Cultivating Habits of Being Grateful

Happy Monday and Happy Thanksgiving!

This season is all about gratitude.  I am so grateful for so many things.  I shared in church this morning that 5 years ago, we were looking for a church.  Friends took us to New Song.  We went looking for a church and found a family.  What a blessing that is and we are so grateful!

I watch the sun rise over the lake in the morning and my heart overflows.  What a blessing that is and we are so grateful!

All I have to do is think of our children, grandchildren and so many others we love and I tear up.  What a blessing that is and we are so grateful!

I have a heavenly Father who loves me, even with all of my dents and scratches.  What a blessing that is and we are so grateful!

There are innumerable things in my life that I am grateful for.  I pray that when you look around, that you too find innumerable blessings.  Material things don’t play a big part in it.  It is more things of the heart.

May your heart be full to overflowing and blessings be beyond counting!  Happy Thanksgiving!

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 

Cultivating Habits of Being Grateful

James Colquhoun – Source:  Food Matters

So many of us are desperate to be happy. Searching for that one thing that will fill that gap, that void, that emptiness that leaves us hungry for more. More money, more clothes, more food, more acknowledgement, more love, more time. When in reality, what we have right this moment is enough. You are enough.

The search for happiness is a truly sad and miserable one when we fail to realize that happiness is not something that we buy or work for, but something that is within our reach each and every day. Something that we should cherish, regardless of our circumstances. It all comes down to how we view our world.

The quickest way to finding true happiness, true peace and contentment, lies in the power of gratitude.

But it’s not just about being thankful for all the good in your life. To truly be grateful, you must also be thankful for the down times; the challenging times in your life.

“Cultivate the habit of being grateful for every good thing that comes to you, and to give thanks continuously. And because all things have contributed to your advancement, you should include all things in your gratitude.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

It really doesn’t take much time or effort to start cultivating a more grateful life. You just need to start. Here’s 6 ways we like to show our gratitude each day:

  1. Keep A Gratitude Journal
    It can reinforce positive thoughts, which helps to shift the brain’s natural tendency of focusing on the negatives, to remembering more of the positives.2. Make Time to Spend with People That Truly Matter the Most
    And show them how much they mean to you! Showing gratitude for others lets them know how much you value them and also makes you feel good too!

    3. A Gratitude Session
    Simply take a few minutes each day to give thanks for whatever or whoever you are grateful for. You can sit quietly, close your eyes and just think about what you’re grateful for, or find an alternative routine that works for you. This one act alone can make a huge difference.

    4. Be Courteous to Others
    Say please and thank you, and really mean it. Give way to another person, or help someone with their heavy luggage. Small random acts of kindness not only help the other person, they make you feel good.

    5. Savor the Small Things
    The simple act of slowing down long enough to enjoy the little things in life can make a huge impact to your mood! Savor the smell of your coffee a little while longer, be present when doing your daughter’s hair and really listen to her chatter. Sit down to eat lunch and really take time to enjoy what you’re eating. Give yourself daily opportunities to find little pieces of happiness and joy. They all add up!

    6. View Your Blessings as Just That, Blessings
    Rather than feeling entitled to certain things, view them as gifts that you are truly grateful for receiving. If you have shelter, food, clean drinking water, these are gifts. True blessings. Not an entitlement. It’s as simple as changing your thoughts. Change your thoughts and you’ll change your world.

    As you can see, cultivating gratitude doesn’t require drastic lifestyle changes. Simply starting with one or two of these suggestions can increase your wellbeing and happiness greatly.

 

 Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self-Control.

Happy Monday and thank you for your service to all of our veterans!

As we enter the holiday season, there are many things to think about.  I think of how very much I have to be grateful for.  Every. Single. Day.  Not as a temporary, passing thought, but deep, genuine gratitude for everything in my life.

When I saw this, I knew I wanted it for today.  In a few short paragraphs, it sums up what I want my life to look like.  Thank you Max Lucado.

Maybe we should all reassess our lives.  What are we choosing?

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

I Choose Love…
No occasion justifies hatred; no injustice warrants bitterness. I choose love. Today I will love God and what God loves.

I Choose Joy…
I will invite my God to be the God of circumstance. I will refuse the temptation to be cynical. I will refuse to see people as anything less than human beings, created by God. I will refuse to see any problem as anything less than an opportunity to see God.

I Choose Peace…
I will live forgiven. I will forgive so I may live.

I Choose Patience…
I will overlook the inconveniences of the world. Instead of cursing the one who takes my place, I’ll invite him to do so, Rather complain that the wait is to long, I will thank God for a moment to pray. Instead of clenching my fist at new assignments, I will face them with joy and courage.

I Choose Kindness…
I will be kind to the poor, for they are alone. Kind to the rich, for they are afraid. And kind to the unkind, for that is how God has treated me.

I Choose Goodness…
I will go without a dollar before I take a dishonest one. I will be overlooked before I will boast. I will confess before I accuse. I choose goodness.

I Choose Faithfulness…
Today I will keep my promises. My debtors will not regret their trust. My friends will not question my word. And my family will not question my love.

I Choose Gentleness…
Nothing is won by force. I choose to be gentle. If I raise my voice may it only be in praise. If I clench my fist, may it only be in prayer. If I make a demand, may it be only of myself.

I Choose Self-Control…
I refuse to let what will rot, rule the eternal. I choose self-control. I will be drunk only by joy. I will be impassioned only by my faith. I will be influenced only by God. I will be taught only by Christ. I choose self-control.

 Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self-Control. To these I commit my day. If I succeed, I will give thanks. If I fail, I will seek His grace. And then when this day is done, I will place my head on my pillow and rest.

-Max Lucado

How to Avoid Stress-Eating Over the Holidays

Happy Monday on a Sunday!

Time elements require me to do my email a little early this week.  I hope you don’t mind.

And here it is – November.  We all know what that means.  First – if it applies, get rid of all the candy laying around screaming your name!  Next start planning.  Thanksgiving is just around the corner and before you can blink twice, Christmas will be here!

This article has some very good points.  It is one of the busiest seasons.  Along with the stress from shopping, worrying about what to shop for or, for whatever reason, whether you are able to shop, comes the worry of who to cook for, what to cook and how much is enough!  At one point or another, I have probably experienced most of these.

I am happy to say, I have gotten away from much of that stress.  I try to focus on a whole, real food meal plan that doesn’t require me to be working constantly until time to eat.  I still shop, but I have learned IT IS NOT A COMPETITION OR A REQUIREMENT.  A gift should be something we want to give from the heart and something that makes the giver happy too.  If it becomes a nothing but a stress and a burden, how does that benefit anyone?

The most important thing I am working on is remembering that Thanksgiving and Christmas isn’t about what or how much we buy or what or how much we cook AND eat!  It is about being truly grateful for every blessing in our lives.  If you don’t think you have any, take a piece of paper and pen and start a talley.  Do you have a bed to sleep in? Food to eat?  Do you have someone who loves you?  Do you love someone?  If you are reading this, you apparently have the means to access it.  My favorite one though is do you have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ?  Not just know Him, but actually have a relationship with Him.  That one can do so much to make the others possible.  It can also carry you through so many other things!  For Christmas, where is your focus?  Is it on how many gifts you can give or get or is the celebration of the birth of our living Savior?  There is a reason there is a holiday and its name is CHRISTmas!

So the holidays are coming and not many things, other than the return of Jesus, will be stopping that.  Make the choice now of how you will spend them.  Fill them with peace, love and forgiveness.  Fill them with family and friends if you have them and if you don’t have any, go find others who don’t either.  Volunteer at a nursing home, a food pantry or soup kitchen.  BE the change you want to see in this world.

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 

How to Avoid Stress-Eating Over the Holidays

Carly Smith  – Source:  MindBodyGreen

Staying healthy during the holidays sounds nearly impossible, right? I mean, everywhere you look it’s temptation at every angle. Cookies, cakes, pies, oh my! But what if I told you that staying healthy had actually very little to do with food itself? What IF staying healthy during the holidays depended more on our stress levels and mindset than anything?

Let’s start by examining the holidays and stress levels as a whole. When we envision the holiday season, we generally think of it as a time for happiness, gift giving, a time for love and family. In actuality, it can be a very stressful time of year. In fact, according to a 2009 study, a striking 90 percent of Americans experience some sort of anxiety during the holidays. So much for it being the most wonderful time of year!

Diving a little deeper, people worry about their financial and work situations, which can become a bigger source of stress than the demands at home. Oftentimes people worry about not being able to afford the holidays or perhaps even getting laid off. People worry about the ability to take time off and the result of an increased workload. Anxiety and stress is also heightened by the pressure and demand to spend a lot of money caused by the commercialization of the season.

Switching gears and putting the holiday season aside, let’s review the relationship between stress and food. Studies show that in times of sadness, people favored eating high-fat/sweet rewarding foods and that a rise in emotional distress caused an increase in the intake of “comfort foods,” even when we were not hungry and had zero need for calories.

You see, my theory is that maintaining optimal health during the holidays may, in fact, have very little to do with food itself. Perhaps the reason is the toxic combination of an overabundance of pleasurable foods coupled with the increased amount of stress that contributes to unhealthy holidays. In fact, 56 percent of people reported that they were more likely to resort to food as a means of reducing stress during the holidays. Alcohol consumption also jumped; 30 percent said they are likely to turn to booze as a stress reducer during the season.

But then there’s one more thing: our mindset. What are we thinking and feeling when we indulge in holiday treats? Chances are if we are already overwhelmed and experiencing holiday anxiety, we are more than likely not having positive thoughts.

Your mindset about your food and what you eat is everything. In fact, according to the New York Times best-selling book E-Squared: 9 Do-It-Yourself Energy Experiments that Prove Your Thoughts Create Your Reality, author Pam Grout challenges readers to set a 72-hour deadline. During this time period, people were instructed to infuse each bite of their food with positive thoughts, envisioning each bite bringing nourishment to your body. After the 72 hours, many people found they lost 3 pounds!

And then there is the famous (and my favorite) Milkshake Study conducted by researcher Alia Crum. Crum was curious if the placebo effect elicited the same results in food labels as it did with medication. She divided people into two groups and gave each group the same milkshake (with about 300 calories total). The catch was that one group’s milkshake was labeled “sensishake” and that it was fat-free and guilt-free with only 104 calories. In contrast, the other group’s shake was labeled “indulgence” and “decadence” with a whopping 620 calories. Crum studied a hormone called ghrelin, which signals the need for food. When we are hungry, our ghrelin levels rise, causing our metabolism to drop in case we do not find food. When we eat, our ghrelin levels drop and metabolism spikes to digest the food.
The results? Participants consuming the “light” shake had significantly higher levels of ghrelin compared to those consuming the “indulgent,” shake which exhibited much lower levels of ghrelin. In fact, the “indulgent” group’s ghrelin levels dropped an impressive three times as much as the “light” group, meaning that their milkshake had left them more satisfied on a physiological level.

These studies reflect the direct relation between our thoughts and mindset and the food we eat. If we enforce negative thoughts, our bodies will respond negatively. The reverse is also true: If we enforce positive thoughts, our bodies will respond accordingly.

OK, back to the holidays, so what does this mean? The toxic combination of high stress, easily accessible indulgences, and negative emotions contribute to a decline in health during the holidays. Chances are if we are stressed out and eating an abundance of pleasurable foods, we are more than likely feeling extremely guilty, which has a direct effect on how we digest and absorb our foods. Don’t get me wrong; I’m not saying limit your stress and then eat everything in sight and it will be OK. I am pointing out the fact that perhaps our stress is driving us to eat more (particularly unhealthy) foods that are readily available this time of year. If we are less stressed, we will not feel the need to overindulge.

This holiday season, the focus needs to be on limiting stress, which starts with getting plenty of sleep. Lack of sleep is related to an increase in hunger and appetite, possibly even to obesity! Lack of sleep has also been known to stimulate cravings for high-fat, high-carbohydrate foods, and with all of the holiday treats easily accessible, it’s probably not a good combination. It is also important to remember to keep a routine exercise regimen, even if it’s moderate activity for 15 minutes a day, as this will help alleviate stress and maintain optimal health. Incorporating yoga and meditation is another wonderful way to help reduce stress and ease anxiety during the holidays.

I truly believe that if we focus on limiting our stress during the holidays, the abundance of sinful treats will not overcome our health. If we are not as stressed, we are less likely to overindulge. When we do treat ourselves, we will enjoy it and not feel guilty. If we approach the holidays with a positive mindset especially around the food we’re eating, we will be able to sustain a healthy, guilt-free holiday season.

Faith

Happy Monday!

Our Thursday DP group has just turned another corner as we finished the new Faith Essential in the in-depth study.

Isn’t it funny that no matter how often you read it or how much you believe you know, there is always something new there.

One of my favorite scriptures, since beginning this journey, is 1 Corinthians 6:19. “Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God?”

Really think about that for a minute.  It is a game changer.  Our bodies aren’t just a personal belonging to do with what we please.  Instead, they are temples of the Holy Spirit!  The Holy Spirit lives within us and whatever we do to our bodies, we do to His temple.  He planned us, long before we were conceived.  He knit us together in our mother’s womb.  God calls us to offer our bodies as a living sacrifice, “holy and pleasing to God.”

If our bodies belong to God, what are the implications of how we should live?

If we are trying to create healthy, new habits, it won’t be done by just willpower.  God wants our efforts, but He wants us to come to the end of OUR resources so we will turn to HIM!  He wants to empower us.

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” Hebrews 11: 1.

Faith is the connecting power into the spiritual realm, which links us with God and makes Him become a tangible reality to the sense perceptions of a person. Faith is the basic ingredient to begin a relationship with God.

If we believe this, doesn’t it make sense that we need to have faith, not only in our eternity with God, but in our daily lives on earth.

“That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me.”  Romans 1:12 KJV

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 The Lord’s Battle

Happy Monday!

Here we are again in a new week.  Yet another fresh start to do with what we will.

As I got some fresh fruit at the church carry in dinner, someone told me I was really strong.  The fruit was surrounded by a variety of wonderful, tempting desserts.  I responded as truthfully as I could.  I like sugar a whole lot more than sugar likes me.  If I eat it, I may enjoy it momentarily, but then my body responds with pain and that isn’t just momentary.  (By the way, it also causes me to break out in fat!)   Am I strong, well, most of the time, but sometimes, I give into the temptation and end up paying the price.  Is it worth it?  Very rarely.  Am I strong?  Yes, most of the time, but it is never by my own strength.  I am strengthened only through the power of my Lord and Savior.

Everyday, we face temptations and trials.  Everyday, we have to make the choice of where we place our faith.  Is it in ourselves or is it in the only true source of lasting strength and power?  Do we really believe God will strengthen us or do we just ask and then go about our merry way, never waiting or listening for an answer?  It’s not our battle and God is fully capable and ready to win it for us!  We just need to be willing to let Him.

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 The Lord’s Battle

The Daniel Plan

It is not by sword or spear that the Lord saves; for the battle is the Lord’s, and he will give all of you into our hands.” —1 Samuel 17:47

Teenage David overcame gigantic Goliath with a slingshot and a few stones. But before he overcame Goliath, he overcame an even bigger enemy: discouragement. First from his older brother, then from King Saul, and finally from Goliath himself. All of them said David couldn’t do it.

David persevered, not because he believed in himself, but because he believed in God. Your goals for getting healthy do not depend solely on you. Turn them over to God and let him wage the battle for you.

If you are ever feeling discouraged, think of what David was able to do with his slingshot. Picture him standing up to the people who said it couldn’t be done. Pray for courage like David’s. God will empower you as you trust in him. You will be able to say, like David, “This is the Lord’s battle.”

Food for Thought: If you have been visited by discouragement, don’t let it stand in your way. God is ready to accompany you to battle.

 

Every Part of You

Happy Monday!

There are so many things going on in the world today.  Most of what we hear about is bad.  Thanks be to God, there is more to the story.

Pastor Saeed Abedini is an Iranian American Christian pastor who was imprisoned for nearly 3 years in Iran for threatening “national security” by making Christian gatherings. On January 16, 2016, he was released from prison with 2 other American prisoners.

Pastor Andrew Brunson was released after being imprisoned for 2 years.  Brunson was imprisoned on October 7, 2016 as part of the purges that followed the failed 2016 coup attempt.

There are heroes every day, saving lives or making lives better for friends and even total strangers.  There are people who go out of their way to visit, pray for or just pass on a kind, encouraging word to someone who needs it.

These things may or may not make the headlines and may never even be known by anyone but the parties involved.  Every single act is of major importance to someone though.

There is a quote that has always really stuck with me.  “Be careful how you live. You may be the only Bible some person ever reads.” – William J. Toms

Everything we do as a believer in Jesus Christ is as important as what you say. Francis of Assisi said, “It is no use walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching.”

And another personal favorite:  “Helping one person might not change the world, but it could change the world for one person.”

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

Every Part of You

The Daniel Plan

Give yourselves completely to God—every part of you—for you are back from death and you want to be tools in the hands of God, to be used for his good purposes. —Romans 6:13 TLB

God has given us so much. He enables us to see, hear, breathe. There is darkness in our world, but there is also so much light. In Jesus’ resurrection, he has brought us back from death too, and we want to be able to give back to him with the same love that he gives to us.

We want every part of us to be a tool in his hands for good purposes.

There are so many things going on right now that are bigger than our problems. God has a much bigger picture in mind, and he wants us to be part of it. The Bible says we are “created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:10 NIV).

If we think we don’t have the strength to do good works, that’s no problem, because God wants to work his strength through us. We have the privilege of being tools in his hands.

Food for Thought: God cheers for us to move forward in the world and bring all of ourselves to him, so that we can be used as vessels to give back to the world.

Slave

Happy Monday!

I hope wherever you are that you are seeing a hint of fall, with cooler temperatures and changing colors.  Where I am, we are having “Hotumn”.  Not an awful lot of either of those things.  I take solace in the fact that when some of you will be experiencing cold and blustery, we will still, for the most part, be experiencing moderate temperatures and the blustering will only be from politicians!

In our weekly Bible study at church, we are doing “Slave” by John MacArthur.  I wasn’t too sure about this at first.  It only took one week’s study for me to change my mind though.  While some Biblical history is involved, it doesn’t take too long before our focus is brought to the real theme of the book.

We are all a slave to someone.  In this case, there isn’t a lot of gray area, it is God or Satan.  According to Webster, the definition for slave is (1) a person treated as property of another. (2) drudge.  Synonyms include:  servitude, thralldom, bondage, enslavement .

So, a slave is someone who is owned by another.  Usually, the owner would have purchased the slave.  We all know the sad history of America’s past.  It’s a part of our history that can’t be ignored, but breaks my heart to think about it.

 

On the other hand, thousands of years ago, another purchase was made.  The price paid for the people was very high.  The purchaser endured a horrific death and willingly gave His life for US.  He paid the price to save us.  What a wonderful Master we have!  That Master, of course, is Jesus Christ.

There are other types of slavery that we don’t always consider.   We can be slaves of food, with it driving our thoughts and actions in everything we do.  We can be slaves to drugs/alcohol, and, once again, all of our life is driven by that desire.  There are various other addictions that may take over our lives.  I have heard many people say they can’t change, they will always be slaves to their addiction.   On their own, they are probably correct.  It takes the almighty power of Jesus Christ to pull someone out of a self -imposed dungeon of addiction and shame.  Without that almighty power, you will usually just replace one thing with another, but Jesus Christ can pull you out of that and fill every void with His Holy Spirit!  What a Master we serve!

SO, who is your master?  Are you a slave to sin (Satan) or are you a servant to a Master who loves you and wants you to spend eternity with Him?  I find it a privilege to serve my Master and know He loves me unconditionally.  Sometimes, He rebukes me as a Father who corrects His child.  He loves me that much.

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

Relying on His Faithfulness

Happy Monday!

Sometimes life is full of bumps in the road.  Sometimes it is full of surprises. And sometimes there is sadness, all clumped together with joy.  Life changes.  Things change.

One thing that never changes though is our Lord’s faithfulness.  He is there to lift you up when you are down and, if you allow it, to give you peace, no matter what the situation.  A part of Psalm 145 says

“The Lord upholds all who fall and lifts up all who are bowed down.”  I can attest to that.  What about you?  We all fall down at some point.  But He is faithful!  He will lift you up.  Fall on Jesus.

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 Relying on His Faithfulness

The Daniel Plan

Teach me your way, Lord, that I may rely on your faithfulness. —Psalm 86:11

It’s hard sometimes to find rest for our souls. We may hit a season with tremendous challenges in it, and our hearts are naturally troubled. Yet God promises us a peace beyond our circumstances.

In Psalm 145 the psalmist says, “The Lord is trustworthy in all he promises and faithful in all he does. The Lord upholds all who fall and lifts up all who are bowed down. . . . The Lord is near to all who call on him. . . . The Lord watches over all who love him” (vv. 13-14, 18, 20).

He’s faithful no matter what our circumstances are, no matter the depths of our struggles.

Who doesn’t fall down? We all do. There’s nothing to be ashamed about. Falling down is being human. The Lord will help us stand up again if we draw near to him. He promises that he’s faithful.

Food for Thought: In the tender seasons of our lives, God is always faithful to us.

When Fear Chases Me

As I write this, I wait for the news that my sister in-law has received the ultimate promotion.  She has earned her wings and I know my brother and niece are waiting with open arms.  There is no doubt in my mind that she will be greeted with “well done, good and faithful servant”.

She has been my “sister” since I was 10 years old.  My heart is breaking for all of us left behind.  I am sad for my nephew.  He has lost his sister, his dad and now his mom.  And I know she is so very tired.

I will not be fearful though.  You see, this separation is only temporary.  We will be together again.

Hold your loved ones tight.  Tell them you love them.

Pray Unceasingly!!

In His light,

Lois

 

When Fear Chases Me

Source: Lysa TerKeurst

My eyes popped open and my heart raced when my phone buzzed at 1:00 a.m.. Good news isn’t usually delivered at that hour. I hopped out of bed and grabbed my phone.

“Mom, police have my dorm on lockdown and are running up and down the hall shouting. I don’t know what’s going on but I’m scared.”

It was from Ashley, my college freshman daughter, more than seven hours away from me.

I tried calling her but the reception was so bad neither of us could make out what the other was saying. Texting was my only option so I asked a series of questions trying to get a better handle of what was happening.

My hands were shaking. My heart was racing. And I felt intensely helpless.

When she was a little girl and cried out in the middle of the night, all I had to do was run upstairs.  I could sit on the edge of her bed and rub her back. I could let her see me. Calm her with my touch. Be there to whisper reassurances.

But now that little girl was a college girl very far from me.

I couldn’t sit on her bed and she couldn’t see me. I couldn’t calm her with my touch. I couldn’t whisper those reassurances with my voice.

All I could do was text her.  And that felt completely inadequate in light of this situation.

Scary images assaulted my mind with all the possible scenarios a completely shaken mama conjures up in moments of frightening uncertainty. I sank down to my knees and begged God to clear my head and give me the words to text that would help.

This is one of those times I was wishing God would appear in a way my eyes could see Him and give me clear step-by-step instructions written down of exactly what to do. But I couldn’t see Him. And no Spirit Finger wrote instructions on my wall. Instead, I felt this gentle nudge to pay attention to what He’d already given me that week.

A set of verses a friend texted me and that I’d passed along to another friend.

Psalm 91:1-2, “He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord, ‘He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’”

I love that these verses give us a script to say out loud, “He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.

Quickly, I texted Ashley these verses and instructed her to say this out loud over and over until she felt some relief with her fear. And you better believe I was saying it out loud over and over as well.

Isn’t it interesting the two words God is called here are refuge and fortress?

A refuge is a quick place you duck into to find shelter. A fortress is a place that is built intentionally for the purposes of exceptional security. The Hebrew word for fortress is metsudah with one of its definitions being an “inaccessible place.”

God is not just a quick refuge from the storm but He’s the place where fear no longer has access to me.  Fear can’t catch what it can no longer reach.

It’s not that bad things won’t happen to me or my kids. We live in a broken world where broken things happen every day. But as a child of God I don’t have to live with fear taunting and terrorizing me.

We still don’t know all the reasons why my daughter’s dorm was on lockdown. Thankfully she and her friends were safe and we all eventually got some sleep that night. I understand that other middle-of-the-night calls don’t turn out so well. I’ve sadly lived through those times as well.

But I’m determined to make some imperfect progress with processing fear.

I now know I can feel afraid but I don’t have to live afraid.

I can say out loud, “God, You are my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.” And then close my eyes and picture Him lifting us to a place where fear can’t catch us.

 

Righteous indignation

Happy Monday!

 

And once again, here I go down the rabbit hole.  I was reading something a few days ago and came across an article on sex trafficking.  Usually, I am a “headline” reader.  That way I can kind of keep up with what is going on without the outrage I sometimes feel when I read the entire article.

 

In this case, I read on and fueled the outrage I feel when I run across this topic.  I think we’ve all heard the various situations that feed this “business” and that isn’t what I am here to talk about.  I want to talk about my reaction.

 

As the hairs stood up on the back of my neck and the steam began to come out of my ears, God put a question in my heart.  Do I have the right to outrage?  In that same question came the answer of, that is God’s job, not mine.  Following that thought, came the words “righteous indignation”.  At that point, I’m like “ok God, I’m not sure what you are saying!”  The last thing that crossed my mind was “love”.

 

I don’t believe God is asking me to go out and feed the criminals who do these things to our children and young adults.  I do believe He wants me to show love, to everyone around me.  When someone meets me, what impression will they have?  Outrage or love?   What can I accomplish with my outrage, other than to possibly put the question in someone’s mind of whether that’s the way Christians act.  On the other hand, if I channel that outrage into love, what might that love accomplish?  Maybe hope, to someone that had none?  Maybe peace, when all they were feeling was loss?  Hopefully, a desire by them to feel that same love?  Maybe it’s time to reassess our lives, our attitudes and our faith.   So, do you feel outrage or do you show love?

 

I started trying to put all of this together and realized I didn’t really understand righteous indignation, so I called on the doctor.  Dr. Google, that is.  The following article says it all.  There are things we can do in justifiable righteous indignation that can actually help.  And above all,

 

Pray Unceasingly!!

 

In His light,

Lois

 

Righteous indignation

Question: “How can I know for sure that my anger is righteous indignation?”

Answer: We can know for sure that our anger or indignation is righteous when it is directed toward what angers God Himself. Righteous anger and indignation are justly expressed when we are confronted with sin. Good examples would be anger toward child abuse, pornography, racism, homosexual activity, abortion, and the like.

The apostle Paul gives clear warning to those who anger God: “Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God” (Galatians 5:19–21). Jesus expressed righteous anger over the sins of the people (Mark 3:1–5Matthew 21:12–13Luke 19:41–44). But His anger was directed at sinful behaviors and unmistakable injustice.

However, we are also taught to be careful in our anger, that we do not sin. “Be angry and do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and give no opportunity to the devil” (Ephesians 4:26–27). We should check our attitude as well as our motive before becoming angry with others. Paul gives us some sound advice on the appropriate approach: “Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: ‘It is mine to avenge; I will repay,’ says the Lord. On the contrary: ‘If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.’ Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:19–21).

James also gives us good instruction when it comes to righteous indignation: “Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God” (James 1:19–20). The apostle Peter echoes this advice especially for those times when we face those antagonistic toward God and the things of God: “But even if you should suffer for righteousness’ sake, you will be blessed. Have no fear of them, nor be troubled, but in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect, having a good conscience, so that, when you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ may be put to shame. For it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be God’s will, than for doing evil” (1 Peter 3:14–17).

Believers can also channel their anger into constructive action by becoming involved with Christian organizations that combat the influence of evil in society. The key is that, if our outrage results in bringing others into a loving and restorative relationship with God, it’s righteous indignation.