Showing posts with label glimpses of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glimpses of God. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2025

Hamburger, Jelly, and the Fruit of the Spirit

 




When my friend, Machelle, asked her three-year-old grandson to name his favorite foods, he listed them: hamburger, jelly, and the fruit of the Spirit. In his preschool mind, the list seemed logical: these were things he had enjoyed at one time or another—the hamburger at dinner, the jelly on some toast at breakfast, and the fruit of the Spirit through the actions of his parents and those who loved him. He heard and remembered this spiritual tidbit about fruit and decided to add it to his favorite foods list. Why not?


Galatians 5:22-23 teaches us “ . . . the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. . . (ESV). When we accept Jesus as our savior, we are “sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it.” (Ephesians 1:13-14 ESV). This encouraging fact means that God marked us as his own by giving us his powerful Spirit to live inside of us! This seal serves as a guarantee that our inheritance in the Kingdom of God is real–not only here on earth but in Heaven as well. Because we possess the same Spirit who is also in our Savior, we are able to produce fruit–or character qualities–that make us look more like Him. But, being able to look more like Him does not mean we always choose to live more like Him. The reality of sin complicates things.


When we allow our sin-tainted will to guide us, we are tempted to gorge on the false foods of self-sufficiency and pride. These can make us feel full for a while, but they won’t lead us toward Life. True life is found in God and in the Spirit he freely offers. When we allow that Spirit to transform us, we can deny our sin and we can feast on the fruit of holiness. This fruit–God’s very nature–is given to enliven and make us more like Him, but it is also meant to be shared. So in a world full of brokenness and grief, Christ-followers can exude beauty, wholeness, and hope; humanity hungers for these. So let’s offer them our bounty, but introduce them to the Giver as well. Wouldn’t it be grand if everyone we met went away full of the Spirit and filled to the brim with fruit? Make us faithful and fruitful, Lord.



Next time someone asks me about my favorite foods, I will start with tortilla chips and ice cream, but, like a certain three-year-old, I will continue with these: Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, and self-control. Why not?



 


Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Why We Shouldn’t Teach Children that Jesus is Their Best Friend

 




A few days ago, I was in a meeting in which we were discussing creative ways to present Bible truths to children.  As we were each presenting our methods of telling the week’s Bible story to the kids, one of my fellow teachers said, “I just tell them that Jesus is their best friend.” I was very uncomfortable with this statement.  Let me explain…

Good Sentiment. Bad Theology

A W Tozer famously writes, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” If we believe this to be true, then we must be very careful to present the God of the Bible with utmost care and accuracy.  If we don’t teach our children to view God correctly from their very earliest years, their impressions of their Creator will be unbalanced at best... or heretical at worst. As parents and teachers, we need to take God’s reputation very seriously.    

In A Class of His Own

Yes, I want my son to feel loved and valued by God, but I don’t want God to be fully accessible to his small mind.  When my child thinks about God, I don’t want him to see the magnificence of God enveloped in a disheveled, skinned knee, gap-toothed buddy. God is wholly other--sui generis--unique, peculiar, in a class of his own--he is not limited to an elementary classroom.  When my child thinks of God, I want him to be awed by the wonder that this amazing being, whom he can’t fully understand, chose to come to earth and be bound in skin. He chose to live as a child who did skin his knees and lose his teeth but in a way that they never will--perfectly.  This perfect child grew to be a perfect man who became a perfect sacrifice. His amazing grace towards us should stir in us a mighty reverence for him.  

The Lion of Judah

Rather than tame what Revelation 5 calls The Lion of Judah by introducing him to our kids as a cuddly, snuggly pet, let’s approach his throne with Christ-earned confidence and fall on our knees in worship.  

Someday, maybe in the not-so-distant future, every knee will bow, and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.  So, let’s give our kids a solid foundation--and accurate theology--by looking on our great and glorious God with hearts full of joy and appropriate trepidation.  

In the words of Mrs. Beaver from the Chronicles of Narnia, “Course he isn’t safe.  But he’s good.”



Friday, December 25, 2020

God's Mystery Unvieled

                                         The star which frightens brings Good News!

The shepherds hail God’s name!


The Heavens sing, the sheep bow down, 


all earth now greets Shalom!



Peace we prayed for now has come


The galaxy proclaims,


“He who loves you has been born


Come greet Him, Christ the Lord!”



Born for grief, this little One


His mother’s heart pierced through


Peace and Justice will prevail


God’s Mystery unveiled.






May you have a very blessed, Christ-focused Christmas!



Thursday, December 24, 2020

The Newborn King

 Enjoy a repost from December 2016...





This is my new grand niece, Amelia Josephine, born two just two weeks before this picture was taken.  I had the privilege of spending her very first Christmas with her along with lots of extended family.  We spent most of our holiday time "ooing" and "ahhing" over her tiny perfection and watching her 22-month-old brother do cute things.

As I held little Amelia in my arms, I was struck by the reality—THE REALITY-- that Christ was born to us as a baby--A BABY!  At this time of year, we read and sing of this fact often;

"You will find a baby wrapped snugly in strips of cloth, lying in a manger." 
   "The little Lord Jesus lay down His sweet head." 
"Holy infant so tender and mild" 
 "Glory to the newborn King"

But do we truly understand what Christ did for us by becoming utterly helpless?  Do we comprehend how He left His place in Heaven and confined Himself in skin?  Do we grasp how our most powerful God allowed Himself to sleep silently in an animal trough?  Can we truly fathom that the same voice that created the entire universe now limited Himself to a feeble cry?

It’s absurd, really.  A limitless, ageless God chose to intersect time and space and become a limited, time-bound man; and not just a man, a baby; tiny, helpless, poor.

So why did He do it?  God saw His children needed Him.  Yet, because of their sins, there was no way they could get to Him.  So He became one of them, and He lived among them to save them and bring them close again.  Not only did He live with them; He loved them; and He died for them…and in their place.  And then He rose again—conquering death, their greatest foe. 

He chose to enter the world in a way that none expected; not as a king; wearing extravagant robes and sitting on a royal throne, but as a baby; swaddled with strips of tattered cloth and lying in a hay-filled manger.  Our mighty, strong, omniscient God chose to come to us in the most unthinkable form, wrapped in skin and humility; a tiny newborn babe.

Just like little Amelia.  Just for little Amelia.  And just for you too.


What child is this, who, laid to rest,
On Mary's lap is sleeping?
Whom angels greet with anthems sweet,
While shepherds watch are keeping?
This, this is Christ the King,
Whom shepherds guard and angels sing:
Haste, haste to bring him laud,
The babe, the son of Mary.



She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.
~Matthew 1:21

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Joseph's Journey

 



Many miles and dusty valleys
Tired donkey, tired wife
Many people but no refuge

Desperate husband, soon...new life!



Big dark city, small dank stable

Sounds of livestock, bright starlight

Bedding down in hay for horses

Frightened mother, strange still night



Pain is coursing, man is pacing

Time is birthing God’s own Son!

Red and wrinkled, baby Savior

Are you the Long Expected One?



Great rejoicing with the angels!

Great rejoicing in the field!

All at once, time races forward 

Grace now present, Word fulfilled 



Awestruck wonder, man is speechless

Grateful heart and weary soul

Gently kneeling low to greet him

Welcome baby, welcome Lord!



Friday, December 11, 2020

He is Here!

 This Christmas season, I wanted to prepare by myself by imagining the lives, thoughts, and musings of some of the people in the Christmas story.  Today's character is Simeon, and he appears in Luke 2.




Another sunrise for Simeon.  Simeon had seen hundreds of sunrises in his 79 years.  Built into the low-lying limestone cliffs that surrounded Jerusalem, his family home had an east facing door which Simeon swung open to greet the sun. Young Simeon and his father had baked mud bricks to form walls for the exposed sides of the structure.  A wooden staircase led out of the home’s front door, turned at a 90-degree angle and ended up directly at the entrance to the busy Jerusalem market.  It was in this market that Simeon sold the woven fabric that he created. Others called Simeon a Tarsim, or master weaver, but Simeon was simply providing for his family in the way that his father had provided, and his Zaydeh before that.  Simeon’s hands seemed made for the loom, but lately, his weaving was slow, his hands stiff and sore.  More and more, Simeon’s grandsons were taking his spot on the weaver’s stool, their deft and skilled hands providing products for the increasing market demand. 

 

Today, as with all days, Simeon rose slowly like the sun that showed its first red rays through his door. He gathered the shuttle and began to rhythmically guide it through the weft; over, under, over, under, over, under.  Such a familiar motion allowed his mind to ruminate.  Was it all just a dream? Last night, as he lay on his mat, his wife breathing softly in sleep, a voice spoke to him.


“Simeon, though your hands grow tired on the distaff and your bones become weary from the work, you will not die until you see the Lord’s Messiah!  He is here!” 


Simeon’s heart beat wildly…the Lord’s promised Messiah!  He was here?  In Jerusalem?  The prophet Micah proclaimed that the Lord’s anointed would be born in Bethlehem, But you, O Bethlehem…, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose coming forth is from of old, from ancient days.”  Why would Messiah be in Jerusalem?  Simeon, falling into fitful sleep, dreamt wild dreams of this grand warrior who would save his people from their oppressors.  Now, awake and alert, he worked and wondered about the presence of the Messiah.  Would he be at the temple?  Did he possess a caravan to display his mighty power? As if to add emphasis to that thought, a powerful wind blew his door shut and raised goosebumps on the back of his neck.  Feeling suddenly compelled, Simeon put down the shuttle, quickly grabbed his outer mantle, and, with unfamiliar vigor, made his way down the wooden staircase.  As he stepped to the street, earlier than his normal mid-day appearance, he was nearly overrun by a noisy group of boys on their way to the synagogue for Torah school.  Simeon was also headed to the synagogue, but not for school.  Simeon was on his way to meet Messiah!  Righteous and devout, Simeon regularly visited the temple to make sacrifices for his family and to listen to the traveling Rabbi’s teaching.  But now, following the unruly group, his mind raced to the previous night’s mysterious words and passing the surprised boys, he entered into the outer court.

 

“He is here!”  “He is here!” 

 

Simeon’s mind could think of nothing else.  He scanned the court, looking for an impressive figure, a kingly presence, but his eyes saw nothing but a poor young couple meekly entering the court carrying a baby.  Suddenly, the Spirit within him spoke again,

 

“He is here! The baby they are dedicating today is Messiah!”

 

When he was just a boy, Simeon’s mother told him the meaning of his name: “God is listening.” God had graciously heard Simeon’s plea for the coming of the King--God’s chosen Messiah…but this baby… was him?  Wasn’t Messiah the One who would be victorious and save the nation of Israel?  This “warrior” was a helpless babe. 

 

“He is here!” 

 

Now it was Simeon’s turn to listen, and filled with the Spirit of God, he approached the little family exclaiming, “He is here--Messiah!” Motioning to them, he took the boy in his hands, and praised God saying,


“Sovereign Lord, as you have promised,

    you may now dismiss your servant in peace.

 For my eyes have seen your salvation,

   which you have prepared in the sight of all nations:

a light for revelation to the Gentiles,

    and the glory of your people Israel.”

 

  The child’s father and mother, weary and worn from travel, marveled at what was said about him.   Then Simeon blessed them and said to Mary, his mother: “This child is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be spoken against, so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed. And a sword will pierce your own soul too.” Tears of anticipated grief fell upon Mary’s scarf as she looked on her baby in Simeon’s embrace and wondered at the events which would surely take place.  Simeon’s rough hand touched her cheek, and he carefully placed the infant in her arms.  “God is hereand here,” pointing to the child.  “My eyes have truly seen his glory.”  Then Simeon left the family as he exited the temple courts.

 

Now, as he wandered through the now-busy market, he was struck by the Lord’s unceasing attentiveness to his people.  God was listening, and the Master Weaver of history had used Simeon’s hands--his old and aching hands-- to show the beauty of His ancient plan!  God had carefully ordained a rescue with an unexpected Rescuer, interwoven with the life of Simeon, to display his tapestry of grace toward man! 


“He is here!” “He is here!”

 

Simeon could now die fulfilled. Today his eyes marveled at the sunrise. Today, his soul exulted in the Son.  Today, his human hands held Heaven’s Rescue.  Today Messiah had come!

 

 “He is here!”


Thursday, October 31, 2019

Red Bird Devotions #30



Image result for one ear clipart
One Ear Open


When my kids were just babies, and even when they got older, I could sleep soundly yet somehow wake to their slightest sigh.  I think mamas have this special ability--probably because they are so sleep deprived--to drift off, yet still listen for their very precious ones.  Oftentimes, my kids would just be crying in their sleep or reacting to a confusing dream, but I would hear them; then I would rise from my comfy bed and go to check on them.  I wanted to make sure all was well. Only when I knew they were safe could I go back to sleeping--with one ear open. 

Shouldn’t we do that with God too?  This world is very noisy. We can get lost in distraction. But, if we tune our ears to listen for even his slightest movement, his still small voice, we will be able to discern his “movement” even when our minds are elsewhere.  If we learn to listen with one ear open while we are going about our daily lives, we will be amazed at all he will show us.  Sometimes he may say, “Look at my sunrise.  I did it for you!” Or, “See that angry young woman? She needs you to notice her.”  Or “Even though you have been offended, offer grace.” Or sometimes, he will just say, “Slow down, Tori.  I need you to quit working and sit at my feet and listen.”  That’s when I need to stop, be silent, and open both ears wide.

When I tune my mama ears to listen to my Father, I learn the patterns, the cadences, the intonation of his voice. I see my small part in his big plan and I’m willing to move when he calls. 
Then, when I hear him stirring, I can rise from my grogginess, my forgetfulness, and my selfishness; I can rush into his presence saying, “Abba, Father, I am here!”

Abba, Father, I am here!


“Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?" And I said, "Here am I. Send me!" 
Isaiah 6:8

“Be still and know that I am God.”  Psalm 46:10