Witness

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Secret Place

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

            Have you ever hidden away in a secret place – a quiet, solitary place away from the world and all of its complications?

            As a teenager, when I struggled with problems or relationships, I used to ride my bike out to my secret place and spend hours there.  It was near the Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge, where (except for the occasional turtle) only the leaves on the trees and the tall grass stirred, blown by the wind.  It was a place where I felt free, a place where I could clear my head and think my private thoughts, a place where I could search my heart and sort out my feelings.

            It was the place where I could find myself again.

            What I liked best about this place was that, though I was undeniably of the world, there in my secret place I could imagine (at least for a little while) that I was not in the world anymore.  There in my secret place I felt apart from everything in the world that had hurt and confused me.

            It wasn’t until a little later in life, when I came to know Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior, that all of this turned around.

            No, Jesus hasn’t taken away everything in the world that hurts and confuses me.  In fact, He has called me to be at work here in this world, in all of its complications, loving those who hurt me, seeking His guidance in all of my problems.  He has called me to be at work spreading the Good News of Salvation which comes through Him and which is available to everyone in the world!

            The difference now is that I am no longer of this world.

            That’s because He has freed me from it, from the sin and death that are at the root of all worldly complications.  Now I truly am set apart from the world, set apart for Him – set apart in Him.   

            He calls me to repentance.  He calls me forgiven.   He calls me a child of God.  He calls me holy – set apart!

            He sees me that way.  I only need to look to Jesus to remember who I am, to find myself again.  Now, when life in this world gets complicated, I run to Jesus!  He is my ‘secret place’, the One that I want to tell all the world about – the One that I want so much to tell you about, so that you can be there with Him too.

Work In Progress

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

Christ Is Risen!

            He lives!  He loves us eternally!  He gives us eternal life!

            “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” (John 3:16)

            God loves us!  He wants us to come to Him, just as we are.  He wants to be at work in our lives.

            I know that my loving redeemer lives because He is at work in me.  He is at work in me every day, in every moment of the day.  He is at work in me here and now!

            Patiently He works things out of me and works things into me. 

            One thing that The Lord is working out of me right now is fear.  It’s going to take some time!  But that’s o.k. because He holds eternity in His hands.

            Trust is what The Lord is working into me right now – trust in His goodness, in His Presence with me, and in His promises.  God has the power to do this good work in me!

            Praise Him!

            I am a work in progress.  Are you?  Have you come to The Lord, to know Him and to know that He loves you?   (I’m praying that you have, or that you will!)  Do you know that He is alive and wants to be at work in your life?

            How is He at work in your life right now?

Detour

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

            Life doesn’t let up just because it’s Lent.  There are still appointments to keep, work to be done, and distractions all around.  Finding time to focus in on The Gospel message is hard.

            It’s always been hard.  It will continue to be, here on earth. 

            I remember one year when this was especially true for my family.  In 2006, at 5 and 7 years of age, my daughters were becoming more conscious of the world outside of our home and church.  The “Easter” bunnies were out in full-force that year at the mall, on school worksheets and in friends’ toy boxes.  It’s only a problem, I think, when it begins to overshadow the real meaning of Easter in kids’ minds and hearts, which is just what began to happen with my daughters.  Their lives were getting busier, and God wasn’t always fitting in.

            To make matters worse, we were traveling that year.  Leaving on Maundy Thursday for Virginia, and returning the Monday after Easter, we would miss church at a time when we really needed to be there.

            I remember praying for my family often that Lent, asking God to help me keep our lives focused on Him.  I also remember overwhelming my daughters with Easter message ‘reminders’, to the point where they began to resent it.  Somehow I had got it in my head that I was the one responsible for making sure they didn’t miss the point.

            My life had become busier too, you see, and somehow, in the midst of it all, I had forgotten how amazing and wonderful our Lord is.

            While in Virginia, we were driving back from a day trip in Richmond when my husband lost his way.  I remember thinking it odd, because he never loses his way.  We ended up taking a very long detour, and passed a Lutheran church.  Noting the service times, we decided to return the next day, Easter Sunday, for worship.

            Something ‘magical’ happened at that service.  Maybe it was the recognition of familiar liturgies and prayers in a different setting that heightened our awareness of them.  The service, the sanctuary and the people were all different and yet somehow familiar too.    But there was something more.  My family and I sat in the pew attentively, as the Pastor spoke about (of all things) the busyness of life and holding on to our faith.

            My older daughter, Sarah, mustered up the courage to come forward for the children’s chat, where the pastor handed each of them a plastic egg to open.  Much to the kids’ surprise, all of the eggs were empty.  This was just like at the tomb on Easter morning, Pastor explained.

            Back at home the next day, after unloading our luggage, Sarah sifted through the clothes, toys, and memorabilia from our trip to find that plastic egg, and with a permanent marker wrote on it, “The Tomb was Empty!”  Praise God, she got it!!  The message I’d tried so hard to get across to her, she got it!

            At that moment I ‘got’ it too.  Jesus Christ is alive, and at work in our lives.   He will continue to be, here on earth.  He will always get His message across.   He will always sift through the busyness of our lives, pull out what is important and bring it to our attention, if we will only come to Him.

            Sometimes, all it takes is a detour.