Oct 072010

Dear children, let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.

1John 3:18

I was recently asked to share on unity and jumped at the idea.  Then I had second thoughts because I have been trying to explain unity for about three years now and still can’t figure out what to say.  Then my husband told me this story.

Last weekend we had extremely high winds at my house.  So high, in fact, it knocked over three trees in my yard, one of which landed on my neighbors shed.  No one was injured, Praise the Lord, but it did poke a good size hole in the roof of his shed.    Saturday afternoon when the winds died down, my husband and a couple of friends went outside to clean up the fallen trees and debris.  One of the trees was a large Cottonwood; generally they are narrow in the trunk but very tall and dense.  Once it was free from small branches my husband bent over and hoisted one of its twisted limbs up onto his shoulder to move it and thought about how heavy it was; then he thought about Jesus.   I immediately knew the picture that was in his head, did you?  That is unity!

God’s love is poured out on to me so that I may, in turn, pour it out to fellow believers.  It doesn’t matter if we are Army or Air Force, Methodist or Holiness, if you worship by singing songs or in the quiet of your prayer closet, His love was poured out on the cross for you.  The bottom line is that if you believe in Christ you know the picture that was in my husband’s mind while dragging a tree and that is unity, that is Truth and that is where we begin.

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The Alaska region update is published on the first Thursday of every month. Submit comments or suggestions to: AlaskaPresident@pwoc.org

Sep 202010

My Bible is falling apart. This burgundy, thinline, bonded leather New International Version Bible is more than 15 years old. Bonded leather is worthless in my opinion. Recently I considered replacing it with a genuine leather version that wouldn’t fall apart.

Searching my office bookcases for Bibles, I hunted for the one I had in mind. I found it. A burgundy, genuine leather, New American Standard Bible lay in my hands. But it’s thicker and heavier than my NIV and not the version I’m accustomed to.

I began to contemplate what it might take to repair my old NIV where a piece of the binding tore off; where worn edges, a bent cover, and loose pages reveal years of use; where smudged pen notations betray tearful reading sessions; and where the shiny gold edging, now dulled from handling, faintly glistens as I flip the pages. What would a Bible repairman have to do to fix my beloved but tattered Text?

As I considered more carefully the prospect of using a different Bible, I felt a hot tension squeeze my heart. What about all the markings I put in it? Carefully drawn underlines, dates indicating significant events in my life, notations made while listening to life-changing sermons. How would I replace those?

Tears trickled down my face as I recalled the moments that this worn NIV had provided comfort, strength, and encouragement. Gazing at it with tenderness, I gently picked it up and held it to my chest. This Bible is historical. It carries my life and breath and tears within its pages. I know exactly where to turn for every verse I seek.

This Bible is the one . . .
I use for every PWOC Bible study;

This Bible is the one . . .
I have carried to every church and chapel service in the last 15-plus years;

This Bible is the one . . .
My silly beagles lick when I’m sitting on the bed reading it;

This Bible is the one . . .
I reach for when I need a Psalm to calm my heart;

This Bible is the one . . .
I hold in my hands while sitting on the edge of the bed sobbing;

This Bible is the one . . .
I held open to Romans 12:1-2 while pacing the floor begging God to transform me;

And, this Bible is the one . . .
I read every day as I sit with the Lord eagerly anticipating a timely word of wisdom.

This Bible is my source of Truth, Light, and Life.
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Today I was struck by an image on the cover of the September 2010 issue of The Voice of the Martyrs. A young Christian woman named Somchi, from the communist nation Laos and the people group Khmu, holds a charred Bible in her hands. The Laotian villagers said the Bible was responsible for her mother’s illness, so they burned it along with other Christian literature they found. Fortunately, Somchi got a new Bible at the house church she attends.

After seeing the burned Bible, I thought of my precious, well-worn and well-loved thinline NIV. It has never been confiscated. It has never been shredded. It has never been burned. And, it doesn’t need to be replaced.

Here in America I don’t need to fear someone coming into my home to destroy the Word of God. At least, not now. So while I still have my religious freedom intact — and I hope that I do until I die or until Christ returns — I intend to cherish my ragged Bible with gratitude and remember God’s faithfulness as I read every page.

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God . . . In Him was life, and that life was the light of men (John 1:1 and 4).

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It’s a Wrap!

This is the final installment of Life Happens – Jesus Answers and “Journey of Transformation.” God is bringing changes to the PWOCI blog so it is time to say goodbye. Change is good when it’s God directed and I trust that He has many blessings in store for us as we Shine in the Light of His Glory.

To begin, I’m including the final paragraph from the July 1, 2010, entry for context:

By September 2002 my health disaster was out of control. Clearly, there was more than lupus ravaging my body. The time had come to take my health care to the next level. I needed answers and I needed them fast. Fortunately, God had an awesome rheumatologist waiting in the wings.

By October 2002 I was wheelchair bound. I needed assistance with eating, bathing, dressing and walking. I was carried up and down stairs. I was bedridden. The excruciating pain, weakness, and burning in my arms prevented me from using them except for balance. The slightest exertion exhausted me. Infected ulcers burrowed to the bone on my elbows. This was a new level of torment.

By the grace of God I landed in the office of Dr. Michael Baker and my search for genuine help was over. I slumped in the rented wheelchair, head adorned with a ball cap covering my unsightly mane, and tears streaking my red, swollen, disfigured face. Both Dr. Baker and my husband carefully lifted me out of the chair and led me toward the examining table. Not only was I nearly paralyzed, I was breathless from exertion, and virtually lifeless.

After a physical examination, lab tests, and a muscle biopsy, Dr. Baker concluded that I had a form of muscular dystrophy called dermatomyositis. This life-threatening autoimmune disease attacks skin, muscle, and connective tissue – basically, the entire body can be affected. Only a small percentage of lupus was present by comparison. The other autoimmune diseases were Sjogren’s Syndrome, Raynaud’s Syndrome, and hypothyroidism. Treatment was prednisone and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) infusions derived from human plasma.

With this new information came the time to update my Exceptional Family Member Program (EFMP) data including the fact that I had only a five-percent chance of survival. Without treatment, or if treatment didn’t work, I would have died. Years later while my dad was dying I learned that I could have received hospice care because my diagnosis and prognosis were so critical. This is something more people should know in case they have gravely ill family members who aren’t necessarily terminal.

Once I was officially diagnosed with a neuromuscular disease I became one of “Jerry’s Kids” and received a custom-fit wheelchair compliments of the Muscular Dystrophy Association. I still have it to this day and intend to keep it as a reminder of the depths to which I plummeted and the brink from which God saved me.

In spring 2003 a knowledgeable army dermatologist gave me a remedy for the infected ulcers on my elbows. One part vinegar to one part water. You heard me right. I was so angry to have suffered for eight months with this torture and all I would have had to do was soak my elbows in vinegar and water! Of course, the remedy was just as excruciating as the ulcers themselves. So I took oxycontin an hour before soaking because the burning pain was too much to bear.

By July 2003 the ulcers were gone but they left permanent, hideous scars. I was able to drive by this time and managed to get myself to PWOC. I had to sit during the entire program and went straight home and back to bed after. In March 2004 I was able to discontinue taking prednisone but continued the infusions.

The promise I received from the Holy Spirit back in 2001 about this trial lasting about five years came to pass. From the time I began getting symptoms in January 2000 to the end of 2004 the ordeal was largely over. Five years. After that the recovery process began.

In January 2005 I began weight training for the first time since 2000 and could lift only 10 pounds on the leg extension machine (quadriceps). I’m still working my way up to 90 pounds which is what I lifted before the disease set in. My quadriceps and biceps were the most severely affected muscles in my body.

By May 2005 I no longer needed oxycontin and phenergan for pain and nausea, and I finished the IVIG infusions after 27 months of treatment. It nearly took a miracle for me to receive these costly infusions but God worked it out. By August 2005 my hair had grown back completely. In 2006 I continued serving at my local PWOC.

In October 2007 my rheumatologist declared me cured of dermatomyositis. I stood in front of the PWOC body and gave an impromptu testimony about my healing, and proceeded to cut up the handicapped plaquard once displayed from the rearview mirror of my car. It was an act of faith.

As I recall 1999 when I walked around our Germany apartment praying for God to transform me by the renewing of my mind (Romans 12:2) I had no idea how He would answer that prayer. I certainly didn’t expect Him to take me down a dark and tangled road. Having endured all this and more, I am convinced we are far better off not knowing the future. Anticipating suffering of this nature would render many of us immobile.

Having persevered and arrived on the other side, I understand why God chose this path for me. It was effective. He used my physical anguish to produce an inward cleansing and strengthening of my heart and soul. As a result, I am free from many old habits, mindsets, and strongholds that kept me from living free in Christ.

There is nothing like a life-threatening illness to get you in a position of dependence, humility, and focus. It creates sober reflection and laser sharp awareness of what really matters in life. The things I thought were important gradually fell away while life itself shone through as the most significant thing of all – that is, eternal life. “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, Look full in His wonderful face, And the things of earth will grow strangely dim, In the light of His glory and grace …”

God taught me many things through my journey of transformation thus far, but rather than sharing some of them in my own words I’ve chosen to let the Word of God speak:

Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I obey your word (Psalm 119:67).

Blows and wounds cleanse away evil, and beatings purge the inmost being (Proverbs 20:30).

I was pushed back and about to fall, but the Lord helped me. The Lord is my strength and my song; he has become my salvation (Psalm 118:13-14).

And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast (1 Peter 5:10).

(More: Romans 12:1-2; 2 Corinthians 12:8-10; Hebrews 12:1-2; Psalm 103:1-5; Psalm 116:1-7; Psalm 119:71, 75, 92, 116-117; Isaiah 40; Isaiah 55:8-9; Isaiah 61:1-4.)

THE JOURNEY ENDS

It’s my hope that this Journey of Transformation has been a testimony of God’s ways, power, love and grace. I pray that the Holy Spirit used this story to encourage, to educate, and to challenge you. Never cower in the face of grave difficulties, but trust in God’s sovereignty, goodness, and mercy even when everything in you cries out against them. Because when Life Happens – Jesus Answers. May Jesus lead you gently through your own Journey of Transformation.

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).

Has life brought you treachery, harassment, and heartache? How much of it is from other people? How much of it is the result of sowing seeds that reaped painful consequences? How much of it is plain old torment from Satan? After all, he uses people and circumstances to harass us.

How do you deal with attacks from the devil? Do you deal with them at all? Have you bothered to contemplate the power and plan of your Enemy?

He wants to steal from you. He wants to kill you. He wants to destroy you. (John 10:10a)

Sound unbelievable? It’s true and it’s real. He’s hard at work attempting to reach his goal every day. So, what do you do about it? First, you must be aware of and know your Enemy. Second, you must seek God’s wisdom in dealing with him. Third, you must intentionally take action each time he attacks.

Ultimately, the battle is the Lord’s, but He instructs us to stand firm adorned with the armor** He has provided. How? Fill your mind with God’s Truth — His Word — every day. One verse of scripture can be used to replace a lie from Satan.

For example, if you’re wracked with guilt over something and you’re continually tormented by it, confess your thoughts and feelings to God. Then, ask Him to lead you to a verse that will counteract the lie you believe. For guilt, Romans 8:1-2 is helpful: Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death. Write the scripture on index cards and place them on your mirror, in your purse, in your car. Read the scripture often and eventually memorize it.

This isn’t a joke or a suggestion. If we, as Christians, are serious about walking in truth, if we are serious about overcoming wrong thoughts and beliefs, and if we are serious about living victoriously as Christ intended, then we need to stomp out the taunts and temptations thrown at us by the Evil One. We defeat the devil one choice, one action, one truth at a time. In so doing, we stand firm.

Do it. Take your Enemy seriously. He means business. So should we.

**Ephesians 6:10-18 Full Armor of God

Finally, be strong in the LORD and in his mighty power. Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. . . .

(A good resource for additional knowledge and understanding of Satan is When the Enemy Strikes by Dr. Charles Stanley at In Touch Ministries.)

Since January the Lord has directed me to change the way I study the Bible each day. I learned that the goal of reading God’s word is to behold the beauty of the Lord. What I learned came from a study I participated in at PWOC a couple of years ago by Tim Keller; which is a series of studies on prayer.

Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal the deeper truths and as you listen to God’s word write down the answers to the following five questions. The first three ask questions of the text.

1. What does the passage say about God/Christ?
2. What does it say about yourself/mankind?
3. What is the most compelling truth you learned?

The last 2 questions are the reflection portion of God’s word where you allow the verses to ask questions of you. This helps what you learned drop down from your mind into your heart.

4. How would you be different if this truth were explosively alive in your inmost being?
5. Why is God showing you these things today?

The key to reading scripture and meditating properly on God’s word is to keep Christ central. When you read a verse such as “the Lord watches over the way of the righteous” it can be very discouraging because realistically who is righteous enough for God? Constantly pointing to Christ and saying “He did it!” brings the fire of God’s love to bear on every word. Jesus made it so our sins are credited to His account and His perfect righteousness lived for us is credited to ours. 2 Corinthians 5:21 says “He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”

As time goes by, I have seen God’s beauty and I praise Him for the lessons I learned about Him during my prayer time. As you get used to studying the Bible this way, the amount of time it takes to do this process can be decreased by 5 or 10 minutes. Try it out on Psalm 1. You’ll be amazed at how the Holy Spirit can make even one verse explode truth and God’s beauty before you. Especially in light of what He’s done for you in Christ.

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. But when he asks, he must believe and not doubt, because he who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That man should not think that he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a double-minded man, unstable in all he does. James 1:5-8

I don’t want to be unstable. I want to have a firm foundation for my life, built on the Truth, and established by Christ. I want to be stable spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and physically.

How do I establish and maintain stability? By applying the truth of God’s word — the truth about who He is, and the truth about who I am. Do my beliefs line up with the truth? Do my actions? Are my choices built on God’s wisdom, omniscience, and sovereignty? Or are they driven by circumstance, feelings, people, the past, the pain, or sin?

Our lives are built one choice at a time. What we do today affects the quality and stability of our tomorrows. Jesus is the only One who can empower you to build a stable life. Ponder the passage below and ask Him to reveal any cracks in your foundation.

Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do what I say? I will show you what he is like who comes to me and hears my words and puts them into practice. He is like a man building a house who dug down deep and laid the foundation on rock. When a flood came, the torrent struck that house but could not shake it because it was well built. But the one who hears my words and does not put them into practice is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation. The moment the torrent struck that house, it collapsed and its destruction was complete. Luke 6:46-49

We were not designed to live haphazardly, being blown about by the winds of the culture, or by other people’s preferences and opinions. And if we allow ourselves to be governed by our own unhealthy beliefs and attitudes, then we are building our lives on the sand. We must be governed by truth – the absolute truth.

(Other passages to consider: Psalms 127:1; Proverbs 24:3; Matthew 7:24; 1 Peter 2:5; Hebrews 3:4)

Dear God,

I pray for my sisters around the world.  God write on our hearts your message of love to be read with great joy by those who are struggling to find  The Way, The Truth, and the Life of Jesus Christ.  Shine through us that the world may know we are a letter from Christ, the result of ministry not written with ink, but with the Spirit of the Living God, not on tablets of stone but a love letter written on human hearts. (from  II Corinthians 3:3)  God, You have engraved us on the palms of your hands (Isaiah 49: 15-17)  Make covenant with us, put your law in our minds and write them on our hearts.  Be our God and we will be your people.  (Hebrews 8: 9-11)  We love you.  In Jesus Name, Amen.

Dear God,

You have been teaching me that the opposite love is not hate but fear.  Set me free from all fear that I may be secure, strong, confident and whole in Your love!!

  • Lord, every time I strive and perform to win your love, I am sliding back into religious slavery. Forgive me for trying to get it right instead of surrendering my brokenness to you and letting Your power flow through me.
  • Every time I act up and don’t treat those around me with your tender grace, I am feeling unloved.  Oh, God, cause my feelings to line up with the truth in Your Word.  While I was still a sinner, unable to do anything for You, You showed me Your Love by dying for my sins.
  • God, I feel ashamed and I hide from You, from myself, from those around me.  Set me free in love!  I want to worship you with nothing in between us.
  • Lord God, forgive me when I get intimidated and don’t speak or live in the glorious freedom you bought for me.  Forgive me for fearing man instead of reveling in awe of My Glorious King who loves me.

I receive your forgiveness and I choose today to give and receive love from a place of tender surrender, knowing I am loved, adored and all my shame is washed away.  I renounce all fear:  the fear of man, the fear of rejection, the fear of  punishment.  I receive the spirit of adoption by which we can cry, “Daddy, Daddy!”  Make me complete, perfect, whole in Your love.

I love you, Father.  In Jesus Name, Amen

There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love. I John 4: 18

I am dust. Actually, men are dust, women are rib bones. Come to think of it, bones turn to dust when exposed to extreme heat. So, it could be said that all humans are dust. After all, God did create the first man, Adam, out of dust. Then He proceeded to create the first woman, Eve, from a rib taken out of Adam’s side (Gen. 2:7, 2:21-22). It is God who put us here on earth, and without Him we would be as worthless as the dust from which we came.

I appreciate the visual image this truth creates in my mind. It fosters feelings of humility and gratitude while reminding me of my humanity and dependence upon God. I can’t help but acknowledge God’s incomprehensible majesty while recognizing my insignificance before Him.

Yet, as important as it is for us to keep this perspective, it’s equally important for us to grasp a life-changing truth we might tend to deny or forget – the astounding worth and value that God ascribes to us. Not only do we have immeasurable value in God because of who He is, but also to God because of His endless unconditional love for us.

But I am like an olive tree flourishing in the house of God; I trust in God’s unfailing love forever and ever (Psalm 52:8).

Each one of us was specifically, individually, uniquely created by Almighty God (Psalm 139). Think about it. Considering the fact that God created mankind from the dust of the ground, it’s remarkable that this all-knowing, all-present, all-powerful God would regard us with such high esteem. But He does. He chose to create you. He chose to love you for eternity with a love that cannot be quenched and will never change. Embrace this life-giving truth as yours and ask God to make it more real to you each day.

By day the Lord directs his love, at night his song is with me — a prayer to the God of my life (Psalm 42:8).

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