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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...

Responding to Disappointment..... Dr. Charles Stanley

 Responding to Disappointment

Dr. Charles Stanley

Matthew 1:18-25

To find examples of wise, godly reactions to disappointment, you’re more likely to turn to Psalms than to Matthew. But thevery first chapter in the New Testament tells the story of an upright man’s reaction to painful and disheartening news.

Joseph—Jesus’ earthly father—was a righteous person. A godly man wants a wife who shares his desire to honor and obey the Lord, and Scripture indicates that Mary was exactly that sort of woman (Luke 1: 45-55). So imagine how stunned Joseph must have been when Mary returned from a long visit with her relative Elizabeth and told him that she was pregnant. Moreover, she was claiming no man had touched her.

Any way Joseph looked at the situation, it appeared grim. And yet Matthew 1:20 says that he “considered”—in other words, he sought a wise, righteous response. God entered Joseph’s life in a dramatic way to confirm Mary’s story and put a stop to his “quiet annulment” plans.

The Lord turned Joseph’s mourning into joy. Mary had told the truth—strange and startling as it was. The couple would bear the intense public censure of an early pregnancy, but Joseph stopped thinking about what others would say. God had blessed work for him: to raise the Messiah alongside a faithful woman. 

Followers of Christ should seek a godly response to disappointments they face. Since the Lord always has a plan, the wisest reaction is to anticipate the good He can do and await His timing. God certainly blessed Joseph for his willingness to “seek first His kingdom” (Matt. 6:33).

An Unveiled Lifestyle..... Craig Denison

 An Unveiled Lifestyle

Craig Denison

Weekly Overview:

Living an unveiled lifestyle is the way in which we experience the fullness of what’s available to us in our restored relationship with God. It’s a powerful lifestyle of faith, direct encounters with our heavenly Father, and life transformation. It’s when we live our lives in light of the perfect sacrifice of Jesus that we begin to experience all his death was purposed to bring us. God longs for his children to walk in intimacy with him directly connected to his wellspring of love for us. May you experience a more tangible, loving, and powerful connection with your heavenly Father this week.

Scripture:“But when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed.” 2 Corinthians 3:16

Devotional:

By the grace of God the veil that represented our sin and shame has been replaced with shameless, limitless, and face-to-face encounters with our heavenly Father. Scripture says,

Since we have such a hope, we are very bold, not like Moses, who would put a veil over his face so that the Israelites might not gaze at the outcome of what was being brought to an end. But their minds were hardened. For to this day, when they read the old covenant, that same veil remains unlifted, because only through Christ is it taken away. Yes, to this day whenever Moses is read a veil lies over their hearts. But when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed. Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit (2 Corinthians 3:12-18).

God longs for us to live an unveiled lifestyle. He longs for us to behold his glory and be transformed into the same image: a reflection of his glorious Son, Jesus. The idea of looking like Jesus used to seem utterly impossible. How could I ever look anything like Jesus? In my sin and shame, how could I ever resemble the perfect, sinless Son of God? But God has an enjoyable and perfect process by which he transforms us. As we seek out all that God has for us in an unveiled lifestyle, God longs to renew our minds to his plans for our transformation.

2 Corinthians 3:18 makes it clear that in “beholding the glory of the Lord” we are transformed. Just as Moses went into the tent of meeting and came out with his face shining (Exodus 33:7-11), we are to go into our own tent of meeting and come out having met with God with unveiled face. Allow the truth of Scripture to define what spending time with God is meant to look like for you. When we spend time alone with God, the Holy Spirit longs to lead us into direct, tangible, and transformative encounters with the glory of God. Christian spirituality is all about direct connection with our heavenly Father and not about engaging in religious practices just because we feel we should. The death of Christ has made unveiled encounters with God completely available to you whenever, wherever. We enter into our tent of meeting clothed with Christ, washed completely clean of our sin by the power of his blood.

And 2 Corinthians 3:18 also makes it clear that when we see God’s glory we are “transformed into the same image,” the image of Jesus. Genesis 1:27 says, “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” God’s intention was always for us to represent him well. When sin entered into humanity that image became grossly distorted. But through the death of Jesus and encounters with our heavenly Father that image is being restored. We can now be reflections of God to a world that is desperately searching for relationship with its Creator. We now bear the image of the one who has saved and redeemed us.

Living an unveiled lifestyle is simply encountering our heavenly Father and living our lives as a response to his love for us. Every encounter with God changes us and makes us more like him. Every taste of his presence fills us with his love and equips us to love others. To live an unveiled lifestyle is to experience the abundant life Jesus came to bring us. May you behold the glory of your heavenly Father and be a reflection of his love to a lost and dying world today. 

Spend time in prayer practicing what 2 Corinthians 3 describes for us: beholding and being transformed by the glory of God.

Guided Prayer:

1. Meditate on the availability for you to encounter God face-to-face, unveiled.

“But when one turns to the Lord, the veil is removed.” >2 Corinthians 3:16

2. Ask the Holy Spirit to lead you into the tangible presence of your heavenly Father. Ask God to make his nearness known to you.

“You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.” >Jeremiah 29:13

“My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” >Exodus 33:14

3. Spend time in God’s presence being transformed by his love. Ask the Holy Spirit to make you more like Jesus. Ask God to reveal himself in a way that would mold and shape you into his likeness.

“And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.”>2 Corinthians 3:18

“For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.” >Romans 8:29

How incredible is our God that he would make transformation such an accessible and enjoyable process. Fully letting go of our sin and shame is difficult to be sure, but the depth of grace, love, and relationship he offers us in return makes it all worthwhile. Allow God to continue to heal any areas of your life where you feel brokenness and shame. Open up your heart to him completely today in faith and allow him to create in you a new foundation of his on which you can live freely and healed.

Extended Reading: 2 Corinthians 3











Stability for the Weak and Weary..... BETH KNIGHT

 Stability for the Weak and Weary

BETH KNIGHT

“Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful.” Hebrews 10:23 (ESV)

You would think a 300-pound boulder would provide the stability you need when you find yourself slipping. Unfortunately, a fellow hiker at Camelback Mountain in Phoenix, Arizona, found out otherwise when his trust betrayed him.

Instead of supplying support, the boulder rolled on top of him, crushing his legs underneath. As I watched the rescue helicopter fly the injured hiker to a nearby hospital, I shuddered to think of how easily it could have been me.

Later, I realized the same thing does happen to me in my walk with Christ. Just like the 300-pound boulder appeared to be secure, I often think the things of this world will provide the stability I desire. How many times have I lost my sure footing on the path set before me and found myself tempted to grab onto sin to steady me? In the end, I always find myself trapped underneath the weight of my sin.

Over the years, I have noticed where the breakdown happens for me: when I am called out of my comfort zone. As I walk with Christ, I am called to new and challenging endeavors to bring glory to His name. I tilt my head back to consider the incline ahead of me, recognizing I will face unknown obstacles along the way. Clinging to my faith, I utter an enthusiastic and slightly terrified, “Yes, Lord!”

But then … I am faced with adversity. What at first seemed difficult, but doable, now seems impossible. The climb becomes more treacherous and taxing as unforeseen hardships are thrown underfoot. When I am caught off guard, I find myself slipping into insecurity, doubt and fear. I begin to wonder, as the Israelites did, “God, did You bring me out here to die?” I am left with a choice: hold fast to my faith or waver toward sin.

An anxious and insecure heart demands relief and demands it now! However, works will not save us; approval from the world will not secure us, and finding comfort in addiction or endless distraction will not stabilize us. In fact, dependence on anything other than Christ will crush us under a weight we were never meant to carry.

The good news, though, is tucked into our key verse: “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful” (Hebrews 10:23). When God calls us out of our comfort zone, He is faithful to do what He promises. Will we hold fast to the confession of our hope, trusting that He who promised is faithful? Or will we waver in our faith, tempted away by sin?

I have learned the hard way that sin overpromises and underprovides. For a moment, we may find respite, but sin never permanently provides the stability we need. So, instead of grabbing onto sin, let us hold fast to our Savior. He will fulfill every promise made!

Sweet friends, as we long for relief, the ache within our soul is difficult to endure. I pray our weary souls would rest in Christ, knowing His right hand is upholding us. (Psalm 63:8) May we endure treacherous paths with hope as we look up from bent and battered knees and say, “I wait for the LORD, my soul waits, and in his word I hope” (Psalm 130:5, ESV).

Oh Lord, I am weak. I am weary. Help me remember from where my hope truly comes. By Your grace, keep me from misplacing my faith in worldly things for support. Strengthen me to endure hardship with confidence, knowing every promise You made will come true. In Jesus’ Name, Amen. 










How to Tell People about “This New Life” (Acts 5:18-21)..... By Jennifer Waddle

 How to Tell People about “This New Life” (Acts 5:18-21)

By Jennifer Waddle

Today's Bible Verse: “They arrested the apostles and put them in the public jail. But during the night an angel of the Lord opened the doors of the jail and brought them out. ‘Go, stand in the temple courts,’ he said, ‘and tell the people all about this new life.’ At daybreak they entered the temple courts, as they had been told, and began to teach the people.” - Acts 5:18-21

If asked, many non-Christians would admit to wanting a new chance in life, a new purpose, and a new beginning. While the overarching answer from most Christians would be “You need Jesus,” this doesn’t explain how new life is found through Christ alone.

The thing is, all of us become teachers when we are saved. By our testimony, faithful study of the Word, and most of all, by the power of the Holy Spirit, we are equipped to instruct others how they can have new life in Christ.

If you’ve been wondering how to share the good news of the Gospel with others, and offer people a chance at a new life, here are few key starting points:

Share Your Salvation Experience

People love stories. They are inspired by what others have gone through. Your personal testimony is one of the best and easiest ways to share Jesus with the world.

Start with the condition of your life before Christ and tell people how He rescued you from sin and death. Explain how your old life passed away and your new life began. Be honest that being a Christian doesn’t automatically make life easier, but it does give you bright hope for the future.

Your salvation experience matters, and it’s one of the best teaching opportunities to share the Good News with others.

Share a Few Key Scriptures

If you think you have to have large portions of the Bible memorized to share Jesus with others, you’re quite mistaken. What you do need are a few key passages that:

Point to mankind’s need for a Savior.

Show that Jesus is the Savior.

Explain how to receive Christ as Savior.

Don’t let a lack of Biblical knowledge stop you from sharing the Gospel. Admit when you don’t know the answer, but be diligent to find it and get back to them. The important thing is to share what you know and let the Word of God speak to the listener.

Rely on the Holy Spirit to Work

It’s not your job to make people believe—it’s up to the Holy Spirit to work in the heart of man. Pray hard for those you’re trying to reach and ask God to soften their hearts to receive the Gospel. Ask for wisdom—knowing He will give it—and plant seeds of faith as you are called. You can fully rely on the Holy Spirit to work through you for the glory of God and the good of others.

New life is available to everyone, but who is willing to teach what it means? Be encouraged today. God will open doors for you, just as He did for the apostles. And when He does, be ready to tell people “all about this new life.”










Father's Day, or Thanksgiving? A Retrospective..... by Shawn McEvoy

 Father's Day, or Thanksgiving? A Retrospective

by Shawn McEvoy

I will enter his gates with thanksgiving in my heart
I will enter his courts with praise
I will say "this is the day that the Lord has made"
I will rejoice for he has made me glad

~ "He Has Made Me Glad"

Make no mistake – I’ll never be "happy" that my father passed on at age 57. I am not exuberant that he did not get to know his incredible grandchildren, or give his daughter away on her wedding day. I ached for his father, who had already lost a young wife to cancer and his eldest son to a car accident in the prime of life. I still haven’t grasped the void he left in the lives of his fishing buddies or his work community. I never wished for my mother to enter her golden years without the love of her life beside her. And yet ...

I had joy then, that day, even as I delivered my father’s eulogy, and I have joy now.

God rejoices in the coming home of His saints, even if those who knew my father understand that by some definitions, he was no saint. But this was a man -- my best man -- who came to know the truth of grace, who experienced no fear or pain in encountering death, and whose final days were made comfortable by knowing it hasn’t even entered into the heart of man what God has in store for those who love Him (1 Cor. 2:9).

I’ve come to see that Dan McEvoy was a lot of things to a lot of people who still feel the void he left. This history has allowed me to see a lot of outpouring, the greatest of which was the phone call we received in the hospital from an old friend. My father’s liver had been conquered by melanoma which had metastasized there. When Mrs. Miller – a woman of my grandmother’s generation – telephoned to say her good-byes, she tearfully asked whether there was any way Dan could keep living if she donated her own liver. I’m not even sure of the ethics there, and we were beyond the help of a transplant, but all I could focus on was: Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one's life for his friends.

And so, I remain thankful. And as I tell you why, I hope you’ll not only follow Paul’s lead to "rejoice with those who rejoice," but that no matter how good, rotten, or unfair your own situation has been with your own father, you’ll find some small cause for gratitude.

In 1997, my father finally decided he needed a Lord and Savior. This was the only prayer I ever really begged God to answer for me, and He came through, not in my time, but in His time. After he made that decision, I knew my faith would be such that whatever happened, whenever it happened, the rest of my life, I would be okay.

With item number one of thanksgiving in place, I am able to say I am also overflowing with thanks for these things:

I am thankful that Dad was the best man in my wedding, and put his hand on my shoulder during the ceremony.

I am thankful that my parents stayed together, especially considering it was Christianity that almost broke them up in the early 80s. They not only endured that rough spot in their marriage, they made it better, loving each other "more than yesterday and less than tomorrow" right up until the end.

I am thankful that my friends Jay and Bill considered "The Danner" a second father.

I am thankful for Christmas 2000, when our family rented a mountain cabin and had our best Christmas ever – not even knowing it would be our last one with the guy that glued all our crazy personalities together.

I am thankful that we cheered my sister as she walked across the stage to complete her degree, and that Dad got to read the essay I wrote about his life and our relationship for one of my graduate courses.

I am thankful for the way my mother’s mother and sisters adored my father, and were never shy in telling me about it.

I am thankful my father gave me everything I needed growing up, and everything I need to go on. As I told him in the inscription to a book I gave him, "you have shown me the ways to be strong, now perhaps you can also show me the strength of being weak." He did.

I am also thankful for the little things: Post-Thanksgiving "turkey sangs" … playing catch by the pool ... the "let’s-do-it" support when I announced I wanted to stay out of school a year before attending a small Baptist college in Oklahoma (although hearing the words "full tuition" didn’t exactly make this hard thing for him) … the somber day we spent in Dallas touring the JFK assassination site … every fishing trip we took. I am even glad I never beat him at tennis.

I am extremely grateful for the eight full days we spent laughing, crying, thinking, praying and just being quiet before he died. We agreed that regardless of whenever either of us were to leave this earth, there was naturally a finite amount of time we could possibly spend together, and so sometimes we just sat, and we loved it. He asked me how I could bear to continue to wipe down his face, or help him move in bed. I got to tell him that I was certain a year from now I would give anything to wring out his washcloths just one more time.

Mostly, I am thankful for the stories and the memories we have and which we shared with each other during our final days. I’d like to tell you two of these.

One day when I was very young, my father and my aunt were tanning beside our pool. I had been playing on the steps. My aunt suddenly realized the splashing she was hearing was not a good sign. They noticed me floating face down in the water. Dad jumped in and yanked me up, only to see me spit water and say, "That was fun; let’s do it again!" I am not sure why this story was so special to Dad (after all, he got in trouble), but he told it often. Maybe it was his reminder of fragility, love, and responsibility.

In any case, 13 years later it was my turn to pluck him from the water. We had taken a friend’s pop up trailer to Arizona’s Roosevelt Lake. We had just set up camp and rented our pathetic little aluminum boat with the outboard motor. We were preparing to head out for "the evening feed," when I saw a light bulb go off over my father’s head.

I could tell his back was not up to an evening of sitting on the hard metal benches that pass for seats. He ran to the campsite, and returned with a folding lawn chair which he smugly placed over the middle bench. He sat down, facing the rear of the craft, and said, "You’ll have to drive, Shawn-o, heh heh." He had his fishing pole in one hand, a silver bullet in the other, a big grin on his face, and on his head, a cheap ball cap he had bought at a convenience store that morning which simply said, "Captain." How apropos.

As we made our way out of our cove and past the no-wake buoys, the wind began to whip up some whitecaps on the water. As soon as we were past the buoys, I revved the motor, and accidentally turned the rudder to starboard just as a wave struck the port side of the boat. Wham! We went perpendicular to the water before the boat slapped back to the surface. I looked up, relieved, until I noticed The Captain was no longer in the boat!

His fishing gear was still there, his beverage was unharmed, and his ridiculous throne was still upright, but he had abandoned ship, and was now floating somewhere behind me as the boat continued to surge forward. Now I did a very odd thing. Instead of simply circling back in a wide arc to get him, I panicked and hit the kill switch on the motor. Now stopped, I could hear a faint voice crying over the waves, "Shawn-o, come baaaaccck!"

"I’m trying – I can’t get the motor restarted!"

(Long pause) … "Row!"

So I tried to row, but the waves were pretty strong and the oars did not fit the oarlocks properly. Dad lost his shoes, his glasses, and the old-lady style sunglasses that he wore over his eyeglasses, and swam to a buoy. I eventually got the motor restarted, and went to pick him up. He got in the boat, still wearing his captain’s hat, and we went to a cove to start fishing. Nobody said anything.

After an hour of no conversation and no bites, I tried to apologize, but he would have no part of it. "That’s what I get for looking like Captain Jackass" he said.

Even though we each got a turn to raise the other from the water, I don’t think either case qualifies as any official kind of baptism. But I do think the moral is – you don’t ask a drowning man if he wants to be saved.

Too many of us are riding around in choppy waters on rickety thrones like our own Captain Jackass. Eventually, we’re gonna wind up in the drink. Hopefully, we’ll have the wisdom to understand what’s happening: Peace, be still. Trust in the arms that will raise you up again. His grace is sufficient for me, for Dan McEvoy, and for you.

One final "water" story – I used to tease my father about which of Tucson's many rest homes he would like me to place him in when he got older. The avid fly fisherman’s reply was always the same: "Shawn-o, you’ll find me face down in some trout stream long before I’m ever ready for a home." We always had a good chuckle about that.

Turns out he was right – sort of. No, he’ll never have to endure me placing him in a home, and while I do think he’s enjoying some beautiful trout streams, I don’t see him face down in one. Instead, I see him face down before the throne of grace, with his questions answered, his faith rewarded, and his spirit rejoicing. This Father's Day and every day, I rejoice with him. How could I do any less?






A Prayer for God to Examine Our Heart and Thoughts..... By Tiffany Thibault

 Prayer for God to Examine Our Heart and Thoughts

By Tiffany Thibault

Search me, 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 everlasting. - Psalm 139:23-24

Search me, God and know my heart. To tell God to search us and to know us in the deepest part of our very being is a very bold request indeed. It takes incredible bravery to ask God to do this. It is an asking that will expose every detail, every thought, every emotion and every sin that stands in the way of us living an abundant life. It is an asking that will have results. It is an asking that will change our lives. Truth will be exposed and laid out.

Test me and know my anxious thoughts. The mind is so amazing! It can imagine so many possibilities, dreams and adventures. It can remember details from circumstances decades before. It can create moments of beauty. It can plan, organize and orchestrate a tremendous amount of details such as planning a beautiful wedding, or exploring medical cures.

The mind is also very intricate and can dive into multiple layers of logic, thought and emotion. It travels in an amazing way through thoughts of reason, weighing and discarding poor choices to make better decisions. Our thoughts can also be easily manipulated by our emotions, our tired moments and the stress that life can bring our way.

Our thoughts can become so consuming that we allow them to grow until they take over our intuition, over our judgment, and just about every detail of our lives.

If we truly desire to become closer to the Lord, then we will spend more time in prayer and in studying the Bible, which will cause our thoughts and our lives to be filled with the peace that comes only from God.

See if there is any offensive way in me and lead me in the way everlasting. If we truly desire to become closer to the Lord, then our hearts will cry out for the Lord to change every offensive way in us. The more the Lord reveals our sins, the more we repent and are cleansed of every offensive feeling, thought and action. This continual action will make us more holy and will make us more like Jesus. Matthew 7:14b says this: “... narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.”  Until we are brave enough to allow God to search us, know us, and test our every thought, we will not be ready to be led in the way everlasting.

Dear God,

My mind is full of so many thoughts. I am full of fears about things that are happening in the world around me that cause me to worry and to fret. I am full of worry about things that affect my family and friends, that are causing heartache in their hearts and lives. I am full of busy thoughts of how to improve certain situations, things I must remember to complete on my to-do list. Lord, examine my heart and thoughts. Please calm down the thoughts that are causing me anxiety.  Lord, please help me to make decisions based on peace, instead of panic.

Lord, If there are any thoughts that are offensive or that will hurt me or someone else, please remove them so that I can move through my day filled with the thoughts that are pleasing to you. Remove the things from my life that cause me to take my eyes off of you. Lord, lead me in the way that draws me closer to you, that draws me closer to living the life that leads me to the way everlasting.

In Jesus' name, Amen.