Tuesday, July 12, 2016

The Source of our Strength

But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings as eagles, they shall run and not be weary, and they shall walk and not faint.
I wanted to write my next blog on recovery, and I still may.  I thought of this verse.  I read the entire chapter for background and verse 28 spoke loudly to me.  I have been reading Lee Stobles books. Currently I am reading The Case for a Creator.  
In the early 1900s it was easy for scientists the accept The theory that our universe was the result of a random explosion.  Simple, finite minds easily believed that the "precise fine tuned order" we observe exists from such a haphazard beginning.  As technology improves we are able to see more of the beautiful detail in God's creation and respected scientists acknowledge that this order could not have resulted from randomness.  There had to have been a designer, an origin.  Most are not ready to acknowledge God, but readily admit the fine tuning requires a tuner.
Well, I do know this Creator and this give verse 28 significance for me.  Hast thou not known? Has thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? there is no searching of his understanding.  God, the Creator is the source of our strength.  He is the One who makes our strength new.  We can fly, run and walk through our days in Victory.

A little old school worship

Strobe light, Lee. The Case for a Creator:  A Journalist Investigates Evidence That      Points Toward God. Zondervan. Grand Rapids,MI. 2004. Print

Isaiah 40. Holy Bible. KJV.  Print.

Avalon. "Can't Live a Day Without You". In a Different Light. 1999. Audio.

Saturday, July 9, 2016

Lessons from my garden

Over the years I have frequently planted gardens, usually with no success.  I deduced it was probably my sandy soil. In an attempt to solve this, I decided to compost. My better half constructed a compost box out of reclaimed wood. For a year all of my plant based degradables were placed here.  Our leaves and grass went on top.  I allowed the decomposes to do their job for a year.  This spring, I planted 4 tomato  plants.  Oh my word, they have produced more than I thought possible. Today as I as I pruned I pondered these thoughts. 
We need to step out of our comfort zone. Because I had low expectations, I placed my plants too close together. The carrying capacity of the areas in my small box was not large enough to sustain the plants.  Some of the branches were unproductive.  They were comfortable hanging out in the shadow of the branches that were productive.  Isn't that what we do as Christians.  We stay in our groups and routines because it is comfortable.  I pruned many yellow branches that were no longer receiving their own energy from the sun because they were shaded.  I as the pastor of my small garden attempted to move these hidden branches around, but there was only so much space in the sun in that area.  This energy is important for growth, just as the Son is to us. (I Cor  9:11-12, Gal 6:4, Eph 5:8)
Sometimes we need to get rid of excess baggage.  I did this to my plants so that the productive portions could be more productive.  We need to cut out activities, people and things that suck our energy.  We too have a carrying capacity and it is limiting. Choose what is important and focus on those things, cut off those yellow branches.  (John 15)
Accept the differences of those in our ecosystem, they too play a role. Ok, so no one likes the decomposers, right?  However, they play a major role in the nutrition of plants. Appreciate those people in the background that supply what you need to be successful.  My daughter hates bees and runs when she sees one. But those bees allow for variation in the plants by cross pollinating. Those people that are scary or annoying are making you change, providing variation that make you able to survive.  Natural Selection is not an evil evolutionary process. (I Cor 12)
Learn from your mistakes. I won't list the mistakes I made with this small garden. I already have plans to make next years garden better. (Phil 3:12-14)  Share with others what you have learned (II Tim 2)