Friday, September 21, 2007

Seeds, Jonah and Seeking First...or something like that

God asked me to lay something down earlier this week. It was hard. It hurt. A lot. I cried. A lot. For a little while I didn’t know how to release this thing. I didn’t know what to do or how to pray. Letting go of something precious can be one of the most difficult things to do. But it is necessary for there to be a death of sorts for new life to appear.

What you sow doesn’t come to life unless it dies. 1 Corinthians 15:36

At church, our worship pastor made the statement, “The extent you wish to grow to, is the extent you have to be willing to be cut back”.

Abraham, who has received the promise that his offspring would be reckoned through Isaac, had to be willing to sacrifice him-and it was because of his willingness that the Lord was his provider. It said when Abram received that promise, “[he] believed God and it was credited him as righteousness.” Even though he had received a promise, and by all appearances the promise would be fulfilled through Isaac, God tested him-and he passed the test. As a result he was able to keep his beloved son. But the key was his WILLINGNESS to do anything the Lord asked. Did he turn back to God and say, “But you promised! How could you betray me? I heard your voice and knew your promise! Now you’re taking away what you gave me!”? How often do we do that to God? So, God asking me to lay this down doesn’t change what He already told me-but God must and shall be preeminent in my life! When we lay something down, it to receive a greater promise. Beauty from ashes. Christ layed down his life, that we might all be raised in glory! We lay down a seed in the ground, and the resulting crop is bountiful beyond what you could see in the small seed.

In the Old Testament, men were asked to sacrifice a bull or a lamb. Today, we are to lay down our lives. Not to necessarily physically die for God, but that our lives be His. The difficult thing with us is that we are LIVING sacrifices. We put ourselves on God’s alter-the tricky part is if we walk up to the alter, we can walk off. However when God is exalted and we are submitted, when we are seeking Him first-then we are equipped to discover and follow God’s will-even if it is just one step at a time.

Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will. Romans 12:1-2

So, even though it was hard to lay this thing down-I know that through obedience I will be able to receive God’s choice blessing for me…and I have no idea what that is. Hooray! I’ve heard it said on more than one occasion that if I knew all of what God was going to do in my life I would screw it up-and that is absolutely correct. Because at that point, since I know it all, I stop trusting God and try to do it on my own, which of course I can’t. Jesus said when we pray to pray, “…give us this day our DAILY bread…” His Word is a lamp unto our feet and a light unto our path. A lamp only illuminates a little bit. He’ll show us the next step, but not the whole journey. That’s part of the beauty and adventure of our God, we always have something to look forward to-if tomorrow comes He has a plan, if tomorrow doesn’t come then we will be with Him so there is always hope. Always. He loves us. He gives us what we need, when we need it, regardless of what it costs Him. He supplies our NOW, not our later. When the Israelites wandered in the desert He gave them manna and quail each day. If they tried to store it up, it would rot. They knew they were in continual need of provision from the Lord.

You see, I had the future all figured out and I went ahead with it-even though in the back of my mind I had some misgivings about the wisdom of my actions. I thought I had it all figured out. God reminded me that I don’t have a clue-but not worry. He does. He has a plan to prosper me, to give me a hope and future. (Jeremiah 29:11) Of course, what some people forget is that this verse is followed by “…you will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.” This thing had quickly become too important in my life. I had become selfish and God was not properly exalted in my life. My heart was divided and a Kingdom divided against itself cannot stand.

Today as I was thinking over the current state of things, I compared myself to Jonah. He knew what God wanted him to do, then went and did what he wanted and justified himself. God let him have his personal pity party for only so long-pretty soon the storm started to rage and he ended up inside a fish! I also, had been warned by God-He clearly said, “Wait” but I let my desires get in the way so I moved forward. But, like Jonah, God only let me do that for so long. Praise His Name it didn’t take getting thrown overboard or becoming whale chow for me to readjust my sails and go with His movement!

However, there was some hurt. The Lord disciplines the ones He loves. Some of my sorrow comes from the fact that in my personal excursion to Tarshish-I was not the only one hurt. And this is one of the hardest parts of this ordeal for me to get through. It’s one thing to put oneself in danger, but to put someone you care about deeply in harms way is something entirely different. This individual protected me and had strength when I was weak. And I hurt him. I was selfish. Knowing that in this whole process someone dear to me was wounded as well made me ache inside. For that forgiveness seems harder. I forgot that “Mercy triumphs over judgment!” (James 2:13) I felt as though I had irreversibly screwed up what God had for me and possibly for someone else as well. I feared that. When the word fear entered my mind I stopped. “For God did not give us a spirit if fear, but a spirit of power, of love and of a sound mind.” The word fear triggered my mind to recognize that those feelings were from the enemy. My mind was going every which way, my emotions were up and down, and I was blowing things out of proportion. Who am I to assume I could unravel the plans of the Most High?

But the plans of the LORD stand firm forever,
the purposes of his heart through all generations.

Psalm 33:11

So, fortunately He thwarted my attempt to take control and He is back in the driver’s seat. Which is a pretty good thing considering I was speeding ahead of His timing for my life. And the resulting ticket of that would be much more costly than doing 45 in a 25 zone. His plan will be accomplished in my life because His Word says so. The Bible says nothing about Natalie’s abilities being greater than the Lord’s, so we’ll stand on the Word of God which is the only foundation I’ll stand on because all others are sinking sand. I was building a castle in my mind, unfortunately the foundation was not yet settled. And we all know that if the foundation of a house is off, everything you build on it will be too. So, thankfully I am now letting God back in to get my personal foundation right. Then when He’s ready, He can build up. “Unless the LORD builds the house, its builders labor in vain.” So, this week has been a time to tear down. But never fear! Because just as there is a time to tear down there is a time to build. I notice that God burned away the chaff, but there is still plenty of wheat left. God uprooted the aspects of this that were not of Him but left plenty of seeds that are of Him. And I suppose the resulting crop will be found out through the test of time. So I will wait and prepare for God’s purposes and plans to be unveiled.

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11

This laying down changes a lot of what I was thinking was coming up for me in my life. Who knows what He’s got in store for tomorrow? For those things, I wait in eager expectation. I know not what they are specifically but I know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him and have been called according to his purpose. (Romans 8:28) I could easily worry and over analyze (as I am so very prone to do) what the various repercussions and outcomes could be. This I find rarely produces any solution or sense of peace. You know why? Because, I haven’t been promised tomorrow (James 4:13-17) I can look forward to the great things I am hoping to see or experience, but I can only walk in today. I can only affect change now in the present. If I use this time well, being obedient and seeking my King, then everything else will fall into place without me worrying and crying over it. By the time I get to tomorrow and next week and next year, it will all be taken care of as long as I am always being a good steward of Today. If I am always presently in the center of God’s will, then He will carry me where He chooses and I have nothing to worry about.

But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness and all these will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own. Matthew 6:33-34

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Worth My Life

Part A

While in the Dominican Republic, Mike preached at the Big Tent a sermon entitled, “Dead Man Walking”. He started out sharing the lyrics to “Live Like You Were Dying”. We shout “seize the day!” and similar mantras. Unfortunately such zeal is generally fleeting, like a fading mist.

He then said that prisoners on death row are considered the most dangerous. Why? Because they have nothing left to lose. They already know their life is going to be taken, so what can men possibly do to them? Jesus of Nazareth was such a man. He knew He was being led to His execution-He knew his time was short. He took hold of every opportunity.


~If Christ is for us who can be against us?
~We must daily die to self, take up our cross and follow Him.
~Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.


What have we to fear? Christ has defeated death!


So, knowing that we are but strangers in this world, that we daily die to self, and are on the road to our physical death…why do we fear? We behave as though we are subject to the same laws that govern the carnal nature. But we are not! We live by the Spirit! We should have the same courage and fearlessness; that boldness that only those with nothing more to lose can walk in. We should be dangerous. Our daily acts should push back the enemies’ battle lines and we should be claiming souls for the Kingdom.

Mike then preached the same sermon back in Lakeland. It hit me both times.

I have now taken it a step further. These are two separate accounts, but in my mind this is the progression, so follow if you dare my stream do consciousness.

Part B

Trying to share a passion for missions with someone of a dissimilar passion can be a challenge. Because we are wired for different purposes we simply can’t wrap our brain around different callings. Once while expressing my heart to my dad and my willingness to go into dangerous areas. He said, “Natalie, I love you passion. Just use some common sense. It’s not worth your life.” Now, of course being my daddy he has to look out for his little girl. I’m not sure now what I said at the time, but since then a fitting response has come to me.

I don’t want to live for something if it’s not worth my life.

Whatever I do must be worth my life. I must have a passion-a willingness to suffer and sacrifice in order to see the will of God done. If not, what’s the point? To build my life on any foundation other than an eternal one is to build a castle in the sand…and why should I build a castle in the sand when I can have a mansion in the heavens? I want adventure. I want to see people transformed. I want my life to be an investment and alter to eternity. To put the work of my heart and my hands where moth and rust cannot consume. Where thieves cannot break in and steal. I want to store up treasures in Heaven. I thrive on the move of God and find myself parched when caught up in the status quo. So much is fleeting. I want to chase after that crown that will last forever. I want to expand the Kingdom everywhere I go! I want God to be glorified in every move-every breath I take. We are bombarded with opportunity and chances to do the good work we are here to do. So, we have a choice. We can “eat drink and be merry for tomorrow we die” or we can take hold of eternity and try to take as many people along for the ride as we possibly can. I will not live a life as a castle on the sand. On the Rock I will build my life and no howling storm or tidal wave will bring to ruin what God has built! I want the chaff burned away and His face to be my reflection as I come through the Refiner’s fire.

So, if you're going to live like you were dying-make sure what you’re living for is worth dying for.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

You Better Recognize!

Acquiring the ability to forgive has been a challenge from the beginning of time as we know it. There is a particular situation in my life which I've struggled with. Well, this past Tuesday my pastor shared something and BAM! I had one of those glorious lightbulb moments.

We know we need to forgive to heal and grow, to obey God-but how the heck do you do it when you just don't want to? How can you choose to forgive someone in your heart when you're still wounded? When they haven't changed?

Recognize your enemy.

Your enemy is not the person that hurt you.
Your enemy is NOT the individual that hurt you.
Your enemy is the one who came to steal, kill and destroy. Whether the one who hurt you stole your childhood, killed your dreams or destroyed your family-understand that the source of those actions lies in Satan.

Am I absolving the person of responsibility or justifying their actions? No. We just need to understand that when division and strife come they come from the enemy. He twisted the situation to fit his purposes.

We need to submit those situation, that pain and anger to God so that He can turn what was meant for evil into good. But as long as we hold on to bitterness and anger we are allowing Satan a stronghold in our lives. We should flee from evil and chase after righteousness. God gave us life that we might live abundantly! (John 10:10)

When you struggle with pain and hurt from others-recognize who is really attacking you. How can you fight an enemy until you know who it is or how they operate? We operate on a spiritual level and thus must fight on a spiritual level. (Eph. 6)

Now that we know where our battlefield is we can equip ourselves and be victorious by the power of God in our lives!

Thursday, March 15, 2007

To ∞Infinity∞ and Beyond!

"...for one of the nicest things about mathematics, or anything else you might care to learn, is that many of the things which can never be, often are. You see it's very much like your trying to reach Infinity. You know that it's there, but you just don't know where-but just because you can never reach it doesn't mean that it's not worth looking for."-Phantom Tollbooth

Infinity: The quality of being infinite. : Unlimited extent of time, space, or quantity: Boundlessness

Reaching God is much like trying to reach Infinity. God is infinite. He is not bound by space or time. He has no end and no beginning-yet He is the Alpha and Omega, beginning and the end. We know we're supposed to pursue holiness and Godliness but we can never be perfect. (That is until of course we've been glorified in Heaven and all that jazz) But just because we can never truly achieve that on earth does not mean we should give up trying. There is always room to grow, always a higher goal to achieve.



Have you ever experienced wanting something desperately? Aching and yearning for that one thing-then when it finally happens there's almost a letdown? "OK that's accomplished. Now what?" If all our goals are earthly goals, eventually we will be let down. So we create new goals which is wonderful-but even then not all of those will stretch over into eternity. However, the quest for the Lord will never leave us with spiritual postpartum depression of you will. This letdown after a goal is reached is common: The honeymoon phase ends, the baby blues, etc. etc. etc.




You know how we always want what we can't have? Perhaps that tendency was built within us in the first place. I think the desire for the unattainable is a beautiful thing! We like a challenge. We feel dangerous and risque even. That should be how we seek God-knowing we don't have a chance in Hell (pardon the pun) but seeking Him anyway. We'll never fully comprehend His majesty,love and might but I'll (literally) be damned if I don't try to get to Infinity in Him!

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Africans Say The Darndest Things...

During June of 2005 I spent two weeks in Tororo, Uganda, East Africa. I was there with a team of American and Scottish ladies to host a women's conference. One day during a break from church, which in Africa lasts most of the day, I walked out of the building to take pictures and meet the women who had traveled so far to our conference. I had only been out the door for about 15 seconds when a short Ugandan woman ran up to me. She raised and dropped her arms in a gesture of pure inspiration and awe as she approached.

With no introduction she exclaimed with a thick accent,
"I had no idea they had short people in America!"

(For those of you that are unaware I stopped growing once I hit 5 feet) A weird giggle/laugh thing escaped my unprepared mouth. I am used to short jokes and greatly enjoy a well crafted one, however I never expected to hear them in Uganda.

As if by a holy revelation she announced,
"I thought in America you were all very tall like great buildings. But you-you are short like me…"

At that point I was trying very hard not to break out hysterically and was somewhat successful. However the next sentence undid my composure completely.

"…but I am not fat like you!" she exclaims with admiration.

At this pronouncement I did burst into fairly hysterical laughter which I quickly tried to suppress. This effort of course resulted in no end of odd facial expressions as I tried to muster all the muscle control I had to keep a straight face.

I then prayed for her at her request with I'm sure a hint of laughter in my voice. I then shared this little anecdote with my team who all considered it a great joke.

I love Africans!

Paradox of Childlike Faith

Paradox of Maturity and Childlike Faith

The older I get, the younger I feel-perhaps that’s not right; the more naïve I feel. I’m supposed to be an adult but the maturity I took pride in in high school is no longer so above and beyond. Now it seems I’m having to play catch up. Rare is the moment in which I feel like an adult, a lady, a possible wife, business owner. Yet the time for me to truly launch out into the depths of adulthood-financial independence, my profession and hopefully my marriage and all that lies beyond will be here any moment. Will I be ready? I guess in the back of my mind I assumed that I’d wake up one day and feel like an adult. Perhaps when I graduated? Perhaps when I turned 21? But somehow I have the sneaking suspicion that that day will never arrive. It seems that so many of my contemporaries (and even some younger to my chagrin) have already crossed the threshold from youth to adulthood. Will I ever feel ready to walk down the aisle? Or be secure enough not to need that?

Paradox #1

I’ll be entering the professional world soon. I’m getting my feet wet now. I suppose that’s what college is for-getting in the water slowly inch by inch. But you know- I was always the kid to run wildly and leap in now matter how cold or how deep. Perhaps that’s why I’m so restless at college just going through the motions. My spirit wants to jump in but I’m forced to inch my way in.

Paradox #2

On the other hand I’m a planner. I have to over think and analyze ever nuance. I have to understand it. Seems I’ve lost that gumption and courage. When it comes to following God wherever He would take me I fear that I’d be more likely to wait and analyze, just go around in circles instead of jumping right in. I don’t want to see the picture of that hat. I want to see the elephant inside the boa constrictor.

I desire adventure and romance. I need to live an uncommon life. Somewhere inside me there’s a wild free spirit. That girl who doesn’t make decisions based on circumstances. I was the goofy faithful kid who’d climb higher, jump farther and push harder despite all obstacles. But somewhere along the way that spirit was bridled. It still rears up, but so does doubt and my ever so analytical “grown up” mind. I’m good…but not good enough. I’m funny…but some other girl is funnier. I have some great things going for me…but some other girl will get his heart. All those feelings and many more tend to reign over the once free-spirited girl. Comparisons are odious.

Life was so uncomplicated as a kid. Which makes me think of childlike faith….Mhh. That concept has always bothered me, if ever so slightly. It’s vulnerable, naïve, perhaps uneducated.

Kids may be naïve but they know who they are, where they’re going and what they want.

“Only the children know what they are looking for”.-the Little Prince

"The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore they attempt the impossible, and achieve it, generation after generation."-Pearl S. Buck

So, often I feel that I have to know it all and understand every nuance. However, do children? So often they ignore the logical and details. When something goes wrong, where do kids run? Straight to their parents. So we should also run to our heavenly Father with all our little woes and joys. When we think we have all the answers and understanding, we stop seeking the Almighty’s input, because we’ve got it covered. We don’t need to bother God because we can handle it.

I’ve been afraid to dream, to desire. To write and compose for fear that I’m just mediocre. Kids will try anything. They know how to push the envelope, toe the line and see how far they can go. I believe that when Jesus said, “Let the little children come”, He wanted the audacious and goofy kids. Those kinds of kids know who they are and that he loves them.


Often, when we picture that scene we see some precious wide eyed meek child timidly approaching Him. That is not what I see. Kids don’t care about formality or titles. The kids Jesus was referring to weren’t concerned with impressing him with their holiness. I picture an incorrigible little guy with a twinkle in his eye. I see him marching right up to J.C. and demanding the Biblical era equivalent of a dodge ball game. Does the Messiah chastise the ignorant tyke for being irreverent? No way. He’s going to get down and run around with those kids chasing him and cheering when He lets them get Him. This kid isn’t out of line. He is approaching the throne of grace with confidence. Shouldn’t we? At first the concept of childlike faith comes across as naïve and ignorant. This topic leads me to think also of our being compared to sheep. In multiple places in the Bible we are compared to sheep. Sheep are dumb. They blindly follow. We are trained to have to know, to criticize-so to be sheeplike seems to be weakness and stupidity. However, sheep know their master’s voice. Even though some earthly shepherds might use that knowledge to lead their flocks to the slaughter, our Shepherd has not, is not and will not ever lead us astray. We can confidently follow His voice. It isn’t blind faith or stupidity. It is because we know who we are, who our God is and who we are in Him. We follow the voice of the one we trust.

So it seems I have things a bit mixed up. I feel young and naïve but without the wild abandon. I do however possess the oh-so-grown-up analytical mind. So I question my maturity and readiness. I love the blunt way kids praise and criticize. No matter how many times they’ve told the same bad knock-knock joke they will continue to find it hilarious long after all grown ups are praying for some intellectual conversation. Being a mature Christian doesn’t mean blind obedience to an invisible shepherd or adopting an uppity religiosity-but to be confident in who He is and who we are in Him. Knowing that if we launch out into the deep he won’t just keep us from drowning-He will take us deeper into a new level of experiencing Him.

Grown-ups never understand anything for themselves, and it is tiresome for children to be always and forever explaining things to them.-The Little Prince

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Wellspring of Life

Above all else, guard your heart for it is the wellspring of life. Proverbs 4:23
Cast not your pearls before swine. Matthew 7:6

Our hearts are very precious things. Sometimes I fear we prostitute our souls and innermost beings in order to bridge the gap between us and others we wish to be close to. We share personal things and sometimes even pray together to create a forced sense of intimacy rather than letting a genuine bond form. It is manipulative and a lack of faith to try to take such fragile things into our own hands.

I need the faith to trust that God is going to bring all things together for the good of those that love Him.

I know that I personally tend to wear my heart on my sleeve. Then the phrase, "what you see is what you get" pops into my head. That scares me. I desperately hope that there is more to me than meets the eye, that I have a beauty and value to unveil, but only at the right time to the right person. Sometimes I fear that I am no more than my outward persona.

But on some level I know that when I was designed there was far more placed in me than even I know; that over time different aspects and qualities will be revealed. I need not put my qualities on display, but rather allow them to be discovered.

Our hearts are easily damaged. We need to make sure that the people who have access to that part of us are not the sort that will mishandle such a privilege. And it is a privilege to be admitted into someone's heart. We have forgotten that discretion is the better part of valor and certain things should be shared on a need-to-know basis. We all have treasure that God has placed inside of us and we shouldn't stick things of such value out in the open.

Things that we hold dear we protect. Our money is secure in a bank or safe. Should we not give our hearts better care than our finances? The thing that's difficult with our hearts is the paradox of protecting it and still being able to open up at the right time. We don't want to be embedded behind the walls of a fortress but neither do we want our hearts so accessible that they can be abused and left behind. We need to be vulnerable to God and open with a select few individuals. Finding the balance is difficult but possible to achieve.

As the great theologian Ben Parker put it: "With great power comes great responsibility". We must make sure to take as good care of the hearts of others that we would have ours taken care of. We should not put others into temptation or compromising positions, but do everything we can to draw the people around us not toward us, but toward God.

"Be courteous to all, but intimate with few; and let those few be well tried before you give them your confidence."-Ben Franklin

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Cliché

Cliché: An expression so often used that its original power has been drained away.

I think that rather often, I dismiss good advice or wisdom because it has become cliché. Each of us has our own particular set of clichés unique to our perspective and situations. For example, having grown up in the church many amazing verses no longer hit me with impact because I have heard them so many times. I can ignore them, because, hey, they're old news. They've become cliché. But then, why do things become cliché? They are so often used for a reason! While not every cliché is good advice, the fact that it is cliché is not reason enough to dismiss it. I think it would be a great personal injustice to ignore an idea just because it gained widespread acclaim. There's this idea in society that we have to try so desperately to set ourselves apart that if something has been done before or comes from someone else it is no longer valid. Don't get me wrong, I'm a definite proponent of originality and dreaming (that is a topic many a blog will arise from I'm sure), but by falling in that trap we ignore the ideas and wisdom of people who are older, and yes often smarter. It's insecurity. We have to prove ourselves to ourselves that we really are as original and wonderful as we hope. Secure people are Ok with wisdom coming from others. You know how people who don't want negative attention point fingers at others in the hopes that they can divert the bad from themselves? People who know who they are don't do that. They don't sweat the trivial because they know who they are so why bother with the junk? But alas, I have gone on tangent.

It's sad to me that we have so haphazardly thrown around pearls of wisdom to be trampled upon. We have not respected them. And by abusing something that could be great we steal the power from it. We've built up an immunity to wisdom, and therefore God has to do that much more to get our attention. We can't base the validity of something on other's perception or misuse. We need to look at the meat of it and the source of it. Many quotes are marvelous and inspiring but they have been adopted into the everyday lexicon of mundane rhetoric, so that we no longer hear the original message.

Some verses that should absolutely knock us flat that we now dismiss:
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son so that whosoever believeth in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16

Let's face it, we've all heard it, we all know the story. Do we care? Eventually we just flippantly refer to it in passing without reverence without caring.

"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." Jeremiah 29:11.

"But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well." Matthew 6:33

These contain amazing promises! But to the church frequenter, they are yesterday’s news.
Don't let constant exposure dull your sensitivity!

We try to dull the pain. We desensitize ourselves on purpose. We want to protect ourselves, but as we block the pain we block the fullness of joy. We want that control and to understand it on our own. By being so together and in control, we've lost our ability to be amazed, because we know things powerful enough to amaze us are powerful enough to devastate us. Walking with God does not stop at salvation. God is constantly revealing Himself through His Word. There's more to God and life than words on page. Those Words contain power! But we have become so accustom to them, they no longer charge or inspire.
Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will. Romans 12:2

We need to be refreshed. To look at something from a fresh perspective.

Consider the following:
A diamond or precious gem is highly valued and praised, in all its multifaceted wonder. If you look at a diamond from a different angle the picture changes, but the diamond doesn't. That's what truth is like. That's what God is like. We're used to the view from where we are, but when we see something new it shakes us. We feel cheated, that God isn't who He said He was, but He didn't change-we did. And we got to see more of His majesty.

What we need are fresh renewed eyes. The treasure was there all along but over time we took it for granted. What was once a fascinating novelty we greatly prized is now a cheesy yard sale item. It makes me mad that so much is disregarded on account of cliché. Can we judge something based on its content rather than the extent to which it used?

You see, in dismissing the phrase, we dismiss the idea behind it. Once again we've judged a book by its cover.

My prayer is that we get a refreshing and renewing of our minds to appreciate those ideas, beliefs, people, and blessings so we can experience the full impact.