Archives for November 2018

Nothing Is Impossible

During this Christmas season, I get so excited about the Bethlehem scene in Luke 2—the angel, the manger, the shepherds, Mary, Joseph, the wise men, AND sweet baby Jesus’s birth.

This year I am so pumped also about the chapter before—Luke 1. I see a story of struggle and God’s miracle. The kind of story I love. The kind of story I live and can relate to.

Three of my favorite verses are found throughout this Luke 1 chapter. I never realized how much was in that chapter foretelling John the Baptist’s and Jesus’ birth.

Zechariah was a priest, and his wife Elizabeth had not been able to get pregnant. An angel appeared to Zechariah and told him not to be afraid (if I saw an angel I’d be afraid also), and that his prayer had been heard. I love that.

The angel told him he would have a son, name him John.

“He will be a joy and delight to you, and many will rejoice because of his birth, for he will be great in the sight of the Lord…and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit even from birth.” –Luke 1:14, 15.

Zechariah doubted the angel, asking:

“How can I be sure of this? I am an old man and my wife is well along in years.” –Luke 1:18.

Ouch. How many times do I doubt God’s promises, God’s goodness, God’s faithfulness? My “soul holes” of doubt speak louder than my faith.

Because Zechariah doubted, he was struck silent for her whole pregnancy. People in the temple could tell he had seen a vision. He made signs with his hands but could not speak.

His sweet wife Elizabeth became pregnant and remained in seclusion for five months. Her response was,

“The Lord has done this for me.” –Luke 1:25.

Amen. What profound gratitude.

Six months into Elizabeth’s pregnancy, the angel Gabriel visits Elizabeth’s young relative Mary in a little town of Nazareth. The angel Gabriel told Mary she would give birth to a son named Jesus.

“He will be great and will be called Son of the most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David…His Kingdom will never end.” –Luke 1:32, 33b.

Mary asked the angel how it would happen since she was a virgin. The angel’s response is so encouraging.

“Even Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child in her old age, and she who was said to be barren is in her sixth month. For nothing is impossible with God.”  —Luke 1:36, 37.

AMEN! Mary’s response is one of my favorite in the entire Bible.

“’I am the Lord’s servant. May it be to me as you have said.’ Then the angel left her.” –Luke 1:38.

Can you imagine being 13 or 14 years old, as Mary was, and having the kind of Spirit-filled faith to be that obedient? She is such an inspiring testament of faith.

Then Mary went to visit Elizabeth. When Elizabeth heard Mary’s voice, the baby inside of her leaped, and Elizabeth was filled with the holy Spirit. Elizabeth encouraged Mary, saying in a LOUD voice:

“Blessed are you among women and blessed is the child you will bear!….” –Luke 1:42.

Elizabeth declared another one of my favorite verses:

“Blessed is she who has believed that what the Lord has said to her will be accomplished!” –Luke 1:45.

Friend, what can we learn from this passage so full of miracles and wisdom?

1) God hears our prayers. The angel affirmed Zechariah first by saying his prayer had been heard. Every prayer is heard, no matter how short the prayers are and how desperately we cry out to God.

2)Whatever in our life seems “barren,” God provides life in that barren spot. Nothing is impossible with God. For me it’s my singleness. God fills my “barren spot” and heart’s desire for a husband. You may have a “barren” relationship or a yearning for a child. God fills that soul hole, even on days that are hard, especially at Christmas.

3) May we always give God the praise. Like Elizabeth who had prayed for years to be pregnant, “The Lord has done this for me.” All comes from Him.

4) May we have the humility and faith like Mary to be totally obedient. Not only did she say she was the Lord’s servant. She declared her total surrender. “May it be to me as you have said.”

Oh, I pray so for me and you also. Total surrender.

It was for Mary. It will be for us also if we surrender our will. May Thy will, not my will, be done.

Merry Christmas, friend.

Reflect:

–What seems “barren” in your life? What seems impossible? Please comment.

–What prayers do you want God to hear? Keep praying. He hears them all.

Renew:

“And Mary said: ‘My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for He has been mindful of the humble state of his servant. From now on all generations will call me blessed, for the Mighty One has done great things for me—holy is His name.” –Luke 1: 46-49.

The Foundation of Our Country and Its Founding Family

On this Election Day and as Veterans’ Day and Thanksgiving approach this month, my heart has been filled with gratitude for  our country’s founding father George Washington. Recently I learned how prayerful and faithful President George Washington was, and how his mother Mary Washington bathed our new country in prayer each day.

On a recent trip to Virginia to visit friends, I took my first tour of Mount Vernon, George Washington’s estate, as well as Mary Washington’s home in Fredericksburg, VA. The home and grounds were lovely. I was pleasantly surprised to learn how deep the faith was of both George and his mother Mary. Even on the museum at Mt. Vernon, you are given an opportunity to place your hand on the Bible and repeat the words George Washington did as our first President. Scripture is carved and engraved throughout his burial site and home.

After leaving Mt. Vernon, we headed to Fredericksburg, VA to see where George Washington grew up and where his mother lived. President George’s mother Mary was married to Augustine and was widowed at a young age. She raised seven children. While the Revolutionary War was being fought, Mary lived in Fredericksburg, VA. She frequently prayed near her home at a landmark called Meditation Rock, where she is buried today. She prayed for her son and our country.

George Washington had served as commander of the Colonial Forces and led to win the British claim to America. George came to visit his Mother Mary just days before his presidential inauguration in New York City. Their meeting on March 12, 1789, was the last visit before her death from breast cancer three months later.

George and his mother met in her bedroom sitting area and George gave her the poignant news that he had been selected to lead our new country as its first president of the United States. The Mother of our country placed her hand on his head as he knelt before her. She gave her final blessing and told him that “Heaven’s and his Mother’s blessing would always be with him.” They embraced at her bedroom door and said tearful goodbyes.

Their family was focused on prayer and meditation on God. Divine intervention saved George Washington many times. One glowing instance is his narrowly escaped death in Pittsburg on an expedition to overwhelm the Native American stronghold. Washington had been sick in bed for 10 days, weak as he fought. Four bullets passed through his coat. Two different horses had been shot out from under him.

He was also the last of 20 officers to command their small army before they won. He said, “The all powerful protection of Providence had saved him.”

I visited Meditation Rock myself. It is located on a cliff that now overlooks a city playground. Mary Ball Washington’s memorial, a mini-Washington monument obelisk, is a few yards away from the rock.

I knelt and prayed. I felt the cool rock under my knees, rock worn smooth from hundreds of years of kneeling prayers. I thanked God for our country, for Mary, who represents so many of our praying mothers, and for our faithful first president George Washington. He, led by the Holy Spirit’s wisdom, gave us roots and wings as a nation. I prayed for unity and revival in our country today. I asked for forgiveness for the times I have been silent.

I prayed for the Deborah’s Voice Prayer Gathering I planned to attend at the Lincoln Memorial the next day where 2500+ Christian women gathered to pray for unity of our nation (www.deborahsvoice.net). I prayed for our President, Congressmen, state, city, and local officials, pastors of our churches, and those who are unbelievers.

I lingered there after my prayer, imagining Mary Washington kneeling in the same spot and crying out to God for her son and her fledgling country. What a strong and courageous woman she was. I considered that just like Mary, our circumstances will be hard and uncertain. We too will discover, like Mary, that prayer moves God’s heart into action and intercession is vital in this crucial time in our country before Jesus returns.

No matter where you and I stand politically, we have much to learn from George Washington’s deep faith as a leader. He exemplified the four points of this Old Testament life verse for our nation:
“If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”—2 Chronicles 7:14 ESV

  1. Humble ourselves—George Washington was a quintessential humble leader. In the museum at Mt. Vernon, he said “Good moral character is the first essential in a man.”
  2. Pray—President Washington was prayerful, as demonstrated in the examples above.
  3. Seek God’s face—President Washington was dependent on the Lord and His Word, the Bible, through the years.
  4. Turn from our wicked ways—President Washington was known for his good moral character and manners. When he was a boy in Virginia, he hand-copied a list called “The Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company and Conversation.” The rules were written almost 150 years before by French Jesuits—priests and teachers in the Catholic Church—and passed on from generation to generation. The rules covered everything from how to have good table manners, how to respect other people, how to be a good citizen, even how to sit, stand, talk and what expression to have on your face.

May we do the same as American citizens and leaders. May we humble ourselves, pray, seek God’s face, and turn from our wicked ways, THEN God will hear us from heaven and will forgive our sins and heal our land. Amen and Amen.

PS. My gifted fine artist friend Dale Glasgow painted the two poignant moments I describe—one entitled “Mother’s Blessing of George Washington” and the other of “Mary Washington Praying at Meditation Rock.” His work is hanging in the White House and the Smithsonian Museum. You can purchase these giclees or prints on his website at www.daleglasgow.com.

“For no man can lay a foundation other than the one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.” –1 Corinthians 3:11