This is My Moment

•September 21, 2015 • 1 Comment

I am very capable of getting on my high horse, refusing to do something that I don’t consider to be my thing and digging my heals in.  Principles are all well and good, but sometimes sticking to them loses you a way in to a situation that otherwise you would not be able to help in.   Sometimes you just have to eat things you would rather not, go to places you would prefer not to, even be subjected to doing things that are not really your bag – but it gains the other’s trust and earns you a hearing that you wouldn’t get if your answer to everything was, “I’m not doing that!”  Coming across as too good or too special to do what others enjoy, or have to do to get by, helps no one’s case!

The Book of Esther is a cracking good story, full of intrigue, twit, plot and counter-plot (if you’ve never read it from beginning to end, do take some time to).  It also contains some elements that seem out-dated and demeaning of women with our 21st centaury eyes.  But most of all it is the story of one woman who’s life personifies living God’s ways. What a strength of character and faith she shows.

The cost to Esther was risk, leaving her life, perhaps ignoring her principles and better judgement at times.

And now, this her moment, her opportunity.  After all she has gone through to get to this place, all the beauty pageants, the grooming, the gaining the good will of the king – now she can speak.  What she did meant that she could be in the right place at the right time when her opportunity to speak up for God and his people came up.  The kings asks Esther what she wants, and because she has built up his good will, she is able to tell him of Haman’s plot and her people are rescued.  Her willingness to put herself in that place saves a whole nation – God’s people.  If she hadn’t of been in that place, that situation, she would not have been able to work for God in it.

Sometimes in life we have to do things we would rather not, sometimes we even have to swallow our principles for the greater good.

What is God needing me to do, that my natural inclination might be to say, “No way”?  What is he asking me to do for him that might open doors, regardless of what I think?  What attitudes of mine is he challenging?  What place is he asking me to go for him – not me?  What moment is he preparing me for?

Lord,
help me not to be so high-principled
that I miss your opportunities,
so fixed in my ways
that I miss your ways,
so convinced I know what is right
that I forget what is right for you.

May I hear your call,
follow where you take me
and be ready
and willing
to speak for you
in the places you take me to.

I couldn’t find a video for this song, but I’ll leave it with Noel Richards to sum it up:

Dangerous People

Here we are Lord
More weak than strong
Still believing
Still pressing on
Make us ready
With hearts that are brave
We will silence
The lies of this age

For such a moment
We have been born
We’re gonna rise up
Take this world by storm
Let evil tremble
We come in his name
Our God is with us
We’re dangerous people

All God’s heroes
Failed as we do
Sometimes doubting
All that is true
Yet he calls us
Great people of faith
Working through us
As history is made

Esther 7:1-10, 9:20-22 CEV)

Haman Is Punished

The king and Haman were dining with Esther and drinking wine during the second dinner, when the king again said, “Esther, what can I do for you? Just ask, and I will give you as much as half of my kingdom!”

Esther answered, “Your Majesty, if you really care for me and are willing to help, you can save me and my people. That’s what I really want, because a reward has been promised to anyone who kills my people. Your Majesty, if we were merely going to be sold as slaves, I would not have bothered you.”

“Who would dare to do such a thing?” the king asked.

Esther replied, “That evil Haman is the one out to get us!”

Haman was terrified, as he looked at the king and the queen.

The king was so angry that he got up, left his wine, and went out into the palace garden.

Haman realized that the king had already decided what to do with him, and he stayed and begged Esther to save his life.

Just as the king came back into the room, Haman got down on his knees beside Esther, who was lying on the couch. The king shouted, “Now you’re even trying to rape my queen here in my own palace!”

As soon as the king said this, his servants covered Haman’s head. Then Harbona, one of the king’s personal servants, said, “Your Majesty, Haman built a tower seventy-five feet high beside his house, so he could hang Mordecai on it. And Mordecai is the very one who spoke up and saved your life.”

“Hang Haman from his own tower!” the king commanded. 10 Right away, Haman was hanged on the tower he had built to hang Mordecai, and the king calmed down.

9:20-22

The Festival of Purim

20 Mordecai wrote down everything that had happened. Then he sent letters to the Jews everywhere in the provinces 21 and told them:

Each year you must celebrate on both the fourteenth and the fifteenth of Adar, 22 the days when we Jews defeated our enemies. Remember this month as a time when our sorrow was turned to joy, and celebration took the place of crying. Celebrate by having parties and by giving to the poor and by sharing gifts of food with each other.

Sacrifice not Self-Seeking

•September 17, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Such concern
about who is the best,
the greatest,
the most important;
which one
deserves most praise
and glory.

How can this be the focus
in the presence of you?
The one who truly is
the Great One.

Such failure to grasp
what this is all about,
what really matters.

This is not about getting,
but giving.
The concern
should be living
and loving.

Until we get that,
the cross is an anathema,
a mystery,
incomprehensible.

When we get it,
we see what giving
and serving truly are.

Lord,
may I seek the way of love
and sacrifice,
not glory
and the appreciation
of those around me.

May I live your way.

When I Survey the Wondrous Cross

Mark 9:30-37 (CEV)

Jesus Again Speaks about His Death

30 Jesus left with his disciples and started through Galilee. He did not want anyone to know about it, 31 because he was teaching the disciples that the Son of Man would be handed over to people who would kill him. But three days later he would rise to life. 32 The disciples did not understand what Jesus meant, and they were afraid to ask.

Who Is the Greatest?

33 Jesus and his disciples went to his home in Capernaum. After they were inside the house, Jesus asked them, “What were you arguing about along the way?” 34 They had been arguing about which one of them was the greatest, and so they did not answer.

35 After Jesus sat down and told the twelve disciples to gather around him, he said, “If you want the place of honor, you must become a slave and serve others!”

36 Then Jesus had a child stand near him. He put his arm around the child and said, 37 “When you welcome even a child because of me, you welcome me. And when you welcome me, you welcome the one who sent me.”

The Wise Way

•September 16, 2015 • 1 Comment

Humility and wisdom,
or jealousy and selfishness?

Which way do I want to live?
Which life do I want to follow?
Which is the right way,
God’s way?

I know the answer,
but can I live it?

Will I cause trouble
and be cruel?

Or live with
purity,
friendliness,
gentleness,
kindness
and helpfulness?
Will I be a person who makes peace
or shatters it
wherever I go?

Fighting and arguing is so pointless,
so exhausting,
such a waste of effort.
living in love
and peace
is such a better use of energy,
more use to the world
and what God asks of me.

Lord,
I want my life to be clean
and lived the way you want it.
I give you my pain,
my battling,
my clumsiness
in dealing with others;
that I may live in your peace
and walk in your love.

Perfect Peace

James 3:13-4:3, 7-8 (CEV)

Wisdom from Above

13 Are any of you wise or sensible? Then show it by living right and by being humble and wise in everything you do. 14 But if your heart is full of bitter jealousy and selfishness, don’t brag or lie to cover up the truth. 15 That kind of wisdom doesn’t come from above. It is earthly and selfish and comes from the devil himself. 16 Whenever people are jealous or selfish, they cause trouble and do all sorts of cruel things. 17 But the wisdom that comes from above leads us to be pure, friendly, gentle, sensible, kind, helpful, genuine, and sincere. 18 When peacemakers plant seeds of peace, they will harvest justice.

Friendship with the World

Why do you fight and argue with each other? Isn’t it because you are full of selfish desires that fight to control your body? You want something you don’t have, and you will do anything to get it. You will even kill! But you still cannot get what you want, and you won’t get it by fighting and arguing. You should pray for it. Yet even when you do pray, your prayers are not answered, because you pray just for selfish reasons.

Surrender to God! Resist the devil, and he will run from you. Come near to God, and he will come near to you. Clean up your lives, you sinners. Purify your hearts, you people who can’t make up your mind.