The first day of our adventure was great. We left Lafayette at 8 a.m. Stopped for a great Mexican lunch in Hope. (The Clintons declined our invitation to dine.) We arrived at the Alpine Inn at 3 p.m. Nick told the Inn Keeper it was the best Inn he had ever seen. Adding that it was the only Inn he had ever seen. We topped off the day with a steak supper at Outback. We are enjoying a movie bundled up in the King Bed. We listened to an audio book and played video games (Nick played. I drove) on the way up. It would have been a perfect day; but the Cajuns lost. It was a good game and very exciting but not satisfying. However, as Nick says “More time for fun things.” We plan to visit the Science Museum tomorrow and check the view from one of the surrounding peaks. My memory of the day was Nick’s overall enthusiasm. He frequently made comments appreciative of what we were seeing or doing. I tend to get down pretty easily and it is a great lesson to be with someone who is almost always up. Looking forward to more […]
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Adventure – Devotional for Sunday March 6, 2011
Sing along with the Great Adventure.This morning I’m off on an adventure. My grandson and I are headed up to Hot Springs, Arkansas for the Sunbelt Tournament. Win or lose, we will stay until Wednesday hopefully watching basketball and having fun. Trips, large and small, have been an adventure for me since I was a child. Our family didn’t travel much. We had 9 kids and, for much of my childhood, no car. But my godmother would take us on great trips. I remember going to Colorado, Mexico and Tennessee. I remember the adventure started days before the trip with packing, buying clothes and general anticipation. It was great fun to see new places and to do something different from the daily routine. This adventure started the same. I didn’t even sleep very well last night in anticipation. I think the life of a Christian was meant to be an adventure. Jesus certainly was one to travel and to live every day to the fullest and with much adventure. The mundane course of most lives isn’t the natural way. We fall into routines because they are safe and require little faith or imagination. We should awaken each morning thinking, […]
Content with Seed Planting and Watering – Devotional for Saturday, March 5, 2011
“I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God made it grow. 1 Corinthians 3:6 NIV We want so much for those we love. We want them to have all that life offers. We want them to skip the painful lessons and to avoid the traps into which we fell. We want them to love and be loved…more than was in our life. We know that God gave us these loved ones and we feel responsible for the success of their lives. It’s frustrating. We need to always remember our place. We can plant seeds and we can water; but only God can produce the miraculous growth we desire for them. We need to always remember that we were incapable of changing ourselves; we have no hope of changing others—only Jesus can change a heart. So sometimes, beset with frustration in our inability to be agents of change, we fail to play the important part we have been given, planting and watering. We can do these tasks and we can make a difference. Direct them to Jesus. We can’t do this by simply saying “You need Jesus.” We do it by telling how we needed Jesus and how He […]
Reflections from a Kairos Weekend – Devotional for Friday, March 4, 2011
Here are some reflections from the leader of the last Kairos weekend. Please consider participating in the next weekend in June. Please contact me if you are interested. We need men and women. KAIROS #51 Have you ever been at a loss of words? Someone asked me how it felt to be a new Dad once. I just looked at him, unable to speak. After the weekend known as Kairos #51, I have been asked a number of times, “So, how was the weekend?” Fortunately, on the Monday following the weekend, I found myself on a plane, with noise canceling earphones, pen, paper and time. I hope these four experiences from the weekend summarize what has been a life changing event for me, the team and the residents of Angola’s Camp C. “I DOUBT IT” A major issue for Kairos 51 began before we arrived, in the form of transfers. Camp C was being converted to a trustee camp. Our weekend happened to hit DURING the transfer and because of this, several residents were asked Friday morning to pack their things and move. Obviously, their move out of Camp C would have resulted in them leaving the Kairos weekend. […]
Integrity – Devotional for Thursday, March 3, 2011
The godly walk with integrity; blessed are their children who follow them. Proverbs 20:7 NLT Let’s consider “integrity” today. It means the state of being whole, entire, or undiminished; completeness. Proverbs tells us our children are blessed when they follow those who walk with integrity. This is because children are quick to note inconsistency and we are quick to fall into patterns of inconsistency. We are not consistent in our judgments; we hold others to different standards than we hold ourselves. We are inconsistent in the segments of our lives; acting differently on Sunday morning from the way we are on Monday morning. We are inconsistent with our relationships; speaking ill of those whom we hug and kiss when we meet. We are inconsistent in our walk; taking strong stands on one day and drifting away the next. We are inconsistent with our discipline promising dire consequences for failures by our children but shying away when the time for implementation comes. Finally we are inconsistent between our purposes, our principles and our production. When our children consider why we say we are here, what we say we believe and compare that with what we actually do, is there any […]
Joy – Devotional for Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Have you considered that you may be missing Joy in your life because you aren’t making it a priority? Joy, like most great things in life, doesn’t just happen. It takes some focus and some attitude readjustment. When we do not discipline ourselves to stay focused on our eternal priorities, we can easily become bogged down by earthly concerns that are unimportant. Consider these thoughts of Paul, written from prison: “But whatever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith” (Philippians 3:7-9). Only dependence on Christ’s strength can bring us joy. We must value our relationship with Christ and treasure our gift of joy in order to experience joy at its fullest. Only Christ’s resurrection power can satisfy our empty hearts. Only His power […]
Lying Lips – Devotional for Tuesday, March 1, 2011
The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in those who tell the truth. Proverbs 12:22 NLT There is a commercial on television these days that I enjoy. It shows “honest Abe” and his wife, Mary Todd Lincoln. She is wearing a “hooped” skirt dress and she asks her husband if it makes her look fat. After a period of embarrassing silence, Honest Abe says, “Maybe a little.” His wife is not pleased. This is the kind of verse that gets a hearty “Amen” from most of us. Who doesn’t despise a liar? The problem is when we think of this kind of verse we are quick to apply it to others and not ourselves. Most of us are guilty of lying almost on a daily basis. Sure, most of those are not “big” lies. And some of them come out of our mouths because we don’t want to hurt others. Many times we don’t want to “confront” a bad situation so a little “white lie” seems the best alternative. I think we just don’t consider how much harm we do when we fail to tell the truth, even when we “shade” the truth to make it more palatable. […]
Indescribable God – Devotional for Monday, February 28, 2011
Indescribable God Yesterday at Amana we began a multiple week study on the Names of God. It was a good beginning. We learned how the children of Israel have come up with many names in an attempt to describe the God who took them as a special people and call them His children. We reviewed some of the names and it quickly became clear that our God is so multifaceted that one name is insufficient to describe Him. But what also is true is that each name is insufficient to describe even one element of His character. Consider “Father” our favorite name for Him and the one our Lord chose when asked to teach us how to pray. When we use “Father” what comes to mind is our own imperfect fathers: men who ranged from the best intentioned to the absent. From men who tried to provide all the training, education and security a child needs to those who were not even present. Not a good start to describe the perfection of God. As I get older, the word becomes more personal as I consider my own feeble efforts to be “father.” I cringe to thing someone would have […]