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"But in the midst of it all, the Lord still has his people."

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 162). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) He does, He really does. Max says, "It seems to me that the entire world is in a state of trauma. "People do not know why they were born or where they are destined to go. This is the age of much know-how and very little know-why. The invisible enemies of sin and secularism have left us dazed and bewildered. "The world needs you! We need people with the resolve of Mordecai and the courage of Esther. The world is in desperate need of a people of God who will stay steady in the chaos." He later says, "Bombs are still dropped. Worlds still explode. Walls still collapse. Pandemics still rage. But in the midst of it all, the Lord still has his people. And when they proclaim the truth of God in the middle of a crumbling world, you never know who might be changed." He then says, "God is

"That is what we need to ask."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 154). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Ok, what is it? Max asks, "Is anything too hard for God? Does he ever give up because the problem is too great? Does he ever throw up his hands and quit? Does he ever shake his head at the sound of a prayer request and say, 'I can’t handle that problem'?" He continues, "The answer, the welcome answer, is, 'No, nothing is too hard for the Lord.' "You must start here. Don’t measure the height of the mountain. Ponder the power of the One who made it. Don’t tell God how big your storm is. Tell the storm how big your God is. Your problem is not that your problem is so big but that your view of God is too small. "Accept the invitation of the psalmist: 'O magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt his name together' (Ps. 34:3 KJV). Our tendency is to magnify our fears. We pl

"Just when I was about to learn the meaning of the phrase 'panic attack,' I saw it."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 154). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Here is the story. Max says, "When I was twelve years of age, I took on a summer responsibility of managing the houses of vacationing neighbors. It was their idea, not mine. Three families who lived side by side were planning to be out of town for a month. They each needed someone to cut their lawns, feed their pets, water their gardens. In sum they wanted to make sure their properties were cared for. They invited me to take the job. More accurately, they asked my dad to ask me to take the job. He didn’t ask me. He told me. I didn’t want to do it. After all, I had Little League games to play, a bike to ride, and uh, uh, uh . . . Those were the only two reasons I could muster. They got me no traction. "Before I knew it, I was sitting down with each of the families, making a list of the tasks I needed to man

"If you need a synonym for plot twist, try peripety."

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 131). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) A what? Max continues, "It’s a literary device that describes a redirected storyline. It’s that moment in the book that causes you to stay up past your bedtime because you can’t believe what just happened." He later says, "Are your days marked by mourning, fasting, weeping, and lamenting? Does the promise of a reversal seem too distant, too remote? "Maybe an illness has taken its toll. Sorrow has taken your joy. Maybe you live under the shadow of a Haman. You report to a self-centered creep. Your elected officials are out of touch with reality. You are married to a spouse who isn’t the same spouse you married. Your skin color isn’t the accepted color of your culture. "The struggles of life have pilfered the life out of your life, and you don’t know where to turn. You’ve been disappointed s

"Justice happens to the degree that we align ourselves with God’s hand of fairness."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 120). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Yes, God is love but He also is just. Max continues, "When you do, when you teach a disabled child to walk or read, when you care for the elderly whose sight is dim or memory is fading, when you rally support for the marginalized or oppressed, you accomplish something that will continue into the world to come. It’s a wonderful thing to restore art, antique cars, or dilapidated houses. But it is a holy thing to restore human dignity." Max later says, "... when we join hands with God, justice finds oxygen, and oppression hides in the corner. "To be clear, the day is coming when God will forever balance the scales of justice. The glory of the new kingdom will be hallmarked by prosperity and justice. The next life will have no need for rescue missions, welfare programs, homeless shelters, or relief a

"Assume that God is at work."

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 107). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) No matter what you are going through, "Assume that God is at work." Max says, "Yours is coming. Assume that God is at work. Move forward as if God is moving forward in your life. Give no quarter to the voices of doubt and fear. Don’t cower to the struggle." He continues the thought, "You can’t see God’s hand? Can’t make sense of his ways? That’s okay. Obey what you know to do, and be patient for what you don’t. 'Those who wait on the LORD shall renew their strength' (Isa. 40:31 NKJV)." He then says, "When the world seems off the rails, hold fast to this truth: Butterfly wings don’t determine the course of history. God does. He did in the days of Esther. He still does today." Maybe that is what you needed to read today. Maybe! Yes, yes! #continuethought

"Does your view of God include a certain relief and a dramatic deliverance?"

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 72). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) A very good and important question, isn't it? Max says, "That is no small question. Indeed, that is the question. The vast majority of people see no pending relief. Their summary of life reads like a Shakespearean tragedy. 'We live in a beautiful but broken world. It cannot be fixed. Nothing can be done. We make the best of it and then die.' For many people that’s life in a nutshell. So it’s hardly any surprise that we live in a day marked by despair and suicide." He continues, "The story God offers is, by comparison, a golden meadow. It begins like the other but ends in a far better place. " 'We live in a beautiful but broken world. However, our Creator made this world and did not destine it or us for brokenness. He destined us for a wonderful life. His intentions for us are g

"Decide now what you will do then."

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 60). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) This is so important to do. Max says, "Don’t wait until the heat of the moment. A crisis is no time to prepare an escape plan. Being in the arms of your date in a motel room is not the time or place to make up your mind about morality. The day of your final exams is not the time to decide about honesty. There is a reason the airline attendant points out the emergency exits before the plane leaves the ground. We don’t think clearly during a free fall. The time to determine to resist temptation is before it strikes." He then says, "Make up your mind now about what you will do then. And remember: Stand up for God, and he will stand with you." And that is so true, isn't it? Yes, yes! #continuethought

"Do you know who you are?"

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  You Were Made for This Moment  (p. 42). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) That is a good question, a very good question. Max continues, "And whose you are? "You are the presence of Jesus in this world—an eternal being, destined for an eternal home. Pimply faced and gangly? Hogwash. You are a citizen of heaven. Unique in all of creation. . . The devil can’t touch you. The demons can’t have you. The world can’t possess you. What people think about you matters not one whit. You belong to your heavenly Father." A live oak He goes on, "I received an unexpected reminder about my identity a few weeks ago. My wife and I had the opportunity to drive through my hometown and pay respects at the grave site of my mom and dad. It’d been ten years since our last visit. It is easy to locate their burial spot. It is the only one with a live oak tree. The cemetery has many trees, mind yo

"Does he care? You’re unsure."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book, You Were Made for This Moment (p. 8). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Do you ever ask that question and are you unsure of the answer? Max continues, "Might you be open to a gold nugget that lies in the substratum of the Esther story? Quiet providence. Providence is the two-dollar term theologians use to describe God’s continuous control over history. He not only spoke the universe into being, but he governs it by his authority. He is 'sustaining all things by his powerful word' (Heb. 1:3). He is regal, royal, and—this is essential—he is right here . He is not preoccupied with the plight of Pluto at the expense of your problems and pain." He says, "He has been known to intervene dramatically. By his hand the Red Sea opened, the manna fell from heaven, a virgin gave birth, and a tomb gave life. Yet for every divine shout there are a million whispers. The book of Esth