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Monday, October 28, 2013

New Crutch Needed

PART 1

A woman crawls through the pressing crowd, clawing her way through the dirt and the shuffling feet to reach Jesus.

“If I can just get to Him, touch the bottom of His cloak,” she thinks. “I know I will be healed from this agony, these twelve years of pain and disease, of loneliness and being an outcast.”

She continues fighting against the crowd. She can see His feet and His tunic now and doubles her efforts. Rocks dig into her bloodied knees and unknowing feet step on her hands. A man trips over her, almost falling and, cursing her uncleaness, turns to kick her hard in the ribs.

In a desperate lunge, her fingertips brush the heavy fabric of His cloak and, in her healing, she knows the struggle has been worth it all.

Jesus, feeling His healing power flowing to the woman, asks “Who touched me?” When He hears her story, her efforts, He blesses her, saying “Go in peace and be healed.” 

There are many times in life when we need healing – from sickness and chronic disease of both the body and the soul. We know Jesus is the physician of our bodies and the healer of our hearts, so we head to Him. We crawl along with what strength we have, keeping his tunic in sight, drawing strength from the hope of reaching Him.

We grasp a few threads on His cloak and He turns to say “I don’t have to ask who touched me. I know you. You are my child and I will never turn you away.”

Jesus stops what He is doing when we touch His cloak. He turns to lift us up, to help us to our feet. He holds our face in His scarred hands and looks in our eyes. “I know you’ve gone through a lot to get here. It still may not be an easy road, but we will walk it together now.”

He puts our arm around His neck and His hand around our waist. “We will go in peace together,” Jesus says. “We will walk along toward healing, and when you are tired, we will rest. When your legs wear out, lean on me and I will help you take each step.”

He doesn't give us a crutch or a cane, He gives us Himself.


No Crutch Needed Part Two

The word was out. Everyone was talking about that woman, the unclean, diseased one who had the nerve to crawl up to Jesus and touch his tunic. Her family and friends were overjoyed with her healing. Some of the people in the crowd were wishing they thought of it first. The Pharisees wanted to punish the woman for exposing so many to her uncleanness. But for a large number of the people who heard of the healing, it was a call to action.  

They might only be common folk, uneducated and of no social status, but they were not stupid. They could certainly add one plus one and get two, and in this case, their math was very simple. One sick person plus one cloak worn by Jesus equaled hope.

And hope was something that had been in short supply for a very long time. Some of the sick languished for years in conditions that drained their family’s time, energy and hard earned money. Some suffered from a sudden illness and were now near death and unaware of their dire situation. Some were in heartbreaking states of mental illness and demon possession, living in restraints and being fed from a plate on the floor like an animal.

But now there was hope, sparkling in the distance like a far away star. If somehow, some way, these sick and inert, these comatose and demented, could get a touch of Jesus’ clothes, their ordeal would be over.

A fever of hope took hold of the families and their efforts became frantic.  Inquiries were made as to where Jesus would be next. Cots to carry and litters to drag were hastily constructed. Distant cousins and neighbors were pressed into service to help transport the sick. Mothers strapped deformed children to their backs, carrying blankets to place them on once at the marketplace. The mentally ill were bound hand and foot to stretchers and carried toward the center of town.

Jesus was coming.

The furor of preparations continued. As dawn broke, the marketplace was already half full of the ill and helpless. Laying side by side on the ground, every small patch of earth was claimed and covered with withered bodies and wretched, suffering souls. Soon the entire area would be cloaked with a patchwork of misery.

Family members stood or sat near their sick, attending their needs. Breaking off bits of bread and feeding them, dribbling water into their dry mouths, wiping faces and arms with damp cloths, the families brought what little aid and comfort they could.

The marketplace was full now. The merchants, initially angry at the crowd for blocking access to their booths, quickly learned they could charge five times the normal amount to the captive crowd and were now happily raking in their profits.

As the sun rose higher, the marketplace became stifling hot. The sick and diseased, enduring hour upon hour of waiting began soiling themselves. Some vomited and wounds bled and oozed though rag bandages. Unable to move without aid, and with their families unwilling to release this one last hope, they waited together in a living sea of suffering.

A young boy on a rooftop, pressed into service as a lookout with a bribe of fresh fruit and cheese, suddenly stood up and began shouting. “He’s coming! I can see Him.”

Those that could, jumped their feet. They grabbed their neighbors in excitement, encouraging each other, saying quick prayers. A confusion of voices all speaking at once echoed off the marketplace walls.

And then there He was. Jesus stood at the head of the small street leading to the marketplace. A blanket of silence unrolled over the crowd.

Jesus looked tired. He was dusty from the miles already walked today and there was a slight slump to His shoulders. But His eyes were alert and alive. Surveying the crowd, His warmth showed through as a slight smile touching the corners of His face.

A big, burly man standing behind Jesus, looked over His shoulder, rolled his eyes and blew air out in a large, noisy sigh. Jesus reached back, scruffling the base of the man’s neck and giving it an encouraging, but playful, shake. Then, turning back to the crowd, Jesus started forward.

And everywhere Jesus went, to villages, towns, or farms, people would take their sick to the marketplaces and beg him to let the sick at least touch the edge of his cloak. And all who touched it were made well. Mark 6:56

There are times when those close to us are facing illness that seems incurable or situations that look hopeless and they don’t have the ability to get help on their own. They have neither the strength to move themselves to Jesus or the faith to believe things can change.

This is when we have an opportunity to follow the example of the townsfolk. We need to carry our families, our friends, our brothers and sisters, to the marketplace and lay them in the path of Jesus. This is a time to pray for them, asking the Lord to walk by and let His cloak brush them and heal them, revive them and restore hope.

We can have faith in the knowledge that Jesus is coming. He is coming to let His cloak sweep across the hurting and bring healing. The heart of Jesus is compassion, moved to action. And Jesus wants us to be the action that carries those in need to Him, that brings His compassion and hope to those we know and love.

Written by
Jody Ward

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Plan Ahead

I dont know if you have noticed but out stores are filled with things to buy for the holiday. "What holiday/" You would not be amiss to ask this question.. Side by side are the goodies for three fall holidays. Halloween  paraphernalia is there and will be until next Thursday...that is unless it is sold after the fact in a 50% off sale.

Then there are Thanksgiving and harvest items to pick up to beautify your house. 

Last but not least...alas and alack...one aisle over from the turkeys and pilgrims you go to red, green, silver and gold land. Ah yes, now Christmas begins in late September these days.

In the light of keeping the Reason for the Season in place and not the hype I am posting a Christmas poem that tries to encourage a prospective of moderation and leaving yourself with some quiet time to appreciate the real meaning of Christmas and to enjoy its meaning. 

BEING ABLE TO DO THIS CAN BE THE RESULT WHEN YOU PLAN AHEAD


Facing Christmas

Facing Christmas

I shall attend to my little errands of love
      Early this  year
So that the brief days before Christmas may be
Unhampered and Clear
Of the fever of hurry. The breathless rushing,
      That I have known in the past.
Shall not possess me. I shall be calm in my soul
And ready at last.
For Christmas, “The Mass of the Christ.”

I shall kneel and call out His name;
I shall take time to watch the beautiful light
Of candle flame;
I shall have leisure – I shall go out alone
From my roof and my door
I shall not miss the silver silence of stars
As I have before;
And, oh, perhaps – If I stand there very still,
And very long -
I shall hear what the clamor of living has kept from me;
      The Angels’ song!

---Grace Noll Crawford, 1919

From The Radient Quest
        Harper and  Brothers Publishers, 1940


 shared by Connie Clark

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

THE POWER OF A GODLY MARRIAGE


I felt the Lord prompting me to write about marriage today. It seems that we take this sacrament so lightly. Yet it actually is a sacred vow and a pillar of society. The Bible describes unity as an incredibly powerful force. Psalm 133 reminds us that where there is unity the Lord commands the blessing. The Lord had to actually scatter and disperse the humanistic people at the Tower of Babel and to confuse their language. God saw that if this self aggrandizing community continued to work in unity, there is nothing they could not accomplish. Their efforts, unfortunately were leading them away from God.

A Christian couple who are operating in love and unity are a mighty weapon for the advancement of God's Kingdom. They will be able to raise Godly children who will also further God's righteous cause in the earth. It has been said, that the best thing a husband can do for his children is to love his wife. When Mother Teresa was asked “What can I do to promote world peace?” she replied, “Go home and love your family.”

As women, one of the simplest yet most effective ways to contribute to and build our marriages is to pray for our husbands. As we commit daily to pray for our spouses, we will see positive changes and growth. Bible promise books and books with specific prayers for husbands and fathers are plentiful now. We can pray scriptures over our mates and be amazed at how God works. Once we start praying for someone, it seems to nuture our love for them. God begins to show us their needs and vulnerabilities. We see them through the eyes of the Divine and begin to appreciate their admirable qualities. The Lord shows us how to better relate to them and miracles really do transpire. Transforming a marriage relationship from shakiness to stability or from goodness to greatness begins on our knees. It is a small sacrifice which yields tremendous rewards.

Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more 
than all we ask or imagine, according to his power 
that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church 
and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, 
for ever and eve! Amen.” 
Ephesians 3:20-21

By Cathy Friberg