Soul Rest

It’s not that we won’t have burdens in this life. We will. It’s that we were not meant to carry these burdens alone.

Jesus says, “Come to Me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is comfortable, and My burden is light.”
Matthew 11:28‭-‬30 NASB2020

His words are a balm to a weighed down weary soul, “Come!” Not condemnation or scorn. His word, “Come” is an invitation. He’s inviting us. He’s inviting you. He’s inviting me, “Come!”

This world is harsh and fast-paced, waiting to chew us up. Jesus tells us He is the opposite, “I am gentle and humble in heart. In me you will find rest for your souls.” This world offers a lot of sleep aids for the body, but only Jesus offers rest for our soul.

Woman of God hear Jesus’ invitation today, “Come, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will find rest for your souls.”

Be Thankful

I’ve been in a study of the book of Colossians with my Bible study group. Today I was reading chapter 3 and right there in the middle of a lot of words, was this ” . . .And be thankful.” (Colossians 3:15b NIV)

We’re to be thankful. It’s a choice we are to make. God won’t make it for us. Just as we are called to brush our teeth and hair, we are called to being thankful.

What I’m thankful for today:

I ordered shoes off of a website from overseas. I didn’t know until I had placed the order. They took two months to come in and they don’t fit. I tried to send them back, but the email address and phone number are not in existence anymore. I’m thankful I have a new pair of shoes to bless someone with.

I’m thankful for God’s word that I can freely read and study.

I’m thankful for God’s saving grace that continually washes over me.

I’m thankful for Believing friends who love me and encourage me.

Having lost my Dad suddenly in 2009, I’m thankful my Mom is still alive and doing well.

Being thankful does not change the hard things we go through in life. Instead, it changes our focus and directs us to what is good. Being thankful is good.

What are you thankful for?

STAND FIRM

Jesus’ words are as stark a reminder today as they were when He gave them to His disciples long ago as He sent them out – ” Stand firm.”

Jesus said, “You will be hated by everyone because of me, but the one who stands firm to the end will be saved.” Matthew 10:22 NIV

There’s a reason why Jesus was warning His disciples and us. He knew what was ahead. They did not.

Ephesians 6:14 in the NIV says, “Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place.”

I Corinthians 15:58 in the NIV says, ” Therefore, my dear brothers, stand firm
Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”

What does standing firm look like today?

It looks like. . .

Standing up for Jesus when we are alone or when we are in a group. When we are surfing the web, commenting on social media or choosing a movie to watch in the privacy of our own home. It’s being sure of whom we believe in to the point that our commitment to Him affects all parts of our life.

Standing on God’s truth. Knowing God’s  truth and applying it to our life.  Being ready to not compromise or give in to the world’s latest version of half-truths.

Standing no matter what or who comes against us in the world we live in. Not bowing to sin or doubt. Keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus.

Standing is serving when others are playing. Praying instead of sleeping. Studying and learning and hiding God’s word inour heart.

Woman of God, someone is counting on us to stand firm and not waiver in our faith. It may be a friend, a neighbor, a niece, a child, a grandchild, a great-grandchild or even a stranger we may never meet this side of heaven. Stand with Jesus and on Jesus’ word. And when you have done all you can do, keep standing!

Life Gets Messy

Scripture Reading:  Matthew 11:25-30

Scripture Passage:

“Come to me all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30 NIV)

 

Many a nights I plop into bed bone tired and recall a past time when I’ve not just been tired, but weary in my soul. Bone tired is not like soul tired. The first needs only a nap and a long nights rest to recover. The other needs God and His hand to hold me up.

In 2009, my heart decided it no longer wanted to beat in rhythm. As a musician, I’m well aware of what off-beats do to a melody. First came a Cardiologist visit, a heart holter monitor and then a diagnosis. The next few months proved modern medicine, although advanced, does not always produce the desired outcome. What looked to be a routine SVT (Supra-ventricular tachycardia) was anything but, and my body refused to respond to the newest heart drugs on the market. I was referred to a specialist for immediate surgery.

Life was as messy as it could get. I went from a normal Home school Mom of three boys to an almost-expert in medical terminology and paperwork who now had an overflowing medicine cabinet that looked like a pharmacy. Surgery proved to be unsuccessful. As I sat in the Doctor’s office two weeks later and was given my discharge papers as his patient and listened to his words, “I’ve done all I can for you. Get your affairs in order,” one thing came to mind as I lay my head on the steering wheel a few minutes later and cried, “Come to me all ye who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest.”

Looking back, I just knew it was the end, but I had no idea God would use this in a mighty way in my future. I dug my heels in, prayed every prayer from God’s Word I could find and started over again when I got to the end of the good book. My heart continued to beat out-of-control at a moment’s notice, but I kept going after each episode, refusing to waste one moment of life given. God eventually moved my husband and me and my family later that same year and a new Doctor in a new town decided I should try an old heart drug that worked a little differently. He worked tirelessly with me for the next year to get my body to accept a dose that would stabilize my out-of-control heartbeat. It finally worked.

Whatever it is that you’re going through today, I urge you to grab your Bible, dig your heels in, and “Come to God all you who are weary and burdened, and He will give you rest. Take His yoke upon you and learn from Him, for He is gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. His yoke is easy and His burden is light.”

It’s been 9 years now and I’m still alive and praising God as I traipse through windy mountain trails, swim laps three days a week at the Y and write for God, my Savior, Healer, Redeemer and Comforter at From One Woman’s Heart to Another at: https://www.facebook.com/From-One-Womans-Heart-to-Another-1384098821682081/?ref=bookmarks, https://www.instagram.com/fromonewomanshearttoanother/?hl=en and https://fromonewomanshearttoanother.wordpress.com/about/

My pain for His Purpose

I awoke the other night from a deep sleep. As I made my way out of bed I must have forgotten that for the past twenty or so years I have slept in a four-post queen-sized bed. Well, at least my nose forgot as it passed by one of the post and made contact.

The pain was excruciating. Of course everything is excruciating in the dark at 2:30 a.m. Wide awake and lying with a cold, wet washrag on my now swelling nose, I wanted to cry. But I knew this wouldn’t help so I did what I always do – I prayed until the cloth was warm and the throbbing turned numb.

Pain is not a word most people want to hear. Or talk about. I’ve noticed people’s reactions to it through the years when I mention it – a shoulder shrug, a muffled reply or a wave of their hands in the air as they back away from me.  Almost, like pain is contagious.

Maybe it is, but this one thing I’m sure of . . . I know pain. I did not ask for it nor am I a proud owner of it. Instead, I do believe God decided to create me with a gift, of which he gives out freely to all. My gift just happened to be a bit different.

It started at birth. I’m told I was born breech and upside down. Forty-eight years ago, a c-section was unheard of.

I’m told I cried for two years afterward. I had constant problems with my ears, nose and throat. I was too young to even know what a gift was back then, let alone know what to do with it. But others around me knew about it, although I’m pretty sure they didn’t understand it or appreciate it either. Much later in life, thirty-five years to be exact, a discovery would be made that would explain my early problems. Hindsight would not have helped me.

When I was four, my cries continued. The deluge lasted for the next eight years or so. It happened one day, I awoke and like that, resorted to crawling. I was not known to be a jokester. Overnight I had developed Rheumatoid Arthritis from a bout of Rheumatic Fever. It affected my legs. My heart had decided it didn’t want to be left out too, so it too went awry as well. This gift was becoming a burden.

After eight years of treatment, I went into remission.

The years passed and as I grew I coped by turning inward. Anger and lust became a great diversion and years of rebellion ensued.

When I turned 25 and was pregnant with my first child, the troubles escalated. I decided I didn’t want this gift anymore.

At thirty, dying in the hospital from a bacterial infection called C-Diff, I told God I had enough. He wasn’t moved. Instead He asked me, “If I was ready?” Struggling to make it another moment, I said, “Yes.” I thought he was asking me “If I was ready to die.” I was, but I didn’t.

At 35, God’s gift magnified into full-blown disability and another brush with death. At 40, lying on a cold stretcher after a 2.5 hour unsuccessful heart procedure, I knew without a shadow of a doubt that God’s gift was not only for me, but meant for others too and if He allowed me the opportunity, I would give him my all, with whatever time I had left on this earth – I would finally unwrap God’s gift, accept it and use it.

What was God’s gift to me? It was and is a life of pain. I was born with it and still have it in varying degrees to this day. It comes in shapes, sizes and various forms of diseases, illnesses, infections, and genetic and immune disorders.

Yet, with all the surgeries, drugs, treatments and therapies, only one help has stood the test of time – my relationship with Jesus Christ.

He became my Hope and His word, my medicine.

If you asked me for one verse that was instrumental, I could not give it. But if you asked me what I’ve learned about God’s Word and it’s application to being sick, I would tell you two things.

First, as Romans 8:28 says, “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose,” I can say that for my life, all things have worked together for my good.

Not that all things that have happened to me are good. But the word good is not the point of this verse. Our eye wants to catch it – GOOD –  and leave out all the others. But the good that is worked out from things that are not, is God’s good – HIS GOOD PURPOSE for our lives. His plan is to use all the wounds, hurts and sorrows, EVERYTHING that happens to us, good or bad, to heal us and draw us closer to him and ultimately make us shining examples of his GLORY and LOVE so others can see and want to know him.

Pain has the opportunity to make us bitter or better. When I was younger and didn’t understand God’s gift, I was bitter. I pouted. I cried. I used anger and whatever else was at my disposal to survive. I didn’t want to be different or hurt anymore. But as the pain intensified, so did my walk with the Lord. The more it hurt, the tighter I held on and I came to understand, through the whisper in my ears or his voice in the wind, or a catch in a song, or a knowing deep inside as I read His Word, God loves me and He’s with me, no  matter what happens in this life. I came to know, love and trust God and His Son, Jesus Christ, through pain.

The second thing I learned was that just because I was given this gift of pain, didn’t mean I was any more special than anyone else. God expected the same thing of me as He does of all of us . . . I was to do something with what he had given me and simply opening it and putting it on the shelf to gaze at and get lost in, would not be enough. He wanted me to pour out my pain, ever last stinkin’ bit of it back to Him as an offering.

Leviticus 23:18 says, “Along with the bread you shall present seven one year old male lambs without defect, and a bull of the herd and two rams; they are to be a burnt offering to the Lord, with their grain offering and their drink offerings, an offering by fire of a soothing aroma to the Lord.”

The Israelite’s celebrated the Festival of Harvest so that the first crops harvested from their fields could be offered to God.

After years of yielding nothing but bills, surgeries, pills and pain, I saw no harvest. Then Romans 8:28 came to mind and I remembered that God’s plan was not just for pain – it was for a harvest of good from out of the pain.

About this time I began to desire a different outcome other than bitterness and my prayers went from words of anger to a heart I never thought I would ever possess – I began to pray and bend and thank God for his gift and ask Him to use the only thing I had to offer – My pain for His purpose. I offered the only thing I had, to be poured out as a drink offering, producing a harvest for Him.

It’s been forty-eight years now with this gift of pain. I never know what will arise or when, but I wouldn’t trade it for any other life, even if I could. This gift gave me Jesus and connected me to the cross where I met my Savior, who died and rose again for me – my greatest gain and His greatest pain.

I’m still alive and for as long as I have breath to breathe, I’m doing my absolute best to live – my pain for His purpose.

 

Join me on this journey of hope at: https://fromonewomanshearttoanother.wordpress.com/ and https://www.facebook.com/From-One-Womans-Heart-to-Another-1384098821682081/ and on twitter at https://twitter.com/Christi40592130 and Instagram https://www.instagram.com/fromonewomanshearttoanother/

 

*All verses are from the New American Standard Bible

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It only takes a moment

As women, we often set the tone of the room or home with the words we choose to speak and how we speak them.

Sometimes I want to blame my words on my day, especially when it’s been filled with pain. Other days I find externals to point to:  The cost of medicine is skyrocketing, my nest is empty or the news is depressing and aggravating.  My list can go on forever as I’m sure yours does as to why I’m entitled to speak the way I do.

Truth is, no matter how bad my day, week, month or year, there are always opportunities for me to practice something that does not come naturally – speaking words that bring life instead of doom and gloom.

I must admit that I don’t always take advantage of them until I remember that Death and life are in the power of the tongue, And those who love it and indulge it will eat its fruit and bear the consequences of their words” (Proverbs 18:21 AMP). 

So just where does our bent toward a negative tone and speech come from? I think it comes from our need and our lack.

Most of us express ourselves without much forethought. We belt out the words that come natural to us. We have a need to communicate and voila, here are our words – take em’ or leave em’. Yet, in our moments of profound negativity, regret is almost instantaneously followed by our hand covering our lips in wonderment, “Did I really say that?”

James 3:8 tells us that “… no one can tame the human tongue; it is a restless evil [undisciplined, unstable], full of deadly poison” and yet I find that even though it’s not possible to have control of my tongue all the time, it is possible to live with fewer moments of regretful slip-ups than slip-outs.

No, it’s not when I put tape on my mouth or bite my tongue. Although helpful, this would only be a temporary fix for a long-term issue and would probably result in more inappropriate words.

There’s only one thing I’ve found to help my lack of self-control with words and tone  – to be totally and completely saturated with God’s word. That is, saturated, consumed and overwhelmed . . . in the morning, at noon and when I lay my head down to rest.

I know what you’re thinking, my days are busy. Mine are too, but I’ve found that they’re never too busy for a moment. . . even if that moment is during a potty break, a coffee re-fill or a quiet few seconds with our eyes closed at our desk, phone off and computer with screensaver on.

I have found that in these few moments of refueling by reading God’s word, praying a silent prayer for encouragement or in the split second when my whisper and His heart connects, I’m changed. My focus is clearer and my heart is renewed and my mind and words take heed and respond.

Self-control is not something any of us are prone to, but it is something that we can strive to attain. . . with God’s help we can be victors and have words, along with a tone that build up instead of tearing down.

It’s a new month, a chance to begin again and no matter how many times we have failed, a fresh start is within our grasp. I encourage you to give God and His word a try for the next 30 days. Who knows? A few moments might make all the difference in your words and tone.  What do you have to lose . . .

 

 

Remarkably and Wonderfully Made

Too often as women, we hold back our criticism about others, but let it rip about ourselves. We don’t like the way we are shaped. Our hair is the wrong color. We weigh too much or too little. Our clothes are not fashionable and nothing fits right. But the truth is even if all of that is true . . . none of it is REALLY true.

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You will never find a flower saying I want to be like the flower next to me. Flowers just instinctively know that they are a flower and it’s okay with being whatever kind-of-flower they happen to be.

The Psalmist says, “I will praise You because I have been remarkably and wonderfully made . . .” (Psalm 139:14 HCSB).

Remarkably and wonderfully created individuals are CONTENT no matter the shape of their thighs, knobby elbows or knees, freckles that litter a body or strips of grey where once was black hair.

When we groan inwardly or outwardly about ourselves, what we’re really groaning against is the very hand of our creator who made each of us in a unique and magnificent way.

What can wash away our discontent with ourselves? Praise and thankfulness to God that arises even in the midst of an unsettled heart full of flesh, when we know and believe and trust and submit to utter contentment in the fact that no matter our size, shape or color, we were created by the hand of God himself to be nothing less than . . . remarkable and wonderful.

Do you see yourself as God sees you?

 

 

Honesty – the only way

It wasn’t a good week for plates in my house. Yes, you heard me right. I was unloading the dishwasher early one morning and I guess I put the plates too close to the edge of the counter because when I added the fourth plate on top of the first three, they all came tumbling down into the dishwasher on top of the other clean plates.

When all was said and done, I had four broken plates. Four. That meant I was left with nine in my set of dishes.

I quickly loaded the trash can with all of the debris and for a second I thought about concealing this accident from my spouse. I mean he didn’t really need to know how clumsy I was, but after 26 years together, I knew that this would not be a wise thing to do.

Sure enough as I explained what happened when he returned home, all he said was, “Are you sure you weren’t mad?” (He knows me well.)IMG_6065

So here I am one day later and it happens again . . . another broken plate, just not exactly in the same way and no, I didn’t throw any plates.

The thing is, if I had chosen to do what my flesh wanted to yesterday – lie, I would have had to do it again today.

One lie does beget another. And another. One bad choice usually follows another. But by making the choice to fess up to my accident and then my untimely 2nd accident, I found a peace in the absence of anxiety in worrying about what he would say.

Sometimes we have struggles in our marriages and wonder, “Where did this come from?” But sometimes these struggles come from a pattern we have borrowed or developed and includes concealed truths, even ones about something as insignificant as 5 plates.

The truth is always the best option, whether that is with our spouse, God or anyone else. It isn’t always easy, but it’s the only option that will set us free.

I love this verse by King David to God in Psalm 51:6 after He had committed adultery with Bathsheba, “Surely you desire truth in the inner parts; you teach me wisdom in the inmost place.”

God desires truth because He is truth. But we desire truth, too. No one wants to be lied to and yet if we aren’t careful, lying can become our default.

The antithesis of a lie is the truth and nothing will grow a relationship faster than when the honest, bold, sharing of truth takes place.

Does your relationship with your spouse need a jolt today? Have you been keeping the truth from him in any area? Come clean and then practice giving what you yourself desire deep inside . . . Honesty – it is the only way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To Give

“Measure thy life by loss instead of gain;

Not by the wine drunk but by the wine poured forth;

For love’s strength standeth in love’s sacrifice,

And whoso suffers most hath most to give.”

Elisabeth Elliot, Keep a Quiet Heart

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