Monday, March 13, 2006

Matthew Chapter 7: 7-8

Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened."

 

 

My best friend has been battling a very rare form of cancer for years now. I have been asking God to help her almost daily for what seems like an eternity. I have many friends who pray for her too, not to mention her family. Just 2 days ago she called me with the first good news she has received in years. Her tumors are shrinking and she has no new ones. She isn't cured, she still has plenty of treatments and experimental procedures to undergo, but she sounded like she had a new lease on life.

 

I truly believe that the constant petitioning of God has made a difference in my friend's health. I also know that her faith in God has kept her positive when one wouldn't expect her to be. But it wasn't an easy route for her. She was treated unsuccessfully in Pittsburgh. When she couldn't get help here she knocked on door after door until she found her way to a place that could help her. Through her determination and faith she has sought and found. And I know that God hears my constant and unending prayers and answers them.

 

Living through this illness with my friend has made me closer to God. He is the One I find myself turning to every day, when there is no one else to turn to when medicine doesn't work. I am so grateful that I feel free to knock on the door. I know it will be opened for me.

 

Dear God, help me to find the time to stop daily and reflect on your endless love for me.

 

Lois Cook

 


Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Matthew 14:23

And after he had dismissed the crowds, he went up in to the hills by himself to pray.

 

I was assigned this one sentence for the devotional. When I volunteered to write a devotional, I said, “Give me a passage at random, because “I like serendipity.” Sure enough, it may be that this verse is one that I needed to spend some time contemplating.

 

I confess that I have lots of trouble getting away quietly by myself to do anything. There is so much need in the world, and I have been blessed with resources. I am not plagued with serious illness or financial insecurity. I live in a free and prosperous country. I have had a loving family, who have encouraged me to use my gifts. Whenever I am not engaged in doing something for someone else, especially for those who have not enjoyed all those blessings, I feel as though those blessings have been wasted on me. So, I tend to be “doing” something all the time (or feeling guilty if I am not). Even my admittedly too rare devotional time tends toward the manic. I am more comfortable reading a theological tome than spending time in contemplation or prayer.

 

Thinking and worrying about what God wants me to do and whether I am doing it, and about what is honest and just and loving, are on my mind a lot. But quiet prayer and peaceful openness to God and the Holy Spirit are hard for me. My prayers, when they are the most fervent, consist mostly of begging for insight and forgiveness for not having done enough. At worst, my prayers are of the formulaic “thank you for this” and “thank for that” and “God bless us every one” type. I could use more of being still and quiet, away from the crowds and concern for the crowds, just absorbing the powerful love of God. I suspect that most of us could use more of that.

 

This passage from the Gospel according to Matthew falls between two powerful miracle stories. Just before verse 23, Jesus has heard of the murder of John the Baptist and “withdrew from there in a boat to a lonely place apart.” But “the crowds” hunted him down and came from the towns all around to seek him out. He didn’t say, “Go away, I’m grieving, I’m trying to rest and get reconnected to God.” He preached, and he somehow fed 5,000 with five loaves and two fishes. Then he told his disciples to get a head start in their boats for the other side of the lake while he bid farewell to the crowds. But, again, before he set off to rejoin his disciples, “he went up in to the hills by himself to pray.” When he set off to join his disciples, he saw that they had sailed a good way off, and he went walking to them on the water. But it was not long before he was called upon again, by a fearful and panicky, emotional volatile Peter, who tried to walk across the water to meet him but started to sink and then begged for Jesus to save him.

 

Jesus’ compassion interfered with his restful contemplation. But between his miraculous acts of compassion, he sought alone-time with God, fortification for the tasks at hand. Even he who was “one with the Father,” took time in a lonely place apart to pray. How can we survive without doing likewise?

 

Prayer: Lord, I am still, and I want to know that you are God. Flood me with your love and compassion, and let that love and compassion overflow from me to others. Amen.

 

Peggy Hooker


 

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Psalm 5:3

In the morning you hear my voice; At dawn I will make ready and watch for you

 

I am sure that I was led to this scripture because of the word “morning.” At the time the Sunday School Children were learning a song called “Woke Up This Morning.” This African American Spiritual says “I woke up this morning with my mind and it was stayed on Jesus.” The second and third verses say “Can’t hate your neighbor with your mind if you keep it stayed on Jesus” and ”Makes you love everybody with your mind when you keep it stayed on Jesus”.

 

I wonder about all the different ways during my lifetime that I have awakened and greeted a new day- with delight when I sense the sun peeking in through the windows, with awe when I sense the silence of a heavy snowfall, with excitement when anticipating a visit with children and grandchildren, with reluctance when the night has been too short for proper rest, with apprehension when a health concern continues to walk along my path, with unrestrained joy when as a child I awoke to another summer day. There are as many ways to greet the new day as there are seasons of our lives.

 

But have I ever considered the discipline of awaking each day with “my mind stayed on Jesus”? To tell the truth, even in retirement, as soon as my mind leaves sleep behind it is filled with what the new day has in store. And even though we often do a morning devotional after breakfast, the canvas of the day has already been painted with a rainbow of joys and concerns.

 

Perhaps the faithful in the Islamic tradition are more able to greet the new day “looking up” because they are called to do so each morning before sunrise and 4 more times throughout the day. When Paul and I made a trip to Israel years ago our first morning in Tiberias began with the call to prayer coming from a nearby mosque- it was early dawn and the voice of the muezzin told us we were in a new land. I have never forgotten being awakened to an unfamiliar sound calling all to lift their hearts, minds and voices to God/Allah.

 

Let me hear a call to prayer, Lord, before my mind is filled with the day to come and the concerns of my life. Let me wake up this morning with my mind stayed on Jesus. Keep my heart, mind, and voice watching, waiting, and looking for You.

Amen                                                

 

Carolynn Schrading

 

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Psalm 69: 30-33

I will praise God’s name in song will glorify him with thanksgiving. This will please the Lord more than an ox, more than a bull with its horns and hoofs. The poor will see and be glad; you who seek God, may your hearts live. The Lord hears the needy and does not despise his captive people.

 

 

Psalm 69 is a lament, the most frequent type of psalm. It is a cry to God for help, justice, and/or mercy for those in exile. The psalmist in verse 29 is pleading with God: I am in pain and distress; may your salvation, O God, protect me.

 

The psalmist promises that he will praise God when he is rescued from his affliction. Like the psalmist we praise God when we are lifted from pain and despair. But is it heartfelt praise? The psalmist says that God would be more receptive if our thanksgiving was more deeply felt, not just a formulaic religious offering (an ox or bull).

 

The exiles, poor and needy (us) are reminded of the love of God as exhibited in the saving of the psalmist from all of his trouble and pain. God’s grace is available to all regardless of our situation.

 

The psalms are more than wonderful literature and poetry; they are instructive for us daily.  They describe our human condition with all its warts, but the good news is that God’s love is with us always. We are God’s creation, we won’t be abandoned.

 

So let us praise and thank God everyday with song and thanksgiving. God dwells in us all regardless of what we were, what we are, and what we will become. That is the meaning of grace.

 

Thanks be to God,

 

Lynne and Don Cameron

 



Friday, March 17, 2006

James 5:14-15

Is any sick among you? Let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord: and the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him.

 

I love the portrayal of the community of faith in the passage above. It illustrates the role of the individual who requests assistance as well as that of the church, which rallies around its stricken member and petitions God on his behalf. For those of us who have difficulty accepting help, it provides a lesson in the blessings of receiving as well as those of giving.

 

Many years ago, I took care of Mrs. B., a vibrant elderly woman who suffered a late—and very aggressive—recurrence of cancer. Despite the fact that she required enormous doses of morphine to control her pain, she remained in her own home with hospice care. She was unfailingly optimistic whenever we spoke on the phone, declaring to me that she was going to overcome her disease despite the odds. Although knowing that this was impossible, I could only marvel at her courage.

 

On the other hand, Nancy, her nurse, seemed more dispirited and exhausted every time we talked. She had mentioned that she had three young children and that her husband was out of work, and I attributed her fatigue to the burdens of her family life.

 

Shortly after Mrs. B. passed away, I discovered that Nancy had been driving to her home at three a.m. every night for the prior two weeks in response to our patient’s frantic phone calls. She would sit and comfort her for several hours and then return to her own home to ready her children for school, after which her arduous work day would begin. When I expressed my appreciation for the excellent care she had given my patient, as well as my awe at her devotion to her, Nancy looked at me as if I had complimented her on having a matched set of ears. “She got frightened at night,” she said simply.

 

Lord, thank you for those we care for, and for those who care for us. Help us learn that our dependence upon You and upon one another is our greatest strength. Amen.

 

Helen Thornton


 
Saturday, March 18, 2006

Luke 9: 28-29

... [H]e took Peter, John, and James and went up a mountain to pray. And while he was praying the appearance of his face changed and his clothes became dazzling white.

 

As I read these verses, I envision a glorious day: serene, warm calm breeze, green leaves barely rustling, lush hillside, sunshine, a curious gentle animal or two observing the three men. Jesus is on his knees, gazing up into the heavens, hands raised in prayer, silently praying, becoming inspired. Moments later his countenance changed: he appeared to be brighter, more beautiful, more energetic, more powerful. What a magnificent scene! Jesus’ prayers were answered.

 

Occasionally we have the opportunity to pray the way Jesus did, perhaps when on a much earned vacation or on a holiday, when we can escape from our hectic schedules. We become refreshed after our conversations with God.

 

How else may one have conversations with God? Why not every moment of every day? Imagine a typical day in your life. What is the first thing you think of when you wake up in the morning? Is it work? Is it plans for the day? Is it God? Perhaps your first thoughts are, “What a glorious day, thank you very much, Lord!” Then what, rush around and get ready for work or appointments? What are you thinking then? Who would be a better listener than God to discuss (silently or aloud) the potential issues of the day. Sometimes the answers to problems come quickly and freely. Sometimes it is a struggle and takes many conversations over a course of many days, weeks, months, before the resolutions become clear. But, just as if you are running concepts past friends or colleagues, talking out the issues with God may make the challenges a little less challenging. Have breakfast with God. Talk to him instead of watching television. Pray in the car on the way to work. Turn on soft music on the radio and meditate with God instead of calling clients on the cell phone while driving. Share a coffee break with God. Instead of participating in idle gossip, why not find a quiet place, perhaps by a window or outdoors, and refresh yourself in prayer. It settles the nerves. Try going out to lunch with God. Take a walk or ride to a favorite spot and thank God for the brilliant autumn leaves, or the geese landing on the lake, or the quiet snow fall, or the trees bursting with blossoms. Then the afternoon, with all the pressures of getting things done prior to the close of business; stop, breathe, pray. Maybe your colleagues will notice a difference in you. They may see a brighter, more beautiful, more energetic, more powerful you!

 

Go home. Sit in front of the fireplace with God (after you cook dinner and put the kids to bed). Tell him about your day. Your face and entire being will transform in the firelight. Maybe then you will be able to sleep a more peaceful sleep.

 

My precious Lord, help me always to remember that you are here with me, everywhere I go, in everything I do. You are the constant listener, the constant answerer, the constant companion, the constant provider. What I think I want may not be what is the best for me. You know. You are the one from whom I should be seeking advice. Let me soak in all you have to offer. Transform me into a better person, however that translates for me, in my own life. When I look in the mirror I will like what I see. When my friends and colleagues look at me they will see a new me. A transformed me. Praise you for your inspiration.

Amen.

 

Barbara Hamilton



Sunday, March 19, 2006

A Prayer

Sustainer God,

 

As we travel the Lenten journey

collectively and individually,

 

we ask that you keep us ever mindful of the steps taken by our Savior Jesus

during the 1st journey so many years ago.

 

Many of us face our own wildernesses of brokenness, sickness, and loneliness

and our own deserts of temptation, pride, and sinfulness today

just as Jesus had done long ago.

 

Some of us feel a bloody crown of thorns around our hearts, Lord,

as we see the poverty of violence and despair in the world today.

 

We watch as the rich appear to cast lots for the meager robes of the poor.

 

Help us Almighty God, to remember in these dark times,

the Salvation that comes to us on Easter.

 

Reassure us that we too are wrapped in the rays of the Glorious Easter Sonrise.

 

Lisa Lockwood