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Devotional for Friday May 3rd
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Devotional for Thursday May 2nd
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Devotional for Wednesday May 1st
Good Morning Everyone,
Our theme for this month: You Gotta Keep Dancing”
Our Bible verse for today: “You have changed my sadness into a joyful dance.” Psalm 30:11
Our thought for today: “Don’t stop dancing”
Your wife is mad and the kids have the flu? You gotta keep dancing. Your boss is a jerk and the bills are all late? You gotta keep dancing. Your mamma don’t dance and your daddy don’t rock & roll? You gotta keep dancing.
I’ll admit without apology or shame that I have borrowed the title for this month’s series from Tim Hansel’s great little book by same title, “You Gotta Keep Dancin”. Tim was the founder of a ministry called “Summit Expeditions”. He led groups of men on challenging wilderness expeditions with the dual purpose of having fun while conquering challenges in nature, but also as a time of Christian discipleship and spiritual discovery.
On one of those expeditions Tim had a rock climbing accident that resulted in a serious back injury that would never heal. After numerous surgeries and treatments of all sorts, combined with more medicine than any person should have to take, Tim ended up spending the rest of his life with chronic daily pain. From the time of the accident forward he was never without pain.
What to do? How do you live like that? You can succumb to despair and sink into a pit of despondency. Or you can live like a zombie zonked-out on tons of painkillers. Or you can simply resolve to get on with life as best you can under the circumstances as they are – you can choose to just keep dancing. Tim decided to dance.
I like Tim’s story because I find it inspiring. I’ve read his book multiple times over the years. It has helped me to stop being a whiny little snot and to just suck-it-up and get on with life. (Okay, I’m still working on the whiny little snot part.)
Sheldon Kopp was a well-known psychotherapist and author in the mid-to-late 1900s. After a lifetime of studying and analyzing people and their lives he wrote, “Life can be counted on to provide all the pain that any of us might need.”
True but dark. I like the quote from famed Bible scholar and theologian Frederick Buechner better, “My assumption is that the story of any one of us is in some measure the story of all of us.”
Yes, that’s better. We can learn from each other. We can be inspired by each other’s examples. I can learn to stop being a whiny little snot about my own small problems by considering how Tim Hansel and others like him handled their big problems with grace and courage and dignity.
That’s what we will do this month. We will learn from others who have handled big life problems well. The truth is that life happens. It happens to all of us. But you just gotta keep dancing.
God Bless,
Pastor Jim
Devotional for Tuesday April 30th
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Devotional for Monday April 29th
Good Morning Everyone,
Our theme for this month: “Laugh Again”
Our Bible verse for today: “I give thanks to my God for every remembrance of you …” Philippians 1:3-5 (CSB)
Our thought for today: “What do you choose to remember?”
Thoughts of my mother make me smile. She was such a kind-hearted soul. She smiled a lot, laughed easily, she was sensitive and considerate, and she was an easy person to talk to. Even as a troubled teenager I would sit with her for hours and just talk.
My mom was also my best playmate for most of my childhood. She was the one who taught me how to play baseball and football; she taught me how to build a snow fort and a tree fort; we played board games, hide-and-seek, and so much more. She taught me how to sew, how to bake, and how to do my own laundry. She was the greatest Mom ever!
But she wasn’t perfect. For one thing, she was a terrible housekeeper. Our house was seldom clean. (At least is was never clean for long. Not with six kids, two cats, a dog, a duck, and most of the neighborhood kids always at our house). No, our house was a mess. Mom did try to clean, occasionally, but seriously, it was a lost cause.
But it’s not the messy house or any of the other imperfections I usually remember. Instead it’s all the good things, the fun things, the long talks, and the happy times that I remember. Those are the things I choose to remember. And it makes me smile.
Philippians is the most joy-filled, positive, and upbeat book in the Bible. In verse 1:3 Paul started by revealing that his memories of the Philippians brought him thoughts of joy and thanksgiving. Thinking of them made him smile. But do you think Paul had only good and happy memories of them? The truth is that the Philippians were little different from you and me, and their church was the same as your church and my church. Those folks had their share of warts and pimples, they passed gas and had bad breath, they got grumpy and difficult – they were just people. But Paul chose to remember the good things about them. And that made him smile.
What do you choose to remember about people and places? You do have a choice you know. You can decide to remember and dwell on the good stuff. You can choose the memories that will make you smile instead of frown.
For instance, I still remember the cartoon I saw years ago of the SWAT team that was called to a little church in a suburban neighborhood. There were police cars with flashing lights, officers in tactical gear with guns drawn, and a police helicopter hovering in the air. Finally the door to the church opened, a deacon stepped out, he waved to the law enforcement officers and said, “Sorry everyone, it’s not a hostage situation. It’s just a really long sermon!”
As a preacher myself the memory of that causes me to smile. It also causes me to keep my sermons short.
God Bless,
Pastor Jim
Devotional for Saturday and Sunday April 27-28
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Devotional for Friday April 26th
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Devotional for Thursday April 25th
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Devotional for Wednesday April 24th
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