Saturday, May 27, 2017

How is Your Soil?

May 27, 2017

How is Your Soil?

Exodus 3:17
"So I said, I will bring you out of the affliction of Egypt to the land of the Canaanite and the Hittite and the Amorite and the Perissite and the Hivite and the Jebusite, to a land flowing with milk and honey."

One thing most people do not know about me is my love for growing things. Since I was young I enjoyed growing a garden, planting the landscape and even trying to make sure things grow. As of the past several years though, it seems as if nothing has been growing or at least has been yielding fruit for the harvest.

As I was listening to a sermon tonight a thought hit me with the pastor’s message. He was talking about when you are a citizen of a given country you are a reflection of the culture of your country and when you go to another country and find an embassy representing that country it stands out as a representation of that given country, it’s culture and background and if you are away from your place of residence you can step into that embassy and have a sense of familiarity. He continued to talk about how the church is to be like and embassy and more importantly we as believers need to be like an embassy whereto when someone steps into our lives our home that they see that reflection of heaven in our lives.

So you may wonder, ‘How does an embassy relate to farming or growing things to yield a harvest?’ Plants need the right conditions in order to thrive. If the plant is accustom to a continued resource of water the roots will not grow in a fashion to where they go deep and strong and if it is moved from this common environment to a more dry soil the plant will die. With that said farmers and growers have learned that if you make the conditions more varied with the watering, nutrients and  soil and weather conditions you can expand the places where given things can grow, flourish and produce a harvest.

Thinking about this I could not help but think about a promise God gave Abraham and later repeated in a little more detail to Moses years later. God said “I am going to give you a land flowing with milk and honey.” Over the past 4,000 years or so this same land that was promised to the Children of Israel had found itself a barren desert. Most of us do not understand it as what is today is a far cry from what the land was even just 75 years ago.  There is documentation throughout history that the very land that Israel is on was a barren waste land several times as well as a land of blessing and flourishing. It was documented in Ezekiel as a land that was abandon. Daniel talks about it as a land war torn and deserted. Jeremiah (which many love to quote Jeremiah 29:11) talks about the land as a land wiped out and even historians talk about the area just within the past 100 years as a desert. The interesting thing is in every single case God’s promise never changed. He said it would be a land flowing with milk and honey and on several occasions it was and something happened to create a dry and barren land.

So why did the land of promise turn to a desert waste land and what brought it back from the dead? Let me take you back to World War II and the time just before, which will shed light on the same things that happened in prior generations. Prior to World  War II the Gaza, West Bank and areas up to Bethlehem were more like our abandon towns in the wild west or forgotten cities on old Route 66 in the Mid West with rundown buildings, broken down walls, land that hadn’t had anything grown on in years and a dwindling population due to the lack of work, wealth or promise so it just became an abandon land. As a result of Hitler many Jews fled to this land to escape the atrocities of Hitler and his henchmen. The only people living there at the time were some Arab nomads. It was thought that the refugees and the nomads could coexist, but the nomads did not want the limited resources wasted on them and would have preferred them to die instead. Long story short the Jews that fled to the land derived ways to bringing the ground to grow things again and become self sustained. When this happened it created the Arabs in the land to become jealous of the wealth and harvest where they wanted to drive out the Jews. In 1948 the UN established a country called Israel where the Jews and Arabs would live together, but it has resulted in much strife and blessings of the land they inhabited.

God calls us to be planted into regions where it seems like all hope is lost and a land that looks desolate. This may be a physical wasteland, but more importantly it is a spiritual waste land. Maybe it is our calling where God calls us into our physical struggles to grow stronger roots to prepare us for our transplant. Too often it is easy to question why God doesn’t allow for us to be planted near continued blessing but rather some type of hardship (health, finances, family, loneliness, trauma or any other thing) only to plant us around other people who are struggling with the same things that God has brought us through.

In order to have a harvest you must be able to cross pollinate. Very few plants can produce a harvest through self pollination. In order to get tomatoes one must plant a healthy tomato plant around others. It is by this simple reason why God allows us to struggle in a situation so we can cross pollinate others who are like us with our same experiences so we bring forth a harvest. It is never that the harvest comes alone rather with the help, strength and likeness of others. Unless we take account of our soil and realize it is God who has created our very sustenance to be healthy in order to bring a harvest in others. Additionally it should be our goal to be an embassy where others similar can find refuge and hope so that eventually they too can be transplanted to bring a harvest to another. It is in that safe haven of familiarity we bring the most important thing to others; HOPE. It is in that hope though we bring can make what was once a desolate and abandon land into a land flowing with milk and honey.

Jeremiah 29:11

“For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans to prosper you and not for harm, plans to give you a hope and a future.”

Jeremiah penned these words while he was in jail and the land was barren and the Children of Israel were in captivity and without hope. If Jeremiah could stand firm in adversity, where do you stand with how things look in your life today? In other words what is the condition of your soil?


CAL

Friday, May 5, 2017

Mission Impossible

May 5, 2017
Mission Impossible

2 Corinthians 3:18 New American Standard Bible (NASB)

18 But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.

When I was growing up one of my favorite TV shows happened to be “Mission Impossible” with the late great Peter Graves. With each episode Jim would be greeted by someone with a riddle then go into a room somewhere to get a briefing of his mission on a recorded portable dvd player. At the end of the briefing the voice on the recording would say:

“Your mission, should you choose to accept it Jim…this message will self destruct in 5 seconds.”

As I was thinking about this devotional and how it relates to the journeys we have in life, I thought about just how much life can be so much like entertainment and the things we watch. We come to a crossroad, like Jim did in ‘Mission Impossible,’ where God shows us that we have a mission and it certainly will be very challenging. Now we can be like the action hero and team like in “Mission Impossible” or we could be like Steve Martin in “Planes, Trains & Automobiles” where everything goes wrong and we cannot get a break and we feel the guy we are teamed up with is the devil as everything goes disarray.

As I have been reflecting on my mission and the road I have found myself on I can honestly say that there have been times that I have been Peter Graves and looking for the adventure knowing the road is hard but the promise is great and rewarding. There have also been times where I have found myself like Steve Martin and asking what else could go wrong or saying ‘it can’t get any worse’ only to realize that it certainly can.

In bible study the other day, one of the ladies who was leading, gave a great illustration of just how life is and what God does as a result. She gave us each a rubber band of which we talked about its characteristics of. You see, a rubber band was made for a purpose and in its purpose if was made to be stretched. Often times though we think that if God stretches us any more than we already are we will break. But what happens to a rubber band that has been left in a drawer for an extended period of time and never stretched or has been stretched and left there yet never is given the opportunity to recoil? It finds itself not being able to be useful and eventually break due to its continued state of being when stretched.

So often, I am sure you can relate, I find myself wanting to be used by God but not wanting stretched. I know when I am stretched there is much pain, pressure and tension, but there is also something else: PURPOSE. It is when we are stretched and sign up for that mission that seems impossible we can look back and see where God brought us, how we have effected others along the way and how much deeper into relationship with God we can go.

2 Corinthians 3:18 talks about the journey and mentions that the journey is to be in relationship with God and trust Him through the process. It continues to talk about the journey making us transformed into His image as He takes us from glory to glory, but I feel that may be misunderstood. Some may think that from ‘glory to glory’ means that everything is good, but what if it had a slightly different meaning to it? Imagine if it actually said something like this:

“God is transforming us into His image in His glory from trial to trial.”

Not always is the journey on the surface glorious, rather it is in those stretching times in the journey that God carries us from glory to glory so we are encouraged and do not lose hope in His transforming work.

As I was wrapping my mind around this concept I came across a remake of a song last night called “Nothing is Impossible.” What I didn’t hear before in this song was an additional verse that says:

“Speak to every limitation
Victory is my Declaration
Same Power that Raised You From the Grave
Is in me so I will give You Praise”

So what sets you apart on your mission that seems impossible and allows you to go from glory to glory? It is realizing the power God has given you, the promises He set before you and that passion to endure. Jim knew the power and promise ahead because he was focused on the destination unlike Steve Martin’s character who was also thinking about his destination but allowed himself to be overwhelmed by the adversity rather than the journey.

What does your journey look like? Are you focused on the promise or the problems? Do you remember where God brought you from or do you allow the fear of the task ahead to consume you to where you would want to return to Egypt?

God is burned a purpose in you and as a result is transforming you through His glory. Take a few minutes to look where God has brought you if you think the mountain is far too big to get beyond. Remember after night comes morning and after pain comes promise.

KEEP MOVING FORWARD!


CAL