Monday, November 25, 2013

Thanksgiving Forever!

Another Thanksgiving has come and gone, but shouldn’t we continue to be thankful for the blessings of this life?  We say there are lots of things in life that we’re not thankful for, but should that stop us from being thankful?  I once worked for a man who had a saying something like this: ‘Work is being in a constant state of discontent, interrupted occasionally by brief periods of celebration for a job well done.’

I think this comment by my old boss can actually be applied to life. Yes, life is sort of a constant state of discontent, interrupted occasionally by brief periods of celebration for a life well lived. As you know, the colonists that came to this country seeking a new life lived hard lives and endured many dangers.  Some died while coming to what is now America, as they attempted to fulfill their dream.
At that first organized time of thanks in 1621, the Plymouth colonists shared a fall feast with the local Indians they connected with during their colonization of America. As the land soon to be America continued to be colonized and organized, other groups and eventually other states celebrated times of thanksgiving on their own. This continued for a couple of centuries before President Abraham Lincoln, during the Civil War, proclaimed a national Thanksgiving Day to be held each November.
In 1620, the small ship named the Mayflower began a journey carrying about 100 passengers, as it left England. Those passengers were seeking religious freedom and the hope for prosperity in the New World.  It took the Mayflower about 66 days to cross the Atlantic and we can only imagine the dangers they encountered during this voyage.  The aim of this voyage was to land near what is now New York City, but they ended up landing near Cape Cod. They missed their landing site by a few hundred miles, but were certainly glad to see land of any kind. A month later they continued across the bay to the mainland and settled in the place they called Plymouth.
It was very late fall when they first landed and they experienced a very harsh winter. Disease and overexposure to the elements burdened them and most of them stayed on board the Mayflower during this time.  As spring approached, only half of the original passengers and crew were still alive. The survivors finally left the ship and began to settle the area. They were greeted by an Indian, who surprisingly did so in English. You may remember the Indian, Squanto, who had been captured by an English sea captain and escaped some time later. This surprised the Pilgrims, as you can imagine.
Squanto helped the Pilgrims in regaining their health and stability, by teaching them how to grow corn and other crops, and fish the local streams.  In November, at the end of their first year in America, the Colonists harvested their first corn crop and the celebration of thanks began. The relationship the Colonists had with the local Indians lasted more than 50 years. Unfortunately, it is one of the few significant positive relationships between the European settlers and the Native Americans.
The actual celebration feast lasted three days as the colonists invited the local Indians to join them. The Indians probably contributed more to the celebration than did the Pilgrims.  The Indian cooking methods and spices made the event very elaborate.  After the celebration, it was back to work and most likely to a “state of discontent” for the Colonists as they continued to forge their way into their new life, occasionally taking time to celebrate their blessings received through their good works.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Communication with God

Communicating with God is probably the most difficult task for us, His children. In order to be successful in the message receiving and sending process, we have to be intentional about building our information base in Him through reading and following His Word in the Bible. Jesus came to us as God’s Word and we must take Him seriously.

The law and the prophets of the Old Testament add to our base of understanding, and Jesus clarified and simplified God’s expectations of us in His Gospel. Coaches of sports teams usually tell their players that the most important thing in their training for success is working hard on the fundamentals of the sport. As Christians seeking a relationship with God, we must work hard on the fundamentals of our faith.
God’s Word in the Bible is our training ground as we seek to turn a one way conversation into a two way conversation. God communicates to us through His Spirit, but if our fundamentals are not developed, the sending and receiving with God is full of interference.
There are several instances in the life of Jesus where the disciples and others around Him actually heard God communicating with His Son. As in John 12:30, “Jesus said, “This voice was for your benefit, not mine.” Jesus is in constant communication with God, He wanted us to know that communication on some level was possible. For us, that is the work of God’s Holy Spirit.
Even when we think we’re interacting with God in our prayers and our listening, we can still mess things up. Going back as far as Abraham we have been tempted to do God’s work for Him. In Genesis 15:4, God promised Abraham a son, but Abraham and Sarah took things into their own hands and instead of waiting for a spirit planted son in Sarah, they engaged Sarah’s slave Hagar to sleep with Abraham and give birth to a son.
In ignoring God’s promise, Abraham and Sarah created an issue that lives with us in today’s world. After they were gifted by the birth of a son together as God had promised, the Ishmael vs. Isaac tension began and continues to play out in our world today. Yes, even Abraham and Sarah took a break from the fundamentals of faith and got off of God’s track for them.
Our challenge is to build up our fundamentals in faith and wait for Gods friendly nudge in the direction of His Will for us. We can recognize it as His Will for us when we don’t see it as something we can control and carry out without His help. It is like going out on a weak limb for Him with the confidence that He will not let it break.  
I can remember many times in my life when I felt led by God to help someone in a particular situation they were in. Most times I have taken the risk that my action would be accepted for what it was and not viewed as my having a personal ulterior motive in doing it. Even when we feel led on a path for reconciliation in a personal matter, we must only do that which feels God led and not cave into the, “Oh, I can fix it” posture.
God’s leadership in our lives flows through His Holy Spirit. As hard as we try to hear what He is telling us, we humans can sometimes misunderstand His communications. This should not stop us from seeking God’s leadership in our lives. We’ll miss the mark occasionally, but our batting average will stay high as long as we don’t give up and we keep working on those fundamentals of our faith.
We must keep attentive to those Godly nudges through His Spirit. If we feel we are being led and not trying to lead, most times that limb we crawl out on will be sturdy enough for God’s work. In 2nd Timothy 3:16-17, we are reminded: “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.”