Went to Marnie and Denver for lunch Christmas Day.
Denver, Marnie and I...
So we went for a walk at the local park...
It was a lovely day!
And here is my song to you, for (post) Christmas. xx
Went to Marnie and Denver for lunch Christmas Day.
Denver, Marnie and I...
So we went for a walk at the local park...
It was a lovely day!
And here is my song to you, for (post) Christmas. xx
From Be Still and Know...
"And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country another way" (Matthew 2:12)
In Matthew, the second chapter, we read of the wise men making a long journey in search of the new born King. Guided by a star, their search came to an end in Bethlehem. With great joy they bowed in worship of the Christ child, presenting Him with gifts.
Herod had asked them to return to Jerusalem to give him a report on finding the Babe. Very likely this was their plan. However, their course of travel was completely changed. God warned them not to return to Jerusalem. They were to return to their home "another way." Although they may have wondered why, they obediently followed God's direction.
In a few days we will enter a new year. As God places it in our hands, we will have the privilege of using it for Him. Most of us already have plans for it. Yet we can never be sure of what lies before us. Next year's path may lead us in a completely different way, a new way we have never walked before. It may bring a sudden change in our life.
God may say to us, "I want you to go 'another way' this year." You may be comfortably situated in your home, everything going well for you. Suddenly a change comes and you are to be moved to a new area. This is not what you would choose, but God say, "This is 'another way' for you to take this year." You may have to walk 'another way' as someone dear to you has been removed from your life. 'Another way' for you may be a serious illness. We may not understand why we must go 'another way,' but God does, and He never makes a mistake.
We should be ready to accept changed plans as the wise men were. When God leads us 'another way' we need to be ready to follow.
God says, "I will bring the blind by a way that they know not; I will lead them in paths that they have not known" (Isaiah 42:16)
God will make a way Where there seems to be no way
He works in ways we cannot see He will make a way for me
He will be my guide Hold me closely to His side
With love and strength for each new day
He will make a way He will make a way
-Don Moen
Dear Friends,
I have not been able to post as much as I would have liked this year, especially 'on the home front' updates. But Weekend Words took precedence and sometimes that was all I had time for each week. I had been considering taking a break from my blog, but I received a lovely comment this week from a reader, which I will post here as I don't know if many of you read the comments:
"Dear Lynda, this is one of the most beautiful blog posts I have ever read. I'm a long time admirer of your beautiful blog and writings and when I am faced with uncertainty and hard times, I have been known to reread many of your posts. This one speaks to me wonderfully right now and I thank you for it. God bless you this Christmas season and in the new year to come!"
And I replied:
"Thank you so much for your kind words. It means a lot to me that you took the time to write and tell me you enjoy my post. I was considering whether to keep going with my blog. Life gets busy sometimes and it can be hard to find the time to search out readings and type them up, find photos, etc. But if even only one person is blessed by the writings then I am encouraged, and it is a reason to keep going. We never know what effect a word of encouragement can mean to someone. Thank you and God bless you! xx"
So it looks like you are stuck with me for a bit longer :))
Perhaps it's time you encouraged someone?
Here is a little prayer I read this week. I don't know who the author is...
Bless Us Lord, this Christmas with quietness of mind.
Teach us to be patient and always to be kind.
Show us that in quietness we can feel Your presence near
Filling us with joy and peace throughout the coming year.
This is my wish for all of you and I sincerely thank you for taking the time to visit my blog and read my posts. Have a blessed Christmas! xx
From Watch For The Light reading for December 15...
Be Not Afraid - Johann Christoph Arnold
Perfect love, the apostle John writes, casts our fear. So when God's angel broke the good news of the Savior's birth to the cowering shepherds of Bethlehem, "Fear not!" was more than an instruction for them to get up off the ground and stop shielding their frightened faces. The "glad tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people" meant that fear's grip on human hearts was going to have to give way to the far greater power of love.
People have derived comfort from these words for two thousand years, but millions are still afraid. What's more, we are scared to admit our fears, particularly our biggest fear of all - death.
The fear of death overshadows all our lives. We live longer than our grandparent's; we are better fed; we lose fewer babies. Vaccines protect us from once-feared epidemics; hi-tech hospitals save tiny preemies and patients in need of a new kidney or heart. But we are still mortal.
I have stood at the bedside of dying friends and relatives - and have fought alongside them - as they faced death. I have held their hands when fear filled their eyes, and have witnessed the remarkable peace that radiates from those who have not only battled their fears, but found strength to ask God to intervene on their behalf.
Without exception, these were ordinary men and women who at some point in their life had decided to spend their energies reaching out to people around them, rather than focusing on themselves. Through this, they received a special gift: the ability to hear the angel's words, "Fear not!" Such a gift can only be given to a surrendered heart, one that knows itself to be held in the palm of God's hand.
My grandfather, Eberhard Arnold, was one such person. He grasped intuitively that our flesh, blood, and bones are not, in the truest and deepest sense, our real selves, but that the real seat of our being, the soul, passes from mortality into immortality, and from time into timelessness. My grandfather spoke of the human soul's perpetual longing for God, and referred to death as the moment we are "called into eternity" and united with God.
It is natural, even for us who call ourselves believers, to feel the gulf between our present state and eternal unity with God. But then we should bear in mind that the angel's "glad tidings", wonderful as they are, do not spell out the whole story. Christ's life began in the manger, but its pivotal point was His crucifixion, and its completion was Easter, when He rose from the dead.
Many years of counselling people through grief and loss have made me certain that Christ's death and resurrection hold the deepest answer to all our fears. We all have bad days; and plenty of us know what depression is. There are very few people who have not, at one time or another, experienced deep anguish - and growing numbers have faced the terror of violence. In our lives we may be tested in ways we cannot even imagine. Yet we can be certain Christ has shared our torment, and worse. He sweated drops of blood and was totally forsaken. He died, and descended into hell. But by overcoming death he took away all our reasons for fear, forever.
Of course, it does no good to recognize this in a merely intellectual way. Knowing that Christ loves us may not save us from fear, nor will it save us from death. And so it comes down to this: the only way to truly overcome our fear of death is to live life in such a way that its meaning cannot be taken away by death.
This sounds grandiose, but it is really very simple. It means fighting the impulse to live for ourselves, instead of for others. It means choosing generosity over greed. It also means living humbly, rather than seeking influence and power. Finally, it means being ready to die again and again - to ourselves, and to every self serving opinion or agenda.
In Dickens's "Christmas Carol", the bitter old accountant Scrooge provides a memorable illustration. Tight-fisted and grasping, he goes through life dragging a chain that he himself has forged, link by link, with each miserly deed. Having closed himself to human kindness, he lives in a universe so calculating and cold that no one escapes his suspicion. Before long he begins to despise himself and look for a way out of his misery. But he cannot find one. He is trapped - trapped in the person of self. Worse, he is haunted by dreams of death, and dreads its approach.
Then he changes. Loosened by those same dreams, the scales fall from his eyes, and he sees a way out: "The time before him was his own, to make amends in!" No longer consumed with his own needs, he is free to love, and vows to dispel "the shadow of the things that would have been." And as he runs from one old acquaintance to the next, he rediscovers the world around him with the unselfconscious happiness of a child.
Such happiness can be ours, too, if we live for love. By "love" I am not speaking simply of the emotion, nor of some grand, abstract ideal, but of the life-changing power Jesus speaks of when He says: "I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me" (Matthew 25:35-36). When we live for love, we will be able to meet any challenge that comes our way. We will know peace now, and at the hour of death. And we will not be afraid.
The Hope of Christmas
This year has held such sadness, It touched each heart and mind,
And sometimes when the sky was dark The sun seemed hard to find.
Yet people were so caring And lent a helping hand,
So side by side we journeyed on And reached out through the land.
But now it's time to look ahead, The future shining bright,
The hope and joy of Christmas Will fill the world with light!
- Iris Hesselden
From Amish Peace...
Prince of Peace
A child is born to us... And he will be called: Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. - Isaiah 9:6
These days there is more than enough Christmas cheer to go around. There are holiday parties, cookie exchanges, and children's programs. There are gifts to buy, and maybe cards to mail and homes to decorate as bright and beautiful as the magazine covers on the rack at the grocery store. Yet there is little peace. And on some busy, frantic holiday days I'm certain that I have forgotten that the whole thing is supposed to be about the Prince of Peace.
That title holds a lot of meaning.
Prince: "Jesus came and told his disciples, 'I have been given all authority in heaven and on earth' " (Matthew 28:18). We've given Jesus authority over our souls and our homes, but have we given Him authority over our Christmas celebrations?
Peace: "You will keep in perfect peace all who trust in you, all whose thoughts are fixed on you!" (Isaiah 26:3). When our minds are filled with all the tasks of Christmas, peace comes when we focus on the Prince of Christmas.
In the Amish home, preparations for Christmas start a few days (not a few months) before the holiday. If gifts are given, they are simple gifts for the children. There is often an Amish school Christmas program that focuses on Christ. In fact, in a book for Amish school teachers a new verse to the familiar carol "O Little Town of Bethlehem" was added:
O little Inn of Bethlehem how like we are to you;
Our lives are crowded to the brim with this and that to do.
We're not unfriendly to the King, we mean well without doubt;
We have no hostile feelings, we merely crowd Him out.
It seems even the youngest children know what Prince needs to reign in their Christmas! Can we make an effort to remember the same?
From A Year's Journey with God...
Bright Morning Star
I, Jesus... I am the bright morning star. - Revelation 22:16 NLT
"Oooh! It's so dark!" I gasped. I was eight years old and it was 5 o'clock in the morning. My father was scraping frost from his car.
"See if you can find the Morning Star,' he suggested. I had never been up early enough to see it before and was amazed by its brightness. As we set off on a long drive to deliver presents to distant friends my father explained, 'Before clocks were invented sailors, watchmen and farmers always knew it was nearly dawn when the Morning Star appeared, so they called it "Star of Hope".'
The message about joy, peace and goodwill that the angels gave to the shepherds seems rather strange! Ever since then there has been very little joy or peace - you only have to watch the news to know how terrible life on Earth can be - at least for some people.
Christmas seems to underline how unfair things are! Some children have masses of presents, others have none; we 'pig out' on Christmas Day while others die of starvation; some people are surrounded by loving families while others sit alone, forgotten or unwanted. God is often accused of being unfair but Jesus never promised us anything but trouble in this life (John 16:33), although he did promise to make everything fair in the next! Because of the birth (and death) of Jesus we can confidently look forward to an eternity of nothing but joy and peace. However, the angels actually promised peace and goodwill on Earth (Luke 2:14 KJV). Although our lives down here may be outwardly difficult, we can still experience a foretaste of heaven in our hearts.
Star of wonder, star of night, Star with royal beauty bright... Guide us to Thy perfect light. - John Henry Hopkins (1857)