A Passion Worth Pursuing
Monday, August 13, 2012
Memorizing Scripture
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Daniel Fast
Many people are reluctant to tell others that they are fasting so they will avoid the sin of the Pharisees: fasting just to gain recognition for themselves. I strongly believe that attitude is a result of a wrong interpretation of our Lord's teaching and that it is a trick of the enemy who does not want us to fast, nor to share with your loved ones, neighbors and friends the benefits of fasting.
By isolating ourselves from the support of other Christians, we will be more susceptible to doubts and negative influences (both human and demonic). We need the prayer shield of our Christian friends and family members to help us continue when we feel alone and when the enemy tempts us to give up Our Lord as he did Jesus Christ. Eventually, people will notice you are not eating.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Encountering God in a Cave
Monday, July 2, 2012
"Send Us to the Nations"
https://www.facebook.com/jarodespymusic?v=app_178091127385&app_data=eyJjb250ZW50LnRyYWNrIjoiOTMwOTQyMDgyMzkzMjkyODAifQ%3D%3D
Home from Africa!
Friday, June 1, 2012
Grace-Motivated . . . Dieting?
I find this article to be very encouraging relating to diet and exercise. I have only just begun to learn to walk in grace when it comes to this vicious cycle of maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Hope this can be a helpful resource to those of you who struggle in this area, too.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Rest
Let me first preface by saying, I am in NO WAY a master of the Scriptures or a great theologian, but I am in a continual process of learning His Word. I don't have all the answers, but I believe God is using His Word to transform me, and I am always open to corrections and more resources to gain wisdom. With that said, the kind of rest I'm talking about is the kind that Jesus gives us in exchange for our burdens and weariness. Think about that for a second: Jesus, the perfect Son of God, the One who holds all things together, who took on all the weight of our sin, says give Me your burdens and I will give you rest. What a trade! That is mind-blowing to me, especially when I try to hold on to my burdens. Why on earth would I want to hold on to these heavy loads of bricks when Jesus wants to freely give me rest and relief? And He can handle ALL OF IT! Could it be a control issue? A trust issue? Both maybe? I don't have to earn His rest....I simply have to trust Him. But it is impossible to be at rest when you are trying to shoulder everything yourself. So...it starts with surrender. It was only a few weeks ago when I was leading worship at a retreat that I heard the best description of surrender. The speaker said it something like this: "Surrender is both a literal and metaphorical collapsing into the arms of Jesus." I love that! Since then, I haven't been able to get that phrase out of my head. It has become my prayer every time I realize that I am trusting in my own abilities or strengths. I pray, Lord, I collapse into your arms - I surrender. That word, "collapse," really helps me to visualize my reliance upon the Lord. It's beautiful! And once we 'collapse,' we are finally realizing where our resting place is - Jesus. He is always our place of rest - no matter where we are, whether we are at work or at home, in a crowd of people or alone, in the valley or on the mountaintop, whether asleep or awake, struggling through sin after sin - we can rest in the finished work of Christ. I love what Jerry Bridges says in his book, Respectable Sins, "not only does the gospel prepare me to face my sin, it also frees me up to do so." So we can rest in the assurance of Christ that our sin is forgiven "before [we] can even acknowledge it, let alone begin to deal with it." I can go to God to confess my sin and know that He has already forgiven me. What beautiful truth!
I want to share with you a specific experience that I had just recently that has allowed me to apply these truths. About a month ago, I picked up a second job in the afternoons to make some extra money to contribute to my trip to Uganda. I already get up at 4 in the morning to go to my first job, so needless to say, I'm pretty tired by mid-afternoon. The Lord has also placed some really awesome opportunities to do some traveling and leading worship on the weekends, which takes time to prepare for. It didn't take very long after the new job started, though, for me to realize that I had taken on way too much. I began to see that my focus was all over the place. I was trying to "do it all," to prove to myself that I was self-sufficient and that I could handle it. Then one day as I was spending some rushed time with the Lord, and crying out to Him for help because I was so weak and drained, I heard God speak so clearly to me. I was in Hebrews 12, reading, "...let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith..." I felt like the Lord was saying so gently, Where is your focus, Kristie? As I continued to process and let the Word digest, the Lord walked along side of me to get to the root of my anxiety. I chose to pick up an extra job, because somewhere in my heart was disbelief- disbelief that God would actually provide the finances for me to go to Uganda, and take care of my expenses while I am gone. This was my "back up" plan, you know, in case God wasn't going to come through (that is what my heart was saying - how deceitful!). In that moment of clarity, I collapsed. I collapsed into the loving, merciful, grace-giving arms of Christ, breathing out all the air I had locked in, and finally gasping for breath, I cried, "I surrender, Lord! Have Your way in me!" You see, I had taken matters into my own hands, rather than resting in Christ, resting in His promises that He would be faithful - and He has been and will continue to be faithful. God is not a drill Sergent, as a wise woman once said. He's not yelling at us, screaming, "Come on! Move it! Go, go, go! You're not working hard enough! You're not doing enough! Do more! Be more!" and so on and so on...No, God's voice is gentle. He is humble in heart. And His yoke is easy and His burden is light.
I have truly only scraped the tip of the iceberg here. God's Word is like a never-ending well, full of rich, life-giving water. I will leave you with a verse I continually go back to when I find my soul getting anxious and uneasy about life or I doubt God's goodness to me..."Be at rest once more, O my soul, for the Lord has been good to you." (Psalm 116:7)