Preparation & Courage

It’s almost Easter, and I am almost ready – or so I thought.  I had my shopping list – my amazing husband is shopping for groceries as I type this in fact.  I have everything I need to put the kids’ Easter gift bags together.  I am actually not behind schedule for once.  So I take advantage of the time, and I sit down to do my devotions.  I am doing a hodgepodge of sorts in my daily reading.  Following a Lent reading from Margaret Feinberg and then homework from two different Bible studies.  It’s weird, but it works for me.

What I want to focus on in this blog is a short reading from the Lent reading. It’s Mark 15:42-47; just 5 short verses.  It’s all it took today for God to speak and move. There are two things that stood out for me in this reading.  They relate to Easter and to every day.  Verse 42 reads, “And when evening had come, since it was the day of Preparation, that is the day before the Sabbath.”  Day of Preparation.  It was like the words jumped off the page.  The day before the Sabbath is supposed to be a day of preparation.  A day spent doing all the things that would become a distraction if left undone on the Sabbath.   What a thought.  Preparing for time for Jesus.  I am just starting a study on the Sabbath, but I know it is a day dedicated to the Lord to worship and honor him with our time, however that looks. But the idea of preparing for it – I had simply never thought about this before.  How different would my Sabbath times be if I took the day before to prepare?  What if I could figure out how to prepare so that when I take time to honor God I am not distracted? I am not overwhelmed by the too-long list of things to get done.  I will have to try this.  I am sure the study on the Sabbath will help give feet to this new spiritual discipline unfolding in my heart.  Perhaps I will write how it goes, what I learned, and what God wants to share.

The next part that struck me is in verse 43. I guess it really only took two verses for God to speak to me.  Isn’t it wonderful when you don’t have to read chapters and chapters before God speaks?  Although those times have their own sense of enjoyment, don’t they?  Back to verse 43; it reads, “Joseph of Arimathea, a respected member of the council, who was himself looking for the kingdom of God took courage and went to Pilate and asked for the body of Jesus.”  Did you catch it? He took courage.  First I think of this verse in light of Easter.  It must have taken tremendous courage for Jesus to face the cross.  After all, He did pray three times that God would take this cup from Him, yet He did the will of the Father.  If we are to reflect the life of Jesus in our lives, then we should be people full of courage.  And then in light of Joseph.  He was well respected by the leaders of that time.  He was on the council, and I believe he was known by Pilate.  I love the wording “took courage”.  To me, it’s like looking at that thing we are supposed to do that scares us and then realizing God has a spirit of courage there waiting for us to just take it.  Jesus took it to His death. Joseph took it facing government officials and peers.  We can take it too!  Why don’t we more often?

So as Easter fast approaches I have a new perspective.  Preparing ahead of time to spend the day honoring my risen King with my full attention and my best efforts because I have come to that day prepared in the time and space in the day or day(s) beforehand.  And I come to that day with courage.  Courage to ask my neighbour to church instead of just talking about it.

But this isn’t just for Easter.  Each week I have the choice to be prepared to have time to reflect on the goodness of God – to worship Him undistracted.  And remember that I can take courage and face the things God is calling me to with confidence in Him.  For in Him and Him alone I can be courageous.

Continue Reading

A Precious Love

The steadfast love of God, how great it is.  To live in the knowledge of a Savior who loves us unconditionally, with an unmoving, never-ending love is overwhelming and amazing.

You have heard of people having a word to define their season, or maybe they have a word for the year.  I am not sure which mine is or both, but the word to define my life is STEADFAST LOVE.  I guess it really is two words, but who’s counting. Steadfast love is a word I hear in my heart and mind daily. It seems to jump off the pages of the Bible when I see it.  It recalibrates me when I get lost in the pain of life or the routine of the mundane.

So for the memory verse for the month of March, here is another one on steadfast love.  Maybe it will be a year of steadfast love. Time will tell, but for now, it remains my anchor of hope in a stormy sea.

Psalm 36:7-8 says “How precious is your steadfast love O God! The children of mankind take refuge in the shadow of your wings.  They feast on the abundance of your house, and you give them drink from the river of your delights.” Just take that first line, how precious is your steadfast love O God!  The Bible ends that sentence with an exclamation mark, but it could just as easily end with a question mark.  I ask God to show me how precious His steadfast love is.  He reminds me of Easter. Of a steadfast love that gave His life for mine.  Of how steadfast love clung to the cross, to the hope, to the redemption of my soul.

God’s love is not like man’s love.  It loves when it is inconvenient – when the one being loved does not deserve it.  It is always there through sleepless nights and sorrow-filled days.  God’s love surrounds us if we take the time to see it.

God’s steadfast love is an abundance feast in His house.  What a thought.  God’s love creates a place for us where we are the honored guest.  It quenches our dry throats with water from the river of His delight.  It refreshes and restores our broken hearts.  It reminds us that we are not alone.  There are others God graciously gathers with us to join the feast, to help us celebrate who He is in our midst.

What a love.  It knows no bounds, no limits, no hesitations.  It gives freely to all who will partake of it.  So I ask you, have you thought how precious God’s love is lately?  Have you silenced your mind and your heart long enough to really appreciate the steadfast love God offers?  If you haven’t you should.  Take a moment and think about what God’s love is to you. Maybe you have never thought about the fact that God, the creator of the universe, is passionately in love with you.  He is.  He loves you with a steadfast love that will never fade.  He loves you where you are right now in the midst of whatever your life is.  He loves you because He created you. No one knows you better, and still He will always choose to love you.  That, my friends, is a love worth daydreaming about.  It is worthy of gratitude and thankfulness.

Take time to tell God how precious His love is to you and how thankful you are for it. It will change your day.  It will make a bad attitude better.  It will remind you there is good out there and in you. It will pull you out of a funk and hold your hand if you need to cry.  It is precious and profound, and it is yours.

How precious is your steadfast love O God!(?)

Click here for the March 2018 memory verse

 

Continue Reading