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

Turning Quiet Places Into Holy Places
by Robert Donato

Luke 5:12-5:16
Theologian A. W. Tozer gives tremendous insight as he writes these profound words in his book The Knowledge of the Holy: “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.”
What do you think about God? Do you see Him as being bigger than our star-strewn universe? If so, then the problems of life won’t seem so overwhelming. On the other hand, if we project God onto a small screen in our minds, life’s obstacles can take on giant proportions. We will tremble and quake before them. We will act first and pray later, and the twin fists of panic and worry will pummel our hearts with fear.
In his book Your God Is Too Small, British pastor J.B. Phillips challenges us not to settle for such a meager concept of God.
“Let us fling wide the doors and windows of our minds and make some attempt to appreciate the “size” of God. He must not be limited to religious matters or even to the “religious” interpretation of life. He must not be confined to one particular section of time nor must we imagine Him as the local god of this planet or even only of the universe that astronomical survey has so far discovered. It is not, of course, physical size that we are trying to establish in our minds…It is rather to see the immensely broad sweep of the Creator’s activity, the astonishing complexity of His mental processes which science laboriously uncovers, the vast sea of what we can only call “God” in a small corner of which man lives and moves and has his being.” (JB Phillips, Your God Is to Small NY NY Macmillan Co. 1961 pp 61-62)
Through Jesus Christ, God offers to us understanding and intimacy.
Everywhere Jesus went people came to Him with their needs. His reputation spread as He met those needs. Then the demands increased. His journeys were filled with times of teaching and then the meeting of human needs. It’s what He was about. It’s why He came. As Jesus read in the synagogue (Luke 4:16-21) He foretold of His own ministry. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He has anointed Me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent Me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”
As Jesus did these things people were changed. Hope was restored. Renewal of mind and spirit took place. It was an amazing time because of the power of Jesus Christ was unleashed. In Him, heaven met people.
As people encounter the Living God, then as well as today, they sense the bigness of deity’s presence, and find in Jesus Christ a Person that can be trusted. If we are to remain in His presence we must draw ever closer to Him
This is accomplished by…
I. Closeness to God Requires Obedience.
Deity descends on the lonely life of a leper v.12 “and it came about that while He was in one of the cities, behold, there was a man full of leprosy; and when he saw Jesus, he fell on his face and implored Him, saying, “Lord, if You are willing, You can make me clean.”
Leprosy, according to Wm. Barclay, proliferated in two forms in Palestine. “There was one which was rather like a very bad skin disease, and it was the less serious of the two. There was one in which the disease, starting from a small spot, ate away the flesh until the wretched sufferer was left with only the stump of a hand or leg. It was literally a living death.”
This was probably the type, which afflicted this man who knelt at the feet of Jesus. Luke says he was “full” of leprosy. He was compelled by the Law to be ostracized from the rest of society. Therefore the agony of his leprosy was intensified by the social stigma attached to it.
Death’s tentacles grabbed his heart as well as his body. When he walked down the street, people kept their distance. Mothers covered their children’s eyes. Doctors shook their heads. No one dared step too close to an open grave
When the leper saw Jesus he knew this Man held life in His hands.
Desperate lunge of faith, he drew near, falling in the dust before Jesus, he spoke in a trembling voice: “Lord, if you are willing…” No bargaining, no expectations. Just a glint of faith, and that was enough to open the floodgates of Jesus’ compassion. “And He stretched out his hand, and touched him saying, “I am willing; be cleansed.” And immediately the leprosy left him” (v.13).
Did you see what Jesus did? He reached out and “touched” the leper. He could have cleansed him from a distance, as a doctor might call your prescription in to the local drugstore. But Jesus came to touch the untouchables, to hold the Father’s cup of love to the parched lips of humanity. The leper drank deeply as the Master reached out His hand. How long had it been since he felt the tender touch of another human being? How long since he had belonged and had been welcome among others?
Immediately the leper was healed. No empty promises from Jesus, but the unmistakable release of heaven’s power.
At that point Jesus instructed the man to go to the Temple to offer sacrifices that Moses commanded in this kind of situation. Jesus knew that such an action would be a witness to the priests and that it was the only way the man could ever be received back into the community. How refreshing Jesus’ action is. Instead of promoting himself as a wonder-worker, He promoted respect for God’s laws. A miracle of God had taken place. A man had received his life back. Transformation came to a man on a collision course toward ugly, painful death. And the news of Jesus continued to spread as crowds of people came near to Him to be healed of their sicknesses.
II. Closeness to God Grows Through Prayer.
Luke interjects a curious, almost out of place statement at this point in the story. “But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed.”
In the midst of many needs, Jesus withdrew to a quiet place where He could be alone with His Father in prayer.
Luke 6:12 “One of those days Jesus went out to a mountainside to pray, and spent the night praying to God.”
Mk 1:35 “Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where He prayed.”
Mk 6:46 “After leaving them, He went up on a mountainside to pray.”
Luke 3:21, at the time of His baptism, it was while He was praying that the Holy Spirit descended on Him. All through the N.T. references are made to the importance of prayer in the life of Jesus. Obviously prayer was an energizing habit of His life.
How intriguing to think that the One who needed to pray so little because of who He was, prayed then and still prays now. There is no way to look at Jesus without noticing the depth of His devotional life. It was an essential part of who He was.
Many people look at Jesus and say, “Oh, how He healed.” Others look at Him and say, “Oh what a great teacher.” Some might look at him and proclaim, “Oh how he loved.” All of them would be right. But we need to look once more and proclaimed “Oh how He prayed.”
Prayer was a priority action for Him. It was so important that He taught His disciples how to pray.
Why would prayer be so important to Jesus? Why would it be such a passion with Him? We see one possible answer in John 6:38 where Jesus says, “I have come down from heaven not to do my Will but to do the will of Him who sent Me.” Jesus was so committed to His Father’s will that He want4ed to listen often to the Father. Nothing would shake that relationship-the one relationship around which all other relationships revolved. It was the relationship that enabled Him to be who He was. If this relationship were hindered, it would negatively impact what He came to do.
His relationship with the Father was what Satan tried to destroy in our Lord’s temptation in the wilderness. If Satan could have gotten Jesus to compromise that relationship, then it could never be said again that Jesus and the Father were one. The plan of salvation would have failed, and the enemy would have won. But Jesus didn’t cave in. The enemy did not win; the presence of God in human history was not compromised and it prevailed.
How important is prayer in your life?
III. Closeness to God Makes Us Strong
All through His ministry Jesus taught His disciples to “pray and not give up.” What did Jesus say to them on the night of His betrayal? “Pray that you will not fall into temptation” (Luke 22:40). Earlier He told them “Pray for those who persecute you” (Matt 5:44). “Pray for those who mistreat you” (Luke 6:28). When he taught His disciples to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, He was telling them to stay focused on the will and way of the Father.
Looking at Jesus’ prayer patterns we see that He wants us to pray. He wants us to withdraw to solitary places to be with God so our relationship with Him can be vital and real. How can we who need prayer so much, but who pray so little expect to be closely bonded with God, when Jesus who needed to pray so little prayed so much?
The most important thing we can do in our lives is to develop our relationship with God. Our relationship should not be a business or religious arrangement. Rather it should be a bonded relationship of persons so deeply moved by what God has done for them that they want to love Him and be with Him. In John 17, in His high priestly prayer Jesus reflects upon the relationship He has with His Father, “just as You are in Me and I am in You” (v.21) Then He prays for us when He says, “May they also be in us” (v.21). Those words of petition have love written all over them. That has relationship written all over it. This is not a mere religious experience or a philosophical notion. Rather, this is a personal relationship with the living God who sent His only Son into the world to die for our sins.
What are you doing to deepen your relationship with God? As we look at Jesus and see how much weight He placed on prayer, it’s a necessary question to ask ourselves. How is your prayer life? Are you allowing God’s truth to grow in you so that His ways become the normal operating ways of your life? We need to pay attention to a profound detail about life mentioned numerous times in the Bible. It says to all who have received Christ into their lives and have chosen to live for God, “Our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (Eph 6:12).
Life is no picnic out there. It’s real world 101. The apostle Peter took more than his share of shots from the enemy and was led to write in his letter “Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith” (1 Pet 5:8-9). How can we resist him if we don’t have somebody that is stronger than this “roaring lion” within us? Do you think you can actually take on a roaring lion barehanded? I don’t want the job, especially when the lion is the devil himself. I much prefer that God take on this lion. I would like Jesus Christ who died and was raised again from the dead to take on this lion. I would like the Holy Spirit, who is mightier than all the demons of hell, to take on this lion.
If we want to live a life of victory in Jesus, we must develop our personal relationship with Him We must nourish ourselves on His Word. We must refresh ourselves from His well of water that springs up to eternal life in us. We must spend time with Him. We must draw near to Him so our thoughts become His thoughts and our ways become His ways. Then, we can face the lion and take him down, “because the One who is in us is greater than the one who is in the world” (1 John 4:4).
I urge you cultivate a precious relationship with God. Don’t neglect it. Make it special. Love Him. Draw close to Him. Whisper, “I love You, Lord,” into His ear throughout the day. Set aside special moments when you open His love letter to you. Sing His praises. Lift up His name. Quiet your heart before Him. Let the littleness of your life get lost in His greatness. Pray to Him. Worship Him. Shut out the world until you only hear God. Become like a child and bask in His embrace.
Don’t you sometimes feel like the leprous man who found healing and restoration in Jesus? Remember how you had nothing and suddenly you were given your life back again. You were headed for destruction and suddenly you heard Jesus say, ” am willing…be clean!” You felt like a nobody who heard Jesus say, “I love you and I forgive you. Welcome home.” Don’t you want to grow in that kind of relationship? When you look into the face of God, don’t you want to say, “I may lose everything else in the world, but I am not going to lose my relationship with God.”
Find ways to cultivate your relationship with God. Make your devotional life a high priority. Protect it. Cherish it. Love God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.
Every day, find a way to quiet your heart in God’s presence. There is your peace. There is your victory. There is your strength. There is your first love.

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Friday

He should not preach about hell who can not do it without tears.
Dwight L. Moody

Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, And the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped.  Then the lame shall leap like a deer, And the tongue of the dumb sing.  For waters shall burst forth in the wilderness, And streams in the desert.
Isaiah 35:5-6
The New King James Version

Start a daily journal in which you record at least one simple joy or blessing you experience each day.
Bret Nicholaus

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Thursday

Good and evil both increase at compound interest.  That is why the little decisions you and I make every day are of such infinite importance.
C. S. Lewis

The LORD’s curse is on the house of the wicked, but he blesses the dwelling of the righteous.
Proverbs 3:33
The English Standard Version

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Wednesday

The million little things that drop into our hands, the small opportunities each day brings, He leaves us free to use or abuse and goes unchanging along His silent way.
Helen Keller

“I have swept away your offenses like a cloud, your sins like the morning mist.  Return to me, for I have redeemed you.”
Isaiah 44:22
The New International Version

Cluttered.  Christianity helps realign my disarray.
Dayna Masih

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Tuesday

I will permit no man to narrow and degrade my soul by making me hate him.
Booker T. Washington

The LORD shall cut off all flattering lips, and the tongue that speaketh proud things:
Psalm 12:3
The King James Version

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Monday

To the true servant of God every place is the right place and every time is the right time.
Catherine of Siena

As for me, I will call upon God, And the LORD shall save me.  Evening and morning and at noon I will pray, and cry aloud, And He shall hear my voice.
Psalm 55:16-17
The New King James Version

The well of Providence is deep.  It is the buckets we bring to it that are small.
Mary Webb

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

he Hour Of The Power Of Darkness
by Jeff Strite

Luke 22:39-22:54
One woman told about her favorite spot at the local zoo. It was an exhibit called the House of Night. It was a place where you could see creatures of the night that would crawl and fly about, but because it held creatures of the night… it was nearly totally dark.  She said that one very bright day, she stepped into the exhibit and (of course) was instantly plunged into total darkness. Almost immediately (she said) “a small hand grabbed mine.”
Smiling, she asked “And who do you belong to?”  A little boy, in a very quiet voice said: “I’m yours… till the lights come on.”
There are a lot of people who have trouble with the dark. Children especially are notorious for that kind of fear, but adults can struggle with it as well.
A friend of mine went thru a very difficult divorce and she ended up living in an upstairs apartment in the middle of town. She was very lonely and for the first 6 months she had difficulty sleeping because she was afraid of the dark. Even months afterward, the only way she could get to sleep was if she had a night light on.
People OFTEN fear the dark.  The dark is a filled with the “unknown”, and with anxiety and uncertainty.
Scientists have even found that if a person spends too much time in the dark can suffer with a condition they call SAD syndrome. That’s an appropriate acronym because those who suffer from it often become moody and depressed. SAD is an acronym for “seasonal affective disorder” because it often happens in winter.
Now in our text this morning, Jesus is addressing those who’ve come to arrest Him:  “… this is your hour, and the power of darkness.” Luke 22:53
There is a power in darkness.   The power of uncertainty, and anxiety and fear.  And during those times of darkness we may be trapped in something we can’t control.
This morning’s text is a case study in the power of darkness and the feeling of helplessness it can bring. Even Jesus is caught up in it. Luke 22:42-44 tells us that Jesus prayed:  “‘Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done.’  An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.”
In just a few hours,
• Jesus is going to be put on trial … not once, not twice, but 6 different times.
• Pilate going to order Him to be taken away and beaten by Roman soldiers.
• Then Jesus will be forced to carry a heavy cross through the city and all the way up the hill to the crucifixion place on Calvary.
• Then He’ll be nailed to that cross, and the cross will be lifted up and dropped into position.
• And Jesus will hang by those nails for 6 long hours.
• And ultimately… He’ll die there.
It’s little wonder Jesus was in anguish as He prayed.  It’s little wonder Jesus prayed “If there is ANY WAY for this cup to be taken from me…let’s do it!”  It’s little wonder that when He prayed, His sweat was like drops of blood.
There’s a relatively rare medical condition where people literally “sweat” blood.  It’s called “hematohidrosis.” Your sweat glands are surrounded by numerous blood vessels, and when a person undergoes intense stress those blood vessels dilate to the point of rupturing. Then blood goes into the sweat glands and comes out as droplets of blood mixed with sweat.
Now, my point is this:  Jesus was facing a time of crisis. An hour of darkness.  And it’s a situation that EVEN He – the Son of God – cannot change.  It is a situation that has affected not just Him, but also those closest to Him.
How He faced that that crisis, and how He deals with that darkness He couldn’t change tells us a lot about how we can deal with our own personal times of darkness. And as I studied this passage, I found 3 basic principles for how we can face situations we don’t seem to be able to stop or change.
The first principle is found in Luke 22:40 & 46  Verse 40 says “And when he came to the place, he said to them, ‘Pray that you may not enter into temptation.’”  And in verse 46 He repeats His advice “Rise and pray that you may not enter into temptation.”
This caught me a little by surprise.  Who did Jesus say His disciples should pray for?  Not for HIM… but for themselves.  “Pray that YOU may not enter into temptation.”
Now, what possible temptation could they be facing?  The temptation they faced was this:  The temptation to feel that God had abandoned them.
Have you ever seen what a child does when they’re in bed and they become afraid of the dark? What do they do?  That’s right. They go get in bed with Mom and Dad.  They seek out an adult. That’s what that little boy did at the zoo.  As long as the child is with that adult (mom, dad, police, etc.) they’re not afraid.  And that’s because the adult represents power and protection that even the dark can’t overcome.
But as we get older (and we face a time of darkness) we find that WE are the adults in the room. And it doesn’t always seem quite right to find some other person and slip our hand into theirs for comfort.
A man named Paul Faulkner told of a woman who came to him for counseling. She told him that nothing was working in her life. Her daughter had been killed, her husband was unfaithful, and now she thought she was about to lose her job.  In the course of the counseling session, Faulkner asked her:   “When the world crashes in on you, to whom do you go?”  She paused a long time before saying, “I guess I just go to myself.”  She told him that the one word that most described her was “alone.”
You see – that’s the temptation.   The temptation to go it alone.
As adults we tend to forget that there is someone out there who is bigger than we are… someone bigger than the darkness we face.
Philippians 4:5b-7 says something very interesting: “The Lord is near; do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
Don’t be ANXIOUS about anything.  Why not? Why shouldn’t I get anxious???  Because the Lord is near.   He’s the big guy in the room.  He’s the one who wants to hold your hand when you become afraid.  And He’s promised to never leave you or forsake you.
But if I forget that He is near the power of darkness can overwhelm me.
And so I need to reach out and take hold of His hand, especially when life gets dark.
But how?  How do I take hold of God’s hand?  That leads me to the 2nd principle of this text:   When faced with a situation you can’t handle, you take hold of God’s hand through prayer. You see – prayer is faith in action. Prayer is the act of looking to the God who answers prayer. Prayer is the declaration that God has the POWER to help me walk thru the darkness.
Luke 22 tells me “(Jesus) withdrew about a stone’s throw beyond them, knelt down and prayed…. An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground. Luke 22:41, 43-44
Now notice, Jesus’ prayer didn’t change the outcome.  Here is the Son of God in prayer – not once, not twice but 3 times asking that this cup be  taken away.
* That he could be excused the sufferings of death,
* delivered from the curse of the law,
* and shielded from the wrath of God that He was bear to the cross because He carried in His person all the sins of all mankind.
The pain that Jesus was about to endure was not just the physical torture of the Cross but also the mental and spiritual torture that He would endure because He was going to the cross as our substitute. On the cross, Jesus bore OUR punishment of sin.  The horror of what Jesus was about to go  thru was more than anyone would want to endure  And so Jesus prayed.
But His prayer didn’t change the outcome.  He still endured the trials, the beatings, the nails and ultimately the wrath of God upon the sin of all mankind.
So, why pray?  Why would Jesus bother?  Because prayer was taking hold of His Father’s hand. It was the point at which the darkness was so intense that only the comfort of prayer was going to do anything for Him.
One man noted: If we had witnessed His struggle that night, we might have said, “If He is so broken up when all He is doing is praying, what will He do when He faces real crisis? Why can’t He approach this ordeal with the calm confidence of His 3 sleeping friends?” Yet when the test came, Jesus walked to the cross with the courage, and His 3 friends fell apart and ran away.
I read of a woman who was facing a terrible situation and her friend was trying to console her. The friend said, “I guess suffering colors our lives.”
To which the woman replied: “Yes. But I get to choose which color.”
In prayer we may be overcome with our personal darkness, but praying gives us the power to choose which color the darkness becomes for us. It allows us to choose which shade of blackness we face.
In His praying, Jesus chose the color of His suffering.   Through His praying He sought His Father’s comfort and strength.  And Jesus received that comfort and strength through the angel.  The angel didn’t rescue Jesus from His fate, the angel rescued Him from His suffering.  The angel came to give Jesus — peace.
Some might say – that kind of prayer is a pipe dream.   They says “If the world gets dark around me, I want something real and tangible. I want something that makes sense. How could you possibly think that just praying changes anything?”
At this point in the sermon, I’ve instructed the people in the sound booth to turn off all auditorium lights.   Our suffering could be compared to this darkness you sense now.  How am I going to turn those lights back on? What if I didn’t know where the light switches were? Or what if I couldn’t get to them because I couldn’t find my way in the dark, or there were obstacles between me and them?   How could I turn those lights back on?  I would ask the sound crew wouldn’t I?  (To the Sound Crew) Would you turn the lights back on?  Why did the lights come back on?   Because I asked.
That’s exactly Philippians 4:6-7 promises us:   “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
When you and I face dark times we need to make our requests known to God.   And because we ask, God says He will turn on the lights in our darkness.   Now, it may not make any sense. It may surpass all understanding. But when we make our requests known to God He promises to turn on the lights… to give us His peace.
And so the first principle of dealing with the dark times in life is to remember that God is nearby. He’ll never leave you nor forsake you. He’s the big guy in the room.  The 2nd principle is take hold of His hand by praying.  And the 3rd principle is believing that God has the power to help me walk thru the darkness.
In Luke 22 we’re told that “(Jesus) withdrew about a stone’s throw beyond them, knelt down and prayed, ‘Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done.’” Luke 22:41-42
These are the only words we read in Scripture of the prayer Jesus prayed in Gethsemane  “Not my will, but Thine be done.”  This a prayer of submission to the Father’s will.  Jesus is saying “I don’t like this plan. I don’t REALLY want to do this plan, but no matter what happens I will stick with the plan… because I trust you to work the plan.”
You see, when we follow God, we have to believe that He HAS A PLAN.
That plan may be painful, it may be hard to understand, it may even be scary. But there is a plan and it has a reason behind it.  Even when the darkness we’re surrounded by isn’t part of His plan, He can make it part of His plan.
One of the most disturbing things I hear people say to folks who are going through difficult times is “it happened for a reason,” as if God caused the problems or the loss or the betrayal they’ve had to endure.   That really disturbs me because I seriously doubt that that’s true all the time.
I think many of the problems we experience in our lives are not the result of God’s plan, but of our own foolish choices. Or the result of the mean-spirited or thoughtless actions of others. But God says it doesn’t matter. Whether something has happened in our lives that is part of His plan or not… if we trust Him, He’ll MAKE that problem part of His plan.
That’s what Romans 8:28 is telling us when it says “we know that in all things God works   for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
Do you love God?  Have you been called according to His purpose?
Well, God is telling you that ALL THINGS will work together for good in your life.  Note that it’s not saying that “all things are good”  Nor that “All things are of God”  BUT it is saying – it doesn’t make any difference. God will MAKE all things will work together for good in your life.
Because God has a plan.
And because of that, because we believe God has a plan, prayer gives us the power to walk through our dark times with confidence.
After His prayer, a group of soldiers come to arrest Jesus. The man who would betray Him with a kiss leads this band of men.
And what does Jesus do?  He speaks kindly to Judas (are you betraying Son of man with a kiss?)  He gently rebukes the soldiers (are you coming after me like I’m a leader of a rebellion?)  And when Peter cuts off the ear of one of them Jesus touches the man’s ear and heals him.  AND THEN, Jesus allows Himself to be taken away to suffer and die at the hands of evil men.
How could Jesus do that?  How could Jesus so confidently walk to His torture and death?  Because He trusted His Father to carry Him thru the darkness.  And He knew He had to go through this time of darkness – to suffer, to die, and be buried He had to go through ALL of that so that He could rise from the dead and conquer the grave.
I listened to one teacher explain that this often how God does things in our lives.  He called it “The Death of a Vision”. He explained that almost all of the great men and women in Scripture received a vision of what God could do in their lives. This was followed by the “death” of that vision and then by the resurrection of their dreams.
You see it over and over again throughout Scripture.
1. Abraham was given a vision – he will have a son.   But then his vision died: Abraham is asked by God to sacrifice his son on Mt. Moriah.  Then God supplies a ram for the sacrifice and Abraham literally receives his son back from the dead.
2. Joseph was given a vision – he would be a great man  But then his vision died: brothers sell him into slavery and he ends up being unjustly accused and thrown into prison.  Then God literally pulls raises Joseph from the dead – rescuing him from prison to be the 2nd most important man in Egypt.
3. Moses had a vision that he would be the savior of Israel and rescue them from slavery  But then his vision dies: he ends up running for his life and spending 40 years in the wilderness.  Then God literally brings him back from the dead to face Pharaoh and free Israel.
You see it again, and again, and again throughout Scripture. Men filled with vision, being overcome by the darkness of failure – but then God worked all things together for good in their lives just like He can do for us.
This is so important that God made this message part of our salvation: Romans 6:1-5  “What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning, so that grace may increase?  By no means! WE DIED to sin; how can we live in it any longer? Or don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were BAPTIZED INTO HIS DEATH?  We were therefore BURIED WITH HIM through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also be UNITED WITH HIM IN HIS RESURRECTION.”
We serve a God of hope, and of light, and of resurrection. We have a gift from God that this world cannot understand and cannot equal. We have the ability to walk through the darkness of this world with confidence because Jesus is the light of our lives.   But you can’t have that confidence and light until you first belong to Jesus.

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

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Friday

It is not only impossible but useless to know God without Christ.
Blaise Pascal

Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honour and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy pleasure they are and were created.
Revelation 4:11
The King James Version

Some wonderful, dazzling successes are going to happen for some of the most awful, undeserving people you know- people who are, in other words, not you.
Anne Lamott

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

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Thursday

It seems to me that if we get one look at Christ in His love and beauty, this world and its pleasures will look very small to us.
D. L. Moody

We ought always to thank God for you, brothers, and rightly so, because your faith is growing more and more, and the love every one of you has for each other is increasing.
2 Thessalonians 1:3
The New International Version

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

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This Day’s Thought from The Ranch- Wednesday

Any parent who comes to terms with God’s claim of authority on his life needs little more to qualify as an effective parent.
Earl Jabay

For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel’s, the same shall save it.
Mark 8:35
The King James Version

Silences are the only scrap of Christianity we still have left.
Soren Kierkegaard

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

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