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Monthly Archives: November 2023

1 Chronicles 16:7-8

On that day David gave to Asaph and his fellow Levites this song of thanksgiving to the Lord:

Give thanks to the Lord and proclaim his greatness.
    Let the whole world know what he has done.

1 Chronicles 16:7-8

Dear God, this is the verse of the day for Bible Gateway, but it also works for where my heart is this morning. I just want to worship. This passage is talking about getting the Ark of the Covenant back to Jerusalem, and David leading the way with singing to you. Yes, I want to sing to you this morning. I want to worship you. I want to walk into this day–from the beginning–with faith in your support and provision.

Father, you really do not fail me. I’ve been disappointed in my life, to be sure. Things have gone wrong that I don’t understand. But all children get disappointed when their parents do something that might be the right thing, or might even be out of their parents’ control, but it doesn’t work out the way the child wants. That’s how I feel sometimes. The question is, do I take that disappointment, throw a tantrum, throw myself on the ground and kick and scream, or do I trust you and follow you?

Oh, my Father. Oh, my Jesus. Oh, my Holy Spirit. Triune God, please be with me today. Help me to carry you into this day. Help me to not only lead others in our work, but also to you. Help us to love you. Help my coworkers to discover you in a new way through my influence in their lives. Influence them through me, Holy Spirit. Move in our building. Move in my coworkers who are sick. Provide for us today. Give us, this day, our daily bread.

I pray all of this in the name of Jesus,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 28, 2023 in 1 Chronicles

 

Colossians 3:1-17

Since you have been raised to new life with Christ, set your sights on the realities of heaven, where Christ sits in the place of honor at God’s right hand. Think about the things of heaven, not the things of earth. For you died to this life, and your real life is hidden with Christ in God. And when Christ, who is your life, is revealed to the whole world, you will share in all his glory.

So put to death the sinful, earthly things lurking within you. Have nothing to do with sexual immorality, impurity, lust, and evil desires. Don’t be greedy, for a greedy person is an idolater, worshiping the things of this world. Because of these sins, the anger of God is coming. You used to do these things when your life was still part of this world. But now is the time to get rid of anger, rage, malicious behavior, slander, and dirty language. Don’t lie to each other, for you have stripped off your old sinful nature and all its wicked deeds. 10 Put on your new nature, and be renewed as you learn to know your Creator and become like him. 11 In this new life, it doesn’t matter if you are a Jew or a Gentile, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbaric, uncivilized, slave, or free. Christ is all that matters, and he lives in all of us.

12 Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. 13 Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. 14 Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. 15 And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts. For as members of one body you are called to live in peace. And always be thankful.

16 Let the message about Christ, in all its richness, fill your lives. Teach and counsel each other with all the wisdom he gives. Sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts. 17 And whatever you do or say, do it as a representative of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks through him to God the Father.

Colossians 3:1-17

Dear God, verse 5 fascinates me:

So put to death the sinful, earthly things lurking within you. Have nothing to do with sexual immorality, impurity, lust, and evil desires. Don’t be greedy, for a greedy person is an idolater, worshiping the things of this world.

First, I am always amused that the lead-off hitter for these lists through the New Testament is sexual immorality, impurity, lust, and evil desires. It’s even before greed. We’d like to think that sex wasn’t a problem before the sexual revolution 60 years ago, but it’s as old as time. I wonder what acting out in their sexual immorality looked like in Paul’s time. There wasn’t pornography. Was there just prostitution and affairs? It’s hard to understand, but it’s obviously a thing.

But that’s not really what I want to talk about today. I am doing this prayer to you towards the end of my day, and I am wondering why I feel so tired right now. Well, as I sit here and read this passage, I think it’s because I didn’t treat this day as a walk with you. I treated it as a walk through a mine field, all on my own. It wasn’t a day of worshipping you and then carrying you with me. A lot of different things went wrong, and I came home worn down. The world defeated me today. It didn’t defeat you because you weren’t leading me. I was doing it all on my own.

Father, I’m sorry for my sin. I’m so sorry. Yes, I let impurity get into me. Idolatry. Greed. Fear. I think about all of the things that need to be accomplished and I let it overwhelm me instead of charging into it armed with my God by my side, my Jesus covering me, and the Holy Spirit supporting me. You Triune Being is all around me, and I leave it behind. I’m sorry. I am determined to really carry you in my heart. To live with a sense of worshipping you in every breath. To till the soil of my heart and remove the weeds and thorns that choke out your Spirit. “I’m yours, Lord. Everything I’ve got. Everything I am. Everything I’m not. I’m yours, Lord. Try me now and see. See if I can be completely yours.”

I pray this in Jesus’s name,

Amen

 

A Little Worship…A Little Repentance

Dear God, as I sit here this morning and think about praying to you my soul feels in the need to just spend some time worshipping you. I also want to come before you and apologize for spending so much time away from you over the last few days. I’ve felt very self-indulgent. I miss you. I’m sorry for how I fail. I’m sorry for my selfishness. I’m sorry for the rights that I claim as my own that aren’t actually mine. I’m sorry for when I am not a good witness for you. I’m sorry for not loving you with all my heart, soul, mind, and strength or loving my neighbor as myself.

And now I want to just worship you. You are everything. You are good. You are powerful. You are not to be mocked. You are exacting in what you expect and yet merciful in knowing I am incapable of delivering to your standard. I add to my list of transgressions every day, and yet you have mercy for me. You answer my prayers with yes and no (and wait). You are a good father who gives good gifts to me. You are my God, and I love you.

And now I have some people who are on my heart. I have a relative, a friend, and a coworker who are all three facing different health issues, although all three are different in their severity. Oh, Lord, please help them. Help their families. Touch their bodies. Oh, help us all.

I love you, Lord. And I lift my voice to worship you. Oh, my soul, rejoice! Take joy, my King, in what you hear. Let it be a sweet, sweet sound in your ear.

I pray all of this through the power of Jesus’s blood poured over my life,

Amen

 
 

Colossians 3:12-15

Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts. For as members of one body you are called to live in peace. And always be thankful.
Colossians 3:12-15

Dear God, I’m in a chapel on Thanksgiving morning and praying for some people I love. Two, in particular, are quite sick—one gravely so. My heart is heavy for them and the earthly paths before them. It is also heavy for their spouses and children. One of them, the more ill of the two, still has living parents. My heart hurts for them as well.

So my wife and I are here this morning. In other circumstances, I might be feeling sorry for myself because not everything is as I would hope it would be. But today, I’m really not thinking about myself at all. I’m here to ask you for your comfort for each of these people and their families. I ask for healing where you will it. I ask for a smooth path no matter the circumstance. I ask that you teach me how to love them. I ask that you not let the pain of these situations be wasted on anyone touched by them.

Oh, God…Oh, Father…Oh, Jesus…Oh, Holy Spirit, please be with the people. Be with my wife. Be with me. Father, heal and do your will. Jesus, teach and love. Holy Spirit, comfort and pray.

I pray all of this through the grace given to me through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 23, 2023 in Colossians

 

Chronic Dissatisfaction

From Simply Sacred by Gary Thomas – 11/21

Dear God, I started this a few days ago, but never got to come back and finish it. Okay, I never prioritized making the time to come back and finish it. But now it’s the morning after Thanksgiving, and I am wanting to spend a little bit of time with you before I get going with my day.

My wife and I were talking about a month ago about our “bucket list.” The list of things we want to do or places we want to visit or things we want to accomplish before we “kick the bucket.” It’s odd, but I told her I have no such list. If I were to be on my death bed right now, the only thing that I think would be on my mind is how it would impact my wife and children. I don’t think I would have any places I wish I had gone, things I wish I had done, or accomplishments left unfinished. Well, I take that back. I have a few writing projects I’ve started but haven’t finished. I really do need to focus and get those completed. I just might feel bad if I didn’t finish those. But those are also things I think you’ve put on my heart to work on. But as far as experiences and places visited, there just isn’t anything in that realm that I care about.

I wish I could say that I feel that way because I am a great Christian and I don’t have a need for travel or experiences. But the truth is that I’m kind of lazy and not very ambitious. However, I do think there is a contentment in my spirit that comes from your Spirit ministering to me as I get to know you and spend time with you. I think part of it might be 1.) you have unreasonably blessed me with a wife who is a delight, and 2.) you have given me a life that pretty much wants for nothing even though I would consider myself solidly middle class to lower-middle class. But you have given me so much, it makes it easier to accept what I have. With that being said, I know people who have what I have and more, and they are still looking.

That makes me think of the U2 song “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.”

Even in the last verse, when they acknowledge they haven’t even found what they are looking for even in you:

I believe in the kingdom come
Then all the colors will bleed into one
Bleed into one
But yes I’m still running

You broke the bonds
And you loosed the chains
Carried the cross
Of my shame
Oh my shame
You know I believe it

But I still haven’t found what I’m looking for

This used to really bother me about this song. I know Bono is a Christian and believes in you. Where is this continued search still coming from after he found you? And I don’t know exactly what he means by this, but one thing it could mean is that it’s one thing to know this about you, and even believe it, but it’s another thing to develop a relationship with you that will allow you to minister to me and develop my soul.

Father, Jesus, Holy Spirit, I offer you this day. I thank you for ministering peace to my soul. I confess the times when I allow my heart to dwell on the cares of this world and I don’t weed the soil of my heart well. I am sorry for that. That is when my heart is unstilled. So help me to enjoy you today and to embrace fully, warts and all, the life and path you have given me to walk.

I pray this joyously as your servant and worshipper,

Amen

 

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Who is God’s Neighbor?

“A few days later the university team gathers for a prayer meeting, as we do every Wednesday. We follow a consistent pattern: Joe prays, Craig prays, Chris prays, then all three pause politely, waiting for me. I never pray, and after a brief silence we open our eyes and return to our dorm rooms.

With the essay deadline looming, I join the team grudgingly for the requisite meeting. Joe prays, Craig prays, Chris prays, and they wait the usual few seconds. To everyone’s surprise—most of all my own—I begin to pray aloud.

“God…” I say, and the room crackles with tension. A door slams down the hall, interrupting me. I start again.

“God, here we are, supposed to be concerned about those ten thousand students at the university who are going to Hell. Well, you know that I don’t care if they all go to Hell, if there is one. I don’t care if I go to Hell.”

I might as well be invoking witchcraft or offering child sacrifices. Even so, these are my friends, and no one moves. My mouth goes dry. I swallow hard and continue. For some reason I start talking about the parable of the Good Samaritan, which one of my classes has just been studying. “We’re supposed to feel the same concern for university students as the Samaritan felt for the bloodied Jew lying in the ditch,” I pray. “I feel no such concern. I feel nothing.”

And then it happens. In the middle of my prayer, as I am admitting my lack of care for our designated targets of compassion, the parable comes to me in a new light. I have been visualizing the scene as I speak: a swarthy Middle Eastern man, dressed in robes and a turban, bending over a dirty, blood-stained form in a ditch. Without warning, those two figures now morph on the internal screen of my mind. The Samaritan takes on the face of Jesus. The Jew, pitiable victim of a highway robbery, also takes on another face—one I recognize with a start as my own.

In slow motion, I watch Jesus reach down with a moistened rag to clean my wounds and stanch the flow of blood. As he bends toward me, I see myself, the wounded victim of a crime, open my eyes and spit on him, full in the face. Just that. The image unnerves me—the apostate who doesn’t believe in visions or in biblical parables. I am rendered speechless. Abruptly, I stop praying, rise, and leave the room.

All that evening I brood over what took place. It wasn’t exactly a vision—more like a vivid daydream or an epiphany. Regardless, I can’t put the scene out of mind. In a single stroke my cockiness has been shattered. I have always found security in my outsider status, which at a Bible college means an outsider to belief. Now I have caught a new and humbling glimpse of myself. In my arrogance and mocking condescension, maybe I’m the neediest one of all.

A feeling of shame overwhelms me. Shame that my façade of self-control has been unmasked. And also shame that I might end up as one more cookie-cutter Christian on this campus.”

Philip Yancey from Where the Light Fell

Dear God, I was praying this morning about what I will preach about tomorrow. Nothing was coming to me. My wife was surprised I didn’t have football on and I told her I didn’t want the distraction. I wanted my mind to still be seeking you. Finally, I decided to lie in bed and read the memoir I’ve been reading by Philip Yancey, Where the Light Fell. That’s when I came across this story, about 80% of the way into the book.

The set up is that Yancey lost his father to polio when he was one year old, and his mother raised him and his older brother in an ultra conservative version of being Baptist. Fringe enough that Southern Baptists in the 50s and 60s thought they were weird. His parents intended to be foreign missionaries, and his mother put enormous amounts of pressure on her two boys to fulfill their father’s ambition in life. It’s a long story that takes 240 pages to tell up to this point, but by the time we arrive at the scene above, Yancey is a sophomore at a Bible college he disdains, he is in a romantic relationship for the first time in his life, his older brother has left the college and experienced serious mental breakdowns, and he cynically realizes that he’s had enough of you, Bible college, and everything else. I don’t think he would put it this way, necessarily, but reading it makes me think he’s just completely burned out on structured religion and the games religious Christians play. Now he’s going to be smarter than everyone.

Then you show up. A professor he actually respects assigns his class to “write an essay about a time when God spoke to you through a passage of the Bible.” It’s the rolling around of this assignment in his mind that set the context for what I copied above. It’s almost like Job 38 when you’ve had enough of Job going on and on and you decide it’s time to set him straight. In fact, Yancey references Job in the report he gives to his class as a result of his experience: “In the words of Job, ‘I had heard of thee by the hearing of the ear. But now mine eye seeth thee: wherefore I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes.‘”

So I think this will be the core of my sermon tomorrow. When Jesus is describing the Samaritan who shows boundless compassion in his story, he isn’t only asking us to rise up and be better people. He is challenging us to be more like you.

Like me, Yancey made professions of faith and accepted Jesus as his Lord and Savior several times as a child, thinking maybe he hadn’t done it right. For Yancey, this experience above was new. He describes it as follows:

Part of me–a rather large part–expects this, too, to pass. How many times have I gone forward to accept Jesus into my heart, only later to find him missing? I feel a kind of sheepish horror at regaining faith. But I also feel obliged to admit what has taken me unawares, a gift of grace neither sought nor desired [emphasis mine].

I think one of the things that frustrates me so much about the current American Evangelical church is that it is selling the wrong thing. It is selling some sort of puritanical life that, if achieved, will enable you to claim victory and then stand in self-righteous judgment over those around you. But that’s not what Jesus told us. Yes, he was harsh when he described how there would be a sorting that comes at the end of the age. Yes, he was harsh when he talked about separating parents and children and all kinds of people over himself. But he never called us to be judgmental or mean. He never called us to be unloving. He called us to love you with everything we have and then love our neighbor as ourself? Who is our neighbor? Well, that’s when he gave us this story of a man of a certain nationality beaten. The nationality is only important to set up that this man would have natural alliances and enemies. Two people who should have helped him didn’t, but a natural enemy did. A natural enemy cared for him extravagantly. Are you my natural enemy? Yes, I suppose you are since I am so insufficient in my sin. But–and I can’t believe I’ve never seen this in this story before–you chose to be extravagant with me, your natural enemy.

One unique thing about Jesus is that he didn’t see enemies in the usual way. He didn’t see a Roman centurion as an enemy. He didn’t see Caesar as his enemy. He saw anyone who misrepresented you as the real problem. And the stories he told about you are amazing.

So I am going to try to put an outline for tomorrow morning here.

  • I. I think I am going to read the story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37)
  • II. Set up Yancey biography and background
  • III. Read Yancey’s telling of his story
  • IV. Expound on this different way of looking at the Samaritan in the story as representing you and the beaten man representing me
  • V. So we have to ask ourselves: in coming to church, reading our Bible, being on committees, etc. why are we doing it?
  • VI. In honest self-reflection, how do we feel about envisioning ourselves as being the beaten man/woman and accepting God’s help
  • VII. Is there anyone in our lives who God wants to use us to reach on his behalf, not by accomplishing righteousness so we can use it as a weapon against the unrighteous, but so we can be the Samaritan in their life?
  • VIII. Read the CS Lewis quote by Yancey: “God sometimes show grace by drawing us to himself while we kick and scream and pummel him with our fists.” Is there anyone today who needs to stop resisting God, kicking and scream. Is there anyone here who would like to let go and accept the gift of Jesus?

Father, I consecrate this sermon to you. Holy Spirit, please use me. Love through me. Through my flawed delivery and possibly even flawed theology, reach those who need you and draw them to yourself. Oh, Lord, be merciful to us all.

I pray it in the name of Jesus, my Lord,

Amen

 
 

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“I Just Want To Be With You”

I just want to be with you 
So come close and put your arms around me. 
I just want to love you. 
So come close and look right at me. 

So I can sing into your eyes. 
So I can look into your heart. 
So I can feel you by my side 
And know that you're here.

Dear God, my wife and I went to the chapel at our church last night to pray for a friend who is seriously ill. While we kneeled on the front row and prayed silently, I had this song come to mind. The church we attended nearly 20 years ago in Waco used to sing it. I’ve searched it and Googled it, but I can’t find it online anywhere. Maybe it was original to the church and the music minister, Antioch Community Church and James Mark Gulley, respectively. I don’t know.

One thing I’ve always found interesting about this song is that it is a little vague about who the singer is. Who is “I” in the song and who is “you?” My inclination is to say that I am the singer and it’s from my perspective. And that’s certainly how I felt last night as I prayed. I just wanted to be with you. As I prayed, I was praying about my lack of faith. I was praying, “Father, I believe. Help my unbelief.” (Mark 9:24) But as I sat there in the silence and tried to tap into the Holy Spirit’s presence, I just felt this song pouring out of me. “I just want to be with you.” Sometimes there aren’t great, or even good, answers to our concerns. In those moments, all I’m sometimes left with is your comfort. I just want to be with you so I can feel your arms around me. So I can feel you look right at me. So I can sing to you. So I can look at you. So I can feel you. So I can just know that you’re near.

But then there’s the flip side of this song. What if it is you singing to me? What if you are the one saying, “I just want to be with you”? What if you want to feel my presence? What if want to sing to me? What if you want to see my heart? What if you want to feel me by your side and know that I’m near?

Hagar named you El-roi, the God who sees me. (Genesis 16:13) You see me now. You see me as I sit here at my computer. You see me when I am scared. You see me even when I walk away. But the idea that you love me that much…well, sometimes it’s simply impossible to believe.

Father, I am substitute preaching tomorrow morning for a pastor who suddenly got COVID this week. I think I know which direction I’m going, but I want to make sure. I want to just sit with you for a bit and feel your presence. I want to feel you by my side and know that you’re near. Thank you, Father.

I pray all of this only through the grace you afford me through Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 18, 2023 in Hymns and Songs

 

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Who do I have to thank but you?

As G.K. Chesterton put it, “The worst moment for the athiest is when he is really thankful and has nobody to thank.”

Nature teaches me nothing about Incarnation or the Victorious Christian Life. It does, though, awaken my desire to meet whoever is responsible for the monarch butterfly.

Philip Yancey, Where the Light Fell

Dear God, I was reading Philip Yancey’s memoir, Where the Light Fell, last night and I ran across this quote. He was describing himself as an 18-year-old at Bible college. As one would expect, the Bible college was very myopic as it focused on studying you, your Word, and living the Victorious Christian Life. But there wasn’t a depth to the experience. Yancey was looking for something more to his experience of you. Were there parts of you he was missing. As he started to explore nature he realized that you were surrounding him more than he really knew. Beyond thanking you for the things in his life that materially benefitted him in some way, his eyes were opening to just how all-encompassing you are.

He used this quote from G.K. Chesterton and I liked it so much I highlighted it and then came back to it this morning when I started to pray to you. What would my life be like if I didn’t know I have you to thank for so much? And I’m including it all. The traditional things like my wife and children, my family, my job and my home. You get the idea. But there is so much more for which I’m grateful that Yancey encouraged me to remember last night. I walked out and saw a beautiful waxing new moon last night. I commented to another man in the meeting how beautiful it was. Thank you, Father, for such a beautiful thing as our moon that orbits our little planet. Thank you for the consciousness that brings me to life. Thank you that I truly feel chosen by you. And not chosen to do great work or accomplish anything important. Just chosen to live at all. Thank you for the struggles that break me. Thank you for taking my broken pieces, melting them together, molding them again, and then filling me. Thank you for beauty in nature and monarch butterflies.

Father, Jesus, Holy Spirit, I am grateful I have you to thank. I am grateful to know you. I am grateful for the fact that Jesus did what he did. I am grateful that you are a good God who chooses to love us–love me. I am grateful that you cannot see the f-you list you have for me through Jesus’s blood. I am grateful for the Holy Spirit, being by my side even in this moment. There is much for which I am grateful. Thank you.

I pray all of this in your holy, Trinitarian name,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 16, 2023 in Miscellaneous, Musings and Stories

 

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1 Peter 3:13-22

13 Now, who will want to harm you if you are eager to do good? 14 But even if you suffer for doing what is right, God will reward you for it. So don’t worry or be afraid of their threats. 15 Instead, you must worship Christ as Lord of your life. And if someone asks about your hope as a believer, always be ready to explain it. 16 But do this in a gentle and respectful way. Keep your conscience clear. Then if people speak against you, they will be ashamed when they see what a good life you live because you belong to Christ. 17 Remember, it is better to suffer for doing good, if that is what God wants, than to suffer for doing wrong!

18 Christ suffered for our sins once for all time. He never sinned, but he died for sinners to bring you safely home to God. He suffered physical death, but he was raised to life in the Spirit.

19 So he went and preached to the spirits in prison— 20 those who disobeyed God long ago when God waited patiently while Noah was building his boat. Only eight people were saved from drowning in that terrible flood. 21 And that water is a picture of baptism, which now saves you, not by removing dirt from your body, but as a response to God from a clean conscience. It is effective because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

22 Now Christ has gone to heaven. He is seated in the place of honor next to God, and all the angels and authorities and powers accept his authority.

1 Peter 3:13-22

Dear God, verse 16 is really interesting to me right now: 16 But do this in a gentle and respectful way. Keep your conscience clear. Then if people speak against you, they will be ashamed when they see what a good life you live because you belong to Christ. I know there are some things that I do the frustrate some people–good people. I know they disagree with some of the stances I have taken on politically charges issues in our community. I’m sorry for that, and I’m sorry that they haven’t very often wanted to engage in dialogue with me about our differences. Honestly, maybe I haven’t pursued dialogue with them either. But I’ve done my best to keep myself pure in this. To keep my motivations pure before you. No hidden agendas, but just trying to follow a set of values I believe you are building in me. So my conscience, I believe, is clear. And I think my reputation is too. I just hope it is for your glory. I hope people might be drawn to develop a discipling relationship with you after seeing you in me. Of course, I fail all of the time. I hope that even my failures might be used as an opportunity to relate to others and show them your forgiveness of me. If you can love Jacob, David, Peter, and even lowly ol’ me, then you can love them too.

Father, Jesus, Holy Spirit, cleanse me with your water. Cleanse my spirit. Leave me with a clean conscience that is only cleansed through the power of your perfect life on earth, the sacrifice of death, and then the resurrection. Resurrect my soul again today. Help me to rest in you.

I pray all of this through that same power Jesus portrayed 2,000 years ago,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 14, 2023 in 1 Peter

 

Old Hymns

Dear God, it’s early on a Saturday morning, and I just feel a need to worship a little. I usually listen to something on my phone in the morning. Frankly, I like to have some sort of noise happening at any given time. Pure silence is not natural for me. I grew up with background noise, so I almost never live in pure silence.

With that said, I normally watch some YouTube videos when I get going on a Saturday morning, but this morning I find myself just wanting to hear some old hymns. I currently have “Tis so Sweet” by Shane & Shane going in my headphones as I type this. “Jesus, Jesus, precious Jesus, how I trust Him!” It’s a balm for my soul.

Growing up Baptist in the 70s and 80s, we used that standard white Baptist Hymnal. It has some great songs I’m glad I carry with me to this day. It’s so sentimental. For me, it’s the way I first learned to worship you. Singing off of a page. Not knowing how to read music but trying to follow along what I now know is the soprano/melody line as I figured out the tune, following the notes up and down. (Oh, now Shane & Shane are singing “How Great Thou Art.” Classic!) My favorite parts were when the men would echo in the chorus. “It is wellllllll (echo: It is wellllllll), With my soulllllll (echo: With my soul), (join together) It is well, it is well with my soullllll.” Love it! I remember one time in a contemporary praise and worship service that it seems that the new Christian praise songs that include the echo have the men lead with the women echoing. I prefer the classic way. I don’t know. Somehow in my little boy heart, it felt like the women were worshipping and then men were coming behind and supporting them. Giving them a foundation for their worship. Interesting. I wonder why this pattern has changed with our modern music.

By the way, I have to say, this Shane & Shane Hymns, Vol. 1 is really well done. They’ve kept the integrity of the hymns without altering them too much, but they’ve still added some nice repeats here and there. This is definitely going to go into the rotation.

Now I have “Give Me Jesus” going in my ears. “When I am afraid, give me Jesus.”

I spent the day helping a friend have a surgical procedure yesterday. I spent right at 12 hours in a hospital waiting and helping him while his wife was out of town. It was a long day. But whenever I thought about complaining, and there were plenty of things I could have complained about with what the hospital did, I would think about the people in Israel, Gaza, Ukraine, etc., who are injured and needing hospitals that aren’t safe. I thought about the chaos of their situations. The trauma. It made me hurt for them and more accepting of my first-world problems of things not moving as swiftly as I would like. It helped.

We are up to “Come Thou Fount.” Good stuff. “Praise the mount, I’m fixed upon it. Mount of thy redeeming love.”

So Father, Jesus, Holy Spirit, I’m not going to lie. Yesterday taxed the patience that you give me as your fruit. It was easy to will myself to be patient and kind for the first half of the day, but by 8:00pm, when things weren’t progressing, they started to exhaust my good will. But you gave me the strength I needed to help my friend and stay positive for him. He was frustrated too, but we got through it. I got him home to his daughter who can care for him until his wife gets back in town. It was a long day, but in retrospect I wouldn’t trade it. I pray that you use this procedure and the pain of it for his good. Both physical good and also good in the other areas of his life. In his wife’s and children’s lives. If there has to be pain, please don’t let it be wasted. Please don’t let it be wasted. And don’t waste it in my life either. Help me to grow from this as well. And let it all be for your glory. “Prone to wander, Lord I feel it. Prone to leave the God I love. Here’s my heart, Lord. Take and seal it. Seal it for thy courts above.”

I pray this in your name,

Amen

 
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Posted by on November 11, 2023 in Hymns and Songs

 

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