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First Love Nurturing

Praise you, O God, my Three-in-One Lord: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Within your Trinity is a great demonstration of unity and diversity, of submission in equality, of humility in cooperation, of perfection beyond comprehension. I praise you that in you there is no lack, that you are totally self-sufficient, that there is nothing in all of creation that is necessary to you.
You are the One who exists outside of time, outside of space, outside of all other relationships, outside of need. All that you give, all that you do flows from a self-sufficient heart of love, for the good of others, out of perfect motives and pure desires.
Praise you for your engaged, committed, consistent, unwavering and intimate love for your twisted creatures and creation, demonstrated clearly in not destroying all evil immediately after the fall. In spite of your great grief at this terrible failure, you press on with the creation story because you have higher and deeper, longer and wider purposes than your and our own comfort and ease.
You are the God of Wisdom, the King of Knowledge, the Lord of Understanding, the Ruler of Insight, able to see into the next million years and know all that will come to pass. In all this You have a plan and will bring it to pass.
I praise you that with your complete and rich knowledge you make all the decisions concerning what will come today: what opportunities you will provide for glory-giving in obedience, what challenges, problems, pains and persecutions you will allow for our good, what successes, achievements and victories you will bring in our lives for your glory.
You are trustable, you are worthy of praise in it all, for you are the God of Glory, of Goodness and of Grace. You are always holy, holy, holy, the Three-in-One, Author of all.
I praise you now for all that will come today and for what you will do in your plan for me. To you be honor and glory in my life at each juncture. Amen.
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God my Guide

[Written in early 2011 while living in Germany to care for Barbara’s mother, Omi.]
Praise you, Lord, for the knowledge that you are the manager of my life. In your goodness and wisdom, your grace and love you are constantly at work, arranging events, filtering out evil, giving guidance, protecting and directing.
Thank you for the surety that, as I pray about each day, you hear, you answer, you reach down from on high and take hold of me, you draw me out of deep waters, you rescue me from my powerful enemy, from my foe who is too strong for me. You bring me forth into a spacious place. You rescue me because you delight in me (Psalm 18:16-19).
What wonderful, rich, peace-giving, joy-providing, rest-producing Truth. Whatever comes I can praise you for it and wait for your wise and good timing in bringing me through.
In relation to Barbara’s mother, Omi, and the potential end of our time here, whether we leave in August or December or April, it’s fine: your timing is perfect. I can trust that you will work things out, all the things that need to happen: Omi’s accepting the change; a place opening up at the right time in the nursing home; the selling of her house; the outworking of disposing of all her goods; the shutting down of all utilities; the closing up of our apartment; the actual leaving.
Praise you, Lord, that you have all these things in hand, that you will guide us through the maze of decisions and will cause each thing to happen at the right time. Praise be to you ahead of time because you are always good, gracious and righteous.
Epilogue: the Lord answered and brought every one of these events to pass, later than we expected (almost a year later, by March of 2012), but at the right time and in the right way, including providing Omi a place in a brand new, beautiful nursing home, with her being willing to go and then in the very last week of our time in Germany, the selling of Omi’s house for the price she wanted, above market value.
Truly, Lord, you are the God of hope, who wants to fill us with all joy and peace, if we will only trust in you. Then you will cause our lives to overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit, blessing all those around us (Rom. 15:13). Help us, Lord Jesus, to trust in you continually, fully, richly and willfully so we can be carriers of hope to all those around us.
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Clouded Vision

“My salvation and my honor depend on God; he is my mighty rock, my refuge.” Psalm 62:7
 
It is amazing what a pair of glasses can do. After arriving here in the Middle East where the sun is so bright, new sunglasses were in order, and I found a pair that were, in my opinion, well, cool. This was confirmed when someone asked me if my sons had picked them out for me! I felt good in them, handsome, with it.
 
Now there’s a subtle difference between feeling good in something and drawing your worth/importance/status from them. Unfortunately I crossed that line and actually began to use those sunglasses as a barrier between myself and others, acting distant and, well, cool. No one knew this but God and me, but that was enough.
 
The Spirit quickly convicted me of my “standing in the way of sinners” (Ps.1:1,2), so I could repent and look to the Lord instead for my status. That desire for worth/importance is a strong one in all of us, and my old nature is good at pulling me in the direction of wanting worth from the wrong source. My attitude had to change.
 
I still wear the glasses, but they are now only a source of good things for me: shade for my eyes, and a reminder of my dependence on God.
 
This whole experience was an effective encouragement to think according to the Word, which means thinking out of the “world’s box.” We need to recognize and reject ungodly advice, especially when it comes from our own heart.
 
This brings to mind the results of a survey done of believers in America which was summed up with a statement something like this: “Never have so many, who claimed to be born again, had so little effect on the society in which they live.” Failure to recognize unhealthy conformity to our society results in our lives being tasteless and fruitless for those around us.
 
In contrast, when we think God’s Word and live it, we become salt, bring refreshment and make others thirsty for Truth. We need to live according to a different standard and do that for the right reasons.
 
Prayer: “Lord, show me where I am drawing my worth and importance from the wrong sources. Help me to repent and draw significance and security only from you, remembering “My salvation and my honor depend on God” so that you may be more powerfully glorified through my life. Amen.”
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Years 5-8

School was never a pleasant experience for me. Sitting still, struggling to understand the teacher’s explanations and especially trying to fathom math were very demanding for me.
 
Later in life it came out that I had a learning disability that made verbal input hard to grasp, but that insight came too late to help me in grammar school.
 
I didn’t learn to read in the first grade, I just faked it with my good memory. I’d listen to the other children read, then hold up my book and repeat word for word what they’d said.
 
Fortunately, my second grade teacher, Mrs. Kerr, caught me in this game and put me in the lowest reading group. That was great motivation to learn and I was very quickly back in the top group, really reading this time.
 
I am so thankful for Mrs. Kerr teaching me to read, equipping me for life. My parents were avid readers and now I could join them. All of us kids read constantly, giving us a wide range of input.
The year I was eight Dad called Andrea, Les and me into the kitchen. “Ok, kids, come with us! We’ve got a surprise for you!” He and Mom led us outside and around to the garage door. This was totally unexpected and we were excited!
 
“Here, line up and put on these blind-folds,” Dad ordered. We quickly complied, wondering what in the world this surprise could be. “Don’t peek,” he commanded.
 
We heard the garage door open and then some scuffling. “Whoa! Steady now!” said Dad.
“Oh, it must be a pony,” one of us exclaimed.
“Just wait,” said Dad. Then after a pause, “Ok, you can take off your blindfolds.”
 
We ripped them off, and there before us was something we had never expected: three bicycles! Wow! We were overwhelmed; we hadn’t even asked for them, but there they were! Dad happily pointed out which one belonged to each of us. “Yep, got these used from Goldbergs. They are in good shape and should last you a long time.”
 
He paused and looked at us, “They are yours, but you must each pay me back $15 for your bike. We will give you each a jar and you can save the nickels, dimes and quarters you earn; it will take a while, but you’ll get it done.”
 
Mom would have just given them to us, but Dad was always working at teaching us about life. We didn’t need new bikes; secondhand ones were fine. We didn’t need everything given to us; things had to be earned. Saving money gave us more choices in life; discipline paid off. We were being equipped.
 
In that same year I told Dad that two of my friends from my third grade class would be coming over the next day to play after school. “Great,” said Dad, “They can help us pick up rocks.”
 
Our farm had so many stones that you could walk across the pastures, going from one rock to the next without ever stepping on the grass. Whenever a field was plowed and then harrowed, we kids got to help pick up the seemingly endless supply of smaller rocks turned up by the machines.
 
The positive side to this work was that we got to drive the tractor, so I didn’t mind at all having to spend an hour picking rocks with my friends—being able to show them how I could drive a tractor was well worth it.
We learned a great deal from everyday life on the farm: carpentry, plumbing, mechanics, and electrical work. We learned how to fix machines, how to put up fences, build stonewalls and care for animals.
 
More importantly, there were the principles Dad taught us through this work: how to meet difficulties head on; how to size up a problem, find a solution and apply it; how to help each other; and how to do things without having the proper tool–I pounded a lot of nails using a rock because there was no hammer handy! That inspired my definition of a true Connecticut Yankee: someone who could do the right job with the wrong tool.
 
We also learned how to be faithful to our duties, how to follow through, how to work well with each other. It was such an equipping-for-life childhood; I wouldn’t have traded it for any other.
 
Picture: me at age 4 in 1950, sitting on Dad’s bulldozer
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Psalm 20:8-9

Psalm 20:8 “Some trust in chariots and some in horses…They are brought to their knees and fall,”
[Horses die, chariots shatter, people pass, strength subsides, and every person in the world comes to the end of his or her rope where there is no further hope.]
“but we rise up and stand firm.”
[But in you, Lord Jesus, strength endures forever: your love is everlasting and your grace goes on through all eternity. When we come to the end of our rope, we can switch to your infinite and eternal rope, crying out to you, surrendering to you, trusting in you.
In you and in your power we will be able to advance against a troop, to scale a wall , to fight the battle, for we are shielded by your goodness (Ps. 18:29). We will always be able to stand firm in you, if we have on the full armor of God.]
Psalm 20:9 “O LORD, save the king!”
[Praise you that you saved king David in every battle and in every difficulty–and through his line brought us our Savior!]
“Answer us when we call!”
[Every day we pray, and every day you answer in your faithfulness. You are my Rock in whom I can take refuge (Ps. 18:2); you are my high tower in whom I can hide; you are my hope in whom I can rest (Ps. 62:5). For this I give you praise and honor and glory, Lord. I give you exaltation, worship and thanksgiving. In your faithfulness you are worthy of all surrender, all obedience, all submission.
So I bow before you now, the Mighty Creator, the Powerful Sustainer, my Strong Defender. And I rise up into this day so that, by your power, I can obey you in praise, in patience, in trust, in thought, word and deed. Glorify yourself in my life today, O Lord God. Amen.]
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More Edified

Your balance also reminds us of the positive tension that you desire in us: the remembrance of where we have come from (out of the dominion of darkness where we were condemned criminals before the court of Heaven, trapped in net of the enemy, in our natural depravity and in helplessness) and who we are in you (the beloved children of the King, brought into the Kingdom of Light, living in your love and grace).
In our natural selves we are sinful, rebellious, negative, selfish, unbelieving and destructive. But in you we are cleansed, forgiven, justified, equipped for special service, accepted, dearly loved, and delighted in.
 
Keeping both in mind means we are able to be truly humble—that is, seeing ourselves as you see us. Keeping both in mind protects us from being depressed in the negative and from being proud in the positive.
 
Only you could bring us to such a balance, lifting us from the level of natural thinking to heavenly seeing, from a self-centered viewpoint to a Christ-centered understanding.
 
You, Lord, are our wonderful God: High and Mighty, Wise and Wonderful, Pure and Powerful, Eternal and Excellent. In you all is brought together in marvelous balance. May we live there with you constantly.
 
Prayer: “I bow before you in worship, Lord; I rise up before you to obey. Help me to see myself as you see me: being your beloved son while being a sinner whom I can’t trust. Help me to trust you instead. May you be glorified in my life today as I live in this positive and constructive tension, resting in your love. Amen.”
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From Edified

“Have mercy on me, O Lord, for I call to you all day long. Bring joy to your servant, for to you, O Lord, I lift up my soul.”
Psalm 86:3,4
 
I praise you, Lord God, for your warm and loving heart which makes it possible to always come to you and tell you what is bothering me, where I have failed, where I am uncertain, where I am angry, upset and hurting.
 
You are pleased when your children transparently pour out their hearts to you. We can be fully honest, “for you are good and ready to forgive and plenteous in mercy to all those who call upon you” (Ps. 86:5).
 
What a full-orbed God you are! On one side you are pure and perfect, high and holy. On the other, you are loving and merciful, gracious and gentle, kind and forgiving, faithful and tender.
 
There’s a tension between these two aspects of your character—being the firm Judge and the kind Justifier, the stern Punisher and the gracious Pardoner, the awesome Mighty One and the approachable Merciful One, the fearsome sin Condemner and the tender Savior of sinners.
 

Both sides are always present, showing the beautiful balance of your character, kept in place, at least in our minds, by the tension between the two aspects: your “firm side” and your “tender side.”You are like the rock in this picture: solid and unshakable in makeup, beautiful in green covering.

This balance helps us respond to you well. Your unbending justice inspires a holy fear of you: awe, respect, caring deeply what you think, and having a fear of firm consequences if we sin. And your all-encompassing compassionate side inspires love, trust, transparency and joy. Together they nurture worship, self-denial and obedience.
 
Seeing this perfect balance in your character brings security, rest and contentment. In you we belong, in you we have worth, in you we have competence.
 
We praise you that in your perfection and that you love the imperfect. We can rest in your love and grace today. Truly, “My soul finds rest in God alone” (Psl. 62:1).
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Psalm 20:7

 
Psalm 20:7 “Some trust in chariots and some in horses,”
Yes, Lord, we often trust in other powers: money, might or men of position. Sometimes we trust in training, technology and theological systems. And sometimes we trust in planning, persuasion and people.
But all of these fall far short of what we actually need; all are pitifully weak in comparison to our enemies–the world, our flesh and the devil–while you are immensely more powerful than any of them. “I called to the LORD, who is worthy of praise….He rescued me from my powerful enemy, from my foes, who were too strong for me” (Ps. 18:3,17).
All our enemies are less than nothing in comparison to you, Lord Jesus, the Star-breather, the Earth-spinner, the Dawn-bringer, the History-ender. You defeated them all in your death and resurrection. Therefore we must reject confidence in anything else but you.]
“but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.”
[You are the only One who is trustable to the end: you are the eternal God of all might, the everlasting Lord of all power, the undying Creator of every creature, the ongoing Ruler of all dominions and kingdoms, the endless Lord of all principalities and powers. No one and nothing can stand against you.
You have a plan for each of us and you will bring it to pass, as we follow you: “The LORD foils the plans of the nations; he thwarts the purposes of the peoples. But the plans of the LORD stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations” (Ps. 33:10,11).
You, Lord God, can do no evil, no wrong, no sin; you only do what is good and righteous and wise–therefore in you we can trust. In your Name we can exalt by believing and obeying your Word, for “the LORD is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold” (Ps. 18:2). Praise be to you!]
Help us to walk today in the greatness of who you are, Lord Jesus, rejecting our tendency to primarily trust in other helps, which are feeble and futile.
Help us to instead trust in you, coming to you immediately in prayer and dependence, believing you to use whatever you chose to protect, provide and guide us through this day. Praise be to you now for how you will work, our great eternal King and everlasting powerful Savior.
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Light, Love Life and Lord

 
Praise be to you, Lord, for your rich and beautiful gifts: new life and eternal life, joy and peace, hope and purpose, your love and embrace, light and grace. To know you is far beyond good, for it is the deepest desire of every human heart to be enfolded in a rich relationship with the Creator of the universe–but sadly, most rebelliously resist your regal offer and are instead locked into the crushing, destructive embrace of the negative values of this fallen world.
It is such a magnificent and beautiful privilege to rest in your embrace of love, in the warmth of your acceptance, in the grace you exude at each moment. And it is a great freedom to rejoice in the lack of condemnation, the lack of accusation and the lack of conditional acceptance. These realities are so wonderfully edifying, strengthening, encouraging and empowering–giving us a rich, warm foretaste of Heaven.
I can go out with you into today, Lord Jesus, knowing that I am with you and you are within me, that you will never leave me. I can trust you fully to guide me through the obstacle course of the day as we wend our way forward in this fallen world, leaving behind a better trail that others can follow.
I praise you that you know every bend, every turn, every pitfall in the path, as well as every ambush the enemy has set up. And you prepare me for them as I spend time with you each morning.
Then, as I keep on the whole armor of God, think your Word, and listen to your Spirit, in your power I can respond to each ambush, stand against each attack and be more than a conqueror no matter what Satan may throw at me. “I called to the LORD, who is worthy of praise, and I have been saved from my enemies” (Ps 18:3).
I may trip, fall or get knocked down, but remaining in your truth by confession and repentance, I can spring to my feet again and continue on the upward path of righteousness you are leading me on for your name’s sake.
“I love you, O Lord, my strength.” You, LORD, “are my rock, my fortress and my deliverer… my shield and…my stronghold” (Ps. 18:2), and as I remain behind the shield of your love, in the stronghold of your holiness, and on the rock of your mercy, I am safe.
Praise be to you, the God of goodness, the Lord of love, the King of kindness, the Giver of grace, the Healer of hearts and the Protector of your people. Today I choose to live in the truth that “Knowing Jesus is Enough for Joy,” following your example, Lord Jesus, who, for the joy that was set before you, endured the cross, despising the shame and are set down at the right hand of God (Heb. 12:2).
Help me to keep my eyes on you and on the joy of knowing you, of knowing where I am going in life and death, for then the difficulties and pain of this life will fade in significance and power, so I can run with patience the race you have set before me.
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From Edified

“Glory in his holy name; let the hearts of those who seek the LORD rejoice!” Psalm 105:3
These are commands, giving us opportunities to choose between obedience in praise, or rebellion in complaining. And we can obey in praise, not because of our situations, our strength of will or our freedom of choice, but because of who YOU are, Lord Jesus: the God of Glory, King of Kindness, Potentate of Power, Lord of Love, Ruler of Righteousness, Paragon of Perfection, Judge of Justice, Light of life, Wonder of the world and Savior of sinners, especially of all those who believe.
You are the Focus of eternity, the Fulfiller of prophecy, the Finisher of time, the Final Solution to sin and evil. In you all comes together, all holds together, all works together. In spite of its twisted and cursed condition, the universe continues to operate as you hold the stars in their places, the planets in their orbits, the atoms in their makeup, the details of our lives in line, the timing of events in sequence and the tide of evil in check.
You are the One to rejoice in, the One to glory in, the One to rest in. What a privilege, what a possibility, what a power, to be able to choose to praise you in and for all, to glorify you, thank you and revel in you at all times.
“Seek the LORD and his strength; seek his presence continually!” (Ps. 105:4). We can obey this command, for you are always there, the way into your presence is ever open, the invitation to come is continually extended to us.
Praise be to you for your open offer of partnership, the way you call us to cooperation with you, giving us the power and possibility of deciding. As Pascal said, you “instituted prayer in order to lend to [your] creatures the dignity of causality.” We can consciously and continually practice your presence with praise and prayer. Along with joining you in your work, this is acknowledging the reality of who you are: the All-present, All-powerful God of Creation.
“Blessed are those who have learned to acclaim you, who walk in your presence, ever praising your name” (Ps. 89:15). To acclaim you, to acknowledge your presence and power in all that happens–this is a wondrous privilege we can practice every day. In our weakness, we can seek your strength; in our ignorance we can seek your knowledge; in our foolishness we can seek your wisdom; in our smallness we can seek your great presence.
You, Lord Jesus, are truly worthy of worship, of glory, of honor. We exalt you today by choosing to prolifically praise you, to seek you and your strength in persistent prayer, to practice your presence in our thoughts and attitudes, to honor you in our words and work.
Prayer: “May you be richly, powerfully, visibly exalted in my life today as I choose to live for your glory by praising you in all. Amen.”
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