Author Archives: smcalhoon
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions
March 23: In the Arms of God
Posted: 22 Mar 2014 08:43 AM PDT
Read: Psalm 131
I have calmed and quieted my soul, like a weaned child with its mother. (v. 2 NRSV)
The great reformer John Calvin said that prayer draws us into God’s “bosom” (Institutes of the Christian Religion, III.xx.5). Embraced by loving arms, held close to the heart of God, we pour out our souls. As Psalm 131 expresses it, in prayer we are held at the breast of a loving Parent.
Calvin is best known for his reformed theology. What may not be as well known is that Calvin devoted a large portion of his writing to a discussion of prayer.
Calvin taught that prayer is how we develop an intimate relationship with God. We respond in love to the God who first loved us. We receive the blessings of the One who is the fountain of goodness. In the attitude of prayer we realize that God is “wholly present to us” (Institutes, III.xx.2).
Our prayer flows from “this sweetness of love” (Institutes, III,xx.28). The reformer used the same word to describe our intimacy with God–dulcedo, “sweetness”–as did Catholic mystics like Bernard of Clairvaux or Richard of St. Victor. In prayer all who love God rest in God’s loving arms. –David Muyskens
Prayer: Thank you, God of love, for all who truly love you. Amen.
Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/.
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions
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March 22: Hezekiah’s Prayer for Healing
Posted: 21 Mar 2014 05:49 AM PDT
Read: Isaiah 38:1-6
Remember now, O Lord, I implore you, how I have walked before you in faithfulness. (v. 3 NRSV)
Such a short, simple prayer certainly had a remarkable result. King Hezekiah was very ill. When the prophet Isaiah told him his death was near, Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and wept bitterly. He also prayed for healing. His prayer mainly reminds God of how good and faithful Hezekiah had been (as if God needed to be told!). But God brought the king back from death’s door and gave him fifteen more years of life; a wonderful gift, indeed.
Why is it that such a short prayer, so focused on personal accomplishments, was heard and answered by God? Why is it that some of our prayers for healing, prayed with humble earnestness and hope, are heard but not answered by God? This is one of the most troubling mysteries of our faith.
When Hezekiah recovered, he sang a song of praise to God: “The living, the living, they thank you, as I do this day” (38:19). The challenge and call of faithful Christian living is to express gratitude and joy to God no matter what our circumstances, healthy or sick, satisfied or discouraged, in plenty or in loss. –Leanne Van Dyk
Prayer: We give you praise and thanks all the days of our lives, gracious God. Help us to worship you no matter what circumstances we are in. Amen.
Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/.
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions
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March 21: Knowing God
Posted: 20 Mar 2014 06:35 AM PDT
Read: Jeremiah 31:33-34
They shall all know me. (v. 34 NRSV)
Knowing about God is different than knowing God. With our minds we can know some ideas of what God is like. Learning from Scripture we can know the revealed truths of the divine attributes. Looking at Jesus we can know much about the nature and character of the Heavenly Father. Observing nature we can see the handiwork of the Creator.
But all these things by themselves don’t add up to knowing God. You can no more know God by gathering information than you can know a person by reading a biography. You can find out a lot about someone, but you can only say you know them when you have met.
We know God through love, not logic. Only in love do we experience a personal relationship with God. God is beyond our understanding. Reason alone cannot fathom the grandeur and mystery of the One who is Source of All, Eternal Word, and Holy Spirit.
You can only say you know someone well after you have spent time together in intimate conversation and camaraderie. Prayer is spending time with God. It is getting to know God in a deeply personal way. It is being with God in listening, in talking, and in silence. –David Muyskens
Prayer: Thank you, O God, that you desire an intimate relationship with us in Christ. Amen.
Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/.
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions
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March 20: Nehemiah’s Prayer of Confession
Posted: 19 Mar 2014 07:11 AM PDT
Read: Nehemiah 1
We have offended you deeply, failing to keep the commandments, the statutes, and the ordinances that you commanded your servant Moses. (v. 7 NRSV)
There are at least six prayers of Nehemiah in the book that carries his name. Nehemiah knew how to pray. When some of the Jews were allowed to escape captivity and return home following Persia’s conquest of Babylon, Nehemiah remained in service to the Persian emperor. He anxiously asked a friend who had visited Jerusalem about the fate of the community there. The news was bad, and so Nehemiah turned to God in a heartfelt prayer of confession. He was sure that his people were still suffering because of their collective unfaithfulness. “Both I and my family have sinned,” he confessed.
When bad things happen to us, it is not necessarily a direct consequence of our own sin. We learn that decisively from the book of Job. But it is wise for us to reflect on our own lives, behavior, and attitudes. When Nehemiah did this, he discovered much that was wrong about himself as well as his people. The problems in his nation weren’t just “out there.” Nehemiah’s prayer of confession is an honest acknowledgment of this, and a plea that God will not forget faithful promises. –Leanne Van Dyk
Prayer: When we suffer, help us to turn to you, O God. Hear and restore us when we confess our sins to you. Amen.
Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/.
April 6th Jazz Vespers
Click on the link below for more information:
April Showers of Love with Khema Loving on Vocals
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions |
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Posted: 18 Mar 2014 06:05 AM PDT Read: Psalm 37:1-7 Be still before the Lord. (v. 7 NRSV) Music contains both notes and rests: sound and silence. We address God with “sound” whenever we use words in prayer. But silence punctuates these times of verbal expression. In silence we go to a deeper place than any words can express. In silence we enter the experience of God profoundly. That is because love, while it can sometimes be expressed in words, is often expressed nonverbally. In close human relationships we express love with an embrace or a kiss. A couple in love spend time simply being together without words. So it should be in our relationship with God. Love of God goes beyond anything that words can express. In mystery God becomes known to us. In a deep awareness we experience the presence, love, and grace of God. Of course, wired as we are for a fast-paced culture, we find this difficult. Many people today can’t stand silence. When we try to sit in quiet our minds start racing. But stillness allows us to experience the love of God. Try using the practice of centering prayer–choosing a word that expresses your desire for God–to let go of other thoughts. Christian tradition calls this “contemplative prayer,” by which we enter the love of God that is deeper than words. In silence we let ourselves be drawn into communion with God. –David Muyskens Prayer: Triune God, give us silent moments in which we become profoundly aware of your love. Amen. Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/. |
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions |
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March 18: Jehoshaphat’s Prayer for Deliverance Posted: 17 Mar 2014 05:58 AM PDT Read: 2 Chronicles 20:5-17 O Lord, God of our ancestors, are you not God in heaven? (v. 6 NRSV) Messengers came to King Jehoshaphat one day with the terrifying news that an enormous army was gathered against the people of Judah. So Jehoshaphat prayed. First, he reminded God that God is almighty. (Perhaps he was reminding himself even more!) Second, he reminded God that God had already acted for the chosen people. God had given the land to the descendants of Abraham and driven out the competing inhabitants. On that basis, the king prayed urgently for God to save the people from destruction. Because God had been faithful in the past, Jehoshaphat dared to hope and dared to ask for God’s continued faithfulness. God answered the king’s prayer for deliverance and the people were rescued through an amazing twist. Incredibly, the enemy armies treacherously turned against each other and were completely destroyed. When we pray to God with sorrow in our hearts, it may help for us to remind him of the faithfulness we have experienced from God in the past. Because of who God is, we pray. Because of what God has done, we pray. This is the pattern of faith we learn from the remarkable story of King Jehoshaphat. –Leanne Van Dyk Prayer: God of might and God of constant faithfulness, hear our prayer now again as you always have in the past. Be always our rock and our salvation. Amen. Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/. |
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions |
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Posted: 16 Mar 2014 09:07 AM PDT Read: Psalm 46 Be still and know that I am God! (v. 10 NRSV) Have you ever had the problem of your mind wandering when you are trying to pray? Who hasn’t? I have found a method called “centering prayer” to be helpful. It helps me become aware of the presence of Christ dwelling at the center of my being. The result is a greater awareness of God the rest of the time. It is a way of dealing with the many distracting thoughts that come when I take time to be quiet with God. There are always many thoughts that come to mind when I am in silent prayer. I disregard them by repeating a word that says, “I want to be with you, God.” For a long time the word I used was my favorite name of God. I would let distractions vanish by recalling that name. I now use a word that expresses my desire to be open to the presence of the Triune God. Instead of trying to chase random thoughts away I gently return to that word. Rather than resisting or reacting to my various thoughts I simply restate my intention to focus upon the presence of God. Twice a day I take twenty minutes for this centering prayer. The practice helps me know that God is near. –David Muyskens Prayer: Help us, O God, to be still enough to know your loving presence. Amen. Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/. |
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions |
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March 16: David’s Prayer of Desperation Posted: 15 Mar 2014 08:05 PM PDT Read: 2 Samuel 12:15b-23 David therefore pleaded with God for the child; David fasted, and went in and lay all night on the ground. (v. 16 NRSV) Any father would pray with a broken heart over his dangerously sick child. King David was no exception–even for this baby, the son of an unholy union. David fathered the child in an act of reckless arrogance, which he then tried to cover up with lies and murder. Yet David loved this baby and pleaded with God for its life, still so full of potential. His sorrow for his sin was great. His love for his child was equally great. And so his prayer to God scraped all the way down to the very bottom of his soul. But God did not answer David’s prayer, at least not in the way David so urgently desired. His little boy, nameless in the story, died. The very first thing David then did was to get up and worship God. Even in his terrible grief, he remained connected to God. There are times in our lives when we know David as a brother in pain and sorrow. He is also a traveler with us under God’s mercy, no matter what our circumstances. –Leanne Van Dyk Prayer: Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit within me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation and sustain in me a willing spirit. Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/. |
Lent Devotions
Lent Devotions |
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Posted: 14 Mar 2014 07:18 AM PDT Read: 1 Kings 19:11-16 . . . a sound of sheer silence. (v. 12 NRSV) The great prophet Elijah, whose prayers on Mt. Carmel were answered with fire on the altar and rain for the parched earth, was cowering in a cave. After defeating the prophets of Baal, Elijah had fled from the wrath of Queen Jezebel. Now he is hiding dejectedly in the wilderness. Loud displays of thunder and lightning did not arouse him. But he stepped to the mouth of the cave when a profound silence let him know that God was there. Then God gave Elijah directions for the next stage of his life and ministry. It is often in deep silence that I become most aware of the presence of God. Being silent before God I am able to hear what God wants to say to me. I need to pray that my intuition will be used as an instrument for Christ to speak to me. Just as my conscience can be tuned to moral law, so my intuition can be tuned to promptings of the Spirit. In a quiet, listening mode I can receive the gift of discernment. Then Christ becomes my guide in all I think and say and do. In every issue of the “Friends of Silence” newsletter, author Nan Merrill asks, “Is there enough silence [in your life] for the Word to be heard?” –David Muyskens Prayer: Living Word, give us ears to hear what you say to us. Amen. Words of Hope is an international media ministry, founded and owned by classes of the RCA, dedicated to building the church in the hard places. The Words of Hope devotional encourages readers to grow spiritually through daily Bible readings and prayer. To subscribe, please visit: woh.org/word/devotionals/. |
