Sunday, June 30, 2019

Hope for the Journey


God has created us to understand things by making comparisons. One particular kind of comparison is the metaphor, in which we understand an idea by comparing it with something that is different in kind but with which we are familiar. One metaphor we all know is the one used in Psalm 23: "The Lord is my shepherd." By thinking of the characteristics of a shepherd--watchfulness, tenderness, faithfulness--we understand God's love and care for us in a more concrete way.

A common metaphor for life is that life is a journey. We use this one all the time. We talk of coming to a "fork in the road" when we have a decision to make, for example. We speak of "going through life," as if it's a trip we're on. A truth that has risen to the surface of my mind recently (See what I did there? My mind is now a vast ocean--or maybe a pond.) is that one must have hope to travel the road of life successfully.

This last spring a friend gave me a book that I'm just now getting time to read. It's On Reading Well by Karen Swallow Prior. In this book, Prior talks about twelve virtues through the lens of great literature. In the chapter on hope, she cites Thomas Aquinas, who said that "the four conditions of hope are that it regards something good in the future that is difficult but possible to obtain." So, as we're seeing it here, hope involves looking to the future for things to be better. We realize that the road may not be easy, but we trust in the possibility of good to come.

Of course, scripture tells us--and Prior would not disagree--to hope in God:

Why art thou cast down, O my soul?
and why art thou disquieted within me?
hope thou in God: 

for I shall yet praise him, 
who is the health of my countenance, and my God.
(Psalm 42:11, KJV)

The author goes on to suggest that two kinds of hopelessness are presumption and despair. She explains, "Presumption  . . . assumes that one's hope will be fulfilled; despair anticipates that one's hope will never be fulfilled." These ideas have given me much to meditate upon as I pull weeds and fold laundry this summer. And a song by Cynthia Clawson came to mind. It's called "The Journey." Listen to it when you can. I think it will do you good. She says, "Give me the heart to be pure; give me the faith to be sure; give me the strength to endure all my tribulations."  www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzY-IMkUIp8 (The song I want you to hear starts at 1:15, but the intro piece is good, too.)

God, give us hope.

--Sherry Poff

Sunday, June 23, 2019

Voices From the Past


I like paper, as in books. In a book, I when I want to go back to a certain passage, I remember where it was on the right- or left-hand page, and approximately how far through the book it was. I’ve often said a book on a “device,” be it phone or tablet, is like a book with no page numbers and no binding. The pages float, somewhere, no one knows where, and if you did not put a bookmark on that thing you want to remember, well, good luck.

Having said that, I do love my ESV Bible app. Maybe it’s because I know the book well enough that I can navigate and not get lost. But the app lets me click on a cross-reference and right back to the starting point in a flash, saving a lot of page-turning. So, I actually do look up many more of those than I do with a “real” book.

OK, let’s leave that and go on a short detour. Every now and then, I like to “speed read” or just scan through a long portion of the Bible. It gives a different perspective and usually brings up some connections that I have entirely missed for my whole life.
Recently I was reading rapidly through the book of Matthew. Or, I would have been, if not for the reference notes in my app. I discovered, verse after verse, piling up almost faster than I could click there and back, references tying everything in the book to a prophecy in the Old Testament. Some were put in by the author (Matthew) and some by Jesus Himself, but all said the same. Everything Jesus did and everything that happened to Him was “to fulfill what the Lord spoke by the prophet.” Clicking on those prophecies took me all over the Old Testament. “The Prophet” was Isaiah, Hosea, Micah, Jeremiah, Malachi, David, Zechariah, Moses, Daniel.

We know these things, but it was quite enlightening to see them all together.
We sometimes get the idea that it’s OK to ignore the Old Testament. After all, the New Covenant supersedes the Old, right? We don’t live under law, right? It seems pretty obvious that if we don’t understand the Old Covenant, we aren’t going to have a full appreciation of the New. But, here is the lesson from Scripture. Jesus quoted the Old Testament through the entirety of His ministry, giving it His entire trust and His own endorsement. (That’s not surprising, since He wrote it.) The Gospel writers quoted the Old Testament through their entire narratives. The Apostles, including Paul, quoted the Old Testament continually as the basis of their arguments that Jesus is the promised One and the only way of salvation. And all that quoting was based on the principle, “the Lord spoke.”

If we accept the fact of our own sin and accompanying fate and we accept that He is the Rescue for our impending disaster, then we do accept all that the Old Testament has said about those things. We do not need to evade, excuse or downplay the Old Testament. We cannot reject parts of the Old Testament, based on current “science” or politics or even our own laziness (it’s so long!), and then pretend that we absolutely do believe the New Testament. Understanding the point and purpose of the Old is the only way to make sense of the New. Let us follow the example of Jesus, the Gospel writers and the Apostles.

--Lynda Shenefield

Sunday, June 16, 2019

The Lessons I’m Learning in the Midst of my Husband’s Cancer



We all know that one phone call can dramatically change a day, upcoming months, or one’s entire life. For me, one of those phone calls came when on May 7th, my husband called to tell me that his doctor wanted him to come into the office because something unusual had showed up on his CT scan. Kelly had been experiencing severe stomach pain in two different days-long bouts over the previous month. Prior to seeing the scan, the doctor believed it was some form of colitis and he was going to send Kelly the results of the scan on-line. So, the fact he was now calling and telling Kelly to come in was not a good sign. Riddled with fear, I got on my knees and begged God that it would not be anything life-threatening. I turned to Psalm 139 because of the promise I knew I would see there of God’s sovereignty over our very lives.

The devastating news we received that day was that there was a mass on Kelly’s stomach; the doctor said it was serious. We were told not to look up stomach cancer on-line; I knew enough to know that, humanly speaking, the prognosis is not good. That evening and night were the hardest in my life with thoughts and fears of the future crowding in. Kelly was scheduled for an upper endoscopy the very next day that would hopefully give us more information. That morning before we left for the hospital, I begged the Lord for some word of hope as a result of the biopsy we were about to receive. God was so gracious in answering my prayer: It was not stomach cancer but a different type of cancer in the stomach muscle rather than in the gland itself. This cancer, though still malignant, is not as aggressive as stomach cancer. More great news followed in that the doctor believed the tumor could be completely removed. I know the biopsy could have revealed different results, and that that would not change the fact that God is good, but oh, how thankful I am, that this is the path we’re walking and not the other!

I want to share three big lessons I have learned so far as a result of this experience. Kelly and I have talked several times about our desire to not let this journey be wasted in our lives. We want to learn what God has for us and be changed to be more like His Son as a result of going through it. Maybe these three things will challenge or encourage you as well.

1. Trusting God’s Sovereignty is imperative in hard times.
               This was something I said to Kelly just hours after the news that he had a mass on his stomach: “If we don’t have God’s Sovereignty, we don’t have anything.” In that moment, I was grief-stricken and fearing a future without my husband, and I knew that the only thing that could sustain me was believing that IF such a thing happened, God would be sovereign over it and have a good reason for it. Partly due to this experience and also due to my proneness in general to worry, I have started Jerry Bridges’ book Trusting God which shows from Scripture God’s sovereignty over circumstances, people, and simply every detail of our lives. The time to ground ourselves in the knowledge that God is in control of all things, and that in the midst of that He is all-loving and wise, is perhaps not in the storms of life but in the times of calm. Then, when the storms do hit, we have the Scripture and truths hidden in our hearts to fight the lies that inevitably come when we face trials.

2. Our brother and sisters in Christ are vital to us in hard times.
               Each text I received was a reminder that we were not alone in this, that there were people who cared about us and loved us. I started making a list of the verses that people shared with me, and I was so very grateful for the prayers of others. Scripture itself teaches that the prayers of a righteous man (or woman) avail much. The morning of the biopsy, I received a text from a dear friend who told me that she was crying with me, and that she and her husband were committed to walking this road with us. At that point it still looked like stomach cancer and that road could have indeed been long and hard, but to know that this friend was going to walk this road with me was true friendship and God’s love on display. We also received cards with encouraging words, a care package from a sweet lady in our church, several who offered to help with kids or meals when we needed it, and many who told us they were praying. Friends, this is what the body of Christ should be. It showed me how much I have been lacking in this area in my own life.  I can be so busy with my own responsibilities and tasks that I miss opportunities to show care to others in hard times. Oh, how I want to change in this area!

3. God’s Word comes alive in different ways when we go through hard times.
               The passage I most associate with the early days of Kelly’s diagnosis is Isaiah 43:1-3. Interestingly enough, in my verse memory plan this was the first passage I memorized this year, and this was also the passage that Kelly opened up the worship service with two days before the tumor was found! “Fear not, for I have redeemed you. I have called you by name; you are mine. When you pass through the waters, I will be with you, and the rivers shall not overwhelm you. When you walk through fire, you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you. For I am the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior.” I think this verse was the first thing I said to Kelly through tears after a mostly sleepless night that Tuesday. He responded with the passage he’d been preparing for his upcoming message: “God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and love and self-control” (2 Timothy 1:7). And it’s not that these verses immediately took away the fears or gave us a great sense of peace, but they were something to cling to that we could claim as true, even if we didn’t understand how it would all work out. God had placed both of those passages in our lives at the right time, because He knew we would need them that very week. Also, several women in our church have been memorizing Psalm 34 this year, and two different women memorizing that passage used it to encourage me. Of course I had come across all of these verses before, but you hear and understand them differently in times of hardship.

               Walking this road over the past month has shown me the importance of God’s Sovereignty, fellow believers, and Scripture. Maybe I mostly wrote this Cup of Grace for me, to keep before me the things that God is teaching, but I hope that God would use this somehow in your life as well. And Kelly and I covet your prayers as he goes in early tomorrow morning (June 17) for surgery. We are praying specifically that the doctor is able to remove the entire tumor, that Kelly would be able to keep his spleen, and that his acid reflux would not get worse (as the doctor feels it very likely will). But all of this we must leave in the sovereign hands of our loving, all-wise God. We are also praying that we could bear Christ’s aroma throughout our week in the hospital. Thank you for your love toward us and for your prayers, dear Sisters in Christ.
              
--Amy O'Rear

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Open Hands 2


           


More than twelve years ago I asked my son-in-law to take a picture of my hands, stretched out open in front of me.  I wanted a symbol, a representation, of the fact that my children were not mine to control and neither was my life.  I wrote of that struggle and included that picture in the blog here in September of 2011.
            I want to revisit that picture and that surrender here.  I have been confronting that concept again with nuances.
            My children are still a focus.  One son is in New Zealand and I don’t even see him.  (I am grateful for Face Time and texts and e-mails!)  To that mix have been added two granddaughters and soon, a grandson.  My health must be placed there.  I am, after all, growing older.  My time is there.  I value my quiet and must guard against feelings of resentment when I don’t get it.  My own future is there. 
`           My focus here, though, is my possessions.  “People are more important things,” I preached to my children and hopefully practiced, but I find now that I must again place my possessions in my open hands.  Yes, I told my children that people were more important than things, but I am being tested.  There are children coming to my house now who have not been taught to take care of their own things, much less other people’s.  Am I going to clench my hands on my possessions because I view them as more important than these children?
            Jesus said in Luke 12:15 that one’s life does not consist of the abundance of the things he possesses.  He also said in Matthew 6 that we were not to store up treasures on earth, but in Heaven.  Are my things my treasures?  Perhaps the essential idea is found in Paul’s words in I Corinthians 6.  I am not my own; I am bought with a price.  If I am not my own, everything I “own” is not mine.  I belong to Jesus and so do all my possessions.  I have nothing to clutch to myself.
            Michael Card wrote a song he called “The Things We Leave Behind.  I would like to quote a section of that song.

            Every heart needs to be set free
            from possessions
            that hold it so tight
            ‘Cause freedom’s not found in the things that we own,
            It’s the power to do what is right
            Jesus, our only possession,
            giving becomes our delight
            We can’t imagine the freedom we find
            from the things we leave behind

            We show a love for the world in our lives
            By worshipping goods we possess
            Jesus has laid all our treasures aside
            “Love God above all the rest”

            ‘Cause when we say “No”
            to the things of the world
            We open our hearts
            to the love of the Lord and
            it’s hard to imagine
            the freedom we find
            from the things we leave behind.

Oh, it’s hard to imagine
            the freedom we find
            from the things
            we leave behind.

            Today I want that freedom and I want you to have the freedom we can find by placing our possessions on our open palms.  Do we really believe that people are more important than things? 

                                                                        ~~Faith Himes Lamb

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Praise


                         
                          “The birdies in the treetops sing their song,
                          The angels chant their chorus all day long.
                          The flowers in the garden add their hue.
                          So why shouldn't I, why shouldn't you, praise Him, too?”

The “Holladay Inn, Cincinnati” has 750-acre Sharon Woods right at our back deck. Brant and I like to sit out on our swing early, with our coffee and Bibles, and listen to the birds and watch the squirrels and rabbits. It is amazing how many different “tunes” we hear. I am positive one of the birds chants: “Teacher! Teacher! Teacher!”

Sometimes the sun is bright and the “songs” keep coming in different cadence...depending on the bird. Sometimes the clouds are heavy...no problem...the birds still sing!
Those birds and their sweet songs have been on my heart for days.

How many times when I was growing up my dad (who was a pastor) quoted Psalm 107: 2:
”Let the redeemed of the LORD say so, whom He hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy.”
Many times, in one of our churches in Pennsylvania, Dad would say to the congregation (even to meJ)...”Sis, stand up and tell us what the Lord has done for you!” He truly believed we should never stop praising the Lord for His salvation and His daily care.

How is your praise today? Can you tell someone that you have been “redeemed from the hand of the enemy” and how God is so gracious to you?

The best tool to encourage me to share my praises is to see what God’s Word says about God Himself and about me...all from chosen verses from one of my favorites -  Psalm 103 (Take the time to read the whole Psalm). Every line could be highlighted! I pray the verses will give you a “song of praise” for today. Don’t rush as you read and meditate!

1. Bless the Lord, O my soul;
And all that is within me, bless His holy name!
***
The Lord is merciful and gracious,
Slow to anger, and abounding in mercy.
***
10 He has not dealt with us according to our sins,
Nor punished us according to our iniquities.
11 For as the heavens are high above the earth,
So great is His mercy toward those who fear Him;
12 As far as the east is from the west,
So far has He removed our transgressions from us.
***
17 But the mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting
On those who fear Him,
And His righteousness to children’s children,
***
20 Bless the Lord, you His angels, (Remember the children’s song?)
Who excel in strength, who do His word,
Heeding the voice of His word.
21 Bless the Lord, all you His hosts,
You
[c]ministers of His, who do His pleasure.
22 Bless the Lord, all His works, (Could these be the birds that sing?)
In all places of His dominion.
Bless the Lord, O my soul! (I am in this Psalm!!)

“So why shouldn't I, why shouldn't you, praise Him, too?”


 Maylou Holladay