Thursday, January 25, 2018

Hear, O Lord, and answer me, for I am poor and needy. Guard my life, for I am devoted to you. You are my God; save your servant who trusts in you. Psalms 86:1

There are times when I read vignettes of time in the Bible, i.e. most of Isaiah, and I think, “This is talking to a specific group of people, in a specific situation, in a specific time.  It’s a lovely story, but what does it have to do with me?” Well, here’s the greatest news you’ll ever hear!  God is constant!  Perfect in perspective and judgement and completely without bias. What He did for sinful humans throughout history, desperate for, yet undeserving of mercy and grace, He will do for you!

David is not financially poor.  He is spiritually bankrupt, broken, exhausted.  He needs mental rest and assurance that the weight of the world doesn’t really set on his shoulders. It isn’t his physical life that needs saving, it’s his sanity! Can you relate?

Because he knows that God is good, loving, and able, David, the poet, puts his humbled and tired heart to pen, takes it to God and leaves it there.  Do you think he got a good night’s sleep after reflecting on the trustworthiness of God? I think so.

Rest Well,

Gretchen 

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

The Lord will guide you always; He will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land and will strengthen your frame. You will be like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never fail.  Isaiah 58:11

God chose a covenant nation who’s purpose was to bless all nations. In remaining Holy, God’s plan of redemption and complete restoration of mankind can be made full. Instead, these people, this nation, became self-centered. God’s promises became their entitlement. God’s love became their focus of abuse and exploitation.

Isaiah 58 speaks of fasting, one of the highest forms of worship and connection to God.  Again, this became a self absorbed ritual centered on the whims, convenience, and lust of the people rather than the honor of God’s sovereign power and glory.  As condemning as this passage is, it is also a call to correct relationship with God and sacrificial love for others.

God’s call to all who know Him is to show love toward one another.  To bless others is to represent God’s infinite resource and sustenance for all mankind’s needs.  Follow the laws of God/love. Find the purpose of your life in Him alone. You are called to Bless others. There is more than enough for you and those who come your way.  That’s just the how God works.

Love,

Gretchen

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In His great mercy He has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. I Peter 1:3

The persecution of Christians in Rome was horrific but had been somewhat contained until the Emperor encouraged enemies of Christians across the Empire to take every advantage to annihilate them. It is believed that Peter wrote this letter shortly after Paul’s martyrdom and sent it to the churches Paul established to encourage and fortify them for the days to come. In this atmosphere of suffering Peter reminds everyone that Christ’s work of grace and salvation was through suffering.

There is nothing for Christians in looking back.  We are born again, into a new living hope, a great gift from God, His love for us fulfilled. Peter, face to face, denied Christ in the very moment of Christ’s great agony. He knew the shame of sin and weakness of resolve. Three frightening, excruciating days later he was face to face with a risen Savior. He found grace, only grace. NO condemnation.  He knows the joy he speaks.

Peter wasn’t special because of his time and place in history, he was merely a man, a sinner saved by grace and that is all.  His words of praise must be our beacon and faith in the storms that will come our way too.

Love,

Gretchen

Monday, January 22, 2018

Shout for joy to the LORD, all the earth, Worship the LORD with gladness; come before Him with joyful songs. Psalms 100:1-2

The thought of the Lord is our greatest source of joy, therefore, to worship is delight.  Sing loud and sing proud! It is God we’re singing too and it is He we are singing about!

The Bible speaks frequently of singing. Moses taught the people of Israel to sing as they journeyed on their way to the Promised Land. Psalm 100 was meant for use in public worship and is still today, one of the most well known and most often sung Psalm of all.

Whatever the occasion, fear or triumph, everything drove David to the LORD and worship. Let’s follow his example and someday, our voices will rise in symphony with Davids, in eternal love and worship at the Throne of God.

Love,

Gretchen 

Sunday Stories, January 21, 2018

Toothpaste and Facebook

Many years ago our youngest daughter set up my husband’s Facebook account.  Melissa is well known for her quick wit and subtle orneriness. She did not disappoint when engineering the social media presence of her dad.  When setting up his profile, she left me and her older sister out of the family. Several months later on the eve of my ministerial ordination in the Church of the Nazarene, she returned to daddy’s profile and made an update. Keith’s timeline announced that he and Gretchen Rooney had just married with the revelation that we were proud parents of new daughter Leah!  Congratulations poured in.

Our close circle of friends, including those present 20 something years earlier when we exchanged our vows, got quite a laugh. It was indeed funny. However, character is important and true to my nature of intense response, I agonized over new found friends and people across media that knew our Christian testimony and might question the validity of Christ’s presence in our life. Like tooth paste, that update couldn’t be put back in the tube.

I am not a fluent user of social media, but I love my few accounts. I savor the funny things your children do, yummy recipes and cool crafts. I pray when asked, and anxiously wait for news when tragedy strikes. Then there is this. Sometimes I cringe and think, “I don’t think I’d have told that.”

The human brain can think millions of ‘thinks’ daily. Maturity grants the ability to rapidly sift and sort, categorize and dispose of or use each impulse. BUT! Every thing that passes through every human mind does not need to come out of every moving mouth, or these days, finger tips. There needs to be a filtering process that occurs, because your news feed is a great indicator of your true heart and mind and like that line of cleaning cream on the bristles of your tooth brush, it can’t be undone.

Recently, Keith’s Facebook account again caused a stir when he reposted someone else’s testimony.  A life once bound by addiction and the dysfunctions that accompany those choices, found grace and freedom from sin.  Keith was deeply moved and rejoiced in their salvation. So he shared it…..without preempting it with a comment.  It appeared in his newsfeed as his very own.  Immediately, people began commenting. Several friends were astounded that he had kept his struggles hidden so well. Realizing his mistake and unable to discretely clarify, Keith removed the story, because it misrepresented his character. This story wasn’t going back in the tube either.

I can go back through my life’s story, or just my media archives, and see the blueprint of my character. I have sinned. The worst consequence is the hurt I’ve caused others.  Their pain hangs in the halls of my mind like portraits in a museum. Things I’ve done are like Colgate squeezed from a tube.

There is much room for shame and regret in the world of toothpaste impulses, social media blunders and interpersonal relationships ruined by sin. Except, God doesn’t work like an oral hygiene product. He sees us through the lens of His perfect creation. Isaiah 60 reveals that no matter the depth of man’s debauchery, God knows our original perfection, pre-sin, and has a plan of restoration.  He is love, He is good.

Protect your character like you do your credit score.  Both are important, but always remember, God chooses to see the best possible scenario and has a plan for its fulfillment.

With Minty Fresh Breath and Much Love,

Gretchen

Saturday, January 20, 2018

“Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; He will never leave you nor forsake you.” Deuteronomy 31:6

Oh! The hope and promise of God’s Word!  Moses, the man of miracles, has come to the end of his journey. He has led the new Hebrew nation from slavery of Egypt to the Promised Land in Canaan.  He won’t join them as they cross the Jordan River into their new home, but God has gone before them and Joshua will lead.

God’s people are living out His promise, but in real time they are doing the most difficult thing any person can do, step into the great UNKNOWN. It is terrifying.  It’s call change and unless the present it unlivable, nobody signs up for it. God is not oblivious to this. Moses repeats what God has said and what he himself has witnessed and lived, “He will never leave you nor forsake you!”  God goes first!

Strength and courage originate from two givens: Solid preparation for the task at hand and confidence in success.  God knows the future for those that put it in His care. He goes before us and prepares us for success!  It’s a win! 

Love,

Gretchen

Friday, January 19, 2018

To this they replied, “You were steeped in sin at birth; how dare you lecture us!” And they threw him out. John 9:34

The Pharisees decide to investigate a sabbath day miracle.  Jesus heals a blind man, but the synagogue authorities must determine whether it was a sin for Him to do so.  They seek the man out and ask him to repeat the details. Who healed you? How did he heal you? Where did he come from? They cast dispersions on Jesus. The man replies, “I was blind, now I see.”  He continues, “If this man were not from God, He could do nothing.”

In ancient times, birth defects or physical handicaps were thought to be the consequence of sin, either the parent’s or the person himself. Because of this prejudice, people cast speculation and judgement on things they knew nothing of.  Physically challenged people were marginalized, abused and cast into the furthest outskirts of society.  Jesus didn’t just give this man the ability to see a blue sky, he gave him a place in the world, the entire ‘living’ package.

Jesus extended love and compassion to a man who responded with praise and worship.  Incredibly, the Pharisees felt their authority was threatened! Their adopted policy was to place blame instead of restoring a world to the beauty God intended.

This miracle shows, the sighted can be blind to truth. In stark contrast to man’s bigotry, hatred, screwed perspective, and fumbled intentions, Jesus can always bring good out of man’s suffering.

Happy Friday!

Gretchen

Thursday, January 18, 2018

Your love, O LORD, reaches to the heavens, your faithfulness to the skies. Psalm 36:5

Clear night skies are magnificent. The longer you look, the more distant stars come into focus, still, there are trillions not seen.  Our sky is ever changing as the earth spins through days, seasons and years. We cannot comprehend where we are in the universe because we cannot pinpoint a reference.  Are we westerners? Northerners? In our vast world? Is up, up? We cannot determine, only hypothesize.

David begins this Psalm with the total wickedness of mankind and its complete lack of fear, then turns to God’s infinite love and grace.  A sinner among sinners, David felt the power of God’s love, forgiveness and restoration in a whole and unencumbered relationship between him and his Creator.

From the air we breath to the farthest corners of outer space, these things that were created by our Father still do not contain the depths, heights, width or breadth of His love.  Pretty amazing!

Inhaling More Deeply,

Gretchen

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the Throne of God. Hebrews 12:2

This letter,Hebrews, is addressed to the Jews, specifically those in Jerusalem. James the Overseer of the Jerusalem church has been killed. The year A.D. 66 began the Jewish revolts against Rome.  The result, Jerusalem disappeared from Christian history until A.D. 326. 

To fixate is to be totally obsessed by all facets of an object of interest.  The writer of Hebrews says, we must look to Jesus’ life and character as our obsession. In this, we see the perfect heart of God and His Son that fixated on God’s glory and the hope of all mankind when He endured the indignities of the cross.

The plight of the early Christians was difficult.  They were embedded in strict tradition and a synagogue that looked no further than earthly power. There were many who sought to take personal advantage of “The Next Big Thing.” The world of the believer was solely dependent on faith and perseverance.  This writer knows that they must run the marathon of faith, casting off the things that hinder and wear them down, keeping their focus on what they desire most, eternal life at the Throne of God.

Traveling Lightly,

Gretchen

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for His soul? Matthew 16:26

Jesus begins to prepare His disciples for the end.  Peter professes the deity of Jesus. He is the Son of God, the Messiah. Jesus shares that He must return to Jerusalem to face persecution and death, then Peter rebukes Him and Jesus acknowledges Satan’s attempt to stop His sacrifice. Finally, Jesus tells these closest friends, comrades, the cost of following Him will be their lives, from their everyday comings and goings to possible martyrdom.

There is a constance push and pull between surviving life and keeping earthly gains in proper place. I am honor bound to pay my electric bill, so I must go to work.  My natural competitive instinct drives me to achieve, thus gaining the faith and trust of my employer who in turn, depends more heavily on my ethic. I have done right, and now I am pulled from the very hearth I work to keep warm.  Where does maintaining life on earth become gaining the world? Adoration and power are great temptations, but they are of this world.

It is a matter of heart. What on earth do you love more than you love your neighbor?

Love,

Gretchen