Sunday, November 25, 2012


When I’m with you, O Lord Jesus,
All my worries disappear like dusts.
By your grace and love,
My life is so complete.

When I’m alone in the dark,
I call upon your name, O Most Loving God.
It’s only then I find happiness and peace
In my heart, soul and mind.

When Your Holy Spirit guides me,
My soul glides high in the mountains.
I need you by my side, O Lord Jesus,
I can’t live without you in my life.

My God, I can feel the joy in my heart.
Now my life seems perfect and right.
O Lord Jesus,
You are behind these diamond smiles.

When I’m with you, my Lord Jesus,
Your love is my source of strength & hope.
You protect me from pain and sufferings.
You shelter me from the heartache of life.

Friday, November 23, 2012

"The Long Wait"


I am glad that Thanksgiving is followed by Christmas... a holiday of giving thanks is followed by a holiday for giving gifts. Sometimes we derail Thanksgiving by doing or saying dumb things... rebellious and hurtful things... and can't wait to move past the mess of the moment on to the glory of a new season, full of joy and the hope of heaven's glory. Maybe this story from a Thanksgiving long ago can help you understand why!

My grandmother smiled with delight as she gave my three-year-old brother and me two shiny nickels. "I know what I'm going to do with my nickel!" I proudly announced. "I'm going to get me one of those toys out of the plastic bubble machine at the MARKET."
My mom wouldn't give me a nickel for the bubble machine. "You'll have to earn your own nickel if you're going to waste it on junk like that," she'd told me.
Well, now I had my own nickel! I would get my own toy out of the cool bubble machine! Right? "That's not exactly what I gave you the nickel for," Mama Faye told me. "I was hoping you'd save them up and buy something special." Yeah, right. That nickel was burning a hole in my pocket, and saving it wasn't part of the fire!
I don't know what I dreamed that night, but I can tell you that I woke up a maniac. As the ladies were preparing the Thanksgiving meal, I took my nickel off the dresser, grabbed my brother's nickel and shoved them in my pocket, then took my brother by the hand. We headed out for a long walk...
... a very long walk.
... to the MARKET.
I put my nickel in first. Crank, crank, crank, clink, clink, clink, plop. Out it popped. I don't even remember what it was. Nothing as neat as the toys on the front of the bubble machine. Not worth a six-year-old boy's only nickel, that's for sure.
My brother put in his nickel. Out popped a miniature set of false teeth. He got the cool bubble! G-daddy, my dad's father, had false teeth. When the women weren't looking, he'd let us watch him take them out and wash them. That was way cool and now my three-year-old brother had some miniature false teeth. Double cool!
We made the long walk back home. As soon as we hit the front yard, mom asked, "Where in the world have you boys been?" "We just went for a little walk," I said in my most innocent voice. It was a simpler time and little boys could roam the neighborhood. You didn't have to worry, especially when your little boys were good. Of course, I was a good little boy...
... most of the time!
As we sat down for our Thanksgiving meal and that special Kodak moment where we join hands and give thanks to God for all the wonderful blessings he has given us, my brother Byron was suddenly reminded of his latest blessing. He dropped Mama Faye's hand, reached into his pocket and proudly announced, "Look what I've got. False teeth just like G-daddy!"
All hands dropped. Suddenly I was the only one in the mood for prayer. At this moment, I desired a very long prayer.
My mom then uttered the words I hated to hear: "Phillip Dixon Ware, what have you done?"
Mama Faye exclaimed as she inhaled, "Oh my goodness, you boys were on the Houston highway. You could have been killed!"
My other grandmother, Granny, pleaded for mercy, "Don't spank them Al, please don't spank them. It's Thanksgiving."
My dad's face flushed red. The vein in his neck popped out and I could see his heartbeat pounding in the vein in his temple. About that time he said ...
Don't you hate it when you go to a movie and the story doesn't end? When you're left with all those loose ends and have to decide for yourself how it's all supposed to finish? I hate that. But I'm going to leave you with this story dangling because I want to make an important point.
When you open up the Gospel of Luke and read the birth story of John the Baptist and Jesus, you come to familiar lines that get repeated nearly every year. They become so much a part of our holiday experience that we view them pretty much as holly and twinkly lights. But for those who lived this story, it was much different.
For hundreds of years, the Jewish people had lived with the last word of the Old Testament ringing in their ears. Go look in Malachi, the last book of our Old Testament, and notice that it ends on the word: "Curse."
You see, their story didn't have an ending. They were the people of God's great promises; made first to Abraham, preserved through the deliverance of Moses, and reiterated again to David. But the promises lay there like a dead corpse, lifeless, and barren.
These were the people of God Almighty, who humbled Pharaoh in the plagues and destroyed his army in the Exodus through the Red Sea. Their God had helped them conquer the Promised Land and destroy the mighty cities of Canaan. But where was this God now? Where were his mighty deeds to save? For hundreds of years they had been a people in bondage to one nation after another, suffering humiliation again and again.
Their God had thundered his Word at Sinai. He had spoken powerfully and shaken kingdoms through the voices of his prophets. But now, just as Amos had predicted, there was a famine in the land. Not a famine for bread, but a famine for the Word of God. For hundreds of years there was no great prophet. No more Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, or Jonah. Most of all, no sign of Elijah, who was to make his grand return in preparation for the Messiah.
God's people sat there in the barren dust of their existence, waiting for an end to their story. Hoping, praying, and dreaming of the day for God to say, "Your long wait is over. Let me tell you the rest of the story."
When you pick up your Bible and read  Luke chapters 1 and 2, remember this is more than just a quaint little tale to dust off at Christmas time when you bring the ornaments down from the attic. This is a story of people who had waited a very, very long time to hear God finish their story and change their mourning into joy and their curse into Christ.

.. about that time my dad said, "Boys, we're going to the bathroom."
My brother Byron was always dramatic in moments of discipline. He screamed like a stuck pig headed to slaughter. "No daddy, no daddy! I'm sorry. Please, I'm sorry. Phil made me do it, daddy..." "Please, I'm sorry. Phil made me do it, daddy..." "Phillip!" My dad only called me that a few times and I remember each of them well! "I'm going to make you watch me discipline your brother first because I want you to know that your actions have consequences on others. I watched: my eyes locked on his as he gave my brother three soft swats and let him go. Byron's cries ceased as the bathroom door closed. I was left alone to face the "LECTURE." "Phil, I'm disappointed in you." For a neurotically responsible oldest child, these words were crushing. Then he went on to enumerate my sins, holding up a finger for each of my transgressions:

  • You directly disobeyed what your mother told you.

  • You snuck off and involved your little brother in this deception.

  • You disappointed your grandmother and hurt her feelings.

  • You risked both of your lives by walking along the highway.

  • You bald-faced lied about it.




At that point, he didn't say his usual, "This is going to hurt you worse than it hurts me." No, he took those five points and applied them to my backside. One for each point, and then one to grow on. When I left the bathroom, dad stayed in there a few minutes and cried — nobody told me, I could see it in his eyes when he came back to the table. I got less than I deserved! God let Israel wait a long time for the Messiah. When he came, there were angels and babies and shepherds and all sorts of wonder and awe. Most of all, there was an end for the story. In the births of John the Baptist and Jesus, God chose to enter history and turn our barrenness into his blessing and our curse into his Christ. Why? Because we all deserved punishment for our rebellious sins, but rather than take us to the bathroom, God chose to visit us in a manger so he could...
... give his people the knowledge of salvation through the forgiveness of their sins, because of the tender mercy of our God, by which the rising sun will come to us from heaven to shine on those living in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the path of peace (Luke 1:77-79 NIV).

The following questions are for your personal thought and for you to share in discussion of this article and its ideas with others. I'd also love to hear from you on my blog.
What is your most memorable Thanksgiving for good reasons?
What is your most regrettable Thanksgiving?
Most of the time, we talk about Thanksgiving as the holiday that is good and Christmas as the one that is commercialized.

  • Why do think this is so?

  • Which holiday do you like better and why?

  • How can you make Thanksgiving more full of the joy of Jesus' coming and Christmas more full of thanksgiving for what God has done for us?

  • Why are both celebrations important for us as God's people?



What can you do to prepare your heart and your family for a more proper approach to the Christmas season?

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

If you judge people, you have no time to love them.


Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself....


The LORD... delights in those whose ways are blameless. —Proverbs 11:20

Inspirational illustration of Proverbs 11:20
I am confident that the Lord will say, "Well done, good and faithful servant!" Why? Not because I'm perfect, but Jesus has forgiven and cleansed me and the Holy Spirit is working to perfect my behavior to match my standing before God. I don't know about you, but I am thankful to know that we can bring the LORD delight. Just like our children can bring us delight. Just like a good desert can bring us delight. Just like a beautiful sunset enjoyed with someone we love brings us delight.

Prayer...

May my words and my actions bring you delight, O LORD, my God! You have done so much for me, dear Father, I want to bring you great joy! In Jesus' name I pray. Amen.


Tuesday, November 13, 2012

"Life as a Fourteen Year Old"


Fourteen should be a wonderful, carefree year in a child's life. Actually, being 14 is more nearly part of the bridge between being a child and becoming an adult. At so tender an age, a degree of maturity might well be making a child aware of the world and its ills; at that age, however, there should be no sense of being an adult who is responsible for fixing the world's misfortunes and evils.


Little boys whose voices occasionally crack now and then should have nothing greater to agonize over than that. Little girls who are laying aside their dolls should have nothing greater to fret over than those boys whose voices are starting to crack.
Malala Yousafzai is only 14, and she seems to be something of an exception. In her home country of Pakistan first, then eventually at an international level, she has become an activist for education. More specifically, she has pleaded for adults in her part of the world to make education more widely available to girls.
Malala has the misfortune of living in a place where a rigid fundamentalist religion claims that girls should not receive the education boys are entitled to have. After all, as women they will remain answerable to their fathers, brothers, and husbands — with very few personal rights. They will be required to be subservient and docile. Cover their faces. Defer to men. Keep their mouths shut.
Today Malala is fighting for her life in a military hospital in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Doctors give her slightly more than a 50-50 chance of survival. If she recovers, the degree of permanent damage is uncertain.
Last month, armed men stopped the school bus on which she was riding, called for her by name, and shot her in the head and neck. According to a spokesman for the Taliban — the fundamentalist Muslim group that eagerly claimed "credit" for the deed — it was Malala's fault. And the fault of her father.
She dared to go to school, and her father had permitted it. In the face of such "secular-minded" and "pro-West" behavior, said the spokesman, reverent and devout Taliban shooters were "forced to take this extreme step." If Malala survives, he said, more righteous warriors will be dispatched to finish the job.
That the attempted murder of a child happened in the name of religion only makes this story more disgraceful. The "righteous warrior" who would commit such an atrocity is evil beyond imagination. He is the right arm of Satan himself.
Islam condemns such behavior. So does Christianity. For that matter, so do atheists. All rational people recognize true evil for what it is — whether perpetrated by Muslims or Christians or Jews, by far right or far left.
People of goodwill from all backgrounds must stand up for freedom of expression, justice for minorities, rights for women, and protection of children.
An ancient Hebrew prophet, saying The LORD's own words, speaks eloquently to all religious people who miss the point of their religion:
"I hate all your show and pretense — the hypocrisy of your religious festivals and solemn assemblies. . . . I want to see a mighty flood of justice, an endless river of righteous living" (Amos 5:21-24 NLT).
Enough with making excuses for hatred. It is time for all nations and tribes, religions and parties to affirm human dignity, respect for one another, and love.
Pray for Malala. And pray for us all to surmount our most sordid impulses.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

They have returned to the sins of their forefathers, who refused to listen to my words. They have followed other gods to serve them. Both the house of Israel and the house of Judah have broken the covenant I made with their forefathers. —Jeremiah 11:10


Sometimes those with the greatest opportunity for blessings spurn them and fall back into the sinful habits of their heritage and culture. The consequences of this rejection of God, and his will, are enormous. For the last ten days in our devotionals, we've looked at the glorious future that lies ahead for us in our walk with Christ. Unfortunately, there are some who never climb on board the train of grace. They don't follow God and disdain those who do. In the face of their criticism, let's make sure we are truly faithful to God's calling, not just in word, but also in deed.

Prayer...

Dear Heavenly Father, I look forward to being with you. Yet, dear Father, I face many challenges in commitment to be faithful. I don't want to fall into the bad and sinful habits of some who have gone before me and who rebelled against you. Please empower my faith to be like those who served you wholeheartedly. Please deliver me from any impure deed or thought. In Jesus' name. Amen.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Observe therefore all the commands I am giving you today, so that you may have the strength to go in and take over the land that you are crossing the Jordan to possess... —Deuteronomy 11:8

God's desire that we obey his will is not arbitrary, impulsive, or demanding. He simply wants us to reflect his character, find his blessings, and receive his strength. Let's not look at obedience merely as something we must do, but as a blessing we get to discover. God gives us commands to obey, principles to guide us, and righteousness to seek so that we can rest in his blessing, live in his strength, and find the new frontiers where he longs to lead us.

Prayer...

LORD and Father, thank you for revealing your will and calling me to obey it. I know your desire is to share your blessings with me and bring me into your eternal presence. In Jesus' name I thank you. Amen.



Together !!!

                       "Coming together is a beginning, 
                           staying together is progress,
                        and working together is success."

Whether in a relationship, or in business, your results will increase tremendously when you work in perfect harmony with the members of your team.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

With a Kiss?

Judas planned to do something to show the people which man was Jesus. Judas said, "The man I kiss is Jesus. Arrest him and guard him while you lead him away." So Judas went to Jesus and said, "Teacher!" Then Judas kissed Jesus. Then the men grabbed Jesus and arrested him. — Mark 14:44-46

How sadly ironic! Judas betrays the one who loves him most with a kiss. For everyone whose heart has been broken by someone he or she loves, this is a great reminder that Jesus knows those deep feelings of betrayal and loss. Here is a Savior in whom we can confide. He knows our dashed hopes and our broken hearts. He promises to strengthen us and be with us in our dark hours of need. Most of all, he promises to dry every single tear from our eyes and welcome us home.


Today's Prayer:

Father in heaven, betrayal by someone we love is such a deep and cutting wound that many of us on your small blue planet never recover. Thank you for reminding us -- reminding me -- that Jesus knows this deep bitter sorrow firsthand and can help us in our time of need. In Jesus' name. Amen.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Congratulations!!!!

We wish you a hearty Congratulations on this pleasant occasion. May your life always shower you with such happy and successful moments. It is a success, you truly deserved. It is an achievement you have truly earned. We congratulate you on your success and wish you all the best for your future. Well done.

"The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor."


[In response to John the Baptist's question as to whether Jesus was the Messiah, Jesus said to tell him,] "The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor."

The clear sign of the Messiah's presence was a time of true blessedness for all who know and follow him. Just think how glorious it will be and all the blessings we will share when he comes again!

Prayer...

Lord God Almighty, I praise you for the time of blessing that accompanied Jesus' first coming to earth. I rejoice looking forward to his return and to the glorious blessings that await me and my brothers and sisters in Christ when our Savior returns. In anticipation of that Day, I thank you in Jesus' name. Amen.