Sunday, December 31, 2006

Our Pastor is writing a column!

Our home church pastor in Jacksonville is writing a few times a month for a column in our hometown paper the Jacksonville Times Union. We were pleasantly surprised to learn this from a community email information that comes occasionally. We have loaded up some of the archived devotions from the past year that he has written and added them in the devotion blog. So look back at some of the past postings to see more devotions written by our Pastor Tom. Here is a short bio on our Pastor Tom. We miss you, Tom! And love you, too! We are thrilled that your ministry is Glorifing the Lord! We look forward to seeing more devotions from you!


Preacher Feature
by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller
Community Columnist

Rev. Thomas Fuller is a native of Dayton, Ohio, and has been married to his wife Cynthia for 33 years. They have three grown daughters. Tom received a bachelor’s degree in World Religions from Wright State University, and a Master of Divinity degree from United Theological Seminary, also in Dayton. He is an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church, and has served rural, inner-city and suburban congregations in both Ohio and Florida, and is currently the Sr. Pastor of Lake Shore United Methodist Church in West Jacksonville.

Tom’s pre-pastoral background establishes him as a jack-of-all-trades and, yes, a master of none. He has worked as a disc jockey, in retail, as a pool table installer, a fork lift driver, a rock and roll drummer and, in addition to many more, for a time shook walnuts off trees in the central valley of California. He claims that his experience in the nut orchards prepared him for service in the ministry. At any rate, his well-rounded encounters with life have given him a unique ability to relate to people from all walks of life.

Tom’s life goal is to grow in his relationship with Christ, and to make Christ known to others. Music, drama and the use of all the arts are important elements in his ministry. Pastor Tom can be reached at trf1452@comcast.net.

Monday, December 04, 2006

The Nativity

by Pastor Tom

My wife and I took in The Nativity on its opening night. We were both a little surprised about how good it was. The filmmakers actually remained faithful to the subject at hand. It was indeed the story of the nativity, beautifully rendered like a fine painting set to music. Even the speculative conversations and circumstances that transcended the biblical material did not overshadow the heart of the story. I’ll probably see it again before it leaves the theaters.

The critics, on the other hand, didn’t care for it all that much. It was too boring, too dry. There wasn’t enough action. It simply wasn’t “Hollywooded” enough for their tastes.

The filmmakers could have kicked it up a notch. They could have introduced a trendy, adolescent character, the kind of aloof, irritating modern day youth that shows up in so many pictures, regardless of the historical setting. There certainly could have been more conflict. Joseph, for instance, could have had another love interest, which would have opened the door for a gratuitous sex scene and an eventual knock down, drag out fight with her live-in boyfriend.

Without a doubt, there could have been a sub-plot that involved revealing the truth about a church cover-up regarding the whole nativity story. Yes, that would be good. Mary could have had a boyfriend who was really responsible for the embarrassing pregnancy, and it could have been revealed that the early church fathers formed some kind of ridiculous club to rewrite the whole story for their own sinister purposes. And that would have opened up the possibility of yet another sex scene. And somehow, it seems, there could have been a few explosions, or chase scenes and maybe even a battle or two! Everything could have been put together in the typical flashing, MTV music video style.

Indeed, they missed a fine opportunity to please the critics. All they ended up with was a straightforward, artistic account of not just any story, but the greatest story. Well, if they have to mess up once in a while, I’m happy they did it with this film.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Thanksgiving’s top ten

by Pastor Tom

Thanksgiving is this Thursday. It’s my favorite holiday, still kind of low key, and centered in family get-togethers. I’m a thankful person, having been blessed far beyond what I deserve. I’m thankful for all the standard things. At the top of the list is the love God has shown us, and then of course my wife and daughters, family and friends, freedom and opportunity, and then all the material comforts. But today I’m thinking of a number of things that really bless me, and here are ten of them.

1. Even though gasoline has jumped in price, I’m thankful that I no longer have to constantly worry about the gas gage and wonder if I’m going to get where I’m going.

2. I’m thankful for the motorcycle cop I pulled out in front of the other day, and that he didn’t get too upset about it and who didn’t give me a ticket, even though I had not yet put on my seatbelt.

3. I really appreciate businesses, organizations and individuals who adopt highways and clean up after those pathetic slobs who toss trash out their car windows.

4. I give a lot of thanks for the city of Jacksonville, and all the people who keep it running, from the mayor to the sheriff and everybody in-between.

5. I’m grateful for my evil cat, a creature I inherited unwillingly, but have come to love and appreciate.

6. I’m thankful for the staff of the Dunkin Donuts on Roosevelt Avenue because they are so polite and helpful, unlike the folks at that other coffee place who tend to treat you like a virus.

7. I’m always so thankful for people who let me over in traffic that I regret not having the opportunity to tell them so while driving.

8. I give thanks for waitresses who call me “Honey Pie” and act like they’re really happy about my appearance.

9. I never cease to be appreciative for the guys who pick up my garbage each week. What a hard, thankless job, and what a mess we’d all be in without them.

10. And I’m thankful that the release of O.J. Simpson’s utterly disgusting book and up-coming television interview were both cancelled. It gives me hope that there is still a limit to the bad taste we will tolerate.

Happy Thanksgiving to you all, and may you be too blessed to be stressed!

Monday, November 06, 2006

Elephant ears

by Pastor Tom

I have this great little jungle of elephant ears growing just outside my office window. I love those things. If it were up to me, I would have an entire elephant ear lawn. But lately, every time I look at them, I can’t help but think about my own ears.

I hate to admit it, but I suspect that my ears are getting bigger. And the timing is not good at all, because I have also reached the age when the possibility of growing out enough hair to cover them up is completely out of the question. As a matter of fact, I think the hair that used to grow on my head has taken to growing in my ears for fear of being smothered by the ghastly, flappy things. When they talk about the Golden Years, they never mention those gargantuan ears.

One would think that as old men’s ears grew to the size of wrinkled flapjacks, their hearing would improve. But that doesn’t typically happen. The hearing tends to diminish. Our ears get large enough to have their own zip code, and at the same time we couldn’t hear a train crashing into a cymbal factory. I suppose it’s all part of life’s rich pageant.

I’m probably more concerned about the size of my ears than how well they work. The reason is, I’ve always been able to hear way more than I ever pay attention to, anyway. My problem has never been hearing, but rather listening. A lot of times, my mind is drifting when others are talking. Sometimes, I’m too occupied to hear what others say.

There are times when I’m more anxious to get my two cents in than to really listen, so while I should be listening, I’m simply waiting for a crack in the conversation. When it comes, I’ll jump right in there and enlighten whoever it is that I probably would have done well to listen to. And then, there’s that personal experience and attitude filter that everything has to pass through.

In light of my own hearing disability, I shouldn’t be surprised at how poorly others tend to listen, but I still do get surprised. I’ve learned after many years that, as far as sermons, announcements or even articles are concerned, it is simply impossible to anticipate and account for poor listening skills in a way that will allow everyone to understand any given communication. Most of us just don’t listen very well.

It’s interesting that Jesus anticipated poor listening skills, Many times, he ended his teachings with the phrase, “to those who have ears, let them hear.” Of course, most of the people he spoke to had physical ears, but only a percentage really heard him. I think that’s how it is, generally. We have ears, but we don’t hear.

There’s a nice breeze outside, and it’s blowing my elephant ears around. Pretty soon, a strong frost will come along, and they’ll shrivel down to nothing. All the while, my own ears will continue to get bigger. I’m praying that I’ll begin to make better use of them. I do want to hear others. And I want to hear God.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Who owns Jessica?

by Pastor Tom

I just finished watching and listening to a Jessica Simpson video, which was for me a first.

Although I am unfamiliar with her music, I do know some things about her. I know that she is a pop singer, and that she dumped her husband, Nick. As a matter of fact, I have become quite a celebrity expert. I know the sorted details of the love lives of several Jennifers, an Angelina, and I think a Biff or a Brad or somebody like that. I hone my celebrity knowledge when standing in those endless lines at the grocery store. Since I have a knack for getting in line behind one of the half a dozen people in town who have yet to acquire a debit card and still insist on writing checks, I have ample opportunity to check out all those Hollywood gossip magazines (without ever having to buy one!).

I ended up listening to Jessica’s video because the title, I Belong To Me, kind of grabbed my attention. The song, while somewhat irritating and lacking any discernable musical merit, had at its heart what could be considered a respectable message. When two people enter into a relationship, one should not own the other, and each should be allowed to be themselves. All good and well.

But simply because no person should own another, does that really mean any of us own ourselves? None of us made ourselves. We can’t take any credit for our birth. For a good while each of us was completely helpless and dependant upon the good will and care afforded by others. We spend our entire lives in constant need of the provision of other people. Most of us take far more than we give. It would be a tough argument to say that any of us have actually bought and paid for our own existence.

Ownership also implies complete control. In this life, it seems to me that we are more like renters and less like owners. We on occasion have access to certain choices, but ultimately, the big decisions are made by somebody else, decisions like when and where we will be born, when and where we will die, and what kinds of choices we will have available to us in the meantime.
There’s been a lot of talk about self-ownership in our day. Some say that because we own ourselves, we should have every right to take our own life whenever we want. The right of a woman to abort a child has been centered in the notion that each woman owns her own body.

Some of us think that certain crimes can be “victimless,” since they don’t really hurt anyone aside from the perpetrator. The problem is, none of these things ever take place in a vacuum. All of us are a part of a whole lot of others. We aren’t just ourselves. Inevitably, the truth that we not only don’t own ourselves but can never really own anything will come to us all.

I believe that God is our real owner. God gave us this gift of life. As our owner, he is not a tyrant. He’ll let us take the reigns, and because we have so often, the world is like it is and not like God intended it to be. But there is good news. When we grow weary of pretending to own what we can never own, we can hand the reigns back to God. Only then can we really discover the blessings of being his property, his treasure, and the love of his heart.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Ugly talk

by Pastor Tom

I had a lot of fun in a costume store recently, checking out all the Halloween masks. In and among all the gruesome and scary creature heads were the likenesses of President Bush, Dick Cheney and Hillary Rodham Clinton. I suppose it could be rather frightening to have a politician show up at your front door. No doubt, you’d be in for some tricks.

It was reported the other day that John Spencer, the Republican challenger to Senator Clinton, made some remarks to an AP reporter about her looks. According to the reporter, Mr. Spencer was simply amazed at the unattractiveness of Hillary’s high school yearbook photo. He allegedly stated his conviction that she must have since had some serious plastic surgery, and his bewilderment at just how her hubby Bill was ever able to marry her.

According to Mr. Spencer, the report was a total fabrication, and he never said anything of the kind. The Hillary people seem to be taking great joy in the reported remarks, in spite of his denial. Sadly, recent history has revealed that reporters are often untrustworthy, having staged photo shootings and flat-out lied on several occasions, just to make a name for themselves.

The Bible regularly demands that any accusation be accompanied by the witness of at least two or three individuals before a judgment is delivered. I’ve always thought that reporters ought to be able to provide some corroborative support of some kind when they reveal embarrassing, damaging and negative facts about someone. It seems like it’s just too easy to smear somebody with little or no accountability.

Well, being a fat, ugly guy myself, I don’t really have much concern for how other people look. Some of the greatest people to walk the earth would never have won any beauty contest. Hillary seems to look fine, aside from the fact that she appears angry a lot of the time. Maybe it’s indigestion. Maybe it’s Bill.

I do admit that there are a lot of ugly politicians running around, but the ugliness isn’t coming from their looks. It’s coming out of their mouths. Oh, I truly enjoy some spirited competition in a political contest, but the kind of trash-talking that we hear is sad. It’s ugly. It’s embarrassing. It’s scary. God help us.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

God's promises are for all of us!

Every promise of God is available to all of us! Whosoever will do whatsoever God tells us! We must be obedient to God! Disobedience is the main hinderence to God's blessings. We need to hear from God individually. Obey God with your words. Receive conviction from God. Promises come with conditions.

Promises of God:
Wisdom, strength, joy, peace, righteousness, creativity, prosperity, good health, long life, favor, good friends, great relationships, hearing from God, being lead by the Spirit. Overall, blessed, wonderful life!

We have to die to sin and choose not to come into the temptation! Go forward and don't keep going around the same mountains.
Speak life and not death!
Live healthy and take care of your body!
Learn how to be and to rest!

Press into new levels of obedience. "learn how to do what's right while it still feels wrong"
Feed yourself regularly with the word

Joshua 1:3 - "Every place that the sole of your foot will tread upon I have given you, as I said to Moses."

1Peter 4:1-2 - "Therefore, since Christ suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves also with the same mind, for He who has suffered in the flesh has ceased from sin, that He no longer should live the rest of His time in the flesh for the lusts of men, but for the will of God." Get a new mindset...say I'd rather suffer than disobey God.

Reference: http://www.joycemeyer.org/OurMinistries/Broadcast/TV/Archive/
October 19 - The number one Hinderence to being Blessed

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Halloweenies

by Pastor Tom

Halloween is good news to many retailers. As far as special day spending is concerned, it comes in a solid second behind Christmas, beating out Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, the Fourth of July, Easter, you name it. And it’s rather strange when you think about it because, after all, what on earth is Halloween all about?

Well, there’s the candy thing, which is very appealing to kids. I used to dream for weeks about ways to increase my take. My costume had to allow for high-speed running through the neighbor’s yards. Forget the mask. And the bag was of critical importance. A strong pillowcase proved best. Of course, I precisely plotted a route for efficiency with notations indicating the “must visit” stops that gave out really great stuff the previous year.

Then, there are the costumes. People really like to dress up and be somebody else for a while. It’s great when kids dress up. They can actually imagine being mistaken for the real Spiderman.
Finally, there are all the ghosts, ghouls, and goblins with a dose of pumpkins thrown in for good measure. It’s no secret that people like scary stuff. They regularly go to scary movies and read scary books and ride scary rides.

It’s not that difficult to identify the attraction of Halloween, but it is a challenge to really figure out where it came from and exactly what it was originally intended to celebrate. There are those who claim a pretty good knowledge of its history, but in truth little is known and a whole lot of things are assumed. Most likely, it is a combination of Northern European nature religion traditions that got tagged on to the Christian All Saints Day, established in the seventh century.

A host of pre-Christian traditions were “Christianized.” Easter eggs fall into that same category, along with Christmas trees. Whatever the origin, it has truly become a unique American phenomenon.

It surprises me that so many Christians are terrified of Halloween. Some Christian parents refuse to allow their children to Trick or Treat. Some churches go to great lengths to provide Halloween alternatives. Preachers pound pulpits and warn their congregations to steer clear of any involvement with Halloween.

I’m not terribly troubled by Halloween. I think everybody could use a little senseless fun once in a while. Oh, don’t get me wrong. I do believe in the devil and in hell and all that nasty stuff. But if Halloween is the best the devil can do to snare us, then we could all rest easy. It is amazing how we Christians can trivialize something so very diabolical, deadly and dangerous as the devil by associating him with a goofy, nonsensical day of candy and mischief. Is it any wonder that some people have difficulty taking us seriously?

As for me, I approach Halloween as an opportunity. I know kids will be out on the candy
run. We pass out candy at church, along with all kinds of little gifts and printed invitations to various church events. Last year, we estimated having about 250 neighbors drop by. I talked to and met many of them. Several asked for prayer, and I prayed with them right out on the church parking lot.

I wish that less Christians would behave like Halloweenies and more would stand firm in their faith. There are genuine battles against evil to be fought that very few have the guts to fight. I suppose that some of us are able to take a big, brave stand against Halloween because we really don’t anticipate any serious hardship as a result.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Choosing greatness

by Pastor Tom

Like most of us, I’ve been paying close attention to the situation as it has been developing in North Korea. I really don’t understand what’s going on there, but that’s nothing new. Volumes could be written on what I don’t understand.

Pretty much of all I know is that there is this psychotic guy in charge over there with a really bad hairdo who, while the population of his country starves, is totally consumed with the notion of creating nuclear bombs. He could be doing lots of other things. He could invest himself in doing what the South Koreans have been doing. They have built quite an economy and created a pretty good standard of living for their citizenry. He could become a hero, and lead his people into a life of freedom and prosperity. He could do any number of great things. But, he has chosen to do what he is doing, which doesn’t make much sense.

Something must have happened to him somewhere along the way. Maybe his parents didn’t change his diaper often enough. Maybe he didn’t have parents. Perhaps the other kids picked on him when he was in school. It just might be that too many people made fun of his silly hairdo. Who knows?

The sad thing in all of this is that here is a person who has the opportunity and the means to do something really great, and instead, he chooses something destructive. We all know where his actions are taking him, even if he doesn’t.

I’m not certain where all this will lead. It could end up quite ugly. The notion of a nut like this with nuclear bombs is not a comforting thought.

Well, most of us probably don’t have entire nations at our disposal. However, we do have families and jobs and communities. And all of us have had some bad stuff come our way. And, just like Mr. Hairdo over in North Korea, we can all choose what we are going to do with ourselves. We can choose to be a blessing to those in our sphere of influence, or we can choose to be destructive or irritating or just plain worthless. It’s really up to us.

It amazes me that so many choose to miss the opportunity to be great. Parents choose to be uninvolved in the lives of their kids. Sons and daughters choose the low road of poor performance and bad behavior. Workers choose to just put in their time. Every day, people choose to be critics, slackers, no-counts, thieves, and worse.

One thing that this life offers each and every one of us is the opportunity to be great, even if we aren’t in charge of a whole nation, and even if things haven’t always gone right in our life. We can be great in our dealings with others. We can be the best thing that ever happened to somebody. It’s up to us.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Christophobia

by Pastor Tom

I suppose we Christians can be a pretty scary bunch. At least that’s what Rosie O’Donnell seems to think. She believes that we Christians are as big a threat to America as Muslim terrorists, according to remarks she made recently on national television. Strangely, her remarks drew a pretty good round of applause.

I have to confess a little confusion. Oh, certainly I’m keenly aware of some very strange and at times downright dangerous people who have claimed some kind of bizarre Christianity. But they are in truth very rare indeed. If Christians were really bent on destruction, or on seizing power from others, they could be pretty successful, since four out of five Americans claim to be one.

Although Rosie obviously fears these Christian people as much as she fears Muslim terrorists, I have noticed that she hasn’t decided to move to a Middle Eastern Muslim nation to voice her views. There, as a rule, they don’t tolerate women who speak their mind very well. And, I have to mention that the punishment for the practice of homosexuality among many Muslims is death. Poor Rosie would end up chopped into a million pieces, sprinkled about as food for the birds.

I wonder what it is about Christians that Rosie fears. Perhaps it’s the thousands of hospitals, colleges, food pantries and relief organizations they’ve founded. It might be the world-wide feeding and medical missions they support. It could just be all that praying and singing. It may be some of the crazy notions they hold dear, like putting others before yourself, loving your enemies and praying for them, giving generously from your hard-earned income to help others, or attempting to live a moral, honest and upright life. Scary stuff!

It would seem that a person like Rosie would have nothing but praise for a country and a culture like ours. Where else in the world could a woman without a hint of talent make millions in the entertainment industry? It would seem that Rosie might perceive a person with bombs strapped all over their body to be slightly more dangerous than a person passing out Bibles. Like I said, I’m a little confused.

I have a suspicion regarding Rosie’s fear. Christians do believe and state that there is a God who has given us a moral law. Christians do believe that there is such a thing as right and wrong. I suspect that for a person like Rosie, such a possibility is much more frightening than being blown to bits by a terrorist.

I pray for Rosie to discover the truth about believers. I pray for Rosie to recover from her “Christophobia.” And, in the meantime, I pray that God will give me the grace to be the scary Christian in her closet.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Beating dead horses

by Pastor Tom

“To another [Jesus] said, ‘Follow me.’ But he said, ‘Lord, let me first go and bury my father.’ Then [Jesus} said to him, ‘Leave the dead to bury their own dead, but as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God.”

The Associated Press very recently released a report about a woman in Athens, Georgia and two of her roommates who decided that the woman’s brother was in need of repentance. Since he seemed reluctant, and even laughed when they began praying for him, they opted to hold him at gunpoint until he had a change of heart. When his attention seemed to drift, one of his captors fired a shot into the ceiling just feet from his head. Eventually, he was able to make a break for the door and find his way to the police station. It would seem that God did not see fit to bless the firearm to the head approach to conversion.

It’s always such a treat for those of us who have chosen to be followers of Jesus to see another “Crazy Christian” report in the media. In truth, without meeting any criteria or demonstrating any proficiency or knowledge, anyone can claim to be a Christian, and some of those who do have what we might call issues. On the other hand, there are many more who sincerely seek to follow Jesus and serve others. Their efforts are rarely reported.

Thankfully, most of us do not resort to weapons to obtain converts. But quite a few of us tend to act somewhat desperate. We beg. We plead. We worry more about the uninterested than the interested.

Strangely, Jesus never seemed to dally around with uninterested people. He was pretty blunt and to the point. He never begged anyone. He never acted as though the church and the purposes of God in the world would fall apart unless some disinterested, apathetic person suddenly jumped up to take the reigns. He tossed out the invitation and then moved on. He never even slowed down. Those who chose to follow him had to move quickly just to keep up with him.

I believe God’s invitation is the same today. Jesus invites you to an adventure of service and sacrifice. His claim is that he holds the key to abundant and eternal life. All this can be yours if you say yes to him. If, however, you are content with your life and the direction it’s taking you, and if you believe that you are already reaching your full potential as a human being, then just stay where you are. God’s work in the world will not fall apart because of your indifference to him. And it doesn’t seem, from the example of Jesus, that God wastes time beating dead horses. Relax. Nobody will have to go to heaven kicking and screaming. The kicking and screaming is for someplace else.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

On being human

by Pastor Tom

“Your attitude should be the same that Christ Jesus had. Though he was God, he did not demand and cling to his rights as God. He made himself nothing. He took the humble position of a slave and appeared in human form. And in human form he humbled himself even further by dying a criminal’s death on a cross.” Philippians 2:5-8

Being a human can get complicated. There are a lot of different approaches. Sometimes, we get cues from the human beings we grow up around and decide to go about being human in the same way. At other times, we reject the notions of being human exhibited by our peers, and we strike out on our own with some kind of new thing.

Most of the time, we discover that people who have chosen a particular approach to being human hang out in little groups of like-minded humans. They all look pretty much alike, talk alike, and tend to engage in the same kinds of activities. Upwardly mobile type humans dress for success, carry cell phones and blackberries, drive BMW’s and talk about the stock market. Biker type humans dress up in leather costumes, hook a chain to their wallets, ride Harleys, and somehow manage to develop huge pot-bellies. Redneck type humans listen to country music, drive pick-up trucks with big tires, pull out a few teeth and marry their cousin. Well, you get the picture. There are a lot of ways to be human.

It’s interesting to me that the one who made humans in the first place, namely God, became a human being himself. As a human, like us, he hung with his peers, but he also ran around with those considered to be less desirable. Like most of us, he had a trade and family and friends, but he was able to step away from those things when a higher calling came along. And, unlike us, he was able to do it all without sin. That made him very unique, and allowed him to become the one person who could save the rest of us.

His sacrificial death gave us new life. And, because of his experience in the human creation department, the way he lived was most certainly a pretty good model for us to live by. He had the inside on just how humans work best, and in some ways his approach was considerably different than ours.

For us, the most important part of being human is to look out for number one. We worry about our rights and how we feel and what we’re going to get. We focus and concentrate on our own problems. We get consumed with self. Oh, we don’t think we do, but we do.

Jesus, on the other hand, had no thought for himself. He surrendered all his godly rights and privileges. He saw his purpose as one of servant hood. He was humble, too. I really think Jesus knew how to do it. He knew how to be a happy, successful human. He knew that the self route is really a rut. He knew that self is just another word for prison. He knew that humans were never designed to be in self-imposed chains. He was free. And I believe Jesus had a great time being a human.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Wonderfully made

by Pastor Tom

“For you did form my inward parts. You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for you are fearful and wonderful. Wonderful are your works!”

-Psalm 139:13-14

Every now and then I make an attempt at woodworking. Typically, I get an idea in my head for some amazing creation, and then think about it for a while. My last project consisted of a box-type, framed shelf to fill a hole in the wall in the bathroom where an old, rusty medicine cabinet had been.

I began with some precision measuring. I tend to cut a piece of wood over and over, only to discover that it’s still too short (an old carpenter’s line). Anyway, I cut the wood and formed the box with shelves, then glued and nailed it together. So far, so good. To trim the unit, I had to cut out a frame, and that involved angles, which also involved complicated mathematical computations. Well, they were complicated for me. After cutting the pieces, I was delighted, and somewhat surprised, to find that they fit together really well. I then installed this magnificent creation and carefully applied a coat of paint. The grand finale came when I was able to show off the finished product to my wife, who promptly told me that it was perhaps the greatest woodworking project of all time. I frequently drag house guests down the hall and into the bathroom so that they, too, can be dazzled by my woodworking wizardry.

It’s really great to conceive an idea, plan a project, and carry it out to a successful conclusion. I think creativity is something we get from God because God is creative, and opportunities to be creative are to be embraced whenever possible. They provide us with reward and satisfaction, and also are a great blessing to others.

Well, let me ask you a question. What do you think God had on his mind the day he created you? Really, what was he thinking? Were you just an afterthought? Did God design you and create you for, well, no good reason? Did God finish putting you together and then think, “Hmm, that’s nothing special.”

I’m pretty sure that God was thinking some beautiful, wonderful things about you as he formed you in your mother’s womb. God knew of your potential as he designed the miraculous creation that would be you. There would be no other like you in all of human history. All of God’s works are wonderful, and you are one of God’s works.

It’s really something to produce a wonderful creation. And, if we take time to think about it, it’s really something to be one.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

The best defense

by Pastor Tom

“And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” Matthew 16:8

I’m sorry I can’t remember the exact source for this story, but a while back I read a magazine article about when Mike Kollin was a linebacker for the Dolphins and a graduate of Auburn University. His former college coach, Shrug Jordan, asked him if he would do some recruiting for him. Mike said, “Sure, Coach. What kind of player are you looking for?”

Coach Jordan said, “Well, Mike, you know there’s that fellow, you knock him down and he just stays down.” Mike said, “We don’t want him, do we Coach?”

“No, that’s right. Then there’s that fellow, you knock him down and he gets back up, but you knock him down again and he stays down.” Mike answered, “We don’t want him either, do we Coach?”

Coach Jordan said, “No, Mike, we don’t want him either. But then, there’s the fellow, you knock him down, and he gets up. You knock him down again and he gets up again. Knock him down again, and he gets up again. You keep knocking him down, and he keeps getting up.” Mike said, “That’s the guy we want, isn’t it, Coach?”

The coach answered, “No, Mike, we don’t want him either. I want you to find the guy who’s knocking everybody down. That’s the guy we want.”

It’s always a great thing to have a good defense. But it’s the offense that scores the points.

Sadly, a lot of what we Christians do is defense. We hunker down in our churches and whine about how bad things are. We hide out and pout. We ask for God’s protection, and then are surprised when the problems we never really did anything about come knocking on our door.

Following Christ means a lot more that being able to get back up when we’re down. It also involves some knocking down type activity. When Jesus said that the gates of hell would not prevail against the church, he was most certainly assuming that the church will do more than sit on the bench.

The problems facing our community will never go away on their own. We should get on the offensive, which by the way doesn’t mean that we are to be offensive. It means that we will act to score some points against the violence and other plagues working full-time to destroy families and neighborhoods. Certainly, we need to pray, and we need to put feet on those prayers.

There are many things we can do. We need to get to know our neighbors again. We need to be involved in community efforts. We need to support our elected officials and leaders. We need to be willing to mentor our young people and provide active role models. We need to get out of the pew and into the stew.

We can begin by believing that there are answers to our problems, and that God will help us solve them if we are willing to be used to that end. And then, we need to begin moving toward the goal.

Monday, August 14, 2006

EYES OF LOVE

by Pastor Tom

“Above all hold, unfailing your love for one another, since love covers a multitude of sins.”
-1 Peter 4:8

I had three sets of grandparents when I was growing up, and I never really thought it was unusual. Without going into the how’s and why’s of it, I believe it turned out to be a very special blessing in my life.

My step-grandpa was named Tullah. He was a very talented and gifted woodworker, carpenter, cabinetmaker; an artist, really. With the ability to create intricate inlaid furniture as well as design full-sized buildings (he drew and built several beautiful churches), he constantly turned out unbelievable masterpieces. The things that man could do with a piece of wood!

As I grew up, I watched Grandpa build, piece by piece, year by year, a unique house he had designed. He did it all by himself, in the evenings and on weekends, with the occasional help of my Dad, while his family lived in a one room building he had constructed. He even hand-faced the stone that made up the front facade.

I loved building model cars when I was a kid, and once Grandpa built a scale-sized car dealership for my room, complete with showroom, operating glass doors and a service center in the back. He played guitar and sang crazy songs, had served in the trenches of WW1, and was a Christian fellow who could have written the book on courtesy.

The last summer of his life, I spent a lot of time with him on his eight acre property and was then old enough to really get to know him and to love him a lot. When he died, everyone in our family cried and cried.

We had a picture of Grandpa in our living room. One day, a visiting buddy of mine picked it up and asked me who it was. After I told him, he asked, “What’s wrong with his face?” Wondering what in the world he was talking about, I walked over and took the picture from his hand. When I saw it, I remembered. Grandpa had a large, very prominent red birthmark covering half of his face. It seemed so strange. I certainly knew it was there, but it was as if I had never seen that birthmark before.

Eventually, I figured it out. My friend never had the opportunity to know and then come to love my Grandpa. If he had, he wouldn’t have noticed it either, because love makes things like that invisible.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

IT’S RIGHT TO RESPECT

by Pastor Tom

“Remind them to be submissive to rulers and authorities, to be obedient, to be ready for any honest work, to speak evil of no one, to avoid quarreling, to be gentle, and to show perfect courtesy toward all.” -Titus 3:1-2

I can remember coming home from school one day, enraged that I had received detention for an entire week for something I had not done. I argued my case with Dad, urging him to go to school and have a little sit-down with that poor excuse for a teacher who had so violated my rights and dealt me such an injustice. Finally, Dad agreed to miss a couple hours of work the next day and go speak with the teacher on my behalf. I was elated. Yep, the Old Man would make quick work of that guy, and I could forget about a week of detention.

The next evening, I eagerly waited for Dad to arrive home from work. I wanted all the details. I wanted to hear just how that teacher had been put in his place. Finally, Dad showed up. “Well, Pappy, did you talk to that teacher,” I asked. “I certainly did, son,” he said, “and I’m completely convinced that you were indeed innocent.” I said, “Hey, that’s great! Now I won’t have to take a week’s detention.” And then, Dad said, “No, son, you won’t have to take a week’s detention.

Now, you’re going to have two week’s detention.” Needless to say, I was a bit confused. “But Dad,” I protested, “you just said you knew that I didn’t do what I was accused of doing!” “That’s right,” he said, “but you didn’t tell me the whole story. During your encounter with that teacher, you were rude. You talked back. You were disrespectful. You failed to conduct yourself in a manner that acknowledged the teacher’s authority. Even though the teacher may have been wrong, he was still the teacher, and you were still the student. The moment you thought your rights came before your responsibilities, you lost them. In the morning, you’ll go apologize to the teacher, and you’ll take the detention and feel darned lucky that it’s not any worse.”

I didn’t like it one bit. Now, I had two weeks of detention for something I hadn’t done. I had already told all my friends how my Dad was going to come to school and set that teacher straight. This whole thing had gone terribly wrong.

Well, the next morning I went and apologized to the teacher. Surprisingly, it was a pretty good encounter. Eventually, I ended up in one of his classes. He turned out to be a great teacher. And, I must say, this whole episode turned out to be, for me, a pretty good lesson on the importance of respect and courtesy.

I am praying for all the students and teachers who are just beginning another school year. I pray patience and wisdom for the teachers. I pray an eagerness to learn for all the students. And I pray that all of us will know as much as my Dad knew about honoring and respecting those who have been called to teach.

Monday, July 17, 2006

The Truth Hurts

by Pastor Tom

“But because I tell you the truth, you do not believe me. Which of you convicts me of sin? If I tell you the truth, why do you not believe me?” -John 8:45-47

According to some pretty reliable polls, only about ten percent of Americans think political candidates regularly tell the truth. That means ninety percent feel that they just say what voters want to hear. Why is that? Well, politicians lie because voters tend to demand lies rather than the truth.

We live in a pretty deceptive society. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says that odometers get rolled back an average of 30,000 miles on about three millions vehicles a year, cheating consumers out of around $1,000 a car. One or every eight restaurant checks is computed incorrectly, the majority of which add up to overcharges. Ten thousand people in the United States are suspected of practicing medicine with a bogus medical degree. Many doctors with valid credentials, when polled, admit to cheating on medical exams. That really official looking manila envelope you received not long ago in the mail that you felt compelled to open because it must have certainly contained some important governmental information ended up containing some half-witted sales scheme from a local car dealer. But you weren’t surprised.

We’ve come to expect as much from car companies. Remember that fine Corinthian leather Ricardo Montalban told us about? Not really from Corinth. It was just a label dreamed up by the Chrysler marketing department.

Then, there are those little lies we hear and tell every day; “I’ll just be a minute.” – “Let’s get together for lunch. I’ll give you a call.” – “Everything’s fixed.” – “I’ll get this book back to you as soon as I’ve finished reading it.” – “The check is in the mail.” – “The doctor will be with you shortly.” – “This will only hurt a little.” – “There’s absolutely no obligation.” – “And if elected, I will…….”

The next time we gripe about our politicians and their inability to be truthful, we should think again. They’re just doing what we’ve asked them to do. We don’t respond well to the truth and rarely want to hear it. We don’t want some politician telling us that the biggest problem with America is directly connected to our shabby, shoddy, apathetic lifestyle. We would rather make believe that they can fix everything for us and we can just all stay as we are.

Jesus got himself into some real trouble, not because he made promises he couldn’t keep or metered his comments according to the polls. He got into trouble because he told the truth. He challenged our false assumptions. He told us plainly to get our lives in order. It didn’t go over well, and it still doesn’t. Sinful human beings are quite comfortable in a world of untruths.
If you want real change, then look to Christ. He is the way, and the truth, and the life.

Sometimes, the truth hurts, but the truth leads to real change and to healing.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Left Behind

by Pastor Tom

“For unclean spirits came out of many who were possessed, crying with a loud voice, and many who were paralyzed or lame were healed. So there was much joy in that city.” -Acts 8:7-8

Human beings have only been exploring outer space since the Russians managed to place the satellite Sputnik in orbit on October 4th of 1957. However, in that short span of time, human beings have managed to create a huge supply of space garbage.

Thousands of fragments larger than an inch, and somewhere between ten billion and thousands of trillions of microscopic pieces of debris are now floating around our solar system neighborhood. Some chunks of space trash are as big as a truck, or even a small apartment building.

Space garbage is created when certain rocket components are spent, waste material is ejected, tools get away, things come loose and, on occasion when secret military satellites are blown up to avoid having them fall into enemy hands. The Russians tended to do just that for a good number of years.

Some space garbage is almost famous. The Gemini 4 crew had a glove float away during the very first space walk in history. Michael Collins lost a camera during the Gemini 10 mission. The lunar module, normally left to crash on the moon, for the failed Apollo 13 flight came back with them and is still up there flying around the earth, along with bag after bag of refuse tossed from various Soviet space stations.

Both Venus and Mars now have little piles of our junk littering their surfaces, and the moon has in excess of 20 tons of garbage lying around. Just a couple of jaunts to the moon, and already there are several junk cars (moon buggies), satellite parts, experimental equipment, abandoned lunar landing craft and the wreckage of several lunar modules, which in short order plummet to the surface after we leave without the benefit of an atmosphere to burn them up. There are even some golf balls up there, cameras, and a host of refuse that would make any landfill proud.

When we humans go somewhere, we always leave something behind. Normally, what we leave is a mess. It seems to be our nature to interrupt, deface, pollute, defile and in some cases even destroy. I suppose it happens so naturally in outer space because we’ve practiced it for so long here on earth.

It doesn’t have to be that way. In the book of Acts, we read about some people who always left something good behind. The believers we read about left deliverance, healing and joy.

Some people walk into a room and don’t leave very much in the way of good after they’re gone.

But, look on the bright side. At least they’re gone. On the other hand, some people bring a lot of love and joy with them when they come, and it tends to hang around for a while after they leave. Thank God for those who leave the joy.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Tick, Tick, Tick

by Pastor Tom

“We are afflicted in every way, but no crushed, perplexed, but not driven to despair, persecuted, but no forsaken, struck down, but not destroyed, always carrying in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies.” -2 Corinthians 4:8-10

There used to be a fellow on television all the time named John Cameron Swayze. He didn’t have a television show that I know of, but he did do a lot of commercials for Timex watches. The Timex watch came out in 1946 and it sold for $6.95, which even back in those days was pretty inexpensive for a watch. The combination of low price, reliability and a great advertising campaign let to incredible sales.

The commercials all had pretty much the same theme. A Timex watch would be severely punished in some impressive demonstration. Once, one was secured to an outboard motor propeller. In another ad, they strapped one to the leg of a race horse. They did dozens of horrific things to those watches. At the end of the commercial, they would retrieve the watch and then hold it before the camera. Lo and behold, the watch still worked. Mr. Swayze would then boldly proclaim, “It takes a licking and keeps on ticking!”

Everybody kind of hoped that just once, the watch would fail the test. Finally, in one commercial, just to show that the Timex people had a sense of humor, they placed a watch on the ground and had an elephant step on it. When they retrieved the watch it was smashed to pieces. It was a great bit, and probably did as much to endear their product to consumers as any of the other commercials.

The Timex watch was, and I suppose still is, a great product. Everybody could afford to own one. It did its job very well, and it could take a real pounding and continue to be reliable. Paul and his fellow disciples in the New Testament were much the same. They were afflicted, perplexed, persecuted and struck down. But they plowed ahead. Their attitude and outlook remained positive. They could still be counted upon. They weren’t wimps. They weren’t crybabies. They didn’t run home with their tails between their legs when things got difficult.

They didn’t start whining and making excuses. They kept on keeping on.

I pray that we can be as reliable. It seems today that so many are ready to throw in the towel at the first sign of adversity. This happened. That happened. So and so said this. So and so did that. They’re discouraged, destroyed, wiped out, finished. Too bad. Too sad!

For those of us who claim the name of Jesus, and have a call upon our lives to serve God and others, may it be said of us, “They took a licking, and kept on ticking.”

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

WHEN LIGHTNING STRIKES

by Pastor Tom

“In him you also, who have heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and have believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, which is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.” -Ephesians 1:13-14

I was delighted to return from a trip out of the country to find that we have finally received some much needed rain during this past week. And, along with the rain comes the lightning. Not far from here, in a 60 mile wide path that cuts across the state down around Tampa, known as “Lightning Alley,” lightning strikes occur more than 90 days each year. Of the 40 million strikes per year in the United States, 400 actually hit people. Half of them die as a result, and the majority of those deaths happen in Lightning Alley. The most dangerous spots, by the way, tend to be grocery store parking lots.

It’s true that one of the safest places to be in a lightning storm is an automobile. Contrary to what most folks think, it has nothing whatsoever to do with the rubber tires. The real reason that most cars are safe is because they have metal bodies. They do indeed get struck by lightning from time to time, but the metal body of a car acts as a Faraday Cage. The electrical charge of the strike is dispersed around the body and remains on the outside of the car. Those inside are kept neutral and perfectly safe.

People should be aware of the fact that convertibles and cars with plastic bodies also get struck with lightning on occasion, but offer no electrical protection for the occupants. These types of cars might look a lot like other cars, but without the metal cage surrounding the people inside, there’s no protection from a sudden strike.

Lightning has incredible power. It’s is kind of comforting to think that, while in your car, lightning could literally crash down on you, and you’d be snug as a bug in a rug. It would sizzle and crash and flash all around you with no ill effects. It makes me think of what Paul says about the way we are sealed with the Holy Spirit. Those who have heard the word of truth and believed have this amazing shield of protection all around them. Nothing will have the power to come along and blast them out of God’s kingdom. The Holy Spirit will keep and protect them until the day comes when they can acquire personal possession of the eternal life that Christ won for them on the cross. Amazing!

Cars and religious systems share something in common. From the outside, they might look a lot alike, but there are some models that offer no real protection at all to those inside, and they may never know until lightning strikes.

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Fountain of Youth

by Pastor Tom

“Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits, who forgives all your iniquity, who heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the Pit, who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy, who satisfies you with good as long as you live, so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.” -Psalm 103, 2-5

It’s going on five hundred years ago that a Spanish fellow named Ponce de Leon landed on a strip of Florida beach just a few miles south of where we live here in Jacksonville. The locals weren’t all that crazy about his appearing and they were pretty crafty individuals, so they made up a story about a fountain of youth. Quickly, old Ponce and his men took off through the swamps and the scrubs hunting for it, just as the natives knew he would. Who could resist? What he found was bugs and snakes and heat and a bunch of misery while he continued to grow old in the process.

It’s ironic that the land of the fountain of youth has the highest median age of any state in the nation. And quite a few of us are still searching for that magical thing that will ward off the aging process. Workouts, hair dye, face lifts, health food and gallons of Oil of Olay are just a few of the things we try in order to avoid the inevitable effects of aging.

I’m getting to the point where I think about it every now and then, particularly when I take a look into the mirror. I could try some new hair or some such thing, but it’s not likely.


Over the years, I’ve been watching people age and I know a lot of folks who have quite a few years on them. I’ve been convinced that the youngest “oldsters” I know are the ones who not only have a strong faith in God, but also an active interest in serving others. It’s not surprising.

Statistics bear out the fact that active church members enjoy a healthier and higher life expectancy than others. Regardless of age, the people I know who are out of touch with God in their lives and more interested in themselves than anything else seem to act the oldest.

We didn’t really need modern statistics to figure all this out. It’s been in the Bible all along. While it’s true that the body will ultimately manifest the effects of time, our minds and our spirits can be renewed by the power of our relationship with God. The Lord designed us not simply to grow old, but to grow up, higher and higher, into a greater likeness of his Son, and into an experience with life that is constantly renewed.

As it says in Proverbs 14:27, “The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life!”

Monday, June 05, 2006

Sixth Month, Sixth Day, Sixth Year

Pastor Tom By Pastor Tom Fuller, Lake Shore United Methodist Church, Jacksonville, Florida, USA (our beloved pastor from our home church!)

“This calls for wisdom: let him who has understanding reckon the number of the beast, for it is a human number, its number is six hundred and sixty six.”

-Revelation 13:18

Some numbers are more famous, or perhaps infamous, than others, and for a variety of reasons. Many consider the number seven to be lucky. And everyone knows about the number thirteen. Just this past week, I was riding an elevator in a twenty story building that curiously had no thirteenth floor. Of course it really did have one, even if it was marked as fourteen. And the number thirteen is particularly troublesome if it happens to fall on Friday.

The Bible has several prominent numbers that pop up repeatedly, and seem to have significance beyond simple math. One of those numbers is twelve, from the twelve tribes of Israel to the twelve apostles, and at least twelve dozen more in between. The number forty is another. It rained for forty days and nights during the great flood. The children of Israel wandered in the desert for forty years, on a journey to the promised land that would typically take eleven days on foot. Jesus was tempted in the wilderness for forty days, and he also appeared after his resurrection for forty days. The number three, in addition to its association with the trinity and the three days between the death of Jesus and his resurrection, shows up in the Bible well over four hundred times.

But hands down, the most famous biblical number has to be six hundred and sixty six. Just the sight of “666” tattooed on somebody’s arm or printed on a black t-shirt or perhaps spotted on a movie poster is enough to elicit visions of devils and demons and all kinds of evil. Not long ago, I made a purchase in a local convenience store, and my total came out to be $6.66. The poor cashier suddenly had a look of horror come over her face. She said, “Oh my goodness, six, six, six! Do you want to buy something else?” I said, “No, that will be fine,” and just for fun gave her the best sinister stare I could muster. This week, we will see the arrival of the sixth day of the sixth month in the sixth year of this century. Who knows what evil will rear its ugly head on such a day!

Actually, the number 666 is not presented in the Bible as evil in and of itself, although it is no doubt an important and revealing number. When the Bible was written, numbers did not as yet have their own symbols. Various letters of the alphabet were assigned numerical value. Most of us are quite familiar with Roman numerals, which are letters of the Latin alphabet that have numerical value. Greek, the language John used to record his Revelation, also had numbers assigned to the letters. It was revealed to John that the numerical value of the letters of the name of the beast in his vision, when added together, would total six hundred and sixty six. This beast is undoubtedly an evil and violent deceiver who stands in opposition to God and everything good. The number of his name, on the other hand, is presented as a code provided for the benefit of the people of God.

John made it a point in this chapter of his Revelation (can you believe it, chapter 13?) to call for the use of wisdom in regard to this particular prophecy. To a large degree, his plea has been ignored. Over all however, the message is clear. The path of sinful human history will lead to catastrophe, but to those who receive Christ and are faithful to his gospel, there will be salvation and deliverance.

We never know what a day may bring, and in that regard, June 6, 2006 is certainly like any other day. The most significant day for any of us is today, because this is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice, and be glad in it.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Toxic Fruit

by Pastor Tom

“But avoid stupid controversies, genealogies, dissentions and quarrels over the law, for they are unprofitable and futile. As for a man who is factious, after admonishing him once or twice, have nothing more to do with him, knowing that such a person is perverted and sinful. He is self-condemned.” -Titus 3:9-10

On September 26, 1830, a man named Col. Robert Gibbon Johnson stood on the courthouse steps in Salem, Massachusetts before a crowd of several hundred cheering spectators as he held a basket of potentially toxic fruit. Despite warnings that the fruit, if consumed, would turn his blood to acid, he announced that he was going to eat the entire basket.

His own doctor, who stood among the other spectators, shouted out that if the Colonel was foolish enough to carry on with his plans, he would foam at the mouth, develop an instant brain fever, and drop dead. Johnson, however, dressed in black, did indeed eat the entire basket filled with fruit, and he survived!

He not only survived, but showed not a single ill effect. The “toxic” fruit contained in the Colonel’s basket was none other than the tomato. For many years, dire warnings about the poisonous quality of the tomato had been universally accepted. Thanks to the brave actions of the Colonel and a number of others, today we regularly enjoy the flavor and health benefits of the tomato. Where would the world be without the BLT?

A lot of grave warnings about all kinds of things have in time been demonstrated false. It was commonly believed for a time that any human being moving at a speed in excess of 35 miles per hour would instantly die. And most of us can still remember all those warnings about Y2K.

Although some warnings are bogus, we should not become numb to all of them. There are some very destructive things out there. When Paul writes to his friend Titus, he delivers a warning that should certainly be heeded by all who are members of the family of God. It has to do with individuals who have slipped into the practice of constant controversy and criticism. For some reason, these people have developed a pattern of never-ending nit-picking. For such people, life is a succession of problems and dilemmas. Their negative attitude is infections. If left unchecked, the church goes nowhere. If it was up to them, we never even would have had the tomato!

Monday, May 22, 2006

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller

“How long, O simple ones, will you love being simple? How long will scoffers delight in their scoffing and fools hate knowledge?” -Proverbs 1:22

I have an old telephone in my house that is commonly called a “candlestick” model. The base features a rotary dial, and the receiver is mounted on top of a column. The speaker hangs on the side, and to use it, one generally has to hold the phone in one hand and the receiver in the other. Believe it or not, it still works. Every now and then, just for old time’s sake, I place a call on this phone. It’s fun to hear that old rotary dial click out each number.

Back in 1963, AT&T introduced the Touch-Tone telephone. It didn’t take long for a nation obsessed with push-button convenience to warm up to the new thing. It was said that to dial a seven digit number on a rotary phone took an average of ten seconds, but only five seconds on the new push-button variety.

Our family was very excited with our first push-button phone. In short order, we were punching out numbers at lightning speed! Back then, each button created a different tone, and before long we were calling friends and irritating them with push-button renditions of our favorite songs. At one time, I even had a push-button phone songbook.

Well, if only we would have known then just where all this push-button convenience would lead. Now, thanks to push-buttons, we never have to actually connect with a live human being when we call a business or agency. Instead, we get a recording that tells us to push more buttons, offering us a myriad of options that have nothing to do with what we really need. We end up stuck on the phone forever, pushing one button after another, with a good chance of eventually slamming the phone down in disgust. But, we should remember that, on the average, it only took us five seconds to dial the initial number, instead of the previous ten it took back in the old days when we actually connected immediately with a helpful, living person. Boy oh boy, aren’t we smart?

I’m not really against technology or opposed to progress. Actually, in a lot of ways it’s great. But, more and more, as our technology gets increasingly complex, I think we tend to get increasingly simple. We don’t think things through. We don’t look at the whole picture. We accept everything. We don’t evaluate much. Overall, it seems to me that we are not really doing a better job at anything. And thanks to technology, we can be stupid a whole lot faster.

The Book of Proverbs in the Bible was written, “That men may know wisdom and instruction, understand words of insight, and receive instruction in wise dealing, righteousness, justice and equity” (Proverbs 1:2-3). Psalm 111:10 tells us that, “The beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord.” Is it any wonder that, as our nations falls away from God, and in spite of all the technological advances, America seems to be in the process of “dumbing down?”

There is no push-button device that can make us smart. Our technology creates as many problems as it solves. Wisdom comes from God, and those who desire to be wise will seek him.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

The Real Picture

by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller

“For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall understand fully, even as I have been fully understood.” -1 Corinthians 13:12

Although people have seen themselves reflected in water since the beginning of time, they haven’t had the benefit of viewing themselves in all their glory in what we would call a mirror until recent history. Early attempts at making mirrors have been mentioned in the Bible and in ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman literature, but generally these devices were made out of polished brass or bronze. The medium, as well as the primitive polishing techniques, were never able to produce a very clear reflection.

The earliest glass mirrors, backed with shiny metal, appeared in Italy during the fourteenth century. The original process for creating a glass mirror was to coat one side of the glass with mercury and polished tin foil. But the process for creating what we would call a genuine glass mirror was perfected by a German chemist in 1835 named Justus von Liebig. His process consisted of pouring ammonia and silver on a sheet of clear glass, and then adding formaldehyde, which produce an incredibly shiny surface that reflected light with great clarity. For many years, all mirrors were produced using this process.

Today, of course, there are many materials and processes used in making mirrors, and the expensive ones are of very high quality. Sometimes, when I catch my reflection in a mirror, particularly the full-length variety, I wish they weren’t so clear.

When Paul wrote about seeing himself in a mirror, he didn’t have the benefit of a clear one. When he saw his reflection, a lot of details weren’t very visible. His reflection was hazy and out of focus. Try as he might, he just couldn’t make everything out. He could never get much better than a fuzzy, distorted picture of himself.

That didn’t worry or upset Paul, because he knew that some day, the perfect would come. Knowledge would be complete. He would see Jesus, not through the eyes of faith, but face to face. On that day, he would understand. He would see things, for the very first time, with complete clarity.

In our own day, we have the benefit of seeing ourselves clearly reflected physically, and maybe that’s why we are so consumed with our appearance. But we have the same problem Paul had when it comes to knowing ourselves. Our self-perception doesn’t always jive with reality.

Perhaps a mirror is not the best tool for knowing one’s self. Generally, our encounters with mirrors reflect only our own face. Maybe we need to look at more of the faces around us. This week, I have had the image of a beautiful, young girl in my mind. Even though I have never met this girl, her image is so very clear that it’s breaking my heart.

You see, this young, beautiful girl was murdered this past week in our city as she sat reading in her own home. She was yet another innocent victim of the senseless violence that has become a common part of everyday life in Jacksonville.

Her image in my mind reveals more about who I am and who we are than a glimpse of my own sorry face in a mirror. It’s a picture that I would rather not see, but it’s the real picture. And maybe, if we can begin to see ourselves as we really are, we can work on being transformed into the kind of people we’ve thought we were all along.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Enduring Love

by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller

“Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”

I’ll never forget my first encounter with diaper changing. Our brand new baby girl had just been home from the hospital for a couple of days and Cindy thought I was ready to take care of her all by myself. Since I had taken the time to carefully study a number of baby books, I was filled with confidence in my baby managing skills. And, considering the fact that Cindy was only going to be away for about an hour, I anticipated a delightful, special moment between father and daughter.

About ten seconds after the door closed behind Cindy as she left, the baby began to cry. Utilizing my vast, recently gained knowledge from all those baby books, I knew to check the diaper before anything else. Sure enough, a diaper change was in order. Without going into great detail, let me just say that this simple, little task turned into quite a messy ordeal. Who could have anticipated those kicking legs, which in short order kind of transformed an isolated problem into a room-sized environmental catastrophe? And back in those days, the cloth diapers we used required pins. I think I only stabbed myself about half a dozen times.

Diaper changing is not what I would classify as a fun kind of thing. It’s dirty, smelly, and messy. I suppose if we only changed diapers when we felt like it, then a whole lot of babies would be in a world of hurt. But we do it because of love. And that’s how love is. When it’s real, it means more than just the fun stuff and the things we feel like doing. It takes endurance.

Mother’s day is coming up, and the greatest thing about mothers is that they are willing to suck it up and do the hard work of love. I’m sure that my mom never once thought to herself, “Gee, I wish little Tommy needed a diaper change. I’m really in the mood for one!” I know that when we had a dessert shortage, she really wanted some when she said she didn’t for fear that we wouldn’t have enough. I bet that if the truth be known, she would have much rather had a new dress than to buy a Cub Scout uniform for me. I imagine that on many a night, she really could have used some relaxation time for herself, instead of reading bedtime stories to us.

Love can be a very confusing thing to some folks. Love can even be completely missed, when the “bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things and endures all things” part of it is left out.

I’m thankful that my mom got it right. And I’m thankful for God’s great love. Jesus didn’t die on the cross for our sins because he wanted to die that way. He did it because of a love that takes guts, sacrifice and endurance. To all the moms who have risen to the high calling of this kind of love, I wish a Happy Mother’s Day!

Friday, May 05, 2006

Rob and the Rock of Ages!


April 2006 266
Originally uploaded by MercyWatch.
Inscription on the plaque:

ROCK OF AGES
This rock derives its name
from the well known hymn
written about 1762 by the
Rev AM Toplady
who was inspired whilst sheltered
in this cleft during a storm
inscribed 1951

We are Hiding in the Cleft of the Rock of Ages

Rock of Ages is Rob's favorite hymn. What a blessing to be able to visit the actual rock that inspired this great hymn. The words to the hymn are below.

April 2006 271
Originally uploaded by MercyWatch.

Rock of Ages

Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in Thee;
Let the water and the blood,
From Thy wounded side which flowed,
Be of sin the double cure;
Save from wrath and make me pure.

Not the labor of my hands
Can fulfill Thy law’s demands;
Could my zeal no respite know,
Could my tears forever flow,
All for sin could not atone;
Thou must save, and Thou alone.

Nothing in my hand I bring,
Simply to the cross I cling;
Naked, come to Thee for dress;
Helpless look to Thee for grace;
Foul, I to the fountain fly;
Wash me, Savior, or I die.

While I draw this fleeting breath,
When mine eyes shall close in death,[originally When my eye-strings break in death]
When I soar to worlds unknown,
See Thee on Thy judgment throne,
Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in Thee.

We recently visited the great cleft in the Rock that inspired Rev. Toplady to write this hymn in 1762.

Monday, May 01, 2006

Read the instructions

by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller

“As [Jesus] spoke, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, ‘Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts that fed you!’ But he said, ‘Blessed rather are those who hear the Word of God and keep it!”

Most of us are not inclined to read the manual. We purchase appliances and electronic equipment and skip right over that thick booklet of instructions that came along with the product. Because that’s so true, there are now toll-free technical assistance hot-lines for consumers to call when they can’t get that new device to work.

The majority of problems received by help hot-lines aren’t really problems at all. For the most part, the calls are a result of the fact that the consumers never bothered to read the manual. The number one reason owners of new washing machines can’t get them to start is simply because they have the lid open, and those darned things just won’t run with the lid open. It’s automatic for washing machine help-line operators to first suggest that they close the lid. That normally does the trick.

Computer tech lines receive thousands of calls a day from new computer owners. In the majority of cases, the failure of a new computer to work is directly related to the failure of the consumer to plug something in. When printers fail, the number one cause is that they never removed the protective plastic tape from the ink cartridge, in spite of the bold faced type instructing them to do so that can easily be found in the manual. But, consumers don’t generally read the manual. By the way, the second most common cause for printer failure is that the printer has not been loaded with paper.

We all get to pay more for products so that the employees hired to tell consumers what they already should have known can be paid. We also pay higher costs due to the large number of perfectly good products that are returned because the people who bought them never took the time to read the instructions.

When we don’t read the manual, we pay the price. That’s particularly true when we don’t read God’s manual for living, the Bible. We just want to jerk life right out of the box and skip the instructions. Small wonder life is not working well for quite a few people. When it goes bad, we get the feeling we’ve been dealt a faulty product. Truth is, the life God gave us is just fine, but we never bothered to read the instructions.

Are you wondering about the why, when, where and how of your life? Do you think you have the gumption to plow through the manual so that you can get it right? It will take a little time and effort. God’s manual is pretty thick, and you’ll never get it all in just one read. But reading it won’t cost you near us much as not reading it. -Tom

Monday, April 24, 2006

Hold On!

by Rev. Thomas R. Fuller

“Because he cleaves to me in love, I will deliver him. I will protect him because he knows my name.” -Psalm 91:14

This is a true story reported in the September 3rd, 1987 edition of The Boston Globe. On a commuter flight from Portland, Maine to Boston, the pilot, a man named Henry Dempsey, heard a strange rattling noise coming from the back of the plane. He turned the controls over to his co-pilot, and made his way through the plane to the rear for an investigation. As he entered the tail section, the plane was rocked by an air pocket, and he was thrown against the rear door, which had been the source of the strange noise because it hadn’t been latched properly. As Dempsey’s body collided with the door, it popped open and he was sucked out.

The co-pilot immediately noticed the open door light and soon became aware that Dempsey was no longer in the plane. He radioed for an emergency landing at the nearest airport, along with his coordinates and a plea for rescue aircraft to search the area of ocean over which they had been flying when the door came open.

Upon landing, the emergency crew dispatched to greet the plane on the runway made an amazing discovery. Somehow, as Dempsey was being sucked out of the open door, he had managed to grab on to the door ladder as he fell, and for ten full minutes, as the plane traveled at over 200 miles an hour at an altitude of four thousand feet, he held on for dear life.
Dempsey narrowly avoided a major head-but with the runway when the plane touched down. He was in fact alive and well. Dempsey was holding on to the aircraft with such force that it took several minutes for the rescue team to pry his fingers from the ladder.

Wow! There are times to let go, and there are times to hold on. Thankfully, this pilot was able to hold on when he needed to, and for that reason he lived to fly another day. I can only imagine his resolve in that moment. His determination not to let go was stronger than the fear and the wind and four thousand feet.

We should understand our connection to the Lord in those very same terms. It’s not always immediately clear to us just how dangerous letting go of the Lord really is. But he is our life. He is our deliverance and our protection. To let go means to take the big plunge. When we cleave to him in love, it means life, and even more. The psalmist goes on to use the words answer, be present, rescue, honor, satisfy and save (Psalm 91:14-16). So, hold on, tight! -Tom

Sunday, April 23, 2006

More than Words


by Julia McGuinness

Scripture:
"All the believers were one in heart and mind. No one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had. With great power the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and much grace was upon them all. There were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned lands or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he had need." Acts 4:32-35 (NIV)

Devotional:
It wasn't just what the early Christians said that made an impact on those around them, it was how they lived.

Luke recounts how these believers shared a material as well as a spiritual life. Whilst they had separate home and had personal possessions, these were not held on to tightly as private property. Christians were willing to share what they had. When fellow believers faced hard times - through the famine and political unrest affecting employment in first-century Jerusalem, or discrimination as followers of the Way - those with financial assets sold them, and released the money to meet the need. No wonder the apostles' testimony packed a punch, backed up by the Christian community living out kingdom values with such integrity.

In our consumer society the emphasis is on getting and guarding. Communities are fragile and families fragmented. Many find it hard to know who to turn to when times are tough. As Christians we may worry about words when it comes to giving our testimony, but perhaps we are at our most eloquent when we express our practical concern for one another. Such love extends to more than simply sharing a pew: our faith is not just about who we are, but who we are together. As Jesus said, "By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another."

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

People Come Into Your Life for a Reason

This came to us in a forwarded email.....it gives us reason to think and ponder the people in our lives and our relationships with them. I brings to my mind..... I need to focus on those relationships! May you be blessed as you think of the people in your life!

People come into your life for a reason, a season or a lifetime. When you know which one it is, you will know what to do for that person. When someone is in your life for a REASON, it is usually to meet a need you have expressed. They have come to assist you through a difficulty, to provide you with guidance and support, to aid you physically, emotionally or spiritually. They may seem like a godsend and they are. They are there for the reason you need them to be. Then, without any wrongdoing on your part or at an inconvenient time, this person will say or do something to bring the relationship to an end. Sometimes they die. Sometimes they walk away. Sometimes they act up and force you to take a stand. What we must realize is that our need has been met, our desire fulfilled, their work is done. The prayer you sent up has been answered and now it is time to move on.

Some people come into your life for a SEASON, because your turn has come to share, grow or learn. They bring you an experience of peace or make you laugh. They may teach you something you have never done. They usually give you an unbelievable amount of joy. Believe it, it is real. But only for a season.!

LIFETIME relationships teach you lifetime lessons, things you must build upon in order to have a solid emotional foundation. Your job is to accept the lesson, love the person and put what you have learned to use in all other relationships and areas of your life. It is said that love is blind but friendship is clairvoyant.

Thank you for being a part of my life, whether you were a reason, a season or a lifetime.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Let the Heavens Declare!

By John Hensman

I got my inspiration based on a Solar Eclipse that West Africa recently experienced (Wednesday 29th)

Scripture:
"The heavens tell of the glory of God. The skies display his marvelous craftsmanship. Day after day they continue to speak; night after night they make him known. They speak without a sound or a word; their voice is silent in the skies; yet their message has gone out to all the earth, and their words to all the world. The sun lives in the heavens where God placed it. It bursts forth like a radiant bridegroom after his wedding. It rejoices like a great athlete eager to run the race. The sun rises at one end of the heavens and follows its course to the other end. Nothing can hide from its heat." Ps 19:1-6 (NAS)

We are a strange people. Many times we look to our own physical abilities and believe we have the aptitude to control any situation; we slap each other on the back when things go right, stating, “look at me…I did this!” When things go wrong, however, we complain and try to place blame on others as to not hurt our own reputations. Sometimes we may even be so bold as to question God asking “why He is not cooperating with our efforts to complete a certain task.”

Scripture again always places our abilities into the correct perspective. Yes, we can build widgets that proclaim our knowledge in technology, but we should always be humbled by God’s power.

On Wednesday the 29th of March 2006 there was a Solar Eclipse. Unlike others that have happened before, this one should hold some significant meaning to Mercy Ships. The Eclipse’s path came across West Africa, almost directly above Ghana. If one believes in a “glass half-empty verses half-full”, they would tend to look at the dark side of this event as those in this area have for centuries. But for Mercy Ships, we believe in God’s power to control events. Remember, “Let the heavens declare the glory of God.” God still expresses His power and shows His glory in everything…even heavenly bodies. For us, it might take an Eclipse once and awhile to acknowledge that He is still God and we are not. So, whether your day goes well or not, never stop giving Him the glory He desires.

There will (without doubt) be some additional unanswered dark days ahead for both the Anastasis and Africa Mercy that may force us to question why! Remember, for every dark day experience, it is but a prelude to God’s Son, who gives all light. God is still in control; we just need to just keep believing…there will be a brighter day tomorrow…in fact it is just around the corner.

To all who reads this…please continue to pray for our ministry as we move forward in Him, especially for resolution to ship concerns!

Sunday, April 16, 2006

He is Risen! He is Risen, indeed!

Easter Greetings!
Scriptures:
"Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart." (Psalms 37:4)

"I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh." (Ezekiel 36:21)

Devotion:
Lately it seems I’ve been reflecting more and more on lesson’s that the Lord has already taught me…and this has caused me to be thankful and a little wondering at the same time. Thankful for the lessons that I’ve been taught…yet wondering what message is there in bringing these lessons to my memory at this time?

Sometimes I have a thought or desire to set out to accomplish this task or that. Along the way am reminded of how if it wasn’t for the faithfulness of the Lord in our lives, His daily protection and provisions for us, we wouldn’t even be in a place to consider doing some of the tasks that come to mind. I guess that is a long winded way of saying I’m thankful for a changed heart.

Early on in my walk with the Lord there was a young minister named Clarence who saw much more of the potential God had placed in me than I saw myself. He told me one day to ask the Lord for the desires of my heart and He would give them to me. I wasn’t very comfortable with this statement and couldn’t believe that God actually would give me the desires of my heart, that there had to be a catch…a condition somewhere that must be fulfilled and I just kind of dismissed it as an over zealous preacher.

From time to time this seed planted so many years before has come back again and again to my thoughts. Each time I’d ponder it a little and then move on to something else. Slowly I’ve come to the point in my life and a relationship with Jesus to understand that as He has changed my heart of stone and given me a heart of flesh that along the way I’ve come to love Him more and more…and now the desires of my heart are to love Him and to please Him, to love my wife and family more and more. It would not seem possible, but please believe me when I say it is so.

He has shown me forgiveness and along the way shown me how to forgive those who had hurt me in the past. He has shown me, His desires for Denise and me, as husband and wife, and empowered us to live a life for Him. We don’t have all of the answers, but are confident as He continues to mold us into His likeness that we will continue to grow in wisdom, love and understanding.

We pray that if you haven’t already come to this place in your life that this devotion may serve to plant a seed, such as the one planted for me so many years ago, and given time and love from Him the seed may grow to full maturity in each of you.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

40 Days of Prayer and Fasting 2006

For four years now we have been inspired and challenged each day by a devotional written by a Mercy Ships coworker somewhere in the organization. If you are visiting this site, we pray that you will join us in the focus for the day and pray the prayer points with us.

40 Days of Prayer and Fasting 2006 - Day 40

Focus: Finishing Well- The Resurrected Messiah
By Don Stephens, Founder/President

Scripture Reference:
“Father, I entrust my spirit into your hands!” and with those words, he breathed his last. Luke 23:46 (NLT).

“It is finished!” Then he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. John 19:30 (NLT).

‘Suddenly, their eyes were opened, and they recognized him. And at that moment he disappeared! . . . Didn’t our hearts feel strangely warm as he talked with us . . . and explained the Scriptures to us?’ Luke 24: 31-32 (NLT).

Devotional:
What a powerful model of ‘finishing well’ is our Risen Lord! He endured suffering and the cross that he might accomplish the will of his Father and in so doing, provide redemption for us.

Perhaps we can each one look again to Jesus example of ‘finishing well’, as most of us experience some level of suffering in the ending of the Anastasis era of Mercy Ships. The organizational resurrection we are all experiencing has a new body – the Africa Mercy.

More importantly, as we encounter others on their individual Emmaus roads, may we warm the hearts and minds of those walking alongside us on our journey. Jesus explained His role from the Scriptures as he spoke. As He said a prayer over the evening bread, their eyes and minds were open to the risen Messiah.

Prayer Points:

* Ask God to give us grace to individually finish well.
* Ask God that each person met as we journey may see Jesus through our word and deed.
* Ask God for grace when His will involves suffering and is not our will.
* Ask God that we may corporately finish well.
* Praise God for the thousands of lives we will see in eternity through the service of Mercy Ships.
* Praise God for using each of us in this process.
* Thank God that we are privileged to have a part in what He is doing.
* Thank God for all the stakeholders of the past 28 years. Some have greatly sacrificed that we might serve. Some have been greatly blessed through our service.

Friday, April 14, 2006

40 Days of Prayer and Fasting 2006 - Day 39

Focus: A Doorkeeper in the House of my God
By: Rene Lako, Mercy Ships Sierra Leone

Scripture Reference:
“Better is one day in your courts than a thousand elsewhere; I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God than dwell in the tents of the wicked.”(Psalm 84:10).

Devotional:
The compound of our team house in Freetown, Sierra Leone is surrounded by a wall, topped by broken glass and razor wire. Two uniformed security guards patrol the compound, equipped with radio, baton and panic button alarm system to keep us safe. This is part of land based life for Mercy Ships staff in West Africa, and it’s quite different from life on a “Mercy Ship”. These guards are not considered Mercy Ships staff, but are employed by the security company. Yet, they get a taste of “mercy ship”, as they say here, and our team house compounds and Aberdeen Clinic and Fistula Centre have become popular postings for the guards.

Psalm 84 emphasizes the theme of God’s dwelling place and the desire to be in God’s presence. “How lovely is your dwelling place, O Lord Almighty! My soul yearns, even faints, for the courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh cry out for the living God.” (Ps. 84:1-2).

The birds have nests to protect and feed their young. This is the kind of safe haven God offers us in his presence. When we are close to him, we have reason to praise him and we experience God’s protection and strength. Yet, this is not just about being stationary in a home. The Psalm speaks about setting your heart on pilgrimage . . . and this was a song pilgrims were singing as they traveled the long road to their destination, the literal “house of God”.

Sometimes, I see my life in Mercy Ships as a 26-year pilgrimage, having served on the Anastasis, the Rotterdam office, the IOC and now in Sierra Leone. Some legs of the journey have felt like dark valleys, other parts have been on sunny hillsides. Even as we pass through the driest desert lands, we can turn them into a place of springs. In God’s presence, as we follow Jesus, we can go from strength to strength.

Although we may not always feel significant or like a hero of the faith, even as a doorkeeper in God’s compound, we can be in his presence and make a difference in the world we live in. In Sierra Leone we aim to serve some of the forgotten poor afflicted by child birth injuries, such as women with fistulas (VVF) or children with disabilities, such as polio. As we meet their physical needs we also share God’s love and compassion with them and bring them into his presence.

Prayer Points:

* Pray for God’s protection for staff in Sierra Leone, and for crew and staff around the world.

* Pray for God to send workers into the harvest field of Sierra Leone, especially 1) VVF surgeons (short term/long term), 2) a ward nursing supervisor, and 3) a financial administrator.
* Pray for continued good relationships with all our local and international stakeholders/partners.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

40 Days of Prayer and Fasting 2006 - Day 38

Focus: When God is Silent
By Melissa Hall, Anastasis

Scripture Reference:
Commit to the LORD whatever you do, and your plans will succeed (Proverbs 16:3).

Devotional:

You have an important decision to make, or you feel unsure about your ability to do something and don’t know where to start. You’ve prayed to God and asked for his guidance. You’ve constantly petitioned him (Luke 18:1) but there’s been no answer. You’ve pored over your Bible (Psalm 119:105), sought the advice of your friends (Proverbs 20:18), even returned to the last bit of guidance you received only to find out it doesn’t apply. Finally you repent of everything you can think of (Isaiah 59:1-2), but still God is silent. You feel like Job (19:8), wandering in the darkness, desperate for encouragement. But God is silent. What next? What happens during these times in the wilderness? Are we left to wander around in circles - or worse freeze, into inactivity too scared to make the wrong decision lest we fall off the narrow path?

God knows us; we as Christians have to trust that if we’re about to wander from his will for us he will warn us (Numbers 22:21-38). After all he sent us his Son to be our Shepherd (John 10:14) and what do shepherd’s do? They make sure their sheep don’t go wander onto dangerous paths, fall into holes or start chewing on something that looks really good but turns out to be poisonous. Now I confess I have never herded sheep, but in England it’s a sport; you can even watch it on television! When the sheep are going in the right direction the shepherd and his dog are quiet, but they whistle and bark like crazy when the sheep are going in the wrong direction. We are Jesus’ sheep, we know his voice (John 10:27), but when we don’t hear him perhaps we shouldn’t despair; maybe we are just going in the right direction.

When I made my decision to join Mercy Ships it was based on wisdom and the desires of my heart. I love sailing and wanted to serve God in Africa. I agonized over whether it was the right decision. God never gave me that resounding, ‘Yes! This is the way walk in it!’ It was only after I’d signed the contract, when money came pouring in and I discovered we were going to Liberia (a country I’d supported as a schoolgirl) that I felt God confirm my plans.

Perhaps, occasionally God wants us to simply step out and ‘Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and your plans will succeed’ (Proverbs 16:3). This is after all a journey of faith: we cannot always see the path before us. It’s like that scene from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, when Indiana has to find the way across a great abyss to reach the Holy Grail. The only clue he has is to, ‘Take a step of faith’. He closes his eyes, and places his leg over the chasm, shifts his weight and bang! His foot makes contact with a glistening path, reaching to the other side of the ravine. It’s sometimes only when we move forward that God reveals and confirms the way.

Prayer Points:

* Pray we will know when to persevere in seeking God’s guidance and when we need to step out in faith and commit our plans to Him.

* Pray for an increase in faith for every person in Mercy Ships, faith in our ability to hear God and faith in His ability to keep us on the right path.

* Pray for God’s Liberian sheep - that He will comfort them and guide them to fresh pastures this Easter.