tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-85409940014797919622024-02-18T23:21:22.280-06:00Simple Girl's Faith JourneyA simple girl's faith journey - whatever it takes.
It won't be perfect. It may get ugly. I will stumble.
God is faithful...I am being transformed.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.comBlogger119125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-49683151628620755522016-06-22T07:04:00.001-05:002016-06-22T07:04:08.118-05:00Caution...Work Zone<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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It's been awhile. Some 'life' has happened. It might make you uncomfortable. Ready or not change has arrived. Honestly, more change is on the horizon. Like it or not, want it or not, change is what we get. Better watch out, because you are about to enter a work zone. Work zones are messy. Work zones can be dangerous and they are not always pretty. Work zones, to the untrained eye, can seem like a crazy, chaotic, hot mess. Yep. That about sums it up. My life right now is a work zone. And yet in the middle of the chaos there is peace. There is a since of divine calmness in this multi-faceted circumstance that is seen by most as a hot, crazy and unfair mess. There are details that are beyond my control. Things that I did not see coming; things that I did not cause; things that have forever altered what I thought the future would be and would hold. It's a major re-model. But it is not absent of God. God is in fact - right in the middle of it. Psalms 138 sums it up well.<br />
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<b><i>I give you thanks, O Lord, with my whole heart; before the gods I sing your praise; I bow down toward your holy temple and give thanks to your name for your steadfast love and your faithfulness; for you have exalted your name and your word above everything. On the day I called, you answered me, you increased my strength of soul. All the kings of the earth shall praise you, O Lord, for they have heard the words of your mouth. They shall sing of the ways of the Lord, for great is the glory of the Lord. For though the Lord is high, he regards the lowly; but the haughty he perceives from far away. Though I walk in the midst of trouble, you preserve me against the wrath of my enemies; you stretch out your hand, and your right hand delivers me. The Lord will fulfill his purpose for me; your steadfast love, O Lord, endures forever. Do not forsake the work of your hands.</i></b></blockquote>
I cannot change the chaos - but I can give thanks and praise.<br />
I cannot calm the crazy - but God can calm my heart<br />
In the midst of these troubled times - God is truth.<br />
When I am freaking out just a little bit, or even a lot - God is there.<br />
His hand is outstretched - we walk through this together.<br />
He will fulfill His purpose - but He has no obligation to follow my plan.<br />
His purpose is eternally greater than a job, or a location, or a bank account, or even a medical diagnosis - and His purpose stretches farther than my eye can see or my mind can comprehend.<br />
God's love is unchanging, unwavering and unending. Even when I don't exactly feel it - His love is still here. God's love anchors me to Him beyond the details of today's circumstance.<br />
He hasn't given up on me - He's just getting started.<br />
But it's a work zone.<br />
I'm a hot mess.<br />
It's ok.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-88394082793914523352014-02-09T07:53:00.001-06:002014-02-09T07:53:35.788-06:00More than Plastic PraiseSometimes in midst of deep struggles and dark moments, there are rays of light. Slivers of hope that break thru and stir the soul at its depths. It's not that things are better, or simpler, or easier to understand. Sometimes it's the promise, the faith that one day things wont be the way they are right now. I am really enjoying the "golden egg" moments that are nestled throughout some really harsh circumstances in the book of Isaiah. Things are not good. People are struggling. Kingdoms are falling. Sin has created great suffering. But today does not define what tomorrow will be. God has a plan for the restoration of His people.<br />
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<b>In that day you will say, "I will praise you O LORD. Although you were angry with me, your anger has turned away and you have comforted me. Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid. The LORD, the LORD is my strength and my song, He has become my salvation... Give thanks to the LORD, call on His name; make known among the nations what He has done and proclaim that His name is exalted. Sing to the LORD for He has done glorious things; let this be known to all the world. Shout aloud and sing for joy, people of Zion, for great is the Holy One of Israel among you." Isaiah 12</b></blockquote>
To offer praise in the middle of pleasure can be easy. Life is good, things are good, praise Jesus, bla bla bla.<br />
But do I chose to praise God when life gets hard and stays that way? Praise should not be circumstantial or environmental. Praise shouldn't be correlated to my mood or my feelings or the the weather. God is worthy of my worship and my praise. Period. Let's be clear. I am not talking fake praise; "it's -6 out, my heating bill was $300 and it's snowing again - praise Jesus". I'm not sure what that's about - but it's not about God. Praising God shouldn't be manufactured, plastic and insincere gratitude.<br />
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The more time I spend with God, the greater my understanding becomes of just how amazing He is and how unworthy I am. He has <b>comforted me,</b> there is peace in my soul that defies present circumstance. He <b>is my salvation</b>, apart from Him I am eternally doomed. <b>I will trust and not be afraid,</b> I can depend fully and completely on Him without fear. <b>The Lord is my strength,</b> so I don't have to be smart enough or brave enough. He and I together will face what I could never face alone. <b>And He is my song;</b> the truth and joy that resonates within me is from Him. <b>He has done glorious things</b>...<b>Great is the Holy One of Israel among you. </b>God's plan for restoration was Jesus. The is a path for restored relationship with my Father. God as active and participating in my life - and that has made all the difference. Praise God!<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-80255100403925765652014-02-07T09:28:00.000-06:002014-02-07T09:28:41.621-06:00A leg to stand on...My morning started early. A cup of hot coffee, a nice little fire and a window to see the sun rise. Mornings always offer such promise. The day is full of possibilities. Before I start my day with Isaiah my heartfelt prayer is this: Soften my heart to you God, teach me Your truth, transform me.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrE6YsGv8EyvU9PcdrC3ctUhv72TfYKA7xrr6oXlZ7CkOOvsEnyQIRY6mLgsfpsMEWSyLyADi6Vk7-e_0Ys45HvId-cNR7spI1ZzRDY7GYSVz7usaVtgozaFe_5CHwE0O7yMM5Sdpkx_M/s1600/isaiah+7.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; display: inline !important; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrE6YsGv8EyvU9PcdrC3ctUhv72TfYKA7xrr6oXlZ7CkOOvsEnyQIRY6mLgsfpsMEWSyLyADi6Vk7-e_0Ys45HvId-cNR7spI1ZzRDY7GYSVz7usaVtgozaFe_5CHwE0O7yMM5Sdpkx_M/s1600/isaiah+7.jpg" height="132" width="200" /></a><b>If you do not stand firm in your faith, you will not stand at all. NIV </b><br />
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<b>If you do not believe, surely you will not be established. NKJ</b><br />
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<b>Unless your faith is firm, I cannot make you stand firm. NLT</b><br />
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<b>If you will not believe, you surely will not last. NASB</b><br />
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<b>If you don't take a stand in faith, you wont have a leg to stand on. The Message</b><br />
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Isaiah 7 is a tough read. Hard times are coming, but the struggle will serve a purpose - God's purpose, and God will not abandon His people. Isaiah 7:9 doesn't leave much wiggle room - in any translation. In this passage King Ahaz is in a tough place; evil men plot to overthrow the king and ravage the people of Judah. God sends Isaiah with a message than in it's simplest context says, 'listen, be calm and do not fear. There will be some rough times ahead, and it's going to take a a few decades a suffering, but My people will prevail. Trust in Me fully, or you will lose your throne.' 2 Kings and 2 Chronicles lead me to believe that Ahaz had at one time known God, but he was not a man who regularly walked in the presence of God. The King had a choice - trust his friends and his own abilities to get him out of a tight spot, or trust God. God was clear: stand firm with me, obey me, or perish. God follows up in verse 11 when He instructs Ahaz to ask for a sign, an amazing act of God that only God could fulfill. Ahaz refuses. At first read, it almost sounds like Ahaz' refusal is offered out of faith. In truth, the refusal comes from a place of arrogance, self reliance and pride. Although he uses "bible talk", Ahaz is not seeking to deepen his relationship with God. He is not interested in sign that will ultimately require him to acknowledge the power and authority of God. Yet God does not relent, and the prophetic promise of the Messiah born of a virgin is given.<br />
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I don't face evil men that plot to destroy me. I don't lead a kingdom on the verge of complete collapse. But life isn't perfect - it's real. Sometimes there are hard things. Health issues, struggles with or in employment, conflict in my relationships, financial difficulties. Sometimes people let me down. I get discouraged. Worn out. Weary. What do I do in these hard times? Is it easier and safer for me to trust myself and the people around me than it is for me to trust God? Is there purposeful self examination in the midst of my struggle? Do I look with clear eyes at my attitudes, my motives, my behaviors and the status of sin in my life? Do I dress up my pride and self reliance with 'Bible Talk'? Do I remember the promises of God, and claim them as my truth? Do I look past this struggle with eternal perspective?<br />
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Do I have a leg to stand on? Yes, and I have a Savior who carries me when I have no strength to walk.<br />
Thank you Lord, for promises fulfilled and for promises yet to come. You are ever faithful!
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There will come a time in the future (in the last days) when the kingdom of God will be exalted above all other churches, kingdoms, nations and powers. God will reveal Himself. With true wisdom, He will have authority over all nations and He will bring peace. Hearts once filled with hatred and war will be transformed. Be wise and do not reject God's truth. But you (as an individual and a people) have aligned yourself with the unGodly. These men are greedy, they are hoarders, and they have created their own gods to worship. When God decides to deal with this, you are gonna want to hide - and make no mistake - God is going to deal swiftly with this sin. A day of reckoning is ahead. There will be no place you can hide; no place you will be safe; no destination that will put you beyond God's reach. Man will be put in his proper place and the Lord will be exalted above all. What men value above God and have created as their own personal gods will be tossed aside into darkness with the scavengers (rats and bats, the dirty and disease filled creatures of darkness) on that day. Stop putting your faith in men; they live and then they die but they cannot compare to God.<br />
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For Isaiah's original crowd, that long awaited day of the kingdom of God was the arrival of the Messiah. Yet even now the church still waits for the second coming of our Lord, and the day of ultimate judgement. In Isaiah's time, God's people had aligned themselves with an unsavory group and it had a negative affect. That continues to remains a risk for both the modern day Christian and the modern day Church. Greed, hoarding, and idolatry are as prevalent today as they were 4000 years ago. <br />
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Think about it. When is there enough money in the bank account? Why do we buy into the lie that we need the nicer house, the newer car, the bigger ring or the better vacation. How about this, every hear these thoughts bouncing around in your brain? Maybe I can't afford this right now, but I deserve it. Her kids always have on the cutest clothes. Did you see his new techno gadget; I need that too. Well of course we have five cell phones four computers, three televisions, Direct TV in every room, two state of the art gaming systems and one surround sound set up that will nearly make you deaf! Doesn't everybody? If I can just buy myself or my wife, or my man or my kid this special thing or that special thing, then IT will be better. Life will settle down soon and we can get back to the family thing and the church thing...I just need to... land that better job, get that promotion, get in a little bit better shape, finish up this sports season... Any of that sound familiar to you, or is it just me? Greed, hoarding, idolatry - remixed for the 21st century. Still as deadly as ever.<br />
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But it's the last verse today that returns again and again to my mind... <b><i>Don’t put your trust in mere humans. They are as frail as breath. What good are they?</i></b><br />
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God help me today. You are my foundation. You never fail. You are faithful. I want you to be my focus. Yours is the only voice that matters Lord. Continue Lord to refine my vision and give me eternal eyes. Amen<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-35629008181106556462014-01-27T07:56:00.003-06:002014-01-27T08:00:26.591-06:00Harshness mixed with hopeGod's plan for purification. Isaiah 1:21-31 is a short 10 verse passage that clearly states the problem of God's people at this point in history. The verses also reveal in glimpses what God's going to do about it. <br />
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<b><i>See how Jerusalem, once so faithful, has become a prostitute. Once the home of justice and righteousness, she is now filled with murderers. Once like pure silver, you have become like worthless slag. Once so pure, you are now like watered-down wine. Your leaders are rebels, the companions of thieves. All of them love bribes and demand payoffs, but they refuse to defend the cause of orphans or fight for the rights of widows.</i></b> Well, it's pretty clear. God's people are committing spiritual adultery. They are cheating on God with their pagan idols. Righteous living has been replaced with wickedness, their value has been tarnished. God's chosen people have become stagnant and stale; their flavor has been compromised. The leaders are not honest and have become greedy and unjust men. They no longer seek to promote right relationships between the people, but instead look to better their own personal and financial interests.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">Therefore, the Lord, the Lord of Heaven’s Armies, the Mighty One of Israel, says, I will take revenge on my enemies and pay back my foes! I will raise my fist against you. I will melt you down and skim off your slag. I will remove all your impurities. Then I will give you good judges again and wise counselors like you used to have. Then Jerusalem will again be called the Home of Justice and the Faithful City.” Zion will be restored by justice; those who repent will be revived by righteousness. </i>The people are living contrary to God, and are thus enemies of His kingdom. God's had enough, and He is going to take the time to do some cleaning up and some cleaning out. This seems harsh at first glance; but in reality it is harshness mixed with hope! Here's the hope...God's not going to destroy, He is going to purify with fire. For those who turn from evil and turn to God, righteousness will be restored.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">But rebels and sinners will be completely destroyed, and those who dessert the Lord with be consumed. </i><b><i>You will be ashamed of your idol worship in groves of sacred oaks. You will blush because you worshiped in gardens dedicated to idols. You will be like a great tree with withered leaves, like a garden without water. The strongest among you will disappear like straw; their evil deeds will be the spark that sets it on fire. They and their evil works will burn up together, and no one will be able to put out the fire.</i></b> The unrepentant will be destroyed. Idols and pagan rituals have replaced worship and right relationship with God. Those who turned from God and stubbornly refuse to repent will be embarrassed by the revelation of their folly. The result will be isolation and complete destruction.<br />
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So these are my thoughts as I meditate on these scriptures this morning:<br />
- Does the Church of today run the risk of committing spiritual adultery? What about me personally?<br />
- Are there things in my personal life that I have let take priority over my relationship with God?<br />
- As a Christian leader, do I promote right relationships between people?<br />
- Are their impurities in my life that God needs to refine?<br />
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Refine me today God. Burn away all that tarnishes, diminishes and dishonors you. Purify me - that I may reflect you. Amen<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-53344010571887098282014-01-23T08:27:00.001-06:002014-01-27T07:58:28.529-06:00To DELIVERANCE Or DESTRUCTION<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I'm starting off my new year with Isaiah - and it's not going to be a fast read. I need to make time for his words to soak deeply. I need to meditate on them, I will quiet my mind and my soul until all that I hear is my Fathers truth. The back story to Isaiah is simple. Once again the house of Israel has turned their back on God. It was an individual turn and a corporate turn - disobedience on both a personal and a national scale. It didn't happen by accident, it happen by choice. And Isaiah is the man that will speak hard and unpopular truth.<br />
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In the first fifteen verses of chapter one, Isaiah spells it out; you are stubborn, you are ungrateful, you are saturated with sin. It's only because of God's mercy that all of you haven't been burned up and completely destroyed like the evil doers of Sodom and Gomorrah. Isaiah then goes on to say that sacrifices, prayers and religious rituals are worthless when they are offered up by a people who DO NOT approach God with hearts of repentance and obedience. In fact, those types of offerings aren't about God at all - those are people doing the church thing to look good to other people. It's going through the motions; it's being a pretender. God doesn't like it, in fact God finds that behavior repulsive. But then God delivers these words:<i style="font-weight: bold;"> "Stop doing wrong, learn to do right! Seek justice, encourage the oppressed, Defend the cause of the fatherless, plead the case of the widow. 'Come now let us reason together' says the LORD. Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool. If you are willing and obedient you will eat the best from the land; BUT if you resist and rebel, you will be devoured by the sword." </i>Isaiah is a long book - almost 100 pages in my Bible, but God doesn't want to save hope for the end of the message; He includes it with the introduction! Make no mistake, God is going to swiftly deal with sin, but there is restoration possible for those who repent. Praise God!<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">Stop doing wrong</i> Stop sinning. Don't just feel bad, don't settle for guilt. Repent. Acknowledge the sin, don't deny it. Turn from the sin, don't just talk about not sinning any more. Sin no more.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">Learn to do right</i> It's not enough to just stop sinning. Next I have to choose to learn what God requires of those who love, serve and follow Him.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">Seek justice </i>Take the time to learn what is right and righteous and then then take action.<br />
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<b><i>Encourage the oppressed</i></b> Life is hard enough. I should look for practical ways to ease (and not increase) the burdens of those around me. I may even have to make amends for some burdensthat I have placed on others.<br />
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<b><i>Defend the cause of the fatherless, plead the case of the widow</i></b> I have a responsibility to the marginalized in my society. I need to speak up and stand up for those who have no strength or voice.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool. </i>God's desire is to purify and redeem - and that is awesome!<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;"> If you are willing and obedient you will eat the best from the land </i>God doesn't require that I am perfect, He requires that I am <u>willing </u>and that I <u>obey</u>. It's about God - His purpose, His plan, His standard and His will. God blesses and honors obedience.<br />
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<i style="font-weight: bold;">BUT if you resist and rebel, you will be devoured by the sword." </i>If I stubbornly cling to my will, my way and my sin - it will ultimately lead to my destruction.<br />
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In these verses there are only two choices presented: I can be willing and obedient or I can resist and rebel. A journey of hope or a journey of hopelessness; A path to deliverance or a path to destruction.<br />
It's my choice to make.<br />
It's your choice too.<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-70762639594376282172013-12-31T07:37:00.004-06:002013-12-31T07:37:39.618-06:00For my Future Daughter<div style="text-align: center;">
As we get ready to meet another new year, and as our three sons continue to take purposeful steps into adulthood I decided to share with you what has been written in my heart for years. Feel free to share, if these thoughts have been written on your heart too.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOXyYy76SqhngUPWd1AxVvxZOjmeWBpqbDDFbe97xLr-lX2NicIzCvFQMBIV2PLiV5YWfuH9Rr8-7ADgTviQSDGp2BBGOkIk2RSjAxRMZST5qIlNaFoEM8S3NHSl-Zj47rmDlFcLbBsCE/s1600/hands.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="133" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOXyYy76SqhngUPWd1AxVvxZOjmeWBpqbDDFbe97xLr-lX2NicIzCvFQMBIV2PLiV5YWfuH9Rr8-7ADgTviQSDGp2BBGOkIk2RSjAxRMZST5qIlNaFoEM8S3NHSl-Zj47rmDlFcLbBsCE/s200/hands.jpg" width="200" /></a>A letter to my future daughter. Not a daughter by birth or a daughter by blood, but a daughter by love. As you prepare to begin your life with my son, there are a few things I think you should know. This man you love has had a life filled with prayer, teaching and observation. Matt and I have worked purposely to help prepare him for life, for love and for you.<br />
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From before the day our son was born, Matt and I have prayed for Gods hand to be on him and for Gods love to be rooted deeply in his heart. We have prayed that God would make him a man with strong Christlike character. We have prayed that God would keep his heart soft and sensitive to the voice of the Holy Spirit. We prayed that God would surround him with strong and Godly men and women who would love him, encourage him, hold him accountable and spur him on to greater and greater God centered things. We have prayed that God would direct his steps and bless the work of his hands. We have prayed that God would give him passion and purpose.<br />
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With the words we have spoken, and with the way we've lived out our faith and our love, we have been teaching him every day. It was our investment in him while he waited for you to arrive in his life at just this right time.<br />
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- We taught him about choosing and living out a relationship with God and not just practicing religious rituals.<br />
- We taught him about investing in people in lasting and meaningful ways.<br />
- We taught him about personal sacrifice for the good of another.<br />
- We taught him to never be afraid of hard work.<br />
- We taught him that the best and most satisfying things in life are very rarely "things".<br />
- We taught him that seeking forgiveness is a part of life, and should not be delayed when necessary.<br />
- We taught him that extending forgiveness is one of the greatest gifts we can give ourselves and others.<br />
- We taught him that honest and deep friendship is where lasting love is rooted.<br />
- We taught him to respect marriage and to value only God above his wife.<br />
- We taught him that some things are only meant to be shared with his wife.<br />
- We taught him that it always takes two people to fix a relationship when it's been harmed.<br />
- We taught him that sometimes there is no "try" - only do, and do, and do until it's done.<br />
- We taught him that lasting love takes effort, commitment, and forgiveness every day.<br />
- We taught him that in marriage, your spouse is your best friend. It's been taught that he should always be your biggest supporter, your most trusted friend and your wisest counsel ~ and we taught him that you would do the same for him.<br />
- We taught him to honor God and you, his spouse, every day - on purpose - with his words, his thoughts and his actions.<br />
- We taught him that in a God-centered marriage there is no room for selfishness or pettiness.<br />
- We taught him that in a God-centered marriage it isn't 50 -50 instead it is 100-100-100. 100% of husband and 100% of wife devoted 100% to God and to each other - always. Anything less that 100-100-100 will always fall short.<br />
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You should also know that from the time he was born we have been praying for you. We have prayed that God's hand would be on you and your family during your childhood, your teen years and in your adult life. We have prayed that you would be sensitive to God's direction and call on your life. We have prayed that you would come to know Jesus as your own personal Savior and friend. We have prayed that you would be treated with the dignity and respect that you deserve. We have prayed that you would be cherished and loved. We have prayed that you would see that beauty of how God created you ~ you are His creation and God doesn't make junk. We have prayed that there would be special parts of your heart that you saved to share just with our son ~ for the rest of your life.<br />
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We have been praying for your marriage for a very long time. We pray that God would be the center of your marriage and that you would each follow the example of love and sacrifice that Jesus taught. We pray that you will both flee temptations that seek to destroy your union.We pray that you would be stronger together than apart. We pray that strong Christian marriage mentors will come along side you in the early years as you learn what it is to not only be married, but what it is to stay happily married. We pray that you will seek God first in all things, and that you will be of one heart and mind when God does prompt you.<br />
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You are the one our son has chosen. You have his love and you have his heart. Our son is not perfect ~ but you know that already and you love him still. We are not perfect either - and it doesn't take long to figure that out. But we look forward to learning to be a part of your life. Be patient with us, and extend us a little grace; we are learning just as fast as we can. And now we know the name of the girl who has filled our prayers for so long. Welcome to the family...Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-35681989210521934392013-12-29T08:11:00.000-06:002013-12-29T08:11:03.141-06:00The New Years Resolution Pit<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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New Years resolutions are a great big lie, a deep dark endless pit ~ at least for me. Resolutions are those things that I know I need to do, and yet I know even as I say the words that I will fail. I will never get the laundry done in one day, or be completely caught up at work or be reading all of the books on my shelves. I probably wont run 5 miles a day, and rice cakes will never taste as good as yeast rolls. I will never resolve to eat chocolate, avoid exercise and drink more coffee ...yet those things I would easily accomplish.<br />
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The failure with resolutions in my world is - well me! It's usually me deciding that I need to change something in some way. The problem with that is also me. See, at the heart of it, most things I would resolve to change are sin rooted and thus these changes are beyond what I can do. God doesn't call me to live a life of resolution, instead He calls me to be transformed. And transformation isn't something I can ever do on my own, it only comes from God. Period. The End.<br />
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<b><i>"Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed" Romans</i></b></div>
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<li>I would resolve to diet ~ but what I need is for God to transform my attitude of laziness and mediocrity so that I can strive for excellence and healthy living that is pleasing to God. God created me and He doesn't make junk. I don't think He cares if I ever get back my size 5 thighs but I do think that God calls me to care for His creation and I think it breaks His heart when I don't treat myself well. </li>
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<li>I would resolve to be less of a people pleaser ~ but what I need is to get rid of the idol in my life that is "public approval" and replace it with obedience to my Heavenly Father. His opinion after all is the ONLY one that matters. This means sometimes when people ask me to do things, I should pray about it, say "No, but thank you for thinking of me" and know that me and God are still ok.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to be less busy ~ but what I need is for God to transform my priorities and plans and bring my desires into alignment with His will. Busier isn't Better, especially if it leads me down the dark path of weariness, restlessness and burnout.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to spend less and spend smart ~ but what I need is for God to transform my discontentment and my envy and replace it with contentment and gratitude.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to speak well or be silent ~ but what I need is for God to transform the words of my mouth so that in all things I honor Him.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to be a better wife, mother, daughter, sister, friend ~ but what I need is for God to transform my selfishness to His character of selfless love.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to be less judgmental ~ but what I need is for God to transform my arrogance and my prejudice so that I can reflect both God's grace and His truth in ways that draw others toward Him.</li>
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<li>I would resolve to be less stubborn ~ but what I need is for God to transform my pride so that I can submit to Godly authority.</li>
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God loves me enough to meet me every day right where I am, and He loves me TOO MUCH to let me stay here. In 2013 God did some great things in my heart and in my life. But I am defiantly a work in progress. I'm on a journey. Praise God I am not who I was. Praise God, He is not done with me yet! Thank you God for the way you continue to faithfully and patiently transform me. Amen<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-5129340069605846602013-12-28T06:48:00.000-06:002013-12-28T06:49:42.379-06:00Crappy Christmas? <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So we are a few days past Christmas, and the typical conversations have begun to occur: How was Christmas? What'd you get? Was it everything you hoped it would be? Let the Post-Christmas Complaining begin.<i> </i><br />
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<i><b>"I didn't get what I wanted." or "The gifts weren't even close to comparable"</b></i><br />
<i><i><b>"So and So didn't call or even send me a card." </b></i></i></div>
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<i>"I was stuck at home"</i> or <i>"I couldn't go home." </i></div>
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<i>"I only got one day off" </i>or "<i>I had to work for part of the day." </i></div>
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<i>"It was rush, rush, rush and run, run, run - the whole day is a blur."</i></div>
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<i>"The kids were fighting, the kids were sic</i><i>k"</i><br />
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<i>"The kids acted like such children!" </i></div>
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<i>"It was too hot", "It was too cold", "The food just didn't turn out right." </i></div>
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<i><b>"The kids where with my ex, and I was stuck with </b></i><br />
<i><b>family that drives me crazy." </b></i><br />
<b>"It just never felt like Christmas to me"</b><br />
<b>"I just couldn't get into the Christmas spirit"</b></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkRpJxwWSUPQcoj5OlHhjpkIJtnPEO5NQSUhDVeO4n7I1mUTY9pmb9jyOgWNqB4MLR1qlZD5u-ezKRPtXCPWVZx6K8STPe3iQuE9xpuc9D4Ltud3chAP9obXqET1EXMngzLhaZNuKchRs/s1600/christmas+bunny.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkRpJxwWSUPQcoj5OlHhjpkIJtnPEO5NQSUhDVeO4n7I1mUTY9pmb9jyOgWNqB4MLR1qlZD5u-ezKRPtXCPWVZx6K8STPe3iQuE9xpuc9D4Ltud3chAP9obXqET1EXMngzLhaZNuKchRs/s200/christmas+bunny.jpg" width="133" /></a>If that was your Christmas it was probably crappy, you missed it completely, and it just might be no one's fault but your own. Congratulations, you've completely forgot what Christmas is actually about - and it isn't you! Seem harsh? OK. I'm not judging. I've been there - and I was wrong. If that's where you are stuck, <b>and</b> if you claim to be a <u>believer</u> and a <u>follower</u> of Jesus Christ, then you are wrong too because you chose to miss the joy, the praises, and the worship of the season. Christmas is a time to honor God for He is and for what He has done. It's a time to remember the day that changed everything. The whole Old Testament leads to the manger, the cross and the tomb. The New Testament points to them too. It's not the treasures under the tree, the treats, or travel to be with friends and family. It's joy and praise for what God did, and for what He continues to do.<br />
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<b><i>The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for</i></b></div>
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<b><i> all the things they</i></b><b><i> had heard and seen...Luke 2</i></b></div>
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What if it's just been a rough year? The death of a child or a spouse or a friend. The death of a marriage or a friendship or a dream? Maybe you still don't have a job, or you hate the one you've got. Do you have toxic people in your life and unhealthy relationships that serve only to shackle and stifle you. Is there a chasm of anger, hurt and unforgiveness that separates you from people you love? It might be that you're on the verge of financial ruin, or possible unemployment, Is your health is in shambles from a long term illness or chronic health condition? Have depression, anxiousness and worry stolen your joy? Is infertility and the shame and self loathing that often accompanies it your current cross to bear? Are you deep in the trenches of life with small children, or hormonal middle schoolers, or hot headed and drama filled teenagers? Maybe you face the challenge of being the adult parent of an emerging adult who is fearless, fiercely independent and sometimes clueless. Perhaps your child is a prodigal or your spouse doesn't share your belief. This may have been the year that you became an "in law", an empty nester, a grandparent, or a retiree. Life might just be changing faster than your mind can process and harder than your heart can handle. If this is you, then cling my friend to the HOPE that is promised at Christmas. The manger held the promise of the Resurrection and the hope of a restored relationship with our eternal God.<br />
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<b><i>Glory to God in the highest and on earth PEACE to men on whom</i></b></div>
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<b><i>God's favor rests...Luke 2</i></b></div>
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Peace in the struggle, Peace in the storm, Peace when the night is it's darkest. Hold tight to Christmas HOPE. Hold tight to it all year long. God is faithful in His time to fulfill all of His promises. Christmas is a call to worship. And worship is about God, and not me.<br />
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Help me today God to hold on to the Hope that Christmas provides. Give me a heart of worship, and let my worship be found pleasing to you. Amen</div>
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Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-49357604282137479832013-12-27T09:28:00.000-06:002013-12-27T09:28:11.324-06:00Do I FaLaLa and Forget?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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On December 26th the Christmas music stops, and so do the endless cycles of Christmas themed movies on the television, cable and nextflix. Many people are back on the job doing their 9 to 5 thing and looking forward to the next break from work - New Years Eve. By New Years Day most businesses and many homes have all the "Christmas decorations" boxed up for another 11 month slumber in the attack, basement or shed. A few Christmas treats still cover the front table; fudge, brittle and caramel bars are a sweat reminder of the laughter and smiles earlier this week. There's a stack of new clothes to wear (and perhaps a few to return) and a pile of new movies to watch.<br />
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Here in the Midwest we are settling in for for looks to be a cold and snowy winter. January and February are going to drag on endlessly for sure. Dark when I leave for work and dark when I get home; it'll be cold and snowy, cold and icy or just cold. It's the season of the flu and bronchitis. Leaves being blown through the front door have been replaced with sand and salt getting tracked through the house. And then there are the never fully dried mittens, lost hats and misplaced scarfs. The few houses that got lights up outside before the early November snow and ice are committed now - those lights are frozen firmly in place 'till we get a little thaw. For the most part, Christmas is over and the the Spirit of Christmas it seems is gone too. It breaks my heart, it makes me sad and it leaves me feeling - well embarrassed. As I read in Luke this morning these words seared my heart.<br />
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<b><i>"So they hurried off and found Mary and Joseph and the baby who was lying in a manger. When they (the shepherds) had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told to them about this child and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them.</i></b></div>
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They didn't keep quiet and they didn't forget. The shepherds were not like me at all. Christmas morning changed everything and because of the manger, the cross and the empty tomb were possible.. Their Christmas Encounter changed their reality forever. Those shepherds did what I should be doing every day: telling people, showing people, sharing my life with people and loving people to the loving and open arms of God. You see, I am different now. Jesus changed me ~ and it's amazing. So this year, I will not FaLaLa and forget. This year, I'm gonna be like a shepherd and I'm gonna share.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-21277266214959746602013-12-24T07:52:00.002-06:002013-12-24T07:52:44.724-06:00Sorry God - No Room this Christmas<div style="text-align: center;">
<i><b>Luke 2 ... because there was no room for them in the inn</b></i></div>
In the winter of 1994 Matt was changing duty stations with the US Navy. We had been living in upstate New York near the Nuclear Prototype Facility, but Matt's training was done and he was being stationed at the Groton / New London Submarine Base in Connecticut for his first sea duty tour. In the early 90's several bases had been or were closing, so we were informed that there would be a long wait before we'd qualify for military housing. It's also fair to note that in the early 90's we were the young twenty-something version of the grown ups we try to be today; no credit card, no cell phone, no home computer and very rarely did we have <br />
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a detailed plan when it came to travel. We picked a convenient weekend, gassed up the car and headed down to the coast one Friday night after both of us were done with work. We pulled into the military town late. It was cold, I was very pregnant and probably a little bit cranky, and we were both tired so we began to look for a hotel. That's when we made the discovery...there was literally not a room available in the entire town. We finally found a dive of a motel with a desk clerk that took pity on us - there was one room reserved that had not been claimed...and at midnight if those people did not show up he'd give us the room. We went back to the car and I sobbed and we waited. At 12:05 we walked into the hotel room and said a heartfelt prayer of thanks. I remember thinking that night as I drifted off to sleep in that lumpy hotel bed "I wonder if Mary and Joseph felt as overwhelmed as desperate as we did tonight ~ back when they were young travelers, far from home pregnant and unable to find rest for the evening?"<br />
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A lot has changed since that winter 19 years ago. But as I woke up early on this Christmas Eve morning, my heart was stuck on this question: How often do I and the people I do life with choose to live like there is still "no room" for Jesus? When I balance at my check book, is my heart hardened or stubborn to the financial principals that God calls me to honor? When I evaluate my calendar do I find it filled with priorities that have 'kingdom value'? When I examine my marriage, do a see a relationship that is centered around God's holy standards for love? When I look at my children, do I know in my heart that I have equipped them with the knowledge of God's love, wisdom, grace and truth? When I think of the future, does my heart really say "not my will, but your will God?" When I look at my body, can I honestly say that I am behaving as a wise steward regarding my physical health and well being? When reflecting on my close friendships, do I see the good Christian fellowship, discipleship, encouragement and accountability that the New Testament describes? And what about all of those sandpaper people in my life; you know the ones ~ they are covered with rough edges and they sometimes rub me raw. Is there room in my life for God to use those people to shape and soften me the way that He desires?<br />
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Every day I have to decide if this is the day when there IS ROOM.<br />
I can only choose for myself.<br />
Every day you have a decision to make too...not just on Christmas Eve.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-58157101120692008872013-12-22T11:05:00.002-06:002013-12-22T11:05:59.588-06:00The Christmas Blues<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhhFWKS80vI6i11pU5M-GCdEcaXMu3ZDxQBxSz9h_G5fzt-y7nMXmNRqbIUoYSD1VyATIjhhkt_kPndKB4y8PAlpTYZ3Dd_d6xl96g86ee5EeCVzmyaYyVJfmozXX7G163sJxX-fIrVHWw/s1600/IMG_4630.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="150" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhhFWKS80vI6i11pU5M-GCdEcaXMu3ZDxQBxSz9h_G5fzt-y7nMXmNRqbIUoYSD1VyATIjhhkt_kPndKB4y8PAlpTYZ3Dd_d6xl96g86ee5EeCVzmyaYyVJfmozXX7G163sJxX-fIrVHWw/s200/IMG_4630.JPG" width="200" /></a><br />
Today the snow falls steady and quiet. White majesty covers everything and I wait for the plow. I could have slept in, but alas I have been awake for hours. The children sleep. The coffee brews. One thing is clear. This will not be the day I had planned in my mind. Too much snow to drive to church safely, so we'll miss the only Sunday this month that we could have worshiped together as a family in our home church. Jay is back from college and Matt is off from work. Can't you just picture the 5 of us sitting together in clean coordinated outfits - with love in our hearts and smiles on our faces... Ok - so they would have grumbled about not sitting with their friends and we probably would not have sung Christmas carols for the 30 minute drive to church, but we would have been together.Yep, this isn't what I was expecting, but in a weird way this reminds me of another Christmas season 21 years ago. Matt was away at boot camp - and did not come home. My parents and my siblings went to California for the holiday and I was stuck at my parents home (which was completely un-decorated for Christmas) alone and sick with the flu! That was a long hard day, but it got better. Six weeks after that Christmas 21 years ago, I was engaged to my best friend. Six months later we were married and living in Florida.<br />
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For some people the Christmas season can be painful. The struggle and the sorrow of the last 12 months still happened and no amount of snow angles, chocolate fudge and "grandma got run over by a reindeer" will change that. This Christmas there is still sickness and illness. There are still people searching desperately for work. Homes are still for sale, and dreams remain unfulfilled. The mail still comes, and so do the bills. Everywhere we look are reminders of relationships that are broken and of people who are gone. There are empty seats at the table - and the reasons why don't matter; the hole is still there. This Christmas there are still too many miles between me and some of the people I love the most. And every Christmas season it's the same thing -in big ways and small ways each of us makes a mental list in our mind - this list contains all the things that the Christmas season should be. Maybe it's the way it use to be, or maybe it's the way we wish it could be. Next we take a quick account of life as we know it, compare the the two and make a judgement about how things are going. That's when it happens. We lose the joy. We forget one of the first things that the angel said in Luke 2 <b><i>“Don’t be afraid!” he said. “I bring you the most joyful news ever announced, and it is for everyone!" </i></b><br />
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Jesus is the source of Joy and His joy is for everyone. As much as we are called to remember the joy of that first Christmas morning, we should not forget the joy that is yet to come. With the same measure that I invest in the preparations of this celebration, should I not also be preparing for the next one - that great day when Jesus will return for those whom belong to to Him? Can I for one minute, take a deep breath and look at things with eternal perspective? Can I choose joy - regardless of how I feel?<br />
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Dear God - Today I seek your joy. Give me clear eyes with eternal focus. This morning, as we eat french toast and worship as a family in the den, may our worship be found worthy in your eyes. May it bring a smile to your face and joy to my heart. Amen<br />
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Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-51820778650183956652013-12-21T11:40:00.000-06:002013-12-21T11:41:45.809-06:00The Christmas Crazy<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjm3mv1pExwpKr274JnOPtjOo1LN2gXc8ZwhcXuUiXBvH4WjnWFfpm3UFnP5zZtmcA8e8KS8Pwh9hIxSX10taxbsnvUYttEHMyrY5GJ6ZiYy5MsLXwpgEa3rdyHVH_TYiRyDMA8Wz9en8A/s1600/Sears-71-901-0-RS-V2-015.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="130" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjm3mv1pExwpKr274JnOPtjOo1LN2gXc8ZwhcXuUiXBvH4WjnWFfpm3UFnP5zZtmcA8e8KS8Pwh9hIxSX10taxbsnvUYttEHMyrY5GJ6ZiYy5MsLXwpgEa3rdyHVH_TYiRyDMA8Wz9en8A/s200/Sears-71-901-0-RS-V2-015.jpg" width="200" /></a>These are the days where that little thing I call "Christmas Crazy" starts to set in. I have a plan and I will not be dis-swayed. Places to go and things to get done ... only 4 days 'till Christmas! I'm gonna be in my car and just so you know, I am gonna be ridiculous - don't judge 'cause you are too. Driving aggressive, driving grumpy, playing leap frog with other cars to get one space ahead and "win", willing to thumb wrestle little old men and pregnant ladies for a closer parking space and praying things like "Lord help that stupid driver" or "Lord let there be a cop close by to see that moron please!" It's the mad dash to the mall for that one gift that I forgot or can't yet find. It's the rat race at the grocery store where I'll look for those last minute ingredients that will complete the menu of the next few days. And diapers...do we have enough diapers to make it until Dec 26th? Preschools consume half their wight in sugar every day, they skip naps and they stay up way past normal bed times. College students do not understand the concept that we are "saving" that food for later. In our neighborhood the elementary age kids are overflowing with Christmas vacation energy and trapped inside houses that are covered in ice and snow. And laundry, why do people keep wearing clothes?!?<br />
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Then there is the family. Not my family because we are perfect, and of course none of my friends families either - cause they are perfect too :-) It's spending time with people that we truly love. We'd move mountains for them, we'd drive thru ice storms for them, we'd sit through awful Christmas band programs for them. We love them fiercely, and yet sometimes they make us absolutely certifiably nuts! They think we can be 12 places at once. They show up late, they laugh too loud, they eat the last Oreo ball; their kids are crazy, they have picky diets, they think they know everything about everything all of the time and they love to tell you what you should do or should have done.<br />
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Christmas Crazy steals my joy. Last year at Church I heard someone say "this year I want Christmas to bring Peace on earth" and my without even thinking response was "Not me! I'd be happy with a little peace for the Wilson 5." In these moments I cling to Luke 2 <i style="font-weight: bold;">The angel said, “Don’t be afraid! Look! I bring good news to you—wonderful, joyous news for all people. Your savior is born today in David’s city. He is Christ the Lord. This is a sign for you: you will find a newborn baby wrapped snugly and lying in a manger.” Suddenly a great assembly of the heavenly forces was with the angel praising God. They said, “Glory to God in heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors.” </i>Christmas is a time for wonderful, joyous praise - not crazy, cranky complaint. So I match up what the angels said in Luke with a few words from my Jesus as recorded in John " “<i style="font-weight: bold;">Peace I leave with you. My peace I give you. I give to you not as the world gives. Don’t be troubled or afraid".</i> Peace is a gift that sits wrapped under my tree. Like any gift I can choose to accept it or I can leave it unclaimed. God extends peace, Jesus offers peace, the real question is WHAT AM I GOING TO DO WITH IT?Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-42585313823492237082013-12-20T21:06:00.000-06:002013-12-20T21:06:32.206-06:00Memories from Christmas PastMemories from Christmas past. As I look back, there are very few presents that I remember from the Christmas' of yesterday. Oh don't misunderstand - there were gifts for sure, but that's not what my mind remembers first or best. When I was a kid we would always get together with my mom's family on Christmas Eve. We would eat dinner and then visit until it was dark enough to go look at Christmas lights. We'd drive around town, looking and laughing and then return back to Grandma and Grandpa's house - where Santa had already come and delivered our presents because Gram's last name started with an A and thus we were at the top of his list :-) On Christmas Day we'd go to see my dad's family. We'd eat lunch, open gifts and then while the grownups had dull conversation, I would build forts with blanks and card tables. Then I'd see how many grown up I could get to come join me in some real fun.<br />
<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWtNUhHpRGg2A700g8dnWFV1_aTY36_apAlUmNIAqsHI_iBcTNxAcyW6kJXAVnPAZf7GfwmI-exuV5E9hqnaklHZht52wVUwa5UHycyL4sxoiXrZHsvgxn8dsXq9RipqeA4i0EMj2DbYs/s1600/IMG_4343.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="150" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWtNUhHpRGg2A700g8dnWFV1_aTY36_apAlUmNIAqsHI_iBcTNxAcyW6kJXAVnPAZf7GfwmI-exuV5E9hqnaklHZht52wVUwa5UHycyL4sxoiXrZHsvgxn8dsXq9RipqeA4i0EMj2DbYs/s200/IMG_4343.JPG" width="200" /></a>I grew up, got married and Matt and I started our own family and our own traditions. Our first Christmas we almost didn't have a tree. We'd flown back to Arizona the week before Christmas and flew back to Florida on Christmas Eve. We didn't get a tree until about 4pm on Christmas Eve and we literally rescued it from the garbage truck in the Kmart parking lot. Christmas in Connecticut took all day. The boys would open a gift, stop and play. Then they'd open another gift, stop and play...they hated clothes...they'd just throw then over their shoulder and move right on to the next box. I remember in 2001 when we left the Navy and moved the the Midwest. It was the first year that our boys were able to go to Matt's families Christmas Eve gathering - there are tables full of food and yummy desserts. They always have a pinata and duck tape, and Santa always shows up with a bag full of gifts for the kids. In our home, everybody gets an ornament every year - usually it relates to something that's happened or some place we have gone in the last 12 months. On Christmas morning, we always open stockings first, have french toast casserole for breakfast and surf and turf for lunch or dinner, depending on Matt's schedule. We do a Christmas puzzle. We watch Elf and eat summer sausage, cheese and crackers. But things are changing. Time marches on. The boys are growing up. As I look back, there are very few gifts I can remember. But I'll never forget the moments. Decorating the tree together. The year the power came back on late on Christmas Eve after 5 long cold days. The laughing and grumbling that was shared when Matt and our brother in law put together all of the boys Christmas toys in the early years; the smiles we shared when we realized that our kids like the big boxes that stuff came in as much or more than shiny new stuff. Following snow plows down I74 late on Christmas Eve, as we made our way back to our home. Fervent prayers as we let the children hold real candles with real flames at Christmas Eve services (please Jesus, don't let a Wilson set anything on fire - Amen). Reindeer food and cookies for Santa. Reading the Christmas story.<br />
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<b>But Mary treasured up all of these things and pondered them in her heart. Luke 2</b><br />
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Let's be honest, there are times when we all think that <u>our special child</u> is God's gift to the world. In Mary's case that was the real TRUTH. Her son would change everything - and she knew it. As my children grow, I have a deeper appreciation for this verse. Mary didn't miss it. She tucked away those first moments in a special place that she would be able to recall later. Did she think about that first Christmas morning when Jesus was a normal preschool boy asking questions, making messes, getting dirty and driving her crazy? Or maybe when Jesus was 12 and missing at the temple because He was spending time with the Biblical scholars of His time? I'm sure she thought of that day when she followed he son's footsteps to Calvary, when she followed His body to the tomb, and then on Sunday when the tomb was found empty. Sometimes I forget in the rush of this season that moments are what matter most, and I should not be wasteful with them. <br />
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God help me today to treasure up moments in my heart. Give me the wisdom to enjoy each day as You give it. And let me draw on the memories of these moments later, and find strength in the faithfulness of Your blessings and Your love...when life is hard. AmenTrisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-60221516906410589242013-12-18T21:32:00.001-06:002013-12-18T21:32:43.386-06:00The perfect Christmas that doesn't exist...or does it?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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That perfect Christmas moment. We see them in our 30 minute TV Shows and our Hallmark Christmas movie specials and we hear it in the songs that fill our ears. It's the Christmas Family Picture where we all smile and laugh. Our clothes are clean AND ironed and we coordinated just the right amount. Christmas Cards are constructed from hand crafted paper, individualized of course, and are mailed out the Saturday after Thanksgiving. Tediously long car rides are filled with caroling, giggling and laughter. The fire is warm and glowing, and we all use our nice hands and our nice words all of of the time. Gifts look like they have been wrapped by Martha Stewart and food tastes like it came from the kitchen of the finest chefs. The house is decorated and everyone loves all of my hand made treats, place cards and this years version of decoupage ornaments on my Christmas tree. Is all of this too much to ask...just one Hallmark Christmas.<br />
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Let's be honest, it doesn't exist.<br />
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This is what it looks like at the Wilson house. The kids are - well kids. They touch each other. They annoy each other. They look out each others windows. Christmas Cards are sent, and any postmark that ends in 2013 is evidence that the card is not late. The presents are wrapped, most of the time - though it may be masking tape or duct tape that holds the edges together. And truth be told, gift bags may be the smartest invention ever! The tree is just the right mix of ornaments we love and ornaments that toddlers cannot eat, break or harmed by in the event that the ornament is removed from the tree and chewed on, sat on or dropped. All of our tasty Christmas treats come from ... Grandma or the grocery store. Our Christmas morning pictures always make it look like we just woke up! I never use place cards, and sometimes we use paper plates...<br />
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And you know what. It's ok. It's not what others may consider perfect, but it is exactly what is suppose to be, at least for now. Kinda like that first Christmas morning. God's people had been waiting for centuries for their savior to arrive - but when it happened they almost missed it completely.<br />
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Jesus was born in a barn.<br />
His mother was a teenage girl.<br />
His home town was a "nothing good comes from there" kind of place.<br />
His first guests were smelly, dirty, and common shepherds.<br />
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And yet it was exactly what God meant for it to be. And this Christmas can be too. All I need to do is be ready for it. Instead of seeing what it "is not", I will seek God in every moment.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-70749085107508187762013-12-17T07:24:00.002-06:002013-12-17T07:24:47.964-06:00The Christmas Crush
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">In the past few weeks, as I have begun to prepare my heart
for Christmas, God has really called into accountability the ways that I
sometimes slip into this holiday season. I must admit that sometimes I struggle
to honor and exhibit the meaning and true focus of what this season represents.
So in these last few days before Christmas I going to come clean and exchange a
few things that were never meant to be a part of the celebration of the birth
of my Savior.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">This time of year it seems like a million things battle for
my time. Baking, cooking, canning and crafting. Parties, concerts, pageants,
dinners and drama’s fill the schedule. I call it the Christmas Crush. I can’t fit it all in. Something has
gotta give. Who needs 7 hours of sleep when I can get 5 hours tonight and still
get all of the Christmas cards addressed and ready to mail. Tomorrow I can
exchange 2 hours of sleep for 5 dozen homemade cookies, baked, cooled and boxed
up for shipping. And those gifts aren’t gonna wrap themselves, so look out
Wednesday night – right after work, dinner, a basketball game and church you,
me and some wrapping paper are gonna have a date! </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">It’s it strange that the first verse God used in this little
series of lessons is from Luke Chapter 10 “you are worried and upset over many
things, but few things are needed; indeed only one” Jesus is talking with Martha in this scripture. Martha is busy, busy, busy doing all the things that simply "must" be done. Yet in her busyness she has missed the one thing that really matters most. Martha had the chance to sit at the feet of her Savior; she could hear His wisdom, soak in His love and worship Him unobstructed. But she didn't. Instead she was focused on temporary things - and she let those things steal both the moment and her joy. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri;">Ouch. How often do I miss moments with my Savior this time of year simply because I am too frazzled or fretting to make time for Him? Is that why my personal study seems so scattered these days? Is that why there is so much noise in my head when my heart tries to speak to my Sovereign God? Does my attitude need a Jesus adjustment? First I will choose to
exchange the over commitment and misdirected focus that often leaves me feeling rushed and ragged and replace it with
responsible refusal and selective involvement. Maybe this will allow me to relax just a little bit and refocus. I can’t do
everything that I’d like to have done. But let's be honest and just say it out loud "a lot of that stuff just doesn't matter at all!" This is the time of year when I GET to honor my Saviors Birth. God loved me so much that He was willing to do whatever it takes to pave the way for our restored relationship, and that story had its earthly beginnings in a barn in Bethlehem. Glory to God in the highest. Peace on Earth. Good will to men. With the arrival of His Son, God once again extended His good will to me. Time for me to get my eyes back on that.</span></div>
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Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-84260963679575045392013-11-07T08:25:00.001-06:002013-12-10T06:59:27.709-06:00Unbreakable PeaceDoing my homework for a theology class and rediscovered this golden egg:<br />
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<b>“I am telling you these things now while I am still with you. But when the Father sends the Comforter instead of me*—and by the Comforter I mean the Holy Spirit—He will teach you much, as well as remind you of everything I myself have told you. “I am leaving you with a gift—peace of mind and heart! And the peace I give isn’t fragile like the peace the world gives. So don’t be troubled or afraid. John 14:25-27(NLB)</b></blockquote>
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The peace which Christ gives is infinitely more valuable than that which the world gives. The world’s peace begins in ignorance, consists with sin, and ends in endless troubles; Christ’s peace begins in grace, consists with no allowed sin, and ends at length in everlasting peace. As is the difference between a killing lethargy and a reviving refreshing sleep, such is the difference between Christ’s peace and the world’s... Let not your heart be troubled, for any evils past or present, neither let it be afraid of any evil to come. Note, Those that are interested in the covenant of grace, and entitled to the peace which Christ gives, (and) ought not to yield to overwhelming griefs and fears. - Matthew Henry<br />
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Peace Defined (by someone smarter than me): The Meaning of Peace. In English, the word "peace" conjures up a passive picture, one showing an absence of civil disturbance or hostilities, or a personality free from internal and external strife. <u>The biblical concept of peace is larger than that, and rests heavily on the Hebrew root slm, which means "to be complete" or "to be sound." God alone is the source of peace, for he is "Yahweh Shalom". The Old Testament anticipated, and the New Testament confirmed, that God's peace would be mediated through a Messiah. Peace with God came through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The verb conveys both a dynamic and a static meaning"to be complete or whole" or "to live well." The noun had many nuances, but can be grouped into four categories: </u><br />
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<ul>
<li><b>(1) </b>salom [l'v] as wholeness of life or body (i.e., health);<b> </b></li>
<li><b>(2)</b> salom [l'v] as right relationship or harmony between two parties or people, often established by a covenant </li>
<li><b>(3)</b> salom [l'v] as prosperity, success, or fulfillment (see Lev 26:3-9 ); </li>
<li><b>(4)</b> salom [l'v] as victory over one's enemies or absence of war. </li>
</ul>
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The peace my Jesus gives is not rooted in my present circumstance.<br />
The peace my Jesus gives is not about how I feel or what I think.<br />
The peace my Jesus gives has nothing to do with my heath, my work or my bank account.<br />
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My peace begins with God's grace. HIS extension of Himself in ways I could never deserve and can hardly imagine. My peace begins with Jesus. Not earthly blessings. Not a life time of days filled with nothing by butterfly kisses and rainbow filled skies. God's peace does not mean that my life will be stress free or strife free. Real life has ebbs and sways. There is good and bad, easy and not so easy, songs of praise and rivers of tears. Sometimes I see God's hand at work, and I think "wow, that is amazing. Isn't the way God worked all of that out so cool!" Other times, there are moments when all I can think is "I will never understand this. It's so wrong. It's so unfair. It's so not the way it should be!"<br />
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God's peace does not solve the struggle of this human life. God's peace does not sugar coat hard times, heart aches, and the valleys of darkness that we sometimes walk through. God's peace doesn't mean that I will always understand, always be happy and that things will always be fair. But God's peace does remind me that this is not my home. This is not my final destination. This is not how the story ends. And I am NEVER ALONE!<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-79471381395725184102013-11-05T06:04:00.000-06:002013-11-05T06:04:11.908-06:00Life is Too Short<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
Today we prepare for our 3rd funeral in four months. Later this week will be the 4th service in 4 months. This really sucks.<br />
Don - a friend and a father<br />
Josh - a friend and a son<br />
Eddie - a friend and an uncle<br />
Dr. Ken Johnson - chair of the Engineering Department at Olivet Nazarene University, mentor<br />
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Each left a lasting mark on the world and on the hearts of those who had the privilege to know them and share life with them for a while. Loved. Missed. Never to be forgotten.<br />
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So here are my thoughts for the day. Give them a read, or roll 'um and smoke 'um - it's really up to you. But remember this: Life is short, it goes by fast, and it really has a strange way of sneaking up on you when you least expect it so...<br />
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<ul>
<li>Don't wait to get right with God. Death waits for no one - and He loves you so much.</li>
<li>Don't be defined by the opinions of others, in the end, God's opinion is the only one that counts.</li>
<li>Don't be afraid when God asks you to do what seems crazy or impossible.</li>
<li>Don't be afraid to ask God hard questions and seek fervently to discover His truths.</li>
<li>Don't waste time holding on to hurts from the past. Unforgiveness is a poison that slowly rots the soul.</li>
<li>Tell Satan to shut up when he tries to define you by who you use to be - you are a new creation.</li>
<li>Start every day with Jesus. It may not change what happens that day, but it will surely affect how you handle it.</li>
<li>Treat Prayer as a first resource and not a last resort.</li>
<li>Anyone can make a short term change; only God can transform</li>
<li>Give people the freedom to move on from the failures of their past.</li>
<li>Kiss your mamma and your daddy, your babies and your grandparents - regardless of your age or theirs.</li>
<li>Make the most of every moment, we never get them back.</li>
<li>Say I love you whenever you can.</li>
<li>Be quick to say I am sorry and mean it - whenever it is necessary.</li>
<li>Marry your best friend, and work every day to protect and grow that love.</li>
<li>Pray with your spouse daily and hold hands.</li>
<li>Take a break and live an unscheduled life every now and again.</li>
<li>Rejoice when your friends rejoice and cry with them in the hard times.</li>
<li>Pick your battles wisely and remember that timing is everything.</li>
<li>Take a deep breath when the kids act like kids.</li>
<li>Raise your kids to be Christ centered, functioning adults.</li>
<li>Socks on the floor are not the end of the world - neither are empty milk cartons in the fridge or empty cereal boxes on the shelves. Not replacing the empty toilet paper with a fresh roll is NOT cool, and if you should happen to take out the trash - good job, now take 5 seconds and put in a new trash bag.</li>
<li>Good character is more important than good grades - but good grades are good.</li>
<li>Accept that the things of greatest worth in this world cannot be bought.</li>
<li>Treasure trusted friendships, they are not easily or quickly replaced.</li>
<li>Eat dinner at the table. Ask dorky questions and listen to the answers.</li>
<li>People may not always remember what you say, but they will never forget how you made them feel.</li>
<li>Do what you can, when you can, and put it all in God's hands.</li>
<li>Every once in a while eat chocolate cake for breakfast.</li>
<li>Be the best Jesus you can be to everyone you meet - they may only get to know Him thru you.</li>
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Search me Oh God and know my heart. Test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the way of everlasting. Psalms 139:23-24</div>
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-23718653680665827032013-11-04T12:00:00.001-06:002013-11-04T12:00:31.377-06:00Praying My Way OutOne day last week a friend of mine on Facebook had the following post:<br />
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I have to admit, I "liked" it - a lot. My patience seems to be thin; I just don't have much sympathy or patience for the miss use of prayer and the misplacing of blame. Don't get me wrong. I am a huge fan of prayer. It should be where we start, where we live, and where we finish in all things. A first resource and not a last resort. But here's the rub for me: What about all of those times when I do this or I do that? I think about it and decide it's the right choice. I talk it over with some friends. I do what I am gonna do, get the ball rolling so to speak and then pause and say..."hey God where are ya, why isn't this working out like we had planned?" It makes me crazy when people get mad at God when they find themselves in a place in life that they "chose their self into". Stop blaming God for your poor personal choice.<br />
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Well, funny thing. God decided we would just chew on that for awhile. It wasn't fun, at 3am on Saturday morning. Yeah.<br />
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It started with the almost audible voice of God saying to me <i>"Without me dear daughter, where would you be?"</i> Honestly - Hell. <i>"And did you behave yourself there?"</i> Honestly - Yep. <i>"And how did you change that?"</i> Shoot - A prayer of confession. <i>"So basically you prayed yourself out of where you had behaved yourself into?"</i> Yeah God, but that was then and this in now.<i> "And now is it your belief that you are doing it all right all of the time?"</i> Well, what can I say to that.<br />
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Just 'cause a girl is saved, doesn't mean that sin isn't gonna try and trip her up. Sometimes we make poor choices that are rooted in sin. We run ahead of God, even with good intentions, and then realize that God seems no place to be found . We might drag our feet and later have to face the truth that delayed obedience is in fact disobedience. We make the willful decision to do, say and think things that are contrary to God's character and we violate our love relationship with Him. Prayer and repentance will deal fully and completely with the eternal consequence of every sin. Divine forgiveness doesn't negate the earthly consequences that may follow - regardless of spiritual repentance. Prayer changes things. Big things and little things. Physical things and eternal things. Emotional things and psychological things. BUT - earthy choices often carry earthly consequences. There are times when we make choices that are not sin at all, but they are not smart choices and they come back to bite us. Matt and I have made some poor financial decisions in the past, not sin - but not smart. Pray as we might, we still had to live with the consequence. It doesn't mean God wasn't there and it doesn't mean that God didn't care. Prayer should not be viewed as the cosmic eraser that I can use to "fix" things that I have behaved my way into. Sometimes I just have to learn the hard way - and God still holds my hand.<br />
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God - show me the offensives ways in me.<br />
God - lead me in your everlasting.<br />
Let me hold tight to you when my consequences hurt or are hard.<br />
Amen<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-31333724726284717962013-10-17T11:37:00.002-05:002013-10-17T11:37:34.686-05:00Ladies of Luke - The BenefactorsLuke 8 opens with Jesus doing His thing- going from place to place proclaiming the Good News of the Kingdom of God. The chosen twelve are with Jesus watching and learning - job shadowing if you will. But it's not just Jesus and his peeps...<b><i>"and also some women who had been cured of evil spirits and diseases: Mary (called Magdalene) from whom 7 demons had come out; Joanna the wife of Cuza, the manager of Herod's household; Susanna; and many others. These women were helping to support them out of their own means." </i></b><br />
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Lets chew on that for a minute or two. In a culture where women had little value, again we find women actively involved with the ministry of Jesus. These women were not cookie cutter converts. All three have been been touched by the healing hand of Jesus in some way, and all three were forever changed. Mary, we know was a delivered sinner, freed from demon possession and passionate about her salvation. No longer defined by the depth of her past sin, she followed and served in full obedience. Joanna was a women of great social standing. We know this because we know to whom she was married. Susanna; we know nothing of her, expect that she had experienced healing and her deliverance prompted her action. Different women with varied stories of deliverance, but they share a Savior. But let's not miss something important here; they weren't delivered and then sedentary. Instead their feet AND their checkbooks were moved to action. They attended to the needs of the ministry. If I close my eyes, I can almost see them in the markets purchasing food for meals, and at camp side kitchens preparing it. Getting laundry done, fetching water. Jesus was focused on his job - preaching - and these women (and others too) made sure all of the other "details" of daily life were addressed so that the ministry could continue without interruption.<br />
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Any takeaways for me today? You bet!<br />
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Can I honor God with my financial giving? Will combining it with the giving of others in my faith community help advance real Kingdom work that has a real financial requirement? Yep. Can I reduce the temptation that my preachers, teachers, and leaders face to be distracted by "other things" and help them stay focused on spreading the Good News? Oh sure, especially if I am willing to do the types things that others simply don't want to be bothered with. It's not always about a spiritual calling or giftedness. Sometimes, we just need a willing heart to tackle an unglamorous, unseen and perhaps even an unclean job.<br />
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God, inspire me to seek out tangible ways that I can serve You and lighten the load of those around me who are called to preach, and teach and share the Good New of the Kingdom of God.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-89870061350356426992013-10-14T12:24:00.000-05:002013-10-14T12:24:08.975-05:00The Ladies of Luke - The "Sinful" Woman<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Loving God with my today and tomorrow - not being defined by who I was or what I have done. This scripture is deep end of the pool stuff and what God is laying on my heart today isn't necessarily the rose petals and rainbows promises of His word. Today I want to unpack her story - but it intersects Simon's story too.</div>
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<span style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 12px;"><b>Luke 7: 36-43 One of the Pharisees invited Jesus to eat with him. After he entered the Pharisee’s home, he took his place at the table. Meanwhile, a woman from the city, a sinner, discovered that Jesus was dining in the Pharisee’s house. She brought perfumed oil in a vase made of alabaster. Standing behind him at his feet and crying, she began to wet his feet with her tears. She wiped them with her hair, kissed them, and poured the oil on them. When the Pharisee who had invited Jesus saw what was happening, he said to himself, If this man were a prophet, he would know what kind of woman is touching him. He would know that she is a sinner. </b></span></span><span style="background-color: transparent; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 12px;"><b>Jesus replied, “Simon, I have something to say to you.” </b></span></span><b style="background-color: transparent; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">“Teacher, speak,” he said.</b><b style="background-color: transparent; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;"> “A certain lender had two debtors. One owed enough money to pay five hundred people for a day’s work. The other owed enough money for fifty. When they couldn’t pay, the lender forgave the debts of them both. Which of them will love him more?” </b><b style="background-color: transparent; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">Simon replied, “I suppose the one who had the largest debt canceled.” </b><b style="background-color: transparent; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">Jesus said, “You have judged correctly.”</b></div>
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Jesus was invited to share a meal with some "Bible knowing" and "God loving" people. While Jesus was there, a woman with a well known reputation of sin came for a visit. She brought what she had to offer Him. This woman brought her best gift. This gift cost the woman; there was financial sacrifice and the sacrifice of her pride and personal interests to minister to the need of Jesus. It was not a glamorous act of service, in fact most would have avoided the task. The Bible records no spoken words between them, but it does record her tears. She was wounded, she was broken, she faced judgement and condemnation. And yet, she placed herself at the feet of the Savior. They called her a harlot. Today what would her label be: whore, prostitute, adulteress, post-abortive, or maybe even lesbian? To the "Bible lovers", she was too dirty to ever be made clean. Her disgrace was too significant, the stains of her sin were too permeating. She was ruined - permanently.</div>
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How did Jesus address the hardened heart of His audience? With a story of course. Two men owed debts. The size of the debts were different but there was one thing in common - neither man had any hope of successful repayment. Knowing that they could never repay the debt, the lender forgave both debts equally and fully. Jesus then asked, who was more grateful? One of the men answered it was the man who owed more - and Jesus expressed that he was correct.</div>
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<span style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 12px;"><b>Luke 7:44-50 Jesus turned to the woman and said to Simon, “Do you see this woman? When I entered your home, you didn’t give me water for my feet, but she wet my feet with tears and wiped them with her hair. You didn’t greet me with a kiss, but she hasn’t stopped kissing my feet since I came in. You didn’t anoint my head with oil, but she has poured perfumed oil on my feet. This is why I tell you that her many sins have been forgiven; so she has shown great love. The one who is forgiven little loves little.” </b></span></span><b style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">Then Jesus said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.” </b><b style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">The other table guests began to say among themselves, “Who is this person that even forgives sins?” </b><b style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;"> Jesus said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you. Go in peace.”</b></div>
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Here comes the slap for the someone. Jesus wasn't cruel - he was honest with a "Bible lover" that should have known better. Simon had invited Jesus in, but there wasn't much sincerity. Simon didn't extend comfort or kindness to his guest. Simon had basically said to Jesus "you can come in for a nice little meal and a fun little visit, but your presence in my home isn't going to make me uncomfortable, in fact your presence Jesus, wont be an inconvenience for me at all. Simon had little gratitude or love. I am a Bible knower and a God lover. Do I ever do that? Do I want to love and serve my Lord in ways that are easy and convent? Do the gifts I offer cost my anything at all? </div>
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Then there was this "sinful woman". The woman had been forgiven of much - and she was grateful for much. She didn't care what anyone thought; no cost was too much. This woman understood the depth of her sin and thus understood the depth of Jesus' mercy, love and grace. She was both forgiven and given peace. A cleansing from the inside out. No longer bound by regret, remorse, judgement, embarrassment, shame - she was given peace. No longer defined by who she was - her peace came from who Jesus is. Her story is not exactly my story; but I understand judgement, sin and shame. I understand how Satan can try and use my past failures to haunt me. I can relate with the condemnation of people who can't or wont look past who I use to be. No mater what my label was - my identity is now secure. I am a daughter of the Living God, forgiven and "in peace". </div>
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Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-52253538984113812352013-10-11T08:00:00.000-05:002013-10-11T08:00:14.990-05:00The Ladies of Luke - A Mourning MotherHas your heart ever been broke beyond words?<br />
Have there been moments when the overwhelming rawness of life hindered your ability to speak or think - or do anything more than breath? Yeah - me too.<br />
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<b>Luke 7:11-15 Soon afterwards He went to a city called Nain; and His disciples were going along with Him, accompanied by a large crowd. Now as He approached the gate of the city, a dead man was being carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow; and a sizeable crowd from the city was with her. When the Lord saw her, He felt compassion for her, and said to her, "Do not weep.” And He came up and touched the coffin; and the bearers came to a halt. And He said, “Young man, I say to you, arise!” The dead man sat up and began to speak. And Jesus gave him back to his mother. </b></blockquote>
Now here is a lady that understands heartbreak and loss. Already a widow, she is now taking the long walk to the cemetery to bury her only son. In this culture, this woman has just lost her last hope. She is now alone. No husband or child to care for her, protect her or provide for her. Her today is filled with sorrow and her tomorrow looks bleak. Yet, she didn't throw herself at Jesus' feet, she didn't call out to him "Lord, Lord". From the text, we can't be sure if she even saw Him at all. But <b>HE SAW HER</b>. In the midst of her pain, Jesus noticed. And don't miss it, 'cause this part is import: He did something! An extension of His love and compassion, His grace and His almighty power over all things; it was nothing she asked for or could ever deserve. Jesus addressed the need of the woman in a way that only HE could.<br />
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But let's be real. Most of us haven't buried a spouse and a child, so can we really relate to this lady? Let's take a minute and break that down. My family isn't perfect, we're just people and that means that we do stupid people things and say stupid people things from time to time. A job can pay the bills, but it's not always fun or personally fulfilling - and what about all of those good Godly people who are under-employed, unemployed, or on furlough? Good people are struggling to sell a home in a topsy turvie market, and more families face the demanding challenge of raising a special child with unique medical/behavioral/educational needs. How many parents have cried a river of tears as their adult child chose to walk away or drift away from God? What about the health complications we never expected, but now must face? We are surrounded by husbands and wives who have forgotten or fell away from what it is to live and love together under the blessing and direction of God - and they live each day in pain. Then there all of us who are living through what can be a war zone with creatures we label as toddlers, preschoolers, kids, teenagers and emerging adults. Even great kids have bad days; great parents have bad days too. To go back to work or stay at home with the babies? What about those OREO people - providing assistance and care for aging parents and helping to care for, provide childcare for and co-raise their grandchild? Too many bills and limited finances. Lots of demands on the schedule and not much time. The newlyweds, the new empty nesters and the new retiree's . . . think there is no stress, conflict and heartache there?<br />
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We serve the same God that saw the widows heartache and was prompted to act. That Jesus guy - He loves you and He loves me that much too! On the days when life is so big that breathing seems like a task, Jesus is there. He sees and He cares. Even when your heart is so heavy that your eyes can't look up for Him, He still looks toward you. And more than that, Jesus is still in the business of meeting needs in ways that only He can. It may not be the way that others expect, or even the way we'd like or expect - but our needs will never go unnoticed. He loves us too much for that :-)<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-18282480538352410482013-10-08T07:52:00.000-05:002013-10-08T07:52:02.804-05:00Ladies of Luke - The Mother in Law<br />
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<b><i>Jesus left the synagogue and went to the home of Simon Peter. Now Simon's mother in law was suffering from a high fever and they asked Jesus to help her. So He bent over her and rebuked the fever, and it left her. She got up at once and began to minister to them. </i></b></div>
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<b><i>Luke 4:38-40</i></b></div>
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Just two short verses. We don't know much about this Mother In Law. We can infer from scripture that she either lived with her daughter and Peter or she was so ill that she was staying with her daughter during the illness. High fevers are scary things...even by today's standards. A fever is the bodies was of saying that something is seriously wrong; but many times the fever in and of itself doesn't specifically identify the problem. It's a symptom. "They" asked Jesus to help her. "They" - Peter and his wife would be the logical guess. It was likely that Peter was there to witness first hand when Jesus had cast demons and healed others, so this could be seen as a logical request. Next of course Jesus does His Jesus thing; He rebukes the fever and it leaves. And then the women - what - she gets up and ministers to them? What's that about?<br />
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The woman was dramatically healed. Jesus saw the symptom, the fever, but he healed the illness. Her immediate response was an act of worship. Not next week and not tomorrow - right now! Not a song. Not a dance. Worship. Service. Love and gratitude prompted her to action and obedience. God's restoration doesn't cause a her to be silent or still. She was compelled to honor God.<br />
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So what can this lady teach me. No fever for me today. I'm feeling just fine and looking pretty good thank you very much. But Wait. Just cause I look fine, does that really mean I am healthy? Sometimes there are things in my life that are symptoms of a deeper illness. A critical spirit, a stubborn opinion, a pre-conceived idea that something just wont meet my standard. Hey God, this is the way I want it. Why don't we do it that way, You can just join right in and bless the party. My pride, my standard, my idea. Me. Me. Me. The name of my illness. Sin.<br />
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As God continues to extend His RADICAL grace to me, shouldn't my question really be...hey God, how can I honor you, worship you, and pay it forward for your will and your kingdom today?<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-20577696595866904572013-10-03T08:59:00.000-05:002013-10-03T08:59:37.476-05:00The Ladies of Luke - AnnaI'm a married working woman, in the midst of raising three sons with my husband. We live each day in the most technologically advanced period of history. Plugged in, tuned in, signed in, turned on. Busy. Busy. Busy. What can I learn from a widow that lived in a church 2000 years ago?<br />
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<b><i>Anna the prophetess was also there, a daughter of Phanuel from the tribe of Asher. She was by now a very old woman. She had been married seven years and a widow for eighty-four. She never left the Temple area, worshiping night and day with her fastings and prayers. At the very time Simeon was praying, she showed up, broke into an anthem of praise to God, and talked about the child to all who were waiting expectantly for the freeing of Jerusalem. Luke 2:36-38</i></b><br />
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She was a daughter - Me too.<br />
She had been a wife - Me too.<br />
She was old - I feel old some days.<br />
She was devout.<br />
She was an evangelist.<br />
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Anna was <u>devout</u>. She was committed to the practice of fasting and prayer. It wasn't what she did, it was how she lived. In constant communion with God - <b><i>worshiping night and day...</i></b> In all things, at all times, on all occasions. Not just from nine to noon on Sundays. Not before meals and at bedtime. Her conversation with her creator was uninterrupted.<br />
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<u>Devout.</u> Sacrificing physical comfort for deeper connection with her heavenly father <b><i>...with her fasting and prayers.</i></b> Fasting without prayer is what I call "a diet." Forgetting to eat lunch isn't fasting. Skipping dinner 'cause there is no time for the drive thru isn't fasting either. Prayer is not thinking, and it's not wishing. It's something that you choose to do on purpose. Prayer is never accidental. It takes time and effort. It's communication and it's parting of growing a love relationship with God. It's getting to know God in a different way, and letting Him get to know me.<br />
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<u>Devout</u>. Anna was paying attention and looking for the movement of God <i style="font-weight: bold;">...at the very moment Simeon was praying she showed up...</i> Anna was no frog on a log. She didn't just show up for church and sit in her polite little seat. No! She was a worshiper of the Most High God. She knew God. She loved God. Anna didn't rely on her friends relationship with God, or her pastors relationship with God. She and God were on a first name basis.<br />
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<u>Devout</u> <i style="font-weight: bold;">...broke into anthem of praise to God...</i>when God moves God should be praised. It's not about "look how cool this is for me", it's about WOW! GOD ROCKS! Anna understood what it is to glorify God for God's glory.<br />
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<u>Devout</u>. Anna talked about how God had moved. She didn't keep the treasure to herself <i style="font-weight: bold;">...and talked about the child to all who were waiting expectantly for the freeing of Jerusalem. </i>She was sharing the good news story in real time. She told everybody. Everyone needed what she knew. Everyone needed WHO she knew.<br />
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Do I live a life of worship - or do I just sing until I "feel" connected on Sunday mornings?<br />
Do I live a life of prayer - or am I just thinking and wishing?<br />
Do I sacrifice physical comfort for greater spiritual things?<br />
Am I paying attention for the movement of God?<br />
Am I sharing the good news story in real time?<br />
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Thanks Anna. Your example helps me understand and challenges me to be more intentional in my own faith journey.Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8540994001479791962.post-35230407860855925332013-10-02T08:34:00.000-05:002013-10-02T08:34:38.325-05:00The Ladies of Luke - Mary and the Day she forgot JesusWhen Matt and I were pregnant with our first child, Matt's duty station for the Navy changed. In the late fall of 1994 we moved from upstate New York to Connecticut for Matt's first assignment on a fast attack submarine. We made a quick trip to the coast to being looking for housing in the community. A number of base closings had caused the relocation of several thousand families to the New London Base and so we would not be able to get into Navy housing for about a year. We left the mountains of New York on a Friday afternoon, drove the several hour trip down to New London and started to look for a hotel for the night. Literally every hotel we went to was full. Finally, we found a place where the night manager reluctantly stated "if the people don't show by midnight you can have that room I guess" So we waited, in the car, in the cold. And we talked about Mary and Joseph. Pregnant, cold, tired. No room at the inn. Eventually we were given the room. No star in the sky, no heavenly hosts - just a young couple praising God for the provision of a little hotel room that provided shelter for the night. For the first time in my life I felt like I could relate with Mary. God had provided, though not in a manner that she had expected I'm sure - and He provided for us too.<br />
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Twice in Luke 2 there is reference to the fact that Mary treasured things up in her heart and pondered them. There were things that Mary kept for herself. Insights, blessings, whispers from her heavenly father. She was aware. She was alert. There were times when she made the effort to pay attention, and make a mental treasure. The second thing I can learn from Mary in Luke 2 - pay attention, some treasures are just for me.<br />
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Mary was a good mom. She took her boy to temple, and to the feasts. She was doing her part to raise her child up with a strong faith connection and tradition. But she was human. <i style="font-weight: bold;">Every year his parents went to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover. When he was twelve years old, they went up to the Feast, according to the custom. After the Feast was over, while his parents were returning home, the boy Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem <u>but they were unaware of it.</u> Thinking he was in their company they traveled for a day. They began looking for him among their relatives and friends. When they did not find him them went back... </i>Many and Joseph were busy doing their thing and they moved on without Jesus...and they didn't notice at first. When they did realize what was going on, they looked for Jesus where they were. Then they went back to the place that they knew Jesus was.<br />
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This was the third thing Mary decided to teach me, and it isn't a comfortable lesson.<br />
Wow! Do I sometimes forget Jesus? In the busyness of my life, how many times have I rushed ahead without God and then realized later that He wasn't there? How many times have I tried to find God in the choices that I have made and the paths that I have followed all on my own? The cure for this of course is repentance. When I am not where God is, I must go back to God. (just like Mary and Joseph went back to Jerusalem). It can hurt. It might be embarrassing. It may cost me some pride. I need to get over it, and get back to God.<br />
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<br />Trisha Wilsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09166539181666795075noreply@blogger.com0