Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 4-2-19

April 2, 2019

Joshua 5:9-12 The Voice (VOICE)

Today is the twenty-fourth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  Our prayers connect our human lives with the loving provision of Creator God; it is a communication partnership to which God calls us. He loves working with us, as well as helping us see and enjoy his presence.  The Lord is our divine Provider and he is teaching us to be his sons and daughters of faith and love.  We are to be led by the Spirit to bear righteous fruit which brings forth more seeds. Therefore, we generously sow that which is good into the fertile ground of the Kingdom while we pray and wait; in so doing we are sowing to the work and will of our loving God.  While we are helping others, God multiplies that love seed to bring forth our harvest. “Let us not lose heart in doing good, for in due time we will reap if we do not grow weary (Gal. 6:9).  Are you putting faith to your seed as you ask God to provide in your life?

In our passage today, Joshua has successfully led the Israelites into the Promised Land as directed by God. The wilderness wandering and God’s temporary provision of manna is history; the Jordan River has closed up behind them.  They must move forward if they are going to obey God.  It is time to grow up and put their hand to the plow.  Israel has been delivered into a land to call their own; they will now receive God’s provisions through sowing and reaping in obedience to God’s Word.

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 4-1-19

April 1, 2019

2 Corinthians 5:16-21 The Message (MSG)

Today is the twenty-third day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  In order to connect in God’s best for us, we need to look at life in a whole new way. God is all about healing and restoring his children in right relationship with himself; this desire of our Father motivates everything he puts into place.  Through the Prophet Isaiah, God promised to bring reconciliation, “The Redeemer will come to Jerusalem to buy back those in Israel who have turned from their sins,” says the LORD (59:20).  God fulfilled his Word and demonstrated his love for us by sending Jesus as the Messiah to be our new life Giver.  When we connect to Christ we are re-created in the image of our new Master; we are a new creation.   Believers are members of a new creation order.  Our sins are erased and we are brought into right relationship with God.  Now, we are invited to join Christ in his ministry of reconciliation.  You and I have a ministry to fulfill; we are the Messiah’s ambassadors to reveal to the world the restoration God has put into place.  Our hearts should be overflowing with gratitude for what God has done in our behalf.  What do you talk about each day with the people around you?  It would be nice if we spent more time talking about Messiah and the new creation he made available than all the garbage going in the old creation.  Are you telling people every day about Christ the Redeemer?

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-30-19

March 30, 2019

Luke 15:1-7 Good News Translation (GNT)

Today is the twenty-second day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God. Today, we are reflecting upon Jesus our Good Shepherd and his heart for increasing the Kingdom.  The Lord is always tending to us and leading us into righteous living and spiritual vitality; he is our personal Savior and we love him. As we respond to his love we spiritually grow and develop.  He is always with us, so when the enemy of our souls attacks, the Good Shepherd gently gathers us into his arms, restores, and heals us.  We have all that we need as we follow our Shepherd (Ps 23:1).  Every believer has a story of how God has been the Good Shepherd who has loved us when we needed it most; provided for us when the world would have left us behind. If we are honest, we will admit our lives would be in shambles apart from Christ; he holds our lives together in his love. We know every heart needs the Good Shepherd, but how concerned are we for those who are still lost and don’t know him? If we are truly concerned, our lives will reflect Christ’s passion for outreach. Honestly, are we praying and asking the Shepherd for opportunities to help him in his quest for the lost?  

The Lord cares about every human being.  He cares about those who know him and those who have yet to meet him. Our passage today reminds us that Christ is no respecter of persons, what he does for one he will do for all.  He rescues us from evil and surrounds us with grace; he calls us by name and treats us with dignity.  Others need to experience the Shepherd. 

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-29-19

March 29, 2019

Psalm 32:6-11

Today is the twenty-first day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God. Sincere prayer acknowledges the holiness of God and the Grace he desires to spill over our lives as his children; he only wants good things for us.  God loves and treasures his children and this will never change; his love is not based on our performance.  Honestly, the Grace extended to Jesus is the same Grace offered to each one of us. “God saved you by his grace when you believed.  And you can’t take credit for this; it is a gift from God” (Eph.2:8).  I once heard Grace used as an acronym:  God’s Riches At Christ’s Expense.  Christ was sinless, but we are not.  As prodigals, God’s Grace calls us to repentance and welcomes us with open arms. “So let us come boldly to the throne of our gracious God.  There we will receive his mercy, and we will find grace to help us when we need it most” (Heb 4:16). God is Grace so instead of running from him, we should be running to him with every aspect of our lives.  Do you pray knowing extravagant Grace and Love are waiting to be offered to you?

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-28-19

March 28, 2019

Psalm 32:1-5 Contemporary English Version

Today is the twentieth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  This is a time to deeply reflect upon our spiritual lives and how we tend to wander as God’s children.  To enjoy God is to be real and focused in our quest for him through heartfelt prayer.  Prayer flows from the meditations of the heart.  In the gospel of Matthew, Jesus sets out an example of a prayer for us that touches on the very issues or things for which God knows we need his help (Mat 6:9-13).  Within that prayer, Jesus teaches his disciples to pray about forgiveness.  “Forgive us our sins, as we have forgiven those who sin against us” (Mat 6:12).  Many times we struggle with forgiving those who have sinned against us, but we fail to realize how essential that very act of forgiveness is to our relationship with God.  Remember, God’s ways are not our ways.  Forgiveness is God’s way of restoring us, taking away the unhealthy remnants of sin, and filling us with Kingdom joy. Do you know the joy of forgiveness in the holy hand of the Restorer?

Love keeps no record of having been wronged (1 Cor 13:5).  Forgiveness means we choose to forfeit our right to hold onto feelings that are not from God; it is a decision that forbids an attitude of resentment or bitterness to take root in our lives.  We cannot serve two masters by trying to say we love God and at the same time refuse to forgive others.  When we refuse to forgive others, we are not serving God we are serving Self.  God is the Great Forgiver who is also the Restorer.  We need God to restore our souls when we sin against him; to obey the conviction of the Spirit and humble ourselves in order for the Lord to restore our fellowship and communion in his love. He wants to take us to a vibrant place of Joy.  We also need God to restore our souls when others sin against us; to allow the Spirit to draw us into extending forgiveness to others in order for him to take the burden off our hearts that is constricting our Joy.  When we forgive others, we are allowing God to deal with that sinner.  David knew about forgiveness; asking God to forgive his sins, as well as forgiving those who sinned against him.  Either way, the topic is sin and forgiveness is the answer.  Let the passage this morning rest in your hearts.

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-27-19

March 27, 2019

Luke 13:18-21 New Living Translation

Today is the nineteenth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  When you pray for a Kingdom heart, you are praying for growth. Let’s reflect on Jesus’ message about the Kingdom. Jesus walked around the region of Galilee preaching and inviting people to listen to him and follow him into Kingdom living.  I am sure as he moved from town to town preaching about the Kingdom of God, some people were thinking, “Jesus, don’t look now, but it doesn’t appear you have much of a Kingdom.  You only have a few undisciplined men following you!” There was no way to view the Kingdom to which Jesus referred. One day the Pharisees asked Jesus when the Kingdom of God would come and he answered, “The Kingdom of God does not come in such a way as to be seen. 21 No one will say, ‘Look, here it is!’ or, ‘There it is!’; because the Kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:20-21).  Do you realize when you pray for a Kingdom heart, you are praying for the lordship of King Jesus to be revealed in the very substance of your life?

Jesus is the Author of small beginnings and he works in hearts that are willing to grow; it requires the faith of a mustard seed.  We may not like small beginnings, but God loves them because there is plenty of room to grow and expand. We must never forget God is Sovereign and his ways are not our ways. Therefore, he declared the Kingdom would begin with a small group of “spiritually poor” people living under the lordship of their King (Mat 5:3).  From that small beginning, the Kingdom that grows through divine life would one day be a place of shelter for all the other kingdoms of the earth (Dan 4:10-12).  The Apostle John wrote about a vision he had of this growth, “The kingdom of this world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ and He will reign forever and ever” (Rev 11:15). So, my spiritual family, keep praying for a Kingdom heart.

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-26-19

March 26, 2019

Isaiah 55:6-9 New Living Translation

Today is the eighteenth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  I am very proud of those of you who have been reading the devotions and allowing the Word of God to settle into your souls. Reflection that leads to repentance and restoration begins in our thoughts as we meditate on the Word.  Remember, humanity thought it was foolish to acknowledge God, so “he abandoned us to our foolish thinking” (Rom 1:28). The Lord transforms us from being foolish children of the world into children of faith in a loving God by saving us and changing the way we think (Rom 12:2).  Christ is Truth and our Source for Wisdom. Therefore, the believer’s minds can become a great battlefield between truth and deception. The enemy is a liar and he will not give up working against your devotion to God or your quest for Truth.  Knowing or identifying Truth is essential to winning the spiritual battle. Don’t ask the world about who God is and what pleases him; the world has been abandoned to foolish thinking. Go to the Word and see what it reveals about God’s character and expectations for his children; pray for Wisdom as you read.  Scripture is the story of God’s self-revelation to the world; it is the Wisdom people need to move beyond foolish thinking into faith living and enjoy his holy presence.  Have you found yourself wondering if your thoughts about God and his ways are based on Wisdom?

As humans, we should never be so foolish as to think we have a handle on God’s thoughts and presume to understand his ways.  However, we can know his heart for us as his children; he affirms us with his love. Trying to fit an infinite God into our human thoughts is ludicrous.  Trying to live our lives according to our flesh or according the culture is equally ludicrous.  Apply the Word to your life and look for the fruit of the Kingdom to manifest in you.  God’s children are known by their good fruit (love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, kindness, gentleness, faithfulness, and self-control).  When the believer bears Kingdom fruit it is a revelation of God’s presence in us…and God smiles!

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-23-19

March 23, 2019

Luke 6:43-45 New Living Translation (NLT)

Today is the sixteenth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  Recently, I had an experience that captured my attention and made me pause for reflection; I believe God allowed it for my benefit and growth, as well as the growth of others whom I would teach.  I was a target of a stranger’s escalating impatience while driving; I was in this person’s way and there was nothing I could do to avoid or change things.  I am grateful for the experience, because it gave me an opportunity to look deep in my heart for the presence of Truth; to assess my spiritual growth in Christ in the Light of this encounter.  As part of my reflection time, I turned inward to ask, “When things aren’t going the way I think they should, do I still represent the Truth (Lord of Love) in how I treat others?”  The world demands its own way; sinful flesh demands its own way and seeks to justify evil behavior. But, Love does not demand its own way and abides in Truth (1 Cor. 13:5).  Therefore, there should be a visual and spiritual contrast between the world’s way of treating others and Christ’s way.  How do you treat the people around you? What kind of fruit is your mouth producing?

As children of God, we must never forget how we speak to or treat someone else is an outside snapshot of who is sitting on the throne of our hearts. We can attend worship, sing songs, raise our hands, perform good deeds, and act godly at church, but whose character do we reflect every day?  When we produce actions that are void of the Truth of God’s character, we are not producing the life of God.  This is Truth whether we are behind the steering wheel of a car, speaking to family, friend, or stranger, or living contrary to God’s commands. If the Lord is not on the throne of our hearts, we will not produce the fruit of the Kingdom.  

In the sixth chapter of the Gospel of Luke we see a series of contrasts.   First, there is a blind man trying to guide another blind man.  Second, there is a person who draws attention to the speck in his neighbor’s eye never realizing he has a log sticking out of his own.  Third, we see two trees—one good and one bad.  All of these examples from the Lord point to a spiritual condition that requires repentance; hypocrisy.

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-22-19

March 22, 2019

Revelation 3:1-6 New Living Translation (NLT)

Today is the fifteenth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God. We must make time for reflection.  When we sit quietly, meditate on the Word, and pray, the Spirit helps us enjoy fellowship and favor.  When we choose to live differently than the Word commands, we need to repent. Repentance is a gift and blessing from the Lord, because it gives us the opportunity to change our direction and move once again in power toward oneness with God. Repentance, restoration, and the work of faith are key to Kingdom Living.  Are you quick to repent, ask for the Lord to restore you, and use your faith to overcome further sin and worldliness?

In our passage today, the Apostle John writes a vision he receives from the Lord about the church in Sardis; a sleeping church out of fellowship with Christ. These believers had a form of godliness, but they failed to trust and follow the Spirit into repentance and restoration.  The people started out right, but over time they stopped growing in righteousness and began living lives contaminated by the world.  Christ calls his followers to remain stedfast through trials and temptations.  “Whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory that has overcome the world—our faith in Jesus Christ” (1 John 5:4-5). White garments are a reward for those who apply the Word and reject the world. Christ is our Overcomer. Are you awake, using your faith, and yielding to your Overcomer?

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more

Daily Devotional from Pastor Mary 3-21-19

March 21, 2019

Psalm 63:1-8 New Living Translation (NLT)

Today is the fourteenth day of our 40-Day Lenten Series, “Praying for a Kingdom Heart.”  Lent should be a time of prayerful reflection, repentance, and restoration as we draw closer to the heart of God.  During my reflection time today, I am very aware the fallen world and its rebellion against the authority of God actually seeks to drain me and leave me “feeling” frustrated and fearful; while God’s Spirit encourages, sustains, and fills me with faith and hope by “knowing” I have a bright future.  With one fleeting thought I can “feel” all kinds of emotions that do not rest on God’s love or sovereignty. Do you sometimes feel weakened by your own thoughts and feelings due to the issues that flow from a sinful world? In Christ, I am peaceful, sustained, and satisfied; the Lord is my happy place!  There is such a contrast for me between the world and God’s Kingdom when it comes to “knowing” I am secure, safe, and satisfied. The Refiner is helping me gain spiritual fitness, so he can sustain me, but I need to pay attention.  Do you reach for the Sustainer to make you feel secure and safe, as well as look for his presence to satisfy your soul when the spirit of the world vies for your attention?

Life in the world can “feel” threatening.  Fear is certainly trying all the time to find a home in our thoughts so it can be worked out through our lives.  All fear does is drain us by repetition; it keeps coming around and around in our thoughts for us to consider or entertain.  Fear wants to be planted so it can grow.  We do not need to give into fear’s process.  The Word teaches, “Humble yourself before God, resist the enemy (fear), and he will flee” (James 4:7).  If we are willing to praise and humble ourselves before God, as our Sustainer, he will open our spiritual eyes to see the reality of his glory and power over all things.  Our thoughts can suddenly be refocused on Truth, so like David parched and feeling insecure in the wilderness, we can begin to praise our God who is the true Sustainer of Life and the Lover of our Souls who will never fail us.  If we were never left spiritually thirsty by the world, would we ever drink from the life of God? Your thirst is your Friend!

During Lent, we will be using the acronym P.R.A.Y. as we pray for a Kingdom Heart.  P=praise, R=repent, A=ask, and Y=yield.  May God bless you as you spend time in God’s Word and in prayer today.

Read more