Saturday, January 26, 2013
The Lord He Is God: There Is None Else Beside Him
The week of Presidential Inauguration and my Bible reading in Deuteronomy coincided and brought together these thoughts I want to share with you. It seems that the more news I read or hear the more my heart aches. What has happened to our country? The good ole United States of America. Once a place of honor where people could raise their families without being afraid. A place where children were taught to honor and respect their parents and their elders. A place where people were taught right from wrong and respected the law. A place where people were taught to love and have faith in God. Where prayer was encouraged-not forbidden.
As I read Deuteronomy 4:9, ("Only take heed to thyself, and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life: but teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons;") my first thought was that our nation would have done well to have obeyed this verse. Seems like we have forgotten the good and embraced the bad!
Later in this same chapter in verses thirty-five and thirty-nine, I noticed this phrase repeated: "the LORD he is God: there is none else beside him." This definitely is a truth that we should teach to our children! It's still on all our money..."In God we trust"...even if it's against the law to say so in some public places! What a shame that we have come to this in our nation!
So what's the remedy? It's in Deuteronomy 4 also...verse twenty-nine..."But if from thence thou shalt seek the LORD thy God, thou shalt find him, if thou seek him with all thy heart and with all thy soul."
We need Him now more than ever! Let's seek Him with our heart and soul!
May God bless you greatly is my prayer!
Marilyn
Monday, January 14, 2013
Muddy Roads!
(this pic was taken on my way home from church yesterday)
“Thus saith the LORD, Stand ye in the ways, and
see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye
shall find rest for your souls.” Jeremiah 6: 16
The past
several days my little corner of the world has seen quite a lot of rain. Some
towns are seeing record amounts of flooding. I can hear the sound of rain and sleet hitting
our tin roof as I sit here today. We live on
a gravel road that gets muddy in wet weather so we tend to pay more attention
to rain than most I guess.
I got to thinking about some times in the past years
when our roads were in even worse shape than they are at the present. When
going to visit my husband’s parents thirty-plus years ago, we frequently
traveled a lonely stretch of red dirt/gravel road with not a single house in
sight for many miles. I never liked driving through there alone in bad weather
but I remember one particular time I had to out of necessity. The road was more
red dirt than gravel and that day it was wet and slippery from several days of
continuous rain. There was evidence that several heavy vehicles had traveled
the road in advance of me because I could see deep ruts in the road where their
wheels had sunk into the mud. I had a jittery feeling in my stomach as I
started down the road. But I remembered the advice my husband had given me:
“Just try to stay out of the ruts and you will be all right.” He knew from
experience that if a low-riding car let its wheels get off in deep ruts, the
bottom of the car would most likely be stuck in the mud until someone with a
pickup or tractor and a chain came along! (Remember…this was before we all had cell
phones!) So with that thought in the back of my mind I gave the car some gas
and with a tight grip on the steering wheel and a prayer in my heart I drove
through the muddy stretch of road safely. “And he led them on safely, so
that they feared not:” Psalm 78: 53
It’s strange how some of our everyday
experiences parallel those in our spiritual lives. We are on a journey that
begins at birth and ends with death. In between we face many kinds of roads and
many kinds of weather conditions. When the road we travel is smooth and
straight, we just sort of sit back and enjoy the ride. But when we face the
rain, the snow, the mud, the ice, or strong winds, we grip the steering wheel
and say a prayer as we drive or perhaps even pull over and stop completely.
It’s pretty much the same in the spiritual realm. When everything is going well
in our church, when our family is happy and healthy, when our job is fulfilling
and pays well, etc. we just sit back and enjoy the ride. Sometimes we even
forget to thank God for providing all these smooth roads.
I heard a remark
recently that I tend to agree with. Someone said that the real test of someones
love for God is not how he acts when things are going bad but how he acts when
things are going well. Most everyone resorts to prayer when their world comes
crashing in but the people who pray and go to church when their life seems to
be going smooth are the ones who have the deepest love for our Lord.
It might
be a good idea to keep your eyes open for those “ruts” in the road ahead of
you. Those are the places where someone else has spun their wheels or gotten
stuck in the mud. Don’t let the failures of others keep you from doing the job
God wants you to do. It will take the guidance and leadership of the Holy
Spirit in our lives to keep us out of the ruts of life but certainly it can be
done.
“Thou wilt shew me the path of life: in thy presence is fullness of
joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore.” Psalm 16: 11
May God bless you is my prayer!
Marilyn
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