May 302011

Submitted by: Muriel Gregory

Self proclaimed prophet Harold Camping predicted that the rapture would happen on May 21, 2011. As I am writing this May 21st has come and gone and I am still here and since you are reading this you are still here too. The rapture did not happen or else we have done something terribly wrong. [insert smile] In Old Testament times, a prophet who made a false prophecy would be stoned to death. Given that option, I feel confident saying that most would pray and research scripture more before prophesying to the people.

So what went wrong with Harold Camping? Many things went wrong. First and foremost Jesus told us that we would not know the time or the hour of his second coming (Matthew 24:42). Second, he probably relied on his own understanding of the times (earthquakes, wars, tornadoes, etc…). The Bible is very clear on that and even warns us about it. Proverbs 3:5-6 says:

“Trust in the LORD with all your heart

and lean not on your own understanding;

in all your ways submit to him,

and he will make your paths straight.”

This verse has given me peace at times when I had no peace and calmed my anxious thoughts. We do not know much and rarely understand what is going on around us but this much we know, trust in God and submit to Him and He will make your path straight. I do not know about you, but I do not need to know the hour of His coming as long as I know that He loves me so.

Submitted by Kathy Walls

Her children arise and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her: Many women do noble things, but you surpass them all. Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting: but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised.  (Proverbs 31:28-30 NIV)

Abraham Lincoln once said “No one is poor who has had a godly mother.”

While Jesus was at Tyre and Sidon, a Canaanite woman cried out to Him saying “Have mercy on me, Lord, Son of David, my daughter is suffering terribly from demon-possession.” The woman knelt before Him and said, “Lord, help me!” Because of her great faith, her request was granted and her daughter was healed from that very hour. (Matthew 15:21-28)

The widow at Zarephath was obedient to God and provided a room and food for Elijah even when she was sure she didn’t have enough to feed herself and her son.  No matter how much they used, there was always enough left in the containers just as the Lord had promised through Elijah.  When the widow’s son became sick and died, Elijah prayed for the boy and his life was restored.  The woman knew that the Word of the Lord was truth. (1 Kings 17:8-24)

Both of these women loved their children and wanted to provide for their needs.    Godly mothers not only want their children’s physical needs met, but want their spiritual needs met as well. The greatest thing godly mothers can do for their children, is to pray for them.  We are instructed to pray about everything without being anxious and with thanksgiving. (Philippians 4:6-7)  Prayer is not telling God what to do, but partnering with God to see that His will is done for our children.  He loves them even more than we do. Pray they desire to know God and that they desire to have a repentant heart, one in which there is no rebellion.  Pray they have a heart for God’s Word, because they can’t know God’s ways if they don’t read His Word.   It is important to communicate to our children what God means to us, how He answers prayer, and how we anticipate what He will do in the future.  Leaving our children a spiritual inheritance is so much more important than a monetary inheritance. We must live Jesus! (Psalm 78:5-7)

Dear Lord,

Thank you for all mothers and especially godly mothers.  Please pour out your Holy Spirit upon them.  Bless our mothers as they pray for their children to develop a heart for God, His Word, and His Ways. May they grow in the wisdom and knowledge of you, Lord.  In Jesus name, Amen.

 

By De’Etta Goecker, Asia Region President

There are many areas of our faith life where we live with tension. Through the years theologians have wrestled, debated, and argued as to where the balance is between God’s sovereign justice and His merciful compassion.

What exactly is an “Act of God”? Are all natural disasters acts of God? There are certainly verses in Job, Proverbs, Isaiah and elsewhere which would lead us to believe God is actively involved in weather patterns. We are also told the “rain falls on the just and the unjust” and that “all of creation is groaning.” Does God actively cause these disasters, or do we live in a fallen world which groans for a redeemer? Does He simply remove His protective hedge in these situations, as He did in Job? This is an issue where I’ve experienced tension in my faith life for years. I’m content not to be dogmatic as I see Scriptures support a view much bigger than I can wrap my mind around or ANY one perspective on the issue.

I am blessed to be surrounded by some AMAZING and Godly chaplains in Misawa. I (and many others through the past weeks – remember to pray for our chaplains) sat down and discussed this with three of them shortly after the quake/ tsunami in Japan. Where is God?  Yes, he created the tectonic plates and how they move.  But did God reach down and create the pain and suffering Japan is currently enduring? I’m not sure. I don’t see Scripture giving the cut and dried answer I would like.  I CAN rest in His character. I CAN rest in His ability to bring great good from great chaos. I can trust that He has led me to this situation which wasn’t of my choosing. I can look for ways to glorify Him in the midst of the suffering.

Are there acts of God when a disaster like this occurs? Absolutely. We see acts of God when someone shelters a child who has suddenly become a homeless orphan, when food is shared, when people donate money or goods from around the world, when neighbors and Americans use their bare hands to dig through rubble in search of the living or the dead, when military spouses shop for hours and assemble home transition kits for those who have lost everything, when prayers are lifted around the world on behalf of revival in Japan.

Yes, God is here. We’ve seen His acts. We rest in His character.  My prayer for each woman in Asia region is she learns to rest in His merciful embrace, in the midst of a dance she may not have chosen.  Ah…dancing with God is a topic for another month.

Submitted by Carleene Myer – Redstone Arsenal

Are you called to endure a Gethsemane season? Have you “been granted for Christ’s sake, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake” (Phil. 1:29 NASB)?

During this Lenten season, let us meditate on the humanity of Christ….he suffered.  He would rather have not suffered…..yet he obeyed His Father because he trusted that He knew best.

Max Lucado states: “Nothing comes your way that has not first passed through the filter of his love.”

Do you trust Him? Webster defines trust as: Firm reliance on the integrity, ability, or character of a person or thing; confident belief; faith.

So, why do we stumble? … “firm reliance on the integrity, and character of God Himself” Did you get that from the definition of trust?…..I can digest that statement intellectually….I can believe that, I do believe that, yet, we worry, we are shocked when bad things are allowed to happen to us, our kids, our husbands.

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and don’t rely on your own understanding…..in all your ways, (acknowledge) rely (have firm reliance) on Him….. Proverbs 3:5,6

Trusting, and learning trust, for me, comes in the form of prayer……You may say, “I pray, in fact, I pray every day”…but, do we spend more time worrying vice praying…..I say if you know how to worry, you know how to pray…..I mean, best friend, perfect Father, Abba, Father praying……learning to turn worrying into heartfelt, Gethsemane prayers.

Seeing the anguish of my son, not in his right mind,(when he had a break down) and then crying out to the God who is reliable, who saw His own Son in pure anguish; He who understands, who hears, who commands angels to do His bidding….that is where prayer begins….

I am learning.  I don’t understand why my family has suffered in this way.  I see the grace of God daily in my life and I am learning to trust Him, especially when it all makes no sense. I live in the Psalms, and draw faith and confidence as I learn to praise and worship Him.

Blessed are those whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage.  As they pass through the Valley of Baca (weeping), they make it a place of springs; …they go from strength to strength till each appears before God in Zion. O Lord Almighty, blessed is the man who trusts in you.

Psalm 84: 5-7, 12

I am learning to pray in ways I never thought possible…..but more importantly, I am learning how to worship Our Lord and Our King.  Praise Him through my circumstances and Praise Him for His incredible, perfect love.

Submitted by Carleene Myer – Redstone Arsenal

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and don’t lean on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will keep you on the straight path. Proverbs 3:5,6

Such words come easily when the path is easy, even a slight downhill path… But when you’re looking at a wrecked car or a suspicious-looking mole, when war breaks out, another deployment begins….do you trust Him?

“Scripture, from Old Testament to New, from prophets to poets to preachers, renders one unanimous chorus: God directs the affairs of humanity. No leaf falls without God’s knowledge. No dolphin gives birth without his permission. No wave crashes on the shore apart from his calculation. God has never been surprised. Not once.”  Max Lucado

I am the one who creates the light and makes the darkness. I am the one who sends good times and bad times. I, the Lord, am the one who does these things.

Isaiah 45:7

Some find the thought impossible to accept.  I did.  When I found myself in the psychiatric hospital with my son because he was suicidal, when my other son was deploying again, when my daughter became debilitated with nerve pain in her shoulder and lost her health and her marriage, I wondered where was the God I love and serve ….do you see Lord, do you hear Lord….are you true to your Word Lord?

I wish I could have spoken to Joseph, the Joseph of the many colored coat… His brothers abused him, selling him into slavery. Was God watching? Yes. And our sovereign God used their rebellious hearts to save a nation from famine and the family of the Messiah from extinction.  As Joseph told them, “God turned into good what you meant for evil” (Gen. 50:20).

“Best of all would have been a conversation with Jesus himself. He begged God for a different itinerary: a crossless death. From Gethsemane’s garden Christ pleaded for a Plan B. Redemption with no nails. ‘Father, if you are willing, please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will, not mine.’ Then an angel from heaven appeared and strengthened him’ (Luke 22:42-43).

Did God hear the prayer of his Son? Enough to send an angel. Did God spare his Son from death? No. The glory of God outranked the comfort of Christ. So Christ suffered, and God’s grace was displayed and deployed.”  From Come Thirsty, Max Lucado

Are you called to endure a Gethsemane season? Have you “been granted for Christ’s sake, not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for His sake” (Phil. 1:29 NASB)?

Coming, Part II of: Do you Trust Him?

Submitted by:  Judy R. Carlson

What does it mean to be a woman at this place and time in history?  Has it changed over the centuries?  Can I be a godly woman and still integrate with my culture?  As I stood before these PWOC women, putting forth these questions I knew they were things I would later address in class time.  But I also asked the following question before I presented my brief class introduction.  What is most important to you as women? (And how about you my readers, what answer would you have given?)

I left the podium area and walked into the aisle with women on either side looking curiously at me.  (I am definitely what the book of Titus calls an “older woman”.  I was in the military with my husband for 28 years and we have six children and 13.9 grandchildren!  And yes, I do take the charge very seriously that we older women are to teach the younger women.  But teach them what is the material point.)

On to my pending question.  Several hands were immediately up in response.  I began to call upon various ladies of different ages.  “A long term marriage!” offered one.  Another said, “To be a good wife!”  A woman of about forty-five said, “Godly grown children!”  “Romance!” shouted one in back of the room, bringing laughter.  One stated firmly, “True friendship”.  The younger woman I called upon last said, “A manual on how to live: ‘Married with Children’.”  Several cried out “Yes!  Yes!” and a few clapped in accord.

By that time I had a big smile on my face.  I love women!  But I also had the usual poignant ache in my heart.  It was not the first time I had asked this question of PWOC ladies.  It was my second time teaching this class and I had also given similar talks at retreats on this topic.  There is such a hunger among women to know how to live their lives, and not only Christian women, but women as a whole.  But there is only one reliable authority for such a serious need and question.  My textbook had to be the Bible (focusing on the book of Proverbs with other related passages, as well as two resource books and a bit of poetry*).

I shared with them the thirty-first chapter of the book of Proverbs in the Bible.  All of my children read through this amazing “How To” book numerous times and I also had my sons memorize the first ten verses of chapter 31 which is written expressly to young men.  My daughters read it also and now as adult women we have studied the remaining verses of that chapter so as to memorize them in a meditative form.  In those verses are contained a wealth of secreted clues given to help us unravel this enchanting ancient pathway to godly womanhood.

The charge by God to married women is not the same as the charge to men.  If we attempt to live out the charge given to men we can only loose our way in the most important mandate given to us as married women.  “An excellent wife, who can find one?”  Does that question tell you at least two things?  The most important goal as a married woman is excellence as a wife!!  The second hint is that this kind of a wife is rare, and hard to find but worth looking for.  “Who can find?”  Doesn’t that sound enticing?!  That’s the kind of woman I can get excited and motivated about being.

I have said that I am trying to show through God’s word the highest order of womanhood, one that brings the most satisfaction.  As I stated in my class my misgivings about challenging the ladies with such a high calling, a beautiful southern girl said, “Miss Judy, if you don’t give us this highest challenge by God, we have nothing to aspire to but our own faulty goals.  We need inspiration!”  I was touched and awed by her “personal best” hopes so well expressed.

When we read the book of Proverbs we can fill in many blanks in understanding the working out of our own “personal best” efforts in these charges; “submit to and love our husbands”, “Be busy at home, and teach our children,” and “She looks well to the ways of her household, and does not eat the bread of idleness.”  Does your husband’s heart fully trust in you?  Will he have no lack of gain in what really matters?  That is the first statement after “Who can find one?”  Can we embark on this scintillating journey into excellent wifehood, and homemaking in our present culture?  I say yes!  We can be leaders in our communities as women who embrace this high calling.  Do we have works of art in our homes?  Do we encourage (make them practice) music in our children? How about our apparel as wives?  “She dresses herself in fine linen and royal purple…and her husband is known in the city gates”.  How about our intimate lives?  “She spreads her bed with the finest coverings made by her own hand.”  (Sounds like Eros to me!)  What about reading material?  Turn off the computer, television, games, etc. and have a weekly reading night where each child and adult reads something brief of special interest to them (not the Bible this time).  Keep those teenage girls far away from “Seventeen” magazine or similar ones.  It is very depressing for our girls (and us) to focus on comparisons to females who have been air brushed for magazines.

In closing I ask, was this all accomplished by a young woman in her twenties or even thirties?  “Her children rise up and call her blessed.”  Not too many toddlers or pre-teens or even young adults rise up to such lofty accolades.  This rising up is by mature children who have looked back and seen what their mother has done in their lives and others.  What about her husband, how early on are his praises?  And her husband (rises) also and says, “many women have done nobly but you have done the best of all”.  That also sounds like a time evaluation to me.  Are we impatient with our failures and foibles as Christian wives?  Be patient with yourself but keep your eye on the goal, “Charm and beauty vanish, but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be praised.  Let her be praised publicly in the gates.”  Can we be patient for that praise and godliness?  It will come in time; perhaps even in a public forum… and so I say to you today that as we are in this classroom of life together we must “carpi diem” before the face of God.

* “The Hidden Art of Homemaking” by Edith Schaefer

* “Let Me Be a Woman” –by Elisabeth Eliott

By Christina McClure and Andrea Plotner

Perfume and incense bring joy to the heart, and the pleasantness of a friend springs from their heartfelt advice. Proverbs 27:9

I (Andrea) have the best friends in the world, each unique and radiant. Today I want to tell you about my friend Christina McClure. She is thoughtful in so many ways, but this vignette is one of my favorites. While we were stationed together at Ft. Bragg, one of my sons went weekly for occupational therapy. Christina knew the day and time of our appointment, and would often show up in the waiting room with a thermos of hot coffee and a basket of muffins, ready to spend half an hour together. Isn’t that amazing?

And now, four years later on my birthday, I received this email from Christina. If you want to bless a friend, here is the way to do it:

“Hey friend!  My last email got away from me before it was finished!  May today be a fabulous day for you Andrea!  May God show up for you exactly in the way you need most!  May your bday food be both yummy and beautifully arranged.

Psalm 65:9-10 talks about what God does for the earth.  Since He does this for the earth, how much more does He long to do the same for us, the crown jewels of His creation?  So my bday requests to Him for you will follow that thought pattern:

May you be visited this day by God.

May you be made to overflow by Him.

May you allow Him to provide what you need this day.

May you know in deeper ways that He has made provision and preparations for you.

May you swim in the river of God, allowing those waters to abundantly fill the ruts in your life.

May the water that flows from God settle your ridges, those places that are higher, harder and more important than they should be.

May you be softened in your hard places with showers from Him.

May you go along with Him as He grows you and, then, blesses that growth in you.

May you go with God as He desires to crown your new birth year with His bounty for His roads OVERFLOW with abundance.”

A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity. Proverbs 17:17

As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another. Proverbs 27:17

Submitted by Kimchi Blow

Train a Child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart form it.
Proverbs 22:6

Most birds can’t fly until their muscle structure has had time to develop completely. In the meantime, the nest becomes their entire world. Baby birds generally develop a psychological dependence which must be overcome. Their parents begin to teach their babies the importance of flying by remaining a short distance away from the nest during feeding. If the young birds are to survive, they must step away from the nest. More than likely, this means a few hard falls to the ground followed by a long trip back to the safety of the nest where the parents are there for security and more lessons to follow.

Eventually, all of this practice does teach the hatchling about the mechanics of flight. Falls to the ground become less and less as the hatchling learns to stretch its wings to eventually fly. Bird parents continue to encourage their offspring to leave the nest for longer periods of time. Some species actually adopt a tough love policy, leaving the fledglings alone to develop their own flying instincts.

There is something to be considered about the process of Mother Nature and birds learning to fly. As human parents we can definitely relate to the progression ourselves. Recently, my oldest daughter left the nest to go live with her father. It was much sooner than I had anticipated but at the same time, I knew it was the right thing for her to do. The day she left was like going through a slow torture in my heart. My emotions were all over the place. Anxiety, doubt, fear, sadness, and hope were just some. It took everything I had that day to put her on a one way ticket to Illinois, but somehow it happened.

At the airport, I kept seeing little girls with their mothers. The memories of her being a toddler came flooding back to me. The question I kept asking myself was, “Where did the time go?”Sixteen years have come and gone! It just didn’t seem possible that she would be graduating in another year and without me to guide her through her senior year. She was supposed to be with me but as circumstances would have it, my plans were not to be.

The airport speaker announced her flight number and the dreaded boarding call began. I just wanted to keep looking at her, studying every detail on her face, as I did when I first brought her home from the hospital. Not believing that she was truly all mine! There we stood, myself holding back the tears and choking back the fear of letting go. She then reached over and comforted me and asked, “You okay?” I wanted to scream, “No, I am not!” Because the truth was, I wasn’t! My life was changing quickly before me and I couldn’t control it but somehow I had to accept it and embrace it! But, why? Ironically, it was the same question that she would ask me when things in her life where not going as planned.

So, why do we have to let go and let God at times? Why do we have to learn to trust Him with the issues of our hearts? Why do we have to let our children go one day? All of these questions are certainly pertinent, but are there any real answers? I think I could probably spend a life time trying to figure out the “whys” but instead I would rather just let God deal in that area. My human mind can’t even begin to fully know and understand the deep wells of our hearts and how life somehow flows through each pumping vessel, giving us all the complex emotions that make us human.

It has been only a week now since that emotional farewell. I have had moments of peace and comfort and moments of complete grief. Mostly though, I am just walking through the process that thousand of parents go through when rearing children, the letting go part. That is in fact the ultimate goal, isn’t it? From their birth to the point they leave the nest, it is about getting them to that place of independence. Who knew it would hurt as much as it does? I remember leaving home myself as a young adult. There was a sense of adventure and independence I was gaining. I had a “Nothing can stop me now!” attitude. Not once, did I ever stop to think about what my parents could be possibly feeling. As life would have it, here I stand as a rite of passage if you will, a parent, experiencing the cycle of life.

Looking back on my children’s childhood I am grateful that I have had so many wonderful times and precious memories. I still have 3 at home and lucky me, I get to do this again! Each one of my children is so unique and holds promises of exciting things ahead. It is a blessing to witness daily the miracle of life through them. Children in the end are the biggest teachers aren’t they? They have taught me a lot about life and myself, my strengths and more so my weaknesses. I am grateful for the lessons learned and the ones to come.

I know it has only been a short time since I have entered into this new chapter as a parent, but I am facing it like I try to face most things, with vigor and perseverance. My daughter will be back one day and I am looking forward to the new role I will play in her life. I am still her mother, but there is another level of intimacy still to experience. I may not be there for her every heart break or to greet her in the morning before her day begins, but I believe I am with her where it counts the most, in her heart and mind.

The Word of God tells us to train a child in the way they should go, and they shall not depart from it.(Proverbs 22:6) By faith, I have to believe that I did the best I could with the time I was given and hopefully with all my children. I am sure there will be days she will feel lonely in life and maybe even hopeless, but my prayer is that the she will remember what her mother did in her times of trial. She cried out to the Lord! As parents, we only want to see our children prosper. We want to see them be the people God created them to be. Sometimes that may not look like what we had planned but again, we have to trust the greater parent at work here, the Heavenly One.

God knows their end from their beginning. He had my children in mind before the foundations of this world were ever set in place. He loves them more then I could even dare to imagine to. In the end, they were a loan from Him, the investment was high but I know the dividends will pay off later. Like life, parenting is a journey with many twists and turns and sometimes even hidden detours, but we can be assured that the journey is worth it. Be assured of this, one day when the time comes for your child or children to get on that airplane, you know they will fly!

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and knowledge of the Holy Ones bring understanding.

Proverbs 9:10

This is a passage we could pray daily.   Wisdom in a time of peace is good, bringing wholeness.  Wisdom in a time of war is necessary, giving us what is necessary to overcome terror and to look to a Holy God who Himself is The Answer.

Dear God,

We need wisdom.  We ask you for wisdom to govern ourselves, to love and train our children, to honor our husbands.  We need wisdom for everything: to love, to forgive, to worship, to know You, to solve problems and to bring your message of restoration to those hurting around us.

Please cleanse our hearts from fear:  fear of man, fear of failure, fear of the dark, fear of loss and grief.  Set us free from control, the fruit of fear.    Heal us from trauma.  Scoop out the fears that cause us to keep you at arms length.  Melt away our fear of intimacy with You.    Set us free from presumption, of going our own way.

We want to make room in our hearts for good fear, the fear of the Lord.  We want to worship you with awe.   God we want to know You: the Holy Ones, the whole trinity, and be filled with Your Spirit of Understanding.   We love you and long for You.

In Jesus Name, Amen.

Submitted by: Courtney Oliver, McChord AFB

 

Good morning all! I woke up this morning at six and couldn’t go back to sleep, so I got up and got into God’s word. Per our pastor’s request, I am reading a Proverb a day for the month of August since we are studying it at church, and interestingly enough, I’ve been doing a study of Proverbs and wisdom over the summer at PWOC. It seems that God has a word for me about wise living. So since it’s six a.m. and I am in a writing mood, I thought I’d share some of what He’s been sharing with me in the hopes that it encourages us all.

Months ago, I read Proverbs 14:1, “The wise woman builds her house, but with her own hands the foolish one tears hers down.” This verse has truly haunted me over the past few months. I think of it and repeat it often to myself, thinking about what it really means for me and my household. Almost every time I think of it, I find myself stopping and asking the Lord to make me that wise woman who builds her house up. It reminds me that in my home, I have tremendous power and responsibility to set the environment for my family. But I can’t confuse power with control. Part of wisdom is giving the control to Jesus. Only by His power through me will my household have peace and be the sanctuary that my husband and my children need.

But what is a wise woman? What is a foolish woman? Proverbs talks often of the differences between being wise and being simple, a fool, or a mocker. At the beginning of Proverbs in my bible, there is a commentary that says:
           
           The “simple” are the least harmful group: they live without thinking and are too lazy to change. But they, like the others, will end up  sorry. “Fools” have more smarts but have made a conscious decision to live by their own wits, independent of God and independent of advice. “Mockers,” worst of all, are rebels against God who make their prideful position known to everyone. They mock God, but God will mock them in the end.

Yikes. As I read that this morning, I can point out times and even specific decisions in my life that looked more like one of these women than a wise one. Laziness, a conscious decision to do things my own way and pride have definitely been sins I’ve been guilty of and will surely be guilty of again. Praise Jesus for His never-ending grace and mercy! But praise Jesus again that we who are in Christ do not have to live this way. God has not only put His Spirit within us, He has also made His wisdom available to us. Our pastor gave us a working definition of wisdom that I thought was so good. Wisdom is a competent response to the complexities and realities of life. I love that!

I see this definition as totally in step with what God’s word teaches us about wisdom. That it will give us knowledge of God and understanding of Him. That it will keep us on straight paths and away from evil. That it will lead to prosperity and not ruin. It will make us good, upright and blameless. I so totally want to be that woman as opposed to the prideful, lazy and blindly headstrong one! And life is complex and very real. We need wisdom to keep us on the right path otherwise we will be living life from one crisis to the next. And don’t we all know or haven’t we all been women who do that? Who survive from one meltdown just to have another? Beth Moore says that in “all situations, in Jesus Christ, we can C.O.P.E- we Can Operate Power-packed Emotionally.” Even in a crisis, if we seek wisdom from the Lord, He will give us peace and HIS power and show us a better way to deal with the complexities and realities of life. We don’t have to be women whose homes are a mess (physically or emotionally) because we can’t deal with what is happening around us. We can set a better example for our children that what the world shows “modern” women to be. We don’t have to be emotional wrecks who freak out when bad news comes or when the kids (big or little) have bad days or bad phases and it feels like everything around us is going nuts. We don’t have to be stressed out, burned out, freaked out or crapped out. Through God’s wisdom and the supernatural power it brings to our lives, we can live with victory, freedom, peace and calm in our homes. Our homes can be safe places of sanctuary for us, our husbands and our children. Our homes can be and need to be a safe place against all that is wrong in the world. We need to make them places of comfort, where all who dwell there are free to express their thoughts, feelings and emotions safely. WE CAN MAKE OUR HOMES THIS WAY!!!

How? We ask the Lord to give us wisdom. James 1:5 says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.” A few things about this pop out to me:

1-Gaining wisdom requires action on our part, we have to ask for it
2-God gives this “without finding fault”- He’s not going to look at us as we ask and go, “Nope, sorry, you’ve made too many mistakes to ever be considered wise! Stinks to be you!” He does not do this to those He loves. He desires us to become like Him; any steps we take to do that, He is going to encourage and bless.
3-”And it will be given to him.” It doesn’t say “might” or “possibly” be given to him, but that IT WILL. We need to ask for wisdom in expectation of receiving it. Plain and simple. This is a promise of God’s word.

For me, I’ve gained the most wisdom simply from the word of God. It is full of life and life-giving principles. I love it and I love how God uses His word to speak so clearly to His children. When we practice being in God’s word, we find out that we make better decisions and have better attitudes. Both of these things are key in building our homes. As I face being a mom, I wonder how my time with God is going to change. I may not have the abundant time to spend alone with Him, or the presence of mind to even pray coherently. But I do want to keep a commitment to being in His word and to practice being in His presence whatever I am doing. Washing clothes, changing diapers, paying bills. I hope that we all make it a habit to do this, and ask for wisdom as we do.

I love you all dearly and I want to see us all live as women who are set apart by the Lord. I pray over each of your homes, that they will be places of peace. That the Lord will give all of us wisdom to be women who build our houses.

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