Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Picture of a changed life!

         I stumbled across a picture that was given to me after a sermon I preached awhile back.  The sermon was on living a life of thanksgiving and I focused on how the Gospel gives us the motivation to live a life of thanksgiving.  I talked about how Jesus changes everything!  Here were my five points.

1.) Before Jesus you were separated from God, after Jesus you have come into a relationship with God.          
2.)  Before Jesus you were dead in your sins, after Jesus you have become a new creation.
3.)  Before Jesus you were enemies of God, after Jesus you became friends with God.
4.)  Before Jesus you were under the wrath of God, after Jesus you became a child of God.
5.)  Before Jesus you were without hope for today and for eternity, after Jesus you have incredible hope      for today and for eternity.

         While I was preaching a young boy drew a picture of who we were before Jesus and who we are after Jesus.  Here was his picture on the back of the note sheet…. 


That sums it up pretty well!  We are a mess without Jesus, and when we enter into a relationship with Jesus he changes us, he makes us into a new creation!  Be thankful today for what Jesus has done in your life!  I am!

Monday, December 9, 2013

Faith Like a Child: You are dad!

      Becoming a dad  has opened up my eyes to some of the beautiful truths in Scripture that speak of God being our father, being our dad.  A couple situations that happened recently made me realize how beautiful it is that God is our dad.  On a Sunday morning when we were in church worshipping I was standing holding my three year old when she pointed at my name tag asking what it was and I told her that it told people what my name was.  She responding with a big smile and said, "daddy."  To my three year old that is my name, that is who I am.
     The other situation happened several weeks ago as we were playing at a park and my seven year old son was running around and playing with some other kids and I looked up to see him looking over the top of the play structure talking to his new friend, pointing at me, and saying, "That's my dad."  These two situations have given me pause in how to respond to the question who is God.  That is an extremely important question and it can answered in many different ways which are truthful and correct.  We can say God is creator.  God is holy.  God is just.  God is gracious.  God is love.  God is trinitarian.  God is glorious.  Those are all truthful statements of who God is.  However, as truthful as those descriptors are, sometimes they can be hard to grasp, to fully understand, and even harder to communicate to another person.  Maybe we would do better to begin answering the question "Who is God" by stating that he is my dad.  He loves me, he takes care of me.  When we see God working around us we can point to that and say, "that's my dad, he did that."  When we look at a beautiful sunset we can point to it and say, "my dad made that."
        God beginning in Genesis chapter three, where sin entered the scene and God's relationship with humans was broken, went on a relentless pursuit to restore that relationship.  The Bible is this massive love story where God is striving to make himself known to all people's and ultimately sends his own son to make himself known and to be able to restore the relationship that was broken.  God wanted to restore a father/son or father/daughter relationship.  More than God wants you to know that He is Holy, God wants you to know him as daddy.  More than God wants you to know that He is just, he wants you to know that he LOVES YOU and has done everything that needed to be done to restore this broken relationship.  It is in the context of a relationship that you will begin to understand what it means that God is creator, that God is holy, that God is gracious, that God is just, but the relationship is the starting place.  God is my dad!  God is my father!  That blows my mind!  "That's My DAD!"
     

Monday, December 2, 2013

Seeing our sin helps us to love well!

       It seems that within American Christianity we shy away more and more from talking about sin.  We have changed the vocabulary from words like sin, wickedness,  and evil, to words like mistakes, shortcomings, and "my bad."  Rarely do we talk about the magnitude of sin and sinners before a holy and perfect God.  Rarely do we pause to contemplate what it means to sin, what it does to our relationship with God and that is a problem.
       Last week as I was reading in the Gospel of Mark I read Mark 8 beginning in verse 36 where Jesus forgives a woman who had sinned much.  The context is that Jesus is eating at one of the phariseas homes and a woman who was described in the account as a "sinner" came in wiped and washed the feet of Jesus with her tears and hair and anointed them.  The Pharisees could not grasp why Jesus would allow a woman with the reputation of this woman to do this.  Let's jump into the story at verse 41, "A certain moneylender had two debtors.  One owed five hundred denarii, and the other fifty.  When they could not pay he cancelled the debt of both.  Now which of them will love him more?  Simon answered, 'The one, I suppose, for whom he cancelled the larger debt.'  And he said to him, 'You have judged rightly.'  Turning toward the woman he said to Simon, 'Do you see this woman?  I entered your house; you gave me no water for my feet, but she has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair.  You gave me no kiss, but from the time I came in she has not ceased to kiss my feet.  You did not anoint my head with oil, but she has anointed my feet with ointment.  Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven- for she has loved much.  But he who is forgiven little, loves little.' And he said to her, 'Your sins are forgiven.'"
       When we begin to minimize the magnitude of sin before a holy God we minimize our love for God.  When we begin to redefine the words sin, evil, and wickedness we redefine our ability to stand amazed at God's incredible love and grace towards us.  If God has only forgiven a "pretty good" person that does not motivate us to live the kind of counter-cultural, upside down, life that the Gospel calls us to live.  However, when God forgives someone who is a sinner, who has offended God deeply, who is wicked, who is evil, (which describes all of us) that gives incredible motivation and reason for that person to love God, to follow God, to live for Him.  That person is not following Jesus because they have to, they are following Jesus because they want to!  Understanding who we are in our sin, understand the magnitude of our sins before the God who created us, is the key to stop living a Christian life feeling like we have to serve God and to start living a Christian life where we want to serve God.
        Let us continue to talk about sin.  Let us continue to reflect on and think about the magnitude of our sin.  Let us continue to realize more and more how sin looks to our creator and sustainer.  When we do we will see more and more clearly how sinful we are.  How wicked we are.  How evil we are.  As we see that we will also see the amazing, astounding, unbelievable grace of God that has forgiven me and as a result we will love much!
     

Monday, November 18, 2013

Faith Like A Child: Toys, suffering, and change.

        Having kids allows you to regularly catch glimpses of Biblical truth coming alive in new and refreshing ways.  It has for me and I enjoy sharing them on here.  The other day our three year old, Anaya, said something that was absolutely shocking.  Something that I would imagine has only been vocalized by three year olds on extremely rare occasions.  So what did she say?  She said, "I think we need to clean up the toys."  Not a common phrase in our household coming out of the mouth of our children.  However, she had a reason why she wanted to clean up toys.  She wanted to clean up the toys because she had just stepped on one of them and hurt her foot!  Any parent knows the annoying and painful experience of stepping on a toy, and now Anaya had experience it and that experience made her want to do something she usually does not want to do, clean up!  As I was thinking about her response my mind quickly jumped to thinking about suffering and God.
         Suffering is one of those universal experiences that we all have.  Everyone of us suffers from time to time in life.   Suffering can be the result of a variety of different factors, but suffering is universal, and that is why it is such a prominent theme throughout Scripture.  In the New Testament when suffering is spoken of it almost always comes with a promise that God is going to bring something good out of the suffering.  The suffering itself is not good, as Anaya experienced, but it did bring about a good change in her wanting to clean up toys.  That is one of the good things about suffering.  It changes us for the better.  Suffering teaches us that we are not strong enough.  That we are not good enough.  That we are not smart enough.  That we do not have it all together.  That we don't have all the answers.  That we can't do this alone.  Suffering teaches us all those things, and much more.  When we realize those things all of a sudden we become people who are no longer depend upon our own resources, but instead depend on the unlimited resources of God.  Which is why Paul was able to say with such confidence in 2 Corinthians 12:9-10, "And He has said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.' Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.  Therefore I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, with difficulties, for Christ's sake; for when I am weak, then I am strong." Suffering is never good, but what God brings out of suffering for those who trust in Him is always good!  

Monday, October 21, 2013

Discipline Leads to LIFE!

       I have a neighbor who might be the most disciplined person I have seen when it comes to exercise!  A little about this man.  I would guess he is in his mid to upper 50's.  We first took notice of him about a year ago when he would go running by our house, and what I first noticed was how incredibly slow he ran.  I am convinced that the average person could have walked faster than he was running, but nonetheless he would go running by our house everyday!  When it was snowing, when it was freezing, when it was windy, when it was raining, when it was hot and humid, he would go running!  I have seen him running in every weather condition that Minnesota can throw at a person.  He just kept running every day and you know what has happened?  He has lost a lot of weight, he has gotten much faster, and now after he finishes his run he jumps on his bike and goes on a bike ride!  This man has been given new life, he is a new person, a different person, in much better shape physically, but it came as the result of discipline.  Discipline where everyday, no matter what, he would go for a run.
       While being disciplined when it comes to exercise is important, I want to focus on Godly discipline.  Godly discipline leads to LIFE, life to the full that Jesus talks about in John 10:10.  When you make a commitment to get up early every morning to spend time in prayer and in the Word regardless of how tired you are that will lead to LIFE.  When you commit to serve and love others all the time regardless of the inconvenience it might be to you that will lead to LIFE.  When you commit to gather together with other believers in worship of God and to learn from his word regardless of how you "feel" that will lead to LIFE!  When you follow God, even when He is leading you to go somewhere unknown, scary, and foreign that will lead to LIFE.
       Having LIFE to the full doesn't just happen as we sit around doing nothing.  Having LIFE to the full happens as we put ourselves in situations where God changes people and we put ourselves in those situations and places day after day after day.  Like my neighbor my prayer is that people will look at you and I a year from now and see that we have been given new LIFE, that we are different people, that we are in a much better place in our relationship with God.  That will happen as we pursue Godly discipline no matter what.  Ask God to give you the strength to power through everything that would deter you from pursuing Him and pursuing life to the full!  Ask and it will be given to you.  Godly discipline leads to LIFE!

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

What to do when life hurts

       For Sr. High this year we are going through the book of 2 Corinthians.  2 Corinthians is a fascinating book in which Paul is attempting to convince the believers in Corinth that he is truly an Apostle and that what he has spoken to them is the true Gospel.  A group of people in Corinth have been spreading rumors and lies about Paul and changing the Gospel message that Paul taught to the Corinthian church.  Paul in his attempt to convince the Corinthian believers of his authenticity does so by time and time again in this letter speaking about what God has done through all of Paul's suffering, struggles, and weaknesses!  Paul makes it clear this is not about Him, but about the powerful God who has worked through him in unbelievable circumstances to do the unthinkable.
       As we were studying the first fourteen verses of chapter one theme came across.  The theme was this: when going through difficult times.... Run to God and Run to God's people.  You see clearly that when suffering comes into our life we are to run to God.  We see this in verses 3-4, "Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles."  We also see this idea of run to God in 9-10, "Indeed, in our hearts we felt the sentence of death.  But this happened so that we might not rely on ourselves but on God, who raises the dead.  He has delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us.  On him we have set our hope that he will continue to deliver us."  Did you see in those verses that we are to run to God, cling to Him, depend upon Him when we face difficult times.  He is the Father of ALL compassion and the God of ALL comfort.  He is the one who raises the dead and the one who delivers us.  When life hurts run to God and hope in Him.
       These verses also reveal to us that when life hurts we not only run to God, but we should also run to God's people.  We see this in verse 4, "who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God."  Did you catch that?  When any Jesus follower goes through a difficult time and they receive comfort from God they have now been equipped and trained and prepared to offer and give God's comfort to others.  Pain and suffering is a part of life and many people have walked through that pain and suffering and received God's comfort.  Go to those people because according to this verse they can offer to you the comfort of God Himself because they have experienced that comfort in their life.  We also see this idea in verse 11, "You also must help us by your prayers."  Paul wasn't telling the Corinthians believers if you feel like it, or if you think about it, or if you get around it your prayers would be nice.  Paul says YOU MUST HELP US BY YOUR PRAYERS.  Paul understood the role of prayer in suffering and because of that he called out to God's people and said, you have to help us by your prayers.  When you are suffering and life hurts call out to God's people and tell them to call out to God on your behalf in prayer.
      If life hurts right now.  If you are going through a painful and difficult experience I want to encourage you based on 2 Corinthians 1:3-11 to run to God and run to God's people.  Run to God and run to God's people.  

Monday, September 16, 2013

Faith Like A Child: When bad is..... bad.

       About a month ago I made an attempt at water-skiing!  After watching my mother-in-law cruise around the lake on her skies like it was the easiest thing in the world, it was my turn.  It wasn't my first attempt water skiing, but it had been years since I had water-skiied.  What I mean by water-skiing in the past is I got up one time, hung on for dear life as we did a loop around the lake and collapsed exhausted into the water at the end.  That was about 15 years ago.  So how did it go this time.... not good!  I tried, and tried, and tried, but all I had to show for it was a bunch of face plants into the water!
      After I got back into the boat I asked my 3 year old daughter, who had the joy (or maybe pain) of watching my failed attempts, how I did.  Her answer in typical 3 year old fashion, "Bad."  What my ego hoped to hear was "great" or "ok" or "good try" instead what I heard was "bad" and rightly so because I did a bad job of water-skiing!  We live in a culture that doesn't like to use the word "bad."  Instead we much prefer to use words like mistaken, fail, screwed up, etc, but we don't like to use the word bad.  We like to say at least you tried, or great effort, or you almost got it right!  However, sometimes things are just bad and we need to call them what they are.  
      I wonder how much we have allowed the language of our culture to sip into our churches when it comes to talking about sin.  Often times we try to soften the blow of sin and cheapen the language that the Bible uses in order that it might be more "user friendly."  We want to make sure people feel encouraged and inspired and talking about sin being really, really, bad doesn't usually make us feel encouraged and inspired.  But sin is bad, in fact it is terrible and it is a huge offense before a holy God and as a result of our sin we are under the wrath of God.  Sin is bad, it is really, really, bad.  Until we grasp how bad sin is we cannot understand how amazing grace is and how desperately we need Jesus.  On my way to work this morning I was listening to a podcast and the pastor said, "We tell people that Jesus saves them from hell, instead of telling people Jesus saves them from their sin."  Being saved from hell sounds better than being saved from our own sin that is such an offense before God that unless it is dealt with by putting our faith in the finished work of Jesus on the cross we will go to hell.
       When we lose the magnitude of sin and quit calling it what it is, we cheapen the gift of salvation.  We cheapen the drastic measures in which God went in order to reconcile ourselves to Him.  Let's be sure to call what is bad, "bad."  Sin is bad.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Investing in youth is an all church ministry!

       A couple weeks ago I had the opportunity to preach at the church that I spent the first 18 years of my life in!  It was a blast getting to be back there and teach the Word in the church that was so vital in my growth of becoming more like Jesus.  It was also a humbling experience because as I looked around that room I saw so many faces of people who had invested in my life and looking back they played a huge part in helping me be where I am today in my walk with Jesus.  It struck me very clearly for the first time how good of job Emmanuel Baptist Church in Mora, MN did investing in youth.  I also realized that if a church is going to invest in young people it needs to be an all church undertaking.  The moment the spiritual growth of young people is placed solely upon the youth pastor and a few adults who love to work with teenagers on Wednesday night is the moment we drastically reduce our effectiveness in discipling young people and pouring into them in hopes that they will follow Jesus wherever God leads them in the future.
        So what does this look like?  Does this mean everyone needs to work in the youth ministry?  No!  What it does mean is that everyone can do something to build into the lives of our youth.  Everyone can get to know the names of several of the young people in our church and make a point to say hi to them every week and telling them you are excited they are here.  Everyone can get to know what activities one or two students are involved in and occasionally ask them how it is going.  Everyone can help create a space where kids can be kids and when they do kid stuff they are lovingly redirected and not shamed and condemned.  Some can take it further.  Those who are a part of the older generation can intentionally meet with students in a mentoring relationship.  Some can help with the youth ministry, some can lead small groups, some can enter into 1-1 discipleship relationships.  The bottom line is everyone can do something, and everyone needs to do something.
      What are we aiming for when the church invests in the lives of kids and youth.  We are aiming and praying that God would use it to grip their hearts and draw them to Himself.  We are aiming towards kids and youth growing up and continuing to follow Jesus wherever He leads them to go.  Success is not determined on what they do, success is determined on if they are following Jesus.  Success is a stay at home mom is pursuing Jesus and living that out in front of her kids.  Success is a blue collar worker who is following Jesus faithfully in the work place and at home.  Success is the missionary, or pastor, who is following Jesus.  Success is found when they enter adult hood and continue to follow Jesus.
       As I looked across that room I saw the people who greeted me every morning.  I saw the people who asked me about how football and basketball were going for me.  I saw people who were my small group leaders.  I saw people who created an environment where kids could be kids while moving us towards Jesus.  I saw a church that invested in kids and youth and my life is vastly different because of that.
       One more thing:  young people are the church of today, not the church of tomorrow.  They are a part of the body today if they are followers of Jesus.  So not only are we to invest in them for what we hope they will become in the future, we invest in them for what we hope will be in the present.  That they might faithfully follow Jesus today in their schools, in the classroom, on the athletic field, in their jobs, with their friends, and in their homes.
       So what is your role for investing in youth?  If you don't have a role yet simply start by getting to know the names of two youth and make a point to say hi to them every time you see them at church!


Monday, August 5, 2013

Faith Like a Child: When is a boat a boat and when is a Jesus follower a Jesus follower?

       I had the opportunity to spend the week at a cabin with my family and it was a blast!  Our 18 month old became obsessed with boats and he ran around the entire week yelling out "boat, boat, boat" every time he saw one cruising across the lake!  One morning in an attempt to get him away from causing trouble (a common occurrence) I had him come over by me and look out the window of our cabin to look for boats.  The cabin was about 5 yards from the water and right out from our windows  were several boat lifts with boats in them so I figured the search for a "boat" would be successful!  However, as he looked out the window he lifted up his hands in the air to say, "where are the boats" even though three boats were literally right in front of him.  A few minutes later he spotted a boat going across the lake and erupted in shouts of "boat, boat, boat."  For Ty a boat was not a boat unless it was doing what a boat was created to do!  If the boat was not out on the water driving around the lake in his mind it was not a boat.
      The same is true of Jesus followers.  A Jesus follower is not a Jesus follower unless they are... following Jesus.  So the question we all need to be asking ourselves is this, "are we doing what we have been born again to do?"  Are we following Jesus, because if claim to follow Jesus, but aren't following him, we really aren't followers of Jesus.  So take some time and ask God to reveal to you if you are following Jesus or not.  Are you following Jesus in your work?  As a parent?  As a student?  As a husband or wife?  As a neighbor?  As a friend?  That is what God has created you to do and that is what God through His spirit will empower you to do!  When people see us, what do they see?  I hope they see someone following Jesus!

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Lord, I need you!

        I love the worship leader at North!  Not only because he is becoming a good friend, but also because he chooses songs that display and drive us to the heart of the Gospel.  There is a lot of fluff out there in Christian music and sadly a lot of fluff out there in Christian worship music.  A song that we have been singing the past few weeks is Lord, I need you by Matt Maher is an example of a song that drives us to the heart of the Gospel. to the heart of God.  Check out these lyrics.


Lord, I come, I confess
Bowing here I find my rest
Without You I fall apart
You're the One that guides my heart

Lord, I need You, oh, I need You
Every hour I need You
My one defense, my righteousness
Oh God, how I need You

Where sin runs deep Your grace is more
Where grace is found is where You are
And where You are, Lord, I am free
Holiness is Christ in me

Lord, I need You, oh, I need You
Every hour I need You
My one defense, my righteousness
Oh God, how I need You

Teach my song to rise to You
When temptation comes my way
And when I cannot stand I'll fall on You
Jesus, You're my hope and stay

Lord, I need You, oh, I need You
Every hour I need You
My one defense, my righteousness
Oh God, how I need You

You're my one defense, my righteousness
Oh God, how I need You
My one defense, my righteousness
Oh God, how I need You

       That is the GOSPEL!  "Lord, I need you, oh, I need You Every hour I need you.  My one defense, my righteousness, Oh God, how I need You."   As I was singing this song on Sunday I had to ask myself what am I trusting in for my salvation?  What am I trusting in for my becoming more and more like Jesus?  If the answer is anything but Jesus, that is not the Gospel.  The Gospel is me putting my faith in the FINISHED work of Jesus Christ on the cross.  Did you catch that, putting my faith in the FINISHED work of Jesus Christ.  It is trusting in what has already been accomplished, not trusting in what I am going to accomplish.  When it comes to me growing to be more like Jesus, there too I am desperate for God's work in my life.  As our pastor said on Sunday when talking about having trinitarian love for our brothers and sisters in Christ, "we can't do it."  We can't do it, but God can and He lives inside of us.  That is why every hour, every minute, every second we should be crying out, "Lord, I need you, oh how I need you.  Every hour I need you.  My one defense my righteousness.  Oh God, how I need you."
        I am a man desperate and wholly dependent upon Jesus not only for my salvation, but for my growth in Christlikeness.  Take some time today and honestly ask yourself these two questions.  1.)  What am I trusting in for my salvation?  2.)  What am I trusting in for becoming more like Jesus?  If you answer is not Jesus, remind yourself of the Gospel message.  Remind yourself of the finished work of Jesus on the cross.

 "My one defense, my righteousness.  Oh God, how I need You." 

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Thoughts about moms!

       My 2 year old daughter Anaya is going to be a great mom some day!  She loves to take care of her siblings (even the older ones, which doesn't always go well!)  She loves taking care of other kids (which doesn't always go well!)  She loves taking care of her babies (which goes well, since they have no will of their own).  When her baby cries she comforts her, rocks her, and kisses her owies all better!  When she lays her baby down for a nap (singing her to sleep) she makes sure everyone else in the house knows her baby is sleeping and needs to be quiet.  When one of her siblings messes with her baby.....  LOOK OUT!
       I have been thinking a lot lately about how Anaya might answer the question, "What do you want to be when you grow up" as she gets older.  Answers to this question seem to vary all of the time from kid to kid, and in reality the answer changes a lot as the child gets older.  This question often elicits grandiose dreams of what they want to be when the grow up from astronauts, professional athletes, famous musicians, movie starts, and on and on it could go.  I wonder how people would respond if Anaya as a teenager answers the question by saying, "I want to be a mom."  I fear that people would almost perceive that as someone who is settling for something less than what she should be aspiring towards.   As if "being a mom" is not enough.  That seems to be the general tenure of our modern culture.  That if a woman chooses to be a stay at home mom, she is somehow being restricted by traditional family values that keep her in the home and do not allow her to pursue her dreams and become successful in her career.  I hope this changes.  I don't know that it is realistic to think that it will change but I want my daughters (and sons) to know that "to be a mommy" is a worthy, honorable, and beautiful desire.
       While I can't change how other people perceive the beauty, importance, and magnitude of someone who above any other "career" aspiration, just wants to be a mom!  In some situations mom might need to work outside of the home in order to provide for her children, but she works not to pursue her career, but instead to provide for her kids.  She doesn't see her kids as a painful interruption to her career, but instead as a beautiful gift that the God of the universe has placed into her hands.
        My prayer is that my daughters and sons know that being a mom is a beautiful things to aspire to!  I can do that by making sure that I am always honoring my wife for the mom that she is to our kids.  To encourage her and praise her in front of my kids.  To remind my kids that children are a gift from God.  I don't know what Anaya or any of my children will be when they grow up, but my prayer is that they understand how beautiful and important being a mommy is!

Thursday, February 21, 2013

How do you pray for your children


I came across this picture and prayer on facebook..... 



and I hated it.  I hated it because in essence what is being prayed for is the American dream which is vastly different than pursuing Jesus.  The sad part is the fact that most of us as parents probably spend significantly more time praying for the safety of our kids, than praying that God would use our kids to bring glory to His name and lead others to salvation. 
       The way we pray for our kids ultimately reveals what we believe to be most important in life.  When we frequently pray for our kids safety, and rarely pray for our kids to live for the glory of God, it reveals that we believe safety is more important than the glory of God.  When we pray more for our kids earthly accomplishments than their kingdom accomplishment, we reveal that we believe earthly success is more important than success in God’s eyes.  
       Of course I want my kids to be safe, and healthy.  Of course I want my kids to be successful.  Of course I want my kids to have their dreams come true.  However, there is something that I desire more than all of that combined.  I desire that someday my kids will stand before God and hear him proclaim, "Well done good and faithful servant."  I desire that my kids will spend their life making much of God, and sharing the Gospel with those around them in word and deed.  If that can best happen through sickness and struggle, than that is what I desire.  If that can best happen through health and "earthly" success, than that is what I desire.  I came across the following prayer and I am beginning to use it when praying for my kids.  May our prayers for our kids change as we realize that God's glory and the salvation of others is WAY more important than health, safety, and earthly success.
     
Do What You Must
Do what You must almighty God
To make me more like Your Son,
Empty me of all envy and pride
And fill me again with love.
Whatever it takes I earnestly pray
To make me a man of Your Word,
Take me to the depths of sufferings deep
Lead me down the Calvary road.
I’ll take up my cross whatever the cost
If You grant the strength and grace,
I’ll follow you Lord, my Savior, my God
To highest of heights or grave.
My dreams and my plans I place on your altar
And to them I raise my knife,
You give and you take, my gracious Provider
You kill and you bring to life.
I ask not for health nor prospering wealth
But one thing I need and trust,
That I might become a man like Your Son
To this end Lord, do what You must.




Thursday, January 10, 2013

Faith Like A Child- Getting distracted!

     Most mornings I get to see a picture of what pure joy looks like!  Our youngest two have a tendency (one that I dislike) to get up fairly early in the morning.  It is very common for the two youngest to both be up by 6:30.  I am typically up so I get to have some time to hang out with Anaya and Ty in the mornings.  The experience of pure joy happens when mommy gets up!  As soon as they hear her voice Anaya our two year old goes tearing down the hallway giggling and squealing with shouts of joy and jumps into her moms arms.  Ty, while not quite to the point of running, also heads down the hallway crawling as fast as his body will allow him giggling and squealing with shouts of joy until he gets to mommy's arms!  It is a great experience to witness and it is an appropriate response for the one who loves them, provides for them, gave birth to them, takes care of them, plays with them, and on and on I could go about why it is an appropriate response.
      A couple mornings ago the same scene began to unfold with mommy as Anaya tore down the hallway to jump into her arms.  Ty, as usual, also began the journey with excitement, working on getting those legs and arms moving as fast as possible, but in the journey down the hallway something happened.  Something was on the ground between him and mom, a play cell phone, and it was successful in distracting Ty from getting to mommy even though a play cell phone can't even begin to compare to mommy.  Instead of finishing the journey by falling into mom's arms, he stopped and played with the cell phone instead.  He got distracted, and ultimately settled for something that cannot even begin to compare with mommy.
     As I watched this scene unfold my first thought was we do that all the time with God.  We are going to God the one who created us, sustains us, loves us, provides for us, and we get distracted along the way, and we settle for something that cannot even compare to the greatness of God.  It would be good for all us to spend some time thinking about things that might be distracting us from God, and than begin taking action to remove those things.  After all, how silly would it be if something as simple and pointless as a toy cell phone were keeping us from running into the arms of God!