Monday, February 22, 2021

On Loan

 

[Photo of a library book sign out form]


And he [Job] said, “Naked I came from my
mother’s womb, and naked shall I return.
The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken
away; blessed be the name of the Lord.”
—Job 1:21

Regardless of your political leanings, when you hear the phrase: “Talent on loan from God!” you immediately recognize the slogan of the radio talk show host, Rush Limbaugh. The first impression that many have on hearing that phrase is to think of it as a boastful and arrogant statement. On closer examination, however, those of us who believe in a Creator God who made us all in His image and gave us all that we are and all that we have can agree that we all can and should make this same declaration.

Not only do we live with the loan of our gifts and talents given to us by God, we live with so much more that we borrow from, yet only for a time. All of our possessions, all of our experiences, all of our education have been loaned to us for use in living our lives for the glory of God.

In my particular situation, I may not have the difficulty that some may have with thinking in terms of temporary, or borrowed, living arrangements. I have lived far more years of my adult life in rented properties than in properties that my husband and I have “owned.” Even those houses that we once owned now have new owners. So, too, that childhood home for most of us likely has new residents since we have grown and moved away.

In some respect, I considered the thousands of children I taught in public elementary and middle school as “my” kids. However, in moments of clarity, I remember that, in introducing school chorus concerts, I would often thank parents for loaning their beautiful children to me to teach. Though I didn’t have children of my own, I could “borrow” some from others, if only for a season.

And, what about those other “things” that God has loaned us and of which He is actually the sole proprietor?

  • The sixth and a half years that I held the position of organist, using the largest organ in the tri-state area (Pennsylvania, New York, and Ohio)—a five manual, 6,000 pipe instrument. I certainly had no ownership rights to that position, nor to that magnificent instrument.

  • Nor did I have any rights to the beautiful Kawai grand piano that I had helped select and on which I played for fifteen years at another church.

I merely “borrowed” these positions and these instruments in order to use them in the praise of our God and for His glory.

So, what do we learn from thinking about the use of “all things borrowed” in this life?

For one, we need to express our gratitude to God, more and more, as we realize all that He has given us to use and enjoy. Secondly, we need to hold the precious gifts He has given in a very light grasp because He may choose to take them from us at any time in exchange for something else. Thirdly, we need to hold no bitterness if God chooses to take these borrowed things away.

Like Job, no matter what God chooses to give us for a season and later take away from us, we should learn to bless the Lord for His gracious borrowed gifts, we should enjoy those gifts to the fullest, and then we should always, and without hesitation, submit to His wisdom and to His perfect will for us in every situation.

 

 

Monday, February 15, 2021

Hope for the Upside-Down

 

[Photo of children standing on their heads]


I say, “My splendor is gone and all
that I had hoped from the Lord.”
—Lamentations 3:18

Suppose you thought that the answer to your happiness came from standing on your head. You had watched other people who could accomplish this feat and saw how happy they seemed, so you tried it and it stuck. You felt you had truly found the way to look at life and the key to your happiness.

Now this sounds absurd to us. But, I believe we all have dreams of wonderful things, even pray and expect the Lord to fulfill our wishes. We feel the real key to our happiness comes from hoping that He will bring whatever we seek to pass in the manner we think He should.

Perhaps a career path we saw as the ultimate goal for our life looked possible. We had prepared for it, we had prayed for it, we had worked hard to achieve it. Yet just when we hoped that God would fulfill our dream, it was taken from us.

Or perhaps, we had looked forward to purchasing that beautiful house on the corner of our street, had prayed and hoped that the Lord had that house for us. But, when it came time to buy it, someone else actually offered more money, bought it ahead of us, and moved into what would have been our ideal residence. Our dreams were shattered.

When we lose hope, we end up in despair. In our Scripture passage at the beginning of this devotional from Lamentations 3, we see that Jeremiah had great hope for himself and for God’s people. He had hope that God would work to bring the kind of splendor and blessing to the Holy City of Jerusalem that he felt was within reach. However, that hope had been shattered.

In Lamentations 3:18-26, we find Jeremiah remembering the affliction, the wandering, and the bitterness he had experienced while praying and preaching to God’s people. In his remembering and despair, he meditated on his dreams. But, and most importantly, Jeremiah also meditated on his God. Once his attention shifted and he was able to look at things “right-side-up,” everything changed.

Note in verse 25 what the Prophet Jeremiah says:

The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him.

Do you see the one word that has changed from the verse that appears at the beginning of this devotional? We go from “upside-down”—hoping from God, to “right-side-up”—hoping in God.

This one change in focus changes everything. Instead of hoping for something Jeremiah thought would please him and answer the troubles he had, he decided to hope in God and trust that God would bring to pass the best results for himself and for God’s people. It was all a matter of trusting God and submitting to God’s will over Jeremiah’s will.

Sometimes this kind of change in thinking takes time, struggle, faith, and waiting, as this passage also relates. But then again, sometimes this kind of change just takes a change in our way of thinking, a new perspective—a change to right-side-up thinking!

—Posted: Monday, February 15, 2021

 

 

Monday, February 8, 2021

A Psalm for Sequentials

 

[Photo of a page from the Puritan primer]


I will extol the Lord at all times;
his praise will always be on my lips.
—Psalm 34:1

Do you like lists? I do. I think I even have some lists of lists! We “Sequentials” like to put things in order and then to look back and forward to gauge where things stand. We like binders with page dividers.

Studying my Teacher’s Plan Book, I could see what my students were taught last week, last month, and last year. By looking back at previous records, I could know what I wanted them to have learned by the end of the month and the end of the year. I could even determine what I wanted them to have learned by the time they finished elementary school.

Several of the Psalms were written as acrostics. Psalm 119 is the longest of these. But, my favorite Psalm of this type is Psalm 34. This particular Psalm is sequential, through and through. And, I love it.

An acrostic is based on a sequential list beginning with a letter of the alphabet. Each stanza of Psalm 34 begins with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet. This sequential format made it easy for Hebrew children to study and memorize this Psalm.

Acrostics have long been used to provide memory hooks for students. Early readers in the United States of America used acrostics to help them learn, even memorize, their lessons. Some of the acrostics appeared on counted-cross-stitch designs based on a page from the Puritan primer, like the one at the beginning of this blog post. As the children in colonial times, and later, embroidered these designs, they learned the lessons the designs intended to teach.

Beyond the connection to acrostics and sequential learning, Psalm 34 details how the Lord should be extoled (or praised). If you choose to meditate on all the words of this Psalm, you will quickly observe that praise comes from our lips, (v. 1) from our souls, (v. 2), from our faces (v. 5) and from our lives (vv. 8-9).

As we continue to meditate on Psalm 34, we learn that when we look at the way God takes care of us, and how He keeps us, we see that we fall under His protection, (vv. 6-8), under His provision (vv. 9-10), under His constant attention (vv. 15-16), and under His compassion (vv.17-20).

How’s that for a set of sequential lists?

To further break this Psalm down into learnable chunks, each of those categories listed in the above paragraphs goes into detail. For example, when we praise the Lord from our souls, we do it with boasting, with audible exaltation, and by exalting Him with others.

Do you see how perfectly Psalm 34 was planned and written?

And for what reason do you suppose that God gave us this wonderful, sequential, perfectly crafted song of praise? God gave us Psalm 34 to help us praise Him, to understand His care, and to comprehend the detail with which He watches over us and provides for us.

Studying Psalm 34 may also encourage you to write your own sequential Psalm. You can begin doing this by asking the question: “How has God shown up in my life?”

As you answer that question, you will likely discover that God has made Himself known in your life through His love, His power, His wisdom, His compassion, and by the application of His many other great attributes.

I strongly encourage you to join me in meditating on this wonderful Psalm. Together we will see the beauty of the words. But more importantly, we will see the beauty and majesty of our God!

 

 

Monday, February 1, 2021

God's Omniscient Journal

 

[Photo of someone writing in a journal]


All the days ordained for me
were written in your book
before one of them came to be.
—Psalm 139:16

Both of my grandmothers kept diaries. My mom also kept a diary. I keep one, as well, but I call mine a journal. I find the styles and the myriad of ways that people write down what has happened in their lives quite interesting.

My one grandmother used a pencil to write in tiny bank books. Usually, she merely wrote just one line a day:

“M and G came from Cleveland today.”

She included no details. Just the facts. It was as if she had taken lessons from the character, like Jack Webb, on the TV show “Dragnet.”

My mom’s diaries had similar entries. But with each entry, she always recorded the weather, like any good farm wife of her day.

Each day, my other grandmother wrote many paragraphs of newsy information about the family and the neighbors. She wrote using the most beautiful penmanship with a lovely script handwriting.

None of these women forerunners of mine ever wrote about their feelings. They also never wrote about the spiritual lessons they’d learned, or anything deeply personal.

My own journal writing has changed over the years. At first, my journals carried only Scripture passages and spiritual lessons that I had learned. Now, my journal entries are a combination of those spiritual meditations, my feelings about them, a running day-to-day recording of activities, and once in a while, even comments about the weather.

All this, by way of introduction, to say that God keeps a journal on us, too. God’s journal about us in an “omniscient journal.” Studying the nature of God, at least to the extent that He has revealed His nature to us in the pages of His written Word, we learn that God has written odd and magnificent things in His journal about our days before they have taken place. No human that I know has such an ability.

Yes, we do make plans. But, as the Scripture tells us in Proverbs 19:21:

Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails.

Even more than having written the activities of each day ahead of time, God has written our feelings about Him, our feelings about life, and our feelings about those things He has brought about to bring us closer to Him. He records our trials, our joys, our thoughts, our dreams, and our physical ailments. He knows more about us before our actual days happen than we know about ourselves after those days happen.

Can you record in advance how God brought about that meeting with someone who needed your word of encouragement? Can you record in advance the blessing you gave to someone whom you never saw again? Of course not. I repeat: God knows more about us before our actual days take place than we know about ourselves afterwards.

What does this fact cause us to do? First of all, I believe that it should cause us to joyfully worship Him, acknowledging His power, love, and omniscience. Like the Samaritan woman at the well, who exclaimed in John 4:29:

“Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Could this be the Christ?”

Then, knowing what we now understand about God’s knowledge of us, we should find this fact comforting, as we look at days before they occur and wonder what will ever happen to us in this situation, or in that one. God already knows what will happen, how He will help get us through that situation, and the reasons He has for allowing everything to occur the way that they do.

As we continue to move through each day in our lives, may the wonderful knowledge of God’s omniscience cause us to trust His awesome love and power. Knowing that God sees what will happen to us before it even occurs should give us a sense of peace that passes all understanding.