Obedience 04/09/2011
 
Obedience is "doing the next thing" with no assurance, no guarantee of it bringing visible or immediate results. This does not mean that obedience is not pregnant with purpose - it is. It just means that understanding does not often dawn until after that obedience is undertaken. It is usually after the step has been taken and the act fulfilled, that one sees from a different and much broadened vantage point.

 
Hope 04/06/2011
 
Hope holds that little word "yet" close to the heart, and continues on.
 
 
I found out about P.T Forsyth when reading Art Katz. Forsyth was a Scotsman born in 1848. He wrote 25 books, one of which is "The Soul Of Prayer." What a book... worth a second and third and fourth reading.

"We are tempted to treat God as an asset, and to exploit Him. But true prayer, thinking most of the Giver, quells the egoism and dissolves it in praise. What we received came for another end than just to gratify us. It came to carry God to us, and to lift us to Him and to the concert of His glory. The blessing in it transcends the enjoyment of it, and the Spirit of the outgoing God returns to Him not void, but bringing our souls as sheaves with Him." p. 41

" We cannot be true Christians without being original.... For true originality we must be one, and closely one, with God. To be creative we must learn with the Creator." p. 90



 
Faith 03/28/2011
 
William Wordsworth wrote: " Faith is a passionate intuition."

That's true, but I also think it is a daily, gritty, where the rubber meets the road, doggedness.
 
Poem 03/27/2011
 
So strike the chord,
Resound exquisite,
Note that beckons deep to deep.

Rise up now,
My heart, awaken,
Lo, He comes to own, to keep.
 
Elizabeth Goudge 03/25/2011
 
Oh the comfort of reading Elizabeth Goudge. It is like that of reading George Macdonald. From the Pilgrim's Inn, p.72:

"This sense of futility ... it's nothing, merely the reverse side of aspiration, and inevitable, just as failure is inevitable. Disregard them both. What can we expect when we aspire as we do,  yet remain as we are?

Struggle is divine in itself, but to ask to see it crowned with success is to ask for a sign which is forbidden to those who must travel by faith alone."

 
 

A young friend of mine recently wrote her status on facebook as: "Be at rest O my soul for the Lord has been good to you."

I like that. Be at rest O my soul, for the Lord has been good to you. He has been good and will continue to be so because He is good in and of Himself and does not change.

The older I get, the more I understand that there is a season for everything - a time to keep and a time to lose, a time to gather and a time to cast away, a time to mourn and a time to dance.

There is an ebb and flow to life - nature itself teaches us that.

David said, "Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that is weaned of his mother: my soul is even a weaned child." Ps 131:2.

The soul does indeed clamor for attention or make a fuss when its needs or expectations are not met. David learned how to wean himself from the incessant demands of his own soul by learning how to rest in the Lord.

Paul learned it also. He said, "For I have learned  in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound... I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Phil.4:11, 12.

"But godliness with contentment is great gain..."Self-control is a fruit of the Spirit. It is a mark of maturity and it honors God.

A soul weaned has learned to forget itself in the pursuit of Him.

 
Creative Writing 04/21/2009
 

Ok, I'm stoked because I recently found out that my nephew has the gift of the muse  and the courage not to hide it. So this is the official welcome to all aspiring writers to show your stuff - whatever that stuff may be.

 
Elijah's Mantle 04/15/2009
 

"But the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake: but the Lord was not in the earthquake: And after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice.

And it was so, when Elijah heard it, that he wrapped his face in his mantle and went out, and stood in the entering of the cave." I Kings 19: 11-13.

He wrapped his face in his mantle. His face was his flesh. What was his mantle? His mantle was prophetic authority. The authority of someone who not only walks closely with his God but is His mouthpiece too.

He covered his face, his flesh with that which the Lord had called him to, had commissioned him to. He covered it with what God had brought him into and had made him into.

What makes up a prophet's mantle? I think a part, and no small part, is  suffering. T Austin-Sparks knew it. He wrote:

"He baptises a soul into an anguish; He throws upon someone - or some little company - the mantle of His own terrible disappointment, dissatisfaction, and grief because of things as He sees them spiritually amongst His own people. That is how God brings things into being. Men do it in other ways, but that has always been God’s way. It has cost the instrument its life every time (not necessarily that it has died a sudden death, or even laid down its life in martyrdom, but it has cost the instrument its life)."

But with the suffering comes something else. And that is the power and authority that come from God alone. Elijah cast his mantle upon Elisha after the Lord told him to anoint Elisha to function in his stead. Later, the Lord intended to take Elijah into heaven by a whirlwind. God sends him first to Bethel, then to Jericho and then to Jordan. Each place has a significance. Throughout the journey, Elisha is determined to stick with Elijah.

When they got to the Jordan River, Elijah took his mantle, wrapped it together and smote the waters, and they were divided, so that the two went over on dry ground. II Kings 2:8.

After Elijah and Elisha passed over, Elijah asked Elisha what he wanted him to do for him before he was taken away. Elisha asked for a double portion of Elijah's spirit. Elijah said that if Elisha saw him when he was taken, his request would be granted. Elisha did see it. He saw the horsemen and the chariot of Israel. Then he rent his clothes and put on the mantle that had fallen from Elijah.

Elisha went back and stood by the bank of Jordan; and he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and smote the waters and said, "Where is the Lord God of Elijah?" and when he also had smitten the waters, they parted and Elisha went over.

There are many Jordans to cross. Oh for the faith and authority to ask "Where is the Lord God of Elijah?" and to expect an answer.

 
Isaac's Wells 04/07/2009
 


Not much is said about Issac in the Bible. He was not like Abraham,  "the father of faith," nor like Jacob who wrestled with God. To Abraham the promises were given and in Jacob we see the epic struggle between the natural man and his spirit. Issac's life seems rather dull in comparision to that of his father's and his son's. On the surface, he seems to serve little more than a link. But there was really quite a bit more to Isaac.

After Abraham's death, there was a famine. Issac went to Abimelech, king of the Philistines in Gerar. The Lord appeared to him there and told him not to go down into Egypt but to sojourn in Gerar. The Lord repeated the promises He had given Abraham to Issac. Issac dwelt in the city of Gerar and the Lord blessed him until he grew so great that it alarmed the people there. Abimilech told him to leave. So Issac left and pitched his tent in the valley of Gerar. Issac was forced to leave his comfort zone and strike out.

Issac was back in the wilderness - the place of testing, the place where one is plowed. There was no water because his father's wells had been stopped up. After Abraham's death the Philistines had stopped up all the wells that Abraham had dug. So, Issac began re-digging them. And he called their names after the names by which his father had called them. The very fact that the wells had names is significant. There was meaning and purpose that had been discovered by Abraham while digging these wells and it had to be rediscovered by the son. There were also new wells to be dug and meaning and purpose for Issac to discover on his own.

Issac's servants dug a well in the valley and the herdsmen of Gerar fought with Issac's herdsmen, saying it was theirs. Issac called the well "Esek" because they "strove with him." Issac dug another well but was forced to strive for and lose that one too. He called it "Sitnah."

So Issac  moved and dug yet another well and this time no one tried to take it. He named that well "Rehoboth" which meant: "Now the Lord has made room for us and we will be fruitful in the land." And Issac went from there to Beer-sheba. The same night the Lord appeared to him. And he said, "I am the God of Abraham, your father. Do not be afraid, for I am with you. I will bless you and multiply your offspring because of my servant Abraham."

Then Issac built an altar and worshipped the Lord right there. And he dug another well.

The next day Abimilech traveled from the city of Gerar to Issac. When he arrived, Issac was surprised and asked him why he had come since Abimilech "hated him and had driven him away." Abimilech confessed that the Lord had blessed Issac and he wanted a peace covenant with Issac. Abimilech said, "You are now blessed of the Lord. I think there should be an oath between us."

Something had happened to Issac from the time he left Gerar until that present moment. He had a testimony. Abimilech recognized it. Driven from his home and everything that was comfortable and settled, Issac had to move out and trust God. And God had come through for him.

Why had Abraham's wells been stopped up after his death by the Philistines? It is always the conflict of the natural man's strength against the faith of the spiritual man. Stop up the source of the spiritual man's life and he will be powerless. There will be no advancement of the kingdom. There will be no occupation. There will be no room for him in the land. It has always been this way and will continue until the Lord's return I suppose. How rare are true men and women of faith. How true the scripture that says the world is not worthy of them.

Where was Issac when his father's wells had been stopped up? I assume he was preoccupied with life in the city. But when he was forced to move out, to take up the journey again, to walk by faith, to "flesh out"  the promises, to work out his own salvation with fear and trembling, then he unstopped his father's wells and remembered their names. Then he dug wells of his own.

And, on the very day of Abimilech's departure, after he had gone, Issac's servants came to him and told him that the well they had just dug had produced water. Isaac called it "Sheba" which means "oath." Oath speaks of covenant.