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Iconium

It was good to get back to our country from all our travels in Asia, back to the familiar. But even there we were faced with uncertainty. We were not sure where it was that God was leading us to settle.
 
I’d been praying throughout the whole six years we’d been in the States for God to prepare things in the city He wanted us go to. This included asking for His opening the hearts of the people, bringing us into contact with those who would believe, providing us a place to live, good neighbors and other workers to team up with. We believed God had been doing just that, and now we just needed to know what that city was!
 
One offer came our way from a team working in the biblical city of Iconium, the city Paul had been chased out of. This is a very conservative Is.lamic city and our team had been working there for several years without any discernible results. The three couples on the team were struggling on a number of fronts and wanted us to come live there for a year to help them.
 
After getting input from the field council, we agreed to go, with one stipulation. They must accept the fact that we would be gone often on trips to other countries.
 
God immediately showed Himself at work to answer my prayers of the past years. Even before we arrived, one of our teammates found a furnished apartment for us—a rarity in this city. We were able to move right in with the few things we’d stored in Ankara.
 
During our time in Iconium we made many friends, including one who claimed to make a decision for the Lord, but unfortunately hasn’t displayed any discernible spiritual growth.
 
We worked to help the team, but in the end it was evident that things had disintegrated too much and two of the couples left. This was sad, but when people aren’t willing to change, adapt and trust God, there is not other alternative.
 
Even though we left Iconium in 2001, I’ve continued to pray for our contacts there, and my relationship with the man who made a decision continues to this day. He now has a group of 6 friends who meet to discuss the New Testament. So God’s work goes on.
KONYA, TURKEY - JANUARY 20, 2015: The local jewellery shops offers the wide range of islamic style jewelries, on January 20 in Konya. Stock Photo - 50140104

Amazing God!

I praise you, Lord God, for your wonderful power and wisdom shown in Creation. You have made the human body so complicated that statically it shouldn’t work!
 
Starting with individual cells which are like intricate little cities with systems of communication, transportation and processing of energy. Then there are the nervous, blood, breathing and digestive systems, all managed by delicate electric and chemical signals–simply amazing.
 
Then, on top of the astounding engineering of the body, you made this complex creature able to reproduce–to be able to make from two cells a completely new copy of the parents. What a wonder that is, to have all the information and pattern included in the DNA of each cell, guiding in the development of every part of the body. As the optic nerve grows both from the eye and from the brain, the thousands of fibers join exactly correctly, making vision possible.
You are a marvel, Lord, and there are many more parts of the creation which show this. Yesterday I read that a trip at the speed of light to the nearest galaxy would take 2,000,000 years! And you, Lord, Jesus, easily fill the whole universe! As Ephesians 4:10 says about you, “He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill the whole universe.”
 
I praise you for your great and deep wisdom and power to create and sustain all this. To you be honor and glory for your breathing the stars, hanging the earth on nothing, bringing the dawn each day and sustaining all til the end of the age.
 
Truly, knowing you in many of the beautiful and intricate facets of your character is enough for joy. You know the way, you have a plan, you run with us through each day in pleasure and pain, what is easy and hard, and will guide us on into eternity.
 
I praise you for these truths, Lord Jesus. Help us to keep them in mind as you guide us today in joining you in our interactions and conversations that you may be honored in all.
 
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Still on the road

Persistence II

 
A Happy and Thankful Thanksgiving to you all! Continuing with yesterday’s subject of persisting through all.
 
The ultimate example of sticking to it is, of course, Jesus himself, as he wrestled in the garden with the temptation to draw back from the extreme suffering of death on the cross and abandonment by His Father. And He worked it through, sticking to the plan so He could redeem us all.
 
In the midst of the difficulties into which God has called each of us, He is doing some important things in us. James 1:2-4 is a familiar passage that gives us perspective: “Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance.”
 
There is the same concept of perseverance again: “He who persists wins.” And what does a “persister” win? “… that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.”
 
The next time you are tempted to give up on what God has called you to, wanting to move on to something easier and more comfortable, remember these verses in James. He has not called us to comfort but to completeness—and this can only come by persisting in the face of trials. He who persists in obeying God wins.
 
Prayer: “Lord, I am so weak, so prone to seek comfort rather than your glory. Help me to persist in what you have called me to. Help me to take up your grace, your power, your endurance today and join you in the work you have for me. Amen”
Picture: persistence in fox trapping at 50 below zero

Endurance

We are on a trip for a family gathering in Columbus, Ohio, and yesterday I had no access to the internet so was unable to post. Sorry. Here is today’s post.
 
Trials “have come so that your faith—of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire—may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed.”
1 Peter 1:7
 
“He who persists wins!” This is a saying by which we lived in the Middle East. There were so many obstacles to life and ministry that it would have been easy to give up and go home.
So often we were denied permission or presented with further obstacles when we tried to do the right thing. The government didn’t want us there, most locals didn’t want us there, some of our supporters didn’t even want us there! But we stayed in obedience to God.
 
Sadly, many workers did give up and leave. And this is not unusual, for in Christian circles many believers fail to persist in difficulties, moving from relationship to relationship, or church to church because things get difficult.
 
I believe that when God specifically calls us to a relationship, or church, or ministry, we should stay there until God specifically calls us away. We should not let Satan drive us away with hardships.
Parenthetically, let me add that when a person is in an abusive relationship or abusive church, the wisest thing often is to leave; that is a different situation. Clear doctrinal error can also be grounds to leave.
 
And there comes a time when God may call us on to new situations, as He called us to Germany for a time—but never in opposition to His stated will.
 
Paul had this attitude of sticking to it. In Philippians 3:14 he said, “I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”
 
Paul wasn’t about to give up because things were difficult (such as getting 39 lashes multiple times, being stoned and imprisoned, ship wrecked, being hungry, cold and sleepless) or because there are no results or he was left alone, as when everyone abandoned him when he was in prison.
 
He went on to say, “All of us who are mature should take such a view of things.” And maturity comes through making many small choices to obey God rather than culture, our feelings or the thoughts of man.
 
Paul prayed in Colossians 1:10 that we would be “strengthened with all power according to his glorious might SO THAT you may have great endurance and patience” Let’s pray that for ourselves and for our fellow believers, especially those being persecuted for Christ’s sake that we may be able to stand in the evil day, and having done all to stand.
 
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Psalm 119:161-165

“Rulers persecute me without cause, but my heart trembles at your word.” Psalm 119:161
 
This is an astounding statement. When persecuted by powerful rulers, the psalmist is not afraid, he is not shaken—but it is his fear of God, his awe and fear of God’s Word that causes him to tremble.
 
This is faith in the unseen, believing and obeying the intangible in the face of very present pressure. I am not there yet—I am very aware of and responsive to what I can see, and am only developing the life in the unseen, beginning with praise in and for all things.
 
“I rejoice in your promise like one who finds great spoil” (Ps. 119:162). This is another statement of faith. Think how I would rejoice in getting 100 million dollars. Yet your Word, Lord, is far more valuable than that. I should treasure it thusly, spending time in it, thinking about it, delighting in it, rejoicing in it.
 
“Great peace have they who love your law, and nothing can make them stumble” (Ps. 119:165).
 
Praise you, Lord God, that your law clarifies reality for us. You are absolutely sovereign: no wisdom, no insight, no plan can succeed against you (Prov. 21:30). You control and filter all that comes to us; and along with your protection, you give us, who are weak in ourselves, more than enough grace to deal with it.
 
You have purpose and meaning in whatever comes. The greatest purposes are our being able to give honor to you, and our spiritual growth along with shining the gospel to all those around us. With these truths as our light, we needn’t stumble into the traps of complaining, fear, selfishness and pride.
 
You are moving all events to a conclusion and are carrying us along at your side in the process. The outcome of our lives is certain (an exit from this world into your arms) and the outcome of history is certain (all evil will be confined to Hell, creation will be “untwisted” and all will be made anew) and our future is secure (we will spend eternity with you).
 
The confidence that you are at work—deeply, mightily, inexorably—brings growth in faith, rest in you and joy in life. We can know through your law of your great and mighty working, of your powerful, perfect, persistent plan for the universe. We can know of the significant role you have for each of your children, including a personally prepared place in Heaven.
 
“I wait for your salvation, O LORD, and I follow your commands” (Ps. 119:166).
 
Knowing what is coming, we can patiently wait for what you will bring, and while waiting, confidently follow your commands. You, Lord God, are Light, you are Love, you are Life. You work for good, you bring about good, you are only good. Your wisdom is right and true, solid and sure, far beyond our comprehension and totally trustable. You are the only One, the only purpose worth living for.
 
Prayer: “I exalt you, King of Glory, I honor you, God of Love, I praise you, Lord of Justice, I adore you, Ruler of Mercy. To you may there be honor and glory today in my motives, attitudes, thoughts, words and actions before you, before the unseen spirit world, before men, before myself. Amen.”
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India and Pakistan

Chapter 77 Return to the Middle East
At the end of September, 1999, we left Connecticut again for Turkey, but only touched down there briefly before continuing on to India where we were invited to be speakers in a conference for our workers there.
 
The conference center was in a beautiful, but remote area without medical care readily available. On our second day there, I woke up to find that the wound on my leg, caused by the flying rock, was infected: red, swollen, raised and throbbing.
 
We put some general salve on it that Barbara had in her purse and prayed for God to protect me. The next morning when I got up, all evidence of infection had disappeared, the throbbing was gone and it felt much better. It continued to heal just fine. I was very thankful for this touch from God: A God sighting of healing in a place with no doctors!
After visiting India, we continued on to Pakistan to visit our workers there. This was always an adventure, for most of our folks there worked in undeveloped rural areas.
 
Gary and Joan picked us up at the airport in a central city. We piled into their small van and headed out on the main road towards the much more primitive place where they worked. One disconcerting factor right off was that they drove on the left side.
 
The road shortly narrowed down to one paved lane and that is where the excitement started. Vehicles would hurtle towards each other on this one lane as if playing the game of chicken and at the last minute, they would swerve to their left onto the wide sand shoulder and fly by. Each car tried to keep at least the right side tires on the pavement, but if the other vehicle was a big truck, it was granted full possession of the road.
 
What made this especially nerve racking was that those wide sand shoulders were also full of other traffic: donkey carts, camel wagons, ox carts, bicycles, and pedestrians. All were heavily loaded, including the pedestrians, who carried loads on their heads. Everyone had to scramble to keep from being hit by the competing vehicles.
 
Then as evening came on, it got even more exciting. The lights of the oncoming vehicles blinded us, so when Gary swerved off the pavement at the last minute, he could not tell what might be on the shoulder. Everyone had to stay alert. At one point, I wondered if this might be the country’s method of population control at work!
 
The paved part of the road was really rough and the small fourteen-inch tires on Gary’s van magnified this. After an hour of this severe rattling, we had to ask him to stop so we could recover a bit.
 
He pulled off into a grove away from the road where we thought we might be able to relieve ourselves—there were no gas stations with toilets along the road—but immediately a crowd gathered. We found that this always happened in Pakistan, even when there was no one within sight, somehow people knew there was something to see and out of nowhere a crowd would form.
 
After our first trip to Pakistan, I came away with the impression that the main themes of life in that country were birds, beds and bicycles. Birds were everywhere, always circling overhead. Many were scavenger birds, feeding on the ever-abundant road kill. Others were crows and smaller birds that populated villages and fields.
 
The beds in Pakistan are a wooden frame with a woven rope area to lie on. In homes these were used for beds at night, but did double duty as couches or even tables during the day. People would sit on the edges of the bed, draw their legs up under them, and put their dishes in front of them on the woven surface. Even roadside restaurants used these beds as their table/chair combination.
 
When farmers went out to work in the fields, they often took a rope bed along with them in their wagon or on their donkey. They used it as a place to eat lunch and then take an afternoon nap in the shade. My guess is that it kept them protected from dangers on the ground: scorpions, snakes and biting insects.
 
Bicycles are the main means of transportation among the poor people, who make up the vast majority of the population. The streets in towns were full of bikes, as were the shoulders of main roads. They were often used to transport heavy loads with the owner walking beside and pushing it. Whole families often rode on one with the wife sitting “side saddle” on a rack over the back wheel while the children sat on the handlebars.
 
After our rattle-bump two-hour journey with Gary, we arrived in his town after dark. I was sitting in the front passenger seat when we went around a corner and came face to face with a camel standing beside the road; he swung his head around and looked at me through the windshield. Gary was able to screech to a halt before we hit him, but my eyes were big as saucers and my pulse was sky high as the camel and I continued to look at each other through the glass!
 
Later on during this visit we went to another small city to talk with more of our workers. Doug took me on his motorcycle when he went shopping. As we weaved through the traffic of small pickups, donkey carts, bicycles, motorcycles and pedestrians, I had to keep my knees tightly pressed against the motorcycle to avoid hitting any of these as we sped by. I could just envision a knee getting caught on some other vehicle and my leg being ripped right off!
 
The road was unpaved and had been bulldozed sometime in the past and just left that way, so there were piles of hard-packed dirt that we drove over. It felt like we were part of a motocross race, with the other competitors being donkeys, camels and pickups!
 
We drove across a bridge above a canal with a stench that was like nothing I’d ever smelled before. It made anything I’d experienced in my years of farm work seemed like perfume in comparison! On one side of the bridge was a little restaurant that sold roasted chickens.
 
“Their food is really good,” said Doug, “but I don’t usually eat it here.” I could understand why.
 
A little further down the road Doug stopped at a little stand where a man was sitting on a platform. Doug spoke to him; he reached into a cage next to him and pulled out a chicken. He produced a knife, cut off its head, made some deft cuts along the body and then placed it between his feet. Grasping the skin at the neck, he expertly pulled it off, feathers and all, back over the body and handed Doug a chicken ready for roasting.
 
Two nights later Doug and his wife took us out for supper. It was after dark when we get got into his old Toyota SUV. He drove us across the smelly canal, then turned onto a humty bumpy road parallel to it where we were privileged to breath in more of the canal’s highly perfumed smells.
 
Then Dough turned off onto what he called “restaurant row.” It had even more humps than the previous roads and it felt more like we were driving over waves than dirt.
 
Both sides of the street were lined with restaurants, little tent-like structures, each equipped with several rope beds out front, serving as table and chairs. Most of these beds were occupied by dark men who smiled at us with gleaming white teeth.
 
At that point I felt overwhelmed by culture shock and had to restrain myself from jumping out and running away! The smells, the humps, the sights and those gleaming white teeth in the dark were all so foreign, so strange, just…too much. I admired the workers who willingly lived and worked in those conditions.
 
At the end of our visit we were glad that Doug drove us back to the airport, as his vehicle had big sixteen-inch tires that rode more smoothly over the rough road. And by going in the daytime there were no “dodge-em” games in the dark with the camels and donkeys and bicycles beside the road.
 
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Warnings!

 
“As for God, his way is perfect; the word of the LORD is flawless. He is a shield for all who TAKE REFUGE in him.”
Psalm 18:30
 
While at a Home Depot store in CT, I found a storm door in the discount rack. I was not sure it was the size I was looking for, but well, its price was 75% off, so I thought to take a chance on it.
 
Dragging it to the cash register, I handed the girl the discount tag. She entered the info, then had to reenter her login pin because it was such a big discount. However, the cash register would not accept her pin. Nine times she tried. “This has never happened before!” she exclaimed.
 
Well, I realized why it was happening at this moment: it was God protecting me from a wrong purchase! So I said, “I’ll wait on this,” and put the door back. When I got home I found that the door was the wrong size, so it was good I didn’t buy it.
 
This is an example of how our loving Father warns us by giving us red flags or obstacles when we are about to make a wrong decision. He promises to give us direction: “I guide you in the way of wisdom and lead you along straight paths” (Pro. 4:11).
 
But are we listening as He leads? Often I am so focused on the goal or object before me that I am not listening to His inner voice, so He gives me a little tap on the shoulder in the form of an obstacle to get my attention.
 
The way to “amplify” what God is saying so we can hear Him better is to praise Him for the obstacle. Praise opens our eyes, raises our sight and protects us from our own pushiness, impatience, selfishness and stubbornness. When we praise, we surrender. When we praise, we honor God. When we praise, we open the way for Him to protect, guide and provide (Psalm 50:23).
 
There have been a number of times in the last six months where God has put up similar red flags for me: an on line order not going through, a sense that I should wait to send a letter, the internet going down just when I wanted to do something. And a day or two later it became clear why God was warning me to wait. Waiting was taking refuge in Him.
 
Unfortunately, I didn’t heed one of these warnings and now am literally paying for it. While trying to get internet access in Germany, we went to one shop that promised everything we wanted. The girl filled out the contract on the screen for us, but then she could not get it to print out, in spite of working at it for a good 20 minutes. Finally, she said, “Come back in an hour when the manager will be here.”
 
We should have just gone home to pray about it more, but instead we came back and signed the contract. In the end the company couldn’t keep their promises and charged us over $200 to end the contract. I failed to accept the light God gave and pressed ahead into trouble.
 
God wonderfully and lovingly gives us light all the time. Are we accepting it or walking in our own way? “The path of the righteous is like the first gleam of dawn, shining ever brighter till the full light of day. But the way of the wicked is like deep darkness; they do not know what makes them stumble” (Pro. 4:18,19).
 
Prayer: “Lord I commit myself to walk in your light all the time. Help me to do this, to heed your warnings, to praise you when things don’t work out, knowing that you have something better in mind. Amen.”
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What a God!

“It is good to give thanks to the LORD, to sing praises to your name, O Most High; to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your faithfulness by night….” Psalm 92:1,2
 
The greatest reason for giving thanks is YOU yourself, Lord: you are full of compassion, you are gracious, “longsuffering and plenteous in mercy and truth” (Ps. 86:15). “You are good and ready to forgive and overflowing with mercy to all who call on you” (Ps. 86:5).
 
“Among the gods there is none like you, neither are there any works like yours. All the nations whom you have made will come before you and worship you, O Lord, and give glory to your name. For you are great and do wonderous things; you are God alone!” (Ps. 86:8-10).
 
• You are the God of power: speaking the stars into existence, gathering them into galaxies, forming the solar system, making sure the earth was in the proper orbit, tilt and spin. You spoke all the creatures into existence except for man, whom you formed out of dust.
• You are the God of faithfulness, promising a Savior in the garden, selecting Abraham, protecting his line and bringing out the Messiah at exactly the right time.
• You are the God of wisdom, able to weave history together, using even the evil of men and devils to accomplish your purposes.
• You are the God of knowledge, present everywhere, being aware of all that is happening, even before it comes to pass.
• You are the God of goodness, constantly pouring out your gifts on your undeserving and twisted creation: sun, rain, winter, summer, night and day, crops and animals, gems and metals.
• You are the God of wonders, having fashioned us marvelously, giving us our hands and feet, eyes and ears. You have designed the brain and nervous system, the heart and the circulatory system, our lymph and digestive systems. You gave us our ability to think, plan, choose and obey.
• You are the God of grace, giving all a second, third and many other chances to believe. You give blessing to those who curse you, do good to those who oppose you, offer forgiveness to those who hate you.
• You are the God of kindness, working in your enemies to draw them into your family, rescuing them from the dominion of darkness and bringing them into the Kingdom of Light.
• You are the Lord of love, rejoicing in each of your children, looking at what is good and pure and lovely and praiseworthy rather than on our rebellion, selfishness and pride.
• You are the God of patience, working consistently in spite of our resistance and selfishness, working persistently through our pride and unbelief to transform each member of your family into the image of Christ.
• You are the God of eternity with no beginning, no ending, no growing, no diminishing, no change; you are the same total perfection yesterday, today and forever.
• You are the God of both justice and mercy, punishing sin while providing a shelter for the sinner.
• You are the God of righteousness, shining your glory over all your creation, giving light to those in darkness, sight to the blind, joy to the sad and peace to the tormented.
• You are marvelous, magnificent, majestic and mighty. Truly, to you belongs all glory and honor and praise, forever and ever.
 
Prayer: “May you be glorified in my life today through thanksgiving resulting in trust, faith, praise and obedience to your marvelous Word. Amen.” –From EDIFIED!
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Martyrdom

Today’s entry from EQUIPPED! (written years ago) is very appropriate with the news I just got: yesterday a expat worker in T was stabbed and killed, the first martyr since 2007. Others, both expat and local believers have received death threats.
 
This is in addition to the expelling of dozens of long term workers from the country,
 
And, the government just approved turning a historic church building into a mosque.
 
Pray for the expat workers and local believers to not give in to fear, but to keep on the armor, to be strong in faith, in the Lord who is their shield and fortress.
 
“Trouble and distress have come upon me, but your commands are my delight.”
Psalm 119:143
 
I praise you this morning, Heavenly Father, for you are the Sovereign One, controlling all that goes on, all that comes to me. You hold back the tide of evil, allowing Satan only so much rope, and you use the fury of his attacks to advance your Kingdom.
 
I read of how many thousands in Haiti have come to faith after the great earthquakes of 2010. You used this tragedy to plow the hard and rebellious hearts of people, opening them to hearing Truth and surrendering to you.
 
Suffering is an unavoidable part of life in this sin-warped world; you are the One who allows the suffering that comes to us, regulating it according to what we need to grow and give you glory, as well as what we can bear with your grace.
 
In the suffering that comes, you have reasons, you have goals, you have growth, you have privileges for us. And we have the responsibility to flee to you, to turn to your Word, to take up and use your grace, to praise, to rest in you, to embrace what comes as opportunity to bring you glory.
 
I praise you:
• for your wisdom, which is far above our understanding;
• for your grace, which is more than enough;
• for your compassion, which provides all we need;
• for your love, which you pour out on us every moment.
 
The words of Psalm 119:141-144a come to mind, “Though I am lowly and despised, I do not forget your precepts.” The negative reactions and hurtful words and actions of people and their rejection of us can easily block out Truth from our thoughts.
 
But our response must be to go immediately to your Word, Lord, to find our comfort, perspective, help and direction. People may not understand us, but you do. We may not understand what’s happening and why, but you do and will help us through it.
 
“Trouble and distress have come upon me, but your commands are my delight.”
 
We so easily confuse comfort and convenience with good; but you so carefully teach us that weakness, hardships, insults, persecutions and difficulties are also things to delight in—when we have your perspective, think your thoughts and see with your eyes (2 Cor. 12:9,10)
.
Praise you that with your Word you work to give us the big picture, to help us understand what you are doing. You draw us up above the snares and rebellious thoughts of the world, the flesh and the devil.
 
Thank you for the shield of faith that we can raise with praise to ward off the fiery darts of self-pity, anger, frustration, impatience, self-centeredness and hurt as well as short-term thinking and feeling.
 
• Praise raises the barrier of protection.
• Praise heals the wounds.
• Praise opens our eyes.
• Praise produces perspective.
• Praise brings freedom.
 
May Your commands be our delight no matter what we may experience.
 
Prayer: “Praise you for your great wisdom, love, grace and goodness. We bow before you in worship, we lift up your name, we exalt you in your perfection and we surrender our hearts to your love. We rise up now to obey you through the day as part of our worship. May you be glorified in our lives today. Amen.”
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