Tuesday, March 14, 2017

God, The Provider - by Nate Payne




“Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.”     Jeremiah 33:3 (NRV)

In 1998 I took a job as the night supervisor at a rural Louisiana hospital.  Though our proximity to the interstate system provided us with the occasional medical challenge we were close enough to larger urban medical facilities that all but the must unstable trauma cases would usually divert to one of the metropolitan hospitals.  It was a wonderful work environment with a dedicated staff of locally trained nurses and physicians who embraced their role as healthcare providers to the surrounding communities.  As night supervisor I wore many hats. Extra hands when needed, staffing assignment for the day shift, transportation and transfer arrangements for incoming and outgoing patients, and procurement of any needed supplies during the dark hours when central supply was deserted.

It was one such dark Saturday night, while struggling with the next day's staffing, that my beeper sounded with an urgent call from the ER.  Glad for a diversion from the glow of the computer screen I jogged down the 2 flights of stairs and through the side door of our small emergency room to find the staff nurses hastily organizing trauma supplies in two of the rooms. The charge nurse informed me she had just received a call from the local ambulance dispatch who had two units at the scene of a houseboat fire just outside of town.  Preliminary reports from the scene indicated there were two victims with significant burns, which mandated treatment at the closest facility.  It would be our job to stabilize the victims until they could be safely transported to the appropriate specialty facility.

One of the greatest dangers for burn victims is the risk of infection often inoculated during initial treatment. Larger hospitals carry disposable packets of bedding, gowns, and equipment covers to minimize bacterial exposure during treatment of burn victims. My job would be to locate these items in the minutes before the victims arrived in our ER. I unlocked the door to the massive room filled with narrow aisles of tall shelves, knowing there was not time for the laborious process of searching the catalogue and cross referencing stock numbers to narrow the search. I hurried to the area I thought most likely to contain the items I sought, uncertain as to what they looked like or where they might be stored, eyes flitting from item to item and shelf to shelf frantically searching for something I could not envision. I remember muttering anxiously "Oh Jesus, Oh Jesus, Oh Jesus......" as I scanned aisle after aisle hopelessly, dread rising in my chest as I thought of the diminished chances for survival of the victims if we could not provide an aseptic environment for treatment. As I came to the end of an aisle I slowed and my eyes were drawn upward to the top shelf and though I could not see what was there I knew what I would find. I climbed up and grabbed three medium-sized parcels and sprinted to the ED and distributed them to a relieved staff. We used the contents of the parcels to dress three treatment areas, finishing moments before the ambulances arrived carrying three burn victims.


It was hours later that a tired staff transferred the last patient to a metropolitan burn unit, and I returned to the dreaded staffing computer and completed the forms and charges attendant with trauma treatment. My last call before signing out was to central supply to let them know what I had taken from the shelves so they could allocate the appropriate charges and restock. It was just after 7 am that a sleepy voice answered the phone. "This is the nursing supervisor, I got three packs of CBT sterile coverings from the supply room last night, please reorder and get with the ED about charges."  "Can't do it" said the voice, "We don't stock them, never have."

Lord lead me to call on you at all times that my answers be bound not by earthly constraints.

Monday, March 13, 2017

God Will Provide - by JoAnne Bush



But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you. Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.                  John 14: 26-27

Since the age of thirteen, I have played piano and later organ for my church.  As a young adult, I began directing a choir of about 25 people and was daunted by the task of assuring that the songs selected would support the pastor’s message each week.

Brother J. A. Sharp was our pastor at the time and I asked that he tell me what songs he would like to sing each week.  He quickly advised that we didn’t have to worry over it, that God has the plans and we just follow them; that I should read the scriptures of the week, pray, and not worry - God would help me select the songs.  Brother Sharp would then provide three months of planned messages and God and I would begin the task to select the music for each week. 

Using his directions, on the first Sunday, the song we sang just before the message had some of the same words that Brother Sharp used in his sermon that day.  It is hard to express in words how strongly I felt the overwhelming presence of the Holy Spirit at that moment. I experienced a physical realization that prayers were answered, and reassurance that He was with me in the work I was attempting to do, as simple as it was.

This occurred over and over as the years went by, scripture, prayer, then song selection, followed by a joyful anticipation each week to ‘see what God had done’ for our
services.  I realized with confirmation that God is in Control if we will give it all to him.

Prayer:  Father, we give thanks for the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives.

Amen.

Sunday, March 12, 2017

God is Eternal - by Jason Thornton



Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty,
Who was and is and is to come!
                          Revelation 4:8

God existed before the world began. He had to precede it all because He made it all. God will also continue to exist forever. We know this because He promises to share eternity with us (John 3:16; Romans 6:23). Eternity is completely in His command.

Eternal life is the crown that God has promised to those who love Him. It is the believer's ultimate reward. Although we presently experience some of the benefits of eternal life, we possess it on promise; some day we will receive it in its fullness. We are still waiting to enter into our future reward. At the Lord's coming, He will grant to us the fullness of eternal life.


The apostle Paul expressed a similar thought: “Finally, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to me on that Day, and not to me only but also to all who have loved His appearing” (2 Timothy 4:8). When Christ returns for the church, Christians will be granted a life of eternal righteousness. We will all receive the same crown consisting of the rewards of eternal life, righteousness, and glory.

Saturday, March 11, 2017

God Answers Prayers - by Jane Sikora



And we urge you, beloved, to admonish the idlers, encourage the fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with all of them.  See that none of you repays evil for evil, but always seek to do good to one another and to all. 16 Rejoice always,  pray without ceasing,  give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.                                   
1 Thessalonians 5: 14-18


After I retired from my career, the missions committee at church was calling me or should I say God was calling me to missions.  I had never been on a mission trip so I decided to start big and travel with our church to Uruguay.  It was a thirty-hour trip from New Orleans, to Washington DC, Argentina and finally Uruguay.  We worked on restoring the oldest Methodist church in Uruguay.  The people were wonderful and so grateful.  It became a much bigger blessing for me than the people we served.  We traveled back to that church several years until the project was complete and the congregation became very good friends with our group.  They were to dedicate the new sanctuary the Sunday we left for home.  

We arrived into the Miami airport an hour or two before the dedication service.  Our flight back to New Orleans had been cancelled and several of our team had to be home by Monday.  We decided to just stop and have a prayer for the church dedication that was happening at that moment.  I felt a warmth go through my body. This was the right thing! After our prayer one of our team went to the airlines desk and pleaded her case about needing to get home.  As she was talking a pilot from another flight into Miami came over to that counter and told us he and his crew had eight more hours left on their schedules and they would take us to New Orleans.  THIS WAS A GOD THING!  We found out the next day that the congregation in Uruguay had been praying for us at the same time that we had prayed for them.  God’s answered prayer!

Dear God, we know you answer prayers and we are so thankful for your steadfast love for us. Thank you for your Son Jesus!


Amen 

Friday, March 10, 2017

From Fear to Faith - by Ann Utterback



Do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God.
 I will strengthen you and help you:  I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.
Isiah 41:10

We all have friends from our childhood.  Sometimes we are fortunate enough to have a BEST friend, and sometimes we carry those friendships into adulthood.  I had one of those lifelong childhood best friends.  We grew up in the country, playing with our pets, riding horses, loving our farm animals, water skiing in the river and enjoying nature.  We went our different ways after high school, but we always kept in touch and we continued our love for the things we experienced in childhood.  

We both got married, she had a baby, and then things changed.  She was diagnosed with cancer when she was a young adult and mother.  She went through treatment and thought cancer was in her past.  Then it recurred and the doctors said she had a very low chance of survival.  Instead of bitterness and fear, my friend turned to her faith.  She prayed earnestly that God heal her and allow her to raise her daughter, who was only a preschooler.  She studied her Bible and believed God’s promises.  She put her faith in God and her doctors, and then she relaxed and went about her life.

My friend told me that she knew the moment God healed her.  When her doctors would tell her there were still tumors in her body, her faith would overcome her fear. She had faith that God would give her the strength to survive.

People experience fear every day:   fear that our children will be hurt, fear over finances, fear of failed relationships, and fear of death.  What are you afraid of?  The way out of fear is faith.  When you fear, you don’t believe, and when you don’t believe, you fear.  Fight fear by trusting in God’s word.

My friend exhibited an admirable faith in the face of extreme adversity.  She was a living example of fighting fear with faith.  She lived 19 years after being diagnosed with cancer, which answered her prayer that she be allowed to raise her daughter.   Two days after Christmas, my friend passed away with me by her side.  Her daughter is a senior in college and will follow her mother’s example of fighting fear with faith.

Thought for the Day

Give God’s Word first place in your heart, because it is life, health and strength for your body.

Prayer


Dear Lord, show me how to believe in you and understand what you are saying to me.  Help me to give up fear and let you replace it with faith.  Amen  

Thursday, March 9, 2017

FORGIVE - by Carolyn Clark


For if you forgive men when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.                                                 Matthew 6:14-16


If you are like me, I have many sins.  I tend to hold on to my grief, or annoyance or hatred a little too long. I have trouble letting go.  I feel justified in my anger and betrayal, and I play that record over and over.  Sometimes, I use it to stay connected to the wrong done to me.  But if I were to turn that around on myself, oh how easily I forget how I have wronged another. I forget my sins very easily. 
The word of God instructs me how to obtain forgiveness for what others have done to me and for what I have done to others, but time and again I am unwilling to put it into practice.  It is hard work to pull the thorn out, lay it down and walk away from it.  A wound cannot heal unless it is free from debris.  So, my challenge is your challenge.  You may not be able to forget or may not want to, but forgive. I am going to try for my sins cannot be forgiven otherwise.  

Peace to you.
Carolyn

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Focus on Jesus - by Mark Faircloth



To me, Easter has always been a time of mixed feelings.  Unlike Christmas, with nothing but joy and expectation, Holy week also contains angst, pain and betrayal.  After 21 centuries of telling, I wonder if some of the danger and doubt has worn smooth on Christians, because we know how the story ends.  Would I have had the same faith in my Savior if I had been with Him during that terrible time? 

If one is looking for bad guys, it’s easy to pick out the usual suspects like the Jewish leaders, Pilate, the mob at the trial.  Even His own disciples’ behavior ranged from appalling (Judas’ betrayal, Peter’s 3 denials), to lost (Thomas asking the way in John 14:5) to petty (James and John arguing over who will sit next to Jesus).  As I read the story of Holy week, it’s uncomfortably easy to find myself in the crowd, at the trial, even at the table.

It’s just as easy to find my way out of guilt, by making a Lenten promise, by paying extra attention to the Bible or making/changing a habit for 40 days.  These are excellent ways to deepen my faith and living, but are they enough?  Will they prevent me from betraying my Master?  Will they keep me awake in the garden?  Only if they lead to true change of heart and action that doesn’t stop on Easter morning.  My prayer is that my temporary focus on Jesus’ journey will be the basis of renewed deeper living for Him. 

Colossians 2: 6-7        (“…continue your lives in Him…”)
John 15:1-2                 (“…cuts off every branch that doesn’t bear fruit…”)

(“…prunes others that they may be even more fruitful…”)