October 27, 2010

  • Trust, delight, commit (Psalm 37:3-5)

    LORD, thank You for showing me
    it is much more fun and much more freeing and much more fruitful
    to let You run the universe
    rather than trying to do it myself in vain.

    Psalms 37:3: Trust in the LORD, and do good;
    dwell in the land and befriend faithfulness.

    Psalms 37:4: Delight yourself in the LORD,
    and he will give you the desires of your heart.

    Psalms 37:5: Commit your way to the LORD;
    trust in him, and he will act.

    LORD, remind me, when I am tempted to take things into my own hands.

    Help me to
    trust in You,
    delight myself in You,
    commit my way to You.

    Your Word is true.
    You are not a man that You can lie.
    You are ever faithful, ever true.

    II Corinthians 1:20: For all the promises of God find their Yes in him.
    That is why it is through him that we utter our Amen to God for his glory.

    Psalms 25:3: Indeed, none who wait for you shall be put to shame...


    Scripture quotations are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

October 7, 2010

  • Update/prayer requests - October 7, 2010

    In my last real update on July 26, I mentioned that I was feeling

    the need to be taking time more alone with Him, not only to speak to Him but also to hear Him...

    This is one reason I've not been posting as much on any of my blogs, including this one.

    My obligation is first and foremost to seeking the Lord and His will for me. I could feel guilty about not posting or feel like I'm a quitter or a failure for not following through with blogging, and I confess that at times I have felt that, but I realize those thoughts are not from the Lord, but are coming from my flesh and the devil and the world. Jesus Christ is the only One whose expectations I need to be concerned about. When you post something, you feel you accomplish something, you have something to point to and can say, "Look at me! I wrote this." (Of course, if there's anything good I posted, it wasn't me, but the Lord at work in me.) Or, when you post, you put yourself out there and feel like you might get noticed and commended. Those are all things that God is wanting me to slay by the power of His Spirit. My desires to be noticed and for attention are ungodly and evil desires. By the grace of God at work in me, I'm going to fight my flesh and try not to post something just to post something, but only to post as the Lord is laying something on my heart. Same thing w/ making comments on others' blogs. And to clarify: though I will recommend posts from this site, I rarely post comments on others' blogs from this site, but I do that from my other site on occasion. (Yes, I confess deerlife does make visits  w/ another dear deer and does banter with an unnamed llama from time to time. )

    Now, more about my journey to prayer...

    A few years back, the Lord had been trying to get my attention about my need to pray, and, well, I knew that in my head of course, since we all pretty much know we should be praying from the time we become Christians. And, as most of us have done at one time or another, I'd made resolutions to pray, but it took God repeatedly showing me (hammering me) over and over and over again about my total depravity, my total insufficiency and my total inability to do anything apart from Him. That included a lot of failures, frustrations, humiliation and tears. Until we come to the end of ourselves, we don't see the necessity of prayer and of our need to seek Him. So long as we can get by pretty well on our own, we won't get down on our knees in humble dependence and cry out to Him for living water and daily bread and His Holy Spirit. Thank God for His sovereign hand at work in drawing me to Himself through his loving Fatherly discipline.

    So now, after all that time, the Holy Spirit has been softening my hard heart sufficiently so those seeds are finally beginning to sprout a bit, so I might really begin to understand in small measure the utter necessity of prayer and seek out time to spend with God in prayer. This calling to prayer intensified early in 2009 (I wrote about it here, and that was why I started up tent of meeting, my other website devoted to prayer for revival). And it has further intensified and expanded since that time. In short, God has been giving me more of a passion to be praying for and encouraging workers to be sent into the harvest and praying for His Gospel to go to all the nations; I've alluded to that in a few posts on naphtali_deer, my other blog (e.g. - see here and here). I'm not exactly sure where all of that is going in my life, but I am finally seeing that the Gospel going to the nations is for our joy, for the joy of the nations and for God's joy and is part of God's glorious plan to exalt Himself. About a week ago, I stood outside and looked up into heaven and said something like, "God, why did it take me so long to get this?!" I cry now as I consider this. I mean, I've been a Christian for almost 28 years now. Of course, I knew we should be supporting missions, I knew the Biblical teaching that God had a plan to save some from every tribe, every language, every people and every nation (e.g. - Rev. 5), but only when God and the mission of God got a hold of my heart did I really begin to see. (Not that I see all yet today, I know that...) As I've mentioned, I am a slow learner, but thanks be to God, He is persevering and longsuffering with hard-hearted and stubborn sinners like me and His mercies and kindnesses will follow us and pursue us and His Holy Spirit will lead us into all truth and will lead us in the way we should go. This is one reason I am so passionate about young people not wasting their lives. I wasted much of mine. I was lukewarm for too long. One minute of lukewarmness is too long! Thanks be to God, He has been gracious to me and has been working to restore the years the locusts of my self-absorption and spiritual dullness had eaten up.

    I confess that I continue to fumble and slip and slide as I seek to go up to meet with Him on His holy mountain, but I know there is grace abounding for sinners like me there and He never casts out those who come to Him, He never despises those who are humble and seeking to worship Him in Spirit and in truth. I love to spend time with Him. And I know He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him. He has also begun to show me that If we are not asking hard things of Him, we are insulting Him and limiting Him. Also, if we are not persevering in prayer, we do not show we consider Him precious enough to spend time with Him and we think we are adequate apart from His resources. These are just a few scattered thoughts here. My heart is full of Him. He is faithful to hear and to save. And He is calling us to watch in prayer with Him so we will not grow faint. To whom else can we go? He has the words of eternal life. He is our life!

    What about deerlife....

    My intent in starting deerlife was for mutual edification and encouragement, but for the past several months, most of my writing has been taking place on my other blog, so If I'm not posting here, I would encourage you to be reading there. And if you have a heart for prayer, I encourage you to visit tent of meeting, though I've not been posting there as often either.

    I also invite those of you who feel led to do so, to please message me with prayer requests and the like. Some of you I know better than others, but I believe this is one way God does want me to be supporting you at the current time. I hope I will have the opportunity to blog here more regularly, but I can't say at the moment. I'm leaving that in the hands of the Lord.

    I also strongly encourage you to be seeking out and praying for fellowship in your own churches and communities. I think that is one of the greatest weaknesses of the Church today; we are lacking the fellowship God intended us to have. That leads into my next point...

    A way you can be praying for me...

    As I mentioned several months ago here, I'd begun to take some steps toward developing friendships and fellowship in our current church home. I would appreciate continued prayer for that. I'm not going to repeat all that, but I'd encourage you to read my thoughts in that post as you have opportunity to do so.

    In light of that, I'd like to share an excerpt from the "Memoir and Remains of R. M. M'Cheyne" by Andrew Bonar. I really like Bonar's description of how M'Cheyne viewed his friendships and the opportunities he had with people. I found this challenging and I think it really speaks for itself as to how you can be praying for me (and how we can be praying for one another) as I continue to step out in faith to develop and cultivate friendships in our churches (and elsewhere) and how we all ought to making the most of every opportunity we have here.

       His visits to friends were times when he sought to do good to their souls; and never was he satisfied unless he could guide the conversation to bear upon the things of eternity. When he could not do so, he generally remained silent. And yet his demeanour was easy and pleasant to all, exhibiting at once meekness of faith, and delicacy of feeling. There was in his character a high refinement that came out in poetry and true politeness; and there was something in his graces that reminded one of his own remark, when explaining "the spices" of Song iv. 16, when he said, that "some believers were a garden that had fruit trees, and so were useful; but we ought also to have spices and so be attractive." Wishing to convey his grateful feelings to a fellow labourer in Dundee, he sent him a Hebrew Bible, with these few lines prefixed :—

    Anoint mine eyes,
    O holy Dove!
    That I may prize
    This book of love.

    Unstop mine ear,
    Made deaf by sin,
    That I may hear
    Thy voice within.

    Break my hard heart,
    Jesus, my Lord,
    In the inmost part
    Hide thy sweet word.

    It was on a similar occasion, in 1838, that he wrote the lines, " Thy word is a lamp unto my feet." At another time, sitting under a shady tree, and casting his eye on the hospitable dwelling in which he found a pleasant retreat, his grateful feelings flowed out to his kind friend in the lines that follow:—

    "PEACE TO THIS HOUSE."

    Long may peace within this dwelling
    Have its resting place;
    Angel shields all harm repelling—
    God, their God of grace.

    May the dove-like Spirit guide them
    To the Upright land!
    May the Saviour-shepherd feed them
    From his gentle hand!

       Never was there one more beloved as a friend, and seldom any whose death could cause so many to feel as if no other friend could ever occupy his room. Some, too, can say that so much did they learn from his holy walk, "that it is probable a day never passes wherein they have not some advantage from his friendship."

       I find written on the leaf of one of his note-books, a short memorandum. " Rules worth remembering.—When visiting in a family, whether ministerially or otherwise, speak particularly to the strangers about eternal things. Perhaps God has brought you together just to save that soul." And then he refers to some instances which occurred to himself, in which God seemed to honour a word spoken in this incidental way.

    Thank you...and a final request...

    I thank God for each of you and for your friendship, fellowship and support. I appreciate your continued prayers for clarity and wisdom for me in all things, including my blogging, specifically that I would not rely on myself but on Christ alone and seek the wisdom that comes from above. In Bible Study Fellowship we've been studying through the book of Isaiah and for chapter 5 we were challenged to ask ourselves which of the woes applies to us. For numerous reasons, I answered the woe about those who see themselves as wise in their own eyes for I know it's far too tempting and too easy for me to get puffed up and carried away with my own ideas or thoughts.

    Isaiah 5:21: Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes,
    and shrewd in their own sight!

    I Corinthians 1:26  For consider your calling, brothers: not many of you were wise according to worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth. 27  But God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; 28  God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, 29  so that no human being might boast in the presence of God. 30  He is the source of your life in Christ Jesus, whom God made our wisdom and our righteousness and sanctification and redemption. 31  Therefore, as it is written, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”

    Romans 11:36  For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.

    Yours in Christ, pressing on to know Him by His grace alone,
    Karen


    Related:

    a challenge to you (God has some secret ones in all places)
    Naphtali News: the Ministry of the Word & Prayer

    Scripture quotations are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

September 4, 2010

  • How I Spent My Summer, # 2: Ignite Chicago (deerlife, ML-J, Crowder & the keytar)

    A little while ago in How I Spent My Summer, # 1, I explained how I ended up getting a $ 95 parking ticket.

    That took place after a trip we took out west, but since I'm not ready to post on that yet, meh, I'm not going to post on that yet.

    I am going to post on a trip Mr. Deer & I took to Ignite Chicago, a Christian music festival, later in July. It wasn't in Chicago, but in Schaumburg, one of the northwest suburbs of Chicago.

    Ok, so I'm out of order here. It's my blog, right?

    Well, all I can tell you is that sometimes you just gotta get out the keytar and let it rip...

    Since you know deerlife always has a book nearby, I did have a Bible along as well as ML-J's "Great Doctrines of the Bible." (During two days of bands, there is quite a bit of downtime, so what better way to pass some of that time than by reading?)

    Right before the David Crowder*Band came on stage I'd read chapter 22, "The Lord Jesus Christ."

    Here's a little excerpt:

    The Bible makes it very plain and clear that the whole essence of the Christian position is dependent upon the person of the Lord Jesus Christ.

    Now that is in many ways what you will call the 'differentia' of Christianity. That is the thing that separates the Christian faith from all other religions. Their founders, while important, are not absolutely essential to them. If Buddha had never existed you could still have Buddhism. If Muhammad had never lived you could still have Islam. In other religions it is the teaching that matters and the person is not essential; other person might have done it equally well, and the teaching would remain unaffected.

    But that is not the case with the Christian faith. Christianity, as has often been pointed out, is Christ Himself. He is not only central, He is absolutely vital, and therefore we have to see that we are concerned primarily and always with Him. this is something that I shall have to emphasise, of course, time and again, but the touchstone of anybody's profession of the Christian faith is, of necessity, such a person's relationship to the Lord Jesus Christ. What proclaims at once that so many people who call themselves Christian are not Christian is that Christ as a person is not at all essential to them.

    I am referring here to people who think that a Christian is just a good man or woman. Obviously, you can be a good man without ever mentioning the Lord Jesus Christ; but in Christianity He is vital, and if the truth concerning Him is not the truth, the whole position vanishes. Now that is something that one cannot overemphasize. The Christian faith is entirely concerned about Him, who He is, what He has done, and what He has made available and possible for us. And therefore you see the vital importance of our being quite clear in our minds, and absolutely right about all these things.

    So I make no apology for putting it as dogmatically and as bluntly as that. To me, those who apologise for saying such a thing are very doubtful Christian, if, indeed, they are Christians at all. There is an intolerance about the Christian faith, expressed like this by the apostle Paul: 'But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed' (Gal. 1:8). And we must say that same thing. The truth is clear, it is well defined, it is perfectly definite, and we must be certain, therefore, with regard to what we believe about Him. It is not enough to say, 'I believe in Christ.' What do we believe about Christ? What is the teaching about Him? That is what now concerns us.

    Now I was already quite happy that DC*B was coming on stage and getting ready to play, but then really exploded with joy when I heard them cranking up their first song,

    "No One Like You."

    Just what I'd been reading!

    Just what the Bible teaches!

    No one like HIM!

    Among the gods there is none like unto thee, O Lord;
    neither are there any works like unto thy works.

    Psalm 86:8

    Amen!

    (BTW: the videos here aren't from Ignite)

    Ok, and now you can be sure the excitement didn't end there.

    If you're familiar with Crowder, you know that no Crowder concert is complete without the keytar.

    "Behold the Keytar"
    williamhartz's photostream / cc by nc-sa 2.0

    Please note that this is the classic red Keytar.

    Not that green one that shows up on occasion.

    Anyhow...

    Well, so in case you were there,

    if you were sitting close enough,

    you know that was me really standing in for Crowder for part of the time.

    I mean you know that these musicians are doing gigs all the time and it's taxing being on the road all the time.

    Behold deerlife!

    Behold the keytar!

    HT: Colin!

    So sing along with the keytar!

    Aren't you looking forward to singing

    forever and ever and ever and ever and ever?

    Foreverandever Etc...