Tag Archives: love

To all the Ma’s and Pa’s

Parents

I am a single girl who needs her momma and daddy! I am so blessed with an incredible relationship with both my parents. It has been about 4 ½ years since I lived with them, but that hasn’t prevented our relationships from growing stronger. As a single female who lives on my own, in an entire different state than any other family, I strongly depend on my parents.

I want to give all of the ma’s and pa’s out there some tips, on how you can better encourage, love, and support your single adult daughters.

# 1. Listen.

You daughter needs you to listen to her. Take the time and call her. Often. She needs to know that you are a listening ear whenever she needs to talk. Sometimes as singles, we don’t always have the privilege of talking to someone about the intimate details of our lives. Many times, we don’t think people care. Show her you care by listening.

#2. Give financial advice.

I am so thankful for the wisdom my daddy gives me when it comes to my finances. I always feel like I can talk to him about my budget, or a big purchase, and I will get non-judgmental advice. Also, having parents involved in financial decisions gives your daughter a certain sense of accountability that we as singles need.

#3. Show affection.

Daddy’s- Love on your daughters. It doesn’t matter how old they are…they need a hug and kiss from you. There is nothing like it. Single girls need physical touch. (appropriately, of course!) There have been times where I have gone several days without a single physical touch, and I thought I would lose my mind! Daddy’s, your girls need appropriate affection from you, so they don’t seek out inappropriate affection elsewhere. Love on your daughters.

Momma’s- Love on your daughters. Tell them they are beautiful. Many times, girls struggle with their self esteem because they have felt judged or rejected by their mother. Your daughters need to be told often that they are beautiful and special. Yeah, we know it’s your job to say it, but it still means the world to hear it.

#4. Model a godly marriage.

Your single daughters need to learn what a godly marriage looks like. Who better for us to learn from than our parents?! Know that your daughters are watching your relationships. They are observing your words, actions, and body language. The way you handle conflict, struggles, and even victories are being observed. Mothers, we are watching you to learn how to be a godly wife. Fathers, we are watching you to learn what to look for in a husband.

Not every relationship, every day, is going to be perfect. I’m just asking that parents become aware of their daughter’s singleness. This season of life can be difficult, and your daughters need you.

Even though she is an adult, she is not married yet, so she is still your responsibility. Love on her, pray for her, and protect her with your support and advice. She will forever be grateful.

And, fathers, do not provoke your children to anger; but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord.

Ephesians 6:4

An Interview with Owen

bicI thought it would be fun to introduce you all a little bit to my husband, Owen. We’re coming up on six months of marriage and I’m more in love with him now than I was when we married. I’ve seen his true character, his genuine love for Christ, his obedience to Scripture and his conviction to do what is right even when it’s not easy.  He was also an older single before we married so I thought his perspective might be helpful to our readers. Plus, he’s a great writer, brilliant, wise, handsome… but I digress. :) So I asked him 5 questions about singleness and the transition into marriage, and here are his answers:

What did you enjoy most about being single? What do you enjoy most about being married?

                I’d have to say that the thing I enjoyed most about being single was the available alone-time. As the quintessential introvert, regular doses of solitude and quiet are important for me in order to keep a balanced sense of mental and spiritual well-being. Too much seclusion can, of course, be unhealthy, but for me the single life provided the privacy needed for reading, reflecting, and writing, activities which married life tends to hinder in some respects. (Real life example: My wife just walked in the room and hugged me and told me she loved me, as I sat on the couch writing this post. Personal interaction = train-of-thought broken.)

                This alone-time “hindrance” caused by marriage, however, is eclipsed by the thing I enjoy most about being married: the personal intimacy. This may initially seem like a strange remark for an introvert to make, but oddly enough, I find great satisfaction in spending lots of time with my wife. However much I used to crave seclusion away from groups of people, I did also crave personal relationship with one or two close friends at a time. Marriage has given me a close friendmy best friendwho I can trust enough to be myself around, who laughs at my jokes, who I can share my deepest fears with, who brightens my world with her very presence. Trusting another person enough to make yourself truly vulnerable in that relationship is a scary business; but the love and intimacy which can result are definitely worth that risk, as I have personally discovered in the gift of a loving wife.

What are some things you wish you would have done or would have changed before you married?

                One thing in particular that I wish I would have done before I got married was learn to manage a budget reasonably well. My philosophy concerning money has traditionally been, “if the bank account is getting low, just stop spending money and start pinching pennies.” This loose method of financial oversight was okay for a bachelor lifestyle. But in marriage, two people must pull from the same bank account, and so spending must be controlled in a stricter way. Cultivating the skill of keeping a budget earlier in life would have made my current financial responsibilities as a husband much easier. Thankfully, my wife and I are now learning this skill together, but she definitely has more skill to offer in this area than I do.

What were some things that you were looking for in a wife?

                The list of characteristics I was looking for in a potential wife is short: 2 things – (1) she must love the Lord, and (2) I must like her. I don’t remember if someone told me about these two qualifications for marriage, or if I came up with them myself (someone probably told me), but by the time Carrie and I met, these were the only stipulations I had. The list should not be underestimated, however, simply because it’s short. There is so much that goes into each of these things. For a prospective wife to really be recognized as “loving the Lord,” she must be committed to obeying Christ in marriage, for instance, by refusing to ever get a divorce, by seeking to submit to her husband’s loving leadership, by pursuing marital fidelity over a lifetime, and by seeking to serve others in the local church and in the wider community with her husband. I wasn’t looking for moral perfection in a wife, but I was looking for a virtuous woman who was walking in God’s Spirit and displaying the fruits of righteousness. As far as (2) goes—“I must like her”—well, I think this just comes down to chemistry and friendship. If two people are on the same “wavelength,” and are physically attracted to each other, AND are committed to obeying and following Jesus by never getting a divorce, etc., then I think those two people have a good chance at a happy and successful marriage.

What things are you grateful for now that you are married that perhaps you were not expecting or seeking in a wife?

                I am grateful for many things in my marriage, and actually, I was not expecting many of them at all. After I became a Christian eight years ago, I wondered, off and on for years, if I would live a life of singleness and celibacy—that is, if I had “the gift” or not. So, I wasn’t really expecting with any solid assurance to be married in the future. But now that I am married, one thing which I’m very thankful for—and which never ceases to amaze me—is (get ready ladies) the fact that my wife cooks for me. The reality that this beautiful woman I live with actually would, and does, make me food (good food!) blows my mind. This is definitely a traditional domestic set-up, and I think each couple has to work out how their food preparation gets done, but this husband is extremely grateful for a wife who uses her time and creative energy to make food for us. Carrie is definitely a “worker at home,” and I was surely not expecting such diligence and sacrificial love in this area.

What has been the most difficult adjustment since you’ve been married?

     The most difficult adjustment in married life for me has been what I call the “human mirror.” When I lived on my own, I knew that I was a sinner. The grace of God taught me that. But, God in his grace now has a new, more intense, method of showing me my flaws, my weaknesses, and my sins. And this method is directly connected to this other person with whom I now live the majority of my life. The Lord is using my wife, Carrie, in my life as a “human mirror” to reveal my blemishes of thought, word, and deed. It’s not that my wife is a nit-picker, always pointing out all my wrongdoings as soon as I mess up. No. Rather, her very presence as a godly woman is enough. Her presence in my life means that I no longer live by myself. I now live in relationship to another person—and sin, by its very nature, always makes personal relationships turn sour. So, to deal well with other people, one must first deal with themselves. For example, when I fail to love my wife selflessly and she is hurt because of my actions, I must recognize my own selfishness and repent, in order to find her forgiveness and be reconciled with her. The closeness of our daily relationship forces me to look hard in “the mirror” to examine my own heart and life, to see what might be present (or absent) that would disrupt the sweet fellowship we are meant to enjoy in marriage. This process is good for me. And I wouldn’t have it any other way! But looking in the mirror is sometimes difficult, and many times humbling, especially when there are many changes that have to be made.

Owen & Carrie Kelly

bridal shower picture cropped

The Fruit of the Spirit is: Self-Control

selfcontrol_fruitsOSPBut the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. ~Galatians 5:22-23

Self-control. To control one’s self is definitely easier said than done. I cringe just thinking about how many times in the past day I’ve failed to control my intake of sweets, my selfish attitudes, the hurtful words that have escaped my mouth…how often I procrastinated sitting down to write this post. For some people (of whom I am jealous) self-control seems to come more easily. You know the ones. They exercise religiously, have their lives scheduled to the “t” and live in an impenetrable bubble of peace…as long as everything goes according to plan. This type of self-control isn’t really what the apostle Paul is talking about, though there are aspects of that to it.

The self-control that Paul mentions in Galatians is a fruit of the Holy Spirit. What often doesn’t come across in our English translations is that “the fruit of the Spirit” is singular in the Greek. That means it’s one thing. A set. You can’t have one without the others. They are all intermingled and growing together in the lives of those who are indwelt by the Holy Spirit (i.e. believers). All of these “fruits” are expressions of love—showing joy in our interactions with others is loving to them, being at peace with others is showing love, being patient with others is loving…you catch my drift. It’s no coincidence that love is the first fruit that’s listed. God is love (1 John 4:16); therefore his followers should also be people characterized by love.

Earlier, in the same chapter as our “fruit of the Spirit” verse, the apostle Paul says that “only faith working through love” counts for anything (Galatians 5:5). And later in verses 13-14, we read that we should not use our “freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” Much of the Christian life is about putting others before ourselves in servanthood and labors of love. And anything that requires us to turn our attention away from our sinful selves is going to take a lot of self-control.

Cultivating self-control  shows love for God and love for others. For instance, it is loving for me to get up at the crack of dawn so that I can spend time in the Word with the Lord (this takes much, much self-control, two alarm clocks and a husband that won’t let me go back to sleep…he’s a very helpful addition to the routine). Or to exert self-control by limiting my spending so that I can give sacrificially to others in need. Or to stop and listen to someone who is hurting when I have a million things piling up on my plate. Or to drop everything to go hang out with a friend who needs to get out of the house. Self-control does not always mean having all the laundry done and the dishes put away. It’s about discerning what is best and doing it (which may in fact be the dishes and the laundry). 

So how do we grow in this area? In another one of his letters, Paul instructed the older women to teach the younger women “to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God” (Titus 2:5, emphasis mine). In other words, this can be learned. It is a spiritual fruit so prayer is essential. Ask for it! (Self-control has been on my prayer list for a long time. I’m growing but it’s a work in progress.) When you fall, repent and get back to it. Seek the Lord in his Word, memorize, study, and just read.  

Then read books that help with ordering your life. Disciplines of the Beautiful Woman by Anne Ortlund is a helpful, practical guide for growing in self-control. Find a mentor and/or someone to hold you accountable. After all, it is the older women who are to teach this to the younger. But let me encourage you, growing in self-control is a process. If it isn’t a natural bent for you (like me) then it’s probably going to be slow going…but don’t give up. Keep at it and someday you’ll look back and see that you are a different person than you were—a more self-controlled, loving, Christ-like person.

Carrie Kelly

The Fruit of the Spirit is: Faithfulness

faithfulness_fruitsOSPBut the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. ~Galatians 5:22-23

Psalms 36:5 says “Your steadfast love, O LORD, extends to the heavens, your faithfulness to the clouds.”

Faithfulness is both an attitude and an action shown toward God and toward others. God’s principles do not change and will never fade—they are eternal. This is true of His character as well, which means He is consistent, trustworthy, and committed to providing the very best for His children regardless of how our circumstances may look. He is faithful. Everything around us may seem as if it is falling apart; yet, God is still moving and working—and His purposes will be accomplished. He is faithful.

Time has no effect on God or on how He makes His plans and decisions. Nothing that happens to us in our lives or in this world will ever surprise Him or interrupt what He is achieving for us. This is why we can always count on Him being true to all of the promises He’s made to us. I want to share a few verses of God’s promises of faithfulness.

Lamentations 3:22–23 “The LORD’s lovingkindnesses indeed never cease, for His compassions never fail.They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness.”

Isaiah 40:8 “The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God stands forever.”

Psalm 16:11 “You will make known to me the path of life; in Your presence is fullness of joy; in Your right hand there are pleasures forever.”

1 John 1:9 “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”

There is no doubt that God can and will keep His promises to us because He is absolutely faithful. The only question is whether we will commit to seeking Him, listening to His commands, watching for His help, and embracing His Word. God wants the very best for us and will never lead us astray. And if we stay in the center of His will, we will experience the very best He has to offer. I read in an article about faithfulness that it is both a passive and active word. The passive aspects include things like commitment, loyalty, steadfastness, endurance, and patience. The active aspects include service, charity, obedience, and walking the talk. I know that sometimes it can be overwhelming to think about it, but remember the law of stewardship. We become faithful in big things by being faithful in little things. Think of some small ways you can be faithful, do those, and as you make a habit of it, you will become faithful.

Karina Lopez

The Fruit of the Spirit is: Goodness.

goodness_fruitsOSPBut the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. ~Galatians 5:22-23

My Pastor recently did a sermon series on the Fruit of the Spirit. I thought I would share some take-away’s I noted from his message on Goodness.

There is a progression in our perspective of goodness as we grow older. When we are a kid, we are taught to “be good”. When we are a teenager we are concerned about “looking good”. And when we grow up, as adults we are more concerned about “feeling good”.

But what is goodness?

It’s important for us to understand this principle:

Apart from God, goodness does not exist.

Why? Because…God is good. Being good comes only from God, and we are commanded to do good.

God is good.

God is good in His person.

“The Lord is good ,a stronghold in the day of trouble; he knows those who take refuge in him.”

Nahum 1:7

God is good in His provision.

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.

James 1:17

God is good in His plans.

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Romans 12:2

Being good.

People aren’t basically good.

All have turned aside; together they have become worthless;
no one does good,
not even one.

Romans 3:12

For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out.

Romans 7:18

Doing good.

3 Reasons for doing good:

1-Inward

When you do good to others, you are doing yourself good.

2-Outward

Doing good impacts others. Acts 11:24

3-Upward

God’s is watching Prov 15:3

So what is goodness?—-Goodness is “doing love in your actions.”

Are you trusting wholly in our Good God?!

Are you “doing love in your actions”?!

You can check out Pastor Jeff’s message on goodness here.

Marlana Kaye

The Fruit of the Spirit is: Love

love_fruits_OSP

John Lennon and Paul McCartney once wrote, “All you need is love.” Our culture has a lot to say about love. We use the word rather loosely in ad campaigns and song lyrics, in reference to desserts as well as spouses, from I ♥ NY tee shirts to  ♥☺ bumper stickers. The New Testament has a lot to say about love, too. In fact, agapē and its root word agapaō appear more than 150 times, mostly in the books by John and Paul (the apostles, not the Beatles).

So what is this love that Paul names first among the fruits of the Spirit? It is the distinguishing mark of a Christian. I’m not saying that lightly, either. Jesus uses this word when he defines the greatest commandments as loving God and loving our neighbors (Matt. 22.37-40), and he uses it again to explain that the world will know his followers by their love for one another (John 13.34-35). It is evidence of holiness. As we become increasingly characterized by love, we become more like Jesus, and only followers of Christ can know this love and act on it.

That’s a bold assertion, to say that unbelievers are incapable of experiencing and acting on love. Bold, yes, but biblical. Take a look at what Paul wrote leading up to the verses on the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5.19-22:

Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God. But the fruit of the Spirit is love…

Love is a fruit of the Spirit, not the flesh. This is a supernatural, self-sacrificial love, more than mere affection, and without the Spirit we are incapable of knowing and expressing love as the Bible defines it.  

Love always has an object. The “works of the flesh” in Galatians 5 are all rooted in self-love, self-preservation, self-gratification, because left in our sinful nature, we are selfish, and even our “good” deeds are tainted. This is why Paul repeatedly reminded and encouraged his readers to love one another, because we are so prone to seek our own comforts and protection rather than loving God and our neighbors.

But consider a few of the numerous ways the Bible refers to love.

Love the Lord your God

Love your neighbor as yourself.

For God so loved the world

Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her…

Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.

Love…does not seek its own…

True love – biblical love – is rooted in God’s love, and its objects are God and others. Jesus asked the Father that his followers would “see my glory that you have given me because you loved me before the foundation of the world…. that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them” (John 17.24b, 26b). This is the love the Spirit pours out in us – the love God the Father has for God the Son and the Son for the Father. We are given access to this eternal, pure, steadfast love, the love God demonstrated to us through Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection (Rom. 5.8). The ESV Study Bible notes that love comes first in the list of the fruits of the Spirit because “it most clearly reflects the character of God.” Only God the Holy Spirit can produce genuine, self-denying love because God is love and he loved us first (1 John 4.8, 19).

In God’s grace, I still battle my selfish nature, and I daily have to confess unloving attitudes, words, and actions. As the Spirit produces fruit in us, though, he strengthens us to deny these selfish tendencies and directs our wills to choose love. Love unites the church (Col. 3.14b). It supersedes all other spiritual gifts (1 Cor. 13.1-3, 13). It compels us to fulfill the Great Commission (2 Cor. 5.14). It banishes fear because we now find security in Christ (1 John 4.18). In this first fruit of the Spirit, we demonstrate a love that is categorically different from any other definition of love outside of Christ, and “they’ll know we are Christians by our love.”

Heavenly Father, we praise you as the only true, pure, and eternal source of love. Thank you for sharing your love with us. Fill us with your Spirit that the world may see your love for us and through us. May we always keep you as our first love. Amen 

Bethany Wester

Archive April: Worth the Wait.

Originally posted on: November 19, 2012

From of old no one has heard or perceived by the ear, no eye has seen a God besides you, who acts for those who wait for him.” Isaiah 64:4

It’s my birthday month! I turn 35 this year…gulp…and next month, I get to marry the most amazing man I’ve ever met! Believe me, waiting until you’re 35 to marry is a looooooong time to wait. But I wouldn’t change a thing. God’s plans are so much better than mine.

Let’s rewind the clock about ten years.  I would have been 25 years old, and to my mind at the time, the perfect age to marry (actually earlier but I would have settled to be married at 25). I was heading off to seminary ready to meet the love of my life, conquer my master’s degree, and face the world serving the Lord by my husband’s side. I was full of excitement, naivety and self-righteousness, and had lots of growing to do in all areas of life. My now fiancé, however, was living the life of an unbeliever. God wasn’t even on his radar at that time. If we would have met then, I would have either been witnessing to him or completely ignoring him!

Fast forward to about 5 years ago. I would have been turning 30, and to my mind way behind schedule to get married and start a family. I had graduated from seminary and was working full time (at a job where neither of my degrees were necessary), and trying to figure out what to do with my life. I was learning much about life and going through a lot of heart-ache. My future husband was in another state and had only been a Christian for about 3 years. He was learning much of Christ and planning to start college soon. He was focused on growing as a new creation and not even thinking about girls. If we had met then, he wouldn’t have even noticed me.

Now let’s skip ahead to last year at this time. I was about to turn 34, and had (mostly) made peace with my singleness and God’s good plan for my life. I didn’t know if I would ever marry and I was generally ok with that. It was no longer essential for a good life for me. I was happy in my little home with the ministries that the Lord had given me and was going about life just fine. There were times when being on my own was difficult and was the last thing I wanted, but there were also days when I couldn’t imagine being “tethered” to someone else and enjoyed my life as a single.

Then in March of this year, a friend of mine told me about a man from my home church who was coming to the school where I work and asked me to help him find his way around. Little did I know when I contacted him with purely helpful intentions that we’d be getting married by the end of the year (If you want to read more of our story, you can read these two posts on my blog: Surprised by Love Once Again and Life on the Fast Track).

God’s timing is perfect and it’s definitely worth the wait. All those years of longing, unanswered prayers, and missing a man that I had never met have all been forgotten. The waiting was difficult but I learned so much from it. And waiting doesn’t stop when you get what you’ve been waiting for. No, you just have to wait for something else. So learning to wait well is good and is a fruit of the Spirit (patience) that needs to be cultivated (which means effort and practice as we learn to deny ourselves and live by the Spirit).

So press on, dear ones! Keep seeking the Lord and following hard after Him. He is for you and is not withholding anything from those who walk uprightly (Ps. 84:11). He is not spiteful or teasing you by dangling the gift of marriage in front of you but only giving it to others. He is generous and a good gift giver–giving to each person what is perfectly suited for them in every season of life. Therefore, if marriage is good for you then God will bring that to you at His perfect time and in His perfect way. He will guide your path, and the path of your spouse just as He has done for centuries to bring about His good plans, so there’s no need to worry (visit my post Worrisome Birds …which I wrote when I was very single…for more on the theme of God’s perfect timing and providence). Put your trust in His faithfulness and love for you.

“The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. “The Lord is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I will hope in him.” The Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the soul who seeks him.” - Lamentations 3:22-25

Carrie Pickelsimer

Archive April: A Decade Later

teen_girl

Originally Posted on: Feb 26, 2013

It has been a decade since I was a teenager (whew that was weird for me to say) and I can say my teenage years were filled with many highs and many lows. Being a high school teacher and a youth volunteer at my church I am able to observe how teens interact with each other on a daily basis. I see how boys and girls interact with each other, I see how you treat others, how you treat and talk about your parents but mostly what I see is a NEED to feel loved and accepted. I see it in you just like I saw it in myself 10 years ago.

I wanted my peers to like me. I wanted my parents to be proud of me and trust me. I wanted to make good grades and excel in sports. I wanted the cute boy to notice me. I wanted to feel pretty. I wanted to look skinny. I wanted to have a date for prom and homecoming and maybe even a Friday night football game. I wanted to have friends. I wanted to get in to a good college so I could have a good job and makes lots of money (haha and now I teach). Just reading this list now stresses me out! Being a teenager I know is NOT easy. It wasn’t easy 10 years ago and it certainly is not easy today. Many times as teens and even some as adults we tend to “want” to do and “be” a lot of different things in order to feel loved and accepted by people in our lives…or possibly by someone who isn’t even in your life (a dad that left or a mom who is at home but works so much you don’t ever see her). This feeling of striving to feel love and acceptance is not of the Lord.

To all the teens (and even the adults) reading this today may I remind you of Who loves and accepts you unconditionally…Jesus Christ. It doesn’t matter if you make all A’s, it doesn’t matter if you aren’t a size two or if your last attempt at a sports victory ended in failure. Regardless of your Friday or Saturday night plans you are Loved and accepted by Jesus. Jesus will ALWAYS be for you; HE will NEVER leave nor forsake you. He loves you so much He came to this earth to die for your sins so you could spend eternity with Him in heaven. Here are some scriptures to remind you of how much you are loved and accepted by Jesus.

John 1:12 – I am God’s Child.
John 15:15- I am Christ’s Friend.
Romans 5:1- I have been justified.
1 Cor. 6:19-20- I am bought with a price; I belong to God.
Eph. 1:1- I am a saint.
Eph. 1:5- I have been adopted as God’s child.
Eph. 2:18 – I have access to God thru the Holy Spirit.
Col 1:14- I have been redeemed and forgiven.
Col. 2:10 – I am complete in Christ.

Take a moment to reflect on how you are living your life. Are you living your life based on who you are in Christ-loved and accepted? Do your actions, attitude and words reflect a daughter of the King? Or are you living your life striving, and doing, and wanting things that aren’t of the Lord in hopes to feel love and acceptance from others? If your life is a reflection of the latter, take heart! The Lord has come to set you free from that bondage. Ask Him—He will reveal Himself to you in a way that will cause you to feel the most satisfying and unconditional love and acceptance ever. Come just as you are and leave the rest up to Him! Take it from me—a decade later—HIS love and acceptance is the Only One that is able to withstand the test of time and eternity for that matter! He. Loves. You.

Holli Howard

Archive April: The Rewards of Waiting

Originally Posted on: August 29, 2012

“It came to pass in the process of time that Hannah conceived and bore a son, and called his name Samuel, saying, “Because I have asked for him from the Lord.” 1 Samuel 1:20

The story of Hannah and the birth of her son, Samuel found in 1 Samuel 1:1-28 stirs up many emotions within me. Encouragement-that the Lord does hear and answers my prayers. Conviction - am I as persistent as Hannah was in my prayer life? And also, the dreadful feeling of waiting. I am however, again encouraged (isn’t that how it goes? The Word encourages your soul more than anything) that I am not the only one who finds waiting to be difficult. Whether it is waiting for a job, a home, a husband, a child, direction from the Lord or an answer– waiting is a hard thing in our society. If you are like me, I daily have to surrender my will and my tendency to want to control situations over to the Lord. I will repeat DAILY surrender.  It’s hard, friends, but through a sweet word from Charles Stanley’s book I Lift Up My Soul, he uses an analogy that resonates in my soul to remind me of the reward of waiting. It is about cake– I have sweet teeth, not just one…they are all sweet!!

You’ve just finished gathering all the ingredients for baking, and you mix them together carefully in a large bowl. Then you pour the batter evenly in two round pans and slide them gently onto the oven rack. You set the timer and sit back for a while to enjoy the delicious smells coming from the kitchen.

Suppose that twenty minutes before the timer rings you decide you want to take the cake out of the oven anyway. It’s only partially baked, with gooey spots everywhere, and obviously isn’t fit for consumption.

Such a decision would be ridiculous, wouldn’t it? Yet in an interesting way that scenario parallels what we do as believers when we try to outrun God’s timing and take ourselves out of His preparation time too soon. We do not give Him time to reveal His purposes in the way He knows best.

Hannah is an inspiration in the area of spiritual patience. She knew that God was the One in charge of whether she would conceive a child, and she took her sorrows and fears to Him daily. We don’t know how long Hannah waited on the Lord.  All the Bible says in 1 Samuel 1:7 is “year by year.” What a wearying process, especially with the taunts of Peninnah.

God knows what you need. Don’t give up and try to satisfy that need your own way. Wait on Him, and He will take care of you according to His goodness.

Today my prayer is that we will rest in the assurance that our Heavenly Father knows exactly what we need and when we need it. May we trust in His goodness and his sovereignty as we wait. May we learn from Hannah and take our sorrows and our fears to the only One who’s perfect love can drive those fears away.(1 John 4:18)

“Wait for the Lord; be strong and do not lose heart and wait for the Lord.” Ps. 27:14

Holli Howard

Archive April: O Love That Will Not Let Me Go

Originally Posted on: October 29, 2012 
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O Love That Will Not Let Me Go 
This is a title to a hymn written by George Matheson in 1882. I recently heard the story behind this old beautiful hymn and it touched me so deeply. I love hearing the meaning behind songs because it makes them even that much more meaningful. George Matheson wrote this as a single man on the day of his sisters wedding. Yep, you guessed it. He was lonely. Here is what he wrote in his journal about that day.
“My hymn was composed in the manse of Inellan on the evening of June 6, 1882.  I was at that time alone.  It was the day of my sister’s marriage, and the rest of my family were staying overnight in Glasgow.  Something had happened to me which was known only to myself, and which caused me the most severe mental suffering.  The hymn was the fruit of that suffering.  It was the quickest bit of work I ever did in my life.  I had the impression of having it dictated to me by some inward voice than of working it out myself.  I am quite sure that the whole work was completed in five minutes, and equally sure that it never received at my hands any retouching or correction.”

He didn’t mention in his journal what had caused him this “most sever mental suffering”, but most have suspected it had to do with the heartbreak he experienced from a woman he loved. Matheson struggled with poor eyesight his entire life and it increasingly became worse the older he became. His fiancee had broken her engagement to him, telling him that she couldn’t see herself going through life married to a blind man.  Matheson never married, and it seems likely that his sister’s wedding brought to memory the woman that he had loved and the wedding that he had never enjoyed. Take a minute and read this beautiful hymn.

O Love that wilt not let me go,
I rest my weary soul in thee;
I give thee back the life I owe,
That in thine ocean depths its flow
May richer, fuller be.

O light that foll’west all my way,
I yield my flick’ring torch to thee;
My heart restores its borrowed ray,
That in thy sunshine’s blaze its day
May brighter, fairer be.

O Joy that seekest me through pain,
I cannot close my heart to thee;
I trace the rainbow through the rain,
And feel the promise is not vain,
That morn shall tearless be.
O Cross that liftest up my head,
I dare not ask to fly from thee;
I lay in dust life’s glory dead,
And from the ground there blossoms red
Life that shall endless be.

How many of us would write such beautiful truths on the loneliest night of our lives? I think we would more likely write something to the effect of, “Poor me. I am always going to be alone. God why are you looking down upon me and not blessing me with a mate? I will never be happy. Woe is me.”

Matheson could have done this. Easily. Instead, he chose to celebrate the consistency of God’s love – “love that wilt not let me go” – “light that follow’st all my way” – “joy that seekest me through pain.”

As this hymn reveals, it was his faith in God that kept him going through the heartbreak that he suffered.  He believed that God’s love would not let him go, and that God’s light would follow him all his way, and that God’s joy would seek him through his pain, and that faith made all the difference.
I don’t know about you…but that sure is convicting to me.

                                                                                                Marlana Kaye