Posted on 10/31/2019 8:53:22 PM PDT by JustAmy
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Bible in a Year:
Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.
One Christmas, my grandmother gave me a beautiful pearl necklace. The beautiful beads glowed about my neck until one day the string broke. Balls bounced in all directions off our homes hardwood flooring. Crawling over the planks, I recovered each tiny orb. On their own, they were small. But oh, when strung together, those pearls made such an impression!
Sometimes my yeses to God seem so insignificantlike those individual pearls. I compare myself to Mary, the mother of Jesus who was so fantastically obedient. She said yes when she embraced Gods call for her to carry the Messiah. I am the Lords servant, Mary answered. May your word to me be fulfilled (Luke 1:38). Did she understand all that would be required of her? That an even bigger yes to relinquishing her Son on the cross loomed ahead?
After the visits of the angels and shepherds, Luke 2:19 tells us that Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart. Treasure means to store up. Ponder means to thread together. The phrase is repeated of Mary in Luke 2:51. She would respond with many yeses over her lifetime.
As with Mary, the key to our obedience might be a threading together of various yeses to our Fathers invitations, one at a time, until they string into the treasure of a surrendered life.
What yeses do you need to say to God? How can you learn to be more obedient?
Dear God, help us to respond, one yes at a time, to Your ongoing work in our lives.
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I don’t think Penny would love having a huge bow on her head. LOL!
Indeed. She takes a dim view of such frivolous canine exploitation.
Thank you.
Bible in a Year:
Sovereign Lord, . . . you may now dismiss your servant in peace.
On Christmas Eve 1944, a man known as Old Brinker lay dying in a prison hospital, waiting for the makeshift Christmas service led by fellow prisoners. When does the music start? he asked William McDougall, who was imprisoned with him in Muntok Prison in Sumatra. Soon, replied McDougall. Good, replied the dying man. Then Ill be able to compare them with the angels.
Although decades earlier Brinker had moved away from his faith in God, in his dying days he confessed his sins and found peace with Him. Instead of greeting others with a sour look, he would smile, which was quite a transformation, said McDougall.
Brinker died peacefully after the choir of eleven emaciated prisoners sang his request, Silent Night. Knowing that Brinker once again followed Jesus and would be united with God in heaven, McDougall observed, Perhaps Death had been a welcome Christmas visitor to old Brinker.
How Brinker anticipated his death reminds me of Simeon, a holy man to whom the Holy Spirit revealed that he would not die before he had seen the Lords Messiah (Luke 2:26). When Simeon saw Jesus in the temple, he exclaimed, You may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen your salvation (vv. 2930).
As with Brinker, the greatest Christmas gift we can receive or share is that of saving faith in Jesus.
Why do you think McDougall saw death as a welcome visitor for Brinker? How does Jesus bring you joy and change you?
Jesus, thank You for ushering in peace through Your death and resurrection. Help me to share Your gift of salvation with someone I know or meet.
Thank you.
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Merry Christmas!
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Merry Christmas Meg!
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Merry Christmas.
Bible in a Year:
Freely you have received; freely give.
I got you a present! my two-year-old grandson shouted excitedly as he pressed a box into my hands. He picked it out all by himself, my wife smiled.
I opened the box to find a Christmas ornament of his favorite cartoon character. Can I see it? he asked anxiously. Then he played with my present for the rest of the evening, and as I watched him, I smiled.
I smiled because I remembered gifts I had given loved ones in the past, like the music album I gave my older brother one Christmas when I was in high school that I really wanted to listen to (and did). And I realized how years later God was still stretching me and teaching me to give more unselfishly.
Giving is something we grow into. Paul wrote, But since you excel in everything . . . see that you also excel in this grace of giving (2 Corinthians 8:7). Grace fills our giving as we understand that all we have is from God, and He has shown us it is more blessed to give than to receive (Acts 20:35).
God generously gave us the most unselfish gift of all: His only Son, who would die on a cross for our sins and be raised to life. Any who receive this ultimate gift are rich beyond measure. As our hearts are focused on Him, our hands open in love to others.
In what ways do you need to grow in giving? What could you do today?
Thank You, Father, for giving me the best gift of all: Your Son! Help me to share Your generosity with others today.
Merry Christmas to you!
Merry Christmas!
Thank you.
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