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You are here: Home / Archives for News and Feeds / Answers For Me

A Persistent Bother

September 19, 2018 By admin

I’m dealing with insidious plant life in my yard. We have a new variety that has crept under the pool enclosure and fills in every available inch of soil. Plus the old regulars. This morning I took time to pull weeds from the backyard while the ground is saturated with recent rains. I’ve tried chemical spray (good for — months, ha!), yearly mulch, and regular pulling, to little avail. Weeds just keep returning. A never-ending process when one lives in a warm year-around climate. Yet I do find a certain satisfaction from yanking those pesky plants and viewing the short-term results. Therapy?

My small grandson begs to walk the yard and visit the flowers. Last week when I started to pull some weeds, I began instructing him on the difference between flowers and weeds. He would like to pull up both plants. After all, both have flowers and fruit. Unfortunately, it is easy to dislodge flowers when one starts attacking the pretender weeds that live among the desirable plants.

There seems to be a lot of “weedy” people in the world. Ones that I wish didn’t exist or could magically disappear. Self-absorbed, cruel, or those who seem to have no contribution in existence yet suck the resources and energy from others. More importantly, could we lose those dangerous or painful nettle/thistle-people that hurt when you get too close? Maybe even the ones that are like stick-tights and you can’t shake them no matter what you try to do?

On the up side, I wish I had the weed-kind of persistence, resilience, or genetic fortitude. Sometimes I’ve made mistakes when pulling weeds. Leaves and stems can appear to be very similar. My husband thinks the heart-shaped leaves of the invasive air-potato vine to be very pretty. Weeds can sometimes produce flowers, fragrance or become tamed into something useful. I am very fond of “Beauty Berries,” found wild along parks and roads with stems of close-packed berries that turn purple in the fall.

Weeds even exist among the people who claim to be God’s people. The weeds grow in our families, communities, churches and countries. Jesus talked a lot about his kingdom in Matthew 13. He said that in God’s kingdom, there is an “enemy” that has planted or sown weeds among the good plants. And when God’s workers get aggravated with weeds and want to remove them, Jesus said, “No.” Because it’s easy to dislodge the good plants when you pull up the weeds. “Let them both grow together until the harvest” (Matthew 13:30, NIV). Jesus will instruct the harvesters when it’s time. But I will continue to pull the weeds in my yard.

Questions for personal journaling or group discussion:

1. What motivation do you believe, drives us to want to “weed-out” people?

2. Is there a place for disciplinary action in God’s kingdom?

Karen Spruill writes from Orlando, Florida.

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Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.

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Filed Under: Dear God, News and Feeds Tagged With: among-the-good, between-flowers, desirable, god's kingdom, harvest, harvesters, jesus, pull-the-weeds, weeds, weedy people, yard

Pulling Weeds

September 18, 2018 By admin

Weeds! Weeds are the miserable bane of every gardener’s dream. I know firsthand; I’ve been up to my elbows in them lately. We’ve taken off on two separate occasions this summer, and even though we were only absent for a week each time, I was shocked when we returned. We live in an area with amazing soil, and it looked like a jungle had replaced the clean plot that we had planted just weeks before.

“A sower went out to sow his seed…and some fell among thorns, and the thorns sprang up with it and choked it” (Luke 8:5, 7, NKJV).

Recently, after a particularly frustrating session of pulling so many of these stubborn weeds, I began looking at this parable that Jesus told so long ago. It’s still applicable to my spiritual life (as it has always been). Christ explains the parable of the sower and the soil later in Luke 8, and I found it amazingly accurate in how it depicted my spiritual walk…especially when the path has gotten weedy.

“Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God” (Luke 8:11).

“Now the ones the fell among the thorns are those who, when they have heard, go out and are choked with cares, riches, and pleasures of life, and bring no fruit to maturity.”

I certainly can’t relate to the part about “riches.” I’ve never been wealthy, so the “pleasures of life” that naturally come with riches haven’t been a struggle; however, the “cares” have (at times) done a number on my spirituality.

I’ve discovered that the more worried and concentrated I become about what is happening around me, the less tangible I feel God’s presence in my life. It’s an easy trap to fall into…forgetting that life is about more than merely just making it through the day. The weeds of worry and care can often choke the spiritual life right out of me if they are allowed to take root and grow.

Pulling weeds is an arduous task, and when it comes to the spiritual garden of my life, I can’t pull them alone. I’ve got a Friend who’s an excellent gardener though…and I often call on Him to help me clear the path so that the fruit of righteousness can grow in my life. He spoke the parable, and He knows how to take care of the weeds in my life.

Michael Temple writes from North Dakota.

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Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.

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Filed Under: Dear God, News and Feeds Tagged With: clear-the-path, discipline, gardening, jesus, life, michael-temple, miserable, parable, pulling-weeds, spiritual garden, spirituality, thorns

A Future Without Me

September 17, 2018 By admin

I did it. I did it? I DID IT?! I DID IT!!!! I just passed the oral defense of my dissertation proposal! I can’t believe it! If you’re not familiar with the process (which I wasn’t until a few years ago), here’s how it works. A doctoral student, (in this case, me), learns everything possible there is to learn about a subject, comes up with questions about the topic that, up until now, have remained unanswered, and then the doctoral student comes up with a project that will answer one or more of those questions. Make sense? (Yeah, I don’t get it either)

You can only imagine the things that were going through my head as I embarked on a journey that I didn’t quite understand. These thoughts included, but are not limited to:

  1. How is it possible that I made it to this point in the program without having learned anything?
  2. Is it possible that I’ve gotten dumber?!
  3. What would REALLY happen if I packed up my car and me and my puppy ran away forever?
  4. Who do I think I am?! I’m not smart enough to do this!

I don’t know if you can tell, but the underlying all of those thoughts is my worst enemy, anxiety. I can safely say that I’ve spent the better part of the last month afraid. Like hiding under the covers afraid. I prayed and asked others to pray for me, but my fear seemed to consume me most of the time.

Until one day, earlier this week when I found a devotional book that I had long been ignoring: Jesus Calling, by Sarah Young. I opened it up and on that very day, the topic was anxiety. The very first sentence blew me away (meant to be read as if Jesus were speaking): “Anxiety is a result of envisioning a future without me.”

I know that Jesus wanted me to find that devotional on that particular day to read that particular sentence. That experience is nothing short of a miracle for me. I wish I could say, I never felt afraid again, but I did. But each time anxiety came over me, I’d remember to think of Jesus being at my side, carrying me through whatever situation was scaring me. I thank God for speaking to me so clearly!

“When I am afraid, I will put my trust in you.” (Psalm 56:3, NLT).

Note: In writing this, I want to make sure that I’m very clear about the nature of anxiety. For some people, it’s a very real, debilitating disorder that can’t be cured by reading a random sentence in a long lost devotional book. If you are one of those people, please seek out help. Jesus made therapists too, you know.

Jael Amador writes from New York, New York

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Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.

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Filed Under: Dear God, News and Feeds Tagged With: answers for me, doctoral dissertation, in-between, jael amador, made-therapists, presentation, random-sentence, seek-out-help

Trust In You

September 17, 2018 By admin

Dear God: I worry about the future. I guess I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. Trying to figure out how I can protect my assets, my children, and my grandchildren from whatever may come.

Yesterday I spent hours learning about long term care insurance, weighing the options, whether I can afford it or not, wondering what happens if I don’t get it. Mentally exhausted, I discussed it with a friend and she made me realize I spend a lot more time worrying about protecting myself financially in the future than I do ensuring my future is secure by spending time with God. Why worry when my future is in God’s hand?

“So don’t worry. Don’t say, ‘What will we eat?’ Or, ‘What will we drink?’ Or, ‘What will we wear?’ People who are ungodly run after all of those things. Your Father who is in heaven knows that you need them. But put God’s kingdom first. Do what he wants you to do. Then all of those things will also be given to you. So don’t worry about tomorrow. Tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own. Matthew 6 31-34 (NIRV)

In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Dee Litten Whited write from Virginia

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Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.

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Filed Under: Dear God, News and Feeds Tagged With: care-insurance, dear-god, god first, litten-whited, spend time with god, spending-time, trust, virginia, worry

Jonah People

August 27, 2018 By admin

My three-year-old grandson enjoys watching cartoon videos and I often treat him to one when he stays with me for a day. I usually watch one with him for the first time but I sit nearby when he begs for repeats on a later date. The repetition provides him with a way to learn songs within the videos and I hear him singing snippets later.

A few weeks ago we watched a Christian cartoon version of the Jonah and the Whale story from the Old Testament. Now he’s singing the songs and asking me such questions as, “What’s a prophet?” or “Why did God say —?” So we reviewed the story as we ate lunch and I starting thinking that people–God’s and others– haven’t changed much since Jonah’s time.

The Jonah story is still a fascinating book in the Bible about a reluctant missionary inside a large fish, an important evil city, and the God who cared about all of them. (In Genesis 10:9-12 Nimrod, the warrior, built such pagan cities as Babylon and Ninevah.) Jonah probably hated Ninevah; maybe he even lost some family members to that place. When Jonah ran away from God’s mission to deliver a message of warning to Ninevah, he spent three, dark, miserable days inside a stinky fish stomach, crying out to God in distress. Then God told the fish to spit out the prophet.

What a great place for introspection, yet Jonah was still talking smack about those pagans “who forfeit grace” (Jonah 2:8, 9, NIV). God gave Jonah a second chance to deliver his message to Ninevah. They responded with humility and God had “compassion” upon the people and did not allow them to be destroyed.

But Jonah was angry that he served such a “gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love” (Jonah 4:2). Jonah pouted and declared he would rather die than live. Still expecting hellfire, Jonah sat down to see what would happen to Ninevah. God went so far as to provide a vine to give Jonah shade, then a worm chewed the vine. When Jonah got sunburned he whined, “It would be better for me to die.” God questioned Jonah’s right to be angry about the loss of shade, and Jonah admitted, “I am angry enough to die.” God confronted Jonah: “You are so concerned about the loss of a vine that you had nothing to do with. Yet Ninevah has more than 120,000 people, and their cattle. Shouldn’t I be concerned about them?”

For generations people have refused to resign the concept of an angry, vengeful God who delivers eternal justice on their terms. They often label others as heretics and unbelievers if they can’t accept a gracious inclusive God. Many times they have exterminated those with whom they disagree, believing they represent God. And they pout, and clutch their vindictiveness as something sacred. Even as God blesses them and provides second chances.

God loved Ninevah and Jonah. Later the same God came to earth as a man, full of grace and compassion for the wounded and ignorant. As he died at the hands of his own people Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34, NIV).

Questions for personal journaling or group discussion:

1. Have you ever been angry enough to want to die? What do you think about that particular issue now?

2. How do you imagine the outcome for evil people? Does that picture match your idea of God, if you believe in him?

Karen Spruill writes from Orlando, Florida

The post Jonah People appeared first on Answers for Me.

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Article excerpt posted on en.intercer.net from Answers for Me.

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Filed Under: Dear God, News and Feeds Tagged With: answers for me, big fish, faith, fish, jonah, loss, personal, videos, vindictiveness

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