Thomas said to him, “Lord, we don’t know where you are going, so how can we know the way?” Jesus answered, “I am the way and the TRUTH and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him” (John 14:5-7).

I want to know God. I want to know God better. Even more, I want to know God accurately.

There have been times in my Christian life when biblical truth didn’t sink in. I couldn’t accept it because I believed or felt something else. Maybe God didn’t answer a heartfelt prayer so I believed He didn’t care. Maybe I experienced suffering that seemed to have no purpose, and I believed God was cruel and unjust.

Through the course of daily living, interacting with other Christians, hearing the views of nonbelievers, and wrestling with my own fickle view of God, I came face to face with a disturbing fact: I’ve lived a large portion of my Christian life believing erroneous things about God. I let my feelings and perspectives dictate my beliefs rather than holding to the TRUTH of scripture.

God’s Word declares absolute truth about His character. The problem for many of us is that we don’t automatically embrace the truth. We read the words but they bounce off the opinions, feelings, and assumptions we form about God based on our experiences. Then we allow our erroneous ideas to define God. When our view of God is based on feelings, opinions, or assumptions, we don’t know Him accurately and the Christian life is harder than it needs to be.

My beliefs about God affect the depth of my peace and joy. They affect whether or not I trust Him, and whether or not I obey Him. My view of God affects my relationship with Him. It also affects how I view myself. What I believe about God shapes my prayer life, the amount of time I spend with Him, and whether my conversations include Him. My beliefs about God affect everything.

It isn’t enough to know about God. We need to really know Him. We must establish within our hearts a truth-based view of God regardless of our feelings, other people’s opinions, or what we experience.

Prayer Challenge:

Father, I choose intentionally to work on my belief system about You. Clear away anything that doesn’t fit the truth of who You are. Enlighten my mind when I read Your Word, and solidify Your truth in my heart so I can enjoy an unhindered relationship with You. Enable me to walk by faith, not by sight. (Hebrews 11:1; 2 Cor. 5:7)

Praying scripture aloud is even more powerful than using our own words. Add this one to the prayer above: Send forth your light and your truth, let them guide me; let them bring me to your holy mountain, to the place where you dwell (Psalm 43:3).

Submitted by Therese Ragland, Fort Bragg, NC

The other day I was watching a father and daughter walk together hand in hand.  She was no more than five years old and she was grinning from ear to ear.  As I watched her for a moment, and smiled as well, I glanced at the father.  He had a smile just as big.  They weren’t really talking or doing much of anything, just walking hand in hand and smiling. Both seemed so content and pleased to be together.

That got me thinking. What if that is a picture of how God wants to be with me?  Not just in Heaven but here on earth, right here right now.  You see, I know as a Christian I should spend time with God, read his word, and go to Him in prayer.  But what if the should turned into a desire? I desire to spend time with God, read His word, and go to Him in Prayer.  Then a really funny thought hit me.  What if God desires me?

Jeremiah 31:3 says, “The Lord appeared to us in the past, saying: “I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with loving-kindness.” And 1 John 4:16 says “And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in him.”

These are two verses that make the point very simple. God does desires us; the entire Bible is full these scriptures.  Not only did God create us in our mother’s womb and know every hair on our head. He desires to be with us.  When He created Adam and Eve the Bible mentions that they would walk and talk together.  They spent time together.  God did not do that so that Adam and Eve would just love HimHe loved them.  He wanted that time with Adam and Eve.  They were a delight to Him. He loves us with the same delight.  I find it unfathomable that God wants to spend time with me. He created me and saved me through the death of His son because He desires to be with me.

At one point when I was watching the father and daughter, they stopped and looked at each other.  Nothing was said they were just there in that moment. You could tell he wanted to be there just as much as she did.  Looking at each other they were delighted to be together. What a picture of God walking hand in hand with us?

If you find yourself in a place of disconnect with God, please open your heart to Him.  Not because of the reasons mentioned here and not just because our lives are full of chaos but because the God of the entire universe desires to be with you.  Think about desire.  What do you desire?  Do you desire for God to do something for you? Do you desire to know Him by spending time with Him reading His word? Are you hungry for more of Him?  Open your hearts to the thought that God desires you.

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!

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