"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in times of trouble." Psalm 46:1

Author: Rick (Page 1 of 37)

Sadness into gladness…

“You have turned my mourning into dancing; You have put off my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness, To the end that my glory may sing praise to You and not be silent. O Lord my God, I will give thanks to You forever.”  Psalms 30:11-12

IMG_0037What a great promise we have here.  God can turn our mourning into dancing.  He takes our sadness and can clothe us in gladness.  He is the transformer of emotions and the producer of joy. This is a wonderful truth to keep in mind when we go through those tough times that will always come.

I have known many who have had to stop  a bad habit.  That habit could be anything from smoking to over eating to inappropriate language.  It seems that in every case the habit must be replaced by something positive to really effect a change in behavior.  If we quit something, there is a void left and if we don’t fill it with something, Unknown-25.jpegit will get filled on its own, sometimes with something just as bad.  For instance, today many people try to quit smoking by us vaping. Recent studies show that vaping might be bringing a host of new problems itself.  It is one problem replaced by another.

When my dad quit smoking after 30 years, I saw him do something I had never seen him do before- he chewed gum.  Before he quit it that was hard for him to do because chewing gum with a cigarette in your mouth is pretty difficult, if not dangerous.  Even though he told me that he never craved a cigarette from the day he made the decision to quit, the habits of using his hands to hold something, having something in his mouth, feeling relaxed, and others still had to be filled.  The main thing he did was pray.  The day he quit he made the drive from Portland to Grants Pass and he said he prayed the whole way and had never done that before.  He replaced the bad with something good.

Unknown-26.jpegGod knows that if we are in mourning, that mourning cannot be just taken away- it must be replaced with something.  The verses in Psalms tell us that God doesn’t simply remove our mourning and make it go away, He replaces it with something better. We won’t just stop mourning, but we will eventually start dancing.  That means that we will move beyond the pain and actually feel whole again.

I have a friend who lost his daughter to a sixteen year battle with cancer.  He is still grieves her loss a year later.  Understandably, because there may be no harder hurt than losing a child. How can such a tragedy be replaced with peace?  I think a story that FB Meyer’s tells might hold they key. One day he met a miserable-looking woman who shared that she had recently lost her crippled daughter who she had cared for for years. images-33.jpegShe was the joy of her life.  The mother was now alone and  home was not “home” anymore. Meyer gave her wise counsel. “When you get home and put the key in the door,” he said, “say aloud, ‘Jesus, I know You are here!’ and be ready to greet Him directly when you open the door. And as you light the fire tell Him what has happened during the day; if anybody has been kind, tell Him; if anybody has been unkind, tell Him, just as you would have told your daughter. At night stretch out your hand in the darkness and say, ‘Jesus, I know You are here!'” Months later, Meyer was back in that neighborhood and met the woman again, but he did not recognize her. Her face radiated joy instead of announcing misery. “I did as you told me,” she said, “and it has made all the difference in my life, and now I feel I know Him.”  This woman had replaced the loss of a daughter with the love of the Father.

We will experience times of sadness- we are images-34.jpegsurrounded by it, but God can remove that and replace it with something good. Probably not immediately, but it will happen. He might do that through His Word, an encouraging song from the radio, or even a phone call from a friend.  He knows our hurt and knows how much we can take.  He is watching and waiting for our call and is poised to have a replacement handy.

I had a friend once who had a real potty mouth.  After he was saved, he lost about 50% of his vocabulary.  He had to make some real changes, but it was hard because his old habit was right on the tip of his tongue.  He came up with a safe alternative to swearing.  Every time he felt a profanity raising its ugly head, he would clear his throat. This gave him time to think about what he was doing.  It was the equivalent of counting to ten before doing something.  Admittedly, at the beginning everyone thought he had a chronic cough.  But as he got more control of his tongue, the less he had to clear his throat.  He substituted something good (or at least neutral) for something bad. Pretty soon he had cleared out the inclination to swear and could stop clearing out his throat.

We need to think about what these verses mean to us. images-36.jpegOur sorrows, disappointments, tragedies and failures are very real — but they are also “raw material” for a transformation that God will accomplish in us if we allow Him to.  And we WILL dance! God will do it. He has picked out the steps already.  When we dance, we will sing to Him and the circle of healing will be complete. Our part is simply to wait…believe…and cling tightly to this wonderful promise!

Read the Word…

“But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.” II Timothy 3:14-17

Unknown-29What if we were to be approached by God today and He were to ask us, “Well, how do you like my book,” what would we say?  Would we respond the same way we would about anything else that gives us enjoyment?  Would it be on par with golf, as big a hit as baseball, or as alluring as fishing? Would we be excited, would we go into tears, would we start talking about favorite verses, or would we just remain silent?  What do we think about the Word of God?  Do we know the Word of God?

A few summers ago, Elaine and I stopped by a Christian book store in Eugene. As is my custom, I ask the very nice manager of the store how business was and she said it was very good.  As we talked she mentioned that Bibles are still what keeps their business afloat. They make up 40% of their sales.  For some reason it got me teary-eyed to know that people are, in IMG_1948these changing times, still buying Bibles.  As I browsed the Bible area I realized how much things have changed from when I was young and there were just a handful of Bibles to choose from (no, we are not not talking the Guttenberg press edition).  Now they have Bibles for every interest, every theological slant, and every possible translation a person could want.  But the key still remains- having access to the Bible is not the same as reading the Bible.  As a friend said once, “It is better to have one worn Bible, than to have a hundred untouched.”

Verse 17 above reminds us that the Bible equips us for our daily lives. But even more than that, it equips us for the battles we face in life.  And our battles are many.  Paul tells us in Ephesians 6:17 that we should “Take the…sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”  Paul is telling us that the Word of God is a weapon.  He knew that we would need it no matter how far in the future someone read his words.  The battle will continue until Christ comes again and we need to be prepared by being “equipped for every good work.”

We cannot use the Word of God if we do not know theIMG_1931 Word of God.  Too often we rely on the teaching of others to expose us to God’s Word, but we need to study it ourselves to really become familiar with it- to be able wield it in times of need.  Can you imagine using a weapon in battle that we have seldom touched and our only knowledge about it comes from having heard someone else talk about it?  We would sorely lack the skills needed to fend off the enemy.   I love our Pastor, but he does not want us to take his word for everything.  He wants us to read the Word ourselves. There is no way he can give us enough sustenance in one day to last an entire week.  Even if I went to Sizzler’s Buffet every Sunday, I could not eat enough to last me until Saturday (I have tried).

Beloved evangelist Gipsy Smith once told a story of man who said he had received no inspiration from the Bible although he had “gone through it several times.”

“Let it go through you once,” replied Smith, “Then you will tell a different story!”  The Bible is not only changeless, it will change us. The Bible is not a book to just peruse, it a book to use.  The Bible is not for light reading, it is a book for life reading.  The Bible is not just a great book to read, it is the greatest book ever written.

One of my favorite groups of people in the New Testament are the Bereans.  When Paul went to Thessalonica to preach the word, he was not well received, but when he went to IMG_0997Berea, and they accepted him eagerly.  What was the difference?  Paul’s words were the same. The difference was the Bereans themselves. We are told that they examined the Scriptures daily to see if what Paul said was so. They made the Word their own. They checked out Paul, one of the greatest preachers of all time, to make sure he was teaching the truth. The Bereans were called “more noble” because they searched the scriptures on their own and became acquainted with the Word with their own eyes.

Can you imagine charging into battle and not even knowing how to get your sword it out of the scabbard?  We may have the best weapon on the battlefield, but it is useless if we are not familiar with it.  Paul said, “Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.”  (II Tim. 2:15)  There is only one way to get to know something and that is through study.

A circuit riding preacher entered one church building with his young son, and dropped a coin into the offering box in the back. Not many IMG_0910came to church that Sunday, and those who did didn’t seem too excited about what the young preacher said. After the service, the preacher and son walked to the back, and he emptied the box. Out fell one coin. The young boy said, “Dad, if you’d have put more in, you’d have gotten more out!”   We can’t expect to get more out of something than what we put in.  God’s Word is the greatest book ever written, but words on a page only become real to us once we have made them our own.

“I had a bottle on my shelf, I saw it everyday.

The pills inside miraculously could take my aches away.

But when pain stayed in my bones, into the trash I threw

the bottle of those crummy pills, unopened and brand new.”

It is hard to complain that the Bible doesn’t work, if…. it’s “unopened and brand new.”

Have a blessed week. 

Humility is strength…

“So if there is any encouragement in Christ, any comfort from love, any participation in the Spirit, any affection and sympathy, 2 complete my joy by being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. 3 Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. 4 Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. 5 Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, 6 who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7 but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant,[b] being born in the likeness of men. 8 And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. 9 Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, 10 so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”      Philippians 2:1-11

Years and years ago (Sandi and Chris’ senior year) I told a story about Kevin Tommasini at the football banquet.  I said that Kevin was a pretty spiritual guy and before one game I went  by his locker and he was praying.  I heard him say, “Lord make me humble.”  Unfortunately, I said, God thought he said, “Lord, make me fumble,” and Kevin did, three times, and it made him humble. So God answered his prayer, but not in the way Kevin envisioned!IMG_1319

God has a way of bringing humility to our lives if we start to think a little too highly of ourselves.  Max Lucado says that it is hard to be filled with Christ if we are too full of ourselves and that is so very true.  Today’s verses give to us the greatest illustration of humility that the earth has ever known and explains to us how we can tap into the power of humility, as well.

I say the power of humility because it is power.  Many see humility as a weakness and that is their first mistake.  These verses show us that the most powerful man who has ever lived, lived in humility.  He could have destroyed those who hurt Him with just a wave of His hand, but instead He humbled Himself and died for those same people.  Had Christ not had humility, we would not have eternal life. If Christ would not have put us above Him, we would never rise above with Him.

In verses 3 and 4 Paul reminds us that we need to IMG_1517esteem others more significant than ourselves.  Many take this to mean that we need to think little of ourselves, but this cannot be.  We were formed in God’s own image; we are important, God said so in His Word.  What God really means is that we are to see ourselves as significant, but even in seeing that, treat others as more important. Christ did not have a self-image problem and because of that went to the cross. No, Christ knew He was the creator of the universe, but He chose to place man’s need over His own.  He knew the pain that was ahead of Him and yet went through with it for our sake- that is humility.

One way to keep ourselves in prospective is to remember that all we are and all we do are by the grace of God.  It is He who has made us and He who should get the credit.  We like to credit ourselves with our accomplishments, but that would be like the donkey taking credit for the raucous reception of adoration when he carried Christ into Jerusalem.  The palms and alleluias were not for the donkey any more than others praise of us is really for us.  When we reach that understanding, we will be able to put others in a  proper place.

George Washington Carver, the scientist who developed Unknown-28.jpeghundreds of useful products from the peanut once said, “When I was young, I said to God, ‘God, tell me the mystery of the universe.’ But God answered, ‘That knowledge is reserved for me alone.’ So I said, ‘God, tell me the mystery of the peanut.’ Then God said, ‘Well, George, that’s more nearly your size.’ And he told me.”    Anytime we begin to think too much of ourselves we should look a the universe around and look at a peanut and see what really matches who we are.

DL Moody was once approached by a man who said he had ceased to sin and had not sinned for ten years.  Moody said, “Really, you must be pretty proud of that.”

The man replied, “Yes, I am.”

Unknown-8.jpegMoody smiled and said, “That, apparently, is your first sin in ten years.”   He knew that as soon as we start to be proud of humility, humility is dissolved.  At the end of the day if we are not humble, we will stumble. That is a fact.  Pride led to satan’s fall and he wants to take us with him the same way.  Don’t be like the preacher who once said, “I am very humble and I am proud of that.”  Be like Christ who did not state humility but lived humility.  If every Christian did just that one thing, our world would be a different place.

God’s good protection…

“He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty.” Psalm 91:1

The traffic in Lincoln City, Newport, and Depoe Bay is often formidable  and the crosswalks are challenging because a person could grow old waiting for the flashing walk sign or not grow old at all trying to cross without one! Combine that with the influx thousands of drivers of various skills, it is a challenge to walk and drive on the coast on weekends at certain times of year. IMG_1139As a sidelight, I heard that the reason the baseball teams were named what they were in LA was because the pedestrians there were either dodgers or angels. The analogy is theologically weak, but you get the point. It is not much different on the Oregon coast.

A few years back Elaine and I decided to cross the road and get a bite to eat in a restaurant. We pushed the walk button to cross the main road (45 mile an hour speed limit) and waited and waited. We had go through two crosswalks to get to the restaurant that was catty-corner to us anyway, so hunger drove us to cross the less busy road in spite of the flashing wait sign. There was no danger because… well, it is too hard to explain, but believe me, there was no danger. So we got to the other side and waited to cross the busy road once more. Finally we got the okay from a friendly flashing light and crossed. All of images-41.jpega sudden we heard a huge noise and I looked over and a large truck had lost its load of metal pipes at the intersection. When he stopped, all the pipes (and there was a bunch of them) shot off his rack, over the hood, through the crosswalk and into the intersection. They were big, heavy, and sharp. If anyone would have been in the crosswalk, they would have been surely injured and maybe worse. An army of men piled out of the truck and started gathering up pipes. It dawned on me that had we waited we would have been in that crosswalk when everything took place.

We were okay and it did not spoil our appetites, but it really made us think. What part does God play in our daily lives when it comes to protecting us. When we are safe is He protecting us and when we are hurt, He is not? Unknown-34.jpegWhy does one person die in an accident and another survives? Why is one prayer seemingly answered and another seems to sit dormant for years. What’s going on here? Do we live on God’s roulette wheel of happenings and once in while we just get the black ball in the right or wrong slot?

We live in an unstable world populated by unstable people governed by an unstable, rebellious angel. There is a popular cliché that says “The safest place is in the center of God’s will.” However, does that mean when something bad happens we are outside of God’s will or if we seem to be protected we are obviously in God’s will. The Word (and experience) seems to say otherwise. Was Paul not in the center of God’s will when he was stoned, beaten, and imprisoned? Do missionaries suffer and Christian martyrs around the world shed their blood because they are out of God’s will? Or what about the reprobate who seems to enjoy God’s protection for a time- is that person in God’s will? What, then, is the need to be in God’s will if suffering and protection seem to be so random.

images-42.jpegWell, because it is not random from God’s viewpoint and that is the viewpoint that counts. One my favorite passages on this subject is found in Daniel 3:16-18: “Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego answered and said to the king, O Nebuchadnezzar, we have no need to answer thee in this matter. If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace; and he will deliver us out of thy hand, O king. But if not, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.”

Basically, these three men of God said, “God can deliver us and if that is part of His plan, okay. But if he does not deliver us, it doesn’t change anything. He is still God.” I believe there are things that will happen because they must happen and there are things that can change because they can change. I believe there are things that may go one way if we neglect our prayer and another way if we do pray. I believe that God has possible scenarios that will play out depending on our prayer life, people involved, His sovereign will, and our free will. Do I believe that, as the above Psalms verse states, we were sheltered by God. IMG_3394Yes, but the incident and its outcome did not determine the sheltering. If we remain close to Him He will protect us regardless of what happens to us. His protection is beyond what we can see. We are limited to seeing today, seeing our own lives, and cannot see the entire scope of humanity like God can. Is God God because He did not allow a pipe to hurt us? No, God is God because He is God regardless of our situations.

God’s umbrella of protection is over us if we are in Him, but sometimes we have to share images-43.jpegit with others and sometimes we may even have to give it to someone else because they need it more. I may have to step out in the weather so someone else can be brought to where he or she needs to be. God knows and I don’t. I just need to trust that He will do what I would do if I had the mind of God. Remember, when we step into eternity and have so much more knowledge, we will never look at God and say, “I don’t think I would have done it that way.” I think we will probably say something like, “Well done, good and faithful Master,” and shake our heads in amazement at His wisdom.

The most precious gift of all

The most precious truth of the gospel is that salvation is a gift from God, freely offered through Jesus Christ. It is not earned by human effort, purchased through good deeds, or inherited by tradition. Salvation is by faith alone, in Christ alone, by grace alone. This is the message the world needs to hear. In this devotion, I want to make it clear that the only path to eternal life is through belief in the Savior who gave His life for us. Let me unpack this truth by focusing on three key ideas: the problem, the provision, and the promise of salvation.

First, the problem is sin, a condition that separates every one of us from God. Romans 3:23 states it plainly: “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”  Sin is not just a list of wrong things we do; it is a condition of the heart. It alienates us from God, who is holy, just, and perfect. Imagine a chasm so wide that no human effort could ever bridge it. That chasm represents the separation between sinful humanity and a holy God. People often try to fill the gap with morality, religion, or good intentions, but Isaiah 64:6 reminds us that even our “righteous deeds are like a polluted garment.”  The problem is not just that we sin but that we are sinners by nature. Because we live in a fallen world and the proclivity toward sin we tend to have motive and opportunity at our fingertips. Sin’s penalty is death, not just physical death but eternal separation from God.  Romans 6:23 warns, “The wages of sin is death.” This is a sobering truth. Without a solution, we are lost, helpless, and hopeless.

But here is the good news: where there is a problem, God provides the provision. That provision is Jesus Christ. John 3:16 declares, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” God’s love for us is not passive; it is active and sacrificial. He did not leave us in our hopeless state but sent His Son to rescue us. Jesus is the bridge across that chasm of sin. He lived the perfect life we could not live and willingly gave Himself as the payment for our sins. Romans 5:8 proclaims, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” His death on the cross satisfied God’s justice and extended His mercy.  Acts 4:12 makes it clear: “There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.”  Jesus’s resurrection proves that He has conquered sin and death. Salvation is not achieved by human effort but received as a gift. Ephesians 2:8-9 says it best: “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”

Finally, let’s talk about the promise of salvation. The Bible is filled with promises that flow from God’s saving work. One of the greatest is found in Romans 10:9: “if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Notice that salvation is not complicated. It doesn’t require a lifetime of striving or a checklist of religious duties. It requires faith, simple, childlike trust in Jesus as Lord and Savior. John 11:25-26 records Jesus’s words: “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die.” This is a promise of eternal life, secured by Christ Himself. But the promise also transforms us in the here and now. 2 Corinthians 5:17 tells us, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” Salvation is not just about going to heaven when we die; it’s about walking in a restored relationship with God, experiencing His grace and guidance every day.

To illustrate this truth, let me share a story about a boy who built a small sailboat. After painstakingly crafting it, he took it to the water’s edge to watch it float. But a gust of wind carried the boat away, and it was lost. Days later, he saw the boat in a shop window. Though it was his by creation, he had to buy it back. When he did, he held it tightly and said, “Now you’re twice mine. once because I made you, and once because I bought you.  That is exactly what God has done for us. He made us, and when we were lost in sin, He bought us back through the blood of His Son. We are twice His.

The question is, what will you do with this message? Salvation is a gift, but it must be received. Imagine someone handing you a priceless treasure, yet you leave it unopened. That’s what it’s like to hear the gospel but never respond. Jesus said in John 14:6, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” There  is no other way. Will you trust Him today?

In closing, I urge you to consider the problem of sin, the provision of Christ, and the promise of salvation. This is not a message to delay or ignore. Hebrews 3:15 warns us, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts.”  The gospel is clear: we are saved by grace through faith in Jesus. It is not about what you can do for God; it is about what God has done for you. Believe, trust, and receive the gift of salvation today. That is the invitation, and it is extended to you right now.

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