Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Bible (Page 27 of 395)

40 Years with Cru

This summer marks my 40 year anniversary of joining the staff of Campus Crusade for Christ (I initially signed on for two years). Over that time I’ve worked on the campuses of Kansas State University and Southwest Missouri State University. Then as a regional leader directing the ministries in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. I later shifted to International Missions, sending and serving missionaries around the globe (to date I’ve visited over 50 countries). I worked in R&D to develop new tools and programs to reach students in the U.S. and abroad. Currently I’m helping faculty find Jesus, grow in their faith, and engage overseas.

My wife joined me on this journey a year later. Together we reflect on the many wonderful things the Lord has done, as well as His presence through difficulties and challenges. I’m looking forward to several more years of fruitful service as I put into play decades of hard-earned wisdom.

Every one our years with Cru happened due to the Lord’s kind hand and an amazing team of donors and prayer partners. Some have been with me from the beginning—simply astounding! Others joined through the years. We humbly thank each and every person who serves with us.

As I consider the people and events over the last 40 years I find special meaning in these verses that start and finish Psalm 27:

The Lord is my light and my salvation—whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life—of whom shall I be afraid?

I remain confident of this: I will see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. Wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.

The Lord is indeed my light, my salvation and my stronghold. My wife and I celebrate His goodness as we enjoy this milestone.

Psalm 27:1, 13-14

Photo—I can’t find a picture from my new staff commissioning, but here’s one from Dawn’s (39 years ago) which is better anyway since she’s in it. Haven’t changed much, have we?

The Abundance of Fruit Season

I bought a watermelon at the grocery store the other day. I thumped along, listening for a deep, hollow echo. I’ve heard (from grandparents, maybe?) that the deeper the sound the riper the melon. So I thwacked a bunch before adding one to my basket. When cut open at home the melon proved red, ripe and delicious, a successful selection. I’m convinced that while my process helps, the fact that watermelons are in season makes picking a good one easier.

Earlier this summer I reaped a harvest from my strawberry beds. Yesterday I picked a handful of blackberries, just now turning dark and sweet. Best of all, fresh peaches are arriving and we’ll gorge on those for several weeks.

Fruits mature at different times throughout the summer. Here in Colorado our season arrives later than many places, so the anticipation grows stronger. Gotta stay calm when the peach stands start to pop up.

Jesus talked about fruit when he addressed a group of religious leaders: Either make the tree good and its fruit good, or make the tree bad and its fruit bad, for the tree is known by its fruit…for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.

My interior attitudes and mental states express through my outer actions. I may hide behind nice words and flowery promises for a time, but the overflow—the abundance—of my heart, kind or cutting, eventually leaks out.

Yesterday I stopped by the pharmacy to pick up a prescription which I thought was ready, but was not. The harried clerk apologized and said they were backed up and didn’t know when I should return. I said thanks and was nice enough, but walked away frustrated. When I sat in the car this idea of abundance of heart struck me. What did this minor inconvenience reveal about the status of my inner life? Am I producing sweet fruit, or only tainted pieces with a shiny veneer?

An abundance of heart appears in qualities like love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (the fruit of the Spirit found in Galatians 5:22-23). If these are growing in my life, even in tiny, incremental measures, then I know my inner life is connected to the Lord. If not, I need to do some work in the garden.

The cornucopia of fruit season never fails to bring me joy. It’s a wonderful image of what an abundance of heart yields as I allow the Lord to cultivate my life through his Spirit and his Word. If I let the Master Gardener have his way, and then I might enjoy his lavish nature not just in certain seasons, but in all phases of life.

Matthew 12:33-34

Photo by Rens D

The Seven Thousand

Elijah felt alone and abandoned. After a whirlwind of miraculous ministry—confronting the prophets of Baal, predicting a massive rainstorm, and fleeing for his life from a mad queen, Elijah sat in a cave. He sensed no hope on the horizon as he moaned out this prayer:

I have been very jealous for the Lord, the God of hosts. For the people of Israel have forsaken your covenant, thrown down your altars, and killed your prophets with the sword, and I, even I only, am left, and they seek my life, to take it away.

The Lord responded, but instead of wrapping Elijah in a big hug or telling him good job, Yahweh gave the next assignment. No time for self-pity, Elijah, too much work to be done. But then the Lord added this reassurance: Yet I will leave seven thousand in Israel, all the knees that have not bowed to Baal, and every mouth that has not kissed him.

Seven thousand—Elijah was not all alone after all. Scores of people whose hearts remained steadfast inhabited the land. Take courage, Elijah, more stand with you than you realize.

I find this passage incredibly encouraging. In today’s chaotic world where godly ways of living and treating others fade and disappear, thousands multiplied by thousands follow the Lord and practice his ways. I am not alone, and neither are you.

Stand strong. Stay courageous. Keep the faith.

1 Kings 19:9-18

Photo by DNK.PHOTO

The Mundane Tasks of Life

A few days ago I visited our local department of motor vehicles office. A new system required making an online appointment, and when I showed up for my scheduled time slot I thought I stepped through the wrong door. No more chaos. Two people waited quietly as I checked in. Within a few minutes I sat at the counter and chatted with a friendly clerk. The process went smoothly and I have to say, made for a pleasant experience (except for writing a big check for the state and county fees).

The next day I dropped off my Jeep for a repair. Some problem with the emissions system, which means in our part of Colorado the vehicle would not pass an emissions test, which means I would not be able to license the vehicle at the now pleasant DMV. The circle of life. After paying another hefty sum I drove off. Car chores finished for awhile.

My schedule fills with tasks, maintenance issues (one of my gutters is clogged), and things that just have to get done. How do I find the Lord in my to-do list? Where is God in the mundane? Many places in the Scriptures remind us of God’s ongoing presence. I like this passage from Hebrews:

Keep your life free from love of money, and be content with what you have, for he has said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” So we can confidently say, “The Lord is my helper; I will not fear; what can man do to me?”

The Lord seems to be keeping me free from money as I spend lavishly on vehicle fees and service. But much more hopeful is the reminder that the Lord is my helper and never gets bored or wanders off.

Where is the Lord in the midst of monotonous and tiresome activities? Right next to me, whether at the DMV, repair shop or anywhere in between. It’s an amazing reality—God stays with me wherever I go.

Hebrews 13:5-6

Photo by Edwin Chen

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