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Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Carpel Tunnel Release















I have had Carpel Tunnel Release surgery on my dominant hand and cannot at this time type much due to post-op pain.  I hope to be back next week.  Please keep me in your prayers.  Thank you.  

Blessings,

Ken

Monday, March 1, 2021

The Lion Has Been Crossed

Then Samson went down with his father and mother to Timnah.  And behold, a young lion came toward him roaring. Then then the Spirit of the LORD rushed upon him, and although he had nothing in his hand, he tore the lion in pieces as one tears a young goat. Judges 14:5-6

A good friend of mine who has spent much time with the Masai Tribe in Kenya, said, in the past when young males turned 14, to show their courage and manhood they, as a group, would kill a lion.  They were armed only with clubs called Arungu.  One youth would bait the lion, then kneel as it charged.  The rest of the young men would close in with their clubs and kill the beast.  The boy who baited the lion was considered the bravest warrior. Understandably so.

One of the best definitions of courage I’ve found says, “Courage isn’t the absence of fear.  It simply implies that there ought to be a concept that is even bigger than terror inside us.”

Luke tells us in his Gospel that when Jesus faced His time on the cross He was in great distress (Luke 22:44).  The physical agony of crucifixion was certainly part of it, but the sinless only Begotten Son, taking our sins on Himself, would, because of it, for the first time in eternity, be separated from His Heavenly Father (John 17:5, Matthew 27:46). This would be His greatest agony of all.

Christ was obedient to suffer and die that death. It had been decided before the foundation of the world (Philippians 2:8, Revelation 13:8). Fear at the cross and death was followed for a couple of days by the celebration of hell.  But the power of the Devil, that roaring lion, seeking to devour, was destroyed on that third sunrise.  Courage won out in that new dawn, as the color drained from the his face, when he saw the King step into the morning light.

 Ken


Monday, February 22, 2021

Rock Solid

 

Then Samuel took a stone and set it up between Mizpah and Shen and called its name Ebenezer; for he said, “Till now the LORD has helped us.” 1st Samuel 7:12

If you’ve ever sang Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing penned by Robert Robinson in 1758, our modern understanding might have a difficult time with the second verse, Here I raise my Ebenezer.

What, you may be wondering, is an Ebenezer?  After a time of sinning against the LORD Israel put away their idols to serve Him only.  Their perennial enemy, the Philistines, had defeated the Jews several times in battle, and had become a force to be reckoned with.  But now the prophet Samuel, led the Israelites out to fight.

Israel came to the battle rattled.  They had been on the losing end of the Philistine spear before and were understandably frightened. But when Samuel cried out to the LORD for Israel, they stood their ground and the LORD heard him and allowed Israel to defeat their enemy.

After the victory Samuel took a stone and called it Ebenezer, which means Stone of Help.  It was, in essence, a trophy of victory that could only have come by the hand and help of the God of Israel.

Sometimes when we reach a valley of decision, before the battle is joined, it seems we’re praying through stone and not to the Rock of our Salvation. With an outlandish chunk of ice in our stomachs, chilled by continual worry or fear, it is difficult to trust that the LORD is already fighting for us.  We might ask, “Doesn’t He know how hard and frightening standing at this battlefront is?”  Yes, He knows exactly where we stand.  It’s not for His understanding that He knows where we stand, but that we understand that He stands with us. 

He is our Stone of Help, a Rock that cannot be moved, yet hears our every cry. When the smoke clears, if we do not become discouraged in our communion with Him and prayers, we will find our victory secure (Galatians 6:9).  It will become one of many Ebenezer’s we will raise throughout our lifetimes.  Trophies of Help and Remembrance.  As we raise them, we will find every one of them to be rock solid. As solid as our Rock, Christ Jesus (1st Corinthians 10:4).

Ken


Monday, February 15, 2021

The Second Time Around

Thus it is written, “The first man Adam became a living being”; the last Adam became a life-giving spirit. 1st Corinthians 15:45

Ever wonder what might have happened if Adam and Eve had resisted Satan’s temptation in the Garden of Eden?  I used to think if they had, wouldn’t one of their children have eventually been tempted by Satan into sinning?  It was a conundrum until I recalled Jesus Himself said the Lake of Fire was created for Satan and his angels (Matthew 25:41). It is my view, and speculation only, that Satan and his evil host would have at that time been put into the fire that was prepared for them, allowing the human race to live on in a state of eternal perfection (Genesis 2:17), in a perfect world (Genesis 1:25).

Sin and death did not enter the human race when Eve ate the forbidden fruit.  It happened when Adam, whom God made the federal head of humanity, did (Genesis 1:26, 3:6-7).  There is no sin in being tempted.  Jesus was tempted in every respect, as we are, and there was no sin found in Him (Hebrews 4:15). Sin comes with commission.

But what if Jesus in His temptation, like the first Adam, had failed?  The universal disaster in that is too horrific to contemplate.  But He did not fail.  Some will say, “Yes, but His temptation wasn’t that hard. Plus, He couldn’t have sinned because He was God.”  It wouldn’t have been a temptation if it had been easy, would it?  A temptation always hits us hardest where we are the most vulnerable. 

Satan was offering Jesus the easy way out of God's full plan of human redemption.  The way where He wouldn't have to suffer but could have everything earth could give, the way around the cross, for it was delivered to Satan to give these things to whomever he chose (Luke 4:6).  When Jesus had fully resisted him and said, “Be gone, Satan,” He became the Second Adam who in His success brought us out of death unto life.

It took a human of free will to be the first to fail.  It took God in the flesh, the Word (John 1:1), to make it right the second time.  People ask, “If God knew Adam would sin why did He make Him then?”  I will ask, “First, answer me why would a perfect and all-powerful God, knowing that, be willing to suffer and die to redeem him back to Himself?”  That is Grace far too amazing to sensibly ponder. Love we cannot fully fathom.

We wouldn’t know that about Him without the First Adam’s slipup. God didn’t set him up for failure.  Love cannot be fully expressed without free will and God created that within him.  Adam was allowed to choose and he chose poorly. The Second Adam revealed Himself to us, choosing rightly. In doing so He took our punishment for sin on the cross and brought us from death unto life eternal, demonstrating that life truly can be better the second time around.

Ken


Monday, February 8, 2021

Of Books and Bottles

You have kept count of my tossings; put my tears in your bottle.  Are they not in Your book? Psalms 56:8

Did you know God has books?  The prophet Malachi speaks of a book of remembrance (3:16).  There’s His book of our lives (Psalms 139:16), also the Lamb’s Book of Life (revelation 20:12). And the Psalmist tells us He keeps a book in which He records all our sufferings.

I know there are times we believe we have suffered and cried our tears in vain.  But God loves to show His compassion to us.  What a comfort to know the loved one lost to death, the betrayals, physical and verbal abuses, and add your own here, are always in His memory.  Every tear and tossing you’ve endured in the night or silent times are in the Lord’s mind.  He spoke to His own chosen, “See, I have engraved you on the palms of My hands (Isaiah 49:16).  How many times a day do you look at your hands?

His thoughts are always to us, and when we weep those tears, He’s faithful to catch and keep each one.  He remembers your hardships, trials, and sufferings every time He opens your bottle or looks at His palms. And When you stand with Him there will no longer be the need for a bottle, for He will wipe away your every tear (Revelation 21:4).  Your name and times are constantly before Him. And He’s writing them down.

How gracious, loving, and compassionate He is.  There’s no work in experiencing that.  It’s all there and more.  All you need to do is believe it and embrace it.  No struggle.  It’s that easy.  Just reach out and accept it. Jesus loves me, this I know.  And His personal love for us is enough that He records and remembers every second.  Books and bottles.  What’s Better?

Ken


Monday, February 1, 2021

The Left Door

After the death of Abraham, God blessed Isaac his son.  And Isaac settled at Beer-lahai-roi.  Genesis 25:11


I’ve done some funerals in my time.  The first was as a layman for a lady who attended a Bible study I taught.  It was an especially heart wrenching service for me as it was for her baby granddaughter who died of SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome).  The child was only four months old.

I believe we all feel at a loss to say the right thing to the hurting.  We want to bring comfort and hope but many words fail in that regard.  In today’s verse, it seems God was Isaac’s comfort and hope when he had none. 

I read an interesting story from Jewish sources respecting comforting the hurting. It said that in the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem, the faithful would enter by a door on the right side.  Those who were bereaved would, for one year, enter at the left door.  Those exiting would know those coming in were in the distress of grief and could show compassion, understanding or even assistance to them.

I could not verify the Jewish source. But if it is not true it certainly serves as a good illustration of how we’re called to comfort just not the bereaved, but the hurting. If a person is breathing, they’re hurting, or have been hurt, in some way.

As Christ followers we are consistently called on to show grace, understanding, kindness, and to be ready to offer comfort and support instead of judgment and a critical spirit.  Our Lord Jesus calls us to a higher commissioning in His name.  Even as He was Isaac’s peace, His compassion reaches out through us.

So, when you become aware of the next person you meet who draws breath, ask the Holy Spirit to give you discernment and wisdom about the bruising life might be giving them.  Be compassionate.  Who knows but they may have just entered into your left door. 

Ken


Monday, January 25, 2021

The Honor of Being Last

Behold, he is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see him, and all tribes of the earth will wail on account of him.  Even so, Amen. “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, “who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.” Revelation 1:7-8


I believe many of us can painfully remember recess games when team captains would choose players for their teams.  There was embarrassment and feelings of disgrace when we would grudgingly be accepted on a team.  I can still recall more than once, hearing, “Awww, we don’t want Kenny. You take him.” There was no honor in being last.

Many still feel that way, and that’s how rejection works-unless you’re the Best.  The Best always outlasts the most.  Jesus Christ, God come to Earth in a human body, witnessed and attested to (John 1:1-2, 14, 1st John 1:1-4, Acts 2:32), has proven that there is great honor in being the Last.

Jesus is the First and the Last in all Eternity and in all Eternity He has existed.  That means He is the A to Z and everything in between. He became a human being, being born, living, and dying, and even raising Himself from the dead ( John 2:19-22, 10:17-18).  All power and authority have been given to Him by His Heavenly Father (Matthew 28:18). There is none like Him, nor will there ever be.  There is no other name under heaven by which we can be saved (Acts 4:12, John 14:6).  He is certainly the First and without a doubt, the period at the end of the Eternal sentence.

Is there another person or thing you trust in as your salvation?  Can you be sure where your conscious soul will live throughout the eternal ages?  With Him, or away?  You can know right now by believing He is who He says He is-God’s Perfect and only way-to Him.  Just believe and become His follower.  He will lead you into an amazing and satisfying life, now and in ages to come.  I used to believe always being last was the worst.  That is until I came face to face with the Alpha and Omega.  I found He’s the Living End.

Ken