EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED

“The lot is cast into the lap; but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord” (Pro. 16:33).

How could that passage describe our lives any better? We make “To Do” lists day after day and only manage to scratch off an item or two, yet we work or run full tilt 24/7.  We plan, and “life” throws us a curve.  Long before we grow into our teen years, the fact that we are really not in charge like we would like to be, hits us like a tsunami.

My husband and I were returning by night coach from a lectureship in the Southern part of the state, when suddenly someone shook me awake and said, “We are here at Central Station; we have to get down now because the train must go to the shed for cleaning and repairs.”

Walk?

Now?

But I need to go to the bathroom first.

I can’t see where I am going; my eyes are so scratchy from long hours without drops to moisten them, I can scarcely focus on anything. I frantically grab a comb from the backpack and try to smooth the stray hairs to keep from shocking others on the platform. The wind outside makes that a vain effort. So I walk, stagger, and then….

Hardly a hundred yards down the platform, I suddenly remembered that my glasses were still in the mesh pocket at one end of my berth.  My husband ran back to look for them, but of course they were gone already. There must have been a lesson I needed to learn about being a good steward.

Do we pay lip service to Romans 8:28 where God declares that he is the one working all things together, and then plan like we are the ones who control our destiny and day to day activities.  All things in any language leaves out nothing. He makes the same declaration in Ephesians 1:12 where he works all things according to the counsel of his own will. God has created man for his purpose, and works all things together for the good of the ones who know that purpose (Romans 8:28). But how many comfort themselves that God is working for them, and yet have no inkling of the purpose for God making this world?

Again, in Proverbs 16:9, he makes the same declaration – A man’s heart deviseth his way: but the Lord directeth his steps. Literally, man devises the way he wants to go but it is the Lord who ‘erects’ his steps. No wonder he warns us to acknowledge him in all our ways so that he will make our paths straight (Pro. 3:6). Once again, he challenges us: how can we understand our way if the Lord is the one who is directing our steps (Pro. 20:24). Of course we can give the answer – God’s word can make us to know ourselves as he knows us (1 Cor. 13:12). Without God’s word explaining what is happening, we walk on in darkness like the rest of the world and don’t know at what we stumble (Pro. 4:19).

Man is not in control, but is fully dependent on the Lord to produce anything of eternal value. All else is temporary, a waste of time and a vanity. We do need to acknowledge him in everything we do or plan to do, so that he will erect our steps (Pro. 16:9) and direct our paths (make our paths straight – Pro. 3:6).

LInda Ghill (https://lindaghill.files.wordpress.com/2015/08/socs-badge-2015.jpg)
LInda Ghill (https://lindaghill.files.wordpress.com/2015/08/socs-badge-2015.jpg)

This ramble is brought to you by Stream of Consciousness Saturday. Click the link and join in today! http://lindaghill.com/2015/10/02/the-friday-reminder-and-prompt-for-socs-oct-315/

Couldn’t Believe It

Stories like this remind me of my own childhood. I slid down one of those cellar doors and have scars to prove it, but kids don’t care about scars. After I became an adult, my husband and I lived where there was an old cellar and had occasion to offer its musty smell to friends who came there to escape a tornado. We cared little for the cobwebs, mice and dank odor that day.

Stuart M. Perkins's avatarStoryshucker

Tolerant friends listen whenever I tell stories about Nannie, my grandmother. She was a fountain of valuable life lessons and something happens almost daily to remind me of a Nannie-story, so I tell it. Friends are not only tolerant but often ask unprompted questions!

Was she funny?  –  She could be hilarious and she loved to laugh.

She told stories too? –  Oh yes.

True stories? –  I believed everything she said.

You believed everything she said? – Well, there was this one time…

And so I told them about a spring years ago when she said something I didn’t believe:

“I ain’t going down there.” I squinted into the darkness. The dank smell of ancient-ness floated up through cracks in the old wooden door.

“Nannie asked you to.” Vicki said sternly.

Prodded by my older sister’s reminder, I looked down at the uneven cement steps in front of me…

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GROWING STRONGER DAILY

What is the reason that we have for growing stronger daily? In order to grow stronger daily there must be enough motive to accomplish the task, and we should set aside time for this goal. The hope of eternal life is based in the promise that God made before the foundation of the world began. “In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began” (Titus 1:2). Many believe they are going to heaven, but why? What evidence do they have? How can they be sure?

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ELIJAH THE TISHBITE—DEALING WITH DEPRESSION

One of God’s greatest prophets was Elijah the Tishbite. God gave him a mighty work to do as he tried time after time to save Israel from their sins. Remind yourself of Elijah’s life and see whether you too can relate to the discouragement he felt at one point as he dealt with what seemed to be an impossible task. Take note the various events in his lifetime and the miracles he performed. Try to understand his goal and why he must have felt like a failure when Israel did not respond the way they should have (1 Kings 19:14), because he didn’t know about the 7,000 ‘successes’ he had.

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HISTORICAL QUOTES ABOUT MUSIC IN WORSHIP

New Testament Christians worshipped in a way not known to Jews or Old Testament worship. They sang together…simple, a cappella  music (Ephesians 5:19; Colossians 3:16). We know, both from scripture and from history, that instrumental music in worship was not an issue—never even introduced in worship—till hundreds of years after the church began. Leaders in denominations, which are today fully instrumental, were appalled when the organ was first introduced.

Beth

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