Of Alien Nations and the Kindness of God

Of Alien Nations and the Kindness of God

And you, who were once alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, even now hath He reconciled. -Colossians 1:21

I know this truth well: that I once was alienated from God but am now reconciled.

How then do I find myself throwing alien-like prayers up to God?  I pray as if He barely knows me. I approach His throne as if I'm a stranger when I am a member of His divine household.

When did I start to think myself a foreigner? I turn this question over and over again. And then the lyrics of Amanda Cook's song "Kind" fill up the room and my heart.

You are not a tyrant king....

You are not an angry man...

You do not treat us with contempt...

You are kind.

Unanswered prayer made me believe the lie that God is a tyrant. Suffering made me believe that I was an outsider--an alien among my own Father.

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When You Wish You Could Swap Seasons

When You Wish You Could Swap Seasons

This morning I woke up exhausted. I wanted nothing more to turn over and catch some more zzzz's. Then I remembered that it's a weekday and I have to coax three kids out of bed and corral them off to school and myself to work.

It was then that I started longing for my single days. I could stay up late and sleep in with just enough time to get ready and grab breakfast. Responsibilities were short and the fun list was long. Longing for a past season doesn't happen often, but when it does it hits strong.

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A Quiet Place to War

About a week ago, we were all set to see War Room, except plans fell through with the person who was to watch the kids. So I ended up going the next day and catching a weekday matinee with the boys since they were out of school. 

The story revolves around a woman who discovers the power of prayer in her prayer closet i.e. war room. And let's just say that I walked out of that theater with a continued vigor to focus on prayer. Funny thing is, God had already handed down a challenge to pray. 

I'm part of #PeriSistersinChrist, a Periscope group of Christian women scopers. During the month of August, we'd entered into a 30-day prayer challenge for our husbands and marriages. So this movie was pretty much a confirmation for what had already been going on in my life. 

After leaving, I really wished I'd had a war room of my own. But with 3 kids and 3 bedrooms all being used, there is no extra space. That is until my boys suggested the entryway closet. I dismissed the idea because the closet is small and frankly, the idea of cleaning out all the clutter that was in there didn't sound appealing. But when I got home, I opened the door to that closet and realized it just might be the right space.

So as I got to work on clearing the closet out, the opposition started: the kids started fighting, the three-year-old had a potty accident (which never happens) and then I got a sinus headache of epic proportions after cleaning out all of the dusty junk in there. My frustration level was rising and I almost dumped everything back in the closet until I realized that the opposition was more than just sibling bickering and a potty accident. 

I've managed to get that closet cleared out but haven't had time to fix it up. So for now I have a few throw pillows on the floor until I can get some time to get it spruced up.

A dedicated  place to pray: talk about a priority shift. We have a dedicated place to be entertained with TV, a dedicated place to stuff our faces in the house but no dedicated place for prayer. Talk about a heart check. And while prayer will take place whenever and wherever, I like the fact that there is a set aside place to meet with God.

What about you? Have you seen the War Room? What were your takeaways?

Living With Hands Wide Open

Surrender.
Such a beautiful concept. But such a hard act.
I find myself praying, hands clutched together tightly.
God says surrender. I say I am…I’m praying.
But how can I surrender when I’m holding so tightly onto what I want Him to handle?
Reminds me of my three-year-old. She’ll ask for help but then is reluctant to hand over the very thing she needs help with…afraid that she may not get it back. I reassure her I’m trying to help as I pry whatever it is out of her little hand.

I don’t want what I think I should have. I want what God knows I should have.

Daily I'm learning and relearning how to let go.

There's a sweetness in surrender: trusting my situation to a God who is totally trust-able. But there's also fear that it won't turn out like *I'd* planned it. 

Elisabeth Elliot said, " “If we hold tightly to anything given to us unwilling to allow it to be used as the Giver means it to be used we stunt the growth of the soul. What God gives us is not necessarily "ours" but only ours to offer back to him, ours to relinguish, ours to lose, ours to let go of, if we want to be our true selves. Many deaths must go into reaching our maturity in Christ, many letting goes.” 

My prayer is: may I leave all in the Hands that were wounded for me.

 

5 Simple Ways To Make the Best of Your Bible Study Time

Yesterday on social media I shared a little tip that has helped my Bible study: printing out the book of the Bible I'm reading so I can write notes onto the pages. Honestly, I didn't expect that post to get nary a like, but it did. So I thought I'd share how I approach my personal Bible study time. 

Here's my approach to Bible study:

1. Open the Scriptures Prayerfully and Humbly: I pray for the eyes of my understanding to be enlightened. The Bible is a historical, factual book, but, above all else, it is a book about God and who He is. I can't possibly fathom all that God is, so I come in knowing that there will always be more to learn about the Bible and God....always. I remember a pastor of mine saying that an older pastor well into his elderly years said he was still getting revelation on a verse of scripture after decades of teaching the Bible. We will never exhaust its knowledge.

2. Print out a copy of the Bible: This has been a great tool for me instead of marking up my Bible. I circle recurring words and themes. Ask questions. Mark definitions and note revelation or questions that pop up as I'm reading. Loose-leaf, hole-punched Bibles are sold online, but I've found it cheaper to just cut and paste into a Word document. Bible Gateway even lets you remove title headings and verses which makes reading easier. 

printed bible

And I just read the Bible only. When most people say they're studying the Bible, what they're really doing is studying a book someone else has written about their study of the Bible. Not a bad thing, but it certainly shouldn't be the only source of gaining knowledge of the Word.

3. Choose a method of study: You may choose to do a topical study. A word study. A character study or read a whole book of the Bible. Whatever it is, stick to it and don't jump around during a single study period. My favorite is to study a whole book of the Bible using the Inductive Study method. Inductive study using investigative tools to gather information about the Bible: Observation (taking in all the facts about the text taking into consideration its context), Interpretation (figuring out what the text is saying & keeping in mind there is only one correct interpretation), Application (lessons for my life).

inductive study

Keep in mind that there are 11 categories of culture that need to be taken into consideration when reading the Bible. They are:

political  * religious * economic * legal * agricultural * architectural

* clothing * domestic * geographical * military * social

The Bible was written in the framework of another time. So though it's spiritual significance is timeless, it was written within the boundaries of culture and should be read with that in mind.

4. Gather "excavation" tools: As I dig deeper in the Word through Bible study. I find it's good to have a Bible dictionary (I especially like looking up name meanings), commentary, encyclopedia, maps (I've just recently started using maps & it I'm finding it gives a frame of reference) and concordance on hand. I admit, I'm a Strong's concordance junkie. I love to look up the origin of words. And be sure to cross-reference; it's the best way to see how the Bible is woven together as one big tapestry. Need help finding tools? This link has a list of basic resources.

excavation tools

5. Separate Bible study and devotion time: For me, Bible study is studying as a student would to gain knowledge for a class. I block out an hour in the evenings after the kids are sleep and I just pore over the scriptures. Often things get so good, I end up staying up too late! In the morning I have devotion time where I dedicate a shorter period of time to reading passages of scripture and praying so that God can speak to my heart for the day. 

I should add that getting a Bible version that is easy reading for you is key. I recently switched from the KJV to the ESV because I wanted a greater ease of reading and the ESV is a word-for-word translation rather than a thought for thought translation like the NIV, NAB, NLT and Bibles. I also gave up the Message Bible for Bible Study because it's a paraphrase rather than a translation. Here's a handy list of Bible translations and types.

What are your tips for Bible Study? And what are you studying now? I'd love to hear how you study!

Running Ahead of God

When I'm out in public with the kids, one of my biggest pet peeves is when they run ahead of me.  More often than not, I have to call them back because they've headed in a direction that we aren't going. 

How often do I do that? Run ahead of God without realizing He's calling me to a different direction. I'm sure I've done it more times than I care to admit. I make plans, write out goals, pray and then tell God to follow me. Of course, I wouldn't think this is what I'm doing, but that's exactly what I'm doing when I don't first submit my way to His.

Then Joshua spoke to the priests, saying, “Take up the ark of the covenant and cross over before the people.” So they took up the ark of the covenant and went before the people. 

When God called the nation of Israel from their wilderness wanderings into the Promised Land, He had strict guidelines for them: follow the ark of the covenant that the priests were carrying which would go before them. The ark represented God's covenant with His people as well as His presence.

As the priests stepped into the waters of the Jordan River, the waters receded a la Red Sea style and the people were able to pass over. The principle here is: the nation of Israel followed and God worked wonders in their midst. 

“When you see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the priests, the Levites, bearing it, then you shall set out from your place and go after it. Yet there shall be a space between you and it, about two thousand cubits by measure. Do not come near it, that you may know the way by which you must go, for you have not passed this way before.”  Joshua 3:3-4

It was crucial for them to wait on the priests who were carrying the ark and to follow the it because they'd never gone this way before. And I've never lived this life before, so how arrogant of me to think I can list out my life where I want my life to go and expect God to line up with it.

The older I get the more I realize just how important it is to have God's promise and presence go before me. Lately, my prayer has been: "Lord, what's next for me? I submit my will to You." Sure, I've got dreams and goals, but I'm ever examining them in light of God's leading. How I'd wish I'd learned this truth earlier in life.

“Dreams are tawdry when compared with the leading of God, and not worthy of the aura of wonder we usually surround them with. God only doeth wonders. He does nothing else. His hand can work nothing less.” ― Jim Elliot

So here's to stepping into the waters, following hard after God and watching Him do wonders.

running ahead of God



What I Want My Daughter To Know About the Gift of Femininity

the gift of feminity

What place does femininity have in modern society? If you look at what the media says, there's not much room for it.

The other day while watching Doc McStuffins for the millionth time, there was an episode where a toy princess has something caught in her hair. She needed help getting it out, but the toy prince misinterpreted her dilemma as needing to be rescued. Seeing as that's what he did best, he went about rescuing her. But she was highly offended at this act. She didn't need to be rescued and told him as much. Furthermore, she added that she could do anything a prince could do...and better. She then challenged him to a contest to prove her "equalness." Turns out, she proved she was better and had to rescue him. The show ended with him apologizing for doubting her ability to do anything a male could do.

Whoa, that's not the message I want to send to my little girl. Sure, I want her to know that the sky is the limit and not to let anyone box her in when she's well capable. But I don't want her thinking that she has to match a man's ability toe to toe.

It seems to be a forgotten fact that we were created male and female by God. Each sex has a specific purpose and strength. And each complements the other. The older I get, the less patient I am with women who want to do everything men can do and better. Seems like the perfect recipe to emasculate a man.

My strengths as a woman are vastly different from a man's strengths. I don't see many men running to compete with woman on what they are best designed to do. It's ludicrous for us to do the same. But all we have to do is take a look back at the Garden of Eden to see where things took a turn. Satan came along and made Eve believe that she needed to take something that wasn't hers. And so began the struggle for dominion over a man.

When Even took that fruit, she was also taking authority and dominance (the things she wasn't created to take). And ever since women have been grabbing for dominance, grabbing to be just like men when we were created to be women, which is a beautiful thing by itself. Women are grabbing to take authority over their husbands and taking matters into their own hands just like Eve.

I don't want that for my daughter. I don't want her grabbing for what's not hers to take. I want her to learn the beauty of accepting what's given like Mary, the mother of Jesus. She gladly accepted the will of God for her life and the fruit of that was a submission that is admirable. She said, "Behold, the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word." 

Women, we are naturally designed to receive (even our bodies are designed that way). Taking is outside of our nature and we've got to teach our daughters that they don't have to go through life taking, grasping and groping. When we gladly accept the gift of femininity, we are free to be who God created us to be. And really, why would you want to be anything else?

When Eve took that fruit what she was saying in essence was, “Be it unto me according to my word." 

"And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat; and she gave also unto her husband with her, and he did eat."

Taking and giving: innocent gestures right? Not when we look at them in the light of how God designed women.

There's nothing wrong with stepping up when the situation warrants it, but women, let's not be aggressive or pushy outside of our nature. And lest you think I'm an anti-feminist, on most points I'm not. I believe in the suffrage movement which brought about women's right to vote and I'm all for equality in pay.  What I'm not for is women thinking they need to be like men as they make their way through this world. Sure, women can be leaders. But women don't need to lead like men to be effective. 

“It is a naive sort of feminism that insists that women prove their ability to do all the things that men do. This is a distortion and a travesty. Men have never sought to prove that they can do all the things women do. Why subject women to purely masculine criteria? Women can and ought to be judged by the criteria of femininity, for it is in their femininity that they participate in the human race. And femininity has its limitations. So has masculinity." -  Elisabeth Elliot

There's a strength and beauty in femininity that can only come when we accept God's design for women. Ladies, we don't have to take a man, a job or authority. God will give it to us just like He did for Esther and Ruth and Elizabeth.

Esther was given her petition.

Ruth received Boaz as her husband.

Elizabeth was given a baby in her old age.

They all received what was given.  Don't believe the lie that just because you are a woman that you have to take and push for what you want. 

Bottom line: I pray for my daughter that she will discover the wonder of being a woman. And once she does that she learns to walk in womanhood with grace and confidence just the way God designed her to. 

 

The Beauty (& Benefits) of Memorizing Scripture

The Beauty and Benefits of Memorizing Scripture

Time and time again, I've attempted to memorize big chunks of scripture, only to fail. Sure, I have lots of scripture committed to memory. But not whole books. The boys have to memorize weekly Bible verses as part of their curriculum at school, so I always thought this would be a good motivator. It never was.

Recently, my online gal pal Kim Cash Tate (a gifted Christian book author by the way) shared a video about her tips for memorizing scripture. That video re-ignited the flame. And it's funny how something as simple as spiral bound index cards helped me tremendously!

A few weeks back I started memorizing the book of Ephesians. I'm still early in the book, but I'm okay with the progress thus far. I've discovered that giving myself a deadline to memorize verses was stressful and counterproductive. Instead, I move on to the next set of verses once I feel I've gotten a good understanding of the verses. I don't just want to memorize for memorization sake. I want to have a clear and deep understanding of what I'm memorizing. I'm finding that this method is helping those verses to stick!

Benefits I'm discovering:

  • Revelation comes from pondering the same scripture over and over. I've read Ephesians numerous times, but with more reading comes a deeper revelation of the verses.
  • Verses pop up in my heart just when I need them. Verses that seem insignificant take on great importance when the Holy Spirit brings them back at just the right moment.  
  • I can spot errors.  Reading verses over and over in context can help you spot when it's pulled out of context or when it's misinterpreted.
  • You can teach it to your kids.  What I know for sure, I can surely pass on to the kids. Instead of looking it up, I have it right in my head (and heart!)
scripture index cards

The System That's Working for Me:

  • Spiral bound index cards: I write down two verses per card and carry it around with me. I prop it up while I'm getting ready in the morning, on the nightstand and on my desk at work. Since I'm a visual learner, seeing it constantly works best for me.
  • I also like to listen to the audio version. YouVersion (the app and web version) has audio versions of various translations. I like to listen and say the verses along with the narrator. I'm currently memorizing the ESV translation but am considering switching to KJV since I've discovered that a lot of verses that I already know are in this translation. 
  • I'm also loving the BibleMinded app for the times when I just have my phone but not my index cards. It provides virtual memory cards with verses as well as fill-in-the blank "quizzes" and I can test my memory by typing the verses out.
bibleminded app

Do you memorize scripture? If so, I'd love to hear your tips as to how you do it!

 

Standing Close to Jesus' Cross

standing close to the cross

..but standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene.  John 19:25

As Jesus hung on the cross, his mother stood at the foot of the cross.

She wasn't flailing and wailing. She wasn't fainting and falling out. She was standing.

I marvel at her strength in a very dark hour. She'd been there in His glory as He performed miracles. She also stood watching her son dying on the cross as the will of God was taking place. 

What a model of unwavering strength and faith! May we all learn to stand firmly like Mary through the trials of our own lives.

"Strong women. May we know them. May we raise them. May we be them."

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One last thing: I wrote a guest post titled When Faith Flounders for Val's 40 Days of Faith series on her blog Living My Faith. You can find it here.