Thursday, August 31, 2017

WRONG CHOICES NEED NOT LORD OVER YOU



Wrong decisions and regret can become your roommates, if you let them. But, if you do, remember this about them. They can lord over, control your self-worth and can send downpours of self-condemnation on you if allowed to rest in the form of depression and regret. They seem to reach through time and space and in doing so, there seems to always be negative consequences that follow them. When a person ignores the signals or warnings in their own heart and makes a bad decision or wrong choice, it will always generate a certain amount of consequence that consist of some type of misery or disappointment and that is guaranteed. It is simply only a matter of when it comes, and how much. The effects of bad or wrong decisions may consists of an individual compromise of themselves, they are not getting what they want, they have to learn lessons the hard way, they feel that they have already blown it and it’s too late to turn back now, or they may have to go back and cleanup a past mess. But the most insidious and damaging effect is the feeling of having wasted a part of their life. At that point a person can feel hopeless and defeated as if there is no turning back. But friend may I tell you that there is hope. Your future is not governed by your past. By that I mean that no matter what your past has been, through forgiveness and repentance from those wrong choices you can change your situation by changing your way of looking at them. Once you honestly commit to changing, you have already begun the process. We humans are so prone to failure, yet in God’s eyes failure need never be final. God’s Word is full of examples of men and women making wrong choices, failing themselves as well as God. Yet most every time it was right there in the middle of the “learning from those mistakes” process, that they found God, and for those that knew Him already, they knew Him deeper after they had walked through the lessons that they were forced to learn, from those mistakes. Once we let go and let God be and do in our lives as He pleases, we need not try and fix something, but simply by our letting go of it and trusting God for the outcome, our situation changes and our future becomes brighter, outwardly and internally. Make it your point today, to start over!


Hold Fast,
Bren

Responding To Offenses


 
 
As I have grown in my spiritual walk with Christ through the years, I have noticed some distinct changes in my life, my attitude and even in my responses to others as I have felt the painful hand of hurt and offense, touch my heart. When I choose the road less traveled and embrace the reality of my situations and think about them in terms of how God may be looking at them and not what my mind churns up about them, I am relieved from the pressure of having to have an answer concerning them. I am learning, that my only response in any matter, is to show the love of God and trust Him in things that I do not understand, knowing that in due time, He will reveal to me what I need to know and understand. Every offense against me, can be used as an opportunity to reflect the Character of the one that lives inside me, if I will only change my perspective. One day a young nurse was complaining to her pastor that she had been offended by some patients, “Thank God for that” her preacher replied, in which the young woman said, “What do you mean by that, preacher?”, “Why, if you were carrying a vase and someone bumped into you, that which is inside the vase could possibly spill out on them”, he said, and “As we go through life and people bump into us, we have the opportunity to spill out the Lord Jesus on them” he concluded. You see, we have the choice when we are offended to spill out anger, bitterness, jealousy and revenge, or broken and contrite hearts. This is how God’s Character inside His children spills out into the world. We may never be called to suffer an agonizing death for our faith. But any time that we quench the fleshly nature in us that is constantly warring to show it’s ugly face, by yielding to that which compels us to do the right thing, then we are denying the flesh it’s gratification of glory, thereby, bringing honor to the One who deserves it.  When we allow our perspective to reflect or mirror the embodiment of Christ in us, then any suffering that we may undergo will be worth it. Think of how the world would be, if we would walk more cautiously in trying to eliminate our critical attitude’s that repels others away from us ,when we respond to them in a wrong way, no matter what they have heaped on us. Proverbs 19:11 tells us that, “A man’s wisdom gives him patience; it is to his glory to overlook an offense.”  Godly wisdom helps us to have tolerance for the person who has offended us and gives us patience to find God’s plan to restore the situation. God always has a plan of restoration.  Sometimes we just need the patience to believe it will happen. Will you today sweet friend, face your trial that you may be going through with an attitude of good cheer, humility and a godly patience with the one who has wronged you and above all else, have the faith that God will honor you by your seeing things from His perspective and not your fleshly way of responding to a bad event. Matthew 7:5 tells us to first, remove the beam from our own eye, then we can see clear enough to help remove our brother’s speck and that part about removing the beam from my own eye in order to see the situation clearly, gets me every time. I can only see clearly, when I remove that which is causing me not to see the situation clearly. Most of the time, we must detach ourselves from the initial or onset of our  offense and step back to see the situation more clearly. How you respond to your offenses will reflect the strength of your walk, in Jesus!

 

Hold Fast,
Bren

Friday, June 16, 2017

HOW FAR WILL YOU GO TO OBEY?



Jeremiah was not an eloquent speaker nor was he a great preacher when God first chose him. God did not choose him because he was intelligent or mighty in any way. But Jeremiah was a man that trusted God in all matters, Jer. 10:23. He would not have been the man for the job, had God been seeking a superstar. For God wanted someone who was teachable, who was moldable to His will and was willing to be devoted to the task that God would require of him. That was the man Jeremiah and because of that trust, he took an unwanted message to a people that was rebellious and backslidden from the God they claimed to know. Because of that message, Jeremiah faced peril upon peril as he was mocked by his own people, Jer. 20:7, he faced death in verse 26, he was beaten and put in jail in 20:2 and again in 37:15, and was accused of derision in 38:4 and wanted him put to death because of it, those are only to name a few. The people of Jeremiah's time believed that they were invincible and somehow, had a free ticket with God because they were Jews. Most had no moral sense of faith, they thought that it was enough to only perform strict ceremonial acts as part of God's Law and attend temple. Their religion was external, material, and ceremonial. While Israel's spiritual status was bathed in a false security, Jeremiah knew the truth. To Jeremiah, righteousness started internally, it was spiritual, and based upon a personal relationship with God. Israel had become spiritually rotten to the core and God assigned Jeremiah the task of telling them so. Jeremiah's prayer life was the source of his strength that enabled him to keep preaching the truth in the face of fierce opposition from the very ones that he was trying to reach with the message God had given him to share. To face the fire of people's anger and the icy cold shoulders of their rejection. Clinging to the Lord, even the hardest of times, allowed God to create perseverance in Jeremiah. Jeremiah's prayers and perseverance indicate an undying love for his fellow brothers, of which was never understood by his contemporaries. What made Jeremiah a great preacher was his prayer life, his tenacity and perseverance, and his burden for those whom he was called to go to. Although Jeremiah was often treated unjustly by those about him, the consequence of sin on his fellow countrymen led him to pray fervently many times on their behalf. Chapter fourteen is devoted totally to his intercession on their behalf as he confessed sins and begged God for mercy on them.
Jeremiah developed a close personal relationship with God from the very beginning. He had such a dependency upon God that he never concealed any thought from Him. His first recorded words to God were, "I do not know how to speak, because I am a youth" 1:6. Jeremiah had thought he had limitations at first. But God proved to him that it was not his ability that God sought, but his obedience. While Jeremiah had praises for God, as found in 17:4 and other places throughout his writings, he was not always filled with praises. Oftentimes he complained. When a plot was revealed that some men planned to take his life, he went to God and asked, "Why does this happen? How can You let it happen?" in chapter 12. While Jeremiah was devoted to the welfare of his friends, family and countrymen, he had a burning desire according to chapter 20:8b-9  into telling them the painful truth about themselves, causing them to lash out at him. He complained, "I have not done anything to anyone, yet everyone curses me. Woe is me!" in chapter 15:10. The apparent frustrations over his fellow countrymen led Jeremiah to pray to God for justice in return for the injustice he had received. Some of his prayers contained hurls of imprecations concerning how he was treated, that give the readers a special insight into the extreme frustration and mental anguish he endured. From praises to curses, Jeremiah held nothing from the Lord, and the Lord sustained and strengthened him. When He felt God's awe and wonder, he praised Him. When he was persecuted and suffering, Jeremiah reminded God of his own faithfulness and asked for justice. Whether it was praise, complaint, or a call for judgment, Jeremiah's open and honest prayer life reveals the inward struggles that he endured with God’s help on a daily basis. Unless Jeremiah had worked to sustain his relationship with God through prayer, he would have never persevered. Like Jeremiah, may our hearts prayer be to have and contain the burden for others that God may be placing on our hearts or some other task and that we may be able to say, “So the word of the LORD has brought me insult and reproach all day long. But if I say, “I will not mention his word or speak anymore in his name,” his word is in my heart like a fire, a fire shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in; indeed, I cannot. Jer. 20:8b-9

The book of Jeremiah was the final prophecies that God sent to His precious Judah, a wayward and rebellious children. He told the prophet Jeremiah to go and take warning of the oncoming destruction, if the nation did not turn and repent. Jeremiah called out for God’s people to turn back to Him, as he recognized the inevitability of Judah’s destruction, due to their unrepentant idolatry and immoral hearts. Their hearts had become so hard against the truth, that they refused to neither recognize, nor see the warnings as real and forthcoming. Instead, they lay blame on Jeremiah…it was just easier that way, for his message fell on deaf ears and it was unwanted. As Jeremiah sought to do the right thing, it seemed as though no one was happy with him. When he rebuked Judah, they thought of him as a trouble maker, one who provoked dispute and caused conflict within the land and the people. He felt condemned if he did tell the people the truth and he felt condemned if he didn’t. I have felt that way myself, many times and can assure you that as you walk with God, you too will find the same discouragement as did Jeremiah; as it often goes with the call of being used of God and can often times leave you feeling despondent and pitted against the very ones that you are trying to help. The Lord responded to Jeremiah’s discouragement assuring him that he would care for him in those times of loneliness, misunderstandings and isolation from those that were cursing him for what he was doing. God told Jeremiah that He would rescue and deliver His people from their sin, redeeming them and liberating them from their bondage if they would simply, turn back to Him. While like Jeremiah, you too may face those spiritual dry patches where no matter how much you serve, how much you give and how much you do, you sometimes will succumb to discouragement, and like Jeremiah felt, you too may wonder why it is, that the very ones that you are trying to reach with truth appear to be an enemy, having no problems with how they are living or what they are doing. You must remember one thing….your job is not to bring the change, but simply to bring the message, seasoned in love and humility. We are servants of the Most High, and it is our job to speak the truth in love, and moreover, not to grow weary in our doing so. There have been saints and scoundrels all through history. The saints have understood some important things about what God’s Word teaches us and how we are to live if we are children of God. Scoundrels never seem to grasp those truths and laugh and mock at them, as though they were silly fables. If we know what to do in certain situations; then those truths can motivate us to resist the temptations that threaten to lure us off the high road and succumb to the low one.

Hold Fast,
Bren

Friday, June 2, 2017

RUNNING ON EMPTY





There are times in my life when I feel the wear and tear of my body as it is being depleted of energy, when my emotional, spiritual and physical resources are drying up and I begin to run on empty. I think most people can relate to feeling that way as well, at times. All around us, people are living lives on empty. They have nothing to fill them; no purpose, no drive, they’re just running on fumes. Have you ever been in a car that’s running on empty and were totally unaware that it appeared to be running on the gas fumes because the gauge showed it as empty? Have you ever found yourself pushing it to the limit, to try and make it to the next exit, while saying to yourself the whole time, “why didn’t I stop and get gas when there was an opportunity to do so?”. How about running out of gas on a hill? When that happens you find yourself going backwards and there is nothing that you can do but apply the brakes and cost to safety on a prayer.
 
Lately the Lord has been reminding me to be, Mary, and I am not talking about the kind of merry that is attached to being happy. I mean, making a direct purpose to pause and sit at the feet of the Master as Mary did, allowing His word to wash over me, cleansing me from all the things that beset me and take over my attentions by distracting me away from my time with the Lord. No one is going to make me bath spiritually on a regular diet of His Word. I must do it for myself. I must set aside the time needed to seek truth for myself and bath in it, to refresh myself from the daily grind of life and you must do the same for yourself as well my friend. We all must choose for ourselves, to stop and fill up, when all the urgent things around us tell us we don't have time. For some of us, our gas needle reminds us of how often we approached life, our physical engines knocking, hands on the steering wheel of our lives sweating, blood pressure rising in our body’s radiator, only to succumb to a blow up or blow out, and in either case it’s not good.
 
Recently, I found myself in one of these situations. My emotional storehouse was depleted. My spiritual bank account was being drained, to which I could barely even feel a spiritual pulse. I had nothing to draw from and was just about to blow. Things were getting done but I was emotionally and spiritually, exhausted. Mentally, I was wanting to just shut down, when a ray of light shined through as I opened up God’s word only to be reminded, that which Jesus said to Peter, “Those who have had a bath need only to wash their feet; their whole body is clean. And you are clean…” John 13:10.  You see while I may have been getting bites here and there in God’s Word with my devotions, I had not allowed the Word to wash over me. I know this because when a situation arose that flustered me, my attitude triggered by the condition of my heart revealed that while I may have been getting bites here and there from God’s Word, it was not soaking in, to the dry parts of my heart, or I would have responded in a different way to my frustrations.
 
 
Here I was trying to wash other’s feet and serve them and I needed it myself. In John 13, Jesus rose from the dinner table during the meal, girded himself with a towel in a manner similar to the way in which a servant would gird himself as he sought to do a menial task, walked over to Peter, bent down and started washing Peter’s dirty feet. It was common at that time for people to wash their feet before dinner, as feet in sandals would often get dusty on unpaved roads. While it was customary hospitality for hosts in Jesus’ day to make provision for guests to wash themselves or, as a sign of honor and respect, to even provide a servant to wash the guests’ feet, it was certainly outrageous for the host himself to engage in the washing of his guests. So in a cultural sense what Jesus was doing, was truly radical. At the time Peter did not understand the deep significance of what was happing at that moment, but as Jesus was explaining to him, it began to soak in and Peter thought that maybe he needed a good washing all over, which Jesus explained that he did not.
 
As a believer in the truest sense of the word, I am washed in the cleansing blood of the Lamb. I no longer need a spiritual bath. But, I do need to dust off the dirt that attaches itself to me as I live out my daily life on this earth where strife and sin still abound. It is because of this struggle with sin, that I must remember, that the burden falls on me alone, to take responsibility for investing in myself to keep my feet washed. I must do what is necessary for replenishing my energy, make rights wrong, tend to the upkeep of my soul according to Matthew 11:28, "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest." I must go myself, in order to re-direct my emotions and to achieve control over all these unwanted feelings that seemed to bubble up from time to time in those murky depths of my weary heart. Life is not an idealized parade of lovely attitudes and well-balanced ministry and family. With time and experience, we can learn to prioritize and master the art of keeping our feet washed by sitting at the master’s feet, so not to become completely depleted, overextend physically, emotionally and spiritually; during those times where we give, work and serve until we find that we are running on empty.
 
Hold Fast,
Bren

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Encouragement For The Servant



All too often through the years I have seen many fellow brothers and sisters struggle in their service to the Lord as they work, serve and give of themselves to do their part in furthering the kingdom of God in their families, their Church and their community where God had placed them. Their struggles were real and often times their discouragement came not in the work that they were doing, but in the lack of encouragement they received to keep up the good work. Sometimes as Leaders we fail to give proper encouragement to those who serve under us because we ourselves may be discouraged or busy. While pastors and staff face their own difficulties, those that are lay-workers fight the same battle. Why! Because they serve the same God and battle the same enemy.  If today sweet friend you are facing discouragement in the task that God has called you to do, please allow me to love on you and minister the word of God into your life, even down into the very spiritual marrow of where the weariness has welled up in you. Everyone needs inspiration and biblical reinforcement for what they do. Whether you are an employee of the church or simply a worker who volunteers your service as an act of obedience to your own personal calling, you need to be encouraged regularly, by being reminded that your good work, is worth the effort and struggle and to keep on persevering until your work has been completed and God calls you home or removes you from your current position to another one, so that He may increase and you may decrease there.

Perseverance seems to be an outdated concept in our day of instant everything. If it doesn’t come easy, why pursue it? If it’s hard or requires endurance, you can quickly succumb to the feeling of "maybe it’s not for you after all" and begin to look for something that requires less commitment. This reminds me of the story of Thomas Edison, as he tried again and again to find the right filament for his incandescent electric light bulb. One day he had completed his 10,000th experiment only to discover another way that would not work. When he arrived home that night, he shared with his wife about all the efforts he had made but had still not seen the outcome of his dream. She questioned his commitment by saying,  “Aren’t you pretty discouraged, Tom?”.  “Discouraged?” responded Edison. “Certainly not! I now know 10,000 ways that won’t work!” Edison learned a unique way of looking at his disappointments and how to turn them into hope. There is another man that learned to do the same thing, but he also learned how to encourage others who were doing the same work as he was, in rebuilding the temple of God. Haggai understood weariness and discouragement. But he learned how to encourage God’s people and his fellow co-laborers in the work that God had required them to do. He knew that the work required lifting each other up in order to see them through the great task that was ahead of them.

Starting something and seeing it through to the finish is a daunting job that requires tenacity and perseverance. It is always easy to start something, like a new diet. But it’s tough to stick with it when you crave those salty chips and dip at the local Mexican restaurant. It’s easy to start a new exercise program, but it becomes tough to persevere when your muscles are aching for you to stop. Getting married is easy. But it’s tough to hang in there and work through problems through the years. It’s easy to begin a new ministry. But, it’s tough to keep on when problems arise or when the results don’t match your initial expectations. Can you relate? Well, that describes the people in Haggai’s day as they began work on rebuilding the temple. The foundation had been laid about 15 years before, but the project had been just sitting on the shelf waiting to be finished. Then one day, in response to Haggai’s message from the Lord, as he shared with the leaders and those who would do the work, the temple began to take shape once again and things were looking up! Haggai delivered his second message to them in Haggai 2:1-9. By this point, God’s people were getting tired and weary. His second message to them came as a message of God’s encouragement to a group of discouraged leaders and workers.

Haggai knew that his job at that point was to encourage those that God had given him to do the work by reminding them that their work and efforts were not in vain but a good thing. Haggai 2:1-3 reminds us that, the Lord did not gloss over or ignore the reality of the situation. He knew what they were thinking and feeling, and He brings it up to show them that He understood and that He cared for them. To be a great leader over God’s workman, it is part of our job to encourage them in their work and to insure they have what they need to complete the task that God has called them to do. Leaders not only lead by their examples, they become cheerleaders for the ones that they are over.  You see in Haggai’s day God’s people had loss their initial excitement and their work was taking its toll on their efforts. They were in need of a cheerleader and Haggai was up to the task God had given him as the leader of his people. There is always a certain sense of excitement when you begin a new ministry or project. But the glow can easily rub off in the grind, if we are not mindful and aware that it can happen. There were probably piles of rubble that needed to be removed. Perhaps some of the workers had envisioned putting the finishing touches on the work and accomplishments that had been made when they realized that there was some rubble that still needed hauling. Their initial enthusiasm was already wearing thin because everyone had been putting out work but not taking in the spiritual nourishment needed to maintain the longevity needed to complete the work and then God showed up for them through Haggai.

The time will always come, when the glamour of the newness wears off and you are left with only a memory of what you know God has called you to do. There are many things that can happen during the work that can discourage you and delays are one of them. Work for the Lord seldom moves as quickly as we hope it will and we must learn to adjust to those conditions. Outside opposition and criticism can discourage us and they too will come at some point just as they did to the servants in Haggai’s day. In verse 5, the Lord says, “Do not fear!” He would not have said that, unless they felt they had a reason to be afraid. Probably the same men who had threatened them and lobbied against them at the Persian court 15 years earlier, was at it again. Any time you attempt to do God’s work, satan will stir up opposition. We’re in a battle with the forces of darkness that are opposed to the church of Jesus Christ. So expect opposition! God is looking for the glory of Christ formed in the hearts of His people, not for the outward, superficial signs of success. He is in charge of all success. All we have to do is focus on the call and how we are responding to it. The enemy loves it when we listen to his whispers of not viewing our success in light of God’s Word. None of the workers on this temple lived to see its glory and how it exceed that of Solomon’s Temple. That didn’t happen until the Messiah came into the temple over 500 years later. With God, a thousand years is as a day. True success will be measured in the light of eternity, not in our lifetimes. We need to keep this in mind as we labor for the Lord. The harvest is at the end of the age, not at the end of each day. Whatever our source of discouragement, God understands and He cares. But He doesn’t coddle us or let us stay there, He encourages us to keep it up, to persevere. In chapter 2, three times the Lord repeats, “Be strong!”, “Take courage!” and He tells them to work. Keep going! Persevere! There are two aspects to this kind of perseverance: an attitude and an action. The people had the wrong attitude. They were weak because they had gotten their focus off the Lord and onto the slow, disappointing progress on the temple. Maybe they were thinking, “This will never get done. We’re just wasting our time!” Have you ever noticed how much your attitude affects your ability to persevere? If you’re motivated, you can stay up all night on a project. But if you get discouraged, you procrastinate and never get around to finishing it.

We hear a lot about pastors, leaders and church workers burning out and quitting the work that they formally say God called them to do. Yet in many of those cases,  the cause of their burnout just may be,  because they did not properly manage their schedules and task as they should have, they were micro managers trying to control everything and do everything without utilizing the help that God provided them in fellow church servants that had the spiritual gifts to do the jobs needed for those many task. They had the wrong attitude when faced with discouragement because of setbacks or disappointments. They were unable to deal with the backlash of people who are in the church, that no one could make happy. And sadly, sometimes they simply do not want to surrender to the call after they begin the work because, they find the task cost them more than they are willing to pay.

But can I tell you that sometimes, people just loose heart. They need someone to come alongside them and remind them that their work is paying off even though they can not see the end results and to keep on keeping on. As God’s servants we cannot afford to be emotionally fragile. Someone offends us, we get our feelings hurt and choose to drop out of service instead of handling things the way God’s Word tells us to. Someone doesn’t do what we had expected or the way we would do it, we quit. Someone criticizes what we’re doing, and we say, “Let them do it cause, I’m out of here!”. But God says, “Be strong!” We aren’t to be strong in our own strength, of course, but in God’s strength 2 Cor. 3:5. But, be strong! Have the attitude that hangs in there in spite of obstacles. The real question is not how do we see things, but how does God see things? If we have not factored God into the equation, we don’t see things in the right perspective and it is certain that we will not last. Remember the story of the 12 spies in Num. 14:9, who went into the land of Canaan? Ten of them came back focused on the giants in the land and said, “We’re like grasshoppers in their sight. We can’t conquer them!” But Joshua and Caleb came back and said, paraphrasing, “Because God is with us and He has promised us that land, it will be ours!” Be strong in attitude!

You see your attitude provides your motivation, but motivation without work won’t get the work done. Joshua and Caleb had the right attitude of trust in the Lord. But they still had to go into the land and fight the giants. Much of the Lord’s work requires of us, far more perspiration than inspiration! That is certainly true in my own service to the Lord. Just because we’re gifted in whatever we do for the Lord does not mean that it just flows effortlessly. To persevere we must not only be strong; we also must work and sometimes the work alone is why God’s people give up. Because they have to work to do it! It’s always easier doing what suits us verses doing what is required of us.

God assures us when we are discouraged in serving Him by His presence, His promise, and His prophecy according to 2:4b-9. After telling Zerubbabel, Joshua, and the people to be strong and to work, God adds, ‘“For I am with you,’ says the Lord of hosts.” The Jews may have feared a hostile host against them, but God is the Lord of hosts, the supreme ruler over all the armies of heaven and earth. If the Lord of hosts is with us, who can defeat us? If we’re serving Him, then nothing can happen to us accidentally or without His express permission. The assurance of His presence should lift our discouragement and enable us to press on. After many years of hardship and danger in the heart of Africa, David Livingstone received an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow. On that occasion, he said, “Would you like me to tell you what supported me through all the years of exile among people whose language I could not understand, and whose attitude toward me was always uncertain and often hostile? It was this: ‘Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.’ On those words I staked everything, and they never failed.” God gave us His Promise”  Chapter 2:5 refers to the covenant God made with Israel when they came out of Egypt. He promises them now, as He had then, that His Spirit would go with them and abide in their midst. Therefore, they need not fear. God has made a better covenant with us than He did with them, the New Covenant, enacted on better promises according to Heb. 8:6. Jesus sealed that New Covenant with His own blood. He promised us the indwelling Holy Spirit to be with us forever  in John 14:16. When we grow discouraged in our service for Him, we should remember His promise, that He would not leave us as orphans, but would come to us and that in the meanwhile, He has given us the Holy Spirit to enable us to serve Him. The many prophecies in Scripture are not given for us to speculate about the future, but to strengthen and encourage our faith. When we see how God has worked down through the ages in accordance with what He told His people in advance, it encourages us to keep serving Him, knowing that the remaining unfulfilled prophecies will surely yet be fulfilled.

One of the most remarkable examples of a Christian persevering is Jesus Christ Himself. Yet even He, the Son of God became overwhelmed in the work that He faced as he was headed to the cross, but thank God He did not give up or back down from the task that He was called to do. He simply yielded. He yielded His way to the Father’s way by saying in the garden, “not my will, but yours be done”. That sweet friend is what our response must be when we are facing hardships, hurts and disappointments for lack of encouragement. Instead of giving up, we must learn to get up, encourage ourselves with the truth an don’t give in to hell’s pity party that we are invited to. As God’s people, you can persevere in whatever the Lord has given you to do for His kingdom. Just like the people building the temple in Haggai’s day, I give you these Words from the Lord, allow them to sink deep with you and encourage you to keep on keeping on. The battle is not over but the victory is already won, so let us live like we believe it! You will survive when the fire inside you burns brighter than the fire around you. So, be encouraged today sweet friend, what you are doing in serving the Lord of your life is important, never loose heart! He is coming soon and your reward is with Him!
 
Hold Fast,
Bren


·         Work willingly at whatever you do, as though you were working for the Lord rather than for people. Remember that the Lord will give you an inheritance as your reward, and that the Master you are serving is Christ. -  Colossians 3:23-244

·         God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people and continue to help them. -  Hebrews 6:10

·         Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered. - Proverbs 11:25

·         Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. -  Luke 6:38

·         As each one has received a special gift, employ it in serving one another as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. Whoever speaks, is to do so as one who is speaking the utterances of God; whoever serves is to do so as one who is serving by the strength which God supplies; so that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen. - 1 Peter 4:10-11

·         Be devoted to one another in brotherly love; give preference to one another in honor; not lagging behind in diligence, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord; - Romans 12:10-11

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

WHAT IS IT YOU WANT TODAY?




Anyone whoever did anything worth-while and stuck with it, is considered an Achiever. Jesus, the master teacher Himself gave us the formula in Matthew 24:13 when He said, “But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.” There it is, plain and simple, the pay off, the reward, the achievement, that final accomplishment in some work towards a personal desire. In a recent study from a well know University, a five year survey was done on some of the top 20 performers in this country in various fields, including a wide range of successful athletes, sculptors, mathematicians, physicians, teachers, musicians, actors, scholars and chief executives. This study also included an interview with the families and teachers of these celebrated high achievers to try and find out what the common key in their success was. What they discovered was, that the mere drive and determination, not talent led them to their success. Imagine that! Just some plain old determination that fuels the will power of anyone that strikes out to do a thing and does not turn back! That reminds me of a woman in the Bible, whose faith was rewarded by her determination to have what she longed for, her health! In Mark chapter 5, "If I could just touch His clothes, I would be healed", that is what she told herself, this nameless bleeding woman who had traveled many miles, fueled by nothing but her faith. She had a bold plan. According to the Mosaic Law, a woman who was ceremonially unclean wasn't allowed to touch anyone, let alone the Son of God, yet desperation calls for desperate things. For 12 long years she had had this problem with loosing blood and it was causing her to be physically sick and even socially unacceptable. The Bibles says that the physicians of her time were unable to relieve her suffering. She spent all she had, yet instead of getting better she only grew worse. Most of us would have thrown ourselves in His path, begging Him to help us. Instead our bleeding sister quietly "came up behind Him in the crowd and touched His cloak" Mark 5:27. By law, her touch would have made Him unclean. By grace, just the opposite happened. "Immediately her bleeding stopped" Mark 5:29 says. Without a word, a look, or a touch from Jesus, she was made whole simply by believing He could heal her...and daring to act on that belief. As her faith was rewarded her, she wasn't the only one who noticed. Jesus turned around in the crowd and asked, "Who touched my clothes?" Mark 5:30. At that point she and Jesus both knew that it had happened, her faith had healed her. Wow, how that scripture illustrates how sensitive Jesus is to our needs, that just a touch in faith to His garment will get His attention for us! How her heart must have pounded as she heard Him say, "Who touched me?". When the disciples pointed out to Jesus that there were many in the crowded street and everyone was touching and grabbing Him, Jesus kept looking around to see who it was that had touched Him with that kind of faith! He wasn't looking to accuse but to affirm. The same faith that empowered her to stretch out her hand now, gave her the strength to step forward. She "fell at his feet and trembling with fear, told him the whole truth" Mark 5:33. She risked everything, public humiliation, and maybe even possible punishment for her actions to explain her, confession of faith to Jesus. The true miracle in this story is about the faith she had, not what she did. Her determination was fueled by her faith. Her willingness to believe she could be well again, despite all evidence to the contrary, and do whatever it would take to get it. When she heard about the man Jesus who'd healed many who had various diseases in Mark 1:34, she made a beeline for Capernaum to see Him.  What is it that you want from Jesus today? When was the last time that you longed to touch the hem of His garment because you knew that only He has what you must have to be better, to be whole, to be free; whether it be physically, or spiritually? He will not disappoint you dear friend, but your faith will determine your answer. If you struggle with your faith; simply ask Him to help your weak faith and show you where your answer lies. And do everything in your power to trust and get to Him!

Loving on you today,
Bren

Changing Your Attitude



“Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you”. (I Thess. 5:18). This is one of many, many verses in Scripture that instructs us to give thanks or be thankful. 

God knows that life is hard and dealing with life’s circumstances can deplete us of our energy as well as our kind attitudes, and that is why He gives so much instruction to help guide us through those tenacious times. There is nothing that touches our lives, that He has not already given a prescription to follow to help, in alleviating the pain and stresses that life brings us. 

So, in our trying to maunder though those difficult times, let’s apply some practical lessons to change the way we look and deal with them and see for ourselves, how changing our views on them will change our entire outlook and drive us to a higher level, in living and walking through them. 

One of the reasons that we get so bent out of shape over our circumstances is because, it constitutes a change that may have to take place in us. A choice if you will, and this, can upset us. We get upset because, we do not like what we are confronted with and the answer to alleviate the problem may be, that change in our will or attitude will have to take place. 

You see, change is always connected to complaining; when the change goes against what we want to happen. It conflicts with our feeling of entitlement, for something. When we say things like, "I hate my job”, “I can't stand this house I live in”, “why can't I make more money”, “my spouse doesn't even try” or “I thought they were my friend?", you get the picture! 

Those feelings must be met with change and practice, or you will stay in the rut of discouragement and gloom and doing so, very possibly will pull those around you down as well. We can change a bad attitude by choosing to change it, stretching ourselves to reach for something deeper within us, that is not always laying around on the surface of our expressions and attitudes.

As we do, we reap the benefits of our gratitude. What better time to start freshening up your thankful thinking, than the upcoming, Thanksgiving holidays. As we do, our appreciation stimulates in us a sense of obligation. Not an externally imposed obligation, but a sense of obligation that arises naturally within us as we recognize how we have been supported and cared for and not only how we are should pay it back, but out of obedience to the Word of God. 

Your gratitude can be cultivated through your sincere self-reflection on having a choice. Our deepest sense of gratitude comes simply through grace, with the awareness that we have not earned it, nor do we deserve all that we've been given. 

The Lord gives grace to the humble and He can change us, if we will obey what He ask us to do, through our choices. Choose today, how you will respond to your life’s circumstances. Don’t wait for the trial to come, choose now what your plan will be and how you will respond. Learn to see your situations as God sees them and be very careful not to judge God by your own equations, of how and what you think about your circumstances, but always by what He has to say about them. 

Maybe today sweet Friend you are judging God because of what you think you know about Him and not what is the truth. Never equate the love of God for you, by what is happening in your life. But know this: “And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose”. Romans 8:28.

Hold Fast,
-Bren

Trust Him and Endure

Hebrews 12:2 "...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scornin...