This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- This Week’s Sermon

How To Really Love Your Enemies
by Eric Elder
www.theranch.org

You can listen to today’s message by clicking this link!  (18-1/2 minutes)
I want to talk today about how to really love your enemies.  Not just live with your enemies, which is often what we try to do, wondering, “How can we just get through this day?” or “How can we deal with the people who are attacking us, accusing us, maligning us or fighting against us?”  How do you not just live with your enemies, but how to you love them–really love them?
To start, let’s look at what Jesus says in His Sermon on the Mount:
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’  But I tell you, Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. If someone forces you to go one mile, go with him two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:38-48).
Talk about setting the bar high!  Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect!  Love those who are coming against you and attacking you!  Give them your cloak if they ask for your tunic! Go with them two miles if they ask you to go one mile!
It really sounds like all you’re doing is letting people take advantage of you.  It sounds like this would be the worst strategy in the world.  Why would Jesus advocate this?
And yet Jesus explains that God causes the sun to rise on the evil as well as the good.  He lets the rain fall on the righteous as well as the unrighteous.  If God in heaven somehow is able to continually bless people, giving them breath, life, food, water and resources to people–regardless of whether those people are mean-spirited or vindictive or malicious or loving or kind or good–if God is somehow able to do that, and still be God and still do all that’s right, and still execute justice, and still do everything that God does, then Jesus says be like God and do the same.  Be gracious to everyone, not just those who love you, but also to those who are against you.
These are hard words to hear sometimes because you may be in a place where there are a lot of people doing vindictive things to you, whether it’s in a relationship with your spouse or at work or a friend.  Maybe some truly terrible things may have happened to you and you’re trying to establish new, healthy boundaries.  So when you hear words like this, you might think, “I already tried that,” or “I simply can’t do that.”  Sometimes words like these can be really hard. But let me dive into this idea of turning the other cheek a little more and hopefully give you an idea of things you can try to help you in your relationships with others.
I had a friend come to me who was married and having a really difficult relationship with her husband.  They were getting verbally abusive with each other, even fist-fighting it out and cat-clawing one another– pretty nasty things.  It was really hard to watch them go through this.
Yet as I watched them, I could see that she was oftentimes responding to her husband as if he was her previous, ex-husband. She looked like she was responding to something that had happened to her previous marriage, but taking it out on her current husband.  She came to me and she asked–pleaded–“What should I do?”
I really hesitated to give her an answer.  It took me several days to get back to her because I didn’t want to tell her the wrong thing.  But from what I saw, she just kept resisting him at every turn.  No matter what he wanted to do, she would resist him, resist him, and resist him. I read this passage over and over and finally showed it to her, saying, “I’m not sure, but what you’re doing doesn’t seem like it’s working very well.  Maybe–just maybe–try this.  If your husband knows that you’re not going to resist him at every turn, he might just lower his offense, and you could lower your defense, and maybe you guys could work it out.”
I said this with a lot of trepidation, because I didn’t want her to be in a terrible, abusive situation.  There are certainly times when Jesus said to take up your sword (see Luke 22:36).  Jesus also said many challenging things back to those who accused Him (see Matthew 12:34).  There were times people wanted to stone Him and He would slip away through the crowd so they couldn’t stone Him or throw Him off a cliff (see John 8:59 and Luke 4:29).
So there may be times when you need to walk away, you need to slip away, and you need to verbally challenge people.  But in this passage, Jesus is saying there’s a power–there’s a strength–that can come from dropping your defenses.
In karate there’s a move when someone comes at you with a punch, rather than fight it, you accept it.  And as you accept their punch, you grab their arm, taking all of that energy that’s coming against you, and throw them to the floor with it.  It’s a different way of resisting someone.  Rather than standing there and using all your energy to try to block their punch, you say, “Bring it on!” because you have another approach that may work even better.  In fact, Muhammad Ali, when he would fight with other people in the boxing ring, he would sometimes taunt his opponent at the beginning of the fight saying, “Come on, give me more!  Hit me harder.  You can do better than that!  Punch me!”
And people would as him, “What are you doing?”
Muhammad Ali would say, “I’m winning.  I’m wearing them out.”  The other guy would just keep swinging and swinging and soon become exhausted.  Muhammad Ali’s just had to wait it out until his turn came, then he would come back and deliver the final blow.  Of course, that’s not what we’re tying to do when we’re trying to really love our enemies!  But I’m saying there’s are principles even in the natural world, where people say, “OK, give it to me!  In fact, give me a double dose!  Bring it on!” and that strategy works.  In our case, as Christians, we have God as our defender.  We have Jesus, who can take someone’s swinging arm and use their own force to throw them to the ground, still loving on them as He picks them back up.
Sometimes people may think, “Christians are so weak because they just let people rail on them, mistreat them and abuse them.”  And that could be.  There could be some Christians who do that.  But I know for me, when people have come against me, it has taken me more strength to stand in silence and let others do what they want to do, or to say whatever they want to say, than it would to actually come back and fight against them.
It is not a sign of weakness when you turn the other cheek.
I was watching a movie this week called Captain America: Winter Soldier.  Maybe you saw it.  There’s a scene in the movie where the president of the country is calling on Nick Fury, the head of the Avengers, to press a button and launch a missile system to attack their enemies.  The president taunts Nick, implying that Nick is a coward if he doesn’t launch the missile system.
This president says, “It’s the next step, Nick, if you have the courage to take it.”
Nick replies: “No, I have the courage not to.”
Sometimes Christians don’t fight back, not because they lack the courage to do it, but because they have the courage not to.  Sometimes it takes a lot more strength to not fight back.
Someone came against me one day with a barrage of attacks and accusations. What they were saying wasn’t right.  Even though some of the facts were true, the way they interpreted those facts was completely wrong.  Yet after trying to defend myself after the first few attacks, I realized this wasn’t the time for defense.  This was the time to listen.  This was the time to let the other person vent and get everything off their chest as to how they felt they had been wronged.
Rather than fight back, I took out a pen and paper and asked them to slow down.  I said I really wanted to hear what they were had to say.  I really wanted to listen to make sure I understood their heart.  Rather than fighting back, I simply wrote down everything they said, point by point.
The more the other person talked, the more intense and painful their words became to me.  Their words were like blows to my head, like punches to my gut.  But I knew any defense I tried to make would fall on deaf ears, and it would only serve to intensify their attack.
When they were done with all they had to say, I was able to say, “Thank you for telling me.”  They were spent, they were done talking, they had been heard and they were thankful for it, too.
I took that list and prayed over each item, trying to understand what God said about them and why this other person felt the way they did.  And I was able to see it from their point of view. Even though I still disagreed, from my perspective, I could understand what they were saying.  I later asked them if we could talk through some of these things with someone else in the room, maybe a counselor or a friend or anyone with whom they felt comfortable.  They said that was OK, and so we did.  I can’t say we resolved everything on that list yet, or even most of the things.  But I can say we were able to walk forward with our relationship in a much more civil way, without the heat of the moment getting in the way.
I wish I could say this has always been my response.  It hasn’t been, and it still isn’t every time.  My “self” is fully alive and kicking within me.  Maybe your “self” is still alive within you, too.  But to the extent that I am willing to lay down my life for others, even for those who are attacking me, I am being Christlike and I can trust that He will be my defender, my protecter, my lawyer, my advocate and my judge.
And I would be foolish to think that I was always right in every argument.
Benjamin Franklin, as noted in the book How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie quotes from Franklin’s autobiography saying that in Ben’s younger days, Ben would always insist that he was right–and most of the time he was.  But someone finally came up to Ben and said:
“Ben, you are impossible. Your opinions have a slap in them for everyone who differs with you. They have become so offensive that nobody cares for them. Your friends find they enjoy themselves better when you are not around. You know so much that no man can tell you anything. Indeed, no man is going to try, for the effort would lead only to discomfort and hard work. So you are not likely ever to know any more than you do now, which is very little.”
So Benjamin Franklin went on and he changed his approach.  He decided, from that point on, he was not going to say, “This is certainly true,” or “This is absolutely right.”  He always allowed that he could be wrong.  He went on to say in his autobiography that this changed his conversations–it changed their tone and then tenor.  Ben said he was able to win over many more people to his position by saying, “I could be wrong in this,” or “I believe this, but it might not be right.”
Using this approach, Ben found out that when he was wrong it was much easier to admit it,  and when the other person was wrong, it was much easier for them to accept it.  Ben Franklin went on to work out many deals with many people and put in place many treaties with many countries, all of which helped us and our country in many ways.
Abraham Lincoln, during the heat of the many battles of the Civil War, at one point was suggesting the north should show grace and mercy to the south, giving them various kinds of aid.  People said to him that he shouldn’t be doing that for his enemies, that he should destroy them.  Lincoln replied:
“Am I not destroying my enemies when I make them my friends?” 
The best way to destroy your enemies is to make them your friends.
This can take time, though.  President Lincoln also said in a letter:
“I am a patient man–always willing to forgive on the Christian terms of repentance; and also to give ample time for repentance.”
Sometimes we need to let things chill for an ample length of time.
As I was thinking about this topic today, I thought of five close friends of mine right now, friends with whom, at five separate times in my life, had been at absolute loggerheads with me.  I didn’t even understand what had happened in our relationship, yet they were extremely angry with me.  When I tried to have a dialogue with each of them them, we weren’t able to make any progress.
At some point I had to walk away from each of them and say, “I feel like this is where I need to go.  If you want to come along with me, that’s fine.  If you don’t, I can’t force you to do that.”  For several of them it took years, but they eventually came back to me, sometimes saying: “I’m so sorry, Eric.  I was wrong.  Will you forgive me.”
Each of these people, these five that I’m thinking about, have become some of my strongest supporters, some of my fiercest allies.  They are people that will fight for me and my family, people that will come and help me in practical ways.
And yet with each of them, they were so against me that I thought at the time, “This is irreconcilable.  This will never work out.”  I could have kept trying to fight against them.  I could have kept trying to argue.  But instead I said, “I’ve got to step away.  I’ve got to let God work on my heart and on theirs.”
I want to encourage you in this, too.  You might say, “I’ve really got to fight against this,” “I’ve really got to take this person to court,” “I’ve really got to continue on with this lawsuit,” or whatever it is that you may be going through.
I want you to know, I’m not a pacifist.  I think there are times to defend your position.  Jesus did.  There were times when Jesus challenged those who challenged Him.  He rebuked those who rebuked Him.  But there are also times to submit, to surrender, and to turn the other cheek–as Jesus did on the night He was betrayed, taken away, accused, beaten and crucified, the night that He showed His ultimate love for each one of us, even though some of us were still treating Him as an enemy.
Let me ask you this:  if you’re resisting your enemies with everything you’ve got, fighting them on every front, how’s that working for you?  Is it perhaps time to try another way? Is there a chance that these words of Jesus, highlighted in red letters in the Bible, could unlock a potential friendship that could help you significantly as the years go on?
I’d like to close with two verses.  The first is from James 1:19:
“Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (James 1:19).
Take your time.  Don’t let the heat of the moment get to you.  Be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry.
The other verse is from Proverbs 15:1:
” A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger” (Proverbs 15:1).
Is there someone to whom you could give a gentle answer today, instead of a harsh word?
Turn the other cheek.  Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect.
Let’s pray:
Father, I know these can be such hard words to hear, and much harder words to apply.  But God, we want to truly love our enemies, not just live with them.  God, I pray You would give each one of us an extra dose of Your Holy Spirit today to empower us, to strengthen us, to give us the courage to turn the other cheek, to go the extra mile, and to give double of what others ask from us.  Lord, I pray Your Holy Spirit would empower us to do this.   Let these words be sealed in our hearts, and these red letters be emblazoned on our chests.  Help us to love others as You love them.  In Jesus’ name, Amen.

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Friday

The ministry of bearing with one another is learning to hear God speak through difficult people.
John Ortberg

It is better to hear the rebuke of the wise, than for a man to hear the song of fools.
Ecclesiastes 7:5
The King James Version

Remember who your ruler is.  Don’t forget His daily briefing.
Carl F. H. Henry

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Thursday

Why, there is greater occasion for thankfulness just in the unimpaired possession of one of the five senses than there would be if someone left us a fortune.
Laura Ingalls Wilder

The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.  The grace of our Lord Jesus be with you.
Romans 16:20
The New International Version

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Wednesday

May we never look past someone God yearns for us to see.
Mary Albert Darling

Therefore, rid yourselves of all malice and all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander of every kind.
1 Peter 2:1
The New International Version

A smile is the light in the window of your face that tells people you’re at home.
Philip D. Noble

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Tuesday

Every part of our Lord’s life was centered and guided by His continuing communication with the Father.
Henry Blackaby

In God, whose word I praise, in God I trust; I shall not be afraid.  What can flesh do to me?
Psalm 56:4
The English Standard Version

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Monday

Somehow fixing your eyes on Jesus causes other things to dim in significance.  Possessions, people, reputation, opinions, political rhetoric, world wars, death, disease, heartache-all of these and so much more grow strangely dim when we gaze on Him.
Charles Swindle

The LORD tears down the house of the proud, but he protects the property of widows.
Proverbs 15:25
The New Living Translation

If something is big enough to worry about…it’s big enough to pray about.
Unknown

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- This Week’s Sermon

The Prescription for Powerful Peace 
by Jeff Strite
Philippians 4:1-4:9
Galatians 5:22-23a
“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.”
Some time back the Gallup organization polled Americans about their most important criteria for judging personal success. They apparently gave them a list of 20 or 30 different option, and these were the results:
Good health came in 1st – 58%
Second, an enjoyable job – 49%
A happy family was third – 45%
A good education, fourth – 39%.
Peace of mind, fifth – 34%
Good friends, sixth – 25%
Materialistic factors as unlimited money, a luxury car, and an expensive home brought up the rear.
I found it interesting that one of the top 5 qualities of a “successful life” was peace of mind.
I. And peace of mind was something God has promised to us.
When Jesus was born the angels declared “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.” Luke 2:14
Jesus said: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you….” John 14:27
In fact, Isaiah prophesied that when Jesus came, He would be called “The Prince of Peace, and of the increase of his government and peace there will be no end…” Isaiah 9:6-7
And then, in Galatians 5 we’re told that part of the fruit of the spirit is… peace.
So, not only do most men and women highly prize peace… so does God.
I spent a great deal of time thinking about this morning sermon. And as I was considering the many scriptures and illustrations about peace, it occurred to me… if everybody wants so much wants peace in their lives – why doesn’t everyone have it?
As I considered this question my mind went back to a conversation I once had with a liberal/feminist friend of mine. I commented to her about how much I used to like the old comedy singing group “The Smothers Brothers”. Back in the 60’s, they had a extremely popular comedy/variety show called “The Smothers Brothers Hour” and they enjoyed a great deal of success, until they started turning their show into a platform for political commentary and satire. The network promptly cancelled their program.
Thirty years later, the Smothers Brothers were back on TV with a special, and (as I explained to my liberal friend) what disappointed me about them was how angry they seemed to be. Do you know why they were so angry? They were still bitter at the network that had cancelled them 30 years earlier. I shared with my friend about how disappointing it was that these great comedians and singers couldn’t let go of their anger.
That led us into a discussion of the need to be able to forgive others… and my feminist friend became agitated. Why? Because the idea of forgiving anyone who had deeply offended her wasn’t something she was comfortable with either.
As I thought back to that conversation it suddenly occurred to me that everybody wants peace. The Smothers Brothers wanted peace My feminist friend wanted peace Everybody I could think of who’d ever been angry or embittered… they all wanted peace. The problem was – they wanted peace on THEIR terms.
Many people believe they will experience peace of mind when they get revenge
Many will experience peace only when their political party is in power
Many will experience peace only when things go the way THEY want them to go.
Everybody wants peace-they just want that peace to be on THEIR terms.
And that is why there is so much conflict in this world
James wrote: “What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you? You want something but don’t get it. You kill and covet, but you cannot have what you want. You quarrel and fight. You do not have, because you do not ask God.” James 4:1-2a
But God’s peace is different than the kind of peace the world pursues.
Jesus said “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives…” John 14:27
God wants to give us a peace that we can have no matter what happens to us in our lives. That’s because God’s kind of peace is dependent upon His Spirit being IN us… not upon the momentary difficulties that we encounter in this world.
As one man once put it “Peace is not the absence of trouble. Peace is the presence of God”
II. Now, that brings us to our passage in Philippians 4
This is one of the most powerful passages in Scripture because it tells us HOW we can have God’s peace.
Paul tells us in Philippians 4:9 – if we follow his advice “…the God of peace will be with you” In fact “… the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” Philippians 4:7
I was examining the text for this morning, I almost passed over verse 2. I’d always regarded this verse as having nothing to do with the rest of Paul’s discussion about peace. But then I realize that what he said in this verse probably initiated his entire discussion of the topic.
Look with me at Philippians 4:2. Paul is saying “I plead with Euodia and I plead with Syntyche to agree with each other in the Lord.”
There’s a couple of ladies in the church that are not happy with each other. In fact, they’re probably downright angry with one another. I’ve seen people like this in church. They’re so mad at each other that they’ll come to the same building an then sit on opposite sections of the sanctuary just so they don’t have to speak to one another.
These ladies (Euodia and Syntyche) are not at peace… there’s a conflict between them that’s upsetting the church. It has become so obvious that news of their conflict has made its way back to Paul. And so he’s writing to them and telling them… “knock it off”
He’s telling them that the way to resolve their conflict is “To agree with each other… (HOW?) In the Lord.”
This brings us to the first KEY of having God’s peace in our lives – to do everything we do “in the Lord” Remember what I said earlier about what causes conflicts in people’s lives? They want peace… but they want it on their terms. That’s why these ladies were in conflict they wanted what they wanted – on their terms.
Now, what Paul is telling these ladies that they’ve got to change their perspective. He’s telling them that – because they were Christians – none of their conflicts were “about them” anymore. They belonged to Christ.  As it says in 1 Corinthians 6:19b-20 “…You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body.”
Therefore, since these ladies belonged to God – their objective was no longer allowed to be based upon whether they WIN. That’s the way many people conduct themselves in such conflicts. They want to win. They want conflicts resolved in their favor. And, if you were a pagan, you could do things that way. But if you belong to Jesus, you can’t do things that way any more. If you belong to Jesus, you have to start asking yourselves the question: “What does God want? Not – what do I want?”
Remember Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane when He prayed “Not my will, but thine?” He’s our role model. He has set the pattern of our priorities. When conflicts arise, we need to ask “What does God want?”
Well, the Bible tells us. A repeated command throughout the Bible is “Love One another”. You have a conflict with someone in the church… settle it! Resolve it! DO NOT rest until you have sought or until you have given forgiveness. In fact, this is so critical that I get the impression that Paul wanted the entire church at Philippi to be involved in this endeavor of getting these ladies back together. To crowd them into the same pew, to find ways of helping them settle their differences.
Why? Because when we do this… God promises us His peace
I read once of a woman who realized she needed to forgive a friend who had hurt her. Some time later, she ran the woman in a store and was tempted to avoid talking to her. “Instead of turning away (she said) I told her how profoundly she had hurt me. She listened, but didn’t apologize. Then I surprised myself. I apologized for harboring anger and hatred against her for so long. As I spoke, I realized I’d forgiven her.” The effect was potent. “My anger melted away,” she says. Now, whenever she sees that woman she says “I can breathe calmly and my heart isn’t palpitating.”
The 2nd key to having God’s peace is to INCLUDE GOD in all that we do.
Philippians 4:5-7 says “Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
The principle reason people don’t have peace in their lives is because they don’t include God in solving their problems.
Perhaps they think God is too busy 
Maybe they don’t want to bother Him
Maybe they would prefer to handle it themselves
But as one person once observed… “If something is big enough to worry about… it’s big enough to pray about.”
BUT the kind of prayer I need to pray is the one that turns all my problems over to God. Because if I don’t turn my problems over to God… if I end up being the only one struggling with my problems… then I will not have peace.
Too often we view praying to God the same way a mountaineer once did. He fell off a cliff, and as he tumbled down into the huge canyon, he grabbed hold of a branch of a small tree. “Help!” he shouted. “Is there anyone up there?”  A deep, majestic voice from the sky echoed through the canyon. “I will help you, my son. But first you must have faith and trust me.” “All right, all right, I trust you,” answered the man. The voice replied, “Then, let go of the branch.” There was a long pause and the man shouted again, “Is there anyone else up there?”
The problem is, when we approach God in that fashion, we’ll have neither peace nor answered prayer.
James tells us that when a person prays, they “… must believe and not doubt, because he who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That man should not think he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a double-minded man, unstable in all he does.” James 1:6-8
I’ve seen this far too often in my ministry. Someone will come to me asking for advice. But no sooner do I give them Biblical counseling than they flitter off and do something entirely different. They asked for my advice, but they had no intention of putting it into practice. God’s basically telling us in James 1 – if that’s how we intend to approach Him in prayer, He’s not going to bother with us.
One poet put it this way:
As children bring their broken toys with tears for us to mend,
I brought my broken dreams to God because He was my friend.
But then, instead of leaving Him in peace to work alone,
I hung around and tried to help with ways that were my own.
At last I snatched them back and cried, “How could you be so slow?”
“My child,” he said, “What could I do? You never did let go.”
Now… let me review
IF I WANT GOD’S PEACE IN MY LIFE
1st – I need to do all that I do “in the Lord” – I must live by His priorities
2nd – In all that I do I must include God, especially in prayer
and now…
3rd – In all that I do, I MUST REMEMBER what God has done before.
Remember that mountain climber who wanted someone else to answer his plea??? Why did he doubt? He didn’t trust the voice. The voice was asking him to do something that he wouldn’t ordinarily do. And most importantly, the voice had no track record that he could trust. The voice had no credibility with him.
In Philippians 4, Paul’s telling us that – in order for us to trust God the way we need to…
… we need to focus on what God has done in the past
… we need to focus on God’s track record
Philippians 4:8&9 says
“Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable– if anything is excellent or praiseworthy– think about such things. Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me– put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.”
What has God done in the past?
How has God shown Himself to be faithful?
How has God shown Himself to be worthy of your trust?
THINK ON THESE THINGS
I have concluded, after several years of ministry, that if I were to give most people a tablet of paper and ask them to write down what disappoints them in their lives – the thing they don’t have…the things they wish they did have…the things they feel should have been – they’d have to ask for another tablet or two to write it all down. But if you were to give them a single sheet of paper and ask them to write blessings they’d have trouble filling out one side of the paper.
The reason many people don’t trust God with their lives is because they’ve never practiced the concept.
But when we do… God’s peace is the result.  Henry Frost served for many years as a missionary to China. In his journal he wrote of a very difficult time in his life. He says, “I had received sad news from home, and deep shadows had covered my soul. I prayed BUT the darkness did not vanish. I summoned myself to endure, BUT the darkness only deepened. Then I went to an inland station and saw on the wall of the mission home these words: ‘TRY THANKSGIVING.’ I did, and in a moment every shadow was gone, not to return”
The peace that God promises us is different than the peace that this world pursues. The peace that appeals to most people is that which hinges on life being kind and gentle with them. If things are good and life runs along at a gentle flow, they are comfortable and at peace. But when difficulties strike and tragedy overwhelms them, their peace disappears.
The Bible is very clear on the fact that life will be hard even for the Christian. Jesus “In this world you will have trouble.” Even the disciples faced repeated conflict and difficulties as they were arrested, beaten, stoned, whipped, thrown in prison and executed because of their faith.
But the peace of “passes all understanding.” It’s a peace that makes absolutely no earthly sense, because it’s based upon God’s presence. He doesn’t remove the pain and the tragedy from our lives because this world is not our home. 2 Corinthians 5:2 tells us that while we live on this earth, “we groan, longing to be clothed with our heavenly dwelling”, longing to be with God because – as that old Negro spiritual once declared “This World is not my home, I’m just apassing through. My treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue. The angels beckon me from heaven’s open shore. Cause I can’t feel at home in this world anymore.”
But while we are in this world, even when faced with death, divorce, tragedy and pain, we can experience God’s peace. A peace that will make absolutely no sense to anyone around us.
There’s a favorite hymn that many of us grew up hearing in church.  “When peace like a river attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea-billows roll, Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to know; ‘It is well, it is well with my soul.’ It is well… with my soul. It is well, it is well with my soul.”
The writer of that hymn was a Chicago lawyer named Horatio Spafford. In 1871, Chicago was devastated by a great fire that destroyed much of the city… including many of Spafford’s own possessions. At about that same time, his son died. But in spite of his own personal loss, he unselfishly helped others who had become grief-stricken and homeless because of the fire. Some time later, he and his wife and 4 daughter planned a trip to England where they were going to take part in a revival with the evangelist D. L. Moody. As their ship was about to depart, Spafford was unexpectedly detained by urgent business and so he sent his family ahead with intentions to join them later. As the ship neared England, it collided with an English sailing ship and swiftly sank drowning 226 of the 273 passengers on board. His wife was one of the 47 who survived. She sent a telegram with these two words “Saved alone.” Their 4 daughters had drowned in the tragedy. Spafford left immediately for England, and as his ship approached the area where his girls had drowned, he penned the words to this song…
“Tho’ Satan Should buffet, tho’ trials should come, Let his blessed assurance control, That Christ has regarded my helpless estate, and hath shed His own blood for my soul. It is well, with my soul. It is well, it is well with my soul.”

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch, P.O. Box 3784, Greenwood Village, CO 80155, USA

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