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Grace Will Find You

Most of us know Psalms 23, or as many will say, the 23rd Psalm.  There are six verses in this Psalm.  Verse six says “Surely, goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life; And I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”

Stop and let Grace find you.  That is my message today.

With this Psalm, we are told that for those who choose the Lord as their shepherd, His goodness—His grace—will follow them forever.  God wants believers to have His goodness and grace because He wants others to experience His goodness and grace through us.

Scripture tells us in 2 Chronicles 16:9, “For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is loyal to Him.”

So, the Lord’s eyes look for those whose hearts are loyal to Him.  Because we are willing to make Him our shepherd, we know that goodness and mercy will follow us all the days of our lives.

So, what does it mean that goodness and mercy shall follow us?  I believe most of us think this verse is saying the Lord’s goodness will be on our lives for all our lives.  That is probably a good way to view it.  But if goodness and mercy are in our lives, we must give it to others to bless their lives.

Goodness and mercy are of no use if they are not given.  They must be used towards others.  If goodness and mercy are following us, it means we have stopped long enough to allow it to catch us.  Because it has caught us, we share it wherever we are, in all things we do.  Goodness and mercy will be the indication of where we have gone, no matter where we are at the moment.

I had a conversation like this with a good friend just recently.  We found that when we extend grace towards others, goodness and mercy have followed our presence.  Grace is God’s way of saying, “I will give you what you don’t deserve from Me so that you can give others what they don’t deserve from you.”

Grace teaches us that goodness and mercy are for others and never for ourselves.  Grace teaches us that life is about helping more than being helped.  Grace teaches us that forgiveness cannot be achieved when grace is not given.  Grace teaches us that we cannot be selfish and receive goodness and mercy.

I could go on with this, but here is the simple truth.  God gives us grace because He doesn’t want to punish us for every transgression against Him.  He wants us to give grace because when we withhold grace we act selfishly.  Grace is the way believers and nonbelievers can agree on at least one thing that is the same, and here it is.

So long as we live, we need the restorative healing and power of grace in our lives.  Grace received says we should be thankful and perhaps change our ways.  Grace given says we are thankful and have changed our ways.

So, stop running and let the goodness and mercy of God catch you so you learn the miraculous power of Grace.  And let goodness and mercy follow you into the lives of others, especially into the lives of those who stand between your desire to live selfishly for yourself and selflessly for others.

When goodness and mercy follow you, the grace of God will find you and enrich your life.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Make Me Careful

What is the most important thing that you have?  I am not asking what the most important thing in life to you is.  Instead, I am asking what is the most important thing that you have in life?  When you have considered your answer then I have this question.  Is there anything in life that is more important to you than the most important thing that you have?

How important is your family to you?  How important is your health to you?  How important is your work to you?  How important are relationships to you?  How careful you are with the things you value reveals just how important anything is to you.  

Being careful doesn’t mean what you might think.  Careful means we are full of care about who we are and what we mean to life and in the world around us.

Being careful means living as if we cannot be replaced in the lives of others who hold us important to them.  It means living as if we are the lifeline to a better life for others.  Being careful means knowing that life is less about us and more about someone or something else. 

When we are not careful, we open the door to carelessness.  Carelessness abounds when carefulness is missing.  Being careless simply means we place more importance on our lives than on the lives around us.  When we are careless, we are more concerned about where we walk than we are about where we take others.

One of the reasons we find it difficult to become careful is because we are selfish.  A selfish person is the most important person to that person.  A selfish person is the most important thing to a selfish person.  A selfish person is the most important desire to a selfish person.  A selfish person does not have to be careful; a selfish person simply lives careless of other things.

Knowing that carefulness is important to living our best, we must learn to become careful.  But how do we do this when we don’t know how to get ourselves out of our way?  Psalms 119: 33-40 has this answer, “Teach me, O Lord the way of Your statutes, and I shall keep it to the end.  Give me understanding and I shall keep Your law. Incline my heart to Your testimonies.”

Here scripture is saying that there is something more important in life than ourselves.  It is saying there is something more important in life than the way we are living our lives.  We should not just be concerned to do what we want to do.  We need to be careful about what our lives means to all life.  It is as if the Lord is asking us to ask Him, “Please make me careful about how I live this life.”  

If we did that, He would show us:

  • How to be careful about the things that should be the most important things we have in life outside of a relationship with Him.  We would learn we cannot be at the center of what is important to us.
  • How to be careful about the things that should be the most important things we desire in life outside of what we want from Him.  The desires we have for ourselves should be balanced by the desires we should have for others.
  • How to be careful in those times when we are the most important things in life to people and things outside of ourselves. We learn we may be the center of someone else’s life.

Learning to be careful about life is learning to ponder everything you do and all that you are just in case you are the object of what is important to someone else.

Let this prayer be yours: “Lord, Make Me Careful so that I may please You in all things, and so that I may be the right things for others who pray to You looking for something or someone to be an important part of their lives.  Lord, Make Me Careful to be careful!”

Live a Delivered Life.  Love You.

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I Want to See You

Hi everyone, this this is Allen Forte

My message today is the third of a three-part message taken from chapter 33 of the book of Exodus.

Part 3 is learning to have an “I Want to See You” spirit.  

In the early verses of this chapter of Exodus, Moses made it known that he didn’t want to go anywhere without God going with him.  He also wanted to know God’s ways before going the ways of the people.

Now, Moses was conflicted in one more area.  The people of Israel had lived very difficult lives up to then.  The people had been in Egypt for over 400 years.  All they really knew was bondage, hard work and hard lives.  They had cried out to God for help all those years.  And now here they were, in the middle of a desert.

The people had grown accustomed to seeing more of the Egyptian gods than the God of Abraham, at least in their minds.  The Egyptians created images of their gods.  Their gods seemed to be more present and seemed to work more in their lives.

This made the Israelites wonder about the God of the people of Abraham, a God they had not seen yet.  They had no image of their God.  They had no sense of His presence.  They prayed and cried out to someone they could not know or see.

I have struggled with this myself.  In times past it has been hard for me to see God in the middle of some of the difficult things in life.  Many people are like me.  When our marriages are not working out, we ask, God are You here?  When we lose our jobs we ask, God are You here?  When we are sick unto death we ask, God are You here?

Like the Israelites, we may find it difficult to see the hand of God in the middle of difficult things that do not seem to change.  We say 400 years is a long time—a long time to look for God in the middle of many difficulties and many struggles.

I have learned that God does not have to make our lives hard just so that we can be brought to a place of seeing His hand at work for us.

He does not need to make us look bad in order to clean us up and make us look better.  He does not need to break our marriages in order to make our marriages great.  The Lord is always with us no matter our circumstances.

Moses and the Israelites had to deal with feelings like this.  So, in Exodus 33:17-18, the Lord says this in response to Moses’ prayer request that God would be with them.  Scripture says, “So the Lord said to Moses I will also do this thing that you have spoken; for you have found grace in My sight, and I know you by name.”  

In verse 18 Moses responds by asking the Lord this one last thing.  “And he said, Please, show me Your glory.”  In other words, please let me see You Lord, and it will be sufficient for me.

Moses had seen enough adversity.  He had seen enough challenges.  He had seen many times over and again that the people were seemingly left on their own in their struggles.  Moses knew that if the people of Israel didn’t know how to recognize when God was at work, neither would the people who were their adversaries recognize His work.

Like Moses and the Israelites, sometimes it’s hard for us to see God in the middle of our circumstances, be they good or not so good.  And like Moses we must remain believing and hopeful no matter what we face, no matter how difficult or how long we may be challenged.

Moses was saying if we cannot see Your works in our lives, let us see Your face for our lives.  How will people know You if we Your people cannot recognize Your work?  Please show us Your Glory Lord.

I know it’s hard for people to see the thing in me that I have not myself seen in me.

So, let this mind be in you; that no matter your circumstance, you will be able to see His face upon your life.  Have an “I want to see You” spirit.

Learn to ask that the Lord is seen in you when others look to see the things the Lord does.  Learn to ask that the Lord’s ways are visible in you when others see more of man’s ways around you.

Learn to ask this one thing of the Lord instead of asking for another blessing from the Lord.  “Lord, show me Your glory and that will be sufficient for me to make it another day.  Show me Your glory that by my actions and by the way I live, others will see You and know that You are as You say You are.  No matter if things are hard or easy for me, I want to see You Lord so that others will have an image of You in the things around their lives.”

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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I Want to Meet You

Hi everyone, this this is Allen Forte

My message today is the second of a three-part message taken from chapter 33 of the book of Exodus.

Part 2 is learning to have a “I Want to Know Your Way” spirit.  

Although Moses and the people of Israel knew that God was with them daily, in Exodus 33:8-11 Moses realizes something was still missing about this relationship.  Moses wanted to personalize something among himself, the Israelites, and God.  Moses wanted more than to know what God was saying to them, he wanted to know God’s Ways with them. 

Moses was accustomed to God telling him what to do.  God always provided what the Israelites needed, and He was good to them.  But that wasn’t enough to make it a relationship.  Knowing what God does is great but knowing how He operates makes Him personal.

In verse 12, Moses says to the Lord, “See, You say to me, bring up this people.  But you have not let me know whom You will send with me.  Yet, You have said, I know you by name, and you have also found grace in My sight.  Now therefore, I pray, if I have found grace in Your sight, show me now Your way, that I may know You, and that I may find grace in Your sight.  And remember, this nation is Your people.”

Thank God for Moses.  In a way he was saying we know that you are God, but we are struggling to know you as our God.  We need to meet You so we can know more about You beyond Your commands.  Moses didn’t want to just be aware of God via the internet.  He didn’t just want to be a Facebook friend with God.  He wanted to meet the Person he talked about each day.  He wanted to relate to the Person the people obeyed each day.

Moses’s heart wanted to meet the Lord, but do our hearts today?  Moses wanted to meet God so he could know God’s Ways.  I often find that I don’t want to change my ways, so I am ok with the knowledge I have about God.  But I learned, a knowledge relationship is not the same as a personal relationship with God.

Remember, the people had only been out of Egypt for a short while before they started to behave in ways that displeased the Lord.  We cannot serve well the Person we do not know well.  Moses knew this about the people.  God was angry with them and with their ways, but they didn’t know God well enough to know His Way.

Knowing about the Lord and about His ways is not the same as knowing that you have been changed by His knowledge to His ways.  Knowledge of God by itself will not change our ways to God’s Ways.  Moses knew the people needed to meet God as much as they needed to know that God was with them.

I have learned that I couldn’t really know the Lord and His Way until I learned what it was about me and my way that stood in His Way.  Sadly, I believe there was a time where I was simply happy with giving lip service to trying to obey Him.  Then I learned I couldn’t even obey Who I did not know because I did not know Him or His Way.  I needed a spirit of wanting to know Him.

There is a specific meaning to the word Exodus.  It is more than just an account of the deliverance of the people from bondage. Exodus means this is the Way.  It’s like God says to us “Follow Me, I am the Way for you.” It means this Way should be your way.

Like Moses did for himself and the people, I came to understand that I needed to meet Him so that I could get to know Him and His Way personally.  My ways stood between me and God’s.  Even as I tried to obey Him and His Way, I failed often because I made knowing and obeying Him a series of events more than it is a Way of Life. 

I suspect many people are this way, and they don’t even know it.  God is not looking for us to have a Sunday morning event of worship and obedience with Him.  He is looking for someone who will cry out as Moses did and say, “I want to meet You so that I can know You and Your Way.”

It is in meeting Him and learning His Way that we can recognize and know who it is about us that stands in the way of who it is that God wants us to be.

Let this be your prayer cry today, “Lord, show me Your Way, that I may know You; I want to personally meet the Person I have been trying to obey.”  Then you will find grace in His sight.  He will come to know you by name because of your cry to meet Him in person.

Knowing God is not a series of events.  He is not looking for you to simply keep from eating from the tree of life.  He is looking for you to live your life the Way He wants all life to be lived.  Knowing Him is life.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Not Without You

My message today is the first of a three-part message taken from chapter 33 of the book of Exodus.

Part 1 is learning to have a “Not Without You” spirit.  

Often, I think about times I would like the Lord to speak directly and clearly to me like He did many time to people in the Bible.  For example, God spoke to Abraham to tell him to go.  God spoke to Jacob to tell him to return to his home. Then the Lord spoke to Paul to tell him to stop and then to go.  By their actions each of these three men said to the Lord, “I will go, but not without You.”

Now, I often wish for those times.  I wish He would simply speak plainly to me and say what He wants to say.  But then I wonder, do I really want that?  I ask myself, “Do I really want what the Lord wants of me, or do I want the Lord to want what I want for myself?”

Here is what I have concluded.  I don’t want a life that is without Him in any way, so I say to Him, “Not Without You, Lord.”  I want to live in no way and in no place without Him.  I want a “Not Without You” spirit.  For me, I believe it is the only way I can overcome powerful desires I have to live for me rather than to allow Him to live within and through me.

In Exodus 33, the Israelites had been in the desert only a few months after being delivered from Egypt.  God had been with them daily in the form of a cloud by day and a fire by night.  But the people were hard-headed.  They had already fallen into worshiping idols, quickly building a golden calf to worship while they waited for Moses to return from Mt Sinai.

They were out of Egypt, but they did not leave their old ways of Egypt behind.  They had God in their presence daily, but they did not allow Him to be present in their lives. God saw that it wasn’t good for them to stay where they were.  So, He commanded the Israelites to leave Mt Sinai and go to the promised land.

In verses 1-3 scripture says God told Moses to “Go up to the land flowing with milk and honey; for I will not go up in your midst, lest I consume you on the way, for you are a stiff-necked people.”  Stiff-necked means you are unwilling to turn from the direction you are heading.  Instead of a “Not Without You” spirit, the people had a “just as I am” spirit.

If we are going to remain just as we are, the Lord may well just leave us just where we are.  This is the reason I wonder sometimes if I really want to hear Him or if I just want Him to hear me.  I’m stubborn and stiff-necked in my ways.  But God is loving.  And even though they were stubborn, He was going to send an angel before them in His stead.  The angel would fight and clear the way for them so they could take the promised land.

It’s important for us to understand, we cannot have a “Not Without You” spirit about what God asks us to do when we want to stay just where we are with a “just as I am” spirit.

It is very difficult for us to hear Him clearly when we listen more to ourselves for what we want for ourselves.

It is very difficult for us to feel His presence with us when we live more to be present in the things around us.

It is very difficult for us to change our direction to His path when we believe more of our lives should be lived on the paths we have chosen.

I could go on, but I hope that you see that it is very difficult for us to want His best for us when we really want Him to want what we believe is best for us.

The Israelites indeed feared going forward without God’s presence, but more than that, they feared leaving behind the things they knew best.  We cannot have a “Not Without You” spirit when we know the things of the world better than we know the God who made the world.

The way to get more of what the world has to offer is to give up more of what the world is offering you now.

The way to have more of what God wants to give you is to give up more of what God wants you to leave behind.

When you have a “Not Without You” spirit, you can have a Godly marriage more than a worldly marriage; you can have Godly children more than worldly children; you can have a Godly job and Godly work more than those that are worldly.

If you strip yourselves of all your desires for what the world has, if you strip yourselves of all the things that you want for you, then you will be able to say with confidence, “Lord, Not Without You” will I want for anything.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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The Treasure He Wants

This was a difficult message for me to receive and understand.  I have often wondered why sometimes the Lord seems silent instead of responding to my prayers.  He doesn’t always move my circumstances the way I ask.  I have wondered why it is that some of us struggle with things that don’t change.  I just didn’t understand.

Why do some of us become sick, while others do not?  Why do some of us have what we need, and others do not?  Most of all, why it is that the right thing seems to happen to the wrong people, and the wrong thing happens for the right person?

Why didn’t someone stop Russia from invading and killing the people of Ukraine and destroying their country?  How should we feel about that?  What should we do?  Things like these make no sense to me.  But then I learned that the very thing I want from God my situations, He wants from me.  Here is what I mean.

There is a parable in Luke 12:32-33 of a rich man who asked Jesus to tell his brother to divide their inheritance.  Now that seems fair and right to me.  If your parents leave an inheritance, it seems right to me that the siblings who remain should divide the inheritance.

In my view the man wasn’t asking Jesus to do something wrong.  It seems like a fair request.  Tell my brother to do right.  But Jesus responded to the man by saying man, who made Me a judge or an arbitrator over you?  That’s all He said.  He didn’t doanything.  So, I wondered, why did Jesus not make the brother do what was right?

Then in verses 29-33, I found the answer.  Jesus will never make you or me or anyone else do anything against what we want to do.  He says this to the people who heard how He responded to this man, “Do not seek what you should eat or drink, nor have an anxious mind.  But seek the kingdom of God, and all these things will be added to you.”

Here is what made this so difficult for me to understand.  I have often wanted the Lord to make others do right.  I have wanted Him to change the hearts of others.  And especially in close relationships, I have wanted Him to step in and to make people do right by other people.  But it seems like He doesn’t hear me.

But He does hear.  And He responds to me by helping me to see something important.  While I cannot make God move the way I want, I can be to Him the treasure that He wants.   When I want Him to move on something I love, He wants me to move my love to Him even more.

When I wanted Him to make my brother do right by me, He wanted me to store up the treasure of doing right by others before Him.  When I wanted Him to heal someone from a sickness, He wanted me to store up with Him my reliance on Him for my health and the health of others.

Each time I want Him to right an injustice against me or make someone else do right, I must instead store up with Him the treasure of my own desires to do right by others and do the right things for others.

The Lord may not change the ways of others directly before you.  But because He treasures your ways before others, it is His good pleasure to give you the treasures of the Kingdom.  He may never change our circumstances, but He will give you enough kingdom treasures to make you learn to live through your circumstance until what is against you changes.

Learn to be the treasure He will store up for Himself in heaven.  Adversity can’t live there with you and Him.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Listen Up!

The book of Numbers tells the story of the prophet Balaam riding on his donkey to go to visit some men God specifically told him not to visit.  Along the way, the donkey encounters an angel of God standing in the path ahead with a sword drawn, ready to kill Balaam.

The donkey tries three times to get Balaam to change his course, but Balaam would not change.  When the donkey stopped, Balaam would strike the animal trying to keep him moving.  Finally, God allowed the donkey to speak to Balaam, who then realized there was an angel ahead who would have killed him.

Sometimes, we are so fixed on doing what we want to do that we do not hear the Lord when He tells us what He wants us to do.  The Lord cries out to us, “Now listen up!  Hear what I’m trying to say to you.”  But we do not listen, nor do we hear, because our hearts are set on what we want.

Now hear this!  This is the Lord’s exclamation to introduce something or to make an announcement instructing us what He wants us to do.  Often, we miss His instruction because we are tuned to our own channels.  We hear only what we say to ourselves.  We don’t have the sense to hear what is going on around us or ahead of us because we are set only to hear what is in us.  We lack the discretion to hear what we should fear.

Proverbs 2:10-12 tells us this about who we should listen to.  It says, “When wisdom enters your heart, and knowledge is pleasant to your soul, discretion will preserve you; understanding will keep you, to deliver you from the way of evil.”  How then do we get this sense of discretion and understanding?

Well, we must remember that if God tells us to do something specifically, we must not disregard it.  Jonah spent a few days in the belly of a large fish because he tried to disregard what God told him to do.  We must learn to listen up in all our circumstances.  God doesn’t just come to speak to us when things are tough; He doesn’t just come to speak to us when we are in the deepest and darkest times of life.

God wants to speak to us when things are going well for us.

You can know if you are not listening up when you find yourself kicking against a goad.  A goad is a pointed object the farmers of old would use to prod their livestock to get them to go in a particular direction.  The goad was used to train the behavior of an animal to do what the master wanted.  The animal didn’t want to be pricked by the pointed end of the goad.

In Acts 26, Paul recounts his conversion story.  When his name was still Saul, he was on his way to Damascus to persecute followers of Jesus.  As he approached the city, he was stunned by a bright light and a voice saying “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me? It is hard for you to kick against the goads.”

It was Jesus, and He was telling Saul, “Now Listen Up!  You are fighting for what I want you to fight against!  You are pursuing what I don’t want you to catch.  You are missing what I want you to catch because you are not listening for My voice in your life.”

I know that in my life when things have been tough, I looked for the Lord to show up in my circumstance only to find that He wanted to show up in my response to my circumstance.  When things were great, I thanked and blessed the Lord only to find that I should have thanked Him and blessed Him in every circumstance.

I needed to learn to shut my mouth and to listen up for Him in every way and in everything so that I could learn to hear Him when He was ready to speak to me.  Don’t wait till your circumstances scream at you to talk to Him.  Learn to listen up for Him in everything.  Then you will have discretion and understanding to guide you before you need to be goaded to change your course.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Don’t Rush

Sometimes I find that my impatience is a worse enemy than anyone else could be to me.  I’m pretty sure this may be the case with many of us.  We are too impatient to wait on the Lord for His help.  Often, we will pray and then we act, or we act and then we pray.  Either way, we get ahead of the Lord.  We may be answering our own prayers ourselves.

We saw this behavior clearly with King Saul.  He was the first king of the Israelites.  Scripture tells us that when he was anointed king, the Prophet Samuel told him to go to Gilgal and wait for Samuel to meet him there seven days later.  Samuel was coming so that he could offer up sacrifices to God for anointing Saul king.

But Saul was impatient.  In his hast to act as a king, he started a war with the Philistines.  And because the Israelites were greatly outnumbered by the Philistines, the people were afraid.  So, on the seventh day, when Samuel had not arrived yet, Saul decided to offer up the sacrifices himself.  He was impatient because he was hasty.

1 Samuel 13:8-12 says, “Then he (Saul) waited seven days, according to the time set by Samuel but Samuel did not come to Gilgal.  So, Saul offered the burnt offering.  Now it happened as soon as he had finishing presenting the burnt offering, Samuel came.  And Samuel said to him, you have done foolishly.”  Because we are impatient, we rush, we get ahead, and we get it wrong.

Saul rushed to fix things.  He saw how big of a problem he had before him in the Philistines, so he took matters into his own hands.  He felt compelled to offer up the offering so he could get on with fighting the Philistines.  Saul saw his circumstances through the eyes of his fears.  The Lord wants us to learn to see our circumstances through the eyes of our faith.

It doesn’t matter what we face, the Lord is always there to face things with us.  Psalm 37:1 tells us, “Do not fret because of evildoers, nor be envious of the workers of iniquity.  For they shall soon be cut down like the grass.”

It doesn’t matter what we are up against nor what we face.  If we wait patiently and do not rush the Lord, He will soon come up against our circumstances.  Abraham and Sarah waited 25 years for Isaac to be born from the time God told them they would have a son.  Eventually God’s timing came to their circumstance.

If we do not learn to wait for God’s timing in our lives, we will for sure fail to have the blessing of His work in our lives.  We cannot rush God’s work into our lives.  We can only wait for God’s work to come to our lives.  Yes, I said we must wait for His work to come to our lives.  If we fret or are fearful, we will rush to act on our fears.

But when we are patient and wait on the Lord, we act through our faith.  Our faith is the surest way to bring God into our circumstances.  So, today I’m asking you – Don’t rush.  No matter your circumstances, rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him.  Don’t rush because of the things you see going on with you and around you.

Don’t be angry.  Don’t retaliate against others.  Don’t rush; it only causes you harm in the end and it is never good.  Don’t rush; let this be the cry of your faith before the Lord.  Learn to be meek in all your circumstances for then you will be filled with an abundance of peace, no matter what you face.  Peace overcomes fear and anxiety.

God will never forsake the righteous person who has learned to wait patiently on the Lord.  When you rush, you act foolishly.  But when you are patient, you respond wisely your circumstances, knowing the Lord is preparing a way for you.  Don’t rush to answer your own prayers.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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I Can Work with That

In the book of Mark, we find the account of Jesus feeding over four thousand people.  He had been teaching the people in a remote desert area.  At one point Jesus tells the disciples that He is concerned that the people had been with Him for three days without anything to eat.  He wanted them to be fed.

Mark 8:5-9 says that in response to His concerns, His disciples asked Him, “‘Where can anyone get enough bread here in this desolate place to fill these people?’  ‘How many loaves do you have?’ He asked them.  ‘Seven,’ they said.  He took the seven loaves, blessed them, and then distributed it to all the people.”

They were saying no one had enough to feed all these people.  He was saying that He could work with what they had if they would just believe.  We should never think about what anyone else can do when it is time for us to be someone.

The disciples could see the overwhelming size of the problem, but they didn’t see themselves as part of the solution.  They saw it through their limits.  They could not imagine how they could deal with this problem. 

Jesus may ask us to do a lot, but that doesn’t mean He leaves us to do it all alone.  He wants us to be someone He can use in His work in the lives of others.  He is not looking for anyone.  He is looking for you to be someone He can use.  Your part is to be ready when He asks.  He can work with that.

The disciples saw a big problem because they saw they had little means.  They determined they could not help because they did not have enough to do what was needed.  Jesus never asks us simply for our help; He asks if we will participate.  He can work with that.

We should not size up our problems based on the size of the Goliath we face.  Instead, we should compare our problems to the size of the faith we have in the fight with our Goliaths.

The disciples had to learn that Jesus could work with anything they had to make provisions beyond what their eyes could see.  He asked how many loaves they had because He wanted His disciples to know that with Him, four thousand people could eat from the same loaf and be filled.  Our part in life is to bring the loaf when it is our means to do so.  He can work with that.

I once worked for a very senior leader in the Pentagon.  He would always ask me if I had done my best in the work I did for him.  I typically responded yes.  Then he would tell me, “Then I can work with that.”  I did my part, and it was enough for him.

What he was saying is this.  He could take my best effort and together we could make it better. Our part is always to be willing to do what we can do with what we have and let the Lord do more.  He can do miracles with that when we are willing to do our part providing a little hope.

Jesus is always asking us how many loaves we have.  When we see a great need before us in the lives of others, let’s make sure we don’t try to serve that need from what we don’t have.  Our part is to give the Lord what we have and allow Him to do with that what we cannot do on our own.

He can work with that if you will be someone who will give Him all you are to work with.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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How To Be Happy

When I look around today and see all that is before me, I wonder why people seem so unhappy.  Why aren’t we happy?

Disney used to have a clear and simple vision statement—“Make People Happy.”  They did this by creating environments and objects that cause people to find a moment of fun, to enjoy life for a short time.  Disney allowed people to experience a time when they could be removed from the day-to-day stuff and just have some fun.  But having fun isn’t the same as being happy.

There is a time and a place for having fun, but fun will come and go.  You can visit Disney, but you cannot live at Disney.  Eventually you will have to go back to your life at home.  To be happy is to learn to live life in a way that brings you contentment in any circumstance of life.  Fun can visit, but Happiness wants to come and stay.

Being happy is not an emotion; it is a state of being.  If it takes things like a cake and candles and a surprise visit to the place you’ve always wanted to visit, and fun wishes from all the people who know and love you for you to have a happy birthday, there is a great chance you will never have a happy birthday.

Riding a roller coaster is not a fun thing to me, though you may love it.  Being a happy person is what makes for a happy birthday.  Being a happy person is what makes the cake special.  Being a happy person is what makes fun things fun.

So, what is happy?

Happiness is being content with your life no matter where your life is now.  Being happy is keeping your wants from determining if you are happy.  Being happy is to define your circumstances with your life rather than to let your life be determined by your circumstances.

God speaks to us about being happy.  In 2 Chronicles 9, the Queen of Sheba pays a visit to King Solomon.  She had heard of his wisdom and fame, so she came to see for herself if all that she heard was true.  When she had seen all that Solomon had accomplished, she said, “Happy are these your servants, who stand before you continually to hear your wisdom.” (2 Chronicles 9:7)

So, what did she see in these people to describe them as happy?  They didn’t have roller coasters to thrill them.  They didn’t have movies to entertain them.  They had work and lots of it, yet she saw that they were happy.  What should we look for in ourselves and others to know if we are happy?

Well, we will see people who are satisfied with what they have more than they are discontent with not having what they want.  What’s more,

  • we will see people satisfied with what they get to do more than they are discontent with what they must do;
  • we will see people pleased that they know someone more than they want others to know them;
  • we will see people who live through what lives in others;
  • we will see people who find being a friend is more important than having friends;
  • we will find people better at controlling themselves than they are at controlling others;
  • we will find people who find possibilities for good more than they find fault; and
  • we will find people living a great day in the middle of what others would find to be a bad day.

The kid’s nursery rhyme says, “If you are happy and you know it, clap your hands.”  God’s spiritual rhyme might say this, “Happy is the life that needs nothing but to stand before and to live daily and continually before the Love of God hearing the wisdom of His plan for how we ought to live.”

If you are happy and you know it, your life will really show it.  If you are happy and you know it, just say Amen.

Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.