Saturday, December 24, 2011

Jon Butler - Talents

You can probably guess from the title of this post what this is a picture of. 


Talents!


So in the introductory entry for this blog (Third Servant), I talked about the parable of the talents.

A few weeks ago at one of my churches here in Pompey*, the preach was on Talents. Obviously, that preach was particularly poignant to me, so I just wanted to share it with you all.

Link to the preach here.

Hope it's as much of a blessing to you all as it was to me!

Until next time,

Love, peace, and non-alcoholic eggnog!

* I attend both Solent Community Church and King's Church. They are both amazing spirit-filled churches and I'm blessed to be a part of both. Please know that you are very welcome, and it would be absolutely great to see you at either one in 2012 (and beyond). :)


Friday, December 23, 2011

Praying for socks

Merry 23rd of December everyone!

Before we begin today, allow me to apologise for not having actually written a post in so long. I'll try and have one up in the next few days.

Today's post is one of my devotions (Girlfriends in God) from Tuesday.




No photo credits today, these are actually my socks! (:




A Box of Socks
Mary Southerland
Today’s Truth
If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer (Matthew 21:22, NIV).
Friend to Friend
My sister loves socks! One day, we were shopping and happened to walk into a department store where neither one of us could afford to buy a single thing. We were just passing through, on our way to find the bargains we could afford. With a sigh and a wistful look on her face, Betty said, “I wish I could afford to shop in this store.” When I asked her what she would buy, she immediately replied with a smile, “Socks! I want a big box of socks. I would wear a different pair every day.” I could think of several things I would have liked to buy in that store and socks was not one of them. I guess it is a matter of perspective. What was important to her was not important to me.
I sometimes think my prayer requests are insignificant and unimpressive to God. After all, He is God. Does He really have the time or the desire to hear and answer my prayers? Yes! The truth is that if it is important to me, it is important to God.
Each Christmas, Operation Shoebox collects and sends over eight million shoeboxes stuffed with small gifts such as candy, school supplies, small toys, toothbrushes, soap, and shampoo to children across the world. In Mexico, hundreds of boys and girls gathered at the church in a small village, excitedly anticipating the arrival of their precious shoeboxes. 
Delightful chaos erupted as bulging shoeboxes, wrapped in brightly colored paper and ribbon were passed into the small, eager hands of each child. Wrapping paper was hurriedly ripped into pieces and tossed aside, a smile spreading across the face of each child as their long awaited Christmas treasures were revealed. However, one little boy dissolved into tears as he lifted the lid of his box and peered inside to see what he had received for Christmas this year. 
One of the Operation Shoebox volunteers spotted the little boy and hurriedly made his way across the church to see what the problem could possibly be. With the help of an interpreter, the volunteer asked the now sobbing little boy, “What is wrong? What is in your box?” With tears streaming down his face, the little boy said, “Socks!” The worker instantly understood and assured the little boy that he could trade his box of socks for another box that might have crayons, a toy or a piece of candy in it.
Alarm spread across the face of the child as he vigorously shook his head and quickly jerked the box away from the now somewhat confused worker. Clutching the shoebox to his chest, the boy began sobbing out an explanation to the interpreter who listened for a few moments and then, with tears spilling out of his own eyes, turned to the volunteer and said, “You won’t believe this!” 
Taking a deep, steadying breath, the interpreter explained, “This little boy has a rare skin condition with which he was born. It seems to affect his feet more than any other spot on his body. The doctors have tried various medications and treatments but finally told the little boy that nothing will work and his feet will never heal unless he begins wearing cotton socks. His parents cannot even afford food for this boy; much less provide socks for their son. So, all year long, he has been praying for socks.” 
Socks were at the top of the little boy’s prayer list. As a matter of fact, they were his list. The mere sight of ordinary cotton socks brought tears to his eyes as he stared in awe at the priceless gift in his hands – socks. You see, they were more than just socks. They were the profound answer from our extraordinary God to a child’s simple prayer. One unknown and seemingly insignificant boy in Mexico prayed. God heard him and said “Let me take care of you.”
No matter how small or trivial your prayers may seem, remember God’s perspective. If it is important to you, it is important to Him. And He will take care of you.
Let’s Pray
Father, thank You for the privilege of coming before You in prayer. I want prayer to be as natural to me as breathing out and breathing in. I refuse to believe the lie that my prayers are too small or unimportant for You to hear. You are my Father. You are my God and You long to hear my voice. I will bring every prayer of my heart to You.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen.
Now It’s Your Turn
Do you have your own “box of socks” for which you are praying? What is it?
Do you really believe that God will hear and answer your prayer?
Read Hebrews 11:6. How does your faith measure up to the faith described in this verse?
Today, pray in faith and see what God does!

Seeking God?
Click here to find out more about 
how to have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.

Hope this makes you think.

Until next time,

Love, peace, and Christmas sweaters!


Thursday, December 22, 2011

Hand Raising Worship – The 10 Styles | Stuff Christians Like – Jon Acuff

Just a little lol for you all to start your days. :)


Today's post is from a blog (Stuff Christians Like) I recently discovered (link to original post here), and will probably have you secretly checking people out during Praise and Worship on Sunday. In th blog, the author addresses real-life issues in a relate to-able and at times humorous kind of way. Rather enjoyable reading. Hope you check it out!






There are some topics that require more than just a remix. Like prayer for instance, I could write a dozen posts on that because it’s so interesting. Or metrosexual worship leaders, I feel like that idea just keeps giving and giving to us. 
So when my wife leaned over to me at church and said, “People sure do have different styles when it comes to singing with their hands raised,” I knew I had to cover the topic at least one more time. I had to, like Jane Goodall in the jungle, step inside the world of hand raising and report what I found. I did and here, after deep scientific study in the field of sarcasmology, are the 10 styles of hand raising I encountered, starting with the least extreme to the most extreme:


1. The Ninja - You are tricky sir, truly, you are tricky. This guy is testing the waters. He sees ladies near him that throw their arms in the air at the first hint of a Chris Tomlin song but he’s not so sure. I mean, what if his friends see him? He used to make fun of people that did that. So instead of going all out, he does a fancy little move. He puts his hands by his pants pockets and just flips them over with his palms facing the heavens. From behind, you can’t see that he is doing anything out of the ordinary and from the front it just looks like he is cupping his hands slightly as if to show you what was in his pockets.


2. The Half & Half - This person often wants to sing with both hands raised, but they go to a conservative church and don’t want to be known as “that guy.” So instead of singing with both hands up, they hold one in the air and put one in their pocket or on the chair in front of them. It’s like half their body is saying, “YAY JESUS!!!!” and the other half is saying, “Nothing to see here folks, move it along please, move it along.”


3. The Single Hand Salute - This is the cousin of the half & half but is different in it’s level of intensity. Instead of just kind of floating in the air, the hand you have up goes out straight at an angle, as if you are saluting some visiting military dignitary. It’s possible this move was first instilled in people when they were young with the song, “God’s Army.”


4. The Elevator - This one technically marks our transition into multi-hand motions. In this move, you act like there is a rule against having both hands raised at the same exact time. So you start rotating your arms. As soon as one arm comes down, the other arm goes up. It’s kind of an awkward dance move, but works pretty well when set to “Blessed be the Name.”


5. The Pound Cake - This is what we in the industry, of hand raising in case you were wondering, refer to as an “underhand move.” Instead of sticking your arms out, you hold them with your palms facing the sky as if you are ready to receive something from someone in front of you. In the pound cake, your elbows should be at stomach level, with your hands tilted at a 47 degree angle as if someone visiting your house warming party is about to hand you a delicious pound cake. It’s not a heavy cake, so you don’t have to brace yourself, but can instead just relax and think, “hey cool, pound cake. Let me take that for you.”


6. The Tickler - It’s getting serious now. The tickler is the person that sticks their arms out horizontally as if they were trying to make a big T with their body. This is a fine move except that because we’re all sitting so close, they inevitably bump into you with their hands. So while you try to sing along with the chorus, you can’t help but giggle as they, lost in a moment of blissful worship, accidentally tickle you.



7. The Double High Five - I am very stingy with my high fives. I think the last time I gave one was in the delivery room of my second daughter. The next time I give one will be if I get a book deal. Other than those two situations, I find the high five to be the physical version of using a lot of exclamation marks!!! That’s why I rarely do this move. The double high five looks exactly like it sounds. You act like you’ve just scored a goal in soccer/football and are about to double high five the person in front of you. (Some people call this move the “Secret passageway” because it kind of looks like you are feeling along a wall for a hidden button that will open a secret door. But I’m a purist and don’t use that term.)


8. The Huge Watermelon - This is like the pound cake on steroids. In this move, your arms are held higher and with a considerable about of dedication and determination. It’s still an underhand move, but now, instead of a light and fluffy cake, someone on a truck is handing down a huge watermelon to you. Better get ready, that thing looks heavy.


9. The Helicopter Rail - At this point, both arms are raised high in the air. This is professional hand raiser territory we’re in. Please don’t try to do this at home. With this one, you reach your arms out, way over your head but out in front of your body. Imagine if you were stuck on a piece of driftwood and a shark with a laser on its head was about to get you and you had to desperately reach out for the rail of a helicopter that was attempting to rescue you. Stretch, stretch, you gotta want it.


10. The YMCA - This is my favorite and probably most common hand raising technique. It’s not complicated. Much like the famous song, you simply raise your hands above your body and form a big Y. That’s all, but it leaves little doubt to the folks around you what is going on. You’re worshipping. It’s big, it’s beautiful, it’s messy and it’s great.


Although I tend to be a pound cake kind of guy, I like when people raise their hands. This is the second time I have written about it. My friend said that when her mom did it, it always looked like she was clearing a runway for God to land. I think that’s pretty cool and hope to one day work my way up to at least mastering the huge watermelon.


Watermelon? Helicopter? Honestly, this reminds me of this:
Redwood Tree





So, which one are you? Even if you haven't figured it out (or are embarrassed to say), hope that tickled you!


So until next time, 




  • Subucula tua apparet! (You may want to get that looked at. :s )

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

2012 Resolutions already? Wha?

'Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ.' - Philippians 1:27

It may seem to be a bit early to begin thinking about 2012 Resolutions, but I'm starting to plan them now because I need your help. Let me explain:

The plan for my 2012 resolutions is actually an idea borrowed from a good friend of mine. He made a list of 12 resolutions for the year, but instead of beginning them all on 1st January, he only started one. Each month, he would add another resolution while continuing those already started. Basically, cumulative resolutions.

With his blessing, I've decided to appropriate his cumulative resolution idea, but with my own spin on it. I've come up with four different categories:


  1. Spiritual - Resolutions to do with my growth and development as a Christian. 
  2. General - Pretty much anything here really. 
  3. 2012 Bucket List - 12 things I want to do before the end of 2012.
  4. Challenges - I love a good challenge. This category is for people to challenge me. The challenges can last anywhere from a month to the whole year. 
This is where you all come in. I'm asking for suggestions for any or all of the four categories. The first three, Spiritual, General, and the Bucket List are all limited to 12 each, and we'll just see what happens with the challenges. Also, if you suggest a challenge, could you perhaps suggest a consequence for failing the challenge as well? Maybe 20 hours of volunteer work or something like that. 

I'll give you all until 23:59 on 17th December to brainstorm and put up any ideas you have, then I'll sort through them, and maybe (for the sake of accountability) let you all know what the final lists look like.

And please everyone, be creative, don't think outside the box, think 'What box?' Haha :p

Thanks in advance for what I hope will be some crazy good 2012 resolution concepts!

Ready? Steady? GO! (: 


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Broken Chariots


Hey everyone,

This entry is really just to re-direct you to another blog: Broken Chariots, by Ryan and Annie ( good friends of a good friend). Annie has been diagnosed with cancer (for the second time), but in this instance it's terminal. The blog is one their ways of sharing Annie's story. It's updated pretty regularly, so do keep checking back. I challenge you to read it and not be touched.

Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers.

And that's it.

Until next time,

M-J

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Be prudent - Mamma Wood

Just want to begin this post by apologizing for not have put up any new entries in an extended period of time. Sorry everyone!

And now as a treat, today's post was not written by me, but by my mummy! :D 

Now from the pen of the legendary Mamma Wood, "Be prudent"

Be prudent

In today’s world of fluctuating economy, most people welcome any advice which would result in their saving, be it money, time or anything else.

Today’s admonition to “Be prudent” therefore encapsulates what I hope will be some welcome yet simple advice.  Let me admit that this advice is not original but gleaned from my mother who was an avid reader.  She came across the saying “Use snippets of time.” and shared it with me when I was a teenager.

Being a “crafty” person, the allusion was a very real one, and it was easy to identify with the many little unused pockets of time which exist in the lives of all of us.  We often talk about wasting time but fail to recognize, or perhaps we overlook those little moments which are tucked away and  unused.  I know someone who taught herself a new language using the time she spent on the bus every day to learn new vocabulary.

There are two sayings which I want to mention: “The devil finds work for idle hands to do”  and “An empty mind is the devil’s workshop”.  If we agree with the ideas expressed there, then the fifth chapter of Ephesians offers some excellent advice.  Pay particular attention to verses 15 and 16, and then it will all make sense.

We know that God is interested in the “all” of our lives, and so when we are called to account, we will need to account for our snippets of time as well.  How can we use them?  We can  learn Bible verses.  We can learn a new language like my friend.  We can start a project.  The possibililties are limited only by our individual imaginations.

If we make a habit out of using our time wisely, no prudently, there is a strong chance that the attitude will spill over into other areas of our lives - our money…our resources…  and so today, as always….”Be prudent.”

God bless.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Be homeless - Follow wholeheartedly


*We interrupt our regularly scheduled (...ish) posts, to bring you a special Hurricane Edition. 
This entry was written last week during Hurricane Irene.*

Be homeless - Follow wholeheartedly


As I'm writing this post, for two different reasons, the title has taken on a new meaning  for me. Today, 25th August 2011, most (if not all) of the Bahamian population is boarded up in their homes waiting out the category 3 Hurricane Irene. As we are beginning to get reports from the southern-most islands, we are learning that some settlements have been up to 90% destroyed, and there are some islands we've heard nothing from at all. Fortunately (up to the time of publishing), there has been no reported loss of life in The Bahamas. 


Be homeless.


Up until yesterday, 24th August 2011, I was technically homeless upon my return to England. My friends and I, have been waiting with baited breath for several weeks to hear whether or not we were going to get the house, or would have to keep looking. For a contract beginning September 1st, this was cutting it fairly close, and it didn't help that we're currently scattered around the globe. My degree was in jepoardy; with nowhere to stay, British passport or not, I could be refused entry into the United Kingdom. 


Be homeless.


And? We live in a pretty self-centred world. How do those situations affect you? I couldn't possibly be telling you to be homeless simply because I was right? They say misery loves company, but that would be taking it to an extreme. Well what if it wasn't M-J telling you to be homeless, but Jesus? Would it make a difference?


The main verse we're looking at today is Luke 9:58. It's Jesus' response to  a man that said he would follow Him wherever He went; He said "Foxes haves holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head." Ok, to be fair, Jesus wasn't exactly saying 'Be homeless,' but rather warning that it was a very possible consequence of following Him. What I notice however, is that He didn't ask of people something He wasn't willing to do Himself. He told the man that He, the Son of Man, had nowhere to stay. Know this, when you say you're a Christian, people watch what you do. Jesus said He was the Son of God, so everyone watched (and many criticized) what He did. Jesus lived a life of example. He told us to love, then showed us how.

Luke 9:57-62 is about the cost of following Christ. The main point being made in this passage is that living as a follower of Christ requires a wholehearted commitment. You have to be ready to give up everything, drop your old life, and take on a new life in Christ. Again, Jesus set the ultimate example in that He gave up everything - Heaven and perfection - to take on the sins of the world, to take on my sins.

In today's world it seems as though people have 'glamourized' Jesus' life. People talk about the highlights -water to wine, walking on water, raising people from the dead, being the Saviour of the world, rising from the dead Himself - but what people seem to skirt over are some of the details. Those last three years of His life when He was doing all those amazing works, Jesus was homeless. He had a God-given purpose, and to realize that purpose He had to put behind Him His old life, that of a carpenter, and take on His new role as Son of Man.


Nowadays we don't have Jesus the man to actually physically follow around, so maybe you don't need to be homeless to follow Him, unless of course you've been called to a life of poverty or missions work ;), but it's the mindset you have that's important. 

At some point during my final two years of high school, I created a major called 'International Bumology,' and began telling people that that's what I was going to study at university. It was basically studying the world's homeless, and the different factors that contributed to their current status. There was even a knesthetic learning aspect where you would live the life of a homeless person for a time. It is only now, seven years after, I am realizing, how true that may turn out to be living life as a follower of Christ. 


Now again, I'm not I saying that to live a Christian life you have to become a vagabond. What I am saying, is that it is not a life of material possesions and narcissism, but one of heavenly wealth and servitude. 

So yes, maybe I am kind of telling you to be homeless, but homeless here on Earth. Store up your treasure somewhere with a better insurance policy. Matthew 6:19-21  Look, I don't know about you, but I have a mansion waiting for me. John 14:1-4  You may want to get on that. ;)


P.S. "The closer we get to September, the more awesome the miracle of us getting a house will be. " That's what I said in an email to one of my (now) housemates, while we were still unsure of what was going on with the house. There's a song we sing during Praise and Worship at my church in The Bahamas, 'He's a Miracle Working God.' That's so true. We found out last week, with 7 days until the beginning of September that we got the house. God is good. :)

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Be used Pt I

I realized while writing this that it would take more than one entry. 


Part one:


“The Lord doesn't ask about your ability, only your availability.


This is really a twofer (definition for those unfamiliar with the term). It's difficult to talk about being used without talking about being available.

How do you make yourself available to God?

  • Stop blocking God. - James 4:7-8a This takes us back to 'Be Lego.' Don't try to merely fit God in, submit your life to Him. His plan is better anyway. We often try to fight surrender because it's not easy to not be in control. When you run into a problem at a company, what do you ask? Something along the lines of 'Who's in charge here? May I have a word with them please?' (Maybe not in as mannerly a fashion as that, but you get the idea.) BEFORE you run into a problem, why don't you do that with your life? 'Excuse me, who's the manager here? God? Oh! Well okay then, I want Him to take care of this for me.' This doesn't mean the rest of your life will be easy, but you won't have to do it alone. One of the songs we learned growing up was 'He's got the whole world in His hands.' That's kind of reassuring isn't it? :)

  • Stop making excuses. - 1 Corinthians 13:11* I'll be blunt. Excuses are childish. Do away with them and take responsibility for your actions, or, in many cases, inaction. Benjamin Franklin said, "He that is good for making excuses, is seldom good for anything else." Until you stop finding reasons for why God can't use you, and accept that He can and will in His time, what are you good for? Time is precious, don't waste it.

  • Come correct. - Psalm 51:10 You can't come to God 'any kind of how' (as we would say in the Bahamas). I think however, that to an extent, how you come to God is more about your heart than the state of your life at the time. Of course if your life is in complete disarray, with you waffling between the ways of the world, and the ways of God, there will be a problem (see next point), but how genuine you are is important. When he wrote Psalm 51, David's life was in a shambles. He had committed adultery with a married woman, got her pregnant, tried to cover it up, failed, had the woman's husband killed instead, then he married her. David had it bad. The thing is, when he went to the Lord, he acknowledged his wrongdoing, and asked to be cleansed, before doing anything else, because as he said, God would not accept a sacrifice from him until he had done so. If you want God to accept your life, let your heart be pure when you give it to Him. Proverbs 27:19

  • Don't half step. Matthew 6:24 This one is simple, make a decision as to whom it is you're going to work with, and stick to it. You come to God asking Him to use you, when you have [His] undivided interests at heart. Philippians 1:27a

  • Humble yourself. -  Philippians 4:13 If you want to make a difference in the world, you have to be humble enough to admit that you cannot do it on your own. The thing is, you can't look to other people to help you. Depend on God. Philippians 2:3-5 In that scripture we're instructed to be not only humble, but selfless as well‽ In today's world, values like those are really only praised in people like Billy Graham, and [the late] Mother Teresa. In the business world, traits like being ruthless, cutthroat, even backstabbing if it gets you what you want are admired. Let's be honest. It's all about survival of the fittest right? Humility and selflessness go against human nature. Or do they? Perhaps not. Ephesians 2:10, "For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do." It seems from that verse that doing good is an intrinsic quality in us. Just because we do not recognize it doesn't mean that it's not there. To 'do good' for another person means putting yourself aside, and putting their needs above yours. Humility. Understand that a life consecrated to God is a life of [among other things] humility. Aside from the positive impact on the lives of others, one of the best things about humility is the payoff: James 4:10

  • Give yourself. - Romans 12:1 If I ask you to borrow a million dollars, and you say you will give it to me, so I go and take it out of your bank account, I'm pretty sure that makes me a thief. Saying you will do something does not equate to doing it. We have a saying in the Caribbean, 'Mouth can say anything.' You only said you would give the million, you did not actually give it, so I had no authority to take it from you. Until you actually give me the money, it's not mine to use. Actions speak so much louder than words. If you want God to use you, to use your life, don't say you will give it to Him, do it.

  • Ask. -  Matthew 7:7 This may seem obvious, but it's interesting how after doing all of those other things to make ourselves available to God, we just forget to ask. How many women get 'the wrong gift' for their birthday/anniversary/Christmas because they drop hints and assume their husband/boyfriend will know what they want? Children will often do the same thing. They will see some popsicles (ice lollies) in the freezer, and instead of simply asking for one, choose to go on and on about how much they like popsicles. Though we know what they want, because they have not asked, sometimes we deny them the privilege. We can hint, suggest, intimate to God all day that we want Him to use us, but often, if we don't ask, we too are denied the privilege. 

Now don't think that not doing these things i.e. not making yourself available to God, means that He will not use you. 


It is easy to let ourselves fall into the trap of thinking that we're too far gone, or too sinful for God to use us. Reality check: God uses anyone He wants. He's God.

Just in case you're still skeptical, here's a few people that God used despite their flaws:





Noah was a drunk
Abraham was too old
Isaac who was a daydreamer
Jacob was a liar
Leah was ugly
Joseph was abused
Moses had a stuttering problem
Gideon was afraid
Samson had long hair and was a womanizer
Rahab was a prostitute
Jeremiah and Timothy were too young
David was an adulterer and a murderer
Elijah was suicidal
Isaiah preached naked
Jonah ran from God
Naomi was a widow
Job went bankrupt
John the Baptist ate bugs
Peter denied Christ
The disciples fell asleep while praying
Martha worried about everything
The Samaritan woman was divorced (more than once)
Zaccheus was too small
Paul was too religious
Timothy had an ulcer

AND (my favourite)

Lazarus was dead!

Never doubt that God can use you. :)




Leaving you with a song again today, enjoy!











* For the most part, the scriptures will be from the NIV (New International Version) or the ESV (English Standard Version), but in this particular instance the quote is from the KJV (King James Version). Though now use my ESV more than my KJV, I grew up using a King James, and so for me, 1 Corinthians 13 is just one of those scriptures that just doesn't sound as sweet coming from a newer translation. 


Next posts:


Be used Pt II



Friday, August 5, 2011

Christianity without Christ? I think they're forgetting something...

Hey everyone,

This is outside of our regularly scheduled posts, but after having read this article on the BBC, Dutch rethink Christianity for a doubtful world, I thought it was worth it to ask you all to pray for Holland. If you remove something's core, how can you expect it to survive? To take the Christ out of Christianity changes it completely, and it is no longer Christianity.

Hope you all please take some time out to pray.

Thank you,

M-J

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Be Lego

If your childhood was anything like mine, you played with Lego growing up. At the end of the day you would 'tidy up' by throwing everything into the container as-is. The next time you came back, you would very likely find a 'creation' that someone else had already started, and what would you do with it? Take it apart, and start again. You wouldn't continue what someone else had already begun. I think God is like that. Often, we have built a foundation for ourselves. We have plans, dreams, goals. We are attempting to live (and control) our lives, and then try and fit God in where it's convenient. When we come to God, or in some cases come back to God, He has to take us apart, strip us down to our lowest point, to our nothing, the same way we used to do with our Lego. God will not build on someone else's foundation. He has a different, and better vision for our lives.

When I began writing this entry, my thinking was that when you let God take control of your life you had to be two things, a) willing, and b) committed. To me, being willing meant you would stick around until things got difficult, and being committed meant you would be there until the end, but more out of sense of obligation than desire. I even referenced Luke 9:57-62 (which is about the cost of following Christ), and how those men were willing but not committed. I thought when you were both willing AND committed, then you were starting to head in the right direction. I thought. Then I read this article: 'Why I'm Not a Committed Christian (And Why That's a Good Thing)' and realized, it's not about willingness or commitment, it's about surrender.

Surrender is where it starts. James 4:7-8a says 'Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.' Earlier I talked about when we are trying to live our lives how we want, and adding God in as an afterthought. I now understand that when you surrender to God, the things of His heart, what He desires for you, become your desires as well. Things line up. In our container of Lego growing up, we had two big green pieces, one a square, and one a rectangle. They were the perfect base for making houses, schools, anything that needed a solid foundation. How much more important is your life, than some house made of Lego that will be taken apart the next day? Instead of trying to be a construction worker (unless that's your actual job), why not let God be the builder? Make Him your big green square, and let your life be His Lego.

Photo credits



To end, I leave you with the words to one of the hymns I grew up with, I Surrender All:



All to Jesus I surrender; 
 all to him I freely give; 
 I will ever love and trust him, 
 in his presence daily live. 

Refrain:
 I surrender all, I surrender all, 
 all to thee, my blessed Savior, 
 I surrender all. 

All to Jesus I surrender; 
 humbly at his feet I bow, 
 worldly pleasures all forsaken; 
 take me, Jesus, take me now. 
 (Refrain) 

All to Jesus I surrender; 
 make me, Savior, wholly thine; 
 fill me with thy love and power; 
 truly know that thou art mine. 
 (Refrain) 

All to Jesus I surrender; 
 Lord, I give myself to thee; 
 fill me with thy love and power; 
 let thy blessing fall on me. 
 (Refrain) 

All to Jesus I surrender; 
 now I feel the sacred flame. 
 O the joy of full salvation! 
 Glory, glory, to his name! 
 (Refrain) 









Monday, August 1, 2011

Third Servant

Hey everyone! Just wanted to welcome you all to a new blog of mine. The name ' חכמה (Chokhmah) σοφία (Sophia) Sapientia' is made of the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin (respectively) words for wisdom (I hope, otherwise this could be embarrassing). Now I don't purport to be wise, the title is more of an allusion to James 1:5.

The reason I decided to start this new blog with more of a biblical focus, was as a result of a revelation I had last week. Not to be a Pharisee, but when praying, something I would often ask God is that He 'bless me to overflow so that I could be a blessing to others.' Last week, while in the middle of praying this, I realized how greedy that petition was. It brought to mind the parable of the talents, where a master entrusts a certain amount of money to three of his servants before leaving on a journey. Upon his return he was pleased to find that the first two of his servants had invested and doubled the amount of money he had left them. The third and final servant however, had simply dug a hole, buried the talents he was given, and gave back to the master exactly what he had been left with. Like a slap in the face it hit me that I was that third servant. I was asking for more blessings, but what had I done with the multitude that I already had? Selfishly horde them. Undeserving of what God had so graciously given up to this point, how could I even think, much less actually have the audacity to demand more?

So is that it? It doesn't matter if I've realized my inclination toward being a third servant, if I choose not to do anything about it. Having studied a handful of languages, something I've noticed about many (if not all of them), is that there are often what seems to be two very similar verbs for one action, for example, to hear, and to listen. In English we tend to blur the lines between the two and use them interchangeably, however if you look closely, you see there is a subtle difference. To simply hear, is just being able to perceive, whereas listening involves effort, you pay attention. One is just the ability, you hear things regardless of whether or not you try, the other is an action, it requires energy and doing, you purpose to listen.

At this point, the choice is mine, just hear God, or actually listen to Him? James 4:17 talks about how knowing the right thing, and not doing it is sin. As sin doesn't look good on me (or you for that matter, just throwing it out there), I've decided to get going. This blog is just me trying to overflow, to use my writing abilities to get God's word out there. These posts are really just my take on/understanding of whatever the entry is about that day. I intend to draw on life experiences, hopefully that makes you able to relate. The first few entries will take the format 'Be ______.' Sometimes the title will say it all, and sometimes you'll have to read for it to make sense. The goal, at least until the end of the summer is to post [at least] once or twice a week, and I've put it up here trusting that you all will help keep me accountable (thanks in advance). One final thing, this blog is as much for you as it is for me, so if you have a correction, a different opinion or take, or just a comment please let me know, and you may just find yourself writing a guest entry. ;)

In closing (boy I feel like a Baptist minister!) and to borrow from the New Testament, 'May grace and peace be multiplied to you.'