Showing posts with label Trusting God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trusting God. Show all posts

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Do Believe......

I Believe...

I Believe...



I Believe... That just because two people argue, doesn't mean they don't love each other. And just because they don't argue, doesn't mean they do love each other.


I Believe...That we don't have to change friends if we understand that friends change.
I Believe....That no matter how good a friend is, they're going to hurt you every once in a while and you must forgive them for that.



I Believe...That true friendship continues to grow, even over the longest distance. Same goes for true love.


I Believe.... That you can do something in an instant that will give you heartache for life.


I Believe...That it's taking me a long time to become the person I want to be.


I Believe...That you should always leave loved ones with loving words. It may be the last time you see them.


I Believe.... That you can keep going long after you think you can't.


I Believe...That we are responsible for what we do, no matter how we feel. I Believe...That true Love is worth fighting for.


I Believe....That either you control your attitude or it controls you.


I Believe...That heroes are the people who do what has to be done when it needs to be done, regardless of the consequences.


I Believe...That money is a lousy way of keeping score.


I Believe...That my best friend and I can do anything, or nothing, and have the best time...


I Believe...That sometimes the people you expect to kick you when you're down, will be the ones to help you get back up.


I Believe...That sometimes when I'm angry I have the right to be angry, but that doesn't give me the right to be cruel.


I Believe...That maturity has more to do with what types of experiences you've had, and what you've learned from them.....and less to do with how many birthdays you've celebrated.


I Believe...That it isn't always enough to be forgiven by others. Sometimes, you have to learn to forgive yourself.


I Believe...That no matter how bad your heart is broken the world doesn't stop for your grief.


I Believe...That our background and circumstances may have influenced who we are, but we are responsible for who we become.


I Believe...That you shouldn't be so eager to find out a secret. It could change your life Forever.


I Believe...Two people can look at the exact same thing and see something totally different.


I Believe...That your life can be changed in a matter of hours by people who don't even know you.


I Believe...That even when you think you have no more to give, if a friend cries out to you........you will find the strength to help.


I Believe...That credentials on the wall do not make you a decent human being.


I Believe...That the people you care about most in life are taken from you too soon...


The happiest of people don't necessarily have the best of everything; They just make the most of everything.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Be Healed By Faith

The healing power of faith.

Visit this link for a short story on the power of faith, before reading the rest of this blog.




So. . .I am not being sarcastic with the title of this blog. I'm pointing out that the actual healing power of faith is, as the family in the above listed article found out the hard way, actually zero - nil, nada, nothing.

Some of you might suggest that "God won't save you from your foolishness". So: God loves you so much that he'd let his only son die for your sins, but if you do something stupid, you're on your own? You know you don't believe that.So how to explain this apparent discrepancy?Let me be as blunt as I can: If God exists, he doesn't help anyone with anything. There are no exceptions, not you or anyone.

Confirmation Bias:Faith-based healing is an excercise in confirmation bias. Simply put: Confirmation bias is when a person wants or believes something to be true, and so considers only the evidence that supports their conclusion.

Consider the following statement: 'It's a MIRACLE! Man saved is Tsunami! Praise God!' We might look at the sole survivor or a tragedy as some kind of miracle. But think about it a little more. Let's suppose 50,000 people drowned in that Tsunami. 50,000 thousands lives ended horribly.

Are you really prepared to celebrate the compassion and grace of God, because one person survived? That's what confirmation bias allows us to do. We don't see 50,000 bloated corpses, we see the smiling face of a man who believes he was "saved", and we want to be that man. You remember his face, and not the faces of the dead.

Finally, let's discuss confirmation bias in the other direction. Suppose I want to be right about the content of this blog. Could I be ignoring evidence of faith-based healing to support my conclusions? I do not believe so.

Here is why: There are millions of personal tragedies every year. MILLIONS. They happen so often as to be commonplace. In fact, when someone appears to have experienced a MIRACLE.

It is ONLY miraculous in light of the fact that most of the time a tragedy would have occured in their situation.

Shall we try to claim that God picks and chooses from the millions of tragedies each year and averts a few dozen, or a few hundred?

Stop lying to yourself.

Be consistent and reasonable in what you believe.

Monday, March 9, 2009

"Don't Quit , Quitting Is Never An Option"

When things go wrong as they sometimes will,

When the road you're trudging seems all uphill,

When the funds are low and the debts are high,

And you want to smile, but you have to sign,

When care is pressing you down a bit,

Rest if you must, but don't you quit.

When….

Success is failure turned inside out,

The silver tint in the clouds of doubt.

And you never can tell how close you are.

It may be near when it seems afar.

So, stick to the fight when you are hardest hit.

It's when things go wrong that you mustn't quit.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

"Little Faith + Big God"


Little Faith + Big God = Huge Results


“. . . If you can do anything, do it. Have a heart and help us!” Jesus said, “If? There are no ‘ifs’ among believers. Anything can happen.” No sooner were the words out of his mouth than the father cried, “Then I believe. Help me with my doubts!”
(Mark 9:22-24, MSG)

*** *** *** ***
*** *** *** ***


Is it possible to be filled with faith and doubt at the same time? Yes!

You can have faith that God wants you to do something and still be scared to death. Courage is not the absence of fear. Courage is going ahead and doing what you’re called to do in spite of your fear.

You have to begin with the faith you already have: it may be just a little, but you start there. A beautiful example of this is the story of the man who brought his sick son to Jesus in Mark 9. Jesus looked at the man and said, “I can heal your son. If you will believe, I will heal him.”

The father then makes a classic statement: “Lord, I do believe. Help me overcome my unbelief.”

Have you ever felt like that? “Lord, I have some faith. But I also have some doubts.” This man was filled with faith and doubt, yet despite his honest doubts, he went ahead and asked Jesus for a miracle. And he got his miracle – Jesus healed his son.

No matter how weak or how frail you think your faith is, it’s enough. It’s enough to get you through what you’re facing, and it’s enough to complete the vision God has planted in your heart.

Matthew 17:20 says, “If you have faith as small as the mustard seed . . . nothing will be impossible to you.” (NIV) That’s not a lot of faith; in fact, it’s just a little faith. But what else does that verse teach? “If you have faith as the mustard seed, you can say to the mountain, ‘Move’ and it will be moved.”

Mustard seed faith moves mountains. Don’t get this reversed. We like to read this verse backward. We want it to say, “If you have faith like a mountain you can move a mustard seed” – as if it takes enormous faith to do a very little task.

God wants you to start with the faith you have, and based on the example of the mustard seed, you don’t need a whole lot of faith to do great things for God. You just need a little.

What does this mean?


  • Everybody has faith – You had faith this morning when you ate your cereal – faith that your spouse didn't put poison in your granola! You had faith when you sat down in your computer chair – faith that it wouldn’t collapse.
  • Everybody has faith; the difference is what you put your faith in – Sometimes people will say they don’t want to go to church or make a commitment to Christ until they understand it all. Believe in this trustworthy equation: Little faith + Big God = Huge results. You take your little faith, “Lord, I believe! Help me with my unbelief!” You put it in our big God, and then he’ll show you how he works out huge results.

"Trusting God With Your Relationship"

But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you
-Matthew 6:33

If you are searching for the perfect mate package with your name on it, you may be surprised to discover that the Word of God has a lot to say on the subject of dating, courtship, and finding Mr. or Ms. Right. And if you are anxious or in a frenzy or frustrated about being married, you may have already started to look in the wrong places.

You don't want a spouse who isn't God's will for you. What are you looking for? God has a good plan for your life. Tall, dark, and handsome. Blonde, blue eyes, and beautiful. Please hear me on this: stop looking at the outside (the packaging)! Good looks don't come with a warranty for success and happiness!

This is how you're going to find your mate: "Delight thyself also in the LORD: and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart" (Psalm 37:4). You have to start by working on your desires. When you delight in God, He's going to make your desires pure. He knows what you need much better than you do.

You have to stop seeking the idea of the person you want as a mate-and seek God. He has the perfect companion for you, and He'll bring that person to you if you will be patient and delight yourself in Him. Whether or not it seems you've waited for a long time, it doesn't take God years and years to get someone to you. He may bring your mate into your life today if you are sufficiently prepared to receive him or her.

When God is in a relationship, you know it. If you're a committed Christian, you'll also know it when God isn't involved. That girl or guy may look fabulous on the outside, but if they're full of vinegar on the inside, any happiness you thought you'd found with this person will quickly subside.

Take an inventory of your relationships. Sort through and relinquish the unhealthy ones that diminish you in any way. Fantasyland already has too many residents. God specifically instructed in His Word that Christians are not to even date unbelievers (2 Corinthians 6:14). Christians have no business going out with someone who is not a believer. If you are, you need to cut that relationship off today!

If you will focus on God and His plan and trust Him to bring your life partner to you in His perfect timing, you'll spend the rest of your lives together being grateful for the fruit of patience and the gift of wisdom.

Related Texts: Psalm 119:63; Proverbs 13:20; 22:24-25; Amos 3:3; Mathew 19:6; 1 Corinthians 7; Hebrews 13:4


Monday, January 26, 2009

"Make Wishes Come True"

" Dreams Do Come True "

The Art of Wishing

One New Year’s Day, on the brink of my fiftieth year, I took stock of my life--and the tally was grim. I was alone after a long marriage, seemingly doomed to perpetual house rental, and separated from the spiritual community that had once sustained me. Though skeptical of "create your own reality" thinking, I launched a year-long experiment in wishing—to see if there was, indeed, any power in "putting it out there," as so many people proclaim. It wasn't easy, but I forced myself to suspend my doubts and go for it all: a new love, a healed soul, and the sweet stucco house of my dreams.

Over the course of the year, I was amazed to discover that all three of my wishes really did come true—in ways that met, subverted, and overflowed my expectations. Based on the experiences recounted in my new book "The Wishing Year," here's how to launch your own year of wishing.

It's OK to Wish for Things

Early on in my quest, one of my great epiphanies was that, inadvertently, I was a terrible “wish snob.” I had grown up with the very strong belief that it was acceptable to wish for spiritual qualities and for cosmic conditions—such as grace, forgiveness, world peace—but not for tangible personal desires like a nice house and a romantic love. But gradually, I began to see that it’s simply a very human quality to wish for a great range of things: from a nice pair of shoes to a world without war. I began to appreciate that, from ancient times, human beings have regarded the most simple material things as being sacred: corn, rain, arrows, the reeds from which to make baskets, and the art of basket-weaving itself. The ancients couldn't afford to be snobs about wishing for tangible things because their very survival depended on them.

Why This Works: Once you let go of rigid compartments, the “spiritual” and “material” dimensions begin to intertwine in surprising ways. For instance, a Buddhist teacher asked me to edit his book, and that connection was both spiritually healing for me…and helped to pay for the down payment on my house!

Set Aside Doubts

For me the beautiful phrase “a willing suspension of disbelief,” coined by the American psychologist William James, was the perfect antidote to my skeptical nature. I learned that when you dare to “put your wishes out there,” you don’t have to commit to a new set of beliefs. All you have to do is to set your doubts aside for long enough to see what happens. I eventually discovered that many of my doubts were themselves quite superstitious--the result of certain unquestioned fears and habitual patterns of resignation, like assuming that someone like me could never afford to buy a house in my expensive northern California town!

Why This Works: When I put my doubts temporarily out of play, it gave me a chance to notice opportunities, accept support, and be receptive to new possibilities that previously wouldn’t have shown up on my radar. For instance, I met a young Japanese flamenco dancer who was looking for a room to rent, and she became the first of several wonderful tenants who have broadened my horizons…and helped me to afford my “impossible” mortgage.

Try This Time-Tested Strategy

I permitted myself to discover what sort of strategy seemed to work best for what sort of wish. When it came to my wish for a new love, for example, I chose a combination of the apparent and the hidden. In fact, I resorted to the old-fashioned ritual of writing down my wish on a piece of paper and slipping it under my mattress! When it comes to the desire for a new love, we can’t just will that new love into being. We can articulate what it is we desire, we can make ourselves available to receiving it, but on some level we have to let go and surrender—and what better way than to sleep on it? Amazingly, within a matter of weeks, the man I wished for came into my life. Having read a book of mine, he called to see if he could meet me—and, believe it or not, this was exactly the way that I had wished to meet a man.

Why This Works: As silly as this may seem, writing down a wish and burying it is actually a potent metaphor for the bringing together of conscious and subconscious forces.

Make It Tangible

When you attempt to make a wish come true, you’re attempting to move from the possible to the actual. For this reason, it’s very helpful to make a three-dimensional object to represent your wish, whether in the form of a shrine, a home altar, or a collage. Because I had such difficulty believing that I could actually own a house, it seemed especially important for me to make this wish concrete and keep it in view. I actually made a little money shrine, filled with gold coins and miniature dollar bills. At first it felt like quite a transgression to do so, as though I were mixing the sacred and the profane. But within months I had gathered a down payment and the house was mine!

Why This Works: When you make a symbolic object, it helps you to acknowledge that you truly do wish for something, to clarify what it is, to honor and stay focused on your goal. And these behaviors are much more likely to bring that goal about.

Wishing and Working Go Together

From my experience, the people who are best at fulfilling their dreams are those who permit themselves to make a wish--and then work like dogs to make it happen! Certainly this is true of my “wish-muse,” Carole Watanabe, whom I write about in the book. She’ll announce a wish, build a shrine--and then spend months making contacts, raising funds, researching sites, renovating properties…doing whatever it takes to actualize her vision. For me, this dual approach was confirmed when I reread the book "Magic, Science and Religion" by anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski. He wrote that in ancient and indigenous cultures, people evoke magic at the start of a new venture in order to help them face those mysterious and unpredictable forces that are beyond human control. But then they do everything within their own power to grow their crops, hunt for food, and vanquish their enemies.

Why This Works: Divine magic, it seems, is most likely to happen when we’ve done our human homework.

Attract Others to Your Wish

One of the things that happens when you openly announce a wish and remain committed to it is that others become attracted to your wish. You let friends know that you want to buy a house in a certain area within a certain price range, and all kinds of people come out of the woodwork to give you the information you need. In my case—once I’d come out with my desire for a house and dared to make my money shrine—a family member suddenly woke up in the wee hours of the night and remembered that, years ago, she’d put a little stash of money in case she needed to buy a car. She had completely forgotten about this account. Since she no longer needed a car where she lived, she gave me the money toward my down payment. And though it wasn’t a large amount, it definitely helped me round the bend from possible to actual.

Why This Works: When you commit to your wish, it creates a certain momentum.That momentum intensifies when others come on board and contribute their resources to your objective, whether in the form of time, money, labor, materials, sound advice or simple encouragement.

Savor What Is

One of the dangers of wishing is that we forget to appreciate what we already have. It’s in the very nature of a wish to be oriented toward the future—and there’s nothing inherently wrong with that, so long as we remember that it is in the present moment that we are actually living our lives. Sages the world over have told us that the greatest happiness comes when what we wish for comes together with what is. The simple term for that is gratitude.

Why This Works: Savoring is a way of noticing and appreciating the wishes that have already come true in our lives and saying thank you. It stops us from dispersing our energy in constant, restless wanting and keeps us strong, calm, and grounded. And that’s precisely the sort of launching pad that is most likely to result in successful wishes!

Thursday, October 23, 2008

In God We Trust

GOD I LOVE YOU SO MUCH , I TRUST ONLY YOU


Need not be perfect, just that it is profoundly human, who has feelings and a good heart. Who knows how to share joys and sorrows, knowing silence and talk, but mostly listening. Like that of poetry, music, the sun and the moon, you feel a great love for life, who can keep a secret.

Your friend must guess the day sad and respect them, must have an ideal and the desire to integrate into the world because it comprises the vast emptiness of the lonely, it must taste of the simplicity of children, feeling that took the penalty and lost something dear Be underestimated Quixote without Sancho.

Get a friend to walk, enjoy nature, deleitare with music, reading, feeling a human being. Get a friend to be able to count on what was of the beautiful and sad during the day, tastes, the anxieties and joys. A friend who can converse in simple things, dew, rain, stars and the memories of childhood and above all things intimate.

Find a friend who is not afraid to tell a fault and when I do, knows how to do it. Get a friend to tell you that it is worth living, a friend who believes in you. Get a friend to be aware that these are still alive. But above all, Get a friend to ride the hand of God.

A veces nos suceden situaciones en la vida que no podemos ni sabemos como afrontarlas, sin embargo, siempre existe una salida y generalmente se hace con ayuda profesional y espiritual. Escribo este mail pues creo que con mi poca experiencia puede llegarle a parejas que estan a punto de casarse o recientemente casados o quien sabe, parejas en crisis.

Mi relación con mi pareja comenzó hace años atrás. Hace mas de 10 años comenzamos a salir, sin embargo, nada serio. Al pasar del tiempo llegamos a establecer una relación de novios serios que resultó en matrimonio consensuado. Sin embargo, nuestro matrimonio no duró ni la cuarta parte de nuestra vida juntos como amigos ni como pareja.

Con esta crisis y con el tiempo he comprendido, que el matrimonio:

es escoger a una persona de corazón y hacer que funcione
no es solo estar casados, sino "querer" estar casados,
es tener una casa de dos (casa-dos), con esto me refiero a la entrada de una terceca persona a la relación
es luchar por los mismos proyectos
es comprender que existen situaciones del diario vivir que te van alejando de la pareja pero que siempre puede haber un punto de reencuentro
es reenamorarse cada mes y ver las cosas que los unieron el día de su boda es de entender que si las cosas van mal, alguno de los dos puede llegar a caer en la tentación, sin embargo, puede fortalecer la unión de la pareja
es tolerar, no aguantar
es agradecer por lo que tienes,
es querer cuidar a esa persona para toda la vida
es respetar y aprender a decir "no" para no caer en la tentación
es una promesa ante Dios y un proyecto de vida con sus altas y bajas
A pesar de las charlas prematrimoniales, nunca llegamos a saber qué es el matrimonio hasta que lo vivimos. Y la verdad es que el matrimonio es una rutina diaria, que es la causal de las separaciones, de las infidelidades y del desamor. Sin embargo, toda rutina se puede atacar de raíz, siempre y cuando los dos esten dispuestos a cambiar las cosas una vez la monotonía ha llegado.

He escuchado y hablado con personas que tienen el mismo problema de una separacion, y me sorprende cómo el matrimonio se ha deteriorado de una forma inexplicable. Existen matrimonios hoy día donde la esposa tiene un amante y donde ese amante tiene a una esposa que ya sabe y que no hace nada para separarse ni para recuperar su matrimonio. Existen matrimonios donde el esposo tiene toda una familia por fuera pero no deja a su esposa. Existen matrimonios donde el esposo "se enamora" de otra mujer y lleva dicha relación hasta acabar con su matrimonio o simplemente sigue con las dos. Existen matrimonios que son separados por una infidelidad y que dos años después se vuelven a unir de una manera más fuerte todavía. Existen matrominios que en la primera crisis o problema, dejan todo así y listo, cada uno por su lado. Existen matrimonios donde el esposo es infiel pero al pasar del tiempo se da cuanta que lo que vale la pena es su vida de casado y la que está en casa esperandolo. Pues si existen personas, y me refiero a hombres y mujeres, allá fuera que no les interesa destruir un matrimonio y que su mejor excusa es decir "ese matrimonio ya estaba acabado antes que yo llegara"......

En conclusión, el matrimonio no es fácil, y no estoy diciendo que los problemas o infidelidades de uno u otro cónyuge lo aplauda, sin embargo, a veces eso es lo que presiona un botón de CUIDADO para la pareja. Si se aman de verdad se puede superar siempre y cuando exista el arrepentimiento real. Si uno de los dos no ama, entonces no hay nada que hablar y es irreparable el dolor y la herida. Recién casados: El enamoramiento se va en menos de un año, pero está en tí buscarlo y conquistar a tu pareja una y otra vez, aunque a veces no te nazca hacerlo; los resultados pueden ser muy positivos.

Cásate con alguien que comparta contigo la mayoría de las cosas que haces (no todo), pues durante el largo camino de un matrimonio, lo que queda es una vida de compartir con esa persona de la cual te enamoraste. Busca también lo que al otro le apasiona. Si es ver deportes, acompañalo, si es bailar, bailen, si es sexo, tengan sexo, si es ver TV, vean TV, si es leer, leen los dos, si es beber, beban juntos, si es ir a misa, vayan a misa juntos, si es caminar, vayan y caminen. Y si piensas que te casaste con la persona equivocada, evita esos pensamientos y encuentra un punto de conexión con tu pareja. En mi caso, yo me casé con la persona indicada, pues el termómetro de compartir estaba a su máximo nivel, sin embargo, por alguna u otra razón ésta persona cambió. Ya sea porque consiguió a alguien más donde ahorita se siente a gusto o porque simplemente en nuestra primera crisis, desistió y se alejo. Creo en el perdón de las personas, creo en que cada vez podemos ser mejores personas, quizás al principio por exigencia de nuestra pareja, pero luego lo hacemos por nosotros mismos. Creo en una segunda oportunidad siempre y cuando valga la pena y exista un arrepentimiento.

Para terminar solo les hago saber que el matrimonio es y será como lo formamos en los primeros años, y que la rutina llega y hay que combatirla y que no hay nada seguro en esta vida por más que lo prometamos ante Dios, pues nunca me imagine pasar por esto, pero son pruebas que nos pone Dios y no podemos hacer mas nada, sólo que afrontarla. Quizás yo fallé ! pero mi pareja falló más en no enfrentar una realidad tan cruel como la rutina. Por eso, si te casaste amando y enamorado, reenamora a tu pareja cada mes, aunque a principio no veas un cambio, ella o él cambiará si de verdad te ama. Busca los detalles por muy cursis que se vean, no dejen de compartir y diganse lo que les molesta sin tener miedo de la reacción del otro. Si la situacion es insostenible solo les puedo decir..que ma~ana es otro dia y que el Sol brillara otra vez...

... There are days that are blue and calm,
with the waters warm, delicious.
... Other days are cloudy, with big storms,
but when you think the ocean is going to devour
comes a new day full of sunshine and warmth.

... Sail in the midst of this ocean.
We lanchitas small, but great.
Each boat has its helm.
In this ... you take the helm today of your life.
You know, by the grace of God,
the direction you want to follow.
You know that to reach your goal you have to go through
All-as-big storms of all types:
passion, depression, moral, economic.

However, you have the wheel in your hands.
As any sailor, you should know to handle the rudder.

In their material,
when we have
a tremendous headache,
We produce sadness, depression, etc..
Our boat starts tilted
by a simple pain.
We take a medicine and straighten out the boat.

We again feel the health standard
which leads to balanced in the physical.
Every day we have to go to rule the rudder;
we must take decisions, decisions,
to straighten out our lives.

In the moral order,
we face friendships that we drag things
not suitable for different types:
talks that harm our mind,
negative ideas for our living.
We have to take the helm of our ship
and not allow ourselves to deviate from the moral and spiritual balance.

You'll have to make decisions.
Take them with the assurance that nothing
you apart from your path, your goal.

Make mistakes and then come
our depression and our aggressiveness.

When you find people in your life aggressive
and that only the negative views of others,
discúlpalas, forgive in advance.
They are people who have failed to take the helm of his life.
We carry them alone, without guide, without goal,
relying only on themselves, on their forces.

But you took the helm of your ship and return it to God
so that you have the assurance that always comes
a safe harbor.

Happiness depends on you, only you
to make such a total surrender of your life to God,
to make your Savior and your Lord so that you have eternal life
Espiritu Santo and guide you in every step of your life, your guide to the helm.
So, live intensely the present moment.
Concentra your whole being into what you do
and fear not the future.

The lighthouse of God cares for you and protect you always!

Monday, September 1, 2008

"Have Faith & All Will Be Fine"

H o p e s

When we find ourselves wallowing in self-pity, it's important to remember that there is someone out there who is worse off than ourselves. Tragedy and unhappy times hit all of us at some point or other. Hope is what gives us the courage to face those times and work through them.

Optimism can't change what happened but it can help you face what happened with increased strength. And sometimes it feels like hope is impossible and nothing that anyone says can make you feel better. But over time, it can help, if you let it.

It's not about being a Pollyana, it's about knowing that you have the strength inside of yourself to deal with what ever life throws at you. And most of us who've been around awhile know that life will always throw something at you when you least expect it.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

What Is God's Plan for You?


Reflections on God's purpose in their lives.

What's God's purpose for my life? It's a question most of us have wrestled with at some time or another.- usually when we are facing a major transition in our lives.In the Fox Faith DVD release "Moondance Alexander", misfit teen Moondance begins to find purpose in her life when she befriends a horse named Checkers and his rough-around-the-edges owner, Dante.


As Moondance begins to work with Checkers daily, Moondance begins to wonder if she and the Pinto have what it takes to actually compete in a prestigious equestrian event and win against all odds.Beliefnet asked our readers to describe a time when they tried to discern God's plan for their lives. Some readers believe God has shown them very clearly the direction for their lives, while others believe God doesn't always speak directly or control the paths our lives take.

Charting a New Direction

When I was in seminary I had a professor propose that among God's traits is omni-competence, that is the ability to deal with what is happening in spite of plans. I prefer that over knowing there is some pre-destined course (this may be why I also don't use a gps thing). I believe thoroughly that God trusts us to set out on our own and is with us as we make bad and good choices. Conversion happens when our path and God's converge, and we head off in a new, untried direction.The greatest quest is one where you set out not knowing for what you look, where you will go to find it, or who might help or hinder you along the way. Open mind, open heart, open possibiities is the way to go.


Listening to A Still, Small Voice

My real spiritual journey started in 1998 and hasn't stopped yet on this journey I call life. I remember feeling lost and broken and then I had this strange encounter with [these] words:


"You are not a broken winged sparrow, but an Eagle ready to soar."I love to think it was divine intervention that spoke out to me that night, since then I have been one to turn inward and reflect and to self love myself enough to continue this journey on my path of enlightment...I find myself growing spiritually each day, and never doubt it.

A Spiritual Voyage

In 1996, while on a sailboat trip across the Pacific, I began picking up the strangest feelings - feelings I had no way of understanding. Then we reached Fiji. From the onset of sailing along the shoreline, and throughout what ended up being an extended stay there, bizarre, what some would call paranormal experiences, literally blew me away. I came home thinking I was ready for a mental hospital and the white coats were coming. Fortunately, I finally confided in a friend who told me I'd had a spiritual awakening.


Where Growth Comes From

I find it hard to believe that God has a detailed plan for our lives. It seems to me that "God has a plan for my life" gives us an excuse for failure and someone to blame when life gets out of control.I believe that there is so much more beauty than ugly in our world and any number of life choices will bring us joy and growth. I believe that growth comes from exploring many possibilities and joy comes from making the best of those possibilities. So often our choices are NOT between "two evils" but rather between "two wonderful blessings."


Still Waiting...

Today my mind is clear and I feel great. I have trusted God and obeyed Him and I have not been disappointed. I have always felt that God has something GREAT for me to do while on this earth. Over the years, I have searched for what this great task might be. It wasn't time for me to know, yet.


I still do not know exactly what this great task is, but God spoke to me a couple of months ago. He was very clear telling me that if I obeyed him and made a specific change in my life, he would reveal my great purpose. I am at peace, awaiting his call.

Answering A (Complicated) Call

I am approaching one year since I officially made my United Methodist Conference aware that I am wanting to travel down the road of discernment and candidacy toward becoming an ordained pastor.A year ago, it was very easy to put this at the top of my list and go wherever God leads me. However, almost 7 months ago God sent a beautiful woman into my life who I had know in high school. She and I have been dating since then and I have come to love her and her three children.


There are so many complications: attending seminary while raising a family and fostering a new marriage, the itinerant nature of how Methodist pastors are placed in churches, the financial implications of attending seminary, and the list goes on.I am very torn right now. I feel called to the ministry and to marriage and family life. I know that thousands of people have done this before me; but I haven't done it myself.


Tuesday, July 8, 2008

"In God's Hand All Is Possible"

God’s Working on You


Little Jannah was playing on the floor while her mother sitting on a chair was busy doing some embroidery. Watching her in curiosity, she asked her what she was doing. She told her that she was embroidering.She told her that it looked like a mess from where she was. She watched her work within the boundaries of the little round hoop that she held in her hand, she complained to her that it sure looked messy from where she sat. She smiled at him and told him, “My daughter, you go about your playing for awhile and when I am finished with my embroidering, I will put you on my knee and let you see it from my side.”While playing, the little boy wondered why she was using dark threads along with the bright ones and why they seemed so jumbled to her. After sometime she heard her mother’s voice saying, “Daughter, come sit on my knee.” Her mother sat her daughter on her knee and the little girl was simply thrilled to see beautiful flowers that her mother had done.She could not believe it, because from underneath it looked so messy. Then her mother explained to him, “My daughter, from the other side it did look messy and jumbled, but you did not realize that there was a pre-drawn plan on the top. It was a design. I was only following it. Now look at it from my side and you will see what I was doing.” Friend, when you go through trials and pain in life, you too like little Jannah, may wonder why God is allowing such things to happen in your life.


But remember the Father is working on you to make you a blessing to the world. You will be thrilled when the Father shows you the plan that He's been working on you and you will not cease thanking Him all your life.

"God Is Within Us,Seek & You'll See"


GOD LIVES UNDER THE BED

This was sent to me by a friend of mine and I just want to share this with you so it would touch your hearts the way it has touched mine...GOD LIVES UNDER THE BED.


I envy Kevin. My brother Kevin thinks God lives under his bed. At least that's what I heard him say one night. He was praying out loud in his dark bedroom, and I stopped to listen, 'Areyou there, God?' he said. 'Where are you? Oh, I see. Under the bed...'I giggled softly and tiptoed off to my own room. Kevin's unique perspectivesare often a source of amusement. But that night something else lingered long after the humor. I realized for the first time the very different world Kevin lives in. He was born 30 years ago, mentally disabled as a result of difficulties during labor. Apart from his size (he's 6-foot-2), there are few ways in which he is an adult.

He reasons and communicates with the capabilities of a 7-year-old, and he always will. He will probably always believe that God lives under his bed, that Santa Claus is the one who fills the space under our tree every Christmas and that airplanes stay up in the sky because angels carry them.I remember wondering if Kevin realizes he is different. Is he ever dissatisfied with his monotonous life? Up before dawn each day, off to work at a workshop for the disabled, home to walk our cocker spaniel, return to eat his favorite macaroni-and-cheesefor dinner, and later to bed. The only variation in the entire scheme is laundry, when he hovers excitedly over the washing machine like a mother with her newborn child.

He does not seem dissatisfied. He lopes out to the bus every morning at 7:05, eager for a day of simple work. He wrings his hands excitedly while the water boils on the stove before dinner, and he stays up late twice a week to gather our dirty laundry for his next day's laundry chores. And Saturdays-oh, the bliss of Saturdays! That's the day my Dad takes Kevin to the airport to have a soft drink, watch the planes land, and speculate loudly on the destination of each passenger inside. 'That one's goin' to Chi-car-go!' Kevin shouts as he claps his hands. His anticipation is so great he can hardly sleep on Friday nights.

And so goes his world of daily rituals and weekend field trips. He doesn't know what it means to be discontent. His life is simple. He will never know the entanglements of wealth of power, and he does not care what brand of clothing he wears or what kind of food he eats. His needs have always been met, and he never worries that one-day they may not be. His hands are diligent. Kevin is never so happy as when he is working.When he unloads the dishwasher or vacuums the carpet, his heart is completely in it. He does not shrink from a job when it is begun, and he does not leave a job until it is finished. But when his tasks are done, Kevin knows how to relax. He is not obsessed with his work or the work of others.

His heart is pure.He still believes everyone tells the truth, promises must be kept, and when you are wrong, you apologize instead of argue. Free from pride and unconcerned with appearances, Kevin is not afraid to cry when he is hurt, angry or sorry. He is always transparent, always sincere. And he trusts God. Not confined by intellectual reasoning, when he comes to Christ, he comes as a child. Kevin seems to know God - to really be friends with Him in a way that is difficult for an 'educated' person to grasp. God seems like his closest companion. In my moments of doubt and frustrations with my Christianity I envy the security Kevin has in his simple faith.

It is then that I am most willing to admit that he has some divine knowledge that rises above my mortal questions. It is then I realize that perhaps he is not the one with the handicap. I am. My obligations, my fear, my pride, my circumstances - they all become disabilities when I do not trust them to God's care. Who knows if Kevin comprehends things I can never learn? After all, he has spent his whole life in that kind of innocence, praying after dark and soaking up the goodness and love of God. And one day, when the mysteries of heaven are opened, and we are all amazed at how close God really is to our hearts, I'll realize that God heard the simple prayers of a boy who believed that God lived under his bed. Kevin won't be surprised at all! Prayer is the best free gift we will ever receive. There is no cost, but a lot of rewards.

FRIENDS ARE ANGELS WHO LIFT US TO OUR FEET WHEN OUR WINGS HAVE TROUBLE REMEMBERING.

Friday, July 4, 2008

"Faith Is A Belief That Don't Seek Evidence"


Have A Little Faith
There are moments in our life that we want to give up. These are the times when everything seemed to shut up and all the doors of escape has been padlocked. Everyone once in a while experienced this phenomenon when no one seemed to be there and nothing can be done but just do nothing. It happened to me many times. It had happened to me and I was not ready to face them but with a little faith and a lot of love I surmount every obstacle that seemed to be very impossible to get out with.

Maybe God really wants us to put in that situations when all we have to do is just pray and wait for HIS Divine Guidance. Maybe God really wants us to test if our faith and belief can withstand all the adversaries of life. And maybe God really wants those evil things to happen just to remind us that HE is always be there for us even though we think that HE abandoned us in every desperate moments.


But God does not sometimes directly rescue us. He send "angels" so that we can feel HIS presence. How many times that when we are in a crisis some unusual friend or someone will offer us his or her help? How many times when we are about to give up, there are past memories that will suddenly popped-out and will remind us how lucky we were before and we soon realized that this crisis of the moment is just another way of living or existence? And God does not fail and will never fail us. Sometimes HIS timing and purpose of giving us so much problems are incomprehensible but at the end of the tunnel we can see HIS light that will give us eternal peace. And we should not have little faith. We gotta have Big Faith. Faith to move on. Faith to carry on. Faith that can only be our own salvation into this cruel world!

Bountiful blessings

BLESSINGS



God hears your prayers


Offered with genuine tears


With His love and compassion


Carries you through all tribulation;


His answers are always the best


Throwing away other options to rest;


Today, if you to Him confess


Your sins and profess;


To abide always in His holy presence,


That would bring blessings immense.



In GOD We Trust

Sunday, June 29, 2008

"In God We Trust , In God We Live"

The Living and Consistent God
But before we come to his saving activity, there are two basic truths about him to consider, which Scripture emphasizes throughout. The first is that he is a living and sovereign God; the second that he is consistent, always the same, "the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows" (Jas. 1:17).



Again and again the one, living and true God is contrasted with the dead idols of heathendom. Prophets and psalmists hold heathen idols up to ridicule. Isaiah describes the scene in one of the temples when Babylon was captured. He pictures the chief Babylonian deities being snatched ignominiously from their pedestals, carried out on men’s shoulders and loaded on to carts outside. Fancy gods being carried by men and becoming "burdens on weary beasts"! And when the laughter subsides, the voice of God is heard. He is no idol needing to be carried about by men, for it is he who carries his people:

Listen to me, O house of Jacob,
all you who remain of the house of Israel,
you whom I have upheld since you were conceived,
and have carried since your birth.
Even to your old age and gray hairs
I am he, I am he who will sustain you.
I have made you and I will carry you. (Isa. 46:3-4)
Not only the idols’ inability to save aroused the prophets’ scorn, but their total lifelessness:
Their idols are silver and gold,
made by the hands of men.
They have mouths, but cannot speak,
eyes, but they cannot see;
they have ears, but cannot hear,
noses, but they cannot smell;
they have hands, but cannot feel,
feet, but they cannot walk;
nor can they utter a sound with their throats. (Ps. 115:4-7)
In contrast to them, "our God is in heaven; he does whatever pleases him" (Ps. 115:3). He is the living God, who sees and hears
and speaks and acts.
This living God is sovereign, a great king over all the earth. He is king of nature, and king of the nations also.
As king of nature he sustains the universe he has made and all its creatures. Even the ferocious elements are under his control. "The sea is his, for he made it" (Ps. 95:5), and the "stormy winds" fulfill his command (Ps. 148:8). Psalm 29 gives a dramatic description of a thunderstorm, in which "the voice of the LORD" breaks the cedars of Lebanon. The lightning flashes. The wilderness is shaken. The forests are stripped bare. The rain causes floods. As havoc spreads, one would expect apprehension and alarm to spread with it. But the psalmist remains quietly confident that God is in
control:
The LORD sits enthroned over the flood;
the LORD is enthroned as King forever. (Ps. 29:10)

Psalm 104 is an early study in ecology. In it the psalmist marvels (Ps. 104:17-18) at the way storks make their homes in fir trees, while "the high mountains belong to the wild goats" and "the crags are a refuge for the coneys" (that is, the rock badger, or hyrax).
The psalm goes on to describe how God feeds all animals:
These all look to you
to give them their food at the proper time.
When you give it to them,
they gather it up;
when you open your hand,
they are satisfied with good things. (Ps. 104:27-28)

Entirely in keeping with this Old Testament insistence that God is the Lord of nature is the teaching of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount, that God rules the animate and inanimate worlds. On the
one hand, he feeds the birds of the air and clothes the lilies of the field; on the other, "he causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous" (Matt. 5:45; 6:26-30).

The King of nature is also King of nations. As Daniel said to King Nebuchadnezzar, "The Most High is sovereign over the kingdoms of men and gives them to anyone he wishes" (Dan. 4:32). We saw
in an earlier chapter how the little countries of Israel and Judah often seemed no more than pawns on an international chessboard. The great power blocs of the day were the empires of Egypt and Mesopotamia. As they confronted each other on the battlefield, and the tide of war ebbed and flowed, it was Israel and Judah and the small neighboring states which got caught in between. Yet Israel continually uttered the splendid shout of faith:
The LORD reigns, let the nations tremble! (Ps. 99:1)

No power on earth, whether alone or in coalition with others, could triumph over God’s people without God’s permission. Do the nations scheme and plot, and set themselves against the Lord and
against his anointed?
The One enthroned in heaven laughs;
the Lord scoffs at them. (Ps. 2:4)

The apostles of Jesus in New Testament days had the same conviction. When Peter and John were forbidden to speak or teach at all in the name of Jesus, they called their friends to prayer. They lifted their voices together to God as the "sovereign Lord," the
creator of the universe. Then they recited the first two verses of Psalm 2 (from which I have just quoted) and applied them to Herod and Pontius Pilate, the Gentiles and the rulers of Israel. These had conspired together in Jerusalem against Jesus. To do what? "What your power and will had decided beforehand should happen" (Acts 4:18, 23-28).

More than that. The prophets taught that the mighty soldier-emperors of the day, some of whom were cruel and ruthless men, were still instruments in the hand of the Lord. Shalmaneser of Assyria was the rod of his anger, the staff of his fury, with which to punish Samaria (Isa. 10:5-6), Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon his
"servant" through whom he would destroy Jerusalem (Jer. 25:9; 27:6) and Cyrus of Persia his "anointed" to free his people from their captivity (Isa. 45:1-4; cf. 44:28).

If the God of the Bible is the living and the sovereign God, he is also always self-consistent. His sovereign power is never arbitrarily used. On the contrary, his activity is always consistent with his nature. One of the most important statements about God
in Scripture is that "he cannot disown himself" (2 Tim. 2:13). Does it come as a surprise that it is said God "cannot" do something? Can he not do anything? Is he not omnipotent? Yes, he can do anything he pleases to do, anything which is consistent with his nature to do. But his omnipotence does not mean that he can do absolutely anything whatsoever; for he limits it by his own self-consistency.
God’s love and wrath, together with his works of salvation and of judgment, are sometimes set over against each other as supposedly incompatible. We have already mentioned how some people imagine the God of the Old Testament to be a God of anger and the God of the New Testament to be a God of mercy. But this
is a false antithesis. The Old Testament also reveals him as a God of mercy, while the New Testament also reveals him as a God of judgment. Indeed the whole Bible, Old and New Testaments alike, presents him as a God of love and wrath simultaneously. The biblical authors are not embarrassed by this, as many moderns seem to be. Thus, the apostle John can tell his readers how "God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son"; and at the end of the same chapter declare that on him who does not obey the Son the wrath of God remains (John 3:16, 36). Similarly, the apostle Paul can describe his readers as "like the rest...by nature objects of wrath" and in the very next verse write that God is "rich in mercy" and has loved us with a great love (Eph. 2:3-4).

The only explanation the Bible gives of the loving and wrathful activity of God, of his deeds of salvation and of judgment, is simply that he is like that. That is the kind of God he is, and this is why he acts that way. "God is love," and therefore he loves the world and has given his Son for us (1 John 4:8-9). But also "our God is a consuming fire" (Heb. 12:29; cf. Deut. 4:24). His nature of perfect holiness can never compromise with evil but, as it were, "devours"
it. Always he sets himself implacably against it.

One of the ways in which Scripture dares to express this truth of God’s self-consistency is to say that he must and will "satisfy himself." That is to say, he is always perfectly himself and acts in a way that is true to himself. In every situation he expresses himself as he is, in mercy and in judgment.

Having now drawn attention to the biblical revelation of God as both living and sovereign on the one hand, and self-consistent on the other, there can be no doubt that the principal way in which the living God has expressed himself is in "grace." No one can understand the message of Scripture who does not know the meaning of grace. The God of the Bible is "the God of all grace" (1 Pet. 5:10). Grace is love, but love of a special sort. It is love which stoops and sacrifices and serves, love which is kind to the unkind, and generous to the ungrateful and undeserving. Grace is God’s free and unmerited favor, loving the unlovable, seeking the fugitive, rescuing the hopeless, and lifting the beggar from the dunghill to make him sit among princes (Ps. 113:7-8).
It is grace which led God to establish his covenant with a particular people. God’s grace is covenant grace. True, it is also shown to everybody without distinction. This is called his "common grace," by which he gives to all men indiscriminately such blessings as reason and conscience, love and beauty, life and food, marriage and children, work and leisure, ordered government and many other gifts besides. Yet God’s entering into a special covenant with a special people may be described as his characteristic act of grace. For in it he took the initiative to pick a people for himself and to pledge himself to be their God. He did not choose Israel because they were greater or better than other peoples. The reason for his choice lay in him, not in them. As Moses explained it,
The LORD...set his affection on you...because the LORD loved you. (Deut. 7:7-8)
Covenant" is a legal term, and signifies any binding undertaking. When used in Scripture to describe what God has done, however, it is not to be thought of as an agreement between two equal parties, a kind of mutual contract. It is more like a "testament" or will in which the testator has sole and entire discretion in the disposal of his own estate. Indeed, the English words "covenant" and
"testament" can be used interchangeably, which is why the two halves of the Bible are known as the Old and New "Testaments." The Greek word diatheke can mean either, and twice in the Epistles there is a play on the two meanings of the word, in order to make it plain that God’s covenant is like a "last will and testament" in that he has freely made certain promises (Gal. 3:15-18; Heb. 9:15-18). His covenant promises are not unconditional, since his people are required to obey his commands and this is their part of the covenant, but God himself lays down the commands as well as the promises. So even at Sinai God’s covenant remains a covenant of grace.

It is important to grasp, then, that the covenant of God is the same throughout, from Abraham to Christ, so that those who are Christ’s by faith are thereby Abraham’s children and heirs of the promises God made him (Gal. 3:29). The law which was given at Sinai did not annul the covenant of grace. On the contrary, the covenant of grace was confirmed and renewed at Sinai. What the law did was to emphasis and expand the requirement of obedience. It is only when the law is considered in isolation from the covenant
of grace that it is contrasted with the gospel. Then the law is seen to condemn the sinner for his disobedience, while the gospel offers him life by grace.
We are now in a position to think about what may be described as three stages in the outworking of God’s covenant,
expressed in the three words "redemption," "adoption" and "glorification."