Saturday, August 2, 2008
Sunday, June 22, 2008
A Song for My Annie
I was really blessed by a song yesterday and I thought the lyrics below really suited my Annie, so I sang it to her. I think she was blessed by it too.
All You Are, by Michael Card
Where did you get those eyes so blue?
They're from the sky that you passed through
Where did you get that little tear?
Did you find that it was waiting for you here?
And what about your little nose?
He knew you need it for the rose.
And as for your soft curly ear
He knew there would be songs for you to hear
For all you are and all you'll be
For everything you mean to me
Though I don't understand
I know you're from the Father's hand
How can it be that you are you?
He thought you up and so you grew
Because your mine, it must be true
He was also thinking of me, too
For all you are and all you'll be
For everything you mean to me
Though I don't understand
I know you're from the Father's hand
For all you are and all you'll be
For everything you mean to me
Though I don't understand
I know you're from the Father's hand
The Father's hand...
Thursday, June 19, 2008
A Poem for Moms and Dads
Let me guide a little child, dear Lord
I do not ask that Thou should give me some high work of Thine
Some noble calling or some wondrous task
Give me a little hand to hold in mine
Give me a little child to point the way
Over the strange, sweet path that leads to Thee
Give me a little voice to teach to pray
Give me two shining eyes Thy face to see
The only crown I ask dear Lord to wear is this
That I may teach a little child
I do not ask that I may ever stand among the wise, the worthy, or the great
I only ask that softly, hand in hand, the child and I may enter the gate
Author unknown
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Discovering Daily Who Christ Really Is
a poem by Bonnie Hain
Discovering daily who God really is,
Thanking Him daily He’s mine and I’m His,
Discovering daily God’s great love for me;
Such mercy, forgiveness, amazingly free.
Discovering daily that God really cares,
Discovering daily He does answer prayers,
Discovering daily what grace really means:
Unmerited favor beyond all my dreams.
Discovering daily God speaking to me;
He speaks through the Bible. Once blind, now I see.
Discovering, discovering each day that I live
That all that I need, He freely will give.
Discovering daily Christ working through me,
Accomplishing daily what never could be.
Discovering daily: I can’t, but He can;
Thanking Him daily for my place in His plan.
Discovering daily how real life can be
When I’m living in Christ and He’s living in me.
Discovering daily a song in my heart
With anticipation for each day to start.
Delighting and basking in love so divine,
Secure in the knowledge I’m His and He’s mine.
Besides mere contentment, excitement I see!
A daily adventure: Christ (alive) living in me!
Copyright © 2006 Bonnie Hain.
A little background about this poem that Major Ian Thomas quotes in his book - "The Indwelling Life of Christ."
Three months before she wrote this poem Bonnie attempted to take her life. When Bonnie and her husband returned from the hospital after this episode of their life, her husband placed a phone call to a local pastor (Bob Hobson) requesting help. Neither Bonnie nor her husband was a Christian.
Major Thomas tells the rest of the story.
Now, in response to this plea from a couple he did not know, Bob went to see them. He led them both to Christ, and he fully understood what that means. He did not just invite them to join his church or even simply to make a decision for Jesus so they could head toward heaven instead of hell. He led them to Christ. He invited them to receive Somebody, so that Somebody could live in them, Somebody living in somebody.
Such truth was revolutionary for this couple. From the moment of their genuine conversion, they fully grasped the implication of being born from above and becoming the recipients of the resurrection Life of the One who was crucified and then rose from the dead to share His Life with them on earth on their way to heaven. Life has held this same excitement for them ever since.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
I Want to Be True, Part Four and Final
I believe it is here that George MacDonald gets into the "how" of it. How can a man/woman be true? See what he has to say.
When an individual is, with his whole nature, loving and willing the truth, he or she is then a live truth. This he has not originated in himself. He has seen it and striven for it, but not originated it.Fantastic, I say! What say you?
The truth of every man, I say, is the perfected Christ in him. As Christ is the blossom of humanity, so the blossom of every man is the Christ perfected in him. The vital force of humanity working in him is Christ; He is his root--the generator and perfector of his individuality. The stronger the pure will of the man to be true, the freer and more active his choice, the more definite his individuality, even the more is the man and all that is his, Christ's. Without Him, he could not have truth, he could never have loved it, loving and desiring it, he could not have attained to it.
God gives us the willl wherewith to will, and the power to use it. But we, ourselves must will the truth, and for that the Lord is waiting. The work is his, but we must take our willing share. When the blossom breaks forth in us, the more it is ours, the more it is His. For the highest creation of the Father is the being that can like the Father and Son, of his own self will what is right. The groaning and travailing, the blossom and the joy, are the Father's and the Son's and ours. The will, the power of willing, may be created, but the willing is begotten. Because God wills first, man wills also.
When my being is consciously and willigly in the hands of him who called it to live and think and suffer and be glad--given back to him by a perfect obedience--I thenceforward breathe the breath, share the life of God himself. Then I am free, and in that I am true--which means one with the Father. And freedom knows itself to be freedom.
When a man is true, if he were in hell, he could not be miserable. He is right with himself, because right with Him from whom he came. To be right with God is to be right with the universe, one with the power, the love, the will of the mighty Father, the cherisher of joy, the Lord of laughter, whose are all glories, all hopes, who loves everything and hates nothing but selfishness, which he will not have in his kingdom.
Christ then is the Lord of life. His life is the light of men. The light mirrored in them changes them into the image of him, the Truth.
And thus the Truth, who is the Son, makes them free.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
I Want to Be True, Part Three
Jesus, the Live Truth
The one originating, living, visible truth, embracing all truths in all relations, is Jesus Christ.
He is true. He is the live truth. His truth, chosen and willed by him, the ripeness of his being, the flower of his sonship, which is his nature, the crown of his one topmost perfect relation acknowledged and gloried in, is his absolute obedience to his Father.
The obedient Jesus is Jesus, the Truth.
He is true and the root of all truth and development of truth in men. Their very being, however far from the true human, is the undeveloped Christ in them, and his likeness to Christ is the truth of a man, even as the perfect meaning of a flower is the truth of a flower.
Thursday, May 15, 2008
I Want to Be True, Part Two
You should not read ahead unless you are willing to have your manhood or womanhood challenged a bit. Seriously...I was and am extremely convicted by the following, but I thank God for it...its life to me really. The language isn't easy to read, but just keep going and you will be rewarded, I promise. Keep going.
Moral Facts--The Doing of TruthAs I've said, I want to be true...and I want to be free. Stay tuned for part 3.
The moment that whatever goes by the name of truth comes into connection with man, the moment that, instead of merely mirroring itself in his intellect as a thing outside of him, it comes into contact with him as a being of action, the moment the knowledge of it affects or ought to affect his sense of duty, it becomes a thing of far nobler import.
The question of truth then enters upon a higher plane, looks out of a loftier window.
A fact, which in itself is of no value, becomes at once a matter of moral life and death when a man has the imperative choice of being true or false concerning it. When the truth, the heart, the summit, the crown of a thing is perceived by a man, he approaches the fountain of truth whence the thing came, and perceiving God by understanding what it is, becomes more of a man, more of the being he was meant to be. In virtue of this perceived truth, he has relations with the universe until then undeveloped in him. But far higher will the doing of the least, the most insignificant duty raise him.
There, in the obedience of his actions, he begins to be a true man. A man may delight in the vision and glory of a truth, and not himself be true. The man whose vision is weak, but who--as far as he sees, and wanting to see farther--does the thing he sees, is a true man. The man who recognized the turth of any human relation and neglects the duty involved is not a true man. The man who knows the laws of nature and does not heed them, the more he teaches them to others, the less he is a true man. The man who takes good care of himself and none of his brother and sister is false. A man may be a poet or preacher, student or teacher, aware of the highest truths of many things, aware of that beauty which is the final cause of existence; he may be a man who would not tell a lie, or steal, or slander; and yet he may not be a true man, inasmuch as the essentials of manhood are not his aim, he has not come into the flower of his own being.
There are relations closer than those of the facts around him that he is failing to see, or seeing, fails to acknowledge, or acknowledging, fails to fulfill. Man is man only in the doing of truth, perfect man, only in the doing of the highest truth, which is the fulfilling of his relations to his origin. Fulfilling them, he is himself a truth, a living truth. The man is a true man who chooses duty; he is a perfect man who at length never thinks of duty. Relations, truths, duties are shown to the man away beyond him, that he may choose them and be a child of God, choosing righteousness like him. The man who regards duties only as facts, or even the man who regards them as essential truths, but goes no farther, is a man of untruth. He is a man indeed, but not a true man. He is a man in possibility, but not yet in reality. The recognition of these things is the imperative obligation to fulfill them. Not fulfilling these relations, these duties, a man is undoing the right of his own existence, destroying his raison d'etre.
When the soul or heart, or spirit, or whatever you please to call that which is the man himself and not his body, sooner or later becomes aware that he needs someone above him, whom to obey, in whom to rest, from whom to seek deliverance from what in himself is despicable, disappointing, and unworthy, then indeed is that man in the region of truth, and beginning to come true in himself. When a man bows down before a power that can account for him, a power that knows whence he came and whither he is going, who knows everything about him and can set him right, longs indeed to set him right, making of him a creature confident as a child whom his father is leading by the hand to the heights of happy-making truth-- then is that man bursting into his flower. Then the truth of his being, his real nature--born in God at first, and responsive to the truth, the being of God his origin--begins to show itself. Then is his nature coming into harmony with itself.
In obeying the will that is the cause of his being, he begins to stand on the apex of his being. He begins to feel himself free. The truth--not as known to his intellect, but as revealed in his own sense of being true--has made him free. No abstract truth held by purest insight can make a man free. But the truth done, the truth loved, the truth lived by the man, the truth of and not merely in the man himself--that is the truth that makes him free.