Came to one of the most gorgeous sections of Scripture in the book of Isaiah. The prophecy comes like a feast in the wilderness to a starving, staggering people because it is preceded by such words of judgment to rebellious nations. I’m just going to read it to you. Is 25:6-10...
“On this mountain the Lord of Armies will prepare for all the peoples a feast of choice meat, a feast with aged wine (it’s been waiting on the Baptists), prime cuts of choice meat, fine vintage wine (we won’t know the difference). On this mountain he will destroy the burial...
shroud, The shroud over all the peoples, the sheet covering all the nations (picture the nations personified & covered like dead bodies & God removing the sheet to bring back to life those who trusted Him); He will destroy death forever. The Lord God will wipe away the tears...
from every face and remove his people’s disgrace from the whole earth, for the Lord has spoken.” (Oh dear Lord, hasten the day. Praise You for Your unending mercies! Now listen listen listen listen, people. This next part is so powerful, it brings me to tears nearly every time.)
On that day it will be said,
“Look, this is our God; we have waited for him & He has saved us. This is the Lord; we have waited for Him. Let us rejoice & be glad in His salvation.” For the Lord’s power will rest on this mountain.”
That is it. That is everything. He will do...
exactly what He said He would do. And all who have trusted in Him will see His face at the Great Feast. And we will cheer, “Look!! It’s Him!! This is our God whom we’ve waited for!!! He told us He’d come! He told us to trust Him. Told us to wait on Him & He’d make all things new!
Let us rejoice and be glad in His salvation!!
On the Great Day, brothers and sisters, when all tears will be wiped away and death will be no more, this is all that will matter:
“LOOK! It’s Him! Our God! We trusted in Him and He saved us!”
Of course He did.
He said He would.
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There are certain expectations we are absolutely right to have about people in any realm of Christian ministry: Pastors, teachers, communicators, singers, worship leaders, church leaders, representatives of Christian nonprofits, etc. Expect them to be flawed? Imperfect? Yes. BUT
Expect them to be genuine regarding Jesus and the people they serve in his name. Paul told Timothy to to “keep away from youthful passions and pursue righteousness, faithfulness, love & peace in company with others who call on the Lord from a pure heart.” If over time they don’t,
that’s not where you want to be. Do not get it in your head no matter what comes out about any person in Christian work that it’s the way you may as well expect all of them
to be. That’s hogwash. You won’t find anyone perfect. Anyone who walks in the Spirit every second. But you
Thinking of the psalmist’s words of distress in Psalm 116:11. “Everyone is a liar.” I’ve lately caught my attitude toward governmental officials being, “you’re all a bunch of liars.” The Holy Spirit points out in this psalm that arriving at this summation is severely oppressive.
And surely it is. And surely this is one reason we of faith are commanded to pray for our leaders. It shields our own hearts, too. The lazy thing to do here is argue over who the biggest liars are. My point is how oppressive it is to think we can’t trust leaders to be truthful.
Of course, there are honest officials out there. Characterizing all by some is cynicism & cynicism left to grow morphs into oppression. Here’s the thing: we CAN trust the Lord. He already told us not to place our trust in humans. Pray for them, yes. Entrust ourselves to them? No.
You know what fun thing you young career writers have to look forward to? Happening on a phrase, a sentence or a crude drawing you scrawled on some random piece of paper that God grew into a book. It’s happened to me so many times. And I always stop, smile and think on it.
Writing’s a hard profession. Maddening. And either impressively defiant in a social media world flatlining our reading comprehension or just plain stupid. Immediate gratification is a fool‘s hope which is why you turn to Cheetos. And as paragraphs gradually materialize on paper,
your book has an uncanny way of having been so much better before you wrote it. Then, should some publisher actually show interest in it, the question becomes whether or not your ego can bear the criticism. And then, of course, there are all the deletions.
You know how you sometimes can’t articulate a season of your life till you begin coming out of it? I’m having that experience. I feel like I’m waking out of a long winter’s night that began with the death of my beloved brother 18 months ago & began wrapping up about 1 month ago.
It was characterized by so much mourning (multiplied with the death of our 5 year old cutest-thing-ever bird dog), bone-deep exhaustion & increasingly unbearable physical pain. I couldn’t write. I could study & prepare messages but not write. I tried hard but nothing would come.
I didn’t have the energy to garden. My body was racked with too much pain to fool with my vines. Got so down about that, I couldn’t even go look at them. I didn’t have energy for complicated relationships or conflict.
This is a fairly niche tweet to any of you who are heads of ministries and nonprofits or are long time pastors of a church and you are nearing or well within retirement age. Assume that those who are working for you are wondering what your plans are. Don’t leave them hanging.
Denial is not only unhealthy for you, it is extremely unfair to those who work for you. We who are in Christ ought not fear facing natural decline. We can say all we want that we still have the energy of a teenager and the gifts and calling of God to stay in the lead but for most
it’s simply not reality & sometimes we can be the last to know. Do you have trustworthy people with the guts to tell you when it’s time to transition if even just a little at a time? Refusal to think about/talk about it signals that our identity is in our position, not Christ.
After your graciousness, I’ll share a couple of good recipes with y’all in a thread. I have to admit when someone has me beat and my friend Jan Morton’s southern cornbread dressing surpasses mine. The best, most consistent recipe for it I’ve ever tasted. granjansjoy.com/2016/11/dressi…
This is my high school boyfriend’s mother’s (lol) recipe for chocolate pecan pie. Makes two so, of course, half the recipe if you’re only making one. It’s absolutely fantastic. The alternative at the bottom is mine. My problem is, I think everything is better with cream cheese.