Thursday, May 23, 2019

Sowing Seeds of Kindness / Allison Mooney

Allison Mooney
Kings Kids / TLC Ladies Meeting / Special Music
Heritage Baptist Church
Canal Winchester

Hey ladies!!!  As we are now into spring/summer how many of you have a garden??
I am married to a man who grew up on a farm and we have a garden every year!!
I personally don't like taking care of it as it get's so hot in the summer..... BUT, I tell my husband, YOU plant it YOU pick it I'LL fix it!! So it works!!

So as spring was approaching and everyone was buying flowers/pants etc,,.... I picked up a few myself! I decided as a visual lesson I will let one plant sit and the other plant I will care for with sun, water, picking off the dead leaves etc..... and after many weeks the one plant died as the other one bloomed and was sooooo beautiful. well..... that's what I would like to present to you!

Sowing seeds of kindness.....

There are over 40 verses in the Bible on kindness so it must mean a lot to the lord for us to obey in this area. Ephesians  4:32 And be ye kind one to another, tender hearted forgiving one another even as for Christ sake hath forgiven you,
Proverbs 31:26 She openeth her mouth with wisdom and in her tongue is the law of kindness.

SOW SEEDS OF KINDNESS.....

1.Tell someone you are praying for them. (and mean it) People know if you are real or you are just saying something without no feeling.  Just like the flower that needs cared for to grow so do we as Christians.

2. Send them a card or flowers for a great job well done.

When I lost my mother years ago and on her first anniversary of her death I received a  hand written little  note   that said..." I know today is your mother's anniversary  of her going heaven and I want you to know I am thinning of you"
That little note meant the world to me at that time.
My friend was sowing seeds of kindness.
It didn't cost her a dime to send that and it was just what I needed.

3.Make some cookies or brownies for someone who just lost a loved one or a friend.

4.Go see folks in the hospital and (don't stay long) Pray with them and tell them you love them!  So many are ill and hurting. Let's see what our kindness can  do for someone. 

5. Tell someone they look pretty today or that that color is perfect on them!! Give a hug when you do it!!

We need to give folks love and care just like the plant needs sunshine, water, caring so do others!!!
We don't have to agree with how they may be living or their choices but a real friend will show love and warn them. It takes kindness to do so.

6.You may say..."I never grew up in a home that shows love" then make a change!!! The Lord will give you folks to love and care for they are all over our church's. Lonely people are in active church's dealing with heartache.  Reach out  to them.

Colossians 3:12  Put on  therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowles of mercy, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, long-suffering. It is a command to do so. The lord will bless your life when you do this. 
Let's not let a person wither up and die because we did not show them the sun (son) we did not water them we did not pick off the bad areas of their life so they can grow new again and thrive.

H.....Hear the situation of problem
E.....Encourage the person
L.....Lift them up
P.....Pray for them!! 

Ask the Lord every week to send someone you'll way to help encourage and help grow as a Christians. They are EVERYWHERE!! We need to sloooooow down and LOOK!!!

It doesn't cost a dime to give folks life and show then Christ love.  For it is FREE!! YOU PLANT THE SEED AND WATCH IT GROW!!  




Monday, May 20, 2019

Trusting God When You Can't See / Becky Smith

Becky Smith
Sunday School Teacher / Church Organist / Deacon's Wife
Shasta Baptist Church
Redding, CA

Trusting God When You Can’t See

 Proverbs 29:18 “ Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he.”
 I started losing my sight in 1999 when I was 51.  In 2017 I was accepted for training at Guide Dogs for the Blind in San Rafael, California.  I returned home with an amazingly wonderfilled guide dog named Wilbur.  Being legally blind, Wilbur is my eyes when I venture out into the world.  He uses his sight to keep me from falling, or tripping over, holes, curbs, and stairs.  He watches traffic, keeping me safe, when crossing a street or a parking lot.  He guides me around obstacles and people easing much of the concern I have with limited sight.  But Wilbur cannot see what is around a corner or on the other side of an object that blocks his view.  I trust Wilbur to keep me safe in the world he can see, but I trust God’s vision, and the wisdom found in His Word, to guide me through the stumbling blocks and valleys in this world only He has perspective to see.  Our perspective only allows us to see what we view from a particular point in time.  Often we are surprised or overcome by life’s “valleys” of sickness, sorrow, or sin because they were obscured from our sight. We didn’t see them coming. But God sees it all and promises to never leave us nor forsake us if we trust His vision to guide us safely through or around these valleys.
It was July 26, 2018.  We’d been sound asleep before the reverse 911 call rang our landline phone at 12:36am.
The recorded call said, due to a wildfire we needed to evacuate immediately.   Thinking it was a mistake, my husband got up to look out the front door.  We live in the Shasta mountains west of Redding, in Northern California. Wild fires are common here but we’ve only been evacuated once before, 12 years earlier, and no homes had been lost.  Unable to get a cell signal, I picked up our land line and called 911. They affirmed there was a wild fire heading directly toward us, and we needed to leave.  Randy returned saying he could see an orange/red glow in the sky above the mountain range surrounding us but no flames.  I tried calling our daughter in Redding but the land line went dead also.  Getting dressed, Randy went to collect important papers and his firearms. I packed a couple changes of clothes, our medications, our Bibles, my appointment book, needed food and equipment for Wilbur, and as many family pictures as I could fit in what space remained.  We loaded everything into our van.  The air was stifling outside. With the headlights on you could see white ash falling everywhere.  We drove up our driveway to our guest house which we’ve used for almost 20 years to house missionary families, and guest speakers at our church.  It’s a roomy 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 1250 square foot home in which we placed many of our most sentimental possessions, wanting to share them with our honored guests.  I never thought to grab anything from that home believing we would be back before night’s end.  From the guest house we could see a few flames in the distance but from our perspective they seemed far away.  At 1am we drove out to the 2 lane road in front of our property.  All power was now out as well. Randy noticed several firetrucks at the north end of our street so he drove there to see what he could find out.  As he talked with the firemen I realized I had a cell signal so called our daughter, Jaynee, in Redding, to tell her we’d been told to evacuate but her dad wanted to wait at the end of our driveway leaving only when it wasn’t safe to stay.  I told her cell reception was gone at our driveway but that I would call her as soon as we got to town to let her know we were safe.  I also sent a text to our youngest daughter, Jacquee, in Texas before losing the cell signal once again. Randy returned saying the firemen did not  know how close the fire was but they’d been sent there and told to wait for orders.  They urged us to evacuate but by law could not force us to.  Back at our driveway Randy positioned our van facing the street, ready to pull out at a moment’s notice. There are three routes we can take to drive out of the mountains into town. With the orange/ red glow in the distant sky we could see the tops of trees on the ridge of mountains directly across the street.  Every minute or so small flames would pop up just above the tree tops but then quiet back down. Randy assured me, “when the flames engulf those trees at the top of the ridge then we will leave.”  For 47 years I had trusted him to keep me safe. I had no reason to doubt him now even though, despite the van windows being rolled up, the air inside was acrid and smoky, burning my eyes.  Wilbur had his front legs on my lap, his nose pressed against the glass of the passenger window, panting heavily. He only does that when stressed. Maybe he is just stressed about being woken up in the middle of the night I thought but my racing heart had a hard time believing that.  Randy got out every time another fire truck rolled by as they all stopped urging us to leave.  He wanted them to know he had been diligent in keeping our property cleaned and cleared and that we had a huge pond and a swimming pool as an additional water source for them. Fireman look for homes that have clearing and defend them. One by one all our neighbors  left. We sat in the van and waited, running the air conditioner as little as possible, watching the dwindling gas gauge.  Our daughter, Jaynee, and son-in-love, Daniel, had been up since my call, watching the skyline in front of where they lived.  From their perspective the flames were growing higher and higher and their concern grew right along with them. Jacquee, learning we had not been heard from, sent Jaynee a text that said, “DANIEL!!! GO GET THEM!!!!”. Believing something horrible might have happened, at 3:30am Daniel, and our grandson, Elijah, headed toward the flames while Jaynee and Jacquee prayed. Driving to the foot of the mountains, he was stopped by a road block. He managed to convince them to let him pass but was told, “Good luck getting past the next one.” The next road block was a mile and a half from our home. He desperately pleaded with the police officers that his in-laws, in their 70’s, might not have left yet. They tried to tell him everyone had evacuated.  He continued to insist that he had to get to our property and be sure we’d gotten out. Finally a highway patrolman offered to give him an escort.  As they drove into the fire Daniel was able to see that what we had observed as 2 foot flames above the trees on the ridge in front of us were actually shooting 100 or more feet into the air growing and traveling rapidly. Reaching our property. and seeing our van, Daniel jumped out of his car begging us to leave.  Randy calmly told Daniel he planned to leave when the flames he was seeing were taller than the trees on the ridge, setting them ablaze.  “But dad!!!!!”, Daniel pleaded, “they are!!!!!!!!  They are 100 feet or higher—you just can’t see them!! The ridge is in the way!!!”   Randy tried to assure Daniel, “Go back down and tell Jaynee we are fine and will get out in time. I promise.”   Daniel opened the van door and pleaded with me to bring Wilbur and come with him.  I wouldn’t leave without Randy.  Daniel turned to Randy and with tears streaming down his face, pleaded,  “Please, dad!  You have to come now!!!!  I won’t leave without you!!”  When he saw the tears and Daniel’s distress he got into the van and said, “Honey, we’re going to leave now.”   My relief was instantaneous. Wilbur was panting and shaking and I was finding it harder to breathe. We were told two of the possible three ways out, including the one Daniel had just taken, were now blocked by fire so there was only one escape route left.  Daniel followed us and as we came down the mountain I turned around. Even with my limited eyesight I could see the fire monster that would soon come over that ridge within the next 30 minutes, bringing a fire tornado that would destroy our guest house,  and nearly every tree and shrub on our 5.7 acres.  Only our home, three outbuildings, and the trees in front of our home would survive, sustaining smoke damage but escaping total destruction. Taking a stand with their engines on the clearance Randy had made, the firemen worked hard to put
 out spot fires that landed on these structures, thereby limiting fire damage to the outside only.  It was as if God had split the raging fire into two parts that went around these buildings instead of through them. The fire came together again behind our home, burning trees and vegetation around our pond, continuing its rampage to the properties behind us. We arrived at Jaynee’s exhausted but the joy and relief of knowing we were safe showed on everyone’s faces.   It would be several days before we’d know what was gone and what survived. It would be 21 days before we were allowed back into our home. Over 1000 homes and dozens of businesses were destroyed in this CARR wildfire. Our street, and the mountains surrounding us, will never be the same.  Eight lives were lost but, thanks to God giving me that moment of cell reception at the top of our street, a compassionate law officer, and prayer, our lives were not added to that total.   From our perspective the danger of the flames from this wildfire were obscured because the mountains were in the way —but God knew, and orchestrated the needed events, to send Daniel to show us a different perspective and bring us out of danger.  God’s Word is given to teach us daily how to avoid danger that we might think is no big deal but God’s perspective sees the whole picture even as we are blinded by our limited sight.  When we share the Gospel with an unsaved person we have the Bible’s perspective on hell that most only know as a swear word.  Do we plead with people, and pray fervently for them to listen, knowing what they face without a Savior? Helen Keller was once asked what is the greatest handicap one could have.  She replied, “SIGHT WITHOUT VISION”.  When I follow Wilbur he guides me with his eyes but without my commands he has no idea where to lead me. I have to know where I am going.  When I follow God He guides and leads through His Word so I’m able to use His vision to stay on the correct path.  Psalm 32:8 says, “I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go:  I will guide thee with Mine eye.”  Not everyone can run to the flames and reach those that need to know the truth of salvation, a gift received through faith, but we can all pray for those that do.  With our limited sight the best way to have clear vision from God’s perspective comes when we obey God’s Word and learn to “walk by faith, not by sight”. (II Corinthians 5:7) 

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

It DOES Matter / Julie Frost

Julie Frost
Pastor's Wife
Solid Rock Baptist Church
Bellefontaine, OH


It DOES Matter

Corinthians 6:17
17 Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you.

Webster's 1828 dictionary defines separate in the following way "...2. To set apart from a number for a particular service."

I know...not the spiritually uplifting devo that we like sitting down to during a quiet moment of our stressful, taxing day. However, please bear with me as I share what the Lord has been teaching me over the last year or so regarding this matter of separation. I am burdened for the state of Christianity. I am burdened for our churches. I am burdened for our marriages. I am burdened for the condition of our families. Most of all, I am burdened for the decisions, we as Christian ladies, are making in our daily walk with Christ. That I make. Decisions that really do matter... in light of eternity.  It is my prayer that you can see my heart in this devotion and pray with me that each of us, as Christian ladies, will understand that EACH decision we make really DOES matter.

 Webster's 1828 defines hypocrisy as "feigning to be what one is not." God has been teaching me these last few years just how important my testimony as a Christian is, in glorifying him and pointing others to him. How vital it is that people do not look at my life and think that I am a hypocrite because I proclaim to be a Christian (follower of Christ) yet I have failed to separate from the world in the areas of relationships, entertainment, clothing, and church etc... As Christians we have been called apart from this world (I Cor. 6:17) for a particular service: To honour and glorify God with our lives  as stated in I Cor. 10:31 "Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." In so doing, we will point others to Christ.  Too many of us are saying we are Christians (followers of Christ) but to the world our life represents hypocrisy because our life does not match the label of Christian. The lost see no difference in us as Christians so they reject Christ.  I do not know about you...but that weighs heavy on my heart!  While we understand that each person is responsible to make their own decision for Christ, it breaks my heart to think that my lack of separation and holiness could contribute or cause someone to turn away from Christ.

Too often we make changes in separation issues (standards). We do not want to call them compromises but that really is what they are.  Compromise by definition is to "adjust and settle a difference by mutual agreement." The thing is...the mutual agreement to lower or get rid of a standard is not with God (Malachi 3:6 tells us God does not change).  The mutual agreement we are making is with the world. When I decide that I want to do something to fulfill a lust of the flesh (watch something, wear something, listen to something, go somewhere, say or do something contrary to holiness), I compromise (change) my place of standing with God on that issue...and I move toward or with the world. God did not change positions on that issue - I did.  God has been showing me that unless I am separated unto holiness (I Peter 1:15-16) ... a lost and dying world will not see a difference in me, therefore they will not be pointed to Christ and be saved. It really DOES matter.

If we were to ask a lost person if a Christian should do this...or that...they are pretty quick to be able to answer. At least they used to be. The line that separates us as Christian from unsaved people has grown so blurry these last number of years. But ask someone like my dad (who is unsaved) and he can readily tell me what a Christian should and should not be doing and what they should look like. Dad will tell you that Christians should not go to the movie theater or dances, wear immodest clothing, get tattoos, cuss or gossip etc... The unsaved are watching and we will never win the lost to Christ by being like them. This reminds me of a time that although we did not ask, a couple in our church once told us they dress casually to church because they want people to feel welcome when they come to church in their casual wear.  Sorry, not sorry, but no! Shake their hand, talk to them, invite them out to eat to show them they are welcome.  But we must not compromise on holiness and separation to appease our flesh. We have gotten into the terrible habit of not calling sin...sin, so that we can appease our fleshly lusts. Or we claim grace.  Over the last few years, I have been saddened to see fellow Christians ("followers of Christ") change in their standards.  From wearing skirts (Deut 22:5)...to wearing shorty shorts.  From listening to psalms, hymns and spiritual songs (Eph 5:19)...to listening to CCM. From not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together (Heb 10:25)...to attending church when it is convenient or as long as it fits their schedule.  And when asked what caused the change...they say grace. God refutes that line of thinking in Romans 16:1-2 "What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid.  How shall we that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" I never want to use "grace" as a reason to  sin. That is not Christian liberty. That is hypocrisy being called something different so that I can fulfill the lusts of the flesh. Instead...I want God to continually sanctify me through the washing of the Word. This is why the closer I walk with God...the more Bible I digest...the more sanctified (set apart) I will become.  In so doing my love for Christ will grow and I will grow in my desire to honour him with my life.  May my motive in all this be that I love God with all my heart and want to please him.

In closing, may I challenge each of us (especially me!) to be constantly evaluating who we are emulating.  May our example be Christ.  I am burdened seeing so many of our Christian ladies promoting female authors who violate God's Word in getting tattoos and preaching to men...among other things. We must be ever aware of the fiery darts of Satan which come in so many forms such as social media, reading material, entertainment etc..  May each of us be diligent in remembering that it really DOES matter. Love you, my friends! - Julie