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"Some people feel guilty about their anxieties and regard them as a defect of faith but they are afflictions, not sins. Like all afflictions, they are, if we can so take them, our share in the passion of Christ."

- C.S. Lewis
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I grew up singing (okay, I wasn’t really singing back then…  but I was listening) lots of songs in church, but a phrase in one song still sticks out in my memory:

“Count your many blessings, see what God has done!”

I didn’t understand that line.  I do now.

Looking back over the last twelve months of my life, I see God’s grace/provision/fingerprints all over my path.  I’ve often been less than stellar at walking along that path, but God has proven faithful beyond my capacity for failure.  I can’t help but be awed and thankful for all He has done in my life during that time…  But that got me thinking…

I’ve heard it said that it’s harder to praise God during times of trouble than times of peace.  Perhaps for some, that’s true.  If we feel a sense of entitlement that our life should be a peachy stroll through the park (regardless of our propensity for sin and selfishness), then when things go awry we think God has somehow failed or wronged us.  How far from the truth!  But I’m seeing the other side of things.  Pain and sufferings are allowed by God because of this profound thought:

It is hard for us to give God praise and have reliance during times of certainty and comfort.

When things are going well, we don’t think we need rescue.  For those of us saved by Christ, we didn’t think we needed saving until we realized the gravity of our circumstance.  I can remember some of the hardest times in my life, including the loss of a loved one and a crippling fear of life changing decisions.  They were times that I was torn down to the point that I had two choices: rely wholeheartedly on a Savior, or believe that I was wholly on my own.  Perhaps, allowing us to go through tough times is one of God’s ways of realigning our hearts to Him and reminding us of our reliance on Him.  This doesn’t mean that all bad things are punishment, or that we should fear good times.  It’s simply a paradigm shift for viewing our situations, and understanding them for the blessings that they are.

I am struck by the notion that God is more concerned with our hearts than our comfort.  On the surface, this may seem a scary thought.  Contrary, we serve a God whose understanding is greater than ours, and who reigns in the realm of eternity.  I trust His judgement.

So, our state of being beckons a response.  I will do my best to chose to glorify a trustworthy God.  Will you join me in starting this revolution of thought?

“In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God.

And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”

- Romans 8:26-28

Answer
  • Question: Are you a Christian? - regocijado-blog
  • Answer:

    Hi regocijado,

    Yes, I am a Christian.  Much of the time, I’m not very good at following the example Christ has set for us, but I hope to grow in Him through grace and faith.

    Thanks for the question, and God bless…

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Engagement photo of me and my lovely bride by Chris Oquendo of ophotography.com - highly recommended, awesome fellow!

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So, it’s been a little while since I posted something here on the blog.  Shame on me, I know.  I have disappointed the plethora of people that read this (hey Mom and Dad), and that is simply unacceptable.

A lot has happened since my last post:

  • I got married! (yay!)
  • I wrote some songs (again, yay!)
  • I received graceful love from God (ok, continue the yay’s)
  • Perhaps most importantly, I’ve grown as a person.

There’s something sobering about entering into a marriage commitment, more accurately a covenant, before God and man to another human being.  It’s a daily, powerful reminder to me every time I look down at the metal band on my hand.  I meant the words I said, and I mean them every bit the same today as well.  Still, it’s a sobering realization to enter into a commitment of such magnitude!

So, the question begs to be asked…  Why don’t we view our faith through that lens?  I know I’m guilty of belittling the covenant I made with God when I accepted the blood of Christ to atone for my sin, and to redeem me from my fallen state.

Today, I challenge you (and me) to think about what lens you view your world through.  Does the magnitude of your relationship with Christ change how you view life?  To every believer who claims Christ, do the implications of Christ crucified beckon you to live life differently?  Are you so rooted in the motions of “doing” daily life that you’ve forgotten what you meant when you called Him “Lord”?  Did you ever really understand what all that meant?

The questions are begging to be asked, and eternity beckons an answer.  May we be found looking through the right lens, lest we miss out on all He has for our lives!

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There haven’t been many moments in my life that I’d call “life changing”.  Actually, there are just a few that I can name:

  • Receiving grace through Christ
  • Meeting Karen
  • Learning to play guitar
  • Feeling called to ministry

Most other things in life, despite being significant, didn’t totally alter my course.  In two weeks, another major event in my life will flip my world upside down and change me forever: marriage.

Since meeting Karen, things have gone down a path I’d never have dreamed.  God has used her to do some amazing things in my life, and now He’s letting me be bound to her in the most sacred and Holy way that two humans can make a covenant, as husband and wife.  This is one of the greatest gifts of love and mercy that I’ve ever been shown, and for that I’m thankful.

So…  What are some of the moments that have changed your life forever?

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It’s finished.  Easter Sunday 2011 has come, and gone.  For those of us in “church world” this means many weeks of planning, thought, prayer, and preparation has culminated in what is normally one of the biggest Sundays of the year.

We celebrated, we sang, we read, we prayed, and we listened.  So what’s next?  Time to take a break, right?

I’m guilty of this propensity for complacency as much as the next guy.  But why do we, as churches, fail to “follow up” Easter with thought-out and prepared services?  Here’s a hint: if you want the biggest representation of the value a church places on its gatherings and teaching time, visit on the Sunday after Easter.

Careful, though.  Thought-out and prepared is different than manufacturing an emotional ride.  Sometimes we fall victim to the “restful” mindset of complacency.  In planning for Easter, we’re forgotten that (barring Jesus’ return mid-week) we’re going to have another service next Sunday.  Lost and hurting people will be walking into the church doors on the next week searching for the same truths that were presented so grandly on Easter Sunday.  Other times, we fall victim to trying to tame the beast called “momentum”, and somehow follow up all the emotional buildup of Easter with something inherently phenomenal.  In doing so, we forget about Jesus and the Cross.  If the following Sunday becomes about following up momentum from Easter, we’ve still missed the point.

Let’s return to the crux of our faith (pardon the pun).  Jesus was risen on Easter.  He’s risen the week after, too.  It’s not our place to make something phenomenal out of that truth: it’s inherently so.  Don’t fall victim to unprofitable mindsets.

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"For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. And not only so, but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement."

- Romans 5:10-11
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Have you ever noticed how hard it is to stay motivated to live purposefully?

It’s comical that we’re so prone to our fallen and broken view of life.  Some of us view the future as a monster lying in wait, eager to shred our perfect lives to bits.  Some of us view the future as the culmination of our happiness, a reprieve of all the wasted time it took to get “there”.  Do we even really know where “there” is?

If we view life through the lens of faith, saving faith in Christ, things take on a different hue.  Our futures become much more secure and meaningful, and the here-and-now becomes more fulfilling and urgent.  We start becoming motivated to live as though our days here have a greater purpose.

Excuse me while I read this until I start living like I believe it…

What say you?

Answer
  • Question: WHERE WOULD YOU MOST LIKE TO VISIT ON YOUR PLANET? - tumblrbot
  • Answer:

    London.  I want to walk the streets of London on a cool, misty day with my future wife and take in the sights of the city.