Prayerful Pondering

by Pat Luffman Rowland

  • Why do you look for the living among the dead?  He is not here; He is risen!  Luke 24:5-6

    The stone wasn’t rolled away for Jesus,

    it was rolled away for us.  

    To enter in. 

    To see the miracle of our Lord –

    that He was lifted up from death to life. 

     We peer over the shoulders

    of those who found that empty tomb

    and we rejoice with them

     in the emptiness of it. 

    For we thrill to a risen Savior,

    the miracle of God’s love.    

    Jesus took the pain of sin and death for us. 

    He felt the sting,

    the throb,

    the agony,

    of all that was ugly,

    dark,

    and without God. 

    He did what we could never do –

    and then He loved us even more.

    He made a way for us to receive His love,

    His atonement,

    His joy. 

    Simply by believing.

     May your Easter be filled with remembering,

    believing,

    and praise for a Savior’s Love! 

    He is risen!

  • In the gospel of John, at the time of the Last Supper, we find some of Jesus’ most compelling words.  He speaks at length, and out of love and compassion – both for His disciples and for all of us yet to come.  (John 17:20) His words are soothing and drawing. 

    Jesus explains much, part of which is how to be a follower of His.  It means committing ourselves to His will, His plan, and His purpose.  It requires total devotion to the ways of the Lord and that will mean getting to know Him through scripture and putting into practice what we learn there.  It will mean getting into the mind of Christ. 

    But Jesus says we have this, His promise, if we choose Him:  “If you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you.  By this My Father is glorified.”  (John 15:7-8)  Then John echoes that in another of his records found in 1 John 5: 14-15:  “Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.  And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him.” 

    Therefore, the key to answered prayer is getting into the mind of Christ and that can be a high mountain to climb.  It will come only as we seek Him with every fiber of our being.  We will need to cast off all personal desires until and unless we know they are His desires as well.  It will mean a constant state of self-examination of our loyalty to God.  It will sometimes mean accepting things that make no sense to us at all, and trusting with all we are that His way is perfect and will bring about a greater good than anything we can imagine.  We can do this only when we know with absolute conviction who God is, and firmly and completely believe that God loves us, and that His plans for us are for good and not evil.  (Jeremiah 29:11)

    When we learn to do a new thing, such as a sport or art, it requires our setting aside doubt and fears and worries.  We must want that new thing so much that we grasp a sure belief in its accomplishment, and then we set out with passion to achieve it.  It is the same with attaining the mind of Christ and trusting His will.  We must fervently want it to be victorious.   

    We can take heart that we are not left alone to achieve this close relationship to the Lord, but have been provided the Holy Spirit, another part of Jesus’ talk with His disciples that night.  Jesus called Him the Helper and the Spirit of truth, and it is through Him we gain the triumph.  Our part is to be zealous in wanting the mind of Christ; the Holy Spirit’s part is in revealing it to us.

    Jesus, life is a difficult and hazardous journey.  Sometimes we hit obstacles that obscure the way beyond.  We like to know where we are going, to have some control.  But often that isn’t Your way.  You ask us to walk by faith and not by sight.  On this day, may we grip Your hand more firmly and trust in our hearts that You love us and will never forsake us.  Help us to remember past blessings, to recall how You have answered other prayers and brought us through the floods and the fires.  Pour Your mind into us today that we may cast aside every fear, every doubt, and every worry, and walk by faith.  Yet even then, remember that we are but dust, O Lord, and favor us with glimpses of victory along the way that we may be encouraged.      

  • While he was in Bethany, reclining at the table in the home of a man known as Simon the Leper, a woman came with an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume, made of pure nard. She broke the jar and poured the perfume on his head. Some of those present were saying indignantly to one another, “Why this waste of perfume? It could have been sold for more than a year’s wages and the money given to the poor.” And they rebuked her harshly. “Leave her alone,” said Jesus. “Why are you bothering her? She has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will always have with you, and you can help them any time you want. But you will not always have me. She did what she could. She poured perfume on my body beforehand to prepare for my burial. I tell you the truth, wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.”  Mark 14:3-9 (NIV)

    Who was this woman in Mark’s story?  This woman who did something beautiful for Jesus?   The gospels relay two stories of Jesus being anointed by a woman, but with differences, as well as similarities. 

    Mark and Matthew (26:6-13) say Jesus’ head was anointed in the home of Simon the Leper, in Bethany.  John (12:1-8) tells the story of Jesus’ feet being anointed, also in Bethany, but in the home of His friends, Lazarus, Martha, and Mary.  Were there two anointings of Jesus’ body by a woman?  If so, was it Mary both times?  Or, was there another woman who also sought to comfort the Lord, and as Jesus said, to prepare Him for His burial?

    Whatever the case, we know this:  It was an act of love and worship and Jesus called it “beautiful.”  He was being recognized for whom He was, and given the very best the person had, to be poured on His body.  Her eyes were on Jesus – no distractions and no concern for what others might say.   She came to adore the Savior, and to comfort Him in the only way she could. 

    It is our instruction from that same Lord, our Jesus, to go out and do kindnesses for others, and to do them in His name.   For He says to us:  “I tell you the truth, whatever you (do) for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you (do) for me.”  Matthew 25:40 (NIV)   

    And He, our Jesus, will call these loving acts done in His name — beautiful.

  • Now the Feast of Unleavened Bread drew near, which is called Passover.   And the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might kill Him for they feared the people.   Then Satan entered Judas, surnamed Iscariot, who was numbered among the twelve.   So he went his way and conferred with the chief priests and captains, how he might betray Him to them.   And they were glad, and agreed to give him money.   So he promised and sought opportunity to betray Him to them in the absence of the multitude.   Luke 22:1-6 (NKJV)

    Here we have a defining list of the sins of man.  We see the hold of money, the lust for power and fame, the ugliness of jealousy, the loftiness of self, and a plan of darkness.  So dark it had to be developed in secrecy.  There is nothing good here, only evil, coming from prideful arrogance. 

    With focus on themselves, these men missed the very magnificence of the Lord God Almighty.  The long-awaited Messiah was here in their midst and they were so tuned into themselves, His truth and glory went unseen.  All their study had been for nothing, it seems.  And Judas, the one who had walked closely with Jesus for three years, witnessed His miracles, observed His love, and heard Who had sent Him, gave it all away for a few silver coins.  Had the blindness of Judas’ heart been of his eyes instead, he would have known not one glimmer of light. 

    These, the privileged, had handed over wisdom and precious opportunity for personal increase.  So centered on themselves and their gain for things of the world, they missed the greatest gain of all.  These men could have been proclaiming His majesty and power, had they not been proclaiming their own. 

    And Judas allows Satan in.  Judas had been chosen by the Lord as a friend and disciple, yet Judas chose greed.  He had not clothed himself in the riches of Jesus’ grace, nor put on the armor of holy righteousness, but stood naked in human self-indulgence.  He made himself readily available for Satan to take control.    

    It is a picture of what happens to humankind when we take our eyes off Jesus and hunger after the world instead.  We will always have an object of worship, so if not Jesus, it will be ourselves in some way.  

    These priests and scribes, who were puffed up with arrogance, betrayed their titles and betrayed their people.  They fell deep into the pit of conceit and foolishness.  Judas traded in three years of close companionship with the Savior and eternal life, for about a month’s wages. 

    We can debate long and hard over their behavior, but it will change nothing.  What they did is history.  It serves only as a reminder of the forces always at odds.  It calls us to examine ourselves and determine where we stand.  Are we for God – or against Him?  What is our testimony today?  What will our story be when it is but a record of history?      

    Father, as we walk toward this Easter season, teach us anew the lessons of Your Son’s journey.  May His work on earth not be lost in accounts we have heard so many times that we lose sight of their meaning.   May we prepare our hearts for fresh blessings of wisdom and truth.   Holy Spirit, take us deeper in our understanding of the Holy Scriptures.  As we breathe them in, may they be established in our lives, that our records will reveal we chose Jesus, and walked with Him all the way to heaven’s gates.                          

  • Oswald Chambers, in his devotional book, MY UTMOST FOR HIS HIGHEST, reveals an important piece of intercessory prayer that I am afraid I miss much of the time. He says “Worship and intercession must go together, the one is impossible without the other. Intercession means that we rouse ourselves up to get the mind of Christ about the one for whom we pray.” Chambers asks, “Are we so worshipping God that we rouse ourselves up to lay hold on Him so that we may be brought into contact with His mind about the ones for whom we pray?*

    When prayers have gone unanswered for a length of time, I do seek God’s mind, asking if I am praying correctly, and if not, how He would have me to pray. But to do this with every individual that asks for intercessory prayer – I embarrassingly admit I do not. Rather, when I am asked to pray, I usually stop right at that moment and pray as that person has requested, and I continue to petition in the same manner after we’ve parted.

    Philippians 2:5 says “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus.” 1 John 5:14-15 says “This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us – whatever we ask – we know that we have what we asked of Him.”

    The prayer that never fails is when we pray according to the mind of Christ Jesus. We need to soak in that truth. We need to ingrain it in our thought pattern so that we will automatically seek His mind on every matter of prayer. God wants the absolute best for each of His children and none of us are wise enough to know what that is. He alone can see every issue and implication in its entirety. The victorious prayer is the one guided by God.

    Living intimately with God means living in worshipful relationship and accepting His will over our own every time. We are to conform to Him, not Him to us.

    Jesus, may I remember the privilege and the importance of worship before I pray.  As I worship You, reveal to me Your mind for the person of intercession.  Then, may the precious blessings of Your love and Your will be poured out on those I bring before Your throne.

    *MY UTMOST FOR HIS HIGHEST, devotional reading for March 30.
    Scriptures from NIV translation (italics mine).

  • Psalm 103 is a psalm of comfort for the one who feels ashamed and discouraged over sins and needs reassurance that God forgives and loves His children in spite of their actions.  It is for the one who needs encouragement, healing, and hope.  This psalm answers the question “Does God still care about me?”  And the answer is a resounding yes! 

    David, who wrote this psalm, was called “a man after God’s own heart.”  He was called that because he had, from his youth, developed an intimate and trusting relationship with the Lord.  He walked with Him and talked with Him — always.  Even so, because David was human, he sinned.  Adultery and murder were among those sins.  But David knew how to come back to God when he had gotten off track.  David knew the way back because he knew God.  His years of living intimately with the Father taught David who God truly was.  He knew that God hated sin, but loved him with an everlasting, unfailing love.  He knew God would always forgive him and always welcome him back when he came with a contrite heart.  What David had in relationship, we can also have.  

    Notice that David begins and ends with praise for God.  Scripture says that God inhabits our praise.  David wants to be heard, he wants the presence of God, and he adores his Maker with words of exaltation.  His intention is to establish a right position between Creator and created.  After David has entered God’s presence with words of exaltation, he continues to pay tribute to God by explaining all he finds in Him.  This is a defining poem about a God of love and David’s confidence in Him. 

    May this psalm provide comfort to the one seeking it, for whatever reason.  We can claim it as our blessing from the One who knew everything we would do before we did it and still sent His Son to die for us to save us from those things we could not save ourselves.   Before we were born, God knew the obstacles we would face and the pain we would go through, and He gave us the promise that He would never leave us to go through it alone.  Declare this psalm to your weary mind, body, and spirit and be infused with His love and the peace that follows.        

    Psalm 103  (NIV)

    1 Praise the LORD, O my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. 2 Praise the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits– 3 who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, 4 who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, 5 who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s. 6 The LORD works righteousness and justice for all the oppressed. 7 He made known his ways to Moses, his deeds to the people of Israel: 8 The LORD is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love. 9 He will not always accuse, nor will he harbor his anger forever; 10 he does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities. 11 For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is his love for those who fear him; 12 as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us. 13 As a father has compassion on his children, so the LORD has compassion on those who fear him; 14 for he knows how we are formed, he remembers that we are dust. 15 As for man, his days are like grass, he flourishes like a flower of the field; 16 the wind blows over it and it is gone, and its place remembers it no more. 17 But from everlasting to everlasting the LORD’s love is with those who fear him, and his righteousness with their children’s children– 18 with those who keep his covenant and remember to obey his precepts. 19 The LORD has established his throne in heaven, and his kingdom rules over all. 20 Praise the LORD, you his angels, you mighty ones who do his bidding, who obey his word. 21 Praise the LORD, all his heavenly hosts, you his servants who do his will. 22 Praise the LORD, all his works everywhere in his dominion. Praise the LORD, O my soul.

    Father, there is no one’s forgiveness we need more than Yours.  We may hide our sins from other people, but we can never hide them from You.  There is no one that can encourage us like You.  A word from You, O God, is precious beyond measure.  We come with praises and thanksgiving for a love like Yours!  We hide ourselves in the shadow of Your wing, where we are comforted and restored.  No matter how hard life gets, there is always healing in Your presence.  There, you renew our hope and give us new vision. We bless Your holy name, most high God!     

     

  • Where there is no God,
    there is no discipline,
    no sense of concern for another.
    Without fear of the Most High
    man stumbles, flails about,
    makes mocking of life’s meaning.

    Where there is no God
    how can one go forward,
    or know when to stop?
    How can he know where to turn,
    where to climb,
    or find rest for the journey?

    Where there is no God,
    man’s selfish heart rules.
    He issues edicts without grace,
    he boasts in himself,
    he is loud, harsh,
    and without reason.

    Where God is,
    there is truth and trust,
    there is right direction
    and godly achievement.
    There is love that soothes,
    and builds up.

    Where God is,
    kindness abounds,
    joy and peace overflow.
    There is unity and grace.
    Man’s heart is full
              – and it is glad!

  • And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.   (Romans 8:28)

    We had lived in our house for almost two decades before I took serious notice of our backyard and what was going on there, un-enjoyed and unappreciated.  I can blame the first 10 years to working too hard and not taking time to notice much of anything but the necessary.  The remaining years were swallowed up with chronic pain that drained my energy and muted the vibrancy of both color and sound.  But true to Romans 8:28, that same debilitating pain brought me good.  For the pain caused me to be still, and with that stillness came the discovery of God’s nature gift in my very own backyard.   

    One spring morning, without any particular reason that I can recall, I poured my first cup of coffee and headed out to the patio.  I settled into a glider chair and began watching the sun rise between two tall trees just over our back fence.  It was a spectacular orange ball rising as if out of an orchestra pit to lead all of nature in celebration of the new day.   It was nothing short of glorious.

    Our river birch, my favorite tree, was alive with birds chattering noisily, flying about, just happy to be alive, it seemed.   Straight above the back stretch of fence standing on utility wires were more than a dozen doves – silver beauties, calling out with a chant-like sound.  I was caught by all the beauty and the cacophony of sound; my senses were being as heightened as if I were walking through an art museum.  My first reaction was that of shock:  how could I have missed such wonder all these years?  On that glorious morning brought quite by God’s grace, I began a ritual that held until the grey skies of winter. 

    I began recounting my discoveries with my nature knowledgeable son-in-law.  I told Mark I was especially attracted to the sounds of the doves and thought they were making different sounds in the morning and afternoon, but he told me I was hearing more than one species of dove and he directed me to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology “All about Birds” website, where it would lead me through identification of birds by description and sound.  (http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds.)  The regal silver doves who were calling out mostly in the morning were Eurasian collared-doves.  The ones I heard more in the afternoon were mourning doves.   The sound of the collared-doves was “coo-coo’-rah, coo-coo’-rah,” which I decided sounded like “Praise Je’-sus!  Praise Je’-sus!”

    I noticed that one of the Eurasian collared-doves had a damaged wing.  There was a chunk of feathers missing and when the dove flew, he would beat the air really hard to lift off.  I watched for him every day, claiming him as a favorite.  Once when he and his mate were on the ground feeding on bread crumbs, he sheltered her with spread wings, facing a mockingbird that had joined them.  He didn’t call out or attempt to chase away the mockingbird, just stood guard over his mate while she ate.  She never looked up; such was her trust in her mated-for-life partner. 

    Mockingbirds are not known for friendliness, but one befriended me.  Every morning, as I settled in, he would appear at the edge of the roof overhang and then fly down to stand about four feet in front of me.  There he would turn his head to the side as he looked me over, strut back and forth, and then look at me again.  I would wish him a cheery good morning and shortly he would be on his way – an almost daily and delightful occurrence. 

    One afternoon, I caught sight of a baby mockingbird in our young Harry Lauder walking stick tree, rising only five feet from the ground.   I couldn’t hold back a soft “ohhh.”  The baby must have belonged to my mockingbird friend because I was allowed to watch their interaction only about 10 feet from where I was sitting.  Because there was no nest in the little tree, I suppose flying lessons were going on.  This was my gift from the one who checked me out every morning; my unobtrusive lingering, quiet and alone, gained trust.  I quietly stepped away to grab my camera, but the clicking caused Baby to call out and that called back a screeching parent.  Trust had worn thin:  Enough!  Don’t push what I’m allowing you!  I know not to mess with a mockingbird, so I came inside and left them to the day’s business. 

    I began journaling on what I saw every day:  a Papa Robin searching for worms on a ground wet from the previous night’s rain, walking busily about.  Then, fertile area found, he would tug, tug, tug.    I wrote of hummingbirds and my discovery that these little jet-birds of tiny beauty make sounds of whirring, chipping, or buzzing.  I enjoyed their weaving in and out of our trellis-woven red honeysuckle, Red Honeysuckledrinking from one deep-throated bloom and then another with their long needle-like beaks.   I found one little green hummingbird that drank nectar with his tiny legs and feet dangling, rather than the usual posture of pulling legs close to their bodies when they hover in mid-air to feed. 

    My intrigue with the backyard led to our hanging several bird feeders, including a sock feeder for our finches.  A mesh bag of about 18 inches and the diameter of a man’s sock, the feeder allows finches to hang directly on the cloth bag and feed through the holes, sometimes while hanging upside down.  

    There had been a purple marten condo in the backyard for quite a while.  The year of my fascination, there was only one purple marten in residence, but here’s the neat thing:  it shared an apartment on the back side with a sparrow!  I understand that’s unheard of, yet there it was. 

    There were many martens living in nearby yards and they would eventually gather overhead on the utility wires.  They would shoot off into the sky with such a rush it looked as if Mother Nature had sent them forward with the fanning of her apron skirt.  I watched as they soared across the heavens, doing what looked like a swimmer’s breaststroke and gliding forever before the need for more wing-fluttering power. 

    While the birds provided the action, they were just part of the beauty.  Blooming things were all about.  Over to one side in a neighbor’s yard standing regally above the fence were golden sunflowers on 10 to 12 foot stalks.  The striking red male cardinals and Goldfinches particularly loved the sunflowers and sang out mightily.  To the other side was a row of white crape myrtles peering over from another neighbor’s fence for a look into our yard.  The color to either side of me added to our own treasures:  the river birch reaching high into the sky, the lazy limbed redbud that the doves preferred, the funny looking walking stick tree, a young white cherry, the lush red honeysuckle, and two deep red floribunda rose bushes, always heavy with blooms.    

    After I began considering the patio my favorite room of the house, I added pots of Lantana to attract butterflies.  They also seemed to attract my mockingbird friend and he would clumsily land in the branches that were too weak to hold him up.  It was a funny sight as he spilled about trying to gain a respectful perch.  I didn’t mind that he broke a branch or two because his attempts were an amusing performance.  

    The Harry Lauder tree is not a common tree and it is worth describing.  We found it in a Farm Bureau magazine and had to search to find one for ourselves.  Harry Lauder trees will grow to about 10 feet tall with the same size of spread.  They have very thick foliage that has a wilted look in the summer — not very pretty.  The payoff comes when the leaves fall off and reveals tightly curled limbs, the kind that florists use to make arrangements.  Their branches are stronger and darker, with more involved twirls and turns than twisted willow trees. 

    I learned the longer I lingered on the patio, the more splendor unfolded and the more interesting the detail became.  I love to watch the dance of the leaves of trees and plants on breezy days.  Then, when there isn’t a hint of air’s stirring, I sit in wonder at how something as light as a tiny single leaf suspended on a cord-like stem high in a tree can fail to move at all, but it happens.  It’s just another part of nature’s majesty. 

    It is all God’s handiwork, His show of miracle making, and He created it for all of us, hoping someday we would look around and experience it.   

    Thank you, Creator, for the pain that caused me to stop and notice what You have freely given.  Your creation brought joy to my soul and lifted me above the weariness of pain.  And Father, thank you for the blessing of healing that eventually came.  In Your always perfect timing, You took my pain and left me with many precious lessons.  I give You all the praise and glory!  You are an awesome and loving God!  I love you, Father. 

  • I love to read the many descriptions of God in the scriptures and how He has provided for us.  He is our shelter and fortress and shield.  He is our hiding place from the enemy and a fountain of replenishment.  He is our guide and comforter, the One who gives us strength and sets our feet upon steady rock.   

    God is all we need as companion and protector, but He is even more.    For He is just as surely in all that He has created for our pleasure. 

    He is the warmth of the sun and the coolness of the breeze.  He is in the rain that nourishes the earth and causes seed to grow.  God is in the moon and stars as they declare the ending of day, and in the rising sun as we hope for another.  God is in the birds that sit among the trees and sing, and in flowers that delight with rainbows of color.   

    And we find our wonderful God in those about us.  We find Him in the laughter of a child and in the love of an adored pet.  He is in the wisdom of the elderly and the gentleness of a faithful caregiver.  God is in the kindness of a friend and the smile of a stranger.  If we but look, we see Him everywhere. 

    Father, how grateful we are to find you revealed in so many ways.  Thank you for delighting in us, that You would give of Yourself so abundantly and lovingly.  Your provisions are full and complete.  You care for us like no other ever could and we bless Your holy name! 

  • For some time, I had been praying for revelation on some particular situations in my life. There was so much that I needed guidance on and God seemed silent. 

    One morning while reading from Oswald Chamber’s My Utmost For His Highest (October 10th meditation), I was drawn to this:  “All God’s revelations are sealed until they are opened to us by obedience.”  Could that be the problem?  Was I oblivious to some disobedience in my life?  Chambers went on:  “Obey God in the thing He shows you, and instantly the next thing is opened up.” 

    I reached for my Bible where the words of Jesus are printed in red.  My Bible seemed to fall open to Luke 6:27, where Jesus begins His discourse on loving our enemies. 

    There was someone in my life that fit in the enemy category and my prayers in that situation had been for personal help, not for the other person.  I was taking the road of self-pity, thinking only of the wrong done me.  I determined in that moment to follow Jesus’ way and look for opportunities to do good and bless the one hurting me, and to change my selfish praying into “other” centered praying.   

    Immediately there came a flooding of peace, a peace that assured me I had heard from God.   And on the heels of obedient practice, came revelation on the other matters I had been praying about.

    Thank you, Jesus, for shedding light on where I fail and how to get back on track.  Your word always speaks direction.   

    “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, and pray for those who spitefully use you. ” 

    The words of Jesus, Luke 6:27-28 (NKJV)