Getting Back In Bible Shape

There’s a funny thing about getting back into the habit of something when you haven’t done it in a while: sometimes it’s terribly difficult. Even when it’s something as good as reading your Bible.

Here’s some background. Lindsie and I started running again and it’s been a few days weeks since either one of us really did it with a purpose. And after two days, we can barely walk. Now is about the time when we could give up. Maybe “just take a few days off” until we’re not so sore. The problem is that it’s easy for a few days off to turn into a few weeks off. And suddenly you’re back where you started and the next time you go running, you’re sore again. The cycle starts all over.

The same thing can happen when it comes to your walk with God. I know it happens to me all the time. Specifically with reading my Bible. Although Lindsie is great at reading hers consistently, I sometimes struggle. With so many great comic books and novels out there to read, sometimes I just feel like using my “free time” for something more exciting…more entertaining.

The past two nights, along with running, we’ve been reading our Bibles together. And it should be easy. I’ve read the entire Bible once in my life, and I’ve read it off and on for years since then. It’s not like it’s a book written in some foreign language or something. But for whatever reason, I can only manage to get deeply involved with my Bible for a few days and nights before I’m ready for more entertainment again. I can somehow manage to find more time for a Captain America comic than I can find for God.

The trick is not to give up. The trick is not to take “just a few days off.” In C.S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters, demons are personified as intervening in the spiritual lives of their “patients” (i.e. – humans). Their goal is to disrupt their patients’ spiritual walks in whichever sneaky, evil ways they can. Although what Lewis wrote was fiction, I do think that’s what truly happens to us. Demons can recognize when we’re really getting into the groove with our faith. And they’ll do whatever they can to throw that off in any way possible.

Like I said – the trick is not to give up. There’s some great stuff in the Bible. Truly entertaining, attention-grabbing stuff. Last night we read James, chapter 1 and it seemed like almost every word in that entire chapter was speaking right to me. There’s a reason that’s the case. Because God WANTS us to read his Word. He wouldn’t have written a cruddy, boring book just hoping someone might suffer through it out of obligation. He wrote something that is truly alive. Something he wanted us to want to read.

So if you try to read your Bible and you aren’t quite feeling it like you were hoping you would, please don’t give up. Just like getting back in shape after a long exercise hiatus, it’s never easy. Especially right after the start, when you’re most sore. Fight through the spiritual soreness and stick with it.

Eventually you’ll get back in shape. And I guarantee that’ll feel really, really good.

Photo c/o Frames-of-Mind. Thanks!

Lovely Reminder

As Mike and I face the challenges of moving, finding a new place to live and finding new jobs, this song brought a certain much needed peace to my afternoon.  What a wonderful God we serve.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=301S7NgAkLs]

blessings,

lindsie

It’s Who You Know

As I was browsing the news the other day, I can across an article containing Obama’s official long birth certificate.  As I read the details contained on the document, I began thinking I now know more intimate details about President Obama than I do about some of my closest friends… or even my family.  I now know his birthday down to the exact minute he entered this world.

That thought prompted another thought.  Since Obama was sworn into office, the American public has learned a lot about him and his family.  We know their style preferences, the kind of dog the own, where they go, who they see, what they do…  The list could go on.  But if I showed up at the doors of the White House and said, “Please let me in.  I know the President,” and then showed the guards my hundreds of trivial facts I had accumulated about his life, they’d look at me like I was crazy and kindly (hopefully) ask me to leave.

Common sense, right?

Why then do so many people think God is any different?  You may know about the Bible, the Christmas story and the Easter story, the Creation story… You may know about Moses, Jonah, Paul… But do you KNOW Jesus?  Do you spend time with Him?  Do you have a relationship with Him?  If you showed up at His door, would He recognize you as His friend?

Knowing about a person does not constitute having a relationship with that person.  The same is true with God.  In fact, James 2:19 says that even the demons believe in God.

It seems to me that more and more people today are under the impression that being good will cut it.  This is a lie.  In fact, it’s one of Satan’s favorites.  If he can get you to believe by doing “good” things, you’ll go to heaven, he can most assuredly secure your place in hell.  The Bible also says (Titus 3:5) that it is not because of the righteous things we have done that we are saved, but because of his mercy through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit.

So I ask you, do you know Jesus?  Or do you just know about Him?

Lindsie

P.S.  If you’d like to know more about having a relationship with Christ, please contact us at stormingjericho@gmail.com.  We’d love to pray with you and to welcome you to our family.

The Brittany Page Story

This is the news coverage on my sister’s health scare.  I’m so proud of her for giving God the credit.  She’s been using this experience as a testimony in some incredible ways.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlBmONarBHU]

(My apologies for the low quality video…)

Creative Chaos

Sometimes God speaks to us quietly, guiding our thoughts with His careful wisdom. Other times He gives us a revelation that explodes like a stick of dynamite and changes the landscape of our entire state of mind almost instantaneously.  This weekend, He blew me away…

Before I go into that, I should give you some background.  As you may know, this is my first semester back in school since I graduated in 2007.  I’m working toward my Christian Counseling degree, which inevitably means many, many psychology classes.  Although my goal is to end up at a Christian university, my current classes are through a local public university.  As I’m sure you can imagine, faith in God doesn’t always fit into the syllabus at such universities.  As a result, I have been taught that faith is foolish, that we did in fact evolve from monkeys and that human beings have no purpose, only function (that is literally what my textbook said).

That being said, this semester has provoked more God-related conversations than psychological conversations, particularly those related to evolution.  Then on Saturday, during one of those completely ordinary moments, God revealed to me a fantastic illustration as to why it takes more faith to believe in the theory of evolution than it does to believe in God and the truth found in His Word.

[UPDATE: Unfortunately, the video we originally embedded/linked to has been removed from YouTube, but if it ever gets re-posted, we’ll add the link back in here. Sorry for the confusion.]

Assuming you did watch the clip, I must ask, have you ever seen something like that happen in real life?  Have you ever seen a catastrophic accident lead to organization?  Have you ever seen a car leave the scene of a crash looking better than it did before?  That makes no sense.  Destruction does not create order.

Now consider the human body in all its complexities.  I’m no scientist and don’t even claim to being to know the intricate miracles our bodies participate in every day, and yet, even from my elementary knowledge, I know something this amazingly sophisticated could not have “just happened”.  Do you see how it takes more faith to believe that than it does to believe God created us?

We were no accident.  We were created with a purpose.  We are God’s masterpiece.

-lindsie

Bought For A [High] Price

Happy Easter season, Brothers  & Sisters!  I absolutely love this time of year.  It’s a time of new beginnings as flowers begin to fill the air with their alluring aroma and chirping bird sing their sweet melodies as they busily fly to and fro, equally as joyful that spring is upon us.

But there’s another reason I love this time of year.  It’s a time to remember what Jesus did for each of us.  As our dance company prepares for our annual Easter show, I’m astounded by His love for us.  The suffering He endured so we could be free breaks my heart, yet fills me with an overwhelming sense of joy and gratitude…all at the same time.

The fact of the matter is, He died for you.  Even if you had been the only person in the whole world, throughout all history who needed saving, He still would have endured every moment of that suffering… because He loves you that much.

As Easter approaches, take a moment to thank Jesus for giving His life as a ransom for your heart.

Isaiah 53:4-12 [He did it for you…take a moment to make it personal.]

4 Yet it was ______ weaknesses he carried;
it was ______ sorrows that weighed him down.
And ______ thought his troubles were a punishment from God,
a punishment for his own sins!
5 But he was pierced for ______ rebellion,
crushed for ______ sins.
He was beaten so ______ could be whole.
He was whipped so ______ could be healed.
6 All of us (including ______), like sheep, have strayed away.
______ have left God’s paths to follow ______ own.
Yet the Lord laid on him
the sins of us all (including ______).

7 He was oppressed and treated harshly,
yet he never said a word.
He was led like a lamb to the slaughter.
And as a sheep is silent before the shearers,
he did not open his mouth.
8 Unjustly condemned,
he was led away.
No one cared that he died without descendants,
that his life was cut short in midstream.
But he was struck down
for the rebellion of ______.
9 He had done no wrong
and had never deceived anyone.
But he was buried like a criminal;
he was put in a rich man’s grave.

10 But it was the Lord’s good plan to crush him
and cause him grief.
Yet when his life is made an offering for sin,
he will have many descendants.
He will enjoy a long life,
and the Lord’s good plan will prosper in his hands.
11 When he sees all that is accomplished by his anguish,
he will be satisfied.
And because of his experience,
my righteous servant will make it possible
for many (including ______) to be counted righteous,
for he will bear all ______ sins.
12 ______ will give him the honors of a victorious soldier,
because he exposed himself to death.
He was counted among the rebels.
He bore the sins of many (including ______) and interceded for rebels.

Rejoice, friends!  Jesus is alive and His power is MIGHTY to save!

-Lindsie

P.S. I’d also like to extend an invitation to anyone who may wish to join us this year for Once Upon a Tree.  The concert will be held Palm Sunday weekend (Saturday, April 16th and Sunday, April 17th at 7pm) at the Brookings United Methodist church.  Proceeds from the concert will go to benefit Mark Winquist and his family as they stand on the promises of God in their battle against cancer.

Busyness

Unfortunately, over the past few weeks, Lindsie and I have been busy.

With Lindsie taking 18 credits this semester and working full time, she’s doing her best to keep her head above water.  On my end, I’ve got my normal job at ADwërks and a few projects on the side that I’m hammering away on.

All in all, this has left us with just about enough time to occasionally sneak in a movie and, once every few weeks, go out and get a nice dinner together.

But really, the reason I started this post with the word “unfortunately” is that our busyness has managed to keep us from staying as connected to God as we should be. Too many nights have been spent working on things that “matter” now, but really, in the long run, won’t matter at all. Too many mornings have brought the dread of waking up to a list of things to do rather than waking up with a list of reasons to thank God we’re alive.

I won’t sit here and make some bold, impossible statement like “But all that ends TODAY!” because the truth is, I can’t say that it will. It’s a daily struggle all of us deal with. When we’re simply trying to make time for life, how are we supposed to also make time for Christ? It’s so much easier said than done, right?

But we have to try. Whether that means holding ourselves more accountable to others outside of our immediate circle or whether that means getting on a set, immovable schedule for spending time with the Lord, we need to do what it takes to stay connected to God. Because he’s just sitting there waiting for us with the awareness that, if we’d just give it up to him, he can (and will) take care of it.

It’s easy to drown in life. But God is sitting there with us in the water, just waiting for us to realize that he’s already holding us. We just have to trust him to help us float.

Think about it. And try to spend at least a few minutes with God today. It’s amazing how helpful it can be when it comes to getting rid of some of the busyness of life.

-Mike

Photo by Kenneth Barker. Thanks Kenneth!

Happy 1st Birthday Sweet Isabelle Jade!

It is our goal to share with you not only our testimonies, but the testimonies of friends and family.  As I’ve said before, we believe wholeheartedly that our testimonies are one of the biggest threats we have against the kingdom of darkness.  And it is our ardent mission to be as threatening as possible.

That being said…

I was touched this morning by this story of God’s healing.  Please take a moment to read about God’s amazing power.

Thank you, Jesus!

Angels In Our Outfield

Lindsie and I watched a timeless classic last night – Angels In The Outfield. For those of you who haven’t had the pleasure of seeing it, Angels In The Outfield is a 1994 Disney movie where a kid named Roger (played by a young Joseph Gordon Levitt) prays the last-place Angels will win the pennant. After he does, the head angel (Christopher Lloyd) sends a team of angels down to help the baseball team, leading to a bunch of Disney-esque shenanigans. I won’t spoil the rest of the film for you, but it’s a Disney film, so you can imagine how it shakes out.

The other premise of the film is that only Roger (the kid) can “see” the angels and thus tell the manager (Danny Glover) which players will have the help of the angels in the games. As a result, the foul-mouthed, ill-tempered manager must simply believe that Roger sees the angels. As the season goes on and more people start to hear about this kid who “sees angels,” people start to question both the manager and the kid’s sanity. Nobody really wants to believe there are real angels helping baseball players on the field.

Here’s the point of this post. In Angels In The Outfield, only one kid had the faith to believe the angels were there. At first, not a single adult believed it was possible. They all “knew better.” So why is that, when the Bible tells us about angels throughout its pages, we adults don’t believe angels could be here on earth with us right now? Why is it that children can believe in angels and have often described how “they saw an angel” when miraculous events occur, but adults simply “know better.” Why can’t we see things with a childlike faith that angels are with us when God tells us directly (numerous times) that they are?

In the movie, only one kid can “see” the angels, but his faith convinces first the manager, then the players, then the entire stadium full of Angels fans. None of the other people—even Roger’s best friend—can see the angels, but people are witnessing the miracles and are realizing there’s something going on, even if they can’t see it. When will the rest of us start to look around, witness the miracles happening every day and realize there’s something going on…even if we can’t see it?

There are angels in our outfields right now, whether we can see them or not. Whether we have the strength and the faith to believe it is up to us.

-Mike

P.S. – The film also features a pretty young Adrien Brody and Matthew McConaughey, which is kind of funny. Also: Tony Danza. Yup…all-star cast for sure.

Brevity of Life

Psalms 39:4-5

“Show me, LORD, my life’s end and the number of my days; let me know how fleeting my life is.  You have made my days a mere handbreadth; the span of my years is as nothing before you.  Everyone is but a breath, even those who seem secure.”

The older I get, the quicker time goes.  As a child, years, weeks, even days seemed to drag on.  There were times when I would truthfully think I would never make it to high school.  And now here I am, 25 and married.   But that’s not even the scariest part.  What’s even more surreal is how fast it all happened.

As I read passages like the one referenced above, I find myself stopping for a moment, reflecting on the temporal aspect of this life, and then quickly merging back into the fast lane.  I tell myself someday I’ll be able to slow down and focus on what’s really important, but right now, I have an endless to-do list and not enough time to complete it.

Now don’t get me wrong, I have no problem with productivity.  I am, by nature, a worker.  I like accomplishing things.  When I can go to bed at night with a significantly diminished list of things to do, I sleep well.

The problem surfaces when we lose sight of what’s truly important in life, when climbing the corporate ladder takes priority over family, when striving for our ideal life clouds our vision of God’s plan for our lives, when being something great in the world’s eyes is more important than being who God made us to be.

But what if today was the last day?  What if tomorrow wasn’t an option?  What if you’ve reached the end?  Are you ready for that?   What will people say about you when you’re gone?  What do you want them to say about you?

 

He worked a lot, the office was like his home…

Her house was always clean, sometimes too clean…

She had a 4.0, but had no time for friends…

He was my dad, but I guess I never really knew him…

Is what you’re living for worth dying for?

{Brittany}

This question stared me right in the face this Christmas.  My little sister Brittany is the epitome of health.  As a track athlete at North Dakota State University, she is in prime condition.  She works out 6 days a week and monitors her diet with incredible precision.  So when she came down with the flu on Christmas Day, we had no reason to believe it was anything more serious.  Her head hurt, she had a temperature of 102º and she was achy.  Nothing about her condition seemed unusual… until she wasn’t getting better.

She had been planning on attending TCX with Campus Crusade in Minneapolis over New Years, so four days later when she was supposed to leave town, she made every effort to assure our parents that she was fine.  By 11:00 am her car was packed and she was on her way.

On Wednesday, her condition hadn’t improved.  Instead, she seemed to be sliding backward.  At that point, her hands and feet were going numb and her speech was becoming somewhat incoherent.  After notifying a nurse on staff at the conference, she was taken to the emergency room and immediately was moved to intensive care.  Her blood pressure was 70/40 and her kidneys were failing.  My parents were called and instructed to come to Minneapolis as soon as possible.

Through the night, doctors scurried in and out of her room, dragging her from one test to the next searching for answers.  Before the night was over, she had two spinal taps and a CAT scan and was hooked up to 3 IVs and a catheter.

But answers didn’t come.  Hours dragged as I waited impatiently for my parents to call with news.  Stranded in Sioux Falls by snow covered roads, my mind was left racing.  Of all the people in my life, how could she be the one in such critical condition?  She’s so healthy…and only 21.  What if she didn’t make it? As this surreal question entered my mind, I was suddenly struck with the realization that life is indeed short and completely unpredictable.  As tears streamed down my cheeks in disbelief, I prayed, pleading with God to give us answers and to save her life.

As always, God provided.  He took care of my sister as she laid in the hospital.  He encouraged her and strengthened her.  And soon answers came.  She was diagnosed with toxic shock syndrome and a staph infection.  The doctors told us if she had not been as healthy as she is, she most likely wouldn’t have made it as long as she did, but even when she came in, they estimated she would have died within 12 hours without medical attention.

My sister is alive by the grace of God.  It was He who surrounded her with people who knew how to help her.  It was He who gave them the wisdom and knowledge to do what they did to save her life.  It was He who knew the answers when no one else did.  I thank God daily for taking care of her the way He did.  I cannot imagine life without her.

{Reflections}

Brothers and sisters, what are you living for?  Is it worth dying for?  What will people say about you when you’re gone?  If today was your last day, would you be satisfied with the life you’ve led?  Would God?

Don’t live life counting on tomorrow.  Tomorrow is not guaranteed.

James 4:13-15

13 Now listen, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.” 14 Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. 15 Instead, you ought to say, “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.”