Saturday, April 18, 2020

“No good tree bears bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit.” Luke 6:43

A very simple thought, straight forward, not a parable.  Jesus calls us out: Your spiritual DNA will reveal itself in what you say, do and produce both personally and publicly. Further more, it is not that difficult to tell good from bad.  Figs don’t look like thorns. (Read further through verses 44 and 45.) 

Jesus had no hidden agenda.  His entire purpose is to save mankind, one heart at time, through the greatest love that ever did or will exist.  We must mirror this transparency of heart, and reflect goodness and love.

We can do nothing about our physical DNA. It was settled the moment we were woven together in our mother’s womb. However, we determine everything about our spiritual identity through our free will.  The good news……..like Nicodemus, we can be born again, and that DNA is out of this world!

Happy Saturday,

Gretchen

Friday, April 17, 2020

He remembered us in our low estate and freed us from our enemies.  His love endures forever. Psalms 136:23

When in the depth of despair, your only hope is someone listening, comprehending the magnitude of your situation and bringing help quickly.

The God the Psalmist knew intimately is a champion of such people.  Written in call and response (read all of it in its entirety!), this Psalm reads like a spiritual, or a crowd pleasing, pep rally cheer.  It lists all the miraculous things God has done for His children through the ages, followed with praise for enduring, steadfast love.

Why can we and this Psalmist praise God and trust Him to the future?  Well……..God had that, so we know beyond a doubt, He’s got this, whatever this may be.

Happy Weekend!

Gretchen

Thursday, April 16, 2020

As for me, I call to God and the LORD saves me.  Cast your cares on the LORD and He will sustain you; He will never let the righteous be shaken. Psalms 55: 16 and 22.

When I was in college I would come home at the end of the semester, crawl into a bed under my parent’s roof and sleep the deep, dreamless slumber of an innocent child.  All my cares were put aside, the woes of the world were their’s to worry about for the night, I could get some rest.

This trend hasn’t changed much, although many years have past.  I rely on the strength of my parents in other ways too, and just knowing we create a Power of Two or Three makes the world seem much less threatening. I want this same connection and security for my children. 

What we seek in our earthly parents, what we long to do for our own children, Father God has already provided for us. Cast your cares like an exhausted, broke, unemployed and disillusioned college student home for the summer.  God will not let you be shaken. Victory has been won long, long ago and there’s always room and rest at Dad’s, aka The Throne of God.

Love,

Gretchen

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God. 2 Corinthians 1:3-4

“Pay it forward” is cliche, but it is the only appropriate response to the gifts we have been given through the Grace and Mercy of Jesus the Christ and Savior. Paul’s salutation in his second letter to Corinth begins with praise to the Creator of all we depend on and we must share it to spread it.

God is the author of compassion, the need to alleviate someone’s sorrow.  In Christ alone we find peace amidst the confusion of this world, comfort in times of disappointment and despair.  For those seeking, the believer is the connection to Heaven, the light on the path to the Throne.

Give praise, a very personal testimony, to The God, Father, Lord, Christ…………forward, backward, anywhere, everywhere……you need it, they need it, we all need it. 

Whoop! Whoop!

Gretchen

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. 1 Corinthians 13:2

“I am nothing,” is a pretty strong phrase, especially spoken in first person.  Not the usual assessment of the mentally well balanced person, but Paul is emphasizing love as the believers highest achievement.

Paul is setting priorities for correct patterns of thought and behavior.  In Corinth, a world of Greek polytheism and pagan worship of a god for everything with an extra to spare, divination, soothsaying and worldly academia were held in high esteem and carried monetary benefits.  However, these things were and still are, worthless if love is not the center motivation and end result.

Love is about everything except you. If faith in an all loving, grace granting, mercy extending God doesn’t create love, then it is not a faith worth having.

Paul implores, “Let love define you!”

Amen,

Gretchen

Monday, April 13, 2020

Do not be misled; “Bad company corrupts good character.” 1 Corinthians 15:33

Corinth was a town on a cross roads of culture.  Commerce to and from Rome came through Corinth giving it wealth, but also an extremely diverse mix of pagan religions that involved every perversion imaginable.  The twenty-first century hasn’t reinvented sin. Paul saw it all and wrote God’s message to these people who embraced salvation but struggled with sin’s unrelenting temptation.

Sin entangles our whole being.  Therefore, it is important to guard against the things and people that engage our emotions, attitudes, natural lusts and casual behavior negatively.  Holiness is not something good people achieve and others fail at miserably.  Holiness is a choice to live with the heart of Jesus and, just like salvation, it is available to each one of us. 

Friends, relationships and life habits matter.  Chose with the heart of Jesus.

Love,

Gretchen

Sunday Stories, April 12, 2020

I have to re-share this story. It is one of my all time favorites and is still as clear today as it was so many years ago.

Easter of 1969 was epic in the lives of Greg, Gretchen and Gayle Jones. We made our mother cry.

Rural southeast Iowa was our home. Father pastored two small churches, but life was humble. So that my sister and I could have a new outfits for Easter, my mom took old prom gowns and repurposed the taffeta and lace to make two frilly little dresses.  My brother Greg sported a suit of brown trousers, white shirt, bowtie and plaid jacket. My parents didn’t have much but they made the respectful behavior and tidy appearance of their children a priority.

At the crack of dawn Easter morning, mother roused us from our beds. We were to attend a community sunrise service, followed by the regular worship service where my father pastored and then off to my grandparents home in the next town over, to enjoy lunch and an egg hunt with all the cousins. Of course the Kodaks would come out to capture the moment.

Following the early service my sister, brother and I wandered off into the cemetery next to the little white country church, while my parents greeted and visited with neighbors. We were six, five and three years of age. When you are unaware of death and burial, but have an active imagination, fences and tombstones imitate rock climbing walls and obstacles courses. I’m not really sure what unfolded in a few short minutes, but somehow a dapper ensemble was torn and dirtied with grass stains, stitches holding a blue ruffle in place got ripped and a nose bleed dripped onto a yellow collar. That’s when my mother cried. 

She did not rant, rave and scream. She sat stoically in the front seat of our 68 Ford and quietly wept, her bouffant trembling a little with each silent sob. Dad put us in the back seat and three big eyed little children wondered how the world had gotten so topsy turvy. We had no idea our mother could cry. Dad was quiet, not really knowing where to start correcting all that had gone wrong.

The Jones children had no comprehension of the sacrifice made by our parents. We got up each day and did what kids do. Understanding that food, water, clothing, all we had that kept us alive and content, was provided at a cost, paid by someone else had not been learned yet. Awareness and gratitude were not natural instincts, but a lesson to be taught. Mother wasn’t angry that we acted as children act, she was hurt because her labor of love was ruined and the image she worked hard to create was marred.

Mom and dad took us home, removed our torn and stained clothing. They cleaned, restitched and ironed out the wrinkles. Soon things were put right again and we set off for service number two a little more aware that our actions had the power to hurt others, even if a gift was given without obligation.

Salvation is offered without cost to any of us. But there was a price and it was paid. Our sin causes pain to the One that loves us most, however, that labor is irrelevant when we are restored to the perfect image of our Creator, just as He designed us to be.

But He was pierced for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on Him and by His wounds we are healed.  Isaiah 53; 5

Have a Blessed Resurrection Sunday,

Gretchen

Saturday, April 11, 2020

If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised.  I Corinthians 15:14

I Corinthians chapter 15 is incredibly important to sound theology.  Read it, digest it and live it.

Our belief, our faith, is totally dependent on this one fact: Jesus died, was buried and rose again.   If He did not, then neither will we.  If He did, then such is our future too.

Have a Marvelous Easter!

Gretchen

Friday, April 10, 2020

Lead me, LORD, in your righteousness, because of my enemies, make Your way straight before me.  Psalms 5:8

There is right and there is wrong.  This song of praise asks guidance for remaining Holy.  The writer does not plead, “Make MY way straight and clear.” Instead he humbly begs, “Make Your way straight before me.”

The road to God’s Throne is not hard to find, but must be sought. God does not tease or torment with vague clues and intrigue.  Ask and you will find.  It’s just that easy.

Love, 

Gretchen   

Thursday, April 9, 2020

No one serving as a soldier gets involved in civilian affairs – He wants to please his commanding officer. II Timothy 2:4

The ideology of military is sacrifice for the greater good. Wise, discerning, leadership is the key to successful strategy in order to achieve this goal, because it begets the confidence of its soldiers who are willing to put their lives aside for the security of others.  A good soldier dedicates him/herself to discipline, endurance and most of all, focus.

Paul, the author of these words, is directing his fellow missionary Timothy to persevere and not let the small stuff become the big stuff, thus distracting him and his ministry from the pure Gospel. God is kind, not quarrelsome, a tolerant and gentle teacher to those who need discipline.   

We are soldiers of the cross. It is we who go to battle against evil for those who are defenseless.  Our commander is all knowing, wise and loving.  His purpose…..THE ONLY GOOD. 

May You Have Sonshine Today,

Gretchen