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Archive for the ‘Deliverance’ Category

Back to Prison – Part II

In Deception, Deliverance on October 23, 2009 at 10:37 am

Dejected?  Absolutely!  How in the world was this happening….again? 

Confused?  Absolutely!  After trying so hard to do everything right, the lie of an unknown person – apparently someone with an ax to grind – instantly transformed a tolerable situation into pure hell.

But doubting? My faith isn’t as strong as Joseph’s for I did doubt and wonder why.

I was moved from the relative freedom of the annex to the main compound in Nashville, thrown into the smallest cell I have ever seen with one of the biggest men I have ever seen, given only the barest of essentials and left.

A friend went to the annex to pick up my belongings to discover that most of my “free world” clothes had been stolen by staff members.  Stamps were stolen by the mail room.  Phone calls disallowed.

For a month I sat, not knowing why I was there or what my future held.  Every mental picture of life after prison I had conjured during the preceding two years vaporized and I was left with only uncertainly and despair.

On the 33rd day of this torture, I was shackled wrist and ankle and loaded onto a bus with forty others for the trip back to West Tennessee State Penitentiary – back to where I started all those many months before.  My faith was so weak but, since there was no choice, I started over again. The days were long and the nights were longer.  I was moved from cell to cell, subjected to one cellmate after another, always in a state of flux with no hope for stability of any kind – always fearful that the activities of one of those men would compromise my custody level and thereby lengthen my term.

I tried to secure employment to no avail, finally landing – by default – in the kitchen scrubbing pots and pans for six hours a day for twenty-five cents an hour. As it was with Joseph, the defining quality of these days was idleness, made all the worse coming from a place of responsibility. My nights were also consumed with wondering what was going to happen and why I had been removed from usefulness and productivity.  Every day was consumed with silent prayer asking why I was being punished when I had done nothing wrong.  No answer came but God’s Hand showed Itself. Read the rest here!!

Prison to Palace

In Deliverance, Devotions, Encouragement, Genesis, God's Provision, Perseverance, Prison on May 1, 2009 at 2:34 pm

Written by A Prodigal from a prison cell – January 17. 2007.


So Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Since God has shown you all this, there is no one so discerning and wise as you. You shall be over my house, and all my people shall order themselves as you command; only with regard to the throne will I be greater than you.”Genesis 41:39-40

From the prison to the palace.  God’s faithfulness and perfect timing works in a life committed to Him!

“Two years later….”  I’ve done twenty-four months in prison (more than that actually) but I deserved to be there.  Joseph didn’t!  I can’t imagine his fight to stay faithful to and focused on God in the face of such injustice and through such a lengthy internment.


For more Ponderings, click here

Isn’t He Worthy?

In Deliverance, Devotions, Thanksgiving, Worship on April 16, 2009 at 3:22 pm

Written by A Prodigal on January 14, 2007.


So Jacob said to his household and to all who were with him, “Put away the foreign gods that are among you, and purify yourselves, and change your clothes; then come, let us go up to Bethel, that I may make an altar there to the God who answered me in the day of my distress and has been with me wherever I have gone.”  Genesis 35:2-3

What an entourage!  Jacob, two wives, two concubines, eleven sons, unnumbered servants, and herds….oh, what a sight that caravan must have been.

What an obstacle!  An estranged brother with four hundred men.  Jacob just knew all he had – all he had worked for for all those years was about to be slaughtered in the desert.  Seems to be somewhat prophetic – the future Israelite nation with Laban chasing them down from behind and Esau blocking their way.  Deliverance was surely needed.

What a brother!  The years had mellowed Esau and tempered his anger.  No slaughter – only forgiveness and acceptance – awaited Jacob there.

What a God!  Guiding, directing, providing, protecting.

Jacob’s response?  Obedience – “go to the city of Bethel and live there” – and worship.

His orders to his family ring true today:

·         Step away from anything you’ve put ahead of God.

·         Seek forgiveness – internal cleanliness – for any offence that lies between you and a Holy God.

·         Make yourselves presentable for God is to be honored above all others.

Isn’t He worthy?

Hasn’t He helped you during you times of trouble?

Hasn’t He been with you wherever you’ve gone?


For more Ponderings, click 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!

16:30

In 23, Deliverance, Prison on February 25, 2009 at 6:54 am

Count time – the last four o’clock count.  That feels strange to write.  That tomorrow at this time I will be somewhere else, with someone else, away from here, doesn’t seem real yet.

I’m still on the bunk for there’s nowhere else to go – no other options.  The TV news is on but I can’t focus on it.  Mentally I’m trying to rush through the stages – the predictable and endless cycle of stages – that still stand in the way of my departure.  It’s repeated itself so many times that it’s all not even in the memory anymore.  It’s just a habit.  When the door slammed at 1530, the timer in my head started and, without checking the watch, I know it’s about time for count to clear.  I’ll hear the alert tone sound over the officer’s radio – will that sound ever leave me? – and then he’ll open the doors. 

The mental  alarm is screaming at me and it occurs to me that the significance of this day may be interfering with the accuracy of it.  But, according to my watch, it’s dead on.  Count is late clearing – the geniuses are at work again.  The standing joke is that count time only ends on time if the officers’ boot laces are not so tight to prevent them from having access to their toes.

Whatever the problem, I wish they’d hurry up.  There are still several stages awaiting before I can lay down and try to go to sleep, and this count thing is holding me up. 

I’m ready to get started!


Visit The Last Twenty-Three Page for more.

Surrounded

In Deliverance, Devotions, Doubt, Encouragement, Fear, God's Provision, Worship on February 16, 2009 at 2:00 pm

Read 2 Chronicles 13

Any military strategist would have to agree – this battle could not be won.

The army of Judah, impressive in its own right, was overwhelmingly out-manned and out-maneuvered.  You would think four hundred thousand soldiers would be sufficient to win the day.  Any commander would feel confident – even self-sufficient – engaging the enemy with almost half a million men.

Well, you would until you arrived at the battlefield to find the opponent had two for every one of yours.  Eight hundred thousand men.  And not just in front of you, but behind you, sitting in ambush, as well.  What a sight that must have been.  How demoralizing.  Your vast army dwarfed.  Your sure victory snatched away.  What’s the use – let’s give up and go home.

That’s what we’re tempted to do, isn’t it?  The enemy shows up with its overwhelming resources and surrounds us.  They arrive with their promises and enticements and we suddenly feel weak and insignificant.  We believe it would be better to give a little ground than to be annihilated.

So we compromise.  We do give a little ground.  We drop back and try to regroup, not appreciating the slipperiness of that particular slope.  Not realizing that that was our opponent’s battle plan all along. Read on here!

14:30

In 23, Deliverance, Prison on January 31, 2009 at 11:32 pm

I’m in the cell and I’m thinking about tomorrow – about leaving this place…..finally. And as I think about walking through that gate into freedom, my mind turns to the many times I have been the one left behind as friends have made this transition.

Rob left in April of 2004. The big galoot, weight-lifter, the maker-upper of words like flink (to replace flinch and jerk) and fringe (used as the combination of cringe and fear). The one of our group most plagued with Attention Deficit Disorder, but good as gold and willing to do whatever he could to help a friend.

Billy followed Rob through the gate a month later. If you read “A Life of Deception” through, you will be introduced to Billy more properly and completely, but he has been there for me during these years and, even as I write this, he is still helping and encouraging me.

Michael left. Brad left. Anthony left. Big Whitsey left. Dirty left. So many have left and I’ve had to stay.

And now it’s my turn and I think about those who will remain after I leave tomorrow.

Chris will stay for a while. He’s a good friend and one of the very best guitarists I’ve ever met. I know how he feels.

Wes was my cellmate for nine months and has become a real friend and encourager, even as he remains. Another twenty-four months and he’ll follow me, but for now he stays. I know how he feels.

Lane moved into my cell after Wes was transferred to Northeast. He was only there for three months before his custody level improved and he was able to move to a minimum security complex, but his friendship remains and though he is saddled with a life sentence, I pray for him that the Parole Board will allow him to leave the prison in another few years.

Charles. Mouse. Larry and Andre. They all remain and I feel for them.

And so another hour passes and the moment I’ve been waiting for is that much closer.


Visit The Last Twenty-Three Page for more.

Dad – Part III

In Blessings, Choices, Deception, Deliverance, God's Provision, Perseverance, Prison, Thanksgiving on January 30, 2009 at 6:57 am

The next several years were spent wandering; moving from one treatment center to the next; one hospital to the next; borrowing money from family and friends with no ability to repay.

 

At one point he was sleeping under a bridge in Nashville.  Desperate, he called one of his few remaining friends—the pastor of the small Nazarene church in Danville, Virginia, we had attended during my high school days.  Rick drove all night, picked up my father and took him back to Danville.  He housed him, fed him, gave him work, and got him help.

 

His dark years were over.  He had finally reached the bottom and made the decision that nothing was worth going through that dark tunnel again.

 

As I write this, nineteen years later, my father has enjoyed those years; sober and helping others.  Now, all these years later, he is back in the ministry, preaching the gospel, exhorting people to turn to Christ and to let Him change their lives.

 

I hate the lost years.  I hate what I saw my mother go through trying to keep my brother and me clothed and fed.  I hate that I lost those years with my father. Read on here!!!

If

In Deliverance, Doubt, Encouragement, God's Provision, Perseverance, Poetry on January 11, 2009 at 2:18 pm

 

“No manner of hurt was found upon him, because he believed in His God.” Daniel 6:23
 
 God “tries” us to prove us – - that we might prove Him. Only thus can we understand that inexplicable….

 

  

If

If you never were faced with the wild sea’s embrace,

And the enemy’s shout in your ears,

Would you ever “stand still” to behold with a thrill

 God’s pathway that saves from your fears?

 
  

If you never were out in the dark den of doubt,

With the lions tossing their manes,

How then could you guess God’s angel could bless

 By using miraculous chains?

    

If you never were caught in that furnace white-hot

Of suffering beyond strength to bear,

Could you quite understand how real is the Hand

And the Presence that comforts you there?


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

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The Last One

In Choices, Deliverance, Devotions, Exodus on December 29, 2008 at 12:22 pm

 “In this desert your bodies will fall – everyone of you twenty years old or more … Not one of you will enter the land…”  Numbers 14:29-30

I’m the last one.  And everyone knows it.  It might be my imagination – I don’t think so – but they’re all watching me, waiting.  To their credit they try to behave normally around me.  They speak to me, share with me, and even occasionally laugh with me.

But I know.  And they know I know.  They’re watching .  Because I’m the last one.  It’s always with me.

For instance, just yesterday, about an hour before we stopped for the night, the fiery cloud still leading up ahead, I stumbled and fell.  My sixty-one-year-old body was just worn out so I laid there for a minute or two.  It felt so good to be still.  Felt so good, in fact, that it took a minute for me to notice the silence.  All conversation had stopped.  No one was even moving.  It seemed as though the entire nation had braked to a stop and was holding its collective breath.  Waiting.

As I struggle to back to my feet, I noticed the sagging shoulders, the sudden down-turn of the eyes and the barely veiled disappointment all around.

I wish I was already dead – I wish I weren’t the last one.  And that thought never leaves me.  Each morning, as my eyes open and the awareness of making it through yet another night sinks in, as I bend down to tie on those same sandals (more of a struggle these days) and as I smooth the night’s wrinkles out of that same robe (not even threadbare on the elbows), I wish I weren’t the last one. Read on here!!

Watch This

In Deliverance, Devotions, Encouragement, God's Provision, Prayer on December 3, 2008 at 7:08 am

I was in trouble…big trouble.  I knew – I had been in trouble before and recognized the feeling.  Like the time I had been throwing the tennis ball against the side of the house – a direct violation of the rules – and lost control of it and broke not only the living room window, the big one in the middle, but the Hummel thing that Gram had given Mom the Christmas before.

Then, to make matters worse, I lied about it and told Mom it was one of my friends that had thrown it.  I didn’t know at the time that Mom had been watching me from the bedroom.  That was trouble – I could still feel the paddle hitting my backside.

But even that didn’t compare with the beating I was about to get.  Usually the peacemaker, I would go around the block to avoid, or prevent, a fight.  But when I saw Buddy, the school bully, picking on Pete, it was more than I could take and I just had to open my big mouth.

Of course, now, staring into his eyes – up into his eyes – and seeing the hams he used as hands clinched angrily into huge fists…Buddy was in the fourth grade and the rumor was that he’d been through the fourth grade twice before.  And to my skinny, third grade – for the first time – eyes, he looked like a giant.  I suddenly knew how David felt as he confronted Goliath.  This was going to hurt.

The only thing I could think – over and over again as I stood there waiting for the pain to begin – was, “Where is the bus?”  It was late and because it was late I was about to get my clock cleaned, my bell rung.  I was about to get the taste knocked right out of my mouth.

I was acting more brave than I felt.  I WAS standing there – on the outside anyway.  On the inside I was running for all my might. Read on here!

A New Holiday

In Blessings, Deliverance, God's Provision, Prison, Thanksgiving on October 23, 2008 at 5:16 pm

Regrets
          Renewals
                    Rewards
     This shouldn’t be as difficult as it’s turning out to be. And, as opposed to the normal writing issues, the difficulty here comes not from having nothing to say but from having too much. I simply can’t include it all.
     The humbling part of all this is the realization that it was one year ago today that I was released from prison, walked out of that gate and into the arms of my three sons and my brother. In many ways it seems like an eternity. In others it seems just a blink ago.
     There are the natural regrets: a way of life lost; the disintegration of a family; disappearance of material possessions; the years wasted languishing away in the prison.
     But the focus cannot stay there for that is counterproductive and dibilitating. The focus must – and does – shift to the renewals: revived relationships with my children; work to accomplish with my mind and hands; friendships forged, both inside and out, that endure; and most vital of all, the renewal of my relationship with my Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ – without having to endure the things listed in the regret column, I wonder if I would have ever been truly free and completely His.
     And there are rewards. Even this early on I can see that the story I have been given through this time is one that has the potential to help others. My prayer is that I am able to find the channel by which I may accomplish that.
     But you’re wondering what this new holiday is. It is my personal emancipation day. It is a personal Thanksgiving – a time of remembering the past, even as painful as it is, so that the mistakes are not repeated and the renewals and rewards are not taken for granted.
     One year ago today, the stress was thick and excruciating. No home. No mode of transportation. Very few worldly possessions. No job. Very little money. Only questions and apprehension.
     Today I enjoyed a vacation day from the job where I have progressed from janitor to administrative assistant. I slept late – 8:30 compared to the normal 4:20. I drank an entire pot of freshly ground Starbucks coffee brewed in my own coffee-maker in my own kitchen. I listened to beautiful and uplifting music on my own stereo in my own living room. I had lunch with a friend. I vacuumed out my car. I shopped for groceries and am now attached to a wireless Internet account writing this entry.
     So many simple things. So many things taken for granted and unappreciated.
     Not me. Not now. Not today.
     I’m free. Free from prison. Free from sin. Free from guilt and shame. Free from hiding and secrets and the pain of living a life away from God.
     On this new holiday – one that will be spent as a time away from the norm every year – I am free and thankful.

August 13, 2001 (Part 3 of 4)

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Deliverance, Encouragement, Mail Call, Perseverance on September 24, 2008 at 5:18 pm

I know your own pain is so intense and unbearable that it’s hard to imagine anyone else hurting, too – this is natural – all I could think of was, “My God, I’ve made a mess of everything and I have lost my family, my ministry, my life!!”  All the while your poor mother was dying by degrees.  You boys were dying.  Pastors and laymen over the nation were praying for me and dying.  Be patient.

Where was I?  I had a thought going and lost it when your letter came –

Oh, yes….O. J. Simpson’s wife, Nicole, who was murdered, has a sister who was so shattered by Nicole’s death that she has started a national program for battered women.  I see her on the news programs often.

John Walsh, whose son was kidnapped and murdered was nearly destroyed himself through that terrible experience.  It was at this time that he went to D. C. and all the major news networks and got permission and funding to start the broadcast “America’s Most Wanted” which has run for 16 years and has been the means of apprehending hundreds of criminals and sex offenders.

All that to say this: you have to fight the thing that nearly destroyed you, or it will overtake you and finish the job.

They say, “The best defense is a good offense.”

Nothing reinforces your own recovery and reduces the risk of relapse like active involvement in a program to help others with the same problem.  And Son, it’s everywhere. 

MSNBC, as well as many other networks, is carrying one program after another about “Sex for Sale” which has flooded the country and the world, now reaching little children through the Web until little children are making copies of nude people and exchanging them with each other at school!  The accessibility of the computer sex market has flooded the country until it has reached epidemic proportions.

A congressional committee has or is meeting in D.C. to discuss this real problem (I saw this on C-Span).  They had video machines set up and were reviewing some of the material that our children have access to.  Porn is linked with most major crime in the U.S. and other countries.  It’s powerful and pervasive.  It’s obsessive and addictive.

Something to think about in view of your own precious boys – as well as other scores of children just like yours: nothing builds trust with the ones you’ve injured like taking an active role in combating the problem.

Had I not become active in helping alcoholics and addicts the 5 years at Hope Harbor and another 4 years in charge of the out-patient program at the hospital, I doubt I would be alive today.  Hundreds went through those programs that were helped and many have held out and are in recovery and many in church with their families.  My dream was to make this old house a recovery center or an intermediate care facility for people getting out of treatment centers for 30 days with nowhere to go except back to the old “playgrounds and playmates” which leads them back into relapse.

But I have had no money and by the time I got the place partially restored my health had begun to fail.  But it’s OK today.

The 8th of next month will be 11 unbroken years I have been free one day at a time from the addiction that destroyed my ministry, my marriage and nearly my life!


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

Read Part 2 of this letter…

Read Part 4 of this letter…..

August 13, 2001 (Part 2 of 4)

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Deliverance, Encouragement, Jail, Mail Call, Prison on September 17, 2008 at 4:51 pm

Dr. Willingham wrote, “God learned something new in human suffering when He stepped down on the battlefield of human suffering and sorrow.”

It was because of this the writer of Hebrews spoke of Christ, the High Priest who, “is touched by feeling of our infirmities, and who is acquainted with our grief.”

There is an understanding through identification once we have experienced the pain!  Only those who have been there are qualified to share!

It was Betty Ford who, after disgracing her office as First Lady through her alcoholic addiction, later confessed that she had to “step down” in surrender which included cleaning toilets and scrubbing floors on her hands and knees.  It was there she heard the cry of those, like herself, trapped in addiction.

She faced another day and the crowds of people, among which were her family, President Ford and their children…..  In a touching ceremony, she placed her foot on a golden shovel, and turned the first shovel of soil for the construction of the Betty Ford Clinic, where thousands of actors, politicians and congressmen and women have completed successful recovery from alcohol and drugs.

Charles Colson disgraced, indicted and sentenced to Federal prison for his involvement in the Watergate scandal finally heard the cry of suffering inmates and started prayer groups with them.  When released he organized the nationally known Prison Ministry, and Chuck has traveled for years speaking in churches and prisons and has written books that have gone around the world touching and blessing thousands.

*****Just got your letter of August 8th and have had a crying time and prayed and agonized for you.

Yes, Son, I am with you all way!  I understand your loneliness and the scorn you feel.  I know.

You mentioned your brother.  Not only is he neck deep in that business, as well as trying to be attentive to your boys and your wife, he has told me he has made a number of trips up to visit with you and the slot was taken by your girlfriend.  You have not mentioned her to me, but I can understand how you would hold on to her.  I’ve been there on that one, too.  They would come to the treatment centers and hospitals where I would be confined and visit with them and bring me things, etc.  I didn’t care that much about them but I felt they were all I had!  So I would hold on.  It was like a man floundering out in the ocean and reaching out to hold onto anybody or anything!  I held on to a lot of driftwood trying to stay afloat  - then when I would get to shore and collect my wits I would realize they were the last people I wanted to be with.  By that time they had run up my credit cards, etc.  (One Sears bill for $1000 for tires and shocks that took me a year or more to pay off.)

But if there is true meaning to the relationship and you really love her, then do it right.  Pray together and when you get out, marry her, and move to Little Rock or Jackson, TN, and start a new life together.  But I sure wouldn’t slap this in the faces of the family in Memphis.  They need freedom and you do, too…time to heal.

Call your brother and ask him to come and see you.  He can tell you what is going on with the business and your family.  You need him.  He loves you and is deeply indebted to you for all you have meant to him and done for him over the years.  But he does not have a good attitude about your girlfriend.  He feels she played a part in your downfall.  This is only natural for him to feel this way.  I understand, but he doesn’t.  He has never been “there” and hope he doesn’t get there.

But you need to stay close whatever you have to do.  You must realize that for the people that love you there is a “love/anger” stage they are going through.  You boys did it with me.  “If Dad loved us why did he leave mother and take off and leave us?”  Andy said his anger caused him to go on the ramble just like I did.  We vent our anger in different ways.

Your brother loves you but he’s hurting badly.  Only you can help this by being patient.


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

Deliverance

In Deliverance, God's Love, Poetry on September 6, 2008 at 7:37 am

“He made darkness his secret place.”  Psalms 18:11

 

“Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.”  Hebrews 5:8

 

Perhaps we must learn obedience in the selfsame way before we may know ….

 

Deliverance

               

God sometimes leads His children into darkness;

                He hedgeth us about ’til all alone,

Like Jacob, we must walk in arid places,

                And find, for rest, our pillow but a stone.

It maybe seems that God is slow to answer–

                Yet His heart bleeds anew at every pain;

Our prayers are bottled up with Him in glory–

                Our suffering may be our eternal gain.

 

Gain, if we will trust with sight denied us,

                Remembering God’s Kingdom is within;

The path to peace too narrow for resentment,

                Our soul too small to hold both God and sin!

We shall remain imprisoned with our sorrow,

                Until by faith our eyes anointed see

Christ high and lifted up, and hear His whisper,

                “Behold my nail- pierced Hand’s perfecteth thee!”


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

August 5, 2001

In Deliverance, Doubt, Fear, Forgiveness, God's Love, Mail Call, Prayer on August 20, 2008 at 5:02 pm

You’ve read a letter from this person before.  It was a scathing tirade that set me on my heels for a time.

And I couldn”t answer her letter right away.  The return mail would have been much too harsh had I composed it in that early frame of mind.  So, taking a page from the life-book of my father, I waited and let the intervening days cool my temper.  So the letter I sent her in reply was calmer and contained more humility than I thought possible given the recent events and her stinging words.

The Spirit had to have both prompted my words and prepared the way for her next letter was of a completely different tone.

Read it for yourself……..


August 5, 2001

Dear Dan,

For my own conscience, I feel that I have to write you back and make a couple of “clarifications” myself.  I was very, very angry when I wrote that letter to you, although I’ll bet you couldn’t tell! HaHa!  Anyway, I feel bad for some of the things I said.  You said I probably “didn’t care to read a detailed explanation.”  Well, if you don’t want to that’s fine – that is your business – however, I do care, Dan.  Can you not understand how betrayed I feel?  I know my letter was horrible, but it did make me feel better!  Sorry….

The thing that really kills me right now is starting over.  I hate to say it, but you were the best boss I’ve ever had…..  Now I wonder if you gave us everything we needed (and more) because you valued us as your employees, or if it was for something else.

I don’t get it, but apparently I never will.  I don’t know if you snapped or if Satan got inside of you.  But I do pray for you, Dan.  And yes, I struggle with the very thing that you addressed in your letter.  I struggle with the fact that I’m supposed to accept that God loves the child molesters and the rapists as much as He loves me!  Of course, I haven’t lived the perfect life – you know that, but I haven’t ever deliberately harmed anyone else, haven’t killed anyone, haven’t cheated on my husband, etc.  So why does God love the people that do these things?  I don’t understand it.  One day you said that Catholics believe that they can do anything they want and no matter how bad, if they do into a confession booth and confess their sins, then they’ll be forgiven.  You said you had a real problem with that.  Well, what‘s the difference in that and what any other religion believes?  Don’t you believe that if you pray for God’s forgiveness then you’re forgiven?  What’s the damn difference?  I am so confused – maybe more than ever – about all of this!  And since I am confused and don’t understand, does this mean that I’m not a Christian?  I am asking you for your input.  Does God punish us for things we have done, do you think? …..  I’m just lost right now!

Anyway… although I do think you deserve to be where you are, I do hate that you are there and I hate that you chose the path that you did.  I pray for you and your family every day.

Take Care…..


Confusion and self-doubt are hard things with which to live.  Questions about degrees of sin and how a Righteous God can – and does – forgive and forget the sins we commit, but the theft of the pack of gum, the running of the red light, the tax evasion and the murder.  All are sin in His eye and all can be covered by the blood of His precious Son.

I am thankful for the surety I have in this regard.  I am humbled by His provision for me.  I remain concerned over my friend and wonder how she is doing with her questions.


For more of the Prodigal’s Mail, click here.

9 – 146 – 5000

In Blessings, Deliverance, Encouragement, God's Provision, Perseverance, Prison, Thanksgiving on July 28, 2008 at 2:24 pm

Strange title for a blog entry, I know, but very significant.

Nine months ago today I was just 120 hours out of prison.  As it always seems to be with time, in some ways the time as flown by.  It has passed in a blink and I still feel that it was just so very recently that I was locked away from all I hold dear.  But the time has plodded along at it’s ordained and steady pace and God has blessed and provided in so many ways, most of which you have read about if you have visited here much at all.  So many wonderful and unbelieveable people have entered my life over the last nine months.  So many stages of transition have been experienced in the whirlwind that as become my new life.  Nine months.  Such a short time for so much to have happened.

This effort was initiated in December of 2007, and this is the 146th post made to this weblog.  And the words – so many words – have not been mine, but God’s.  The things written about and commented upon in this endeavor are things He has brought to my mind.  I am merely the conduit through whom He has chosen to speak these things.  Hopefully – and prayerfully – as I have written them and posted them, someone else has found them helpful during their dark days of confusion and despair.

Five thousand.  The pages of this weblog have been viewed five thousand times in this short time span.  To those of you who have returned again and again to read of this Prodigal’s journey into and then out of the pit, thank you.  You have encouraged me and have kept me on the task I feel God has given me.

9 – 146 – 5000.  All milestones.  All successfully negotiated hurdles.  And it continues………..

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.

July 22, 2001

In Blessings, Deliverance, Encouragement, Forgiveness, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Love, Mail Call, Poetry, Prison on June 25, 2008 at 1:54 pm

     During the early days of my incarceration, shortly after I re-committed my life to the Lord and received His forgiveness, I wrote out my story.  It was in very rough form and was certainly nothing of admirable content or talent, but I felt the need to get it out.

     I sent this draft to my Dad.  Of all the people in the world, he had the ability to truly empathize with me.  He had already proven his love by driving a thousand miles to pray for and hug me in those first horrific days.  He had already expressed his forgiveness as we wept and prayed that day in the visiting room of the jail.

     Now he would know the whole story – the only one so far.

     I received this letter in return.

 

July 22, 2001

My Dear Son,

     I received the manuscript late Wednesday eve… What a story!  And what courage it took to write it!  No greater relief than to get totally honest – with yourself – others and God!  I, too, have been down every rocky, dead-end road and am acquainted with total failure and shipwreck.

     I’m sure my reaction to this is much different than your mother’s.  I have thought of her through this and can only imagine her shock.  I have prayed for her and Jerry everyday – also the others…..  According to your brother, your wife and children seem to be holding up, but they are all suffering a pain that will not go away for the rest of their lives.

     I know your feelings of isolation, desolation and desperation.  Five lockups in treatment centers and general hospitals, halfway houses, and rescue missions for periods of from 30 days to 6 months.  Six months in Rick’s church basement.  Six months in a boarding house, etc.  After staying in the Hyatts and Hiltons and Embassy Suites over the years and driving plush cars and wearing new clothes and eating the best food – what a disaster!

     I felt like filthy, greasy rags on the floor of an old abandoned garage, forgotten and worthless.

     But someone was there all the time.  I just didn’t know.  The Lord had me surrounded by His special instruments.  “God works in mysterious ways His wonders to perform.”

     I was bottomed out in an intensive care unit in Nashville Veterans Hospital – borderline brain convulsions – tubes, wires, etc.  I kept thinking of you boys – how I had hurt and disappointed you.  My pillow was soaked with tears and I was all alone.

     I started quoting the words (out loud):

          “God uses best the broken things

           The contrite heart – the battered wings

           Of our poor selfish pride –

           Ah, yes, and even scars we hide,

           He blesses for His own.

           If in the breaking I might be

           A better vessel Lord for Thee

           Then crush my stubborn will,

           And all of self that lingers still;

           Anoint my eyes that I may see

           A vision of Your plan for me

           ‘Til Thou shalt call me home.”  (one of Mother’s poems)

     A nurse was standing nearby and heard me – she rushed to my side and asked me to quote those words again.  She got a piece of paper and wrote them down and exclaimed, “It’s just what I needed.”  And left the room.

     I’m thankful He led me into AA with people with my problem that could identify.  God used those people and I was not alone.  Five years at the Harbor and four years teaching at the hospital enabled me to help others which helped me stay on track.   September 8th will be 11 years of freedom from that addiction that destroyed my ministry, my marriage and the trust of all who have ever known me.  I owe it all to God’s love working though people.

     I’ll write you again.  I have been very sick.  I love you….always!  Always!  Always!

Dad

 

     He had been there and he knew.  By God’s power working through him, he had overcome his addiction and had lived to help others and further the Kingdom of God through his work.

     That was my father’s prayer for me over the next seven years and was one of the last things on his mind as he died.

     He is in Heaven and my prayer is now that his prayer will be answered – that I be used of God and that this ordeal through which I have come will not be in vain but be beneficial to those who need to find their way to their Savior.

July 2, 2001

In Deliverance, Encouragement, Forgiveness, Jail, Mail Call, Mother, Prayer, Prison, Salvation, Thanksgiving on May 20, 2008 at 6:53 am

I was arrested on Father’s Day in 2001.  Not one of my proudest moments.  It was frightening, intimidating, overwhelming and alienating.

     My Dad drove thirteen hours – one way – through the night to be by my side and hold me in his embrace as I wept on his chest.  In that moment standing there with my father’s arms around me I knew that somehow – someday – all would be OK.

     As it would happen, my precious mother – already suffering the effects of the devastating Alzheimer’s that would eventually rob her of even her ability to express herself verbally – wrote the first letter I received after my arrest.  This letter watered the seed planted in my father’s arms that day.

     God could and would forgive.  God could use this horrible moment in time for good – both for me and for others.

     God could make a way………

 

July 2, 2001

My Dearest Son,

     I know this is belated but I have been trying to get my wits together.  I’m still not sure I am there but I did not want to delay any longer so that you would think I did not care.  You have to know that this letter is hard for me to write.  I still can hardly believe what has happened.  You have been such a model son all your life and I guess I thought you were invincible.  Perhaps I have not spent enough time praying for you.  I should have known that a young man of your many talents would be pursued by Satan himself.  Forgive me in failing to hold you up in prayer more often.  I do want you to know that I love you now more than ever and you are constantly on my mind.  I have not written because I was too emotional to get thoughts together.

     The first (thing) I want you to know that my Mother’s love is as strong or stronger than it has (ever) been.  I will not abandon you for making a mistake – no matter what the consequences are.  Of course, you have to know that I am shocked to think you would plot to kill any one, especially the mother of your children.  You should have known that your actions would have devastated the boys.

     I have taken heart in the fact that no one has lost their life and you still have the opportunity to make a confession and ask God’s forgiveness.  I implore you to that step.  Although this plot was inspired by Satan you have not committed the unpardonable sin.  If you come to Him, He will blot out your transgression.

     I am aware that all of your material wealth is gone and you feel that all is lost, but if this event will save your soul from being lost for eternity it will be worth everything that you have lost.  I am praying constantly to that end.  There is no telling what you can accomplish in God’s Kingdom if you surrender to Him.  My prayers are to that end.  Material things dim in the light of eternity.  I encourage you to use your time in jail reading God’s Word and repenting.  Even if you are incarcerated, you can let God use you.  After all, nothing of this world is lasting.  Look toward eternity.

I love you so much!!!

Mom

 

She had no way of knowing, but her prayers were answered even before she wrote the letter.

     After two weeks of jail, the time clearing the fog and giving me a chance to fully come to terms with the reality of my situation and the horror of my crime, on my 41st birthday, lying on a mat in a two-man jail cell, I finally came to the end of myself and cried out to God for forgiveness.

     And He forgave.

     It would be years before I would achieve physical freedom, but that day, as I read the letter of my wonderful mother, I was already free!!

Helpless

In Behavior Modification, Choices, Deliverance, Devotions, God's Provision, Prison, Psalms on May 19, 2008 at 8:20 am

For not in my bow do I trust, nor can my sword save me.  But You have saved us from our foes, and have put to confusion those that hate us.  In God we have boasted continually, and we will give thanks to Your Name forever.  (Psalm 44:6-8

Rouse Yourself, why do You sleep, O Lord?  Awake, do not cast us off forever.  Why do You hide Your face?  Why do You forget our affliction and oppression?  For we sink down to the dust, our bodies cling to the ground.  Rise up, come to our help.  Redeem us for the sake of Your steadfast love.  (Psalm 44:23-26)

I have always been self-reliant, self-sufficient, a self-starter, self-this, self-that, self, self, self….

Do you see a pattern?

I knew about God, knew a lot about Jesus, claimed trust and faith in Him, paid my tithe, attended church, prayed over meals (probably more from a perceived need to set an example for my children than from any real desire to thank God), taught Sunday School Classes (in my own strength), led Church Boards (in my own wisdom).

God gave me talents, abilities and intelligence and I, in turn, took God off the throne of my heart and replaced Him with the very gifts He had given me.

But today I am in a place where my talent is unappreciated, my intelligence is of very little use and my abilities are unable to accomplish anything of much value.

Funny how quickly a self-based life can crumble and leave you on the bottom with no where to look but up.  No one to whom to look but God.

Today the words of the Psalmist have a new ring: “I do not trust in my bow, my sword does not bring me victory; but You give us victory over our enemies, You put our adversaries to shame.  In God we make our boast all day long…”

I am helpless.  Unable to accomplish anything but to place my faith in God.  He is mighty.  He is able.  He is the Deliverer.  He is my rock.  He is my salvation.

So I pray with the shepherd boy, “Awake, O Lord!…Rise up and help us; redeem us because of Your unfailing love.”


This was written during the early part of 2003 as I sat on a prison bunk awaiting the deliverance I thought would surely come just any moment.  But, while my situation has now improved dramatically, the overwhelming (and spiritually healthy) sense of helplessness still prompts me to daily cry out to God from Whom all blessings flow and Who is more than able to accomplish what concerns me (and you) today.

For more Ponderings, click here.

Daniel’s Prayer (adapted from Daniel 9:4b-19)

In Behavior Modification, Daniel, Deliverance, Devotions, Encouragement, Forgiveness, God's Love, Prayer on May 14, 2008 at 12:58 pm

     This prayer hit home during my second year of incarceration. I, too, felt exiled and alone with my deep sense of guilt and regret. I was able to personalize this prayer and realized that, though God had to punish the sin, He still loved me and was more than able to accomplish good things through me in the years I had remaining on this earth.
     I pray today that you, too, are able to pray this prayer with the prophet and that God will speak peace to your soul.


     O Lord, the Great and awesome God, who keeps His covenant of love with all those who love Him and obey His commands, I have sinned and done wrong. I have been wicked and have rebelled; I have turned away from Your commands and laws. I have not listened to Your servants who spoke to me in Your Name.

     Lord, You are righteous, but this day I am covered with shame – you have exiled me because of my unfaithfulness to You. O Lord, I am covered with shame because I have sinned against You. The Lord my God is merciful and forgiving, even though I have rebelled against Him; I have not obeyed the Lord my God or kept the laws He gave me through His servants. I have transgressed Your law and turned away, refusing to obey You.

     Therefore the judgment of God has been poured out on me, because I have sinned against You. You have fulfilled the words spoken against me by bringing disaster upon me. All this disaster has come upon me and yet I refuse to seek the favor of the Lord my God by turning from my sin and giving attention to Your truth. The Lord did not hesitate to bring disaster upon me, for the Lord is righteous in everything He does; yet I have not obeyed Him.

     Now, O Lord my God, who brought Your people out of Egypt with a mighty hand and who made for Yourself a name that endures to this day, I have sinned, I have done wrong. O Lord, in keeping with all your righteous acts, turn away Your anger and Your wrath from me. My sins have made me an object of scorn.

     Now, my God, hear the prayers and petitions of Your servant. For Your sake, O Lord, look with favor on me. Give ear, O God, and hear; open Your eyes and see the desolation of my circumstances. I do not make requests of You because I am righteous, but because of Your great mercy. O Lord, listen! O Lord, Forgive! O Lord, hear and act! For Your sake, O my God, do not delay, because Your servant bears Your name!

Psalm 44:23 – Awake, O Lord! Why do You sleep? Rouse Yourself! Do not reject us forever.

1 John 1:9 – If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.

Psalm 103:12 – ….as far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.

Jeremiah 31:34b – For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.

If we repent, truly repent, he is obligated, based on His Word, to forgive us.

If He forgives us, due to His nature, He is able to forget we ever did anything wrong. The sin is written in the Book, but the blood of Jesus flows over the entry and it cannot be read ever again. His precious blood makes us, and our page in the Book, as white as snow, ready for our fruit to be listed.

This makes us eligible to claim and rely upon His promises.


For more Ponderings, click here.

Always On Time

In Deliverance, Encouragement, God's Provision, Poetry, Prayer on May 13, 2008 at 5:26 am

“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.”  Psalms 46:1

 

I thrill to think of the faithfulness of God–how He is not only mindful of my every care and problem, but in the emergencies of life, has been….

 

Always On Time

 

The prayer you have prayed these many long years

                To an empty horizon of dreams and of tears,

Shall come to fruition, I know, friend of mine,

                For our Father is faithful, and always on time.

 

How often when testings unlimited come,

                And it seems that the battle will never be won,

The Hand of my Saviour has reached down for mine,

                And lifted me up in an instant of time!

 

What glorious rest when the mileage seems long,

                The mountains loom high, and the giants look strong

To know that my Saviour sees each need of mine,

                And praise His dear Name–He is always on time!

Brakes (and Breaks)!

In Blessings, Deliverance, God's Love, God's Provision, Prison, Temptation on May 2, 2008 at 1:23 pm

     The squeak coming from the front end of the car signaled the need to throw some money at a brake shop.  I purposely waited until after the first of the month so my personal coffers would have something other than the customary dust bunnies in them and I took the poor little ten year old thing to the shop.  Lifetime brakes would run me just under $200, and, while I didn’t have that kind of cash just lying around, I could always charge it and pay on it for a bit.  That was preferable to rear-ending someone when the brakes finally gave up the ghost altogether.
     Thirty minutes after dropping it off the phone rang and the service manager might as well have slugged me between the eyes for I certainly saw stars and heard train whistles when the figure of $940 rolled off his tongue.  It seemed that the car, now with just over 87,000 miles, had never – apparently – had any sort of maintenance done on the brakes.  Complete rebuild from the ground up was required.  Looks like those payments will stretch out a little further than I had originally planned.
     But, as I was lamenting the huge (for me) outlay of cash and fighting the temptation to develop a bad attitude, I was reminded, by the Holy Spirit, no doubt, of where I was now compared to this time last year.  A year ago I would have gladly paid someone to have a problem of this nature.  This was nothing.  It isn’t even a blip on the radar screen.  I have had so many breaks in the last seven months – so many evidences of God’s handiwork in my life – that I have absolutely no reason to complain or lament.
Just the fact that I have a credit card with a limit high enough to allow me to have this work done is a break in and of itself.  Not to mention the fact that within a few days, thanks to the President’s Economic Stimulus Plan, I will have $300 dollars deposited into my account – money I wasn’t counting on even a couple of months ago.
     So my focus changed and I began to count my blessings and the breaks I have been undeservedly granted, and my mind turned to the biggest break of all.  A break offered freely and with no requirement of merit of any kind.  The Break of Salvation and the road it took to get me into a mindset to grasp hold of it is the break of more than a lifetime – it’s the eternal break.
     After that, what else matters really?

I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes

In Deliverance, Encouragement, God's Love, Peace, Poetry, Prayer on May 1, 2008 at 5:38 am

“I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.”

The Psalmist, David, found hope, and help, and healing in the upward look, and so in the emergencies that must come….

“I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes”
(Psalms 121)

“I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, “–
The God who loves me knows my soul’s sore test,
He heareth now the heart-cry of His child;
My help shall come: the Lord will give me rest!

The arm of flesh on which I’m prone to lean
Cannot allay the anguish of this hour;
So I shall lift mine eyes beyond this scene
Unto the hills, the symbol of His power!

Yes, I shall lift mine eyes above all natural things,
In every disappointment, pain, or grief;
And looking up, my faith on soaring wings,
Shall find in Him both victory, and peace!


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

Gratitude or Grumbling

In Blessings, Choices, Deliverance, Encouragement, God's Love, God's Provision, Jail, Prison, Thanksgiving on April 23, 2008 at 9:32 am

     I wondered how it would be.  As my out date from the Department of Corrections approached and my mind began to focus more and more on life after prison, I wondered how I would react to freedom and the accompanying stress.
     The possibilities were many, each with a blend of circumstance and dilemma, but they can all be reduced to two general categories: gratitude or grumbling.
     Would I be like Peter who, released once from the prison of brick and mortar and later from the prison of his failure, spend my life in grateful service to my God?  Or would I be more akin to the children of Egypt who weren’t out of sight good before they started in on poor Moses?
     Would I be thankful for the blessing of release and employ my God-given talents to help others – a modern-day Joseph?  Or, to pick on the poor Israelites again, would my attitude turn sour at the first setback, disappointment or difficulty?
     Well, on this day which marks the six month point of my post-prison life, I can answer that question.  Not that this is the only time this question will need to be addressed for there is a lot of life left if God allows it, but, as with the first one hundred days which was the subject of another article here, this milestone is a big one – if only to me – and I feel the need to report for the glory of God.
     My answer to the question of which side of that fence I am on is resoundingly gratitude!
     There have been – and will surely continue to be – challenges and trials as the readjustment continues.  There will probably always be a little financial stress.  There will surely always be times of loneliness for my children and the life that could have been had I not allowed the enemy of my soul to gain that foothold in my life.
     But I am, indeed, grateful.  As I stepped out of my little rented house in the country setting north of Nashville this morning at just after five to head to work, I couldn’t help but pause to give thanks for all He has done for me.  In the quiet, early morning moment, as the birds celebrated Spring and the sleepy community began to come to life, I was again humbled – as I have been many times over the past six months – by God’s love, His provision, and all that He has restored to this once-shattered life.
     I am very grateful.

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 »

Temptation

In Deliverance, Poetry, Temptation on April 17, 2008 at 6:25 am

“For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.” Hebrews 4:15.

This is the balm for my healing in….

Temptation

The unkind wound that cuts and grieves your soul,
And tempts your lips to utter bitter things,
Dear one,  is but a challenge to keep step with God,
For underneath each cloud a bluebird sings!

“In all points like as we are, ” was the plan
That marked temptations which were Jesus’ lot;
So I would not exchange His glory on my life
For all that man can give, or can be bought!

I would not change His whisper in my heart
Which through the years has comforted and sustained,
Or visions of His Presence which have winged
Across my soul until my tears have rained!

If you have God, and Christ enthroned within,
There is no testing that can e’er defeat;
Give thanks that He still saves and sanctifies–
That He still guides unerringly, your feet!


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