Saturday 14 December 2013

TURNING FIFTY!

Forty years old

The man who views the world at fifty the same as he did at twenty has wasted thirty years of his life  -  Cassius Clay aka Muhammad Ali

In a few weeks’ time I will be turning fifty years old – I will have lived on this earth for half a century.  As I reflect on the past ten years I realize how much I have grown spiritually and emotionally and how much baggage I have managed to dump on the roadside of life in the past decade.
I have started to like myself and to make friends with who I am. I am finding that I don’t really care so much anymore if I leave the house without having made my bed or done the dishes. I am developing patience and my feelings of empathy and compassion are far deeper now than they were when I turned forty.  I am really beginning to enjoy being a mother and am starting to truly appreciate the fact that I actually have the most amazing children!  They are unique and wonderful.  They make me laugh and they make me cry and they are the reason that I have such a close relationship with God – I spend hours praying for them!
I also realize how blessed I am that after 21 years of marriage my husband is still my best friend and we are still in love with each other.

A decade ago God gave me a prophesy which is being fulfilled on a daily basis.
“I began reading Exodus prior to turning forty years old.  I was filled with a sense of excitement; this was going to be the year I started to fulfil my dreams, straighten out my life, and let go of past hurts to become the person God intended.
On the morning of my birthday, I told my husband what a wonderful feeling it was to be forty years old, how I was going to release the burdens from my past and start trusting God to equip me for the future.
Shortly after I declared this, our eight-year-old daughter walked into the room.  “You know, Mommy,” she said, “God let the Israelites wander in the desert for forty years then brought them out of the desert into the Promised Land.  You are forty today”.  (Extract from God’s Promise for Families)

A few weeks ago God gave me another prophecy for the next decade, this time via Pastor Victoria Idoko.  I attended a talk she gave on “Secrets of a glorious destiny” and when she had finished speaking she started prophesying into people’s lives.  I was one of those people.
She took my hands and repeated the word ‘fulfilment’ four times.
She then prophesied that God will fulfil my expectations.

“My soul, wait thou only upon God; for my EXPECTATION is from Him.
He only is my rock and my salvation;
He is my defense; I shall not be moved.
In God is my salvation and my glory;
The rock of my strength, and my refuge, is in God
Trust in Him at all times; ye people, pour out your heart before Him;
God is a refuge for us.”   Psalm 62:5-8


My expectation for the next decade is for God to continue to show me who I am in Him.  To help me to continue growing into the woman He created me to be.
My expectation is that He will fulfill the prophecies that have been spoken over my life about being a speaker and a writer and bringing His word of healing, hope and encouragement to others.




Saturday 7 December 2013

THE END OF THE TUNNEL


Imagine yourself a silent witness to the humiliation that Jesus was subjected to before his death.  The soldiers stripped him of his clothes, put a crown of thorns upon his head and mocked him. They spat on him and took a stick and struck him again and again on the head.  Prior to this he had been slapped and hit with fists and flogged.
Now, imagine Jesus standing there and in his mind’s eye he is looking through a tunnel into the future, thousands of years into the future and he is focused on one person at the end of the tunnel.  As he stands there with spit and blood running down his face, enduring the pain of being brutally hit and mocked, all he can think about is this person at the end of the tunnel.

The person he is looking at is a murderer and an adulterator, an alcoholic, a thief and a liar, someone full of pride and envy, someone who is destroying their lives by cutting themselves, starving themselves or throwing up after every meal because they think it will make them feel better.  The person is a sadist, cannot control their temper and lashes out at people, verbally and physically.  The person has so many hidden sins it is unbelievable. The person he is thinking of doesn't even believe in God and thinks of themselves as being a decent human being.  He is concentrating so hard on this person in an effort to blot out what is happening to him and he is repeating to himself “I will endure this, I will willingly go through being nailed to a cross and being separated from my Father in heaven if it means that that person has a chance of asking for forgiveness, of being forgiven and of being able to spend eternity with God and me”.

Jesus knows that the only chance that person has of having a relationship with God is through his death and resurrection because God cannot accept a sinner into heaven and have His kingdom tainted with sin.
He knows that the only chance that person has is for him to die on the cross – to take that person’s sin upon his body, to have those sins nailed to the cross and to die for that person in the hope that that person will accept him into their lives, confess their sins and because of the blood that he shed on the cross they could be forgiven and so enter into a relationship with God.
Jesus would be the bridge between this person and God.
“Forgiveness is the divine miracle of grace. The cost to God was the Cross of Christ.  To forgive sin, while remaining a holy God, this price had to be paid.” (Oswald Chambers)

You are the person at the end of the tunnel. You are the person that Jesus looked at.  You are the person Jesus died for.
I AM THAT PERSON



“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life”.   John 3:16


Thursday 21 November 2013

LIFE, DEATH AND ANSWERED PRAYER



DANIEL KYLE 
26/09/1961 - 17/11/2013

Daniel came into our lives in the year 2007.  
We had often seen him before at church but never actually spoken to him.
We were at a church camp and Daniel was having a smoke break outside and Steve happened to be standing alongside him.  They started talking and during the course of the conversation Daniel told him that he was far lonelier in the church than he had ever been whilst living on the streets.  Yet, he would later acknowledge, how within the church body, God blessed him.  The church needed him and he needed the church.
Steve invited him to come have supper with us and to do a Bible study after supper.
The following Wednesday Daniel arrived and for the next 5 years (apart from school holidays or when we were away) Daniel came and had supper with us every 2nd Wednesday of the month until he married Cheryl.

Daniel longed to have someone to love and to share his life with, so for five years we prayed for God to fulfill the desire of Daniel’s heart and God did.  He brought Cheryl into Daniel’s life.  One of the happiest days of our lives was when we witnessed the two of them getting married in our church.

Daniel became a part of our family.  He loved my mom and was very fond of my brother Paul.  They accepted him and treated him as a member of the family and this meant the world to Daniel.

At the supper table Daniel would tell us stories about his life and we and the girls would listen with fascination as he told us what it had been like growing up as an orphan in foster homes, Marsh Memorial Home and St Johns Home. He had spent many years living on the streets and moving from town to town and the sharing of his story of this time exposed us to a way of life that we knew nothing about. He once said to us that apart from a Christmas meal at our minister’s house, we were the first family he had ever eaten a meal with – a mother, father and children all sitting around a table together eating and talking. He was 46 years old.

He brought a new depth into our lives and we started to see the world from a different perspective.  He had compassion for those less fortunate than him and he was an incredibly generous person. I will never view beggars in the same light again after having a conversation with him one night.  I had shared how I did not know how to react to the beggars on the road especially the ones that swamped the car as soon as it stopped at a red traffic light.  We have always been told not to give food or money as this just enables folks to stay on the street and the money is often used for substances that are detrimental to them.  Daniel told me that the only thing I had to do was give them their dignity.  I had to acknowledge them as people, make eye contact, smile and ask them how they were doing.  I have found that about 85% of the folks I greet in this manner always respond positively and with great surprise. 

Daniel had a lovely sense of humor and the gift of being able to laugh at himself.  He challenged us to think about and accept people from his background and with his condition and struggles.
Daniel loved writing!  In fact he wrote copious notes.  He loved and worshiped and feared God.  He was not afraid to question God or get upset with Him and often felt deeply disappointed by God.  But through all his fears and doubts he knew that God did love him and care for him and on the 3rd July this year, a few months before he died, he wrote the following in a piece entitled DO YOU KNOW YOUR GOD?

“Why trust in the gold and riches of today, while tomorrow it may be gone?  Why spend your time and wealth on food that does not satisfy the soul?  But rather feed on wisdom, that fills your appetite for truth and life into Eternity, where there is no death nor sorrow nor pain!  For life thrives on the unity of truth, grace, mercy and love for one to another.”

We will miss you Daniel.
"A friend loves at all times"       Proverbs 17:17

Friday 15 November 2013

PARENTING - A THANKLESS JOB!


This morning after I had dropped my children off at school the thought crossed my mind that “sometimes it is quite a thankless job being a parent”.  God immediately replied “Tell me about it Noel. I totally agree with you! You didn’t even greet me when you woke up this morning and it has been quite a while since you have taken the time to just sit and look at the wonderful world I created for you, never mind thank me for it.  You take a lot of things for granted, my child”.

As I reflected on this I realized that God must sometimes feel exactly the same way about my attitude as I do about my children’s attitude.  He must look down at me and think “My child, why are you so thankless”.
We provide a home for our children, work hard to feed and clothe them and give them a good education.  We love them and care for them and yet at times we feel discouraged when it seems that everything we do is just taken for granted and there is little sense of appreciation of what they have.  Can you just imagine how God must feel?  He gave His only Son to die a horrific death on the cross so that we could have fullness of life here on earth and eternal life with Him and yet how often do we just take that for granted?
We grumble and complain that we don’t have this or that.  We constantly ask God to bless us and help us and give Him a list of demands of our ‘needs’ and then get upset when those ‘needs’ are not met in the way we want them to be.
God disciplines us because He cares for us and does not want any harm to befall us and yet we rebel against Him because we want to live our own lives.  We don’t want to have to love and care for everybody.  We don’t want to have to practice self-control and not swear at the taxi driver who is blatantly breaking the law and driving dangerously.  We don’t have ‘time’ to pray and meditate on God’s word on a daily basis.

That last ‘we don’t’ brought me up short as I realized that my children must feel exactly the same way about me as God does at times.  I often don’t have ‘time’ for them.  I am so busy working, cleaning, lifting, cooking and doing a myriad of things that are actually not that important that I don’t have time to just ‘be’ with them.  The two most common sentences that they hear me utter are “not now, I am busy” and “I am so tired”.  Basically time is all we have and we can either use it well or waste it.

“I tell you, now is the time of God’s favour, now is the day of salvation”.
(2 Corinthians 6:2)


 "There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven" (Ecclesiastes 3:1)





Friday 11 October 2013

'LET DOWN' BY GOD


 
There have been two times in my life when I felt God had let me down so badly that I didn’t want anything more to do with Him.

The first time God ‘let me down’ I was twelve years old. My parents got divorced.  I decided then, that I did not want anything more to do with a God that could not ‘keep’ my parents together no matter how hard I prayed.  I turned my back on God until I was in my mid-twenties.  It was only as I grew older that I realized that their divorce had nothing to do with Him.   In Malachi 2:16 the Lord says “I hate divorce”.  The decision to get divorced was made entirely by my parents and God had no hand in it!

The second time God ‘let me down’ I was forty-three years old.  From as far back as I can remember I had always wanted to be a writer and I finally completed my first book when I was 43 years old. I believed  the promise God  made to us in Psalm 37  “Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart.  Commit your way to the Lord, trust in Him and He will do this”.
The title of the book is God's Promise for Families.
 
One of the main desires of my heart is to write.
Someone had prophesied over my life that God would give me the desire of my heart and a verse given in confirmation of this prophesy is found in Jeremiah 30:2 “This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says:  ‘Write in a book all the words I have spoken to you’”.

I had covered all the bases – I had prayed about the book, someone had confirmed it with a prophesy which was then followed up by a scripture verse and the book itself is very scripturally based.  In fact a friend of mine who read the manuscript before I submitted it for publication had this to say “Actually, Noel, it would be a very good book if only it didn’t have so many scripture verses in it!”
I truly believed and had absolute faith that the book would be accepted for publication.  I posted it off to three publishers – two of them never bothered to reply and the third one sent me a politely worded rejection letter.  To say I was devastated is an understatement.

I was totally shattered and my faith and trust in God’s faithfulness was shaken.  I spent days crying and weeks asking God why my book had been rejected.
After a period of time I started working on the manuscript again.  I rewrote quite a few things and added some other things.  I spent a lot of time in prayer and reading the Gospel.

Six years later I submitted the book to a partner publisher in America and they accepted it.
I know now that if my book had been accepted first time round it would have been one of the worst things that could have happened to me and my family.  I would have taken all the credit and become insufferably proud.  I would not have been able to cope with the public speaking that goes hand in hand with advertising a book.  There was still a lot more healing that had to take place in my life and issues from my past that needed to be dealt with before my story was made public. I needed those years to grow in Him, to learn to rely solely on Him and to trust Him in all things.  I needed that time to realize that God’s timing is always perfect and that He will not allow anything to happen to us – whether good or bad – until the time is right and He has equipped us to deal with the situation. 
 
I can now fully agree with Jean Ingelow who said "I have lived to thank God that all my prayers have NOT been answered!"


 

 

Saturday 21 September 2013

QUESTIONS AND RAINBOWS!


 
This blog is dedicated to the two Emmas in my life.  Emma Jane Curry and Emma Blencowe – my prayer for the two of you is, that no matter what life throws at you, you will continue to grow in the knowledge that God wants beautiful things for you.
 
“It was a cold, stormy day.  The children and I were driving to the dentist.  We witnessed the clouds clear and the most magnificent rainbow appeared.  Our four-year-old daughter had been given a book about Noah and we read it daily.  Thinking this was a wonderful opportunity to illustrate the story of Noah, I asked her why God sent the rainbow.  After a moment of silence, she said, “Cause God wants us to have beautiful things to look at!”

Even though it was not quite the answer I was looking for, it is wonderful to know she is growing up in the knowledge God wants beautiful things for her.”1
 
 
This same daughter, Emma Jane, is now eleven years old and has been asking the following question repeatedly for the past few months “If God knows everything that is going to happen in the future WHY did He create the world and make us, knowing that we would sin and destroy the world He gave us?”
Up until yesterday I have not been able to give her an answer with any real conviction because, truth be told, it is a question I have struggled with most of my life!  I have always told her that God made the human race because He wants to have a relationship with us but that does not answer the question of ‘why would He do that?  Why would He give us freedom of choice when He knew that we would turn our backs on Him and destroy the world?’
We were driving along the coast and had just been admiring a beautiful rainbow when Emma Jane said, with awe in her voice, “Wow, mom, isn’t God wonderful!” and then it struck me – that is the reason why we were born – God made us so that we could experience joy and wonder and reverence for Him and His creation.  If we didn’t have freedom of choice we would not be able to experience any emotions – we would be robotic creatures unable to form a relationship with God and to interact with Him.
God knew we would destroy the earth but He would still have created it even if only a small percentage of the human race over all the ages chose to follow Him.  He confirmed this when He sent Jesus to die on the cross “for God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).
He knew long before He created the world that we would sin but His desire to have fellowship with us, His longing for us to experience the beauty that He could provide us with and the fact that He wants us to spend eternity with Him in heaven was worth it.
“The entire human race was created to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.   Sin has diverted the human race onto another course, but it has not altered God’s purpose to the slightest degree. And when we are born again we are brought into the realization of God’s great purpose for the human race,  namely, that He created us for Himself.  This realization of our election by God is the most joyful on earth, and we must learn to rely on this tremendous creative purpose of God”.2  
We are made in God's image "and therefore share many of His characteristics and emotions.  Knowing this provides the basis for self-worth.  Self-worth is not defined by possessions, achievements, physical attractiveness, or public acclaim.  Self-worth is knowing that God created us in His likeness.  Criticizing or downgrading ourselves is criticizing what God has made.  Because we are like God we can feel positive about ourselves and our abilities.  Knowing that you are a person of infinite worth gives you the freedom to love God, know Him personally, and make a valuable contribution to those around you".3
 
1.  Extract from God's Promise for Families, Noelene Curry
2.  My Utmost for His Highest, Oswald Chambers
3.  Life Application Bible, Study notes
 
 
 

Saturday 7 September 2013

POVERTY & LOVE

A couple of months ago I attended a service in a really quaint church in a small town known as Bathurst in the Eastern Cape.  The minister entered the church wearing black flowing robes and he had a snow white beard.  He took his place behind the lectern and his opening words were “I better introduce myself.  I am Father Abraham and if you are here for the Christmas day service you can meet Father Christmas!”

The minister was my dad Ray Lutge, who in fact had been ministering in the Bathurst church for many years, but had been on a month’s bush camping holiday with my brother in Namibia and had decided not to shave!

His sermon that morning was on the gifts of the Spirit and I was amazed to find out that there are in fact 27 Spiritual gifts noted in the Bible.
They are prophecy, service, teaching, exhortation, giving, leadership, mercy, wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, miracles, discerning of spirits, tongues, interpretation, apostleship, helps, administration, evangelist, pastoral, celibacy, voluntary poverty, martyrdom, hospitality, missionary, intercession and exorcism.
I have to laugh sometimes at how practical our God can be.  Here we have all these lovely ‘spiritual’ gifts and in there somewhere is this amazingly practical gift of administration!

Romans 12 says “Just as there are many parts to our bodies, so it is with Christ’s body.  We are all parts of it, and it takes every one of us to make it complete, for we each have different work to do. So we belong to each other, and each needs all the others.  God has given each of us the ability to do certain things well”1.
If you look at the list of gifts there are some there that each one of us should be practicing.

The gift of giving, the gift of mercy, the gift of helps and the gift of hospitality are all gifts that we are capable of exercising.

The gift I found very interesting was voluntary poverty.  “It is the special ability that God gives to certain members of the Body of Christ to renounce material comfort and luxury and adopt a personal life-style equivalent to those living at the poverty level in a given society in order to serve God more effectively”. 
Well, Mother Teresa was certainly given that gift in abundance. She founded the Missionaries of Charity ministry in Calcutta and for 50 years she lived and worked amongst the poorest of the poor. She cared for orphans, AIDS patients, lepers, tuberculosis victims and many more in need.

God was speaking about material poverty and yet how many of us live in absolute poverty spiritually and emotionally. This kind of poverty is something that we have control of and it is in our power to change.

Even though, on a daily basis, Mother Teresa saw people starving with hunger she could still say the following:

“We think sometimes that poverty is only being hungry, naked and homeless.  The poverty of being unwanted, unloved and uncared for is the greatest poverty.  We must start in our homes to remedy this kind of poverty.  Being unwanted, unloved, uncared for, forgotten by everybody, I think that is a much greater hunger, a much greater poverty than the person who has nothing to eat”

Each one of us is capable of doing something about this kind of poverty – all it takes is love.
 
 
 
1  Life Application Bible

 

Friday 16 August 2013

WHO IS GOD TO US?


Empathy is defined as “your pain in my heart”.  How do we develop empathy if we never experience pain or hurt, sickness or the loss of a loved one, either through death or the ending of a relationship?

Oswald Chambers writes “Suffering either gives me to myself or it destroys me.  The only way to find yourself is in the fires of sorrow.  Why it should be this way is immaterial.  The fact is that it is true in the Scriptures and in human experience.  You can always know that you can go to him, who has suffered, in your moment of trouble and find that he has plenty of time for you.  But if a person has not been through the fires of sorrow, he is apt to be contemptuous, having no respect or time for you, only turning you away.  If you receive yourself in the fires of sorrow God will make you nourishment for other people".

My sister once wrote me a letter and this is what she said "I think we are blessed in a wonderfully paradoxical way, because our capacity - huge capacity - for healing has been carved and hollowed out through out experiences of pain and feelings of rejection, feelings of never quite being good enough, through our failures, through our unmet expectations, and disappointments with ourselves and others - suffering is so intimately connected to wholeness.  Perhaps wisdom is simply a matter of waiting and healing a question of time"

It has been through my times of pain and sorrow that I have grown the most as a person.
It is also during those times that I have actively sought God and prayed the most!

Nick Vujicic, a man born without arms or legs has this to say:  I love how God lets us go through difficult challenges to help each other and encourage one another.  The challenges in our lives are there to strengthen our convictions.  They are not there to run us over”.

A man who I never met, put into words what God ‘is’ and those words have had a major impact on my life and my relationship with God.  His name was Andre le Roux and he was a Methodist minister.  He wrote a letter on the 26/05/2010 after being given the news that despite the chemotherapy treatment he had been undergoing, the cancer in his body was continuing to grow and spread.  Below is a portion of that letter:

"Now, more than ever, we are left with a miracle as the only option for healing.  We hold onto that hope, though will need to find, and own, a new hope too - one that is not dependent on the cancer being taken away, but on being carried through this disease, and if necessary through the valley of the shadow of death.  It is not about what God can do for us, but about who God is to us.  And the God I believe in is not the magic genie god who jumps out of our "prayer lamps" to grant us our 3 wishes (though at times God does that for us).  I believe in a God who is with us in all things: carrying, guiding and challenging.  However, at this time, that picture needs strengthening and deepening in me - it needs a new depth that I have not needed before.  I am determined to find it.  God cannot be the "fix it" only God - that would make a mockery of everything that Jesus stood for. In the end, the incarnation is about God being with us.  I hope to find that in a way that sustains me along this road.  Never having been there before makes it a new journey for me - one that may prove lonely at times, no doubt frustrating and confusing at others, but there will also be the special moments that come from seeing the world through new eyes opened by the discoveries I make along the way." 
Andre died on 13/07/2010, 48 days after penning this letter.

Jesus died upon a cross in order to be able to “feel our pain in His heart”.

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday 6 August 2013

A GOD ORDAINED APPOINTMENT!



 
There is no such thing as a co-incidence in a believer’s life.  In Psalm 139:16 it says “All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be”.

God knows that sometimes we need to meet certain people and He arranges what I call “God ordained appointments”.  On a recent holiday to Port Alfred my youngest daughter and I had one such meeting.  We were travelling to meet my sister who was also staying in Port Alfred and as we left our holiday home the car started to make a noise.  It sounded like a stick or stone had got trapped between the wheel and the underside of the vehicle.  I stopped and checked underneath the car but could see nothing.

As we continued to drive the noise became worse. It was a screeching sound that got louder and louder until eventually we could hardly hear each other. I stopped the car again, got out, walked around it and prayed.  I phoned my sister to tell her we were going to be late.  I knew there was a garage workshop about a kilometer away and thought I would try and drive there slowly.

I got back into the car, started it and there wasn’t a sound. We drove off slowly and the silence was such a relief after the noise.  I decided to call on at the garage anyway as we had a ten hour drive back to Cape Town the day after.  We  arrived at the garage only to discover that it was closed. Standing in front of the locked gates was an elderly gentleman who looked like he had been waiting for us.  He walked towards us and told us that the workshop didn't open on Saturdays.  I asked him if he knew of any other garages and he said “yes, follow me”.  He got into a car parked nearby and drove off.  I followed him and we eventually drove into the parking lot of a business area and standing outside an open workshop roller door was a gentleman who later introduced himself as Chris Nell the owner of “Spannerworx”, Automative Maintenance.  My elderly gentleman spoke to Chris through the window of his car, told him my car needed looking at and drove off before I could thank him.  I said to Chris “that was a really nice guy”.  His reply “I have never seen him before”.  I knew that he had been an angel, just waiting for me to arrive so he could show me the way to Chris!  “For He will command His angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways” (Psalm 91:11).

Chris then informed me that his workshop was also closed on Saturdays and that he had just popped in to collect something and was on his way out.  I explained what had happened and told him that after praying for the car the noise had disappeared but I thought it would be best to have it checked.  He looked at me strangely then told me to drive the car into the workshop.  He hoisted it up and gave the wheels and underbody a thorough check and then took it for a test drive.  There was nothing wrong with it.

When he got back he refused any payment so we gave him one of the pancakes we had bought to take to my sister! He then shared with us his amazing testimony.  He had gone to a Mighty Men of God conference led by Angus Buchan (if you want to know more about this amazing man click on http://www.shalomtrust.co.za/) and his life had taken on a new meaning.  He showed us a photograph he had taken at the conference of a cloud in the shape of a cross that stayed still above the place where they were worshipping even though the clouds around it were constantly moving and changing shape as the wind blew. He shared with us how he had lost his job and had started his own business doing automotive maintenance from a small garage.  The business grew and within 2 years he was able to move to bigger premises.
 
OLD PREMISES
NEW PREMISES
How he was celebrating over 20 years of marriage that same day (cannot remember the exact number of years) and how thankful he was to God for his wife and his 2 sons.  He shared that he was relatively new at this relationship business with God but he had a burning desire to tell people about “His Father” and shared with us what God had been doing in his life.

I was going through one of those times when God seemed distant and God knew that I needed to hear a stranger’s testimony.  A stranger telling me about how great our God was and how much He cares for each of us individually and how intimately He is involved in our lives.

I needed the reminder that He has provided His angels to guide us and guard us (my elderly gentleman who led me to Chris) and that He loves us.

Four days later my mom died.  On the day she died I had the privilege to sit beside her for many hours before she went to be with our Lord and during that time I thought back to my meeting with Chris and how, through his witness, my faith and my hope in my God was renewed and strengthened.

Hebrews 3:13 “..encourage one another daily”.

Thank you Chris, for your encouragement and for checking my car out!

 

 

Sunday 21 July 2013

DYING TO LIVE


 
My mom always told me that she believed death would be glorious and that it would be an amazing experience to enter heaven and hear Jesus say "welcome home".

Ten days ago she heard Him say those words to her in person.

My mom had not been well for a while and had been moved to the Frail Care Centre at the Retirement Home she had been living in for the past 2 years.  My sister and I popped in for a visit on Thursday morning the 11th July and knew immediately that she was dying.  She acknowledged us with a smile and after about an hour of us being there she looked around the room at my sister, myself and 2 nurse aides who were also in the room at the time and very clearly said “I love you all very much”. After that she started to drift in and out of sleep.

My husband went to fetch our three girls from home (it was school holidays) and brought them to her room.  What an amazing time that was.  Our retired minister, Bill and his wife Mary, were also there and we stood and listened and watched as these 3 girls sat on her bed, holding her hands and speaking about the memories that she had made with them - ’remember the time Ouma when…’  or ‘it was so much fun Ouma when we went to…..’

There was a lot of laughter especially when one of our daughters looked around the room at all the people present and said “Well, ouma, you certainly are getting a really good send off” and then added “and you are leaving the world well populated”.  My mom loved just being with her grandchildren and listening to them talk and she often repeated to other family members and friends things they had said.  I could just imagine her saying to Jesus later "and did You hear that wonderful comment about me having a "really good send off"!?

Each girl then said goodbye.  They hugged and kissed her, told her that they loved her and would miss her.

Bill read a scripture to her and prayed and we could see that she was aware of what was happening around her.  Everyone left and it was just my sister and I in the room with her until my brother arrived from Namibia at 4.30.  He had caught the 1:00 o’clock flight from Walvis Bay to Cape Town.

As he sat down beside her and took her hand she opened her eyes and spoke to him.  We could not make out the words she was saying but knew that she recognized him  and was at peace that he was there with her.
After that she did not open her eyes again.  The three of us stayed with her.  Every now and again one of us would pray or read a Psalm or just talk quietly.  There was an incredible sense of peace in the room .  My mom died at 6.40 that evening and about 10 minutes before her spirit left her body my brother knelt on the floor took her in his arms and committed her to the Lord giving thanks for her life.

The sms message that I sent to family and friends a little while afterwards simply stated “my mom is in His Presence” because that is exactly where she was.  At home with her Lord, hearing Him say “welcome home, my child”.

My mother believed totally and absolutely in the words that Jesus had spoken whilst He was here on earth “I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes Him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.  I tell you the truth, a time is coming and has now come when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and those who hear will live” (John 5:24 & 25).  My mom is alive with Christ.

Trevor Hudson once said “...if our deepest confidence is in the God who raised Jesus from the dead, then our sadness will not be trapped in hopelessness and despair.  We will be able to grieve with hope”.
 
I want to end with the words that one of her grandsons wrote about her:
"Don't despair at the ending  of life, rejoice at a life well lived and enjoyed.  A life that touched others, that helped nurture others and that helped change the world, even in a small way."

 

 

 

Saturday 15 June 2013

GOD HAS FORGOTTEN


Why is it that most of us find it almost impossible to forgive ourselves and to forget the shame of our pasts and yet, with the same breath, we acknowledge that we believe that “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness”?1

Isn’t that incredibly hypocritical of us?  Doesn’t that show a major lack of faith on our behalf? God says He forgives our sins and “will remember our sins no more”2 and yet we say we cannot forgive ourselves.  How insincere is it of us then to tell other people about this amazing God when we don’t believe a word of what He says ourselves. What right do we have to call ourselves believers in Christ when we are invalidating the very essence of the Christian gospel message by refusing to forgive ourselves?

God “gave you a share in the very life of Christ, for He forgave all your sins, and blotted out the charges proved against you, the list of His commandments which you had not obeyed.  He took this list of sins and destroyed it by nailing it to Christ’s cross.  In this way God took away Satan’s power to accuse you of sin, and God openly displayed to the whole world Christ’s triumph at the cross where your sins were all taken away”.3

Do I have faith in what Jesus Christ has done?  “When I turn to God and by belief accept what God has done, the miraculous atonement by the Cross of Christ instantly places me into a right relationship with God.  And as a result of the supernatural miracle of God’s grace I stand justified, not because I am sorry for my sin, or because I have repented, but because of what Jesus has done”4
If I continually feel guilty about the sins I have committed, ashamed about the things I have done, upset about the hurt I may have caused others even after I have asked God to forgive me and made restitution where possible, what kind of witness am I for God?  If I am trapped in the sins of the past how do I explain to someone that once they accept Christ as their Saviour they will be set free from sin, the benefits they will reap leads to holiness and the end result is eternal life.5
We need to ask, as the apostles did, Lord “increase our faith”,6 and then start living in God’s grace.  “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not by works, so that no one can boast.”7

Once a woman who thought she was having visions from God went to the bishop for advice.  He told her that the next time God appeared to her she was to perform a test by which to know that it really was God. She was to ask God what the personal and private sins of the bishop were.  A month later she was back and she told the bishop she had done what he had asked.
God had replied “Go tell the bishop that I’ve forgotten all his sins”.8

1 1 John 1:9,  The Holy Bible, NIV
2  Hebrews 8:12, The Holy Bible, NIV
3 Colossians 2:13 – 15, Life Application Bible
4 Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest, October 28th
5 Romans 6 (paraphrased), The Holy Bible, NIV
6 Luke 17:5, The Holy Bible, NIV
7 Ephesians 2:8 – 9
8 Methods and Practices of Anthony de Mello, Praying Body and Soul

 

 

Friday 7 June 2013

FEELING LIKE A FRAUD!


There are times when I feel like an absolute fraud as a Christian.  In the dictionary a Christian is defined as “a person who believes in and follows Jesus Christ” and someone who “possesses Christian virtues”.

Virtues are the same as the fruits of the Spirit spoken about in the Bible – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.1

I just have to get behind the wheel of a car and all of the above mentioned virtues disappear from my life.  When I am waiting to turn at a traffic light and the oncoming vehicles just keep on coming even though the traffic lights have turned red or when I have spent 5 minutes waiting in a queue to turn right and a taxi driver just whizzes up besides me and cuts in, I find myself giving into feelings of extreme road rage!  In fact, on one or two occasions, I have forgotten that I have a passenger with me in the car until my 11 year old, sitting in the back says in a very shocked voice “Mommy, you are not allowed to use words like that!”

I am very thankful that my children and husband are seldom in the audience when I am speaking or giving my testimony.  When one speaks in front of a Christian audience you are always so aware of wanting to make a good impression so I can just imagine one of my children sitting there listening to me and saying to themselves “Who is my mom trying to kid!  I live with her. I saw her lose her temper just this morning when she tripped over the shoe I left in the middle of the doorway. She certainly didn’t show any self-control then!”

I identify so much with the following quote:

When I say, "I am a Christian"
I'm not claiming to be perfect
My flaws are all too visible
But God believes I'm worth it2

In Ephesians it says “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not by works, so that no one can boast”.3
Grace is an unmerited gift, the condition of being favoured and sanctified by God.

When I feel like a fraud as a Christian I go back to the foot of the cross and seek forgiveness for my lack of self-control, my anger or jealousy and then I rest peacefully in the knowledge “that everyone who believes in Jesus receives forgiveness of sins through His name”.4

All definitions given are from the collinsdictionary.com
1Galations 5:22, Holy Bible, NIV
2http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/193313-when-i-say-i-am-a-christian-i-m-not-shouting
3Ephesians 2:8 & 9, Holy Bible, NIV
4Acts 10:43, Holy Bible, NIV