Monday, February 25, 2013

The Comfort Zone is Called Comfortable for a Reason AKA the View is Always the Same


My Sunday School Teacher Eddie seems to be able to get me involved in all sorts of My Church the Road’s ministries. I’d like to think it’s because he is also a salesman. But I can’t blame it on that. He doesn't do the “hard sale,” and he doesn't guilt me into it. Both of those things would work. Shh, don’t tell him. No, he just asks and leaves it up to the Holy Spirit for the nudge. And the Holy Spirit is not dependent solely on My Sunday School Teacher Eddie either. He feels free to push me into areas I wouldn't normally frequent frequently.

These nudges from the Holy Spirit always get me out of my comfort zone.

Why can’t God just put me in a place that is easy and I can coast through?

Short answer: 

Because the Christian life is not comfortable.

Long answer:

1.    You Christian pursue righteousness, Godliness, faith, love, perseverance, and gentleness. Fight the good fight of faith; take hold to eternal life to which you are called and about which you are to make a good testimony. 1 Tim. 6:12 (Pursue. Fight. Take hold. Does that sound like we can coast through life?)
2.       Let us run with endurance the race God has set before us…We must run the race that lies ahead of us and never give up. (You must endure. You must run. You must never give up. Do these sound like easy activities?)
3.       I press to reach the end of the race…I run straight toward the goal…Philippians 3:14 (Press forward and run. Does that sound comfortable?)
4.       Jesus said, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself and hoist up and carry his cross daily like I will do for you and follow Me.” From Luke 9:23 (My words but look it up. This is what He was telling His disciples. The disciples knew that the Roman cross meant unspeakable pain, humiliation, and suffering. They didn’t understand yet the meaning of what He was telling them but they would understand fully later. Does this sound like something the lazy girl would sign up for?)

Now this is still part of the long answer:

Why would anyone choose this lifestyle?

1.       Hold firmly to the Word of Life; then on the day of Christ’s return, I will be proud that I did not run the race in vain and that my work was not useless. Philippians 2:16
2.       I press to reach the end of the race and receive the heavenly prize in Christ Jesus. Philippians 3:14
3.       But I run to win the race which Jesus Christ has already won for me. Philippians 3:12

Sounds like the effort will be worth the prize.

So I will step out of my comfort zone and:

pursue, fight, hold tightly to, run, press forward, hoist up, 

and carry the uncomfortable things in following Christ.

 I will live on the edge.

 I will step out into the unknown for Christ’s sake.

It will be scary but the view will be great!

(Remind me that I said this the next time My Sunday School Teacher Eddie asks me to do something.)

Monday, February 18, 2013

The War of the Roses


I must love roses because I have managed to have accumulated 27 rose bushes in my yard. And I bought 3 more yesterday. Somebody stop me!

It is the time of year to prune them. I really didn't know I had 27 bushes until I counted as I pruned.  I cut away dead branches and off shoots. I took away height so the bushes will spread out and be full of blooms in the spring and not be sparse and leggy. I took away more than I left but I know from past experience that it will produce the kind of plant I want. Of course dealing with all those thorny branches is no fun. I felt like I was at war with each bush when I had to deal with avoiding getting stuck. But this is all part of maintaining the bushes.

Because I was cutting away the top part of the plant I could see what was underneath. There were dead branches, weeds, and general debris that are not helpful to the plant so that had to be cleared away too.

All this time with the roses gave me time to think. It dawned on me that God had a little something to say about pruning me. So when I was finished outdoors I looked in the Bible for the story. I found it in John 15:1-11:

  
Verse 2 was the thorny part for me. Yes, I know Jesus is like the vine with us as the branches. Yes, I know God is the One who separates the ones of us attached to Christ from those who are not. I understood all that. But the part that God prunes every Christian so we will be productive stuck and struck me for the first time.

I imagined God taking away the top part of my life (the part that looks good and the part I show to everyone) and revealing to me the junk underneath. That’s the part, the sin, which I need to clear away to bear more fruit. Those are the areas of my life where sin creeps in like weeds, where forgiven dead stuff is not cleared away, and where unresolved problems in relationships gather like debris.

When God prunes it’s not pretty. My rose bushes are not pretty now. But as with my bushes my life will be beautiful because of the pruning. Pruning is not pleasant. I was stuck and scratched many times with thorns. But Jesus endured the thorny unpleasant part for me to be beautiful like the roses will be in the spring. Pruning gets rid of a lot of waste. And a big thank you to my trash guys for hauling it away. I need to get rid of the waste accumulating in my life too. My trash guys can’t deal with that but my Lord Jesus can.

My yard looks like it’s ready for spring to bear many beautiful roses. I won that war with the roses.

King David said in Psalm 51:10, after his big sin boo boo  “Create (cut away, produce, clear out, prune) in me a clean (pure) heart (tender undivided understanding conscience) and renew (repair, restore) a steadfast (determined, confirmed, established) spirit (Holy Spirit control) in me.”

Now I need to win the war of my sin will.

It won’t be pleasant, pretty, or comfortable.

But if I let God do the pruning the results will be beautiful.

Monday, February 11, 2013

For My Heart/ With All My Heart


I just happened to have my hiking boots on the other day. And if you know me, you know that the boots are only a fashion statement and not for real use. But since I had them on and it is heart health month I decided to put them to their intended purpose. I cranked up the incline on my treadmill to the highest setting and went for a mountain hike. Wow, I was breathing hard in no time and getting a cardio like I haven’t had in a while. Good for my heart and good for me.

I’m supposed to be mindful of my heart. My father died from a heart attack when he was younger than I am now. My doctor is always doing EKG’s (or ECG’s I think they are called now) and other KG’s/ CG’s on me to make sure that my heart stays OK. But even my doctor can’t monitor one aspect of my heart. That is its capacity to love.

Deuteronomy was one of the first places God told His people to monitor their volume and ability to love. Chapter 6 verse 5 and 6 says, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart (all your inner self, thoughts, and purposes) and with all your soul (desire, passions and emotions) and with all your strength (serious immense diligence). These commandments that I give you today are to be on your hearts (inner self, mind, and emotion).”

Love God with all your heart and keep it in your heart. Double hearts.

Then Jesus Himself said in Mark 12:30 and 31 that the greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all of your heart and soul and strength and that the next command in order is to love everyone around you like you love yourself.

Love God and love others with all your heart. Double hearts again.

The Greek word that Jesus used for heart is ”kardias” This is where we get the medical word “cardio” meaning heart. This is the muscle that keeps us alive. This is one of the most important parts of our body. It’s very important to keep this in working order. It’s very important to prioritize loving God and loving others. Love with all your cardia – max capacity. And keep this cardia for love in correct working order.

1.     I’m supposed to make sure I keep my heart healthy so I can live.

2.      I’m supposed to make sure I keep my heart spiritually healthy so I can love.

The second kind of love doesn't even require hiking boots!

P.S. Happy Heart Day 

Monday, February 4, 2013

Will I Cry Too?


Sunday at My Church The Road was great.

 My Music Pastor Josh led us in some great music. We sang: about our life victory in knowing Jesus,  that when Jesus comes back it will be a glorious day, that we will shout and sing praises to King Jesus, and that there is no other god on earth like our Jehovah God.

My Pastor Wade preached from Revelation 1:4-7.


The music and message was thrilling to my little Christian soul until My Pastor Wade began explaining verse seven. Then everything came to a screeching halt in my celebration. My Pastor Wade took us to a scene in our imagination. It was something like this:


There is a man standing on a mountain. He is looking over the beautiful creation that was formed by God for him. As he stands there enjoying the beauty, he reflects on his life. He has been a good man by his peer’s standard. He hasn't killed anyone or stolen anything or caused trouble in the world around him. He is a loving committed husband. He is a wonderful dad. He works hard and provides for his family. He is involved in a religion to which he is dedicated. He has never heard about Jesus or been given the opportunity to trust in Him. When Jesus comes with the clouds (verse 7) and he sees that he is one who is responsible for His death, no matter where he is in this world will he cry and mourn because he missed the opportunity to believe in Him? Will our Holy Righteous Jesus still judge him? Yes and Yes!


Oh no and Oh no, I said in my heart.  As I stand there with victory, shouting and singing, celebrating the return of My Jehovah King Jesus, will I start crying when I see the ones I could have told stand in judgment? Will I see my missed opportunity?  Will I mourn too? Is this verse for Christians too? I have this conviction from the Holy Spirit in my heart that the answer is, yes.

Well then, I’m responsible for “the man standing on the mountain.” I've got to change something in my life to make room to get the message to him. That may cause a rearrangement of my schedule. That may re-prioritize my spending. That may readjust my vision when I look at people.  

Will I mourn on that glorious day?

Will I cry too?