Ten Keys to Unlock Your Writing Impact

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

key-hole

You’ve just poured your heart out sharing the woman’s story who visited your clinic, and how the appointment has changed her life, and now you wonder if your story will have the full force you intended.

Or you’re writing ministry partners to let them know the results of a recent fundraising event that fell short of your goals, and you’re asking how to put words together so that people see your vision and are moved to contribute.

Emails. Newsletters. Fundraising letters. Blog posts. Words. Words. Words. Each of them filling the inboxes of your PMC ministry partners, crying out, “READ ME!!”

How does your organization compete with a steady stream of incoming words as you endeavor to reach out and touch your prospective and current ministry partners?

Picture it now: That potential ministry friend glances at your headline and it grabs his attention. He reads your first sentence. Then the first paragraph. Before he knows it, he’s totally hooked. And if you’ve achieved your goal, you held his attention to the end.

How did you do that? Though he may have felt captivated under your spell, good writing isn’t magic. It is a craft that can be developed.

ten-keys

Whether it’s been years since English Composition, or you’ve never had formal training in writing, here are ten keys to open the door to connecting with your readers:

1. Hook readers at the opening. People typically decide whether or not to read an article or blog post based on the headline, and then the first sentence, and then the first paragraph. So, hook them and keep drawing them in.

Personal stories, questions, statistics, and quotes are great ways to grab people’s attention.

2. Call to action. What is your goal? Why are you writing this particular article or blog post or email? What’s the point? What are you trying to accomplish? What is your intended impact?

For a blog post or article, what do you want them to do as a result of reading it? Whatever your aim is, make it reader-friendly and provide links or contact information to make it easy. Give practical steps.

For an email or a fundraising letter, state the purpose of the letter in the first sentence or two. Get right to the point, follow-up with the basis and support, restating the goal or purpose at the end.

You can even state it a third time in the middle.

This simple step will help your writing be more effective. When you’ve finished you can ask yourself and others, “Did I achieve my goal?” Quiz your team before sending by saying, “Would you read what I just wrote and see what impact you think it will have on our ministry partners–how you think it might move them?”

3.  Consider your audience. To whom are you writing? Think about your recipients–their age groups, denominations, ethnicities, and political backgrounds.

Consider those who oppose you. Many of our close friends and family may be in our audience because of their relationships with members of our team, and may not necessarily be Christians or agree with you.

What in the piece are they most likely to relate to? How can you build on that? How can you highlight standards of excellence in patient care to build credibility? What words or phrases might need deleting or sharpening in order to convey your organization’s integrity?

Is there anything you’ve written that could put your ministry at risk? Is there any way you could say the same thing and appeal to a broader audience?

Pray for wisdom to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves.

And consider Paul’s words in 1 Cor. 9:22 who said he became all things to all men so that by all possible means, he might save some.

4.  Show; don’t tell. In general, that means rather than using adjectives like, “She was upset,” show how she was upset. Help the reader picture her with something like, “She was sobbing so hard she could barely talk,” or “Tears were streaming down her face.”

5.  Eliminate repetition and unnecessary words. When proofreading, look for repeated words and use a thesaurus. This online one is my favorite: http://www.thesaurus.com

Pay attention to recurring sentence styles and change them up with phrases and connectors.

Respect your readers’ time. Know they are busy. Keep your writing succinct and strip it of unnecessary words. That doesn’t mean complete neglect of adjectives and adverbs, but using strong nouns and verbs is better. Be ruthless in your editing so you don’t bore your readers.

Remember, less is more.

6.  Avoid passive voice. Passive voice is the verb “to be”+ a past tense verb like “was noticed” or “was fired.”

Passive voice omits naming the subject. The word that appears before the verb phrase in passive voice is actually the direct object because it is receiving the action of the verb.

So, if the editor was noticed, or was fired, the editor isn’t doing the action; someone else is. The logical question is, “Who did it?”

To change to active voice, the writer has to drop the “to be” verb and name the subject. For example, “The publisher fired the editor.”

7.  Grammar, spelling, and punctuation. For grammar-Nazis, nothing will hurt your credibility like misspelled words and improper grammar. Some will cringe, wondering what those mistakes say about your professionalism in other areas.

Refresh your knowledge with an overview of the rules. But keep in mind, rules are made to be broken. And when writers do it intentionally, they do it for style. Or to make a point. But sometimes writers just know that breaking that particular rule will make for easier reading.

How can you tell the difference? Ask others on your team. Google it.

It’s better not to break a rule than to ignore it and have people thinking you’re ignorant.

When you’re not sure, check with the experts. Current or retired English teachers make great volunteers.

Here’s a quick online grammar resource for common questions:
http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/capital.asp

Grammar Police: 25 of the Most Common Grammatical Errors We All Need to Stop Making

Quiz Yourself: 25 of the Most Commonly Misspelled Words

8. Punctuation. Because we know what we were thinking as we composed our thoughts, we can find it challenging to see our own mistakes, especially when the work is still fresh. If at all possible, get someone else to proof.

If you have to proof your own writing, try to let it sit a day or two, or at least a few hours.

Worst case scenario, copy and paste to a new format, so it looks different and read aloud to help you pick up on possible mistakes.

9. Links and white space. For online articles in particular, one of the most important things you can give your reader is white space. The space doesn’t actually have to be white, of course. But this space between paragraphs allows and encourages the readers’ eyes as well as their minds to rest a moment before continuing.

Think of it like feeding your reader bits of information; the white space allows him to swallow between each morsel.

Links make your e-newsletter or website blogs user-friendly. As you mention topics that strike your readers’ curiosity or call them to action, they will appreciate not having to go looking for more information, but being able to intuitively find what they are looking for right there in what they are reading.

10. Length — content rich. If you’re like I was when I first began writing for our PMC, you worry about your articles being too long.

Trouble yourself no more, as long as you’re writing great substance.

What about less is more?

Less is more when you’re rambling and repeating yourself and saying the same thing over and over like I’m doing in this sentence.

However, when you enchant your readers with spellbinding writing, you don’t have to worry as much about length.

In fact, research shows if you produce engaging material, your features can be longer. In fact, in 2014 research showed the most shared articles online were averaging 1700 words, and in 2016 they are averaging over 2500 words.

NOTE: A modified version of this post first appeared at SparrowSolutionsGroup.com.

Leaving One Home for Another

Wally, My Pastor for Almost 25 Years

Wally, my dear husband, who has helped me to experience in the flesh what it means for a husband to love his bride like Christ loves the church, faithfully pastored God’s people at First Presbyterian Church in Dyersburg, TN for 18 years, loving and being loved by them.

After having fired the pastor six months before calling Wally, and all the pain and heartbreak that went with that, they needed a tender shepherd who would provide stability and peace.

Wally consistently fed the flock a solid and steady diet from His Word that helped all of us to see how desperately we need Jesus, more than any of us tend to realize.

I know that I am not alone when I say I came to know and love and cherish Jesus more and more dearly as Sunday after Sunday, Wally pointed me to how Jesus has satisfied my every need.

We saw people grow in their walk with the Lord. I can’t count the number of people who shared about how they started reading their Bibles because of Wally’s encouragement.

We saw people love the Lord and each other. We saw them live out their faith, quietly serving one another behind the scenes, meeting needs. We saw marriages restored. We saw people come to know Christ and seek to honor Him in their relationships at home, work, church, and the community.

We have walked through life with these sweet people, through births and marriages and the valley of the shadow of death, mourning with those who mourn and rejoicing with those who rejoice, always finding God to be faithful and delighting to see how He grows His people.

And they wept and rejoiced with us as well.

This church was our family for 18 years.

Our children were 1,2, 4, and 6 when we moved to Dyersburg.

Our daughter had married in this church just a year and a half before our departure, and was blessed by so many ladies both in our church and community with help for the wedding and showers and gifts and you name it.

Every time our kids were in the Dyersburg State Gazette, multiple people brought copies to me at church, and someone always put it on the bulletin board.

When my aunt was dying of cancer, they faithfully prayed for her. They texted me and checked on me while we traveled.

When my grandparents passed away, they prayed for us and sent flowers, and especially for Wally as he preached at my Papaw’s funeral.

They have loved us well. They have been what the church is supposed to be, not only to us, but to each other and to their community.

Killing the Church? Or Being Killed?

Pastoring, like mothering, is hard.

When your kids are small, and all you see day after day after day is dirty diapers and dirty faces and dirty clothes, and it seems like you spend all your time cleaning, and you wonder what you actually accomplished, it can feel like you’re spinning your wheels. Will you ever see the fruit of your labor?

And in a small church in a small community, it can be difficult to keep your focus—to keep your vision—to believe that you’re really accomplishing what God wants for you. You can wonder if the church is making any progress, or like a car in a mud hole, if you’ve got your foot on the gas and just going deeper in the ground.

And in spite of the many ways I and countless others expressed our gratitude and appreciation for Wally’s shepherding us, this dear man has been haunted for almost 30 years as he took to heart the seminary counselor’s interpretation of a personality test when she told him he was ill-suited for pastoral ministry.

And in spite of the havoc we have seen pastors wreak on congregations by their harsh treatment or gossip or instability or judgment or neglect of their flock, and my constant pointing Wally to consider that Christ is his Master and how I and all the people love how we see Jesus in his care of this flock, his judgment of himself loomed larger than any of us could convey: FAILURE.

Over the course of eighteen years, FPC’s membership changed as older saints departed this life and younger ones relocated, all Wally could see was a big beautiful building well situated on the bypass that could be filled, yet sat mostly empty Sunday after Sunday. I would encourage him to focus on the faces of the 60-80 who were there. How ten years ago we’d been down to an average of 30 each Sunday, and how God had doubled that and brought all these new families not because of anything we had done differently, but simply through the ordinary means of grace—prayer, preaching the Word, genuine loving fellowship among believers, serving others, the sacraments.

Oftentimes people would be out visiting family or going to soccer games or some other activity. And yet, we kept a choir, even if there were only four or five people in their robes at the front of the small gathering scattered across the building, adding to his sense that the church was dying. The lingering question for Wally as he looked out into the empty sanctuary was, “Am I killing the church?”

I told him he didn’t have that kind of power. That if God wanted to grow the church, He could grow it in spite of him. But repeatedly, he had this gnawing sense that he was the problem.

One of his frequent sermon exhortations would be to tell our people to quit listening to themselves and to talk to themselves instead. To tell themselves the truth. I told him he needed to listen to his sermons and preach to himself.

We went through church revitalization with Briarwood’s Embers to a Flame ministry, which deepened the commitment of our people to prayer and repentance and concern for deeper community and worship and reaching the lost. But through that process, Wally became convinced that in order for First Prez to reach out to the community, they needed a person with skills like more of a church planter—someone more outgoing who could build relationships easily. He’d just completed the Dale Carnegie course in an effort to help him with that, but ultimately he felt he was trying to be someone he wasn’t, and that the pressure internally of feeling he wasn’t what First Prez needed and externally of seeing a mostly empty sanctuary Sunday after Sunday was killing him.

So, we prayed that God would open another door for ministry.

And many tears were shed as He did exactly that. God called us to Moriah.

Called to FCA? Or Deeper Still, to that place of vision known as Moriah?

People have asked how He called us…so here’s the story…

On Sunday night, October 31, as Wally and I were sitting up in bed talking, he said he didn’t think he was going to make it. I asked him what he meant by that, and he said he didn’t think he could keep going—that he didn’t think he could keep pastoring. He didn’t think any other church would want him. If he couldn’t make it in Dyersburg, how could he make it anywhere? Who would want him?

For 25 years of pastoral ministry, the Sunday night “feeling like quitting conversation” was nothing new. He’d laughingly said he talked himself out of quitting every Sunday night for years. I’d found encouragement from other pastors’ wives who shared in private conversations that their husbands went through the same thing. And then there are those friends from seminary and our younger days in ministry whose marriages and lives we’ve seen torn apart—those we thought had the perfect marriage. Life has taught me that life is hard and there’s no such thing as perfect. It’s broken people helping broken people looking to a perfect Savior.

Then looked at me and said, “I think I’m done.” Without blinking, I asked him what that meant. He said he didn’t know, that he didn’t know what else he could do.

God didn’t call me to be a pastor’s wife. God called me to be first and foremost His daughter—the daughter of a King who loves me and cares for me and knows the plans He has for me. Secondly, He called me to be a wife and mother, which was the desire He put in my heart soon after He called me to be His daughter. As a wife and mother, my chief responsibility is to look to the needs of my family above any other.

As Wally’s helper, my role is to be his biggest cheerleader and supporter. And for some reason, this time, this Sunday night in this conversation when Wally said he didn’t think he was going to make it, when he said he was done, I responded differently than I had in the past. In the past, my focus had been to remind him of all that I could see at First Prez and all that we knew of God’s character. But I heard such hopelessness in his voice this time, such a cry for help, a plea to not have to keep serving God as pastor at FPC Dburg.

So, I responded that if he really couldn’t keep going that there were all kinds of things he could do—he could work in a factory or a fast food place; he could drive a truck; he could teach, and I said I’d do whatever I needed to do for us to make it.

Then I said, “We could open a Bed and Breakfast.” Wally’s eyes lit up, and he said, “Yeah, let’s do that.” We spent the next couple of hours searching online for B&Bs for sale throughout the southeast, mostly near family in MS or East TN.

The next morning, Wally said he felt such a relief thinking there was something else he could do. We’d visited a B&B in Ohio in June, and loved how the couple used it as an opportunity for ministry and even gave pastors a discount. We’d felt really pampered there and the prospect of being able to provide that kind of hospitality to others gave both of us a lot of joy.

We quickly discovered that in order to make a living running a B &B, you have to get a LOT of things right. As with any real estate, location is everything. To find a place that we could afford and be able to rent the rooms out frequently enough to bring in enough income to both sustain and make a living could be a challenge. We’d want to make it nice and cater to our guests to elicit the best reviews, because reviews are everything. We’d be talking about a significant investment—probably emptying out our retirement in order to do it right, and even then, we’d probably have to borrow. Which meant one of us would probably need to work at first outside the B&B to bring in a living until we really got it going.

By the next morning, I’d texted Tiffany, my sister-in-law, and asked her to pray for us. She said she would, and put us in touch with a good friend in Chattanooga in real estate, and we set up a meeting to visit in a couple of weeks.

As I began searching for Bible teaching jobs in East TN, I came across Bethel Bible Village, and the heading “House Parents” caught my attention. As I scoped out the site, it reminded me of French Camp, MS, which I knew all about both from my college days of working at their summer camp, Camp of the Rising Son (CRS), and taking our kids there, and from our daughter Elizabeth working there in 2013 and 2014.

The first time I drove under the arch at French Camp in 1986, a feeling of coming home came over me. The quiet little campus nestled off the Natchez Trace in one of the few “dark spots” remaining in the United States—dark enough to house one of the largest observatories in the southeast—the Rainwater Observatory. God used the two summers I worked at CRS significantly in my relationship with Him, in large part because of the leadership of the camp director at the time, Margie Newman, who I came to see as a sort of spiritual mother.

In fact, in 2013, when Elizabeth drove down to interview at CRS, I’d written Margie a letter telling her Elizabeth was coming, and asking if I came with her, if we could get together for a visit. I was delighted to find she was still there and in good health and that she invited me to spend the 3-4 hours with her while Elizabeth interviewed.

So, I googled French Camp, and found they also showed an opening for house parents. I called Wally and asked what he thought about the idea. He said, “Well, you know I’ve been saying for years I’d like to eventually be closer to my parents.” We both loved the ministry of French Camp, a ministry our church had supported since before they called us. To not have to do something scary we’d never done before like open a B&B felt better. We’d both really enjoyed parenting our four kids and lamented the empty nest, so the prospect of getting to make an impact on young people appealed to both of us.

The main thing we wondered about being house parents is if it would be possible to make a home there. What about holidays and other times when we would want to have family gatherings? Would this be a place we could make a home for our own kids to come?

Since I still had Margie’s cell phone number from visiting in 2013, I tried to call her, and sent her a text asking her to call me, telling her I had questions about the house parent position. A few hours later, Wally called and asked if I’d heard back from Margie. I hadn’t and began to if maybe her number had changed, so I went back on the website. To my surprise, I found Margie listed as the HR Director, with her email address. So, I emailed her.

I wrote the following in my journal:
Nov. 1, 2016, “Oh Father. Please, please, please give Wally and me wisdom. You know we are thinking about this B & B idea. Is this what You want for us? Please show us. You know Wally wants to be used. You know our resources. You know our skills set. You know the future. What would You have us do?

…We were up until 11:30 last night thinking and talking about B&Bs and then today continuing and talking about teaching in Chatt or being houseparents, and feeling once again, as always that we do not have a home.

What a blessing it is that today I would read those sweet words in Ps. 90:1, ‘Lord, through all the generations, You have been our home.’ You are God. You are on Your throne. None of this has caught You by surprise.

v. 12 Teach us to realize the brevity of life so that we may grow in wisdom.
v.14 Oh Lord, take pity on us. Satisfy us with You unfailing love—that Wally and I may sing for joy to the end of our lives.

I Kings 19, in v. 4, where Elijah said, “I’ve had enough, Lord,” it sounds exactly like Wally. Lord, I think of the rest of that chapter, how Elijah reminded You of how he had zealously served You, and how the people were trying to kill him. For Wally, it’s not like that at all. He has faithfully served You and has seen no visible increase—though the people here have grown and we’ve had new people join—just not conversions, other than R 18 years ago. But the reality is that he can see nothing he can point to as fruit—other than when we came there was so much conflict and now I really think this is one of the most loving churches ever. But he feels like a square peg in a round hole—like what the church needs is someone who’s gifted in outreach. Lord, You know, we do not. We are empty. That’s the bottom line. Elijah was empty and felt like quitting and giving up. He’d had enough. And You revealed Yourself to him in the gentle wind. Would You reveal Yourself to Wally? And make it crystal clear what You want us to do? Just as You did to Elijah? Would You open and shut doors so there’s no doubt? And if You are leading us out, would You bring just the right person to pastor this flock?

Zechariah 4, Lord, as Z was the one who laid the foundations, in v. 10, You say not to despise small beginnings, that You delight to see the work begin…Lord, You truly have used Wally to lay a foundation of solid biblical preaching on the Good News of what Jesus has done, of prayer, of peacemaking, of loving each other. You have used him to shepherd this people. And it has been small beginnings. So, now, if You will not use Wally to complete it, that’s Your prerogative, Lord. We are simply instruments in Your hands.

Thursday, 11-3-16
James 1. Thank You, Lord, for this opportunity for great joy—for the chance You are giving Wally and me for our endurance to grow. Lord, we do need wisdom. So, we are asking You. And I thank You for Your promise that You will give it—and without rebuking us. My faith is in You alone. Not in our own or any human resources. You alone are the God of all wisdom and the Source of all resources. Help any flicker of me that doubts—any part of my unbelief…Lord, would You open a door—the door—where You want us to go? Would You have a church or school pursue Wally because of his gifts in teaching so that it would be crystal clear? Or, would You bring an influx of people here because of their desire to be fed Your Word and open doors for conversions so that it is clear that You want us to stay. We don’t know Your will, but want to know. Would You show us? Please.

Friday, 11-4-16
Oh, Father, thank You for Your Providence. That just a little while after having written the above prayer, we got a call from Bruce Hosket at FCA, and Wally and I were both able to talk to him, and now we’re going there next Thursday.

Lord, thank You for Margie, what she has meant to me all these years, how she was like a spiritual mother to me when I worked @ CRS and how she has been such a role model for me and so many others. The prospect of having her right there—as a spiritual mother again—well, You know the joy that gives me. And You know how watching the Angela Morgan story video touched a nerve for me, and reminded me of how French Camp felt like home –always—how I always wished it could be my home—but never thought it could be possible. Such a feeling of nostalgia comes over me every time I drive under that arch—like I’ve come home. And the prospect of becoming houseparents for those kids—it fits with how I’ve thought so many times about foster parenting, but have been afraid of do I have the emotional fortitude? To carry it through? And Lord, honestly, that is what scares me the most—do I have what it takes? Which is why the boys sound better to me than girls—just because I’m afraid of myself. But then, I do love ministering to young girls. Lord, You know what is best. I’m Yours, and whatever You think best.

And then there’s Wally and where he might serve. Lord, I just want to see him full of joy—excited in what he’s doing in serving You.

Sat., 11-5-16
Ps. 96 Sing to the Lord a new song. Lord, is this change—are You leading us to change to lead us to sing a new song? How I pray for Wally as he is possibly talking to Miles and Troy now. Give them wisdom and discernment in how to respond. Lord, would You prepare a man with gifts of reaching this community for Christ?

Zech. 9:16 How I praise You for how You have rescued me and how I pray Lord that You would rescue more of Your sheep and use Wally and me to play a part in those rescue efforts – that all the sheep will sparkle like jewels in a crown.

Wed., 11-9-16
Zech. 10:12 Thank You for this promise, Lord. By Your power, You will make Your people strong, and by Your authority, we will go wherever we wish. You have spoken. I think too of Wally making decisions for us to leave, to possibly go to FCA—by Your authority—there’s Your sovereignty. We will go wherever we wish—there’s our free volition to do as we please. Profound mystery. Yet both hold true.

On Thursday, Nov. 10, Wally and I left Dyersburg right after Community Bible Study and headed for French Camp, arriving there late that afternoon. We talked to Bruce for a while and then headed to Taylor Dorm, where we visited with Randy and Joy Martin, the house parents there. On Friday, Bruce took us on a walking tour of FCA and also showed us Moriah Home, the building for younger boys, which had been closed the past year and a half and he was thinking of reopening and moving some of the younger boys into.

Sat., 11-12-16
Thank You for the past couple of days at French Camp, for being around Christian brothers and sisters—people who love You and are ministering to young people and their families. How I pray for wisdom as we proceed, and that You would help us to know if this is what You want us to do, where You want us to go. If not, please make that clear. Lord, I know it is worldly to think of that building and apartment and how ugly it is. I know that You are about restoring the ruined places—both physically and in people’s lives. It’s not so much that it has to be beautiful, but just not ugly. And I never really feel like I know how to make an ugly place not—though You did help us to do that at Millsfield. And I wonder about our furniture and piano and Wally’s books. Lord, would You just show us how—what You’d want us to keep and get rid of. It’s all ultimately Yours. You could cause a fire or tornado or earthquake and cause it to be destroyed in a heartbeat. I know that the things of this world will all pass away, and it’s never safe to hold tightly to those things. My only question is how to strike that balance of a willingness to give up what we have and at the same time a desire to make our home lovely—warm—that is a place we enjoy coming to and being. Would You make it that and show us how? Would You cause Bruce and Margie and others to see it like that and to think about living there and what they would want for themselves?

John 6:27 Jesus, thank You for this verse, especially in light of my earlier prayers—that I should be concerned about perishable things, but instead I should spend my energy seeking eternal life You can give. For God the Father has given You, Lord Jesus, His seal of approval. And to give myself, to spend myself, for these kids—what a blessing. Could there be any greater?

Sun., 11-20-16
John 12:25 “Those who love their life in this world will lose it. Those who care nothing for their life in this world will find it.” Lord Jesus, how I think You for these words, even as we think of the prospect of moving to FCA and that particular dorm that really does look so dumpy right now—that may also mean losing our bedroom suite which we have come to really love—our king size bed, etc. It does make me really sad to not get to sleep in it any more. But Lord, if this is what you want for us, I know there is so much more to life than “BED.” And Jesus did not have a place to lay His head. And it’s not as if You’d be calling us to sleep on the floor or dirt. We would still have so much more than most people in the world. Help me be willing to give up my bed—to care nothing for it compared to the gains of serving You. Oh Lord Jesus, how dreadful, how terrible, that I would for a moment begin to complain about leaving my cozy home for the sake human beings.

Fri, 11-24-16
Ps. 115 Not to us—not to Wally or to me—but to You goes ALL the glory—for Your unfailing love and faithfulness. Lord, I thank You for how we’ve seen You work here. Thank You for giving me the big picture. Would You help Wally to see it too? Would You help him to reflect on how different it is now from when we first came? Lord, we hear people talk about You as an integral part of their lives. That did not happen when we first moved here.
Oh Lord, would You help them more and more to trust You—that You are their helper and shield.
v. 10 Father would You help Wally especially, as Your priest to trust You.

Mon, Nov. 28 – Fri, Dec. 2 – FCA Interview Week
FCA’s application and interview process is grueling. It has to be. The children they serve and the work they do is too critical for it not to be. The application is 28 pages, including 8 references. So, before we ever got to November 28th, between us, Wally and I had talked to close to 20 people, plus there were spouses. The fact that everyone managed to keep it confidential is almost miraculous. God so protected and cared for the flock of First Prez while He walked us through that time.

All the reference forms had to be turned in by the time we arrived. That in itself was a feat.

Providentially, I left my journal at home…

We arrived at FCA a little after 4:00 that Monday and stopped by Margie’s on our way in so she could go over the week’s schedule with us. We stayed in the guest room at Taylor Dorm, where Randy and Joy Martin are the house parents with their four children. We ate at the dining hall with Randy and the Taylor boys and then Wally visited with the guys while I visited with Joy.

Tuesday morning, we had to be at Turpin Home with the Paladino’s at 6:30 AM. Michael & Audrey are the houseparents there with their five kids. Michael surprised us by asking us to share our testimonies during devotion that morning. From there, we went to Maintenance and met with David Dennis, who happened to be one of my brother Jad’s college roommates. One night I also got to meet his wife Marla who told me how instrumental Jad had been in her life as a young believer when he coached her flag football team at State. At Maintenance, we also got to meet Erin, who is the wife of the head of Maintenance, and who grew up in Yazoo City in Second Prez and knows Marie Cato.

The days kind of run together now, but one afternoon they had us work as part of the work crew—Wally with the grounds crew and me in the Welcome Center, putting labels on loaves of bread they were getting ready to mail. They mail out over 6,000 loaves of sourdough bread that they make themselves!

We also spent time with Lance Ragsdale, the VP of Development. I knew his name sounded familiar. As soon as I saw him, I knew I knew him. Turns out he was a freshman when I began working at Hinds Community College right after I finished at State, and he came to our RUF Bible Study.

Wally had never visited the Rainwater Observatory, so he totally ate up getting to spend several hours out there with the director, Edwin Faughn. And then we had lunch one day with Bruce and Kim Hosket. Kim is Margie’s daughter, so I’d worked with her at CRS in ’86 and ’87, and with Bruce in ’87. I wasn’t super close to either of them then, but I liked what I knew of them, and I could see Wally and me being friends with them. I could see Wally and Bruce hitting it off from what I remembered of Bruce. And we also had lunch with Alex Coblentz, the pastor of French Camp Presbyterian, and got to hear his story of how he grew up in Brazil as the son of missionary kids, and how God led him and his wife to French Camp.

We had dinner with Kevin and Hannah O’Brien—he’s retired navy and is in charge of cooking all the bread and fudge in the Welcome Center and his wife is a cancer survivor and a graphic artist, and does all of FCA’s graphic design work. He gave us perhaps the most grim outlook. I think he was trying to be realistic—which was good. They mentor the Arrowoods, the houseparents of Day, which housed 15 boys, ages 6-16, who Bruce was thinking about splitting up and moving the younger ones to Moriah. Kevin shared that Sarah A. was having a really hard time with the prospect of those boys moving out—that they are like her kids. Wally and I prayed afterwards that if it wasn’t God’s will, or if He wanted us at FCA, but not split them up, or have us in some other capacity, that He would make it clear. Or that if He wanted us with the little guys, that He would make it okay with the Arrowoods.

He could not have answered more beautifully. By the time we arrived at 5:45AM on Wednesday, we learned that Bruce had already been there the night before and had talked to the Arrowoods and the boys and told them the plan. And Wally and I seemed to connect immediately with Steve and Sarah, and the boys seemed excited.

And then we got to visit Moriah—with a tape measure. And I found that our king size bed would fit. Such a kindness that God extended to me that He did not even give Himself—as He had no place to lay His head. And Bruce let us pick colors for paint. So, we got to plan where we would put where and what we would keep and what we would need to replace. Seeing there was no stove, I asked Wally to ask if we could make a donation to get a convection oven. Bruce said they would just get us one. Wally asked Bruce if we could get shelves to line three walls so that he’d have room for his books. He replied, “Done.” I asked if it might be possible for us to replace the sink with one that had a deeper and wider left side. Bruce’s reply again, “Done.”

Wednesday evening, we ate in the dining hall with Mary Jane Winter and the boys from Barrett and shared our testimonies with them afterwards. And then visited with Mary Jane and her husband Don and daughter Kate in their apartment. Don served as a pastor in Jackson, TN for 23 years, so it was encouraging to talk to someone from such a similar vocational background.

On Thursday, they had a meeting for me to attend to talk about a strategic initiative to help students develop a Christ-centered Life Plan that had been stalled because of lack of a coordinator. As they shared about the initiative and what they’d done so far and about my background and skills set, it seemed apparent that God had fitted me for the position—all the while they had been wondering where they would find someone with that skills set who would want to come to French Camp, MS.

On Friday morning, we had breakfast with the president Stuart Edwards, followed by a formal interview with him, Bruce, and Margie. They told us they like to take about a week afterwards to pray and consider before extending a call.

Getting the Call and Saying Goodbye
Saturday morning, December 3, was our annual “greening of the church.” Wally and I prayed that no one would ask us where we were all week. As He would have it, no one even came. It’s usually a dozen—or 15 or 20. This year, Wally and I were the only ones until 9:30. By 10:00, three others had come, but we were almost through. It was pretty disappointing if not confirming that our time there was done. How could we not be discouraged? Was that not symbolic of a general lack of interest in supporting the activity of our church? One of the ladies commented that the bulletin said 10:00, and there had been some confusion. Even so, only three came. I’m sure they were all busy. And everyone assumed everyone else would be there. But for us, it was pretty disheartening.

We were both praying that even though they’d said a week, that we’d hear sooner. Timing wise, we wanted to give the church at least three weeks notice, and we felt the best time to move would be the first of the year. In order for the timing to work out, we needed to let the folks at First Prez know by Sun., Dec. 11.

So, Wally began crafting a farewell letter on Monday, Dec. 5. And as we talked about it, we felt it would be better for them emotionally to read the letter and be able to digest it in the privacy of their own homes than to hear it from the pulpit, where it could be harder to take it all in. We knew there would be questions and comments and thoughts, and we wanted to give people time for all that privately before having to deal with it all publicly. We prayed we’d be able to get it in the mail by Wednesday or Thursday, at the latest, if God was indeed calling us to French Camp.

Thurs., 12-8-16
Dear Father, thank You so much for answering our prayers to hear something from FCA in an early enough time so that we could send out letters to our church family. Wally heard from Bruce yesterday around 2:00, so I went to the church, and we were able to get the letters in the mail by 3:00. And now Lord God, there is so much to do. We need to list our house and pack. Would You bring a buyer quickly so that we would not have to keep making payments on a house when we do not have sufficient income to do so?

That morning, I posted the letter on Facebook and said my first goodbyes at Community Bible Study, our last meeting of the semester. Eighteen years ago, I’d attended my first one there at Cumberland Presbyterian. As I said goodbye to so many familiar faces and shared our news, it seemed surreal, and just like yesterday that I was a newbie there.

On Wednesday, Dec. 14, I journaled about how Jan and Dana had spent basically all day Monday and Tuesday cleaning, preceded by Dawn and Dana having helped the Friday before and Susan and Martha coming to help on Tuesday too. By Tuesday evening, we had our home ready for Mark, our agent to come take pictures to make a video. And God blessed us by helping us sell so much of our stuff and helping us find a small dining table that would fit in the nook in the living room.

The next week I journaled about how Dana had been there so much helping me with packing—she, Dawn, and Lana came. We would not have been able to get it all done had it not been for them.

Mon., 12-19-16
Oh Father, it’s so hard to believe that we load the truck a week from today. I’m feeling really sad about saying goodbye. Thank You for last night with the Hamers. They had Wally, Ian and me over for dinner—started with Brie and hot apple cider followed by delicious shrimp and pasta. Then bananas Foster with homemade vanilla ice cream. Talk about feeling pampered. And they took us down to their basement and gave us some old books that were Miriam’s dad’s and Tom’s sister’s.

Thurs., 12-29-16
Oh Father, the last few days have been a blur. Thank You that You are my One constant. My Sure Foundation. My Rock. We packed the ruck Monday. Thank You for Ian’s friends who came to help. Chase, who would have come without being paid. Terran, who could only stay a couple of hours before having to go to his grandmother’s for lunch. Austin who arrived early and stayed to the end. Omar, who came at the drop of a hat as soon as Ian called, when Terran left. And thank You for the $ to pay them. And thank You for Shane coming and directing everyone in how to load the truck so that we were able to
get everything loaded.

I didn’t realize how sad I was or how inadequate I feel as we head to FC, but I was very teary as we pulled away from our street, so thankful Wally and I were riding separately. My tears were mine and not for anyone else to see. As we were between Winona and FC, I broke down and began sobbing. I tried to call Tiff, but no answer. So I called Lana. Thank You that I got her. Thank You for her prayers. Thank You that You heard. Thank You for all the people who were there to greet us when we arrived—who helped us unload the truck. It was unloaded in less than an hour. Thank You for helping me take measurements and to plan were everything would go before we got there so I could direct people. Thank You for Bruce having shelves built and the place freshly painted and the new stove put in for us.

Thank You for Kim and Bruce having us over to eat with all their family for supper and for how they all welcomed Ian. Thank You that we were able to get most of the kitchen unpacked and most of our books unpacked and on shelves. Thank You for how homey You are already helping us make it.

Is. 60 Thank You that You will be our light. Thank You for all these promises and the hope they give. How I long for that day. V. 20 Thank You that my days of mourning will come to an end. That I will be righteous. That I will possess the land forever.

Oh Lord, even now, as I am in between homes and reminded that I don’t really have a home—a permanent dwelling place on earth, it is such a comfort to read these verses and be reminded that ultimately You are my home. You will plant me in Your land to possess forever—in order to bring Yourself glory.

v. 22 The smallest family will become a thousand people—the tiniest group a mighty nation. You, the Lord, will make happen. Lord, would You do that with my family? Would You make our family a godly heritage?

On January 1, 2017, Wally preached his last sermon as pastor of First Presbyterian, Dyersburg. Our youngest, Ian, who was honored by his classmates by being voted “Mr. DHS,” was in the middle of his sophomore year in college and loved coming home to visit with his best friends. Many of our youngest son’s friends who are members of other churches worshiped with us that last Sunday.

The sweetest anointing was at the close of the service when those who wanted were invited to come forward and lay hands on us and pray as we knelt in the middle, as they sent us to this new mission field.

When we got up afterwards, I realized that no one had remained seated, but every single person had come forward to pray.

Through the hands and arms touching us and the words being uttered, it truly felt that God Himself was touching us and saying, “Go. I am sending you. I will go with you. And I will be with these, My people, as you leave.”

Shrinking from Suffering

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

Shrinking from the Suffering of Job

Oh Lord, I did not want to read Job 1 this morning. But that is where the plan had me reading. I knew what was in it. And how my heart shrinks at the thought.

Oh Lord, You have just blessed me with the most amazing birthday I could have ever imagined. 50. I think of the Syrian refugees who have no homes and of Christ who had no place to lay His head, and yet You allowed Wally and me to spend the night at the Peabody, to be pampered like a king and queen and even to feast like royalty at the Flight. And we came home to a place of such comfort—that may not be the Peabody—but for us it is just as nice—much nicer than Jesus or the Syrians had.

Job was the wealthiest man in the entire area according to v. 3, and we may be far from that, but I don’t feel like it. We don’t lack for anything. You have graciously provided for all of our needs and more of our wants than I could have ever imagined or hoped for.

Oh Lord, it brings tears to my eyes to read of Job’s children in these first verses—because I know what’s coming, and my heart shrinks from it. Seven sons and three daughters. You’ve blessed us with three sons and one daughter, and so I picture the faces and the relationships of Will, Elizabeth, Walker and Ian. And it says they would take turns feasting in each other’s homes, inviting their sisters to celebrate with them—so I’m guessing they were young adults since they had their own homes?—perhaps the daughters were teens. And when these celebrations ended Job would offer sacrifices for his children in case they had sinned in some way and cursed You in their hearts. (v5) Lord, all of this sounds so familiar, how our kids love being together and hanging out—how fun and festive it is—the laughter and loudness and stories—but how as their mom what I wonder about most is their walk with You. V. 5 says it was Job’s regular practice to offer sacrifices for them, and I think of how You’ve moved me as You’ve grown me to devote myself more and more to praying for our children and their spouses. Oh, how this strikes right to my heart.

And then, of course, is the entire conversation between You and Your and our enemy, the accuser—Satan—who accuses Job of being a fake—that Job’s devotion to You is all because of Your goodness to him. And of course, again, I know the rest of the story with Job, but I don’t know the rest of mine. Oh Lord, would You keep me faithful? Whatever Your Providence permits. I know You are good and holy and wise. Would You impress that truth so solidly on my mind and heart that I will persevere in faithfulness and worshiping You regardless of what You bring into my life?

And then, of course, Job loses everything—all of his earthly wealth wiped out in a matter of moments. No insurance. Nothing to fall back on. Everything is gone.

And then, what I and every parent fears most happens—not just the death of one child, which would have been bad enough—but all three precious daughters and all seven cherished sons. In one tragic whirlwind or tornado, they are gone. Not only are those ten lives snuffed out, but all of his interactions with them and theirs with each other—the celebrations and feastings and joys of being together are no more. He can’t go back in time and have them back. All ten gone. I cannot begin to imagine such loss.

And so he tears his robe in grief and shaves his head, and then he falls to the ground and … I would expect he falls to the ground and weeps, or falls to the ground, his heart breaking, or falls to the ground and doesn’t get up, or falls to the ground and cries himself to sleep. But instead, he falls to the ground and worships. He worships You. He doesn’t curse You. Instead, he says in v. 21 “Naked I came from my mother’s womb and naked I will depart. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. May the name of the Lord be praised.” He recognizes that ultimately You are the source of every gift and every loss, and He praises You. Oh Lord, would You give me the same grace to recognize Your hand in everything as You gave Job—to praise You regardless of what You bring into my life?

Thank You for Wally’s preaching through Job, and especially in Your Providence that You would have him preach the last chapter the same day You would have me read Job 1.

And thank You for how You have provided Your own commentary on the book of Job in James 5:11—that the two main things we see in Job are 1) the perseverance and steadfastness of Job in that he kept on praying throughout the entire book—even if they were prayers of screaming at You, he never turned away from You through very intense spiritual warfare, and 2) Your compassion and mercy. In 42:6, Job repents in dust and ashes before You, and as in so many places in Your Word, You are near to the broken and contrite of heart. You love us enough to humble us. Oh how that terrifies me. And yet, Lord, I trust You. Everything that happened to Job ultimately was so that he could really see You, as he says in v. 5 “Before I’d only heard about You, but now my eyes have seen You.” And Lord, though I haven’t been through anything like Job, the one thing I have seen is how You’ve used pain and suffering to draw me deeper in my relationship with You. I’ve come to know You better and see You more clearly in times of darkness when You are the only light I see.

And thank You so much for what Wally brought out about the happy ending—the relief it gives because You have wired into us a longing for a happy ending—a distant memory of Eden. And yet, as satisfying as the ending of Job is, it’s still not perfect. Because even though Job gets tice the wealth and his health is restored, and he even has 10 more children and even lives to see grandchildren, these are not the same 10 he lost, and certainly he still grieves the first ten. And so, that makes us yearn for the real happy ending. And we think of Christ Jesus who was truly the Innocent Sufferer—not like Job, who though righteous, was still a sinful man. And Jesus never prayed prayers screaming at You or saying things about You that weren’t true. You never abandoned Job like You turned Your face on Your own Son as He cried out to You, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?”

And how striking it is Lord, that You would reinforce how Job points forward to the truly Innocent Sufferer, Jesus Christ, by having me read in John 18:28-19:42 the same days as Job 1-2, when again and again You, Lord Jesus, stood trial before Pilate, the governor, he could find You guilty of nothing. And then, though You were innocent, that he would have you flogged with a lead-tipped whip, and then shove a crown of thorns into your head, slap You across the face, throw a robe on the open fleshly torn wounds of Your back, and then have You stoop over to bear the heavy load of the solid wood cross as You stumbled up the hill to Calvary where they hammered nails into Your hands and feet and pierced Your side with a sword. Job’s wife told him to curse God and die, but You were cursed by God and died, for as it is written in Deuteronomy 21:23 and Gal. 3:13, anyone hung on a tree is cursed by God.

Oh Jesus, once again, I am so astonished by Your love, what You endured so that I might live happily ever after. And then, how beautiful it is to get to the end of John 20 when Thomas, who at first did not believe You’d been raised from the dead, after he put his finger in Your hands and into the wound in Your side, then he finally believed You really had come back to life. And You said in v. 29, “You believe because You have seen Me. Blessed are those who believe without seeing Me.”

And that theme of seeing brings me right back to Job seeing You at the end of 42:5. And yet, what Job saw with his own eyes was all Your virtues that You described in chs. 38-39, 41. He didn’t see You physically on the earth like Thomas and Peter and John and Mary and the other disciples. And yet, in Job 19:25-27, Job said, “I know that my Redeemer lives and I will see Him with my own eyes.” Lord Jesus, as You said, blessed are those who believe without seeing. You gave Job that grace to believe without seeing, and You’ve given me that grace too. How I pray for those who are blind, that You would open their eyes to see You and Your truth.

BIBLE READING PLAN UPDATE

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

On January 1, I blogged about a Bible Reading Plan. As the year winds down, my 50th birthday approaches, and my 32nd year of walking with Christ, as I became a Christian just after my 18th birthday, I wonder how many times I’ve read through the Bible, and I honestly have no idea.

NLT

After several attempts in college that eventually played out, I know the first time was with the Discipleship Journal plan, which was really helpful because it only had 25 days each month, so it gave me times to catch up each month if I happened to miss a day.

The only thing was I didn’t always miss a day, and I didn’t like getting to day 25 and having a whole week of unassigned readings. I used M’Cheyne for awhile at Wally’s recommendation and the One Year Bible for years, and the chronological plan, then I decided to read slowly at my own pace for about three years, but I got really bogged down and never got through the Bible at all.

Which led me to starting afresh in 2015. And it has literally been the richest, most thoroughly rewarding reading through the Bible year of my life.

So, as we anticipate 2016, I thought sharing some of what I’ve learned might encourage some of you…:)

THREE NEW DISCOVERIES in 2015!!!

A few other things I have found to be vital.

  1. The New Living Translation (NLT). The link tells about the translation process, which is fascinating and gives much credibility. For years I used the NASB, the most literal. Over the years, I’ve used the NKJV, NIV, ESV. I like different things about them all. If you’ve only been using one translation, you might try a different one.

Our son Will, who has become fluent in Mandarin in the past few years has told me how fresh it is to read God’s Word in Mandarin because of the different words that are used. Since most of us can’t read Hebrew or Greek, it’s helpful to get the freshness of a new translation.

We found copies for about $5 at Amazon. On a side note, the translators were scholars representing a broad spectrum of denominations, theological perspectives, and backgrounds, but it was super cool for me to see a few names I know like Tremper Longman (who helped write one of my favorites, Bold Love, and got his PhD at Yale), Richard Pratt (who taught at Wally’s alma mater, RTS, and got his ThD at Harvard), D. A. Carson (who got his PhD from Cambridge and wrote one of my favorite books on prayer),  George Guthrie, (who teaches at Union, just down the road from us in Jackson, TN, and whose brother is Wally’s MD), and Willem VanGemeren, (who also taught Wally at RTS).

NOTE: The NLT is NOT the same as The Living Bible, which people have jokingly said “isn’t living and isn’t the Bible” because it’s a paraphrase, not a translation.

Literary Bible Reading PlanI cannot say enough about how much I LOVE this plan!!! First, one of the most frustrating things in other plans is when I’m in the middle of a narrative and caught up in the story, and then the plan says I’m supposed to stop.

Not with this plan.

This plan accommodates to the story, so it may have you reading just a few verses in one book, and two or three chapters in another.

It also accommodates to the type according to harder to read places like lineages and descriptions of building the temple or the various kinds of sacrifices by not having those sections be too long and balancing them with other passages that are easier to understand and capture interest.

Another thing I like about this plan is how often themes will show up in the different places where I’m reading.

For example, the past few days, I’ve been reading in 2 Kings 18-20 about King Hezekiah, a descendant of King David, who God says “did what was pleasing in the Lord’s sight” because he “removed the pagan shrines, smashed the sacred pillars, and cut down the Asherah poles.”

It goes on to say how “there was no one like him in all the kings of Judah…He remained faithful to the Lord in everything, and he carefully obeyed all the commands the Lord had given Moses.” But then in chapter 20, it tells about how Hezekiah became deathly ill, and the prophet Isaiah went to visit him and told him he would not recover, and then how Hezekiah responded by crying out to God for his life, and how God heard his prayers and healed him.

But then later in the same chapter, when Isaiah tells him that the Babylonians are going to come and take away the treasures of the palace and that even his own sons will be taken into exile, Hezekiah’s response is appalling:

He says, “The message you have given me from the Lord is good.” For the king was thinking, “At least there will be peace and security during my life time.” 2 Kings 20:19

Reading about how Hezekiah cared more about himself than his people, even his own sons, makes me want a better king–a king who would be willing to give his life for his people.

And how very beautiful, that as I have those thoughts heavy on my brain, I go to read in Isaiah 9 – 10 the prophesies of another King, another descendant of King David, whose government and peace will never end, “He will rule with fairness and justice from the throne of His ancestor David for all eternity. The passionate commitment of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies will make this happen!”

This kind of thing has happened ALL YEAR LONG!!

All year, I’ll be reading and will say, “Wally, listen to this! This is so cool!”

Finally, I LOVE that I was able to have this plan emailed to me daily, and can simply push play and have it read to me.

There have been a few times when I was traveling and my routine got out of whack and I got behind. I did not want to just skip those days and pick up with the day where I was–though I could have done that. I wanted to know what I missed.

All I have to do is click the link, and it plays it for me, and I can listen while I’m driving or whatever. Obviously I’m not soaking as much in as when I’m reading, but it’s better than nothing.

EXPOSE YOURSELF. On that note, I have to share something my wise wonderful husband said back in the spring when we were talking about Bible reading, and I was lamenting that sometimes I don’t really have time to meditate on God’s Word.

He said, “Don’t be so hard on yourself. Just read it and let it do its work. When you go out in the sun, you don’t have to try to let it warm you and give you light.

It just does because its the sun.

It’s the same way with God’s Word. Just read it. Expose yourself to it and let it do its work.” That is certainly consistent with Isaiah 55:10-11 and Hebrews 4:12.

2. Power of a Purple Highlighter. The third commandment says not to take the name of the Lord your God in vain. Yet, my tendency is to read God’s Word, without recognizing the weight of the reality that I am hearing His voice.

When reading about Jesus, it’s too easy to focus on His humanity and lose sight of the fact that He was also fully God.

Slowing down and reading with a purple highlighter, and highlighting every reference to God has made a significant difference in my thinking about Who I’m reading about, which has moved me to respond in prayer and praise.

And every time we read God, or the Lord, or Jesus, any words referring to Him, we should remember that this is the Sovereign Creator and Ruler of the Universe, the One Who made you and me and knows everything about us.

  • Prayer. Before Bible reading, ask the Holy Spirit to speak to you through His Word. He is the One who gave man the words to write exactly what God wanted to speak and who gives understanding to us of what God is telling us about Himself, ourselves, others, our situations, how He wants us to live and act, what He wants us to believe and do, etc. 2 Peter 1:20-21, 2 Timothy 3:16-17, 1 Corinthians 2:10-13.

    One of the prayers I pray most frequently is this: Open my eyes that I may see wonderful things in Your law. Psalm 119:18
  • Ask. What does this teach me about God? Regardless of the type of Bible literature you’re reading, history, prophecy, psalms, etc., that simple question forces you to slow down and think.

    And as soon as you see God’s character flowing through, your thoughts turn to praising God for His wisdom, sovereignty, mercy, care, faithfulness, etc. to His people.
  • Reading as communion with God. During Bible reading as mentioned above, don’t feel like, well, this is my reading time, so I’m not going to pray now. No!

    View your time in God’s Word as a time of communion with Him–that He is speaking to you and you are responding.

    When things puzzle you, tell Him: Lord, I do not understand why this person did this, and it seemed to be okay, or why You did this–it doesn’t seem consistent with Your character. I keep a prayer journal, and I write down stuff like that. Sometimes a few days later I’ll stumble across the answer. Other times not.

    But talking to God about it opens up our relationship to a deeper intimacy. He knows my questions and doubts before I think them any way, so I may as well talk to Him about them.
  • Do. And confession. James 1:22 says we should be doers of the Word, and not hearers only. Inevitably, as I’m reading, the Holy Spirit shows me where I’m neglecting to do something He wants me to do or where I’m doing something I shouldn’t–even if it’s in my thought life like thinking more about my own interests more than that of those around me. So, as I’m reading, a lot of that time is also in prayer and confession.

    Or if I’m seeing God’s goodness and wisdom, but I’ve been anxious, then I’m praying confession of how I haven’t been trusting Him and believing that He really is in control and is going to work things out for His glory and my good and for the good of those I love and care.
  • Remind yourself of the Good News. I John 1:9 is one of my favorite verses because it reminds me that God is both faithful and just.

    He is faithful to not let me go and to remind me of my sins.

    He is also just–the Judge who judges sin and all unrighteousness.

    He has judged all my sin, past, present, and future on the cross when He punished Jesus for my sins.

    And this verse promises that if I confess my sins to Him, He will not only forgive me, but will cleanse me from all unrighteousness. 

    As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us. Psalm 103:12

DHS Men’s Soccer 2015 Glory Story

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

How sweet of the Lord that though Ian graduated Friday night, the memories were not over yet! Saturday night we played Madison at 7:00 at DHS JC Sawyer Stadium to determine whether or not we would proceed to State. The last time Madison lost in their regular season, it was to “some team in West Tennessee”: Dyersburg Trojans. 2-1. March 24. Madison won 3rd place at State last year and had nine of their starters return this year.
 
But for the Dyersburg Trojans, this has been the most unlikely of soccer seasons with the most unlikely of soccer teams, and I’m reminded of how the Lord loves to take the small things and use them to display His glory. The beauty of strength in weakness. It is as beautiful and poetic as Sam being the hero in The Lord of the Rings or David vs. Goliath. God is the Best Storyteller, and the best stories are the true ones.


 
For us personally, I think of Ian Bumpas, who has loved soccer since he was three and began playing at the Y, and he was so fast and so good that people would ask us if we worked with him at home. Hahaha! One friend recalled on Facebook this past weekend that she remembered little Ian as fast as lightning, while the other kids were picking clovers in the grass.


 
Ian’s other starting senior is Andrew Collier. Ian and Andrew became friends when Ian knew he was not going to kick for DHS anymore. Ian had been through kicking camp, so he recruited Andrew to kick and began getting together with him and teaching him everything he’d learned. Such a sweet friendship between these two guys developed, and Andrew has been an AMAZING kicker for DHS. I don’t remember all the awards and titles, but I’ll just say, he turned out to be one of the finest high school kickers in the state.
 
At the beginning of the season, Andrew and Ian were our only starting seniors, so of course, our expectations were not very high for this team. And Ian hadn’t played in three years. We didn’t know what to expect.
 
But another senior earned a starting position: Malik Johnson, who had never played soccer before this year a day in his life. A football player who’ll be headed to play college football in the fall just decided to come out and give soccer a try. But he is so physical. And we have literally watched him develop foot skills and passing skills on the field before our eyes!
 
And I think of junior Yohannes Mesfin, whose parents Hirchie and Sara Schaffner, literally found him in a garbage dump in Ethiopia when they were on a mission trip to Ethiopia. They went back for him the summer before Ian’s sophomore year and adopted him. He didn’t speak a word of English, but he knew how to play soccer.
 
Then there’s Bryce Gilmore, a junior. The season had already started when we learned about this young man who had just moved to Lake County from Memphis, who’d grown up playing club soccer as keeper. Coach Greg said he was the most respectful, well-mannered young man. His family had disintegrated and he’d moved to Lake County to live with an older cousin and her husband, but Lake Co doesn’t have soccer. Thankfully, their new principal, Mrs. Decker, had just left DHS and has a strong relationship with our folks, and our boards were able to work it out legally for Bryce to play for us. Since we already had a keeper with sophomore Elliott Walden, Bryce began playing defense, and as a former keeper, he totally understands how to defend the goal to support the keeper.
 
The rest of our usual starters are sophomores and freshman!! And YET, there we were on Saturday night, undefeated in the district for the first time since 2009. #1 in the District and Regional champions. The first time that’s ever happened in the same year. And we competed Saturday night to see if we would go to proceed to the State competition.
 
And I think of our amazing coaching staff. Coach Greg Stapleton who VOLUNTEERS as coach!!! Works for BASF, presumably so he can coach soccer!! Hahaha! Then “Nuts” Bradley Greer, who also volunteers as coach, who played for the Trojans, and I think graduated in 2006, right in the middle of the season suffered a heart attack. But he was back with our guys the first chance he got. And Musa Manneh, who played professional soccer for Gambia and teaches math at DHS. He has quite the story himself. And then this year track coach Stephen Thomas who also teaches at DHS began volunteering his time as a soccer coach and had our guys warming up before the official practice could begin by running two miles a day. Each day he would pair the fastest runners with those who were not as fast, and every day the guys were paired with someone different, fostering opportunities for the guys to get to know each other which I’m convinced led to stronger relationships and ultimately greater teamwork. God has brought together a group of men who have had such a beautiful influence on our young men, who have imparted so much more than just soccer to them.
 
It has been so beautiful to see the transformation of this team in really playing together as a TEAM!!!! No hot shots or big egos or ball hogs! These guys have truly played together in a way I have never witnessed before.
 
Ian asked me some time around the middle of the season if I thought there might be any way his uncle, my brother who fixed his knee, might could ever see him play soccer. I told him I knew he’d love to, but I didn’t think it was likely since he lives in Chattanooga and is so busy with surgery, plus he’s on staff with sports teams and teaches orthopedic residents. But I asked Jad, and he said, well, maybe if they make it to State…Since it’s only about a two hour drive…
 
But, ever since then, I’d been praying that we’d make it to State. It was a stretch, but with God, I knew all things were possible.
 
Oh, the prayers I prayed!!!
 
And I know I was not alone.
 
Did other teams and their parents pray too?
 
Certainly.
 
Was it God’s will for us to go to State?
 
Before Saturday night, I didn’t know.
 
But I am SO SO SO thankful that my mom and my sister got to see Ian play Thursday night. And to hear Elizabeth Bumpas sing the national anthem. And not just any game either. The most exciting game EVER.
 
They got to see Ian’s bullet kick when he scored the first goal early in the game.
 
They got to feel the tension throughout the rest of the game after Lexington scored and we sat tied 1-1 until we went into OT.
 
They got to feel the agony of what looked like defeat after Lexington scored in the second OT half and we had less than two minutes left and they were ahead 2-1.
 
They got to feel the HOPE and EXCITEMENT and JOY when sophomore Coleman Self scored with less than two minutes left, tying it up 2-2.
 
And then the PKs…
 
For Ian, who is known for his boot or kick, and sophomore Aaron Stapleton, Coach Greg’s son, who began playing with varsity when he was in middle school, to both miss the goal on their attempts while Lexington made their first three, bringing the game to what we thought was a sure loss at that moment with the score at 5-2. Oh the agony as our hearts melted within us!!
 
But then Bryce Gilmore scored, moving us forward with 5-3.
 
And then Elliott Walden blocked Lexington’s next kick, holding them at 5!
 
And then Yohannes Mesfin scored, inching us forward to 5-4.
 
And then their keeper, Captain America, who is being heavily recruited by colleges, MISSED the GOAL. HOW in the WORLD DID THAT HAPPEN? No explanation. Divine intervention?
 
It is a great mystery how God sovereignly controls all things, and yet at the same time man freely moves about. And God uses it all ultimately for our good and for His glory.
 
And then Andrew Collier scored, tying us at 5-5!
 
And then Lexington missed again thanks to Elliott Walden!!!!!
 
Could it be?
 
Was this really happening?????
 
YES!!!!
 
Coleman Self, whose goal at the end of the second OT half kept us in the game, SCORED, and DYERSBURG WON REGIONALS!!!!


 
Through middle school at CCA, he looked forward to the day that he’d be able to play at DHS. Those dreams were shattered in August of his freshman year during football practice when he tore his ACL after having been talked into kicking for the football team, and again his sophomore year after having kicked all season of football, kicking into the end zone almost every time, when they made it to the playoffs and he tore it again at the beginning of the second half.
 
His surgeon, my brother, told him he should never play again as a third tear would require two surgeries–the first a bone graft and then six months later the surgery actually connecting the ligament to the bone, and that he’d be looking at quality of life issues for the rest of his life.
 
Ian so loved soccer, he remained a manager for the Trojans throughout high school, and I don’t think he missed a practice or a game. After we lost to Lexington last year, knocking us out of moving forward to Regionals, Ian begged us to let him make his own decision about playing. He said he understood the risks, but it was his life. We talked to my brother and agreed. And prayed for the Lord’s protection.


 
What a glorious story the Lord had written already.
 
I wrote then that if it ended there it would be beautiful, that I was praising Him and will praise Him still.
 
But my prayer was that we would win and that Ian would get to have his dream come true of my brother getting to see him play soccer.
 
Ian has told me several times that his favorite passage is Isaiah 40:28-31, which I thought was cool because I’d memorized it back when I was in college. I’ve thought about those words lately though from his perspective, and they’ve taken on a whole new meaning.
 
“Do you not know? Have you not heard? The Everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth does not become weary or tired. His understanding is inscrutable. He gives strength to the weary and to those who lack might, He increases power. Though youths grow weary and tired and vigorous young men stumble and fall, yet those who wait upon the Lord will renew their strength. They will mount up with wings like eagles. They will run and not become tired. They will walk and not become weary.”
 
After I posted this story on Facebook, many people felt that it was almost destined that we win—that this was so much like a story that we were destined to have that kind of a happy ending. And don’t we all long for happy endings?

Every Trojan on the field and in the stands wanted to see us go to State.
 
Evidently God wanted something more for us. Something more for our young men.
 
It began to hit me Sunday morning when I heard someone ask the question in a completely unrelated subject: “How do we grow the most? Through wins or losses?” He went on to say that God is interested in a lot more than our happiness—He’s interested in our growth. And He wants our relationship with Him to be real and intimate.


 
Ian told me that he told Coach Stephen and Andrew that he thought one of the reasons he missed the first PK in the Regional game is because God wanted to humble him. Wow. How many 17 year-olds have that much insight or get the opportunities to gain insight like that? As with his other loss and grief, God used that experience to draw him deeper to Himself.
 
This journey with all its life lessons and friendships have shown me that there’s so much more to soccer and sports than soccer and sports.
 
And so the season ends with glory. No, not with us traveling to State, but with the glory of a team that learned to work together and to support one another and trust each other. And to see the beauty of the little team that could.
 
And I’m so thankful that Ian got to play Trojan soccer.

Bubbles and the Enchanted Woods: A TRUE Fairy Tale

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

Long, long ago, far, far away…okay, actually, it was before the King created the Universe…He set His love on a very bad man and his wife. No one understood why the King loved the man and his wife, because they were very, very bad. They thought a lot of themselves and little of others. They were very selfish, thinking only of themselves all the time and what would make them happy, and that made them argue and fight and talk ugly and never want to share.

And the King gave them a little girl who was just like them. She cried all the time, from morning until night. And as she grew older, she kicked and screamed and hit her friends at school and scribbled on her papers and never shared her dolls or her toys. When she didn’t get her way, she would throw all her toys on the floor in her room, or run away and sulk, or sometimes she would even bite herself or pull her hair out.

But the King lavished His love on them.

He kept pouring in water and love, and it was like a great big bubble bath, and the bubbles of His love just kept growing like a vast garden in the spring. There were love bubbles everywhere. Some of the bubbles were even shaped like hearts—just for the fun of it because the King knew that a love so clean and pure would be irresistible.

And so the man and his wife, and their little girl, though they were very bad, and very selfish, they could not help but be attracted to the King’s bubble bath. And as they jumped in the bubbles, they played and laughed, giggling as the bubbles danced all around them, making music that brought a joy they had never known—a joy that began to change them. For in the bubbles, they saw the beauty of the King’s love. And as the bubbles did their work, they all began to see how their badness was like grimy slimy mud and dirt that had caked them from the inside out.

But the King’s bubbles not only washed away the filth, it began purifying them. They were like tiny magic mirrors that enabled them to see their dirt and ugliness, and the more they looked at the bubbles, the more beautiful they became, because they were lavished in the love of the King.

And as they played in the bubbles of His love, much to their surprise, they found that they began making their very own bubbles! And the more they played, the more bubbles they made. They blew bubbles at each other and laughed to see how very big they could blow them across their cheeks and hair and catch them with their palms. The man and the woman and their little girl played so much in the bubbles, that their bubbles bounced and danced right out of the windows and the roof into the streets and into their neighbors’ homes. And the more they all played in the bubbles with their friends, the more their love for the King grew.

As their little girl grew, the man and his wife began to think that one day their little girl wouldn’t be little any more. And they thought and talked about how wonderful it would be for their little girl, who was their own little princess, to be wed to a prince who also loved to frolic in the King’s bubbles just like they did.

And so, both the man and his wife, sometimes together and sometimes by themselves went to the King, and asked Him if, when their little princess, princess Elizabeth, grew up, if He might grant them their request. The King did not say anything. The love and joy that danced in His eyes let them know it was possible. But they knew from the Ancient Word the edict that His royal subjects were to keep asking to see what He would do. For He always heard, and He always answered in the best and most delightful ways for His subjects, even if they couldn’t see His answers at first.

But in another village, not so very far away lived a little prince whose parents had given him the name to reflect the beauty of the enchanted woods the King had made: Forest.

Prince Forest discovered the magic of the King’s love as he explored the thick evergreens whispering the praises of the King. And as he hiked along the river creek, he found the tiny stones mesmerizing in the beauty of how they had been formed. As he fell in love with the King there in the enchanted woods, he longed for a princess he could take there, so that together they could behold its magic, and together delight in the King who had made it all.

As Providence would have it, one day Prince Forest traveled to the village where the little girl lived. Princess Elizabeth had by this time grown into a lovely princess, so filled with the beauty of playing in the bubbles that when she sang, her voice filled the little village.

As Prince Forest entered the village, he heard the voice singing praise to the King, and he began searching earnestly throughout the village to find the lovely magical voice. The closer he came to the voice, the more he could feel his heart swelling with anticipation and joy. Could that voice belong to a princess who would join him in singing praise to the King in the enchanted woods? And so he searched and searched with great longing.

When at last he saw her, he could not move, for she was more beautiful and lovely than he’d even imagined, for she loved the King who had lavished His love on her. Bubbles danced all around her in the dazzling sunlight as she sang.

All at once, he approached her, and upon learning that she was Princess Elizabeth, he asked her to come to his home in the enchanted woods and be his wife.

Princess Elizabeth, however, knew in her heart of hearts that though the King had lavished His love on her, deep within resided an ugliness that perhaps Prince Forest and others could not see. An ugliness that the bubbles hid. She was afraid to leave the home where she felt safe and loved in spite of it all. She loved the King and she knew He loved her. She felt best just playing in His bubble bath that made her heart sing and brought joy to everyone in the village as she sang praises to the King.

But Prince Forest found that the King had filled his heart with a love so faithful and pure, that he loved Elizabeth, even if she would never be his wife.

And so Prince Forest and Princess Elizabeth became very dear friends, growing in their love for the King. And they played in the bubbles together, laughing and dancing, and sometimes Prince Forest would take Princess Elizabeth to the enchanted woods and show her the precious stones the King had made, and the more time they spent together, the more they both fell in love with the King.

And as their love for the King grew, Princess Elizabeth found that in being with Prince Forest, her love for the King grew and grew, and she began to think that perhaps her love for the King and the music she made might be even sweeter if she said yes to Prince Forest’s proposal.

And so, on a very cold winter’s day, in a place very very far away in the enchanted wood, Prince Forest bent down on one knee, and this time when he asked Princess Elizabeth to marry him, placing an exquisite sapphire ring encircled by tiny diamonds on her slender finger, before he could even get the words out, she exclaimed, “Yes!” For she knew that Prince Forest would always love the King more than he would ever love her, and that made his enchanted woods very safe.

And together they would live happily ever after…until the blessed wedding day with the King. For the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Forest was only a foreshadowing of the eternal wedding that is to come.

The Fragrant Aroma of Prayer and Candles

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

Ask anyone who knows me well, and they’ll tell you, I’m about as frugal as they come. Which is why I’ve never been one to burn candles. Which is also why it made me kind of sad to savor the small red currant candle that perfumed my friend Helen’s entire home when I visited a few years ago. I knew it was an extravagance in which I would not indulge. And I really wanted to.

When I found a red currant travel tin candle for just ten dollars several months later, I grabbed it.

But then I was reluctant to burn it… because I didn’t want to waste it.

And that is why for so long I had so many candles that were given to me as gifts that I hardly ever burned.

I didn’t want to use them up.

All that changed for me last fall.

I did not want to go to the conference where Rev. John Sartelle was preaching. I’d wanted to hear him, but I was going through a particularly painful time, and I didn’t have the liberty to talk to anyone outside our immediate family about it. As a person who is typically bubbly and friendly, and as a pastor’s wife, but who is also as transparent as the cleanest window, let’s just say, I did NOT want to go. I’d been crying most of every day to the Lord. Most of my prayers were tears. The ones that weren’t tears were mostly psalms.

John Sartelle’s sermon that Saturday morning was “Do Your Prayers Shake the Earth?” What resonated most in my heart was from Revelation 8:4, which says “The smoke of the incense, together with the prayers of the saints, went up before God from the angel’s hand.” And at the end of verse 8 in Revelation 5, it says that each of the creatures who were falling down before the Lamb “were holding golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints.”

As I meditated on the fact that our prayers, my prayers, go up to heaven and land in a golden bowl before the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ Himself, I could imagine God saying, just like I do with the red currant candle, “Mmmmmm, that smells good.” And it made me cry all the more. Tears of joy. That God loves to hear me pray. That my prayers actually smell good to Him. That they are a fragrant aroma to Him.

And then I did a Bible search on incense and found 146 references. Most have to do with burning fragrant incense before the Lord, and then verses describe a special recipe and a special altar and how the incense could only be burned by a special anointed priest.

How different that is from now! Revelation 1:6 says that Christ has “made us to be a kingdom and priests to serve His God and Father…” So, we have a responsibility to pray. It is a privilege that only we who are His priests have.

Hebrews 9:2-4a describes what it was like: “A tabernacle was set up. In its first room were the lampstand, the table and the consecrated bread; this was called the Holy Place. Behind the second curtain was a room called the Most Holy Place, which had the golden altar of incense…”

Think about the Most Holy Place. Hebrews 9:7 says, “Only the high priest entered the inner room, and that only once a year, and never without blood, which he offered for himself and for the sins the people committed in ignorance.”

BUT, when Christ came, as v. 12 says, “He did not enter by means of the blood of goats and calves: but He entered the Most Holy Place once for all by His own blood, having obtained eternal redemption.”

And then Hebrews 10:19 is the clincher: “Therefore, since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus,” and Hebrews 4:16 says we can “boldly approach the throne of grace.”

Imagine if the mayor of your city, or the governor of your state, or even the president invited you to his office and said, “What would you like me to do?” First off, I’d be a little in awe walking in. Really? You’re really asking me? And after the shock, I’d be so excited, I would make it count.

Even better than the president of the United States, as adopted children of God, through Christ He has given us access into His throne room.

And He LOVES to hear us pray! Our prayers smell good to Him. Our prayers are incense to God!

But, because we are sooooo weak, prayer is HARD WORK.

At least it is for me. My mind wanders. I get sleepy. I’m afraid to get too specific. I’m afraid to say what I really want.

But God knows.

So, here are a few things I’ve found to be helpful:

A prayer journal – writing my prayers to God helps me get specific and real and pour my heart out. I’m totally honest in these notebooks—they’re just between God and me. Every now and then, He leads me to share something with someone, but for the most part it’s pretty boring stuff that stays just between the two of us.
The Bible – praying God’s Word back to Him so enriches my devotion to Him. My husband has encouraged me in my Bible reading to always ask myself, “What does this teach me about God?” So, as I ask God that question, I pray back to Him in praise and thanksgiving what I see. And I also pray in confession sin and things that convict me from His Word.
Written prayers of others such as The Valley of Vision and A Way to Pray – sometimes I simply pray these prayers making them my own; other times they just get my thoughts going
A prayer list – helps me remember to pray for folks
And my new favorite prayer tool: a fragrant candle. Each time I start my time with the Lord, as I light a candle and smell that wonderful fragrance, I imagine Him taking in the perfume of my prayers and saying, “Mmmmmm. That smells good.” And it helps me want to pray.

Candles have now become a budgeted item. Favorite candle fragrances (so far): Frazier Fir by WoodWick, Red Currant and Island Grapefruit by Votivo, Mango Dragon Fruit by Bath & Body, Macintosh Apple by Yankee

May my prayer be set before You like incense… Psalm 141:2a

Bible Reading Plan – Day 1

 by renidbumpas@gmail.com

Today is January 1, 2015, and I’ve been planning for some time to start the new year like many with a plan to read through the Bible this year. I’ve done it before. Countless times. Much to my chagrin, often it’s been like checking off boxes, and I’ve gotten not much out of it–though my husband insists, and I agree, that it is good even when you don’t realize it just to have the daily self-discipline and to get the big picture.

But a few years ago, I determined that I’d use a chronological plan and just read at my own pace, little by little, until I finished. I made it through Genesis, Job, and most of Exodus. Most of it was fruitful. But then I went through wave upon wave of severe trial and needed to drink deeply from Psalms, Philippians, I Peter, and other passages that spoke to my need. It’s now been months since I’ve been in Exodus.

I have two goals: One is to read meditatively and prayerfully and devotionally. The other is to read through the Bible–to get the benefit of the daily self-discipline and the big picture. So often the two seem to conflict–if I begin with the assigned portion, I can easily get distracted in reading devotionally and prayerfully and not finish the assigned portion. But if my main goal is to finish the assigned portion, I can go through the motions without a clue as to what I’ve read! Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free? Thanks be to Jesus Christ our Lord, who has sent us the Helper, the Holy Spirit. O Lord, please help me!

So, I did a quick search for a Bible reading plan and scanned several on this link: http://about.esvbible.org/resources/reading/ and decided on the ESV literary plan. I liked it because it had a reading from the psalms/wisdom literature, Israel’s history, Chronicles and prophets, and New Testament. Over the years, I’ve read various translations–the NASB for accuracy, the NIV84 because it was fairly easy to understand, and the ESV because it was advertised to have the accuracy of the NASB, the readability of the NIV and the beauty of the KJV. This year, I’ve decided to use the NLT–which is even more readable than the NIV.

O Holy Spirit, open my eyes and my heart and mind that I may receive wonderful things from Your Word. Do not let me merely go through the motions. Sink Your Word in my heart.

Father, as I read the names of the people in Israel’s history in I Chronicles 1, I am struck by how different it must be for people in other parts of the world to read these same names. For me, the familiarity of the sons of Abraham in v. 28. How different it must be for those Muslims who have converted to Christianity–like those whose testimonies we’ve heard in Dispatches from the Front. And how that ancestry gives Your Word such a ring of truth. Thank You, Lord.

And then in Genesis 1, I am struck once again that this is the narrative of the beginning of the history of human beings on the earth, and it begins with You. You are eternal. Before the beginning of time–You are. You have always been. My finite brain cannot begin to comprehend Your eternal nature. Then You spoke, and the world came into being. And throughout the account, there is such beauty in the order into which You created. Separating the light from darkness on Day 1, the waters from the sky in Day 2, and the dry ground on Day 3, and then the next 3 days correspond with rulers to dominate each of those environments. Day 4 is the sun, moon and stars to rule the darkness and the light, Day 5 the birds and fish to rule the skies and waters, and Day 6, the beasts and man to rule the earth. So very beautiful, Lord.

And how I praise You that we see You as a Trinity right there in v. 26 when You say, “Let Us make man in Our image.” A rich rich verse if ever there was one. Thank You for all that You’ve taught me about that verse over the years. About the love that exists within the Trinity. The Father’s deep love for the Son–that I have a tiny glimpse of in being a parent myself in how I adore and delight in my children, and how the Father sends the Son, and the Son walks in obedience and humbles Himself and sacrifices Himself for the Love of His Bride and always lives to honor and glorify the Father, and for the Holy Spirit that enables this sweet communion to flow between the two and who opened the hearts of people, applying Your Word and giving us life. Thank You that when we see any of those activities in ourselves–loving, creating, communicating, glorifying You–they are all reflections of our being made in Your image. And even in v. 26–the dominion You give us over the earth–when human beings are endowed with gifts and skills–they are reflecting Your image, and as they beautifully develop and exercise those skills, they glorify You–even those who don’t know You do so. They can’t help it. They glorify You by their mere existence and reflection of Your holy image. No wonder in v. 31 You say You saw everything You made and behold, “It was very good.” Thank You, Lord. Thank You for opening my eyes to behold Your goodness and beauty.

Luke 1. Having just read or heard and even seen this passage depicted in the movie The Nativity, during the Christmas season, I thank You, Holy Spirit, for still giving this passage a freshness to my soul this morning. I thank You for Luke–that he was a Gentile who set out to write this book for another man–Theophilus–so he “could be certain about what he’d been taught about Christ.” (v.4) Thank You for the details You moved him to include–like the time period “when Herod was king of Judea” v. 5. And thank You for the reference to incense being burned in the Temple while the people prayed–another sweet reminder of how You view–how our prayers are before You as a sweet aroma or fragrance. (For more on our prayers as a fragrant aroma, click here.)

Thank You for how out of the ordinary the story is. It’s just so unexpected. One moment Zechariah is performing his priestly service–the next moment Gabriel the angel appears to him. This is Your doing, Lord. Z did nothing to manipulate this extraordinary supernatural vision. This is no show he put on–no hocus-pocus. He was just being faithful doing his duty. Thank You for that reminder of how You work. Help us not to seek the supernatural hocus-pocus or to try to control You, Lord. But to simply be faithful. Earlier in v 6, You give an indication of Zechariah’s and Elizabeth’s character–they were righteous in Your eyes–careful to obey all Your commandments and regulations. I can’t help but think of Jesus words: “If you love Me, you will obey My commandments.” They expressed their devotion to You not by being showy, but by faithfully obeying. Still, Zechariah was so shocked by this vision You gave him that he did not believe at first. v. 18 Thank You for that too, Lord–and how it comforts me in my weakness. That if a righteous man like Zechariah, whom You chose to parent John the Baptist, would struggle with doubt and belief, there is hope for me.:) But Your work is not hindered by his lack of faith. You fulfilled Your Word in spite of him. As v. 37 says, “For the word of the Lord will never fail.”

I find it fascinating that both Mary and Zechariah knew Your Word so well that when they broke out in song, worshiping You, their praises echo the sounds of the Psalms and the praises of Moses. And that they would both focus on Israel–that You are the God of Israel. And how lovely that Luke, a Gentile, would record that reality–seeing that You–the God of OT Israel are the One True God and that You also have made all Your people part of spiritual Israel. In both of these hymns of praise there is that literary genius of that double meaning. How beautifully exquisite–I can’t help but wonder if Zechariah or Mary were even aware of the fulness of their praise, inspired by You, Holy Spirit.

And then the beauty of vv. 78-79. Because of Your tender mercy, Lord, the morning light from heaven was about to break upon them, and how I thank You that You have caused this light to break upon the darkness of my heart, mind, and soul–to give light to those who sit in darkness–in the shadow of death–to guide us in the path of peace. And as I think today of the passing of my grandfather–from death to eternity–and of all my family–my mother, aunts, uncle, cousins–who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, how I pray that Your light would break upon them because of Your tender mercy.

Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Thank You–that as 2014 has closed and I look forward to a new year, for the wisdom in this passage–that to everything there is a season. Help me as I go through these different times, to accept each as from You, and to worship and praise You, knowing that You alone are eternal and do not change with the times.