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How to Set Your Mind on Things Above: 6 Ways to Let Go of Earthly Things

How to Set Your Mind on Things Above: 6 Ways to Let Go of Earthly Things Debbie McDaniel Set your minds on things above, not on earth...

God Acts on Our Behalf..... Dr. Charles Stanley

 God Acts on Our Behalf

Dr. Charles Stanley

Isaiah 64:1-4

The Lord is a God of action. Even when He rested on the seventh day of creation, it wasn't because He was tired and needed to recuperate. Although He deliberately made a choice to stop His creative activity, He never ceased working. While the Lord is always controlling the universe, He is, at the same time, intimately involved with individual lives.

God has a plan for each one of us and wants us to know what it is. Every time we take a step of obedience, He sheds more light on our path. But sometimes He asks us to pause awhile, and we may not know why. We long for direction in a particular matter, but our prayers just aren't being answered, and we wonder, Why does He delay?

When you aren't seeing any answers, it doesn't mean that God is not working. He's still actively involved in your life, but He works in ways that are not always visible He orchestrates circumstances, changes people's hearts, and protects His children from making hasty decisions that will have disastrous consequences. Perhaps the Lord knows you're not yet ready for the next leg of your spiritual journey. Waiting times are opportunities for growth in character, obedience, and faith. He may also need time to train you for future responsibilities and ministries.

When you intentionally choose to be still, God unleashes His mighty power on your behalf. He has planned good things for those who wait, and I believe what He has in store for your life will surpass all expectations. When He knows you're ready to receive His blessings, they'll flow into your lap.

Casting Off Negativity..... Craig Denison

 Casting Off Negativity

Craig Denison 

Weekly Overview:

Our heavenly Father has made incredible promises to us, his children. And while our God is completely faithful to deliver on his promises, he does not force them on us. He’s promised his nearness, his affections, and an eternal life spent with him. But we have the power to choose our own way. He doesn’t force himself where there’s no space. God’s word won’t have power in our lives if we don’t read it. We won’t hear God effectively if we’re not listening. And we can’t experience his nearness if we constantly fill our lives with other things. So, this week we’re going to talk about different ways we can experience the promises of God so that they might come to full fruition in our lives. May you encounter God powerfully as you grow in fully experiencing the incredible promises of your heavenly Father.

Scripture:“Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruits.” Proverbs 18:21

Devotional:    

Negativity is like a weed that robs us of the vitality available in thankfulness, in right thinking, and in saying only that which builds up. Negativity never serves to edify, produce life, or lead to anything positive. It can serve only the purpose of destruction. Let’s spend time today looking at what the Bible says about negativity, learning how we can stop its destruction, and ask the Holy Spirit to be our Helper in ridding it from our lives. Scripture speaks very harshly of the power of an unbridled tongue. James 3:2-6 says:

For we all stumble in many ways. And if anyone does not stumble in what he says, he is a perfect man, able also to bridle his whole body. If we put bits into the mouths of horses so that they obey us, we guide their whole bodies as well. Look at the ships also: though they are so large and are driven by strong winds, they are guided by a very small rudder wherever the will of the pilot directs. So also the tongue is a small member, yet it boasts of great things. How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire! And the tongue is a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our members, staining the whole body, setting on fire the entire course of life, and set on fire by hell

The tongue is the rudder that leads to a life of “unrighteousness” or a life lived in honor and obedience to God. Proverbs 18:21 says, “Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruits.” Speaking negatively produces the fruit of unrighteousness while speaking words of thankfulness and grace produces life. Proverbs 26:20 says,“For lack of wood the fire goes out, and where there is no whisperer, quarreling ceases.” We’ve all experienced the harmful effects of slander. If we will choose to cut out negativity, we can put out the destructive fire slander causes. Finally, Proverbs 15:4 says, “A gentle tongue is a tree of life, but perverseness in it breaks the spirit.”

Have you experienced the power of negativity in your own life? How does speaking negatively about a person affect your feelings toward them? How does speaking negatively of a situation affect your perspective for the day? Now think about the opposite. What does it do for your emotions and perspectives to speak positively? How do you feel when you express thankfulness about your life instead of negativity? As we learned in Proverbs 15:4“A gentle tongue is a tree of life.” When you speak gently of others you will find life produced not only in yourself but in them as well. When you co-labor with God’s heart in sharing his message of love, grace, and peace, the result is a wellspring of life.

Negativity is not the same as correcting those around you face-to-face. The Bible speaks highly of correction motivated by love. And we need people around us that have the courage and love to correct us when we’re wrong. However, there is no place for negativity in the lives of believers. You don’t need it! You don’t have to speak negatively about people and situations. You can always choose to speak thankfulness, grace, and love. Think for a minute about what your life would look like without negativity. How would your attitudes, emotions, and perspective be different? Would you enjoy your life more? Would others enjoy you more?

The Holy Spirit is here to help you express thankfulness instead of negativity. He is always looking for opportunities to lead you into a life more full of the abundance and enjoyment of God’s righteousness. He is faithful to guide you into a fruitful life lived in obedience to him. God will never give you a command he won’t help you obey. He is not a God who sits back firing rules at his people from afar. He is a God who comes down off his throne to die in order to make a way for you to live a better life full of restored relationship with him. Choose thankfulness today over negativity and rid yourself of that which robs you of experiencing God’s promise of abundant life. Spend time with him today in his presence, let his love and grace stir up thankfulness within you, and receive the help that comes from the Holy Spirit’s guidance in your life.

Guided Prayer:     

1. Meditate on what God says about the power of your speech. 

“Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruits.” Proverbs 18:21

“It is not what goes into the mouth that defiles a person, but what comes out of the mouth; this defiles a person.” Matthew 15:11

2. Now reflect on people and situations that seem to constantly produce negativity in your life. Where do you most often feel anger, frustration, and negativity? Who consistently leads you to speak negatively about people or situations?

3. Ask the Holy Spirit to help you speak life and thankfulness today instead of negativity. Think back on those people and circumstances. Focus on what you can be thankful for today. Thank God for what he is doing in those people and circumstances that seem to consistently produce negativity in you.

When you begin to notice yourself speaking negatively today, stop and ask the Holy Spirit to guide you into an attitude of thankfulness. Hold captive your thoughts today. Catch them before you speak them. Choose to speak life into people around you. Spread God’s love today. And watch as your day is transformed into being more joyful, peaceful, and full of life.

Extended Reading: James 3











God Wants to Use You for His Glory..... LAURA BAILEY

 God Wants to Use You for His Glory

LAURA BAILEY

“When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had driven seven demons. She went and told those who had been with him and who were mourning and weeping.” Mark 16:9-10 (NIV)

In a whisper so faint I thought I’d imagined it, a friend asked, “Do you think God values men more than women?”

The dispensing of juice bottles and crackers to our impatient toddlers came to a sudden standstill. “No way! Well, I don’t think so. Why would God name women in the Bible if He didn’t value them?”

A few months earlier, I had asked the Lord to send me friends to challenge me in my faith and spur me on to be more like Him. I was ready to throw off the blanket of complacency from around me and foster relationships that drew me out of my cozy, Christian comfort zone.

Prayer answered.

Later that night, after tucking my girls in bed and hearing their tender voices squeak out prayers to our heavenly Father, my friend’s question from earlier that day came back to me. I couldn’t help but replay the conversation, embarrassed by my inability to form a confident response because of my lack of biblical knowledge. Then that familiar voice spoke to my heart: “You aren’t going to find the answer pouting in a corner. Go to the source: the Bible.”

The Bible is filled with women from all walks of life who were put in all kinds of roles. The more I read, the more the Holy Spirit illuminated Scripture with the resounding affirmation: He highly values women. In the Old Testament, Rahab's courage saved the line of David from which Jesus is descended. Esther's bravery saved the Jewish nation, and Ruth's persistence and selflessness resulted in the birth of Obed, the grandfather of King David.

The New Testament introduces Mary, the mother of Jesus, and Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist who prepared the way for Jesus. Mary Magdalene, present throughout Jesus’ earthly ministry, was the first to see Him after His resurrection: “When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had driven seven demons. She went and told those who had been with him and who were mourning and weeping” (Mark 16:9-10).

The words in our key verse are highlighted and underlined in my Bible, so how had I overlooked their significance? Lee Strobel, author of The Case for Christ, explains why Jesus revealing Himself first to a woman was such a countercultural event: “During that time it was frowned upon — even considered embarrassing — for women to deliver information. So much so that belief in the news of Christ's Resurrection could have been jeopardized by the involvement of Mary Magdalene and the ‘Other Mary’ who were first to deliver the Good News.”

So who was this woman and why would God “risk" the gospel message by placing her at the empty tomb and then using her as a mouthpiece for the Good News? This Mary had a rough past; if scrutinized, it would be easy to discredit her as a witness. During her first encounter with Jesus, He freed her of demonic possession. (Luke 8:1-2) As an expression of gratitude, she devoted her life to serving and following Christ. Her name is mentioned 12 times in the Gospels, which is more than most of the disciples.

Make no mistake: God purposed Mary Magdalene to play an important role in Jesus’ ministry. And throughout history, God has used many other women to build and further His Kingdom.

God loves and values women. He created us in His image, male and female. (Genesis 1:27) His grace and mercy extend to all human beings. (2 Corinthians 5:15) He is no “respecter of persons;” He does not discriminate or show favoritism. (Acts 10:34)

Despite cultural expectation, her past, her role in life or how she had been treated, He chose a woman to deliver the most important news in all of history. God uses all kinds of people for His glory … even you and me.

Heavenly Father, thank You for gifting Your children with unique talents, roles and responsibilities. May we continually seek opportunities to glorify You and spread the gospel in all circumstances. Help us to be sensitive to the Holy Spirit working in our lives to lead and direct us to do Your will. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

TRUTH FOR TODAY:
Romans 8:28, “And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.” (ESV)











Keys to Living A Worry-Free Life..... By Lynette Kittle

 Keys to Living A Worry-Free Life

By Lynette Kittle

“Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life? – Matthew 6:27

Worry and anxiety seem to be at an all-time high.

Like many, you may feel overwhelmed with social media’s constant updates on changing world events. This continual source creates an atmosphere of uncertainty, wondering what will happen next, causing millions to live on the edge of the possibilities.

Still, God urges, “Cast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7).

In this type of cultural climate, you may ask, “How is this possible to even live worry-free in the present-day atmosphere?”

Scripture explains the key to living anxiety-free is to instead of focusing on turbulent times, to turn your thoughts to prayer, petition, and thankfulness to God(Philippians 4:6).

Psalm 91:2 encourages you to look to the Lord as your refuge and fortress, trusting in Him rather than what is happening in the world.

As Isaiah 41:10 urges, “So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”

By choosing to trust God and follow His strategy for living rather than depending on an ever-changing, unpredictable, shaky humanity, you’ll begin to see your anxiety and worry level disappear.

Psalm 50:15 instructs to “Call on me in the day of trouble; I will deliver, and you will honor me.”

Likewise, Psalm 55:22 states, “Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you; He will never let the righteous be shaken.”

Maybe though you’re not even sure why you feel so anxious? If so, Psalm 139:23 encourages you to ask, “Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts.”

Or maybe you’re not focused on world events but consumed with worry about just meeting your daily needs. If so, Matthew 6:8 describes how your Father in Heaven knows what you need even before you ask Him.

Take comfort in realizing God already sees what you need before you ask. Like Isaiah 65:24 describes, “Before they call I will answer; while they are still speaking I will hear.”

If you feel it’s all up to you to survive, choose rather to believe what Psalm 54:4 assures that, “Surely God is my help; the Lord is the one who sustains me.”

No matter how unstable the world becomes, Psalm 23:6 describes God’s faithfulness to you stating, “Surely your goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”











Men & Christian Friendship: It Won't Just Happen on its Own..... by Shawn McEvoy

 Men & Christian Friendship: It Won't Just Happen on its Own

by Shawn McEvoy

A friend is always loyal, and a brother is born to help in time of need.- Proverbs 17:17, NLT

I own many books, but the ones I reference often I keep above my desk at work. One of these is a 1983 edition of David W. Smith's The Friendless American Male. It's a title that, sadly, has only grown more accurate in the last three decades, its content more applicable. Men, especially us hard-working, married-with-children types, are lacking in close biblical friendships. The reasons are varied and several, and it's not my intent in the space of a daily devotional to present or solve them all. Suffice to say that most men I talk with vouch for the lack of quality friendships in their life, even if they speak of different reasons for the condition.

It's something I worry about, something I marvel at when I consider some of the differences between myself and my own father. For example, back when my father was climbing the ladder in the Tucson Real Estate industry and had children the ages mine are now, his weekends were all his own. Tennis in the morning on both Saturday and Sunday. Soaking up sun at the pool or doing yardwork in the afternoons. Watching sports or even working in the evenings. A quarterly fishing trip. Several of these activities involved his friends and acquaintances. It must be pointed out that he didn't know or serve the Lord at this time in his life, but it's also important to note that, to the best of my recollection, we kids weren't starved for his attention or affection. It still seemed like we were close, and had plenty of time together. So, I merely use my father as the model I was shown for what men were expected (allowed?) to do and be socially in the 1970s.

At some point things changed, and yes, in most ways, for the better. Men began leaving their work at work. Being conscious about setting aside time for family activities. Reserving weekends for playing with their kids and going to soccer games rather than hitting the tennis court or the golf links or the lake. But technology, instead of saving us time, only seemed to create more ways in which we could spend it working. Where my father routinely met his buddies for a beverage after work, it's all I can do to rush home, swallow some food, and not leave my wife and kids feeling neglected before I log on for another couple hours of work and then an exhausted collapse into bed. Meeting another dude for a beer or coffee? Seriously, I don't want to laugh, but when? Even if I had a hole in my schedule, what makes me think the person I might invite (even if I knew someone well enough to want to spend time with him) would have time and desire, too? I was heavily involved in our Adult Bible Fellowship at our former church for years, and I can count on one hand the times I did something outside of church with any of the men in that group.

So, something is definitely missing. Somewhere, we went too far. I remember being single and having the privilege to work with two very close friends in our college admissions office, both of whom were newly married. Yet getting them to do anything social outside work was just about impossible. One of them wouldn't even go see a movie with me - one that I was offering to pay for - on the night his wife was busy studying for her nursing final exams. The other wouldn't even ask his wife whether he could put off lawn mowing for one more day to attend a minor league baseball game with a mutual friend who was in town for just one night. What was going on?

Sure, I was tempted to blame their wives for not letting their husbands out to play, but even if there was truth to that notion, it wasn't the issue. The issue was, and is, that men simply are not bonding much these days... that the Bible speaks about friendship and male leadership and iron sharpening iron... and we are either purposefully choosing or unwittingly failing to make bonding and sharpening a priority.

So what do we do?

The only answer I have is: something. For me, that something arrives every March. That's when I and 13 of my friends from college and camp get together for a long weekend of fishing, good food, fantasy baseball drafting, NCAA tournament watching, and most importantly, fellowship. We call it "Draftmas" because it's very much like a holiday for us, and it centers around our fantasy baseball draft and league as a device to draw us all together, give us common footing. But to a man, most would tell you that the baseball is not the point. So what is?

Let's refer back to The Friendless American Male: on page 52 Smith writes, "Close friendships don't just happen. They result from the application of principles recorded throughout the Word of God." He contrasts the kindness and affection that David and Jonathan shared with the "lack of sympathy" and "overt emotional harassment and condemnation" Job experienced with his pals Zophar, Eliphaz, and Bildad. The difference, Smith says, can be found throughout the Bible in these six principles of male friendship:

God-Centered

Formation of a covenant

Faithfulness

Social involvement

Candor

Respect

Just as Amos 3:3 says, "Do two men walk together unless they have made an appointment?", so do we display an intentional commitment to this activity as central to who we are as men, to who we want to be the rest of the year for our families and each other. While having close friends who don't live near me (but whom I'm always in contact with) does, admittedly, sometimes hinder me making new friends locally, it also serves to remind me how making new friends is possible and necessary. And I can see Smith's principles at work in this treasured group: God is indeed at the center of each of our lives; we've formed an agreement to meet together and communicate together around something we all enjoy, and are faithful to that agreement, to God, and to each other. We all fill roles, and are active socially and economically with each other, lending a hand in often amazing ways when needs arise; we speak freely and candidly, and we respect the various issues everyone brings to the table.

Sometimes those issues are big ones: Joblessness. Crises of faith. Being overwhelmed. Economic hardship. Remarriage. Career decisions. Waiting on God. Loneliness. Recently-deceased parents. Autism. Health. I'm already wondering how different this gathering is going to be from past ones. But even when trials are shared, this is never a downer of a man-cation. In fact, I can't wait to get out of town to really bounce ideas and prayers off my friends, really seek out ways we can help each other, while at the same time catching more fish and outbidding them for Albert Pujols.

About five years ago, one of our group told me, "You know this is only going to get harder to keep up the older we get." I disagreed. Several of us are only finding it easier. For one thing, our wives have come to see the difference in their men when they spend this time with each other. Mine practically pushes me out the door even though the event is often close to her birthday weekend. It's not a perfect answer to what I'm missing and seeing so many other men miss in their lives, but it's a start, and even, I realize now, a model.

Intersecting Faith & Life: What common interest can you center a group of Christian men around? It should be an excuse, a starting point, a conversational diving board. While things like sports, fishing, golfing, and other stereotypical male things are good, bear in mind that no one man enjoys all of these activities or subjects, and often, it's a sore spot with him, one that might be the very thing that, deep down, has him feeling like not as much of a "man."

Wives, you can help "wake up" your listless man by hooking him up with his friends (not your friends' husbands on a grown-up play-date, mind you), letting him reconnect with those who share his memories and the activities he used to enjoy. Several healthy couples I know set aside one weekend every year for each person to spend a same-sex getaway with close friends, while also not feeling threatened by the idea of an evening here, an afternoon there causing any damage to the relationship. If anything, it'll make your marriage healthier, and bring you back together with things to talk about and pray for.

Further Reading

1 Samuel 18:1-41 Samuel 19:1-10







A Prayer for Trusting God in Hard Times..... By Debbie Przybylski

 Prayer for Trusting God in Hard Times

By Debbie Przybylski

Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.” Joshua 1:9

We all want God to answer our prayers. We believe in the power of prayer, but when it comes down to our own individual lives and our own problems, we often don't have the faith to believe God will answer. The times we are living in are difficult. We are often trapped by our unbelief and fear, but God is preparing us for the end-time harvest. He wants to enlarge our territory. He wants to bless us with increase, because His nature is to care and bestow divine favor on us.

We are the ones who limit Him because of our lack of trust and our fear of stepping out in faith. The truth is that the things we do for God should be outside of our own ability and should be trusting in His supernatural ability. When we back away from dependence and trust in God, we are not living by faith. He wants us to trust and obey His Word. He wants us to be strong and courageous. We need to be willing to attempt things big enough that unless God's steps in, we are sure to fail. This is the kind of trust and dependence He is looking for in our life. We need not be shaken. He can break through every obstacle. He is the God of the impossible!

Lord, I thank You that You are the God of the impossible. You can do anything. I want to trust in Your ability and not my own. Teach me to see difficulties in my life from Your perspective. Help me to focus on You and Your power. I want to be like Joshua and Caleb who believed in a good report and focused on You even in hard circumstances (Numbers 14:7-9).

My responsibility is to carefully read, trust, and obey Your Word. Today I bring before You this difficulty in my life [Name a hard situation you are right now facing]. Help me not to fear but to trust You in this situation. I declare my faith in Your ability to fulfill Your promises to me. You will fight for me and win the battles in my life. You are mighty, powerful, righteous and true.

I have nothing to fear with You on my side. I will be strong and courageous even in hard times. I will not be terrified or discouraged, for the Lord my God will be with me wherever I go (Joshua 1:9). You will never leave me or forsake me (Joshua 1:5). I do not need to figure everything out. You already know the best plan for my life. I will not try any man-made method to do only what You can do.

Show me Your supernatural power. Teach me how to walk by faith and pray breakthrough prayers. I choose to have faith in Your ability to break through every obstacle in my life. Just like Joshua, You will give me the land and every place where my feet step (Joshua 1:3).

“Through you we push back our enemies; through your name we trample our foes. I do not trust in my bow, my sword does not bring me victory; but you give us victory over our enemies, you put our adversaries to shame. In God we make our boast all day long, and we will praise your name forever” (Psa 44:5-8).











The Death of Death..... Greg Laurie

 The Death of Death

Greg Laurie

Whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this? (John 11:26)

When Jesus died on the cross, He conquered sin. But when He rose again from the dead, He defeated death.

Death is not a subject we usually want to discuss. But when you get down to it, that is what Easter is all about. Easter is about the death of death, because Jesus came to conquer death.

We don’t like to discuss this subject of dying. It is a hard subject for us to talk about. Many don’t even want to use the word death. They will use other words, like passed away or expired. We will refer to someone who has died as “the dearly departed.”

Some, in an attempt to avoid its seriousness, will make light of it with expressions like “kicked the bucket” or “cashed in their chips.” We don’t want to deal with death. It is a hard subject to grapple with.

Easter is a day that marks the death of death. Death died when Christ rose. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die” (John 11:25–26).

You may be thinking, “Greg, are you crazy? What are you talking about—death died? People still die. Don’t you watch the news? Haven’t you heard about all of the horrible things that are happening in our world right now and the deaths of so many people? How can you say that death died?”

I understand that we die. I understand that our bodies go into a grave. But here is what I am saying to you: death is not the end. Sure our bodies go into the ground, but the soul lives on forever. The Bible says that one day our bodies will be resurrected as well.

This is the hope of Easter. Death is not the end of the road; it is only a bend in the road. When Jesus died and rose, He rendered death powerless.