Monthly Archives: November 2024

Calling On God

I was recently telling a friend the story of how I came face to face with a rattle snake. My friend and I were running through the woods away from my younger brother. I took a side trail trying to lose him. A few feet into the trail, I saw the snake laying across the trail. I hit the brakes, but they didn’t. It knocked me down, and I came face to face with the snake. It raised up its head to strike. In that moment, I called out, “Jesus” for help. The snake laid its head down and slithered on. It’s got me thinking, “Who do you call on when you’re in trouble?” When your finances need help or you have a relationship issue, who do you call on? When the bottom falls out, who do you reach out to? The psalmist taught us to call out to God who can help in any situation.

Here are some Bible verses on calling out to God for help:

1. From the depths of despair, O Lord, I call for your help. Hear my cry, O Lord. Pay attention to my prayer.

Psalms 130:1-2 NLT

2. I love the Lord, because He hears [and continues to hear] My voice and my supplications (my pleas, my cries, my specific needs). Because He has inclined His ear to me, Therefore I will call on Him as long as I live.

Psalms 116:1-2 AMP

3. But as for me, I will call upon the Lord to save me, and I know he will!

Psalms 55:16 TPT

4. O Lord, I call upon you; hasten to me! Give ear to my voice when I call to you!

Psalm 141:1 ESV

5. The Lord is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth.

Psalm 145:18 ESV

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Choosing To Be Thankful

Years ago I learned the Law of Thanksgiving. It simply states that the more you give thanks, the more you have to give thanks for. Think about that for a second. When’s the last time you were thankful for something? So far 2020 has been a crazy year. I see a ton of people complaining about it and wondering what’s next. We can be thankful that World War 3 didn’t happen, that COVID-19 didn’t kill the percentages that we were told it would, we got to spend some time at home with our family and we’re learning to have some long overdue conversations. I’m not minimizing the seriousness or impact any of the events that have happened so far this year, but there are reasons to give thanks in all of them.

1 Thessalonians 5:18 says, “And in the midst of everything be always giving thanks, for this is God’s perfect plan for you in Christ Jesus” (TPT). No matter what’s going on in your life, there’s a way and a reason to give thanks. In my darkest days, I learned to thank God that I didn’t have things as badly as someone else had it. It took a conscious effort to change my mind from, “I don’t think Job had it this bad” to “God, I realize things could be a lot worse in my life. Thank you that it’s not.” The more I began to change how I saw my situation and found reasons to be thankful, the less bitter I became. I believe it shortened the long term negative impact it could have had on my life.

Psalm 107 is a great chapter to teach thankfulness. I recommend reading the whole chapter, but today I want to share verses 8-9. They say, “So lift your hands and thank God for his marvelous kindness and for all his miracles of mercy for those he loves. How he satisfies the souls of thirsty ones and fills the hungry with all that is good!” To cultivate a thankful heart, you can’t just keep your thanks inside. You need to share it. Even though it’s not November as I write this, try thinking of one thing each day that you are thankful for and share that with others. Try doing that for 30 days or even longer. You will find that your outlook on life will change and that suddenly you will have a lot to be thankful for.

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Throwback Thursday is a feature I’m using to help build some margin into my schedule to pursue other ventures. Each Thursday I’ll be bringing you a previously written devotional that still speaks encouragement to us from God’s Word.

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Praise And Thanksgiving

In 1620 the Mayflower reached what would be the New England shore. It was already late fall and it was too late to plant food. They endured a harsh winter and food rations. They called this period “The Starvation Time.” In their first few months in the new world, half of them died. When spring came, they began to plant corn. The native Americans taught them how to fertilize the soil with fish. At one point that summer, drought was threatening their food supply. They called for fasting and prayer. The day after they prayed, it rained and their crops were saved. That next fall, they had a bumper crop. William Bradford and Edward Winslow recorded in their journals regarding the feast they shared with about 90 of the natives. They wrote that they, “Returned glory, honor and praise with all thankfulness to our good God who deals graciously with us.”

In Mark 6, Jesus had been preaching all day and ministering to people. It was getting late, so the disciples asked Him to send the people into the nearby villages to find food and rest. Jesus’ reply caught them off guard. He told them to feed the mass of people themselves. “With what?” they asked. Jesus asked them how much food they had. They found five loaves a bread and two fish to give the crowd. Verse 41 says, “Taking the five loaves and two fish, He looked up to heaven and said a blessing [of praise and thanksgiving to the Father]. Then He broke the loaves and [repeatedly] gave them to the disciples to set before the people; and He divided up the two fish among them all” (AMP). Did you catch that? Jesus said a blessing of praise and thanksgiving, then God multiplied what they had.

Zechariah 4:10 says, “Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin, to see the plumb line in Zerubbabel’s hand” (NLT). Sometimes we miss out on the blessings of God because were upset about the little we have. Like the Pilgrims and Jesus, we should instead be giving praise and thanksgiving to God for what we do have because that is what He provided. What we often despise, God rejoices at. What we reject, God wants to multiply. Our attitude will dictate the outcome. As we enter this period of Thanksgiving and Christmas, don’t spend your time complaining about how little you have or how you wish you had more. Instead, praise God for what you do have and thank Him for it. When we do, He makes it more than enough.

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The Shepherd’s Tree

I’ve read about a tree in the southern portion of Africa called the Shepherd’s Tree. It grows in areas where there is little rainfall and thrives in harsh environments. It provides valuable resources to both humans and animals in such conditions which helps maintain the ecosystem in those regions. Shepherds use its fruit like a coffee bean giving them caffeine and something to drink. Its wood can be used for making utensils, while it’s leave have medicinal properties. Some people even refer to this as the Tree of Life. One of the most important features though is that its roots go down deep into the soil. In fact they go deeper than any other tree, reaching more than 150 feet deep. This tree reminds me of who we are called to be as Christians.

Psalm 1 describes the person who lives according to God’s Word, meditates on it and delights in it. Verse 3 says we will be like trees that are planted by a riverbank. Those trees have all the water they need in order to produce in any environment and any season. We’re called to bear fruit in any season as believers. Paul described the fruit as love, joy, peace, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, long suffering, gentleness and self control. The fruit we bear will help us and others in any situation. Verse 3 also says their leaves will not whither. Remember the leaves have medical significance bringing healing to anyone around us. All of these things happen in our lives the same way the Shepherd’s Tree does them. It comes down to our roots and how deeply they’re planted.

Colossians 2:7 says, “Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him. Then your faith will grow strong in the truth you were taught, and you will overflow with thankfulness” (NLT). The deeper our roots grow in Christ, the more we will be able to produce fruit, healing and life giving resources. Our lives must be built on Him so that we can withstand any environment or conditions that come against us. Our faith will be strong and contagious because our lives are based in the Word of God rather than the shifting sands of culture. Finally, we will live a life overflowing with thankfulness. The more we give thanks to God, the more we recognize by faith that all we have comes from Him. When we live with that kind of mindfulness, He gives us more in order to provide for the people around us. We truly will be like the Shepherd’s Tree.

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The Weapon Of Thanksgiving

There are many times in our life when we’re thrust into a spiritual battle. Things can be going well, and then all of a sudden m we find ourselves being shell shocked by a bombardment of attacks. It can sometimes take me some time before I realize what’s truly going on. I then start reaching for my weapons of praise music, prayer and fasting to start fighting back. I’ve found that there’s another weapon we hard,y use. It’s the weapon of thanksgiving. When we start giving thanks to God, we create an atmosphere where faith can grow. We shift our perspective from shock and awe of what’s happening to us to our Father in Heaven who can give us the victory. When we use the weapons of thanksgiving, we stop our complaining, which invites fear and worry. Thanksgiving begins to shift the outcome of the war.

In 2 Chronicles 20, word came to King Jehoshaphat that vast army had entered their land and was headed for them. He immediately was afraid and turned his attention toward Heaven and began to pray. He asked the rest of the people to join him in prayer too. In verse 12 he prayed, “O our God, will You not judge them? For we are powerless against this great multitude which is coming against us. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on You” (AMP). Then the Spirit of the Lord came on someone and God began speaking to them to go into battle. When the marched towards the enemy, Jehoshaphat sent singers out in front of them and they began to sing, “Praise and give thanks to the Lord, for His mercy and lovingkindness endure forever.” When they sang this song of thanksgiving, God moved and destroyed their enemy.

Philippians 4:6 says, “Do not be anxious or worried about anything, but in everything [every circumstance and situation] by prayer and petition with thanksgiving, continue to make your [specific] requests known to God.” Too often our prayers are formed from words of anxiousness, fear and worry. Here Paul reminds us to remove those things and to replace them with thanksgiving. He understood that we must Include thanksgiving in our prayers when we are under attack. A grateful heart activates the power of God on our behalf and He begins to fight our battle for us. Thanksgiving shifts our speech, our prayers and perspective. When you’re overwhelmed, begin to thank God for what He has done and is doing. The battle will shift and God will give you the victory.

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Taking Care Of You

In the beginning, God charged Adam with taking care of the earth. Throughout the Bible we read where God has since charged us with caring for the elderly, the widow and the orphan. We’re also to take care of the poor and needy. In all that caring for others, we might wonder who is supposed to care for us. Again, the Bible is clear on this one. It says that God will take care of you. We worry so much about things that are out of our control, but are in His. He is not going to leave you or forsake you. He’s clothed the fields with flowers and made sure the birds have food. After reminding us of this, Jesus said, “Aren’t you more valuable than them?” When we seek His kingdom, first, He takes care of everything else for us.

Here are some Bible verses on God taking care of you:

1. As a shepherd cares for his sheep on the day that he is among his scattered flock, so I will care for My sheep; and I will rescue them from all the places to which they were scattered on a cloudy and gloomy day.

Ezekiel 34:12 AMP

2. Give your burdens to the Lord, and he will take care of you. He will not permit the godly to slip and fall.

Psalms 55:22 NLT

3. Pour out all your worries and stress upon him and leave them there, for he always tenderly cares for you.

1 Peter 5:7 TPT

4. Therefore, angels are only servants—spirits sent to care for people who will inherit salvation.

Hebrews 1:14 NLT

5. Your righteousness is like the mighty mountains, your justice like the ocean depths. You care for people and animals alike, O Lord.

Psalms 36:6 NLT

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The Secret Of Satisfaction

Growing up, my parents would let me have any shoe I wanted as long as it was less than $25. That was fine for a while, but then I arrived in junior high and Nike introduced the Air Jordan line up. My friends and neighbors got them, but I couldn’t. They were $100, which was considerably more than my $25 limit. I wanted them so badly that I began to put pictures of them in my binders, drew them in my books and had posters on my wall. I thought they were the coolest shoe ever. My parents were teaching me a couple of lessons. The first was to be thankful for what you have even if it’s not what you want. The second was that if you want something more than what you have, save up your money to get it. That created more value in those shoes than if they had been given to me.

In Philippians 4:11, Paul wrote, “For I have learned to be satisfied with what I have” (GNT). That’s a lesson we could all learn. He’s not saying that we shouldn’t ever want more than we have. It’s that we need to learn to be satisfied with what we do have. If we’re constantly looking for something else or wanting more, we will miss the lesson of contentment and fail to be appreciative of what God has given us. When we don’t appreciate something, we don’t value it. If we don’t value it, we take it for granted. God blesses us daily with good things that we look right past because we already want more than the daily bread He’s given us. Paul’s next verse said that whether he had a little or a lot, the secret to life was learning to be content and satisfied.

Ecclesiastes 6:9 put it this way, “It is better to be satisfied with what you have than to be always wanting something else.” What blessings have you been overlooking? What are some things you get, but are never enough? A lack of satisfaction or contentment can be an outward expression of an inward brokenness. Once you’ve identified the outward expression, trace it to its roots. Ask God to bring healing to that area and to help you learn to be content with the things you have, whether a little or a lot. Once that change happens in you, the lens that you look at life through will change, and your prayers will too. Start changing them today by thanking Him for the many things He’s already blessed you with instead of asking Him for all the things you don’t have.

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Throwback Thursday is a feature I’m using to help build some margin into my schedule to pursue other ventures. Each Thursday I’ll be bringing you a previously written devotional that still speaks encouragement to us from God’s Word.

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Unqualified

Have you ever been told you’re unqualified to do something? I can tell you from experience that it’s a confidence crusher, especially when you hear it over and over. After awhile you can begin to believe it yourself. You may even tell yourself that you’re unqualified to do something. Fear likes to use that line to keep us where we are so we don’t step out in faith. So many people let that word hold them back, but there are those who defy it. There are those who know that most of what God calls you to,you’re going to be or feel unqualified to do and step out anyway. They push past their fear and feelings into a position of faith and reliance on God to show up. It’s on,y when we push past the natural that we activate the supernatural. The Bible shared stories of people like that in order to encourage us to do the same.

In 1 Samuel 17, we read the story of a teenage boy who is the youngest of his brothers. They were off at war while he stayed home. After a while, his father sent him with a care package for his brothers. When he arrived at the battlefront, he saw the enemy had a mighty warrior that everyone was afraid of. Something in him rose up beyond his lack of qualifications to say that he could beat this guy. His brothers told him he was too young and was just showing off. The king told him he was unskilled and unqualified to fight. Even as he stepped onto the battlefield to face this mighty foe, the enemy taunted him using his lack of qualifications. However, this young man didn’t let that stop him. In verse 46 he replied to the taunts, “Today the Lord will conquer you, and I will kill you and cut off your head. And then I will give the dead bodies of your men to the birds and wild animals, and the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel!” (NLT). Then, this unqualified boy, grabbed a stone, put it in a sling, ran towards the enemy and killed him.

Jeremiah 17:7 says, “But blessed are those who trust in the Lord and have made the Lord their hope and confidence.” Where is your hope and confidence? Is it in your qualifications or what people say about you? Or is it in the Lord who called you? David trusted in God controlling the outcome regardless of his qualifications and even though he was outmatched in every area. He stepped onto the battlefield in faith trusting God to do what he could not. He still had to face the giant. He had to endure the ridicule. He also had to put the stone in the sling and send it flying. Stepping out in faith is going to require more than just standing on the battlefield. It’s going to require action from you. God used a skill David had to unconventionally defeat the enemy. Don’t let your lack of qualifications keep you on the sidelines. Put your hope and confidence in the Lord and starting taking on giants.

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No Shortcuts

Several years ago there was a college admissions scandal. Several rich, prominent families were paying people off in order to give their kids an unfair advantage in getting into colleges. A lot of famous people committed fraud doing this while paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribe money. What they didn’t understand was how they were setting their kids up for failure in life. By contrast, people like Kevin O’Leary and Warren Buffet have given their kids very little to help them in life. They have said that they don’t necessarily want their kids to inherit their wealth because they won’t have struggled to gain it. The struggle is where they learn to appreciate it and value it. They believe that taking financial struggles away from their kids will cripple them in the long run and destroy their character.

In the Bible, God used struggle and hardship as part of His process to strengthen people, develop character and to get people ready to lead. Joseph stands chief among them. When he was a teenager, God gave him dreams of what his future would hold. He shared them with his family and was a punk to his brothers. They resented him for his behavior and dreams, so they grabbed him, stripped him, and sold him as a slave. His favored status was gone and years of struggling ensued as he worked in Potiphar’s house and went to prison. While he was in prison and forgotten, God worked on his character. When he was ready, God redeemed him from the pit and placed him second in command to Pharaoh. When his brothers came seeking help, he didn’t take revenge. He recognized God’s hand in the struggle.

James 1:3-4 says, “For you know that when your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. So let it grow, for when your endurance is fully developed, you will be perfect and complete, needing nothing” (NLT). God has a process to grow you and place you. It isn’t an easy one. Don’t have the mindset of the people above who tried to shortcut the process. That ultimately affects your development and character. Trials and tests are part of the growth process. If you want to be complete, lacking nothing, you must submit to the process. It won’t be easy, but the strength you will gain will maximize your ability to reach the potential God placed in you. Instead of trying to use a shortcut, ask God for strength, wisdom and courage to endure. You can become the person God sees in you and be used for greater things.

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A Lifestyle Of Gratitude

Every November I see people post daily about something they’ve thankful for. I love to see the posts, but gratitude shouldn’t be seasonal. It’s actually a spiritual discipline that we need to incorporate into our daily lives as Christians. In its trues form, it is an act of selflessness because it acknowledges that someone other than ourselves is the source of things in our lives. It gives credit where credit is due while working to keep us humble. Gratitude is one of the best ways to acknowledge God’s work in our lives. Too many times we pray to ask God for things, yet stop to give Him thanks when He answers. In our home, we have made it a practice to stop what we’re doing, no matter where we are, and give thanks once a prayer has been answered.

In Luke 17:11-19 it says that Jesus was walking from Galilee to Jerusalem. As He was passing through Samaria, He came into a village where He was met by ten lepers who called out to Him for help. Jesus saw them and simply told them to go show themselves to the priest. As they were walking along, they realized they were healed. Nine continued on to show the priest and run to their family. Verse 15-16 says, “One of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, glorifying and praising and honoring God with a loud voice; and he lay face downward at Jesus’ feet, thanking Him [over and over]. He was a Samaritan” (AMP). Jesus asked where the other nine were. Then he asked, “Was there no one found to return and to give thanks and praise to God, except this foreigner?” That question should challenge each of us to have the spiritual discipline of gratitude in our lives.

1 Thessalonians 5:18 says, “In every situation [no matter what the circumstances] be thankful and continually give thanks to God; for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus.” It doesn’t matter what season we’re in, or what our circumstances are, we must learn to be grateful. When we continually give God thanks, it changes our perspective and attitude. The more we things we give thanks for to God, the more we find we have things to be grateful for. A grateful heart is the will of God because it keeps our eyes fixed on Him no matter the situation. What can you do starting today to incorporate this spiritual discipline into your life? How will you be held accountable to be like the one leper who returned to give thanks? Don’t let this be just another season of giving thanks. Use it to begin a lifestyle of gratitude.

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