it leaves Him as God on the throne of our hearts, to do His work in and through us; it yields our, “in chargeness,” wholly into His hands. It lets God be our God.

“My soul, wait thou only upon God,”

 

 

 

Cornelius— What About Discarded People?

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The very foundation of Salvation is grounded in the realization that God’s unmerited love toward us is greater than any other power— Including death!!     Romans 8:35-37,38-39, Ephesians 3:14-21

 

 

 

 

Cornelius was an officer in the Roman army. Both Gentile and bad guy. He ate the wrong food, hung with the wrong crowd, and swore allegiance to Caesar. He didn’t quote the Torah or descend from Abraham. Uncircumcised, unkosher, unclean. Look at him.

Yet look at him again. Closely. He helped needy people and sympathized with Jewish ethics. He was kind and devout. “One who feared God with all his household, who gave alms generously to the people, and prayed to God always” (Acts 10:2 NKJV). Cornelius was even on a first-name basis with an angel. The angel told him to get in touch with Peter, who was staying at a friend’s house thirty miles away in the seaside town of Joppa. Cornelius sent three men to find him.

Peter, meanwhile, was doing his best to pray with a growling stomach. He saw a vision of a sheet that contained enough unkosher food to uncurl the payos of any Hasidic Jew. Peter absolutely and resolutely refused. “Not so, Lord! For I have never eaten anything common or unclean” (Acts 10:14 NKJV).

But God wasn’t kidding about this. He three-peated the vision, leaving poor Peter in a quandary. Peter was pondering the pigs in the blanket when he heard a knock at the door. At the sound of the knock, he heard the call of God’s Spirit in his heart. “Behold, three men are seeking you. Arise therefore, go down and go with them, doubting nothing; for I have sent them” (Acts 10:19–20 NKJV).

“Doubting nothing” can also be translated “make no distinction” or “indulge in no prejudice” or “discard all partiality.” This was a huge moment for Peter.

Cast of Characters - Lost & FoundMuch to his credit, Peter invited the messengers to spend the night and headed out the next morning to meet Cornelius. When Peter arrived, he confessed how difficult this decision had been. “You know that we Jews are not allowed to have anything to do with other people. But God has shown me that he doesn’t think anyone is unclean or unfit” (Acts 10:28 ). Peter told Cornelius about Jesus and the gospel, and before Peter could issue an invitation, the presence of the Spirit was among them, and they were replicating Pentecost—speaking in tongues and glorifying God.

And us? We are still pondering verse Acts 10:28: “God has shown me that he doesn’t think anyone is unclean or unfit.”

In our lifetimes you and I are going to come across some discarded people. Tossed out. Sometimes tossed out by a church. And we get to choose. Neglect or rescue? Label them or love them? We know Jesus’ choice. Just look at what he did with us.

God Runs Toward You

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Brighten your day by envisioning God running toward you!!

When his patriarchs trusted, God blessed. When Peter preached or Paul wrote or Thomas believed, God smiled. But he never ran.

That verb was reserved for the story of the prodigal son. “But when he was still a great way off, his father saw him and had compassion, and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him.” (Luke 15:20 NKJV)

God runs when he sees the son coming home from the pig trough. When the addict steps out of the alley. When the teen walks away from the party. When the ladder-climbing executive pushes back from the desk, the spiritist turns from idols, the materialist from stuff, the atheist from disbelief, and the elitist from self-promotion…

When prodigals trudge up the path, God can’t sit still. Heaven’s throne room echoes with the sound of slapping sandals and pounding feet, and angels watch in silence as God embraces his child.

You turn toward God, and he runs toward you.

True Love

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  The very foundation of Salvation is grounded in the realization that God’s unmerited love toward us is greater than any other power— including death.   Romans 8:35-39, Ephesians 3:14-21

 
It was a busy morning, about 8:30, when an elderly gentleman in his
80′s, arrived to have stitches removed from his thumb. He said he was in
a hurry as he had an appointment at 9:00 am.

I took his vital signs and had him take a seat, knowing it would be over
an hour before someone would to able to see him.

I saw him looking at his watch and decided, since I was not busy with
another patient, I would evaluate his wound.

On exam, it was well healed, so I talked to one of the doctors, got the
needed supplies to remove his sutures and redress his wound.

While taking care of his wound, I asked him if he had another doctor’s
appointment this morning, as he was in such a hurry. The gentleman told
me no, that he needed to go to the nursing home to eat breakfast with
his wife.

I inquired as to her health. He told me that she had been there for a
while and that she was a victim of Alzheimer’s Disease. As we talked, I
asked if she would be upset if he was a bit late. He replied that she no
longer knew who he was, that she had not recognized him in five years
now.

I was surprised, and asked him, “And you still go every morning, even
though she doesn’t know who you are?”

He smiled as he patted my hand and said, “She doesn’t know me, but I
still know who she is.”

I had to hold back tears as he left, I had goose bumps on my arm, and
thought, “That is the kind of love I want in my life.”

I hope you share this with someone you care about. I just did.

How’s Your Love Life?

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For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died;  and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised.   2 Corinthians 5:14-15

 

 Part of godliness is loving—as He loved—sacrificially, selflessly. Loving others not just with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth.

 

Post By Kay Arthur

In light of the fact that it is February—the month in which we celebrate Valentine’s Day—may I ask you a very personal question? “How’s your love life?”

The reason I ask is because your love life, my love life, is a very strong indicator of our relationship with God.

So how about three more heart-searching questions? Questions you might want to bring before God in prayer, asking Him to show you exactly where you really are. I know that as I have examined myself—and continue to do so—God is showing me how much I have to learn—where I fail, where I am weak and how much I need to grow in love. My cry has been, “Lord, teach me about love.” What’s your cry in respect to love?

Here, dear one, are the questions:

First, how well do you love God? And what about others? How do you do in that arena?

Second, whom do you love the most? God? Others? Yourself?

Third, how dwells the love of God in you? Do you know anyone who needs loving? Whether he or she is lovable or not, have you made yourself available to God to be His means of loving that person?

Two months ago we celebrated Christmas—a  holiday that in the most incredulous of ways not only reminds us of God’s unfathomable love for us, but for the world . . . most of whom do not even know He came or Who He was—Who He is! And if they do know His name, too often it is only as an expletive. John 3:16 tells us that God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son.

The baby placed in Mary’s womb supernaturally was the very Son of God . . . the only begotten of the Father . . . born to die. God incarnate—living in flesh just like ours. Tempted but without sin. The One deemed the Lamb of God who would take away the sins of the world by tasting death (and the separation it brings) for every man. The One forsaken by the Father so that you and I would be accepted as Beloved—and never, ever forsaken or forgotten.

And what were we like when God expressed such love towards us? Romans 5:6-8 tell us Jesus Christ died for us when we were without hope. Without hope because we were without God. He loved us when we were ungodly, helpless sinners—enemies!

And when we finally responded to His wooing and believed, God’s Word says, “I will call . . . her who was not beloved, ‘beloved’” (Romans 9:25; Hosea 2:23).

As the ancient hymn writer put it, “Amazing love! How can it be, that Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?”

As I write this, I think of a testimony—the story of Serge LeClure. At the age of eight Serge was taken from his hardworking, loving, single mother and committed to a home for delinquent boys—a home where he would be “properly cared for.” The “care” turned out to be abuse, bullying and rape. It was a “care” he constantly ran from, a “care” that caused him not to care! But he did learn to survive—through hate.

Serge rose to the top as a gang leader at fifteen. As a dealer in drugs, he received over a million dollars for his services. He also spent twenty-one years in prison, six of which were in solitary confinement. Through a chain of events in prison, he came in touch with people who endured embarrassment, harassment and much more, for the sole purpose of telling others about the love of God. For two years, Serge observed love in action—genuine caring. At the age of thirty-eight, Serge LeClure knelt on the cement floor of his cell and received the tangible gift of God’s love by believing on the Lord Jesus Christ.

He rose from the floor a new creature—set free from his addiction to drugs. The unlovable was loved, the condemned prisoner was pardoned, the incorrigible tempered, the sinner deemed a saint, set apart for God. And all because of the love of God! As 1 John 4:10  says, “In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation [the satisfaction] for our sins.”
This is the power of God’s love.

The power to love. A power given to each of us who believe on His name. A love that becomes the distinguishing evidence of our salvation according to 1 John 3:10 and 14; 4:7 and 20 and 5:1.

So how’s your love life? Do you love God? God says we are to love Him with all our heart, mind, body, soul and strength. But not only God; we are to love others. Those who are genuinely born of God not only love the Father, but the child born of Him. Thus Jesus gave His disciples a new commandment: we are to love one another even as He loves us (John 13:34 and 35). It would be time well invested to meditate on the ways He expressed His love toward us, toward others, even toward the one who would betray Him.

And what is it that keeps us from loving like this?

John, the apostle of love, tells us in his first epistle by way of a warning: “Do not love the world nor the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. The world is passing away . . .” (1 John 2:15 and 16).

Yet the world is so very present, isn’t it? So alluring! So tangible! So appealing to our flesh, our ego, our desire to be, to attain, to “make it”! But you have to ask yourself, will it last? Is it worth what you pay in time, in energy, in relationships?

Ours is a culture of concupiscence—a culture that has infiltrated the church. We have a love of softness. We are told, “You deserve it! You earned it. You owe it to yourself to be good to yourself!” Oh Beloved, we hear it and we believe it. We have so loved softness that we have not endured hardship as a soldier of Christ. We have not disciplined ourselves for the sake of godliness.

And part of godliness is loving—as He loved—sacrificially, selflessly. Loving others not just with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth. When we love His way, then we assure our heart before Him, and we have confidence in the coming day of judgment, because as He is in this world, so are we. They know we are His disciples by our love—His love unleashed in us to overflow on the world about us.
So, how is your love life, Beloved?

 

 I am the rose of Sharon,
And the lily of the valleys.   Song of Solomon 2:1

God Is Never Wrong—A Wonderful Short Story

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We have the “assurance” of salvation when we “trust” Jesus with our lives, that’s it.  Once we trust Jesus, He, our great Heavenly Physician, will perfectly heal and restore us, thus our assurance is in Jesus, not in ourselves or our future. Salvation is Now!!                                                                                                                             1  John 5:11-13,   1 John 3:2,   John 17:3

 

 

 

 

A king who  did not believe in the goodness of God, had a slave who, in all
circumstances, said: “My king, do not be discouraged, because  everything
God does is perfect, no mistakes!”

One day  they went hunting and along the way a wild animal attacked the
king.  His slave managed to kill the animal, but could not prevent his
majesty losing a finger.  Furious  and without showing his gratitude for
being saved, the nobleman said  “Is God good? If He was good, I would not
have been attacked and  lost my finger.”The slave  replied:  “My  king,
despite all these things, I can only tell you that God is  good, and he
knows “why” of all these things. What God does is  perfect. He is never
wrong!”

Outraged  by the response, the king ordered the arrest of his  slave.Later,
he  left for  another hunt and was captured by savages who made human
sacrifices.  In the  altar, ready to sacrifice the nobleman, the savages
found that the victim had not one of his fingers, so he was released.
According to  them, it was not so complete to be offered to the gods.

Upon his  return to the palace, he authorized the release of his slave that
he  received very affectionately.”My dear,  God was really good to me! I was
almost killed by the wild men, but  for lack of a single finger, I was let
go! But I have a question: if God is so good, why did He allow me to put you
in jail?”

“My King,  if I had gone with you in this hunt, I would have been sacrificed
for you, because I have no missing finger, therefore, remember everything
God does is perfect. He is never wrong.”

Often we  complain about life, and negative things that happen to us,
forgetting that nothing is random and that everything  has a  purpose.
Every  morning, offer your day to God ……. don’t be in a  rush.  Ask God
to  inspire your thoughts, guide your actions, and ease your feelings.  And
do not be afraid. God is never wrong!

You know  why this message is for you? I do not know, but God knows, because
He never makes mistakes …….The path  of God and his word is perfect,
without impurities. He is the way of  all those who trust in Him, as He says
in 2  Samuel 22:31.

What you  do with this message is up to you. May God put in your heart the desire to follow Jesus completely!

God is  never wrong!!    Psalms 94:18

All About Love—A Wonderful Short Story

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We have the “assurance” of salvation when we “trust” Jesus with our lives, that’s it.  Once we trust Jesus, He, our great Heavenly Physician, will perfectly heal and restore us, thus our assurance is in Jesus, not in ourselves or our future. Salvation is Now!!                   1John 5:11-13,   1 John 3:2,   John 17:3

 

The very foundation of Salvation is grounded in the realization that God’s unmerited love toward us is greater than any other power—including death!!                                                                  Romans 8:37-39, 1Corinthians 15:55-57

Love is not simply about avoiding injurious activities—it is about choosing to purposefully act in uplifting and selfless ways. Nor is it simply about doing what feels good. Rather, love involves doing what is good regardless of how one feels. Doing what is in the best interest of another and giving of oneself for another, love is selfless! When we love, we live. When we stop loving, we die!

A Story About Love

I once had a friend who grew to be very close to me. Once when we were
sitting at the edge of a swimming pool, she filled the palm of her hand
with some water and held it before me, and said this: “You see this
water carefully contained on my hand? It symbolizes Love.”

This was how I saw it: As long as you keep your hand caringly open and
allow it to remain there, it will always be there. However, if you
attempt to close your fingers round it and try to posses it, it will
spill through the first cracks it finds.
This is the greatest mistake that people do when they meet love… they
try to posses it, they demand, they expect… and just like the water
spilling out of your hand, love will retrieve from you.
For love is meant to be free, you cannot change its nature. If there are
people you love, allow them to be free beings. Give and don’t expect.
Advise, but don’t order. Ask, but never demand. It might sound simple,
but it is a lesson that may take a lifetime to truly practice. It is the
secret to true love. To truly practice it, you must sincerely feel no
expectations from those who you love,
and yet an unconditional caring.”

 

 

            The Power Of God’s Love!

 And so we know and rely on the love God has for us.God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in him. In this way, love is made complete among us so that we will have confidence on the Day of Judgment, because in this world we are like him.  There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment.  The one who fears is not made perfect in love.  1 John 4:13-21 NIV, John 5:24

This Is Truly The Gospel In Action!!

“Courtesy Come And Reason Ministries”