Posts

COME!

In St. Matthew 14 we find an account of Jesus constraining His disciples to get into a ship to go to the other side of the Sea of Galilee.  They had just witnessed a notable miracle when Jesus multiplied a few fish and loaves of bread in order to feed over 5,000 people.  The disciples must have felt on top of the world after such an experience, but they soon became less confident as they found themselves in the midst of a storm out in deep water and Jesus not with them.    This has always reminded me of the highs and lows that we go through as Christians.   One moment we may be blessed and feeling strong in the Lord, and the next moment be frightened by circumstances that we don’t seem to have any control over.   The mountains and valleys of life are something that we all experience; but through them all, Christ is teaching us that He is the Master of all things.   When it began to grow late, Jesus came to them walking on the sea.   At fir...

ONE THING YOU LACK

A story is recorded in three of the Gospels in which a man came to Jesus and asked Him, “What good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?” (Matthew 19:16).   To this man, the question was all about doing good things to obtain salvation.  He was obviously very proficient at doing good things already because, when Jesus told Him to keep the commandments, and spelled them out for him, this man said that he had kept them all since he was a child.  For all his good works, however, he still was in doubt about the condition of his soul.   Many folks today have placed their hopes for Eternity in the quality and quantity of “good things” that they have done in their lives.  Sadly, many who confess Christianity fall into the same trap.  They have been churched all their lives, and tried to keep the commandments, and perhaps been quite successful, but yet they feel an emptiness in their soul.  They know in their hearts that there is something more t...

MAGNIFY THE LORD

"O magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt His name together." (Psalms 34:3).   I remember being very curious as a boy - I guess most boys are.  There was no end to my exploring, examining, and dismantling of anything and everything.  One of my best memories, though, was when my parents bought me a microscope one Christmas.  There was very little that escaped being placed on a slide and smashed under a cover slip so that I could peer at it.  It was like opening a brand new world to me.  Things that were commonplace and familiar became exotic and alien when zoomed in at high magnification.  The intelligent design, and intricate construction, of even a blade of grass, or a human skin cell, turned the mundane into the divine.   Years later, when I was introduced to the verse above, it made perfect sense to me.  As we go through our life, there are many things that confront us that seem very large to us.  Even the simplest of dif...