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Archive for the ‘Control’ Category

A Simple Task

In Behavior Modification, Control, Devotions, Perseverance on April 20, 2009 at 9:50 am

Written by A Prodigal on January 15, 2007.


He answered, “Here I am.” Genesis 37:13b

Joseph would never have believed how that day would turn out.  How his agreement to perform that errand for his aging father would change his life.  How that paternal request fulfilled an eternal plan.

Joseph was an instrument of God’s but his edges were rough.  His dreams were gifts from above but the ability to harness them for God’s purposes would require many difficult miles, many lonely days and nights, many heart breaking setbacks and times of utter discouragement.  Little did he know, as he set out to find had brothers, that he was stepping into God’s crucible and fulfilling his divine destiny.


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Treasure

In Control, Devotions, God's Provision, Jesus' Words, Paranoia on April 2, 2009 at 11:46 am

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.  Matt 6:19-21.

We don’t think about it often – it’s an underlying assumption we tend to have here in America – but we tend to move through our lives in a bubble of perceived security. We are protected by law enforcement agencies, dead bolts and alarm companies. Doors and windows, gates and fences, bars and watchdogs give us a sense of security and safety and promote the existence of the bubble of belief that we, along with all our stuff, are safe and untouchable.

Recently, however, I joined the ranks of the owners of busted bubbles. A little over two weeks ago I returned home from work at the end of the day only to walk into a crime scene. A brick through a window and an involuntary transfer of possession of several thousand dollars worth of property had occurred and, like the window, my bubble of perceived security was shattered. Anger. Apprehension. Helplessness. Vulnerability. All these flooded my mind and heart as I surveyed the scene.

And a quandary – how could I restore my sense of security and protect my property? Read on here!

Back to Prison – Part I

In Choices, Confusion, Control, Deception, Deliverance, Doubt, Encouragement, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Paranoia, Peace, Perseverance, Prayer, Prison, Thanksgiving, Worship on March 6, 2009 at 6:31 am

We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.  (II Corinthians 4:8-9)

 

Dejected?  Surely!

 

Confused?  Probably!

 

But doubting? Never!

 

Joseph maintained his faith and started over again. Those were days and weeks and months of idleness, made all the worse coming from his place of responsibility. His nights were consumed with wondering what was going to happen and why he had been removed from usefulness and productivity.  Surely he remembered the meals in Potiphar’s house (meals he had planned) as he ate the prison gruel.  Certainly, lying on the straw mat, he thought of the soft bed he so recently had had.  He probably asked God more than once why he was being punished when he had done nothing wrong.  And Potiphar’s wife?  How long before forgiveness replaced the resentment?

 

But he waited on and trusted in his God.  And God did not disappoint—God made him a success.  A successful inmate; now there is an apparent oxymoron.  But God caused the jailer to take notice of Joseph, and, before you know it, Joseph was running the jail! Read on here!

The Master Weaver

In Control, Devotions, Encouragement, Perseverance on January 27, 2009 at 7:02 am

The Master Weaver is at work in the world. He is actively weaving the tapestry of eternity. What looks disjointed and awkward from our side of the veil, will make perfect sense when we see it from the other side. We will see that indeed all things work together for good.  We will trace the connections made in situations that baffle and amaze  us here.

We will see a level of grace given to the cancer patient so it becomes a ministry opportunity rather than a death sentence.

We will see that a job loss requiring the launch of a new & never-before-comtemplated career had the effect of moving a life across the highways of a nation and planting a testimony within the hearts of others.

We will see a military activation that has the potential to generate a spirit of fear but deepens the faith of a family instead.

We will see that it was our loving Heavenly Father taking the unexpected from the human point of view & turning them into those “all things” happenings of a life committed to Him into the good & beautiful.

I don’t know about you but I’m anxious to see His Tapestry.


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Whatever He Wants

In Control, Devotions, Encouragement, God's Love, God's Provision, Prison on November 24, 2008 at 7:09 am

This Pondering was penned July 24, 2005, while in a prison in Nashville, TN.  Since I wrote this – since God put this things on and in my heart – I have been able to track a little of His moving in my life and circumstances.  I am amazed and humbled that He loves me so and provides for my needs.


Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words. And God, who searches the heart, knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God. –Romans 8:26-27

 

 

 I was reading along in Romans – that’s where I needed to be today – I’m doing the read-through-the-Bible-in-a-year thing and that was today’s passage.  I was headed toward my favorite scripture passage – the one to which I was grasping with all my might – Romans 8:28.  You know it.  I know it.  And I’m relying heavily upon it for there has to be some good come out of this mess I have made of my life.

Well, I’m reading along and, out of the blue, this scripture, which I have read many times, jumped off the page at me.

You see, I’ve been praying one certain prayer for months…even years.  The prayer that God would act, through His great love and mercy for me, and make a way out of this prison for me.  And here, right in front of my favorite verse was a passage telling me something very disturbing. Read On!!!

Turn The Light Back On

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Control, Devotions, John on September 22, 2008 at 3:32 pm

In the beginning, “God said, ‘Let there be light.’  And there was light.”  (Genesis 1:3)  And this light was the essence of God shared with the world.  It was not the created sun.  Check the record.  The sun wasn’t spoken into existence until day four.  This light was God Himself.  This was the light John wrote of at the very beginning of his gospel.  “In Him was life, and that life was the light of men.” It was the inextinguishable, incomprehensible, inexplicable radiance from the pure personality of the Creator.

And He shared this part of Himself with a dark world.  “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light.”  (Isa. 9:2)

But then God did the most amazing thing.  Something more amazing than creation.  More wonderful and frightening than anything ever done before or since.  Something that surely left all Heaven in stunned silence.

The Creator gave the created the light switch.

And the created used it to turn off the light.

Light makes us uncomfortable, doesn’t it?  Darkness hides the dust on the furniture, the dog hair on the rug, the wrinkles on the skin and the mess we’ve made of our lives.  Get it dark enough and even the sink full of dishes and the heartaches and heartbreaks can seem to disappear.

We turn the lights down in our homes and in our souls.  We think things, plan things and indulge in things in the dark we would never contemplate if the light was on.  The Great Deceiver has convinced us that, like the two year old with his eyes closed, if we can’t see God, He can’t see us.  Satan whispers that one night of drunken rivalry won’t hurt anything or anyone – besides, haven’t we earned the right to a little fun?  One act of adultery or fornication won’t matter.  After all, it’s a God-given human urge, isn’t it?  One pill or one joint is alright.  It’s just to numb this pain.

So we hit the switch.  We turn God’s light off.  We move around with darkness in our souls thinking we’re having fun and living the good life.  We spend money we don’t have to hang out with people we don’t really like and try to numb the pain which will only return.  We live this pretend life when there could be so much more.

Yeah, turning on the light will be painful initially.  Shocking.  Look at the mess we’ve been calling life.  Discouraging.  Is there really a fulfilling life possible?  Cleaning house after avoiding it for a while is no fun.  Even less fun is the piercing light of God’s presence illuminating all the recesses of our souls so long in the dark.

Reality check.  God handed us the switch, but it was a loan and not a transfer of ownership.

One day our switch will be deactivated and God will turn on the light once and for all.  And on that day the garbage piled up over the years will be displayed.

Wouldn’t it be better to use the switch, face the initial pain and invite Jesus in for a field day?

“Behold, I stand at the door and knock.”  And, while we may be embarrassed about the mess, He knows about it already and just really wants to help clean up.

Bright light can be initially painful to those coming out of the darkness, but light cleanses, heals and gives life.

What will you do with your switch?


For more Ponderings, click here.

Revealed Power

In Alone, Control, Deliverance, Devotions, Jail, Jesus' Words, John, Prayer on July 8, 2008 at 1:11 pm

     The hearing ended and the hearing officer turned off the tape recorder that had been silently but obviously witnessing the proceedings.  Parole had been denied.  Again.

     And he didn’t understand.  Certain that he would be out of prison in short order, plans had been made, jobs acquired, and the hopes of three little boys elevated to heights from which they would now free fall.  More damage to already tenuous relationships.  How was he going to explain another delay?  What was the reason for this latest setback?

     Raised by a wonderful set of parents who had hardwired a basic sense of fairness into him, his outlook had always been optimistic and upbeat.  Throughout his life, a life more characterized by blessings than merely punctuated by them, that sense of fairness planted by his folks had been cultivated into a mature organism.  It simply did not occur to him that there were others for whom fairness was a completely foreign concept.  And the thought of others acting, or, in this case, reacting, to him in any manner inconsistent with that basic idea of fairness never crossed his mind.

     Until now…

     The docket for today’s hearings had been full and, of the even dozen brought before the board for review on this rainy Monday, all had been recommended for the coveted prize except him.  Several had served a smaller percentage of their sentence and one man was working on his seventh trip to the penitentiary.

     He stood, slump-shouldered, and turned to face the small group of supporters in attendance.  A childhood friend who had graciously held a job position with his company on the assumption that freedom would be realized for his friend.  His eyes revealed something of the depth of the pain shared with his friend who would not be released, would not be allowed to return to society, would not be permitted to once again be productive and provide for his family.

     An uncle, estranged for so long, but who had been such a blessing and prayer partner during the previous months leading up to this day – a day that faith said would be the glorious day of release and restoration so long awaited.

     Finally, the woman he loved.  The one with whom he had promised to share the remainder of his life.  The one that he had planned to wed early the following month – a wedding that would now be delayed….again.  The look in her eyes broke his heart.  The look composed of hurt and love, pain and forgiveness, empathy and promise.

     It was too much to bear.  Embracing his loved ones, the man turned and left the room and the building, to return to his cell – the only home he had known for the past fifty-eight months.  He was discouraged, disillusioned, hurt.  He felt abandoned, alone and hopeless.

     He realized that a crime had been committed, a terrible act of selfishness and stupidity.  He knew he deserved punishment and had patiently and quietly served the last five years waiting for this day – a day he knew would be his day.  But that was not to be.  And his sense of fairness required a reason why.  If there was a reason – a tangible, “do this and you can go home” reason – he could have understood.  But for this new delay to be without purpose, apparently without reason, was too much for him to digest.

     He wandered aimlessly into his cell, avoiding any eye contact with the other inmates – there would be no solace there, no understanding, no empathy.  His failure only increased their chances of release, and though some would no doubt offer their condolences, they were hollow and obviously insincere.  Once behind his door, he broke down and wept, instinctively reaching for his Bible.  There had to be a reason, a purpose for this pain.  What was the purpose?

     They were so excited.  Their first-born was about to be just that….born.  Dad was hoping for a boy – a son.  An heir to whom he could impart all the collected wisdom handed down through the generations.  One to whom he could teach the trade learned from his father.  One to inherit the good business and the good name for which he had labored so arduously.

     Mom, with the love only a mother could have for the one carried for those long months, wished – no, prayed – only for a healthy child upon whom to lavish her love and attention.  She knew of her husband’s hopes, but, while never voiced, she didn’t really care about gender.  She just wanted to hold her baby in her arms that had been nestled in her womb.

     And then he was there – yes, he.  A baby boy, squirming and screaming.  Matted jet black hair and the ruddy complexion of their race.  Everything seemed perfect and the last remaining bit of prenatal apprehension common to parents the world over disappeared.  Only joy remained.  Mom was finally holding this bundle so long awaited.  Dad had his son and he stroked his wife’s hair, still damp from exertion, as he looked down at the boy and down through the years at all the wondrous days they would all have.  Hope was in full-bloom and their faith in their God had born perfect fruit.

     It was the next morning before they noticed the problem.  As his mother was nursing him with the early morning rays of sunlight streaming in the window of the room, he opened his eyes for the first time and his mother looked into to large white voids where beautiful and dark irises should have been.  Her precious baby boy was blind and she wept quietly has he drew nourishment from her.

     Her baby boy would never see her face, never gaze in wonder at creation, never know the joy of play with friends.  He would be alone in the crowd, afraid in the light and judged from a distance.

     And the questions began to bombard her mind and heart.  Why did this have to happen?  How was this even remotely fair?  Who caused this tragedy?  Was it some sin she had committed?  Had her husband transgressed somehow and brought this judgment upon her baby boy?

     What is the purpose of it all?  How could a just God, a loving and merciful Creator, cause something so awful?

     And the questions, unanswered, continued.  Month after month and year after year.  Festering.  Dividing.

     The boy grew, adapted and became all that he could be.  A beggar.  Sitting outside the gate of the city, he “earned” his living by the kindness of strangers and friends.  His only talent, his one gift, was engendering pity of passers-by, and, through the exercise of this gift, he brought a small sum into his parents home each day.  Enough for a small bit of barley, for wheat was too expensive.

     And as the years passed, unknown to him, his parents, in those quiet moments during a meal or through an evening spent together, would ask the same old questions, not expecting an answer anymore.  It was more of a habit now.  Why?  For what purpose is our son blind?  Life had held such promise, but he had been sentenced to a life of humiliation and degradation.  Why?

     One day as he was plying his trade at the city gate, a group of strangers observed him from across the way.  They were new to town and were standing to the side, allowing the foot traffic to pass them as they watched and listened.  One of the group, always an inquisitive sort, ask another, the apparent leader, “See that blind beggar over there?  Who sinned to cause his condition to be such as it is?  Him or his parents?”

     The prisoner could trace it back years and years.  Enslaved at the age of twelve, the addiction grew, a malignancy in his soul, until he was helpless to extricate himself from it and powerless to avoid it’s lure.

     Years past – years of broken vows, both to himself and to others.  Resolutions did not make a difference.  Pledges were empty.

     Sitting on the edge of a metal prison bunk, the prisoner realized that he had been imprisoned long before the shackles were affixed and the iron door slammed for the first time.  His whole life had been one of deceit and concealment.  His existence characterized by a fear of the terrible secret becoming known by those around him.

     A façade was maintained successfully for years.  Outwardly successful, respected and honored as a man of God, he carried his secret with him, never far from exposure but separated from a life of victory and purpose by a gaping chasm.

     He remembered the day, only a few short months before, the secret went public.  He could still see the hurt in the eyes of his loved ones as they realized the depth of his depravity.  A full thirty years after his spiritual imprisonment began, the physical incarceration commenced.

     Family became estranged, friends withdrew and total strangers made snap judgments about him.  And the world was watching…

     Watching to see how this man of privilege and prestige would cope with the loss of every single worldly possession, all position and his respectability.

     Watching to determine whether God would judge and discipline this man who had so successfully juggled his double-mindedness and his double standard for so long.

     Watching to acquire proof that the decision made to surrender to the Will of God – a decision too late made, most would say – was yet another attempt to manipulate others and thereby avoid punishment.

     Watching to ascertain the strength of the man who had had it all and lost it so quickly and so tragically.

     Reflection birthed revelation.

     He was not in prison only because the parole board willed it.  Release was not delayed due to crime, time or the whim of seven people he had never met.  Freedom did not elude him to serve some perceived need of the people of the state for confinement to follow conviction.

     Sure, these all a temporally correct, but, as though the veil separating him from the solution of a grand mystery was slowly rent, a hint of the bigger picture – the underlying purpose – began to form in his mind.

     As he read the next words, sitting alone in his cell, it was as if the Master was speaking across the centuries and over the miles directly to him.  “He was born blind so that the power of God could be seen in him.” (John 9:3b – New Living Translation)


For more Ponderings, click here.

A Morning Prayer

In Choices, Control, God's Provision, Prison on June 16, 2008 at 10:49 am

 This is not original.  This was heard by this Prodigal through the tape ministry of the College Church of the Nazarene, in Olathe, Kansas.  This was played over and over as I sat in the cell of a State Penitentiary.

And the trust I so desparately needed then in that environment, I still need today almost eight months after my release.

Learning to lean on the Savior is not a once done, always have thing.  It is a daily choice and I need His help and His guidance.

Maybe this prayer of this godly man will help focus your prayer for trust as it did mine.


Heavenly Father, I ask Your forgiveness for the many times I have failed to live in perfect trust.  I confess that I often find myself anxious and fretting and worrying.  I pray today that you will teach me that You will give to me the grace to trust You more.  Not more as in quantity, but in quality.  May my trust be more deliberate. 

Give me the patience to wait through the times when it feels like nothing is happening.  Give me the courage to believe in the promises of Your word.  You have demonstrated Your faithfulness so many times in the past and yet sometimes my memory is so short. 

Remind me this morning to trust in You,

          to commit my way to you,

                    to delight in you,

                              to rest in you. 

Teach me and show me how, through the power of Your Spirit, to trust more perfectly.  I commit to You the unanswered questions and unsolved issues of my life, the frightening things that seem to wait out on the horizon of my life.  I offer them all to You this morning.  Help me to trust that You will see me through – that You will care for all that is involved in my life.

Choose to Run

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Control, Devotions, God's Love, Jail, Jeremiah, Perseverance, Prayer, Prison on June 4, 2008 at 9:36 am

For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope.  Then when you call upon me and come and pray to me, I will hear you.  When you search for me, you will find me; if you seek me with all your heart.  I will let you find me, says the Lord, and I will restore your fortunes and gather you from all the nations and all the places where I have driven you, says the Lord, and I will bring you back to the place from which I sent you into exile.  Jeremiah 29:11-14

I have always been fascinated by people who have the discipline and ability to get out, day or night, hot or cold, rain or shine, and run.

Why do they do it?

Are they getting ready for a big race?  Probably not.

Are they preparing themselves so that IF they are ever accosted, they can sprint to safety without becoming too winded too quickly or without their legs tiring too fast?  That’s unlikely.

I’ve tried to develop this discipline.  Over the years I have spent untold hundreds of dollars on running shoes and clothes – like I needed some special “look” to run.

I joined track teams in both junior high and in college.  Both times I rationalized my decision to quit.  Justified it by telling myself that I was just not cut out to be a runner – I didn’t have the “stuff”.

Well, yesterday I did it again.  I stopped in and bought some new running shorts and short socks and I’m going to try it again.  Not because I’m afraid of or expecting an attack.  And not really because I want to lose the little paunch that I have developed over the years.  But because I want the discipline in my life.  I need the discipline in my life.

I have always been fascinated by people who have the drive to get out of bed an hour before they really have to, regardless of how late they were up the night before – although I expect that getting to bed at a reasonable hour is a part of the discipline, too – to pray and study and listen to God.

Why do they do it?

Do they think they are going to be engaged in some sort of intense spiritual battle that day?  They’d better, because that’s what happens – daily!  Satan is out there.  The Bible says he’s prowling around like a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour.  I have been devoured  When the spiritual battle came – and it always comes – I was out of shape.  I tired too quickly.  My spiritual legs gave out.

I never was much of a threat to Satan.  I never developed the discipline of prayer and study.  Oh, sure, when the big test was approaching and I hadn’t studied as I should have, or when the money was all gone and the twins needed food, or when the office payroll came due and the work was not there, or when I found myself in jail with very few friends and the bad news was hitting me from every direction, in those times I would be very disciplined, very conscientious, about my devotional life.

But I’ve never learned the trick of preparing for battle in times of peace, of staying prepared for the battle even when the threat board was empty.

Today I choose to prepare.  I choose to be disciplined.  I choose to let God control my life one hour at a time.  I choose to run and I choose to pray.

Jeremiah 29:11-14 is my promise.  I want to search for Him and His will for me with all my heart.  I want to get in on his plans to prosper me – not as the world perceives prosperity, but I want to be rich toward God and in what He has in store for me.


I wrote this while sitting at my brother’s house.  I wrote this thirteen days after my bail was posted and I regained some measure of freedom, tenuous though it was.  I wrote this the day before 9/11, never comtemplating the change the next day would effect in the psyche of our nation and the world.  I wrote this not realizing until later just how quickly everything that matters can change. 

Footballs & Blessings

In Blessings, Choices, Control, Devotions, Football, Jail, Jesus' Words, Prison on May 28, 2008 at 7:04 am

It’s a beautiful fall day.  Picture perfect even.

There is a little chill in the air.  Not much.  The climate here is always fairly mild, but a little chill is present, nevertheless.

And the excitement.  Oh, yes – excitement is there keeping the chill company.

The crowd is gathering in.  They know what to expect.  They’ve all seen it before – well, most of them have.

Two rich men are preparing to play the game.  Others have roles to play as well, but it’s the two rich men who are the center of attention.

And it’s not entirely accurate to call it a game, either.  It’s a serious business to the two rich men.  A game to some but not to them.

The two of them have been preparing for this day for a very long time.  A lifetime.  An eternity, some would say.  And they’re ready.

A hush falls on the crowd.  They all appreciate the importance of the next play.  It’s success or failure will have huge consequences.  The stakes are high and, regardless of the outcome, many people will be affected.

So here it goes….let’s listen in….

Tom:    This is it, folks.  It all comes down to this.

Chris:   You’re right, Tom.  It’s third down and fifteen from the Giant’s 29.  And, with only 25 seconds remaining, the Cowboys have got to get this first down and stop the clock in order to stay alive.

Tom:    Aikman is set.  He takes the snap and drops back into the pocket.  He’s looking downfield.  Here come the Giants.  Aikman fires.  Irving is in the end zone.

Chris:   O, my God.  Michael Irving never even looked back.  He turned at the corner of the end zone and the ball was right there.

Tom:    A picture perfect pass and a trademark finger-tip catch as Irving falls out of the end zone.

Chris:   The official is running down the sideline.  TOUCHDOWN!!!  The Cowboys have won.  The Cowboys have won the game.

Tom:    It just doesn’t get any better that that Aikman/Irving combination.

Chris:   You’re right, Tom.  That was a beautiful sight to see.

 

That game being over, you grab your remote and begin channel surfing.  Another scene grabs your attention.

It’s a beautiful fall day – well, it could have been fall..  A picture perfect day.

There is a little chill in the air.  Not much.  The climate here is always fairly mild, but a little chill is present, nevertheless.

And the excitement.  Oh, yes – excitement is there keeping the chill company.

The crowd is gathering in.  They know what to expect.  They’ve all seen it before – well, most of them have.

Two rich men are preparing to play a game.  Others have roles to play as well, but it’s the two rich men who are the center of attention on this day.  And this is definitely not a game, but there are rules that must be followed.

The two of them have been preparing for this day for a very long time.  A lifetime.  Some would say an eternity.

A hush falls on the crowd.  This is it.  The moment.  Most appreciate the importance of this play.  It’s success or failure will have eternal consequences.  The stakes are high and, regardless of the outcome, many people will be affected.

So here it goes….

Let’s listen in….

 

Rich Young Ruler:      Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?

Jesus:   Why do you call me good?  No one is good – except God alone.  You know the commandments: ‘Do not commit adultery, do not murder, do not steal, do not give false testimony, honor your father and mother’.

Rich Young Ruler:      All of these I have kept since I was a boy.

Jesus:   You still lack one thing.  Sell everything you have and give to the poor, then you will have treasure in heaven.  Then come, follow Me.

 

Scripture reports that when he heard this he became very sad, because he was a man of great wealth.

 

You can almost hear the great cloud of witnesses gasp as the play fails.  How tragic.  How utterly tragic.

Aikman launched a ball.  Christ launched a blessing.

Irving followed his instructions.  The rich young ruler did not.

Irving turned the right way and caught the ball.  The rich young ruler missed the blessing by turning the wrong way.

Aikman connected with his receiver.  Christ was unable to connect due to the exercise of the free will God has given each of us.  The blessing was there but the intended receiver was not in the right place.

One took a risk, the other elected to play it safe.

Don’t we tend to do the same thing?  We go our own way and then ask God to bless us.  And when the blessings do not come as we think they should, we get mad at God.  Blame Him for our failures and our situations.

Don’t get mad at God – follow His route.  His planned path.

The blessings are there waiting – follow His leading.  His direction.

“In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths.”

Connect with Jesus – the consequences are eternal.


This thought was written while I was in the jail in Shelby County, Tennessee.  The date was December 15, 2002, and my effort to avoid prison by being granted probation had failed.  Things were dark but the Lord was there.

Blessed be the Name of the Lord!


For more Ponderings, click here.

Ruts

In Choices, Control, Forgiveness, God's Love on May 21, 2008 at 11:38 am

The sign on the side of the old dirt road was simply written and to the point.  It was a warning sign, but most likely placed there by a local and intended to lean away from the serious and toward the humorous.  It read “Be careful which rut you choose.  You’ll be in it for the next five miles.”

I smiled as I read the sign but soon found out, to my dismay, that the author of the warning knew what he was talking about.  The road, obviously susceptible to frequent flooding, was indeed but a series of deep ruts that stretched out lazily into the distance.  Some were deeper than other and most likely formed by the farm equipment used in the area.  Others were more shallow and kinder to the suspension of my car.  I took the advice offered on the sign, chose carefully and made it through with nothing but a stiff neck and a slightly battered hubcap to show for it.

For years afterward, it was nothing more than a cute story to relate to friends and family.  But my life has taken a turn, and with that turn, the humor of the sign and the cuteness of the story have turned more serious.

I have come to believe that life is but a series of ruts.  Few of us will ever live a life where every day is filled with adventure and excitement.  For the most part, our lives are predictable and, at times, even mundane. We educate ourselves.  We hire ourselves out for a wage.  We marry.  We raise children.  If reduced to it’s lowest common denominator, each of these are ruts we run in as life progresses.  Of course, this is not necessarily a bad thing.  All of the endeavors listed are admirable and worthy of our attention and commitment.  Deep fulfillment can be found in these ruts.

But there are other, less acceptable, ruts in which we seem to find ourselves sometimes – even ruts we make for ourselves and then regret later when it’s too late.  Poor decisions, impulse control problems, failure to properly discipline ourselves, and the unwillingness or the inability to control our appetites and wants can place us into deep ruts from which there is no escape.  Even the loving and kind and forgiving Heavenly Father will ofttimes allow the consequences of our actions to unfold upon us, even as He forgives and prepares our place with Him in the next life.  Decisions have consequences and those ruts can be long and relentless. 

Even the good ruts can become bothersome and a chore if we fail to maintain a vital and continual relationship with God.  Only He can give us the ability and the desire to love others when they are not very lovable and to deal with the circumstances of life in a positive and engaging way.  No marriage is a bed of roses and every child has the potential to cause a parent heartache.  Bosses can be a pain and the very normalcy of life can be taxing.  Without God, we just tread water, churning through the days.

Ultimately, our choices determine our ruts.  And our attitudes – the only thing over which we ever truly have control – determines whether we are miserable or joyful as we travel.  Joy can be found in the ruts of life.  Fulfillment can be found in the mundane.  Usefulness can be discovered again after failure.  God is the God of second chances and, for those that love Him and seek Him with their whole heart, He can use even the ruts of life to bring us all the good He has for us.

 

All Things

In Blessings, Control, Encouragement, God's Love, Poetry on May 8, 2008 at 7:50 pm

“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God.” Romans 8:28

 All things! What comprehensive words! The cross that weighs so heavy; the wound that goes so deep….yes,

 All Things

All things work together for our good–
Believe this promise in the trying hour!
The bitter test may not be understood,
But faith can triumph over Satan’s power
If we but cry, “Lord, I will trust in Thee,
For surely Thou hast deemed this best for me! “


 All things work together for our good–
The broken dreams and sorrows that life brings;
The secret pain that none but God can see
May be His means to open faith’s rich springs;
And often we must suffer utter loss
To apprehend the victory of the cross!


For more of the poetry of my grandmother, visit the “Uplifted Eyes” page.

Will God Change His Mind? – Part VI

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Control, Devotions, Forgiveness, God's Love, Prayer on April 28, 2008 at 12:35 pm

This completes this small series of articles.  These were written during the fall and winter of 2002 – a time when I really needed God to change His mind.

In hindsight, by which most things become abundantly clear, I am glad that He did not stay the punishment I deserved.  I would have been so much worse off if He had.

Of course, He knew that.

I pray that these have been helpful in some way.


Have you ever felt as though you were in the belly of a great fish?  I have!

Have you ever stopped to imagine what Jonah experienced while there?  For three days?  I have!

But as intriguing as it might be to run down the road of sights and sounds, smells and fears, uncertainty and apprehension, the most important question to consider is, “Why was he there in the first place?”

The answer boils all the way down to his willful violation of a known command of God.

God said, “Go!”

Jonah said, “No!”

Sound familiar?  It does to me.

God said, “No!”

I said, “Whatever!”

So, while I’m not in the belly of a great fish – a fact for which I’m thankful – I might as well be.  The cell in which I spend most of my time is about the size of the stomach cavity of a whale and smells just as bad.  Uncertainty and apprehension try to fill my days and would succeed if I didn’t purposefully choose to keep my focus fixed on God’s promises, His presence and His great love and mercy.

But I digress – we have another question to answer.  The answer is the very reason for Jonah’s flight.  Jonah knew the answer to our question.  (See Jonah 4:2)  He knew God was a God of love and mercy.  And Jonah hated Nineveh.  Hated them for their ethnicity.  Hated them for their apostasy and sinfulness.  Hated the knowledge that, if they repented of their sins in response to his preaching, God would withhold His judgment.

So, when God told him to go preach, he ran the other way.  But he didn’t get very far.  God has a way of giving us just enough rope with which we inevitably hang ourselves.

In due time, with a lot more trouble than was really necessary, the Ninevites received the message and, much to Jonah’s regret, repented.

And God changed His mind.  (See Jonah 3:10)

Are there judgments coming into your life that you would like to avoid?

Check your obedience quotient.

Read Joel 2:12-14.


For more Ponderings, click here.

Will God Change His Mind? – Part V

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Control, Deliverance, Devotions, God's Love on April 21, 2008 at 5:42 am

Amos was just a working stiff – a sheep breeder by profession – from the little village of Tekoa.  In his day the town was about ten miles south of Jerusalem, but it has long since been swallowed by the great city.

He was an average guy, doing his work, caring and providing for his family, worshipping the only wise God.  Well, maybe he was special after all.  There were very few of his contemporaries worshipping the way they should.  At least not in the northern kingdom of Israel.

So one sunny day, while dealing with the stresses of his daily work, he was interrupted – interrupted by God Himself – and told to go north to Bethal and prophesy against the northern kingdom.

Can you imagine his reaction? Read the rest of this entry »

Will God Change His Mind – Part IV

In Choices, Control, Devotions, God's Provision, Prison on April 14, 2008 at 3:45 pm

I had a good life.  I had a good marriage, three beautiful little boys, a thriving law practice and an overall influential life.  Very active in church, both musically and administratively.  By all outward appearances I was at the top of my game.

But something was wrong.  Wrong on the inside.  The outward success had no foundation – no spiritual basis – no real relationship with God to hold up the massive structure being built on top. Read the rest of this entry »

Prevailing Prayer – Part I

In Control, God's Love, Holiness, Jesus' Words, Pastor Bill, Prayer, Second Coming on April 10, 2008 at 6:03 am

The effectual fervent prayer of the righteous man availeth much.”  James 5:16           

     My precious mother, now with Jesus, practiced the lost art of ‘prevailing prayer!’  I heard her in her bedroom weeping and crying out to God for our family when I would come home from school in the afternoon as a teenager; for a period of time she was the only Christian in our home.  One night while my brother and I were sleeping, mother burst into our bedroom and through her tears exclaimed, “I’ve heard from heaven!  I’ve heard from heaven!”  She had been ‘God wrestling‘ in her bedroom and her faith reached all the way up to God’s mercy seat, for she told us through her tears, “The Lord has given me the assurance that all our family will be saved!”

     One by one our family surrendered to Jesus!  My brother David and I both answered the call to preach the gospel and today we are still preaching the ‘Way of Holiness‘ in jails and churches and wherever God calls us!  My father was saved in a little Wednesday night prayer service!  Mother and dad are both now with Jesus, and we’ll all be home together soon!  For it’s almost ‘Suppertime‘.

      As we witness the ominous signs of prophetic fulfillment on an almost hourly basis, many people have asked me, “Pastor, what can we do about itIt’s all beyond our control!”  Read the rest of this entry »

Will God Change His Mind – Part III

In Choices, Control, Devotions, God's Love, Psalms, Samuel on April 8, 2008 at 3:52 pm

I am an old man now – my life, both the good days and the bad days, are behind me now.

I guess from that last statement you could gather that I regret my life – and while, it’s true, there are moments of my life that I deeply regret, most of it has been wondrous and even miraculous.

There have been days of wonder, sitting on the hillside basking in God’s creation.  There have been moments of intensity as God delivered me from the attacks of wild beasts and the threats of giants.

There have been moments of incredible embarrassment, as when Samuel skipped over all my older brothers and announced to everyone that I would be replacing Saul as the King of Israel.

But then there were the shameful moments in my life, the most glaring being centered on the lust of my flesh to which I succumbed and caused a national scandal.  Read the rest of this entry »

“This is a Job for Superman”

In Confusion, Control, Jesus' Words, Pastor Bill, Revelation, Second Coming on April 2, 2008 at 6:05 am

Help, Superman!” cries LOIS LANE, as she appears in the window of a twenty-five story building, with stairways and elevators a raging inferno of flaming destruction!  Two blocks away, CLARK KENT views the flaming building and with supernatural hearing and x-ray vision, KENT says to himself, “Good grief,  LOIS is trapped on that twenty-fifth floor and there’s no way the firemen can reach her in time!  Into this phone booth and off with these clothes…  THIS IS A JOB FOR SUPERMAN!  And so, faster than a speeding bullet, SUPERMAN sweeps LOIS LANE from the windows ledge and places her gently on a street far from the burning building and out of danger!  The echo of the cheering crowd reverberates through the tall buildings of downtown Metropolis, “THANK GOD FOR SUPERMAN!  THANK GOD FOR SUPERMAN!           

Jesus said in Luke 21:10, “NATION shall rise against NATION and KINGDOM against KINGDOM; Read the rest of this entry »

Trading a Toilet Brush for a Keyboard

In Blessings, Control, Forgiveness, God's Provision on March 30, 2008 at 3:52 pm

In 1985, as I waited in the line of candidates for the Juris Doctorate in the auditorium in the School of Law situated on the campus of University of Memphis, the possibility that I would be earning a living with a toilet brush was absolutely the farthest thing from my mind.  I had my education.  I had a good job with a prominent law firm.  I was young and the future was a bright and shining star.

But some really poor decision-making altered that future.  Stupidity changed my plans.  Sin blocked the road on which God had set my feet and the required detour was long and painful.

And, though I have been forgiven by God and restored to Him; Read the rest of this entry »

The Hidden Path

In Choices, Control, Devotions, Encouragement, God's Provision on March 25, 2008 at 6:02 am
“Your road led through the sea, Your pathway through the mighty waters – a pathway no one knew was there.” (Psalm 77:19)                

Have you ever actually stopped to consider the scene?  It’s mind-boggling! 

The four hundred or so members of Jacob’s family ended up, through an amazing set of circumstances, in Egypt.  Times were good – great, in fact.  Joseph was in charge.  No one in the entire country, except Pharaoh himself, had more power than this exiled former slave.  This ex-shepherd.  This ex-houseboy.  This ex-inmate.

This man of God!

But now, all these years later, that tiny band has grown and, by God’s mighty power displayed through His servant Moses, has escaped from Egypt.  That safe haven of the time of Joseph had turned cruel and harsh.  God heard.  God cared.  God provided the way.

So consider the scene: this over-sized family, that only hours before had made a joyous and triumphant exodus from the land of their captors, standing on the shore of the great sea, mountains on either side and the most fierce and feared army of the day bearing down from their rear.  I imagine the singing stopped.  I hear the panic in the voices of the women as they ask their husbands what’s to become of them.  I recognize a familiar chorus, one that will be, unfortunately, replayed many times in the coming years, “Did God deliver us from Pharaoh only to kill us in the wilderness?”

Can you blame them?  Would you have responded any differently? Read the rest of this entry »

God’s Confluence

In Blessings, Choices, Christmas, Coincidence, Control, Luck on February 25, 2008 at 4:54 pm

Do you believe in coincidence?  Luck?  Fate?  Kismet, Karma, Happenstance?

I don’t!!  God is in control and knows where we are and everything that concerns us at every moment of every day.  We are subject to His will and His way and His direction.  We can choose to yield to that will or we can spend years – or a lifetime – beating ourselves against that will.  Yielding brings peace and fulfillment.  Rebelling only causes pain and havoc here and an eternity without Him.  The choice is ours and I will have more to say about this in the days to come, but I would like to provide an example of how wonderfully God can and will work all things out for our good if we will only choose to follow Him.

On December 13th, I was informed by my boss at the church that, if the entire crew would work on Sunday, the 23rd, to get the facilities cleaned up from Exit 108the weekend services, we would be allowed to take the entire week of Christmas off.  There was no debate among the gang and it was settled.

And when we all discovered that the time off would be with pay, the excitement began to build and I, for one, since this would be the first Christmas outside a fence in five years, was anxious to spend the holiday in Memphis, with the possibility of seeing my children at some point during that week.

If that wasn’t enough of a blessing, God moved again.  This time in the heart and schedule of an ex-wife.

On Sunday, December 16th, I received a phone call from the mother of my boys.  She informed me that the family would be celebrating Christmas on the Eve of the day and, if I wanted and was willing to meet her halfway, I could have the boys – my precious sons – the week of Christmas!!!!

Needless to say, I DID want.  I DID meet her halfway – at Exit 108 on Interstate 40.  I DID have my sons in my home – for that’s what it is when they are there – for four glorious days and nights.

An entire week off from work – with pay – and then the boys get to come up, too?  Coincidence?  Do you really believe that?  How sad if you do.  My God is in control and orchestrated the whole thing.  Praise His dear Name.


Where God Wants Me is a poignant PowerPoint presentation dealing with the question of Coincidence.  I don’t believe in coincidence, as you have just read.  God is in control.  Enjoy this and think about it.

Hold On

In Behavior Modification, Control, Devotions, God's Love, Hebrews, Perseverance on February 11, 2008 at 11:26 am

“We have come to share in Christ if we hold firmly till the end the confidence we had at first!” Hebrews 3:14


     I’ve been trying to lift some weights, using my time wisely, and all that.  I figure if I sit in this prison for however many months and years without doing everything I can to better myself, then this time has been a waste.
    
So I’m trying to build a little muscle.  Spending several hours a week pushing filthy pieces of iron around – pushing my body to its limit.  Beyond its limit at times.
    
And, of course, there are plenty of recommendations, suggestions, advice, and, yes, criticism, available and stuffed down your throat regarding this weightlifting deal.  Everyone has an opinion and “the” program to build muscle faster, easier and quicker.
    
Well, there’s nothing fast, easy or quick about this process.  It requires dedication, discipline and commitment.  I’ve been at it for three months and I would have to say that I’m not overly impressed with my progress.  But I’m not going to stop.  I have too much time and effort invested to quit now.
    
One of my aspirations through this process is to be able to complete a set of 25 pull-ups.  Completely rested and fresh I may be able to manage 4 or 5, so I have a way to go.  A magazine article I read recently provided “quick and easy” steps to accomplish this goal.  The first step was to test yourself and make sure that you could grab an overhead bar and hang there for 60 seconds.
    
No sweat, you think, anybody should be able to do that.  My response to that?  Try it!  The first time I did, I managed to hold on for 35 seconds.  Much more difficult than it sounds or even looks as I watched others do it.
    
All of this was on my mind as I read my devotions this morning.  “We have come to share in Christ if we hold firmly till the end the confidence we had at first!” Hebrews 3:14
    
I remembered my attempt to hold onto that bar.  During the first 10 seconds or so I felt strong and thought, “No sweat!”  But as the half minute mark approached and my hands began to ache and my forearms burned with the infusion of lactic acid, I quickly changed my tune.
    
The longer I held on the harder it was to continue, until I finally was forced – by my own body – to relinquish my grasp.  How much like our walk of faith this is.  We begin to walk with our Lord and Savior and we think, “No sweat!”  But the longer a particular trial lasts – trials like prison terms or unemployment – the more we long for relief and release.  Do we have the ability to hang on?
    
Not on our own.  Not in our own strength.  But the comforting realization is that we don’t have to be able to hold on to the problem.  We don’t even have to maintain our grip on Jesus.  The nail-scarred hands are holding us.
    
Our job?  Trust Him and relax in His grasp.  By struggling and writhing around, we can wrench ourselves away from him.  Which reminds me of another of my favorite scriptures: “Be still, and know that I am God.”
    
Relax and believe in God.  He who began a good work in you will be faithful to complete it.


For more Ponderings, click here.

No Coincidence

In Blessings, Control, Peace on February 10, 2008 at 12:36 pm

Tryouts for All-West Band were scheduled for December 8th, in Jackson, Tennessee.House Becomes A Home Weekend

A cooperative Christmas concert was set for December 9th, at Opryland here in Nashville.

A coincidence?  I don’t believe in them.  If you continue to read these posts and, through them, come to know me and see how God is working in my life, you will learn that I believe that God is in control and that He orchestrates the lives of men to achieve His good purpose.  Occasionally, in those very special moments in a life, He allows us to see Him at work and experience the wonder of His workings in our lives.

I shouldn’t have been surprised, then, at how the weekend turned out.

After the auditions, my precious children drove to Exit 196 on Interstate 40, which sits just west of Nashville.  I met them there and, with my youngest in the car with me and my twins following in their truck, we made our way to Greenbrier and my little house.

We quickly dumped the luggage and piled in the same vehicle and made our way farther north to the catfish restaurant in Springfield where we did the things we do the best: act silly, laugh uncontrollably, eat, and enjoy being in each others’ presence.

With stomachs full and laugh lines fresh, we returned to the house where something absolutely amazing happened.  For the first night since June 8, 2001, my children slept under my roof.  It was the best night in six years. It surpassed the preceding 2190 by far for my three wonderful boys were with me again.  And the little house finally became home.

They say home is where the heart is and last night my heart was in this little house for the first time.

It’s awfully nice to be home!

On The Way

In Control, Devotions, Encouragement, Genesis, God's Provision on February 6, 2008 at 5:35 pm

Before he had finished speaking,…
Genesis 24:15

There have been many times in my life when I desperately needed God to work – to solve a problem or resolve a conflict or make provision for my survival – but, being the in the very midst of the situation and often feeling overwhelmed by it, was unable to even know how to pray.

It has been during those times when I have fallen on my face before God and cried out for help.  Being unsure of how any solution could even be possible, my cries have rarely been specific but more akin to the groaning of a soul in need of the wisdom and guidance of a Creator even in terms of how to pray for and about the matter.

How comforting to know that God’s answers are on the way before we even utter our prayers.  In the Scripture, the servant is far from home, on a mission for his master and unsure of where he was going or who he was looking for.  But he trusted that God both knew where he was and that He had the answers to the questions with which he was dealing.  So he stopped.  He prayed.

And before he had even completed the prayer, the answer was walking up in the form of Rebekah.

We frequently feel abandoned and alone – stuck to deal with our circumstances on our own.  But the reality is that God is answering our groans and cries before we even know how to pray or complete the prayers on our lips.

Trust in Him.  He cares for you!


For more Ponderings, click here.

God Provides

In Choices, Control, Devotions, Doubt, Fear, Genesis, God's Provision on January 30, 2008 at 5:54 pm

Abraham said, “God himself will provide the lamb for a burnt offering, my son.”So Abraham called that place “The LORD will provide”
Genesis 22:8, 14a

     A scene in a movie always jumps to mind when I read this great story.  Indiana Jones is standing on the edge of a great and seemingly bottomless chasm.  He needs to cross this span to complete the journey on which he has embarked, but there seems to be no way.  At one point we think he’s going to try to jump it using his own strength – how he does most things in those movies.  But he realizes just how futile that attempt would be.  Ridiculous to think he could cross that distance.  He’d have to be Superman.
    
Finally he pauses for a moment and then quietly, if timidly, steps out on faith.  And just at the moment we all think he will plunge to his death, a bridge, hidden until that moment, appears to bear him across the distance.
     At the last minute.
     I can’t imagine the faith it took for Abraham to bind Isaac and lay him on that altar.
     How many times in our lives have we stood on the edge of a precipice, wondering how we would ever cross?  How many times have we contemplated our eternal predicament and fretted over how we would ever satisfy the Holy God with our puny little selves and our flawed and inadequate attempts?
    
How many times have I visualized myself in the place of Indy and wondered if my faith would be stout enough to tap into the limitless resources of my Heavenly Father.The bridge is already there.  The provision has already been made.
    
Truth produced and performed a song a number of years ago with the hook line of, “Step out and the bridge will appear.”  So true.  God wants – even demands – our faith and trust.  He’s standing there with the bridge in place waiting to see if we trust Him enough to step out when all we can see is the chasm.
    
“God, I trust in your faithfulness to change both my attitude and my circumstances.”


For more Ponderings, click here.

A Web Site Is Born

In Control on January 30, 2008 at 5:09 pm

Just another late November night. One week after Thanksgiving, the date sat ignored on most calendars.  Largely inauspicious and ordinary. But as the recently experienced Christmas season reminds us – the most extraordinary things can happen on the most ordinary of nights, in the most ordinary of places, using the most ordinary of people.

It had been a topic of quite a bit of conversation between a friend and me for some time.   Somehow, in some way, the story of my life needed to be told.  It was just too good a story not to share it.  Not that I’m anything special, but the God Who was working things – many of them bad – out for my good deserved the glory.  I had to tell the story.   Just how to do that was the question.

As I wrote some of the material that I felt needed to be shared – a project in and of itself that had consumed my thoughts, time and prayers over the last two years – I pictured a book being published, or a series of magazine articles, perhaps.  Something traditional.  Something printed.  Something I could hand to someone and say, “Look what God has done.”  The thought of a Web site had never crossed my mind.

Never until that night, sitting in a Panera Bread café with a childhood friend, a friend who had been developing, writing and publishing Web sites for years, did the thought of the untold possibilities that existed through and because of this medium hit me.  A plan quickly formed and, as the idea developed, the excitement grew.

Amazing how God works.  As that day dawned, though the idea was there, no plans had been made to put feet on the thought. But before the night was over a web site was created, a project was begun, and a ministry was born. And so the adventure begins and may the Lord bless it.

Wasted Time

In Control, Devotions, Encouragement, Matthew, Perseverance on January 16, 2008 at 11:20 am

Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness…” Matthew 4:1a 

Jesus knew who He was.  He knew He wasn’t the son of a carpenter from Nazareth.  Remember the childhood disappearance when He was found in the Temple?  “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” (Luke 2:49) 

So I imagine, as He walked the earth during those first thirty years, noticing the misery, the hopelessness, the depression of the people, He repeatedly prayed for the Father to allow His earthly ministry to begin. 

But it wasn’t time. 

I can imagine, as He was submerged beneath the water, water that he had made, held there by His cousin, who He had made, that He felt a flutter of anticipation in His breast – “It’s time!” 

As He surfaced and He recognized the voice of the Father proclaiming His Son-ship from the heavens, he must have felt an incredible surge of power and eagerness, muscles quivering with readiness to begin the next phase, adrenaline coursing through His veins, ecstatic over the possibilities – over the task at hand…finally. 

But the Father said to wait.  The Spirit led Him into the wilderness. 

“Wait, My Son.  Be patient!” 

How difficult it must have been.  The Son, as part of the Triune Godhead, had an eternal view.  A thousand years were as a day and a day as a thousand years. 

But the Son, as one who had voluntarily put on skin, had a finite view.  His time for ministry was short.  Each day important.  How easy for the Son to chafe under the command to “wait”. 

But He waited and followed the Spirit.  He obeyed.  He acquiesced. 

Are you being asked to wait?  Are you in a place you don’t understand?  Are there things that you see you need to be doing?  Good things?  Productive things?  But you’re being required to wait? 

My answer to all those questions is “Yes!” 

Do I understand?  No! 

Will I ever understand the purpose of this time? 

Maybe! 

Maybe not! 

The Father doesn’t promise us understanding.  He promises us provision, sustenance and hope.  This side of heaven we won’t understand God’s perfect plan any more than we will understand why Jesus was led into the wilderness. 

Be patient. 

Trust. 

God doesn’t make mistakes.  Nothing is wasted or accidental with Him. 

Are you being required to wait? 

Then wait. 

And trust. 

And look for His release from the wait. 

See:
Matthew 4:1-11
Isa. 30:18
Psalm 40:1
Psalm 27:14
Psalm 130:5 


For more Ponderings, click here

Voice Of The Spirit

In Blessings, Control, God's Love, God's Provision on January 12, 2008 at 2:32 pm

And it came to pass, in the fullness of His time, that on the morning of the 13th of November, 2007, as the day dawned and I began the morning process of getting ready for work, the Spirit’s work was about to be made known.  My work schedule had been arranged to allow me to leave for the day at two o’clock and, as I pulled out of the parking lot of the church and turned right to head to what would soon be my new address, I still had no idea how heavily involved the Holy Spirit was in this one situation of life.

I firmly believe that the Father and the Son and the Spirit move in and through and among us constantly to guide and direct and correct and nurture us.  But to experience it in the fashion of this day is something extraordinary – exciting…..even humbling.

I met the property manager after work and picked up a key to the house.  The third trip from the motel to the house moving some of my belongings put me at the new place just before I was to meet the property manager and the landlord there to sign the lease so I stayed and waited.

The landlord pulled up a few minutes early and, as I walked outside to meet him, I had this sense that I had met him before – somewhere in my former life.  He was friendly, easy to talk to and had an openness that I perceived immediately.  In short, we seemed to hit it off from the jump.

After the lease signing and the general conversation, the property manager left and the two of us were alone outside when he shared his concern about me.  All day he had been plagued with uneasiness over leasing his house and forming this relationship with a felon.  He knew some of my history.  He didn’t know me and so, in the absence of information, substituted the stereotypical convict in that mental picture and put my name on it.

As he drove to the meeting that night he had prayed for God to somehow give him a peace about the matter and to speak to his spirit as to whether this should be done or not.  As he pulled into the driveway and I walked out to meet him, he was expecting long hair, tattoos, piercings, and attitude.  Of course, none of that really applied (thank goodness I had cut my hair) and he reported to me that at that moment the Spirit of God gave him the peace for which he had prayed.

The Voice of the Spirit.  The Hand of the Father.  The love and provision of the Son.  What a triple threat to have on our side.  Praise His Name.

Finding The House

In Blessings, Control, Doubt, God's Provision on January 9, 2008 at 6:05 pm

My first full day in Nashville seemed to solve my housing problem.  Spending $900 per month for an extended stay motel couldn’t last long. My budget was screaming and I was tiring of the noise.  I went to see a friend from the “gated community” who owned a condominium in a town north of the city.  We had talked two years before about a possible rental situation and I would have certainly accepted his offer had the Parole Board seen fit to release me then. 

Now, two years later, the place was rented, but during our short visit, I discovered that she was behind in the rent and was on her way out.  I would soon have a place to live.  

After another week in the motel and the out lay of another $230, I found out that that was not to be.  My friend caved to a sob story and my apparent answer turned out to be the wrong answer.  

My next stop was an apartment complex down the street from my job.  I stopped in during a lunch break, made application, paid for credit and background checks, and was notified that very afternoon that I would not be invited to live in the community.  But that’s already been discussed. 

So it was back to the “cell” for the foreseeable future and, in God’s glorious timing, that future was closer than I ever dreamed. 

Today – being the 12th of November – a co-worker told me about a small house he had seen down the street from his home.  A “For Rent” sign had just gone up over the weekend and he gave me the phone number and directions.  I figured to drive by after work and check out the situation and the surroundings. 

That wasn’t to be, either. 

My boss, the poster child for Type-A personalities, caught wind of it, knew about my need, and by 1100 we were in his truck headed to the house.  We met the property manager, made the deal, and scheduled a time for tomorrow to sign a lease. 

Questioning the goodness, providence and provision of God?  Let’s review for a moment: 

·         Instead of a one-bedroom apartment where my boys would have nowhere to sleep but the great room, there will be two bedrooms and room for my children to visit.
·         Instead of a two-story condominium, there will be everything on one floor.
·         Rather than sharing walls with others, there is now a free-standing dwelling that is all mine.
·         And, as a bonus, it turns out that I will be living in the same small town with my boss and several of my co-workers, not to mention that I will be outside of Davidson County with all that that entails. 

I’m glad God is in control of things.  His ways are truly higher. 

Too Hard?

In Control, Devotions, Genesis on January 7, 2008 at 11:16 am

Is anything too wonderful for the LORD?
Genesis 18:14a

The sun rises every morning.  A normal occurrence.  Overlooked.  Ignored. Even dreaded. But through my window it has taken on a new, more meaningful dimension.

Outside my window, across the fence and the cotton field stands a small grove of pine.  And each morning those few trees – sentinels in the otherwise barren field, filter the sun as it cracks open the fresh horizon.  And, as the seasons progress, this grove marks the march of this heavenly body as it paces back and forth across the sky like a sentient being entirely cognizant of its boundaries. 

 

This daily event and seasonal march thought by many to be common is in fact a daily reiteration that God is in control of the universe and that nothing is too difficult for Him.

The Bible is replete with accounts of His wondrous and awesome acts – the birth of children to the elderly and barren or the virgin, the dividing of seas and the vanquishing of giants, the walking on water and the springing open of jail cells – but they are merely anecdotal to those who choose to observe.  He marked off the boundaries of the sun and moon and carved their paths into the cosmos.  He set the stars in place and the earth on its axis.  He set the seasons.  He is in control.  Who can doubt it?  Who can deny that God sits on His throne and directs the movements and experiences of man?

 

So I ask the question the angel asked, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?”

No!


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Denied

In Control on January 5, 2008 at 5:15 pm

A quarter mile down the street from the church where I’m working sits an apartment complex.  The location couldn’t be more perfect for not only is it close to work, but one street down and one street over is the residence of most of my support group here.  On pretty days I could walk just about everywhere I would need to go.

So I stopped in and completed application on the 7th day of November.  As I have previously written, I’m getting sicker of the “cell life” by the day and long for a place of permanence.

The lady in the office was nice.  We discussed the options – one bedroom or two – and the prices – $600 per month for the one bedroom – and the availability – immediate.  All sounded great to me.

We drove to the front of the complex and walked through a unit and I was already picturing my stuff in this little apartment.  Already, I was coming home to this little nest in the evenings.  It felt right and I left knowing I had just seen my home.

This afternoon my feelings were proven wrong.  Evidently apartment management companies view felons as a group with more risk than reward.

So, it’s back to the “cell” with more questions than answers and more frustration than faith.

Still In A Cell

In Control, God's Provision on January 4, 2008 at 4:48 pm

secondfreeworldcell3sm.jpgsecondfreeworldcell2sm.jpgSecond Free World Cell

It’s Monday, November 5th, and the alarms on my watch and phone sound signaling the beginning of my second day of work.  And, as my eyes open and I take a moment to look around, I realize that, despite the recent moves and improvement in circumstance, I am still living in a cell.

The neighborhood is much improved.  The neighbors are of a different – not necessarily better – class and are quiet, not to mention that my proximity to them is more to my liking.  There’s no one in the room with me for whom I need to be quiet or who will get in my way as I prepare for the day.

I make my coffee in a real coffeemaker and use the real stuff as opposed to the instant variety I’ve choked down for the past five years.  The news is on the television and there is no need for headphones.  Exactly when I want to, without anyone’s permission, I wander into the bathroom for a shower (without shower shoes).

But, in spite of the improvements, it’s still a cell.  A temporary dwelling.  A transitional domicile.  A lot of my belongings are here and there’s barely room to move about, though I seem to manage.  Yet I long for the day when I will be in an apartment of my own – a place where I can start to get things organized and begin to think of as home.

I know… it’s only been two weeks.  But I’m tiring of the cell life.  Sue me!

Confusion

In Choices, Confusion, Control, Devotions, Doubt, Genesis, Perseverance on January 4, 2008 at 4:40 pm

Therefore it was called Babel, because there the LORD confused the language of all the earth; and from there the LORD scattered them abroad over the face of all the earth. Genesis 11:9
Terah took his son Abram and his grandson Lot son of Haran, and his daughter-in-law Sarai, his son Abram’s wife, and they went out together from Ur of the Chaldeans to go into the land of Canaan; but when they came to Haran, they settled there. Genesis 11:31

Is there still any doubt about God being in control? 

If there is, the story of the Tower of Babel should dispose of it.  Man can make his plans, dream his grand dreams and bask in his illusions of grandeur, but at the end of the day, God has the final say.

We start out on many journeys throughout life.  Careers, marriages, missions and purposes.  Yet so many times we fail to persevere and see our dreams realized.  The family of Abram set out for Canaan, but somehow became distracted along the way so “they settled”.  Sadder words were never penned.  How many times have I been in the midst of a good thing only to become distracted?  How many times have I settled for less than my dream or forfeited a goal in exchange for the substandard?  Less than God’s plan.  Less than my potential.  Less!! 

Well, I’m through with less.  I want more.  I want far beyond anything I could ever ask of even think.  I want abundance and fullness and richness of life here and eternity in heaven with Jesus.

Is that asking too much?  I don’t think so.  Neither does God!


For more Ponderings, click here.