Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Then Daniel answered the king, “You may keep your gifts for yourself and give your rewards to someone else. Nevertheless, I will read the writing for the king and tell him what it means.  Daniel 5:17

While a youth, Daniel was carried away from Jerusalem and into exile by the Babylonian army. Well educated, handsome, and intelligent, Daniel became friend and advisor to King Nebuchadnezzar, a brilliant builder and administrator of the world’s greatest empire at the time.

On three occasions Daniel’s ministry caused Nebuchadnezzar to call the God of Daniel, God. Nebuchadnezzar died and Babylon was led by other kings. By the time Daniel was a very old man, Belshazzar was in power.  In an act of deep wickedness, this king brought sacred things from the temple of God and used them in an orgy type feast. God was not amused and wrote Belshazzar a message of his doom on the wall of the banquet hall. Daniel was called to interpret the message. He did, and that very night the Babylonian empire fell to Persia.

This earthly king meant to disgrace and circumvent to power and ordinances of God. In a panic, Belshazzar promised greatness and security in his kingdom if Daniel could save him and give him peace of mind. Daniel let it be known that the only place in any kingdom he was interested in was that of the One True God. Belshazzar died that night. Daniel lived and continued to lead a life that brought glory to God.

Have a Wonderful Wednesday,

Gretchen

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Instead, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight. I Peter 3:4

The world is always cruel about the things we have no control over.  Think of prejudice. It is centered on skin color, geographical origin, gender, all things that were part of the original package, designed by God, when we were woven together in our mother’s womb.  But soon after the exit, it begins, the sorting of who’s who and what will be tolerated.  The knee jerk reaction is a life time of experimentation to find a skin you’re comfortable in and so perfect no one could possibly find fault, all while proving one’s higher discernment by picking others apart.  This build’s fragile families that have little chance of surviving life’s stress.

Nero’s persecution was horrendous. Peter probably wrote this letter shortly after Paul’s martyrdom. Peter teaches, the things of strength and comfort begin in the home with the two people that founded the family. When the world becomes the enemy, wives should offer loving devotion.  A countenance of hope and faith trumps the torments of the world.  Then, power of two becomes the winning majority.

Biblical tradition tells that Peter’s own wife, Concordia, was martyred in Peter’s presence shortly before his own life was taken.  Together, they stood firm and changed the world of Christianity by their character, not their earthly gathering of baubles and bows.

Love,

Gretchen

Monday, July 23, 2018

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come! II Corinthians 5:17

Many animals outgrow their skin.  A caterpillar comes into the world very small and very hungry, but as he chomps away and grows, his skin stays the same. He must shed this ‘crisis’ and move on, or he will die before he ever has an opportunity to become what he was designed to be. This process occurs multiple times before a final metamorphosis.

In this passage of scripture Paul speaks to the Corinthian congregation concerning their issues in everyday life. New Christians struggle to put away bad habits. They did in Paul’s day and they still do today! Those who have a little more wear and tear on their faith must still chose to soften their hearts and minds to Christ’s call in a lost and hurting world. Because Christ’s love compels us, (vs. 14) we must chose to be renewed. If we don’t we will die.

Growing uncomfortable with something is one of the many ways God shows us it’s time to grow a little, move on and become more like Jesus.

Chasing Butterflies.

Gretchen

Sunday Stories, July 22, 2018

When domestic terrorists blew up the Alfred P. Murrow Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995, killing 149 adults and 19 children, and maiming 680+ others, I, along with many fellow Americans, fell into a dark season. It’s what happens when your heart grieves over your neighbors’ loss and pain. Again and again, as the world gets smaller via instant media, modern man is susceptible to constant despair, but to resist and numb ourselves to correct emotional response to tragedy is a tragedy in itself.  So I’m reposting an earlier essay. My desire is that it steers you to a place where you can find peace in the midst of the storm and preserve a heart that does not fear to feel.

HOPE

“Where can I go from Your Spirit? Where can I flee from Your presence? If I go up to the heavens, You are there; if I make my bed in the depths, You are there. If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea. Even there Your hand will guide me, Your right hand will hold me fast.

Psalms 139: 7-10

I call them Judas days, moments that betray me, seconds of doubt and disappointment that flash through my mind, hook together with like thoughts and become days, weeks….. seasons of sadness and frustration.  I have confessed my sins and they are forgiven. I believe that the exclusive, defining characteristic of God is Love, but in days of Judas, when all I know and believe doesn’t seem to be enough, there is an illogical shade of black on everything, a waning of warmth and comfort, a shift from confident balance and positivity, to a fragile grasp, clinging to the promises of a God I know is Good.

Why, as a devout Christian, am I not exempt from depression? I do not have the answer to that, I struggle with shadows that jump out of nowhere and interrupt my joy and emotional balance. I am NOT a mental health professional but I have found things that bring me through my Judas days in victory.

  1. Most importantly, find a health care professional you trust and be honest with him/her.
  2. Your feelings are real and there is no logic to this pain, so don’t try to reason it away.
  3. Chose to do good. Be kind. Someone needs the blessing of your presence.
  4. Compassion for others is born in our personal sorrows and failures.  Give your heart some credit and take joy in what you are becoming.
  5. Rest.  Don’t sulk, or wage emotional warfare against those that have hurt you, but rather, seek respite to restore and strengthen yourself in a healthy and appropriate way.
  6. God sends amazing people into your life. Don’t push them away in the name of independence and strength.
  7. Don’t get lost in the lie that this will last forever. It’s dangerous! Talk to someone…..today!

Cute quotes and sayings that patronize deep emotional issues are not the meat and potatoes food your soul is seeking. Stay in God’s Word. It is His voice and He will speak. The Psalms are a great place to start. God doesn’t chose the strongest to suffer the most because they can handle it. Facing down the gates of hell is something everyone will come to at one time or another. The outcome is your choice and is determined by who you take with you to win. Take Jesus (and a few of His friends)! He’s already won eternity!

One last thought:  Good lives don’t just happen. They are purposely built. Reckless words and toxic things effect impulsive thoughts and responses.  Be careful and sweep the dirt out of the corners of your heart often.

Love,

Gretchen

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is: 1-800-273-8255   SuicidePreventionLifeline.org

GET HELP! YOU ARE WORTH IT!

 

 

Saturday, July 21, 2018

“For by your words you will be acquitted and by your words you will be condemned.” Matthew 12:37

Our words reveal our character. In fact, all our actions, both secret and public have an audience and are being written down. You can’t do one thing and say you believe another.  To do so means you are rewriting truth. There is only one Truth and He will not be amended or altered to suit man’s comfort. 

These words are Jesus’ own in context of the Pharisee’s questioning the origin of His powers.  Every miracle Jesus performed was done in love and benevolence, for the purpose of healing and restoring the weak and broken, but He was accused of being in cahoots with the devil.  Why? The Jewish leaders hated Him and His threat to their authority. They wished to murder His character with their words. (Gossip at its very worst.) Their tongues revealed their soul’s darkness.

Calling evil, good, is a fast road to a place no one wants as their permanent address, but calling good, evil is the depth of wickedness because God is Good, He is the author of good and through His Holy Spirit we should recognize His works. All that we live and say should be witness to our trust in these things.

Love,

Gretchen

Friday, July 20, 2018

I answered, “Sir, you know.” And he said, “These are they who have come out of the great tribulation; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” Revelations 7:14

Have you ever walked out onto a newly blanketed field of snow under a clear sky and bright sun? It is so perfectly white and sparkling, the glare blinding, but it’s radiant and beautiful. Whiter than white.

For every theologian there is a different interpretation and understanding of John’s vision of the things to come. It is indeed difficult to digest, but not to cling to when read for the promise it reveals.  What will happen at the end of this age? Those who believe that Jesus died, not of a stroke, or a heart attack, or of the wearing down of the mortal body over time, but a brutal bloodbath of a murder, at the hands of those He would forgive if they asked. His life’s blood ran to wash away our black sin and make us as white as snow.

As a young person with my whole life ahead of me, I hated to hear or read of tribulations that I might someday suffer. On the other side of youth I have come to realize that struggles, sorrows, grief, disappointment, tragedy, and the list goes on……is universal.  Every human that ever walks the earth will have to face down the gates of hell and find out who God really is.  And when you know, you believe or you don’t.

Heaven is a place of life, because the blood that was spilled didn’t end in death. 

Happy Friday!

Gretchen

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Give us each day our daily bread. Luke 11:3

I’ve prayed the model prayer we’ve been given hundreds of times and I take each word very seriously, but these seven words, Give us this day our daily bread, are the absolute hardest for me to utter with sincerity.  I want to improvise my own ‘New and Improved’ petition for help.  I stutter as I force myself not to say, “Give me this day my daily bread, and be mindful of all the days ahead too.” The urge to request more than my share so that I can nobly parcel it out to others is very strong too.  I’m not being facetious. I want to ask for so much more!!!!!

I am a worrier. I worry that I worry, and when I place everything at Jesus’ feet, I worry I forgot something.  So, to only ask and TRUST that my needs for a single day only will be met, is a test of self-control and faith. 

The things of this world wear and weigh us down.  It is better to leave the future and its stockpile of provision in God’s hands. Preserving and storing things down here is a complete hassle anyway. There is great relief and rest in only today.  Yesterday is in the books, and God has tomorrow in His hands, so today is the moment to live in peace and joy, and bring Glory to God in all you do, beginning with your countenance of confidence and faith that your daily needs will be met, most likely with enough to spare and share.

Love,

Gretchen

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to death-even on a cross! Philippians 2:8

Paul is in prison awaiting sentencing as he writes this letter to the first church he established in Europe. They have been sorely persecuted from the beginning but they are known for their purity and generosity.  However, many diverse people in one place sometimes struggle to see eye to eye, and this was one of the concerns Paul addresses in his epistle.

In a world full of opposing insights and opinions, there is one thing we can agree on, the character of Jesus while He walked on earth among us.  From His model we can perfectly discern what we are expected to be, humble in life and obedient in all circumstances until death.

There is a lot wrong in the world today, but there is one thing we can do right.  We can humble ourselves to one another in love and chose to get along, Christian to Christian. Jesus lived and died in a time of tremendous corruption and exploitation of those in authority, both religious and political, and in that time He loved. He came to show us the way to live and die.

Have a Wonderful Mid-Week,

Gretchen

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

For the word of the Lord is right and true; He is faithful in all He does. Psalm 33:4

This Psalm is a song of praise, short and to the point. It begins with the call to sing a new song, or tune. I am one that loves old hymns. By their lyrics I was able to memorize scripture and theology was imprinted on my heart at and early age. Yet, the new of today’s worship warms my heart when I stand beside those I have prayed for and watched grow. It is a privilege to share the act or worship with them. These words of David are not saying to cast away the words that have already been said, he just suggests that it is important to seek joy and as each sunrise and sunset is different because of God’s creative power and love, then so too should be our praise.

These Psalms would have been learned in the community of worship.  There was no media. The temple music director would have taken the music and gathered the musicians to rehearse, sung it as part of ‘church’ and sent the children of Israel home whistling hope, joy, assurance and everything else the heart needs to sustain itself throughout the week. 

We often read God’s scripture alone in meditation and devotion, but as you ponder these great words of acknowledgement, think of the throngs of people that sang them together in the midst of uncertainty, but shared a great confidence in all that God could and would do.  Join with someone often and do the same.

Love,

Gretchen

Monday, July 16, 2018

Nor did they repent of their murders, their magic arts, their sexual immorality or their thefts.  Revelation 9:21

Satan is the persecutor and corruptor in chief, the very definition of evil. He is a relentless instigator of pain and sorrow with your soul as his target.  Yet, with all the warnings in the world, people stubbornly resist grace and refuse to change their ways with no qualms about a moral standard.

All men are born carnal. We have an instinct to selfishness/sin but as we grow we sort into two categories: Those who humble themselves and repent and those who are proud, make excuses and blame everyone else. As free agents every individual must choose. The most intimate personal and individual fact on earth is, you alone choose your destiny.   

Satan’s hatred and God’s love ARE NOT EQUAL AND THEY DO NOT FUNCTION IN TANDEM OR BALANCE!!!!! God’s love conquers all, but man must believe and live accordingly. It’s the most important choice in your life. Eternal life means forever in the presence of God’s love and safety, hell is the absence of God and there is no horror story written that can touch the agony and carnage in a place, sealed forever, without hope and relief.

Please go with me to the Throne!

Love,

Gretchen