Skip to main content

Posts

"God’s love can’t be legislated, but it can be chosen."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 71). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) It sure can! Max says, " Choose it, won’t you? For the sake of your fresh start. For the sake of your journey. For Christ’s sake, and yours, choose it. The prayer is as powerful as it is simple: 'Lord, I receive your love. Nothing can separate me from your love.'" Max goes on, "My friend Keith took his wife, Sarah, to Cozumel, Mexico, to celebrate their anniversary. Sarah loves to snorkel. Give her fins, a mask, and a breathing tube, and watch her go deep. Down she swims, searching for the mysteries below. "Keith’s idea of snorkeling includes fins, a mask, and a breathing tube, but it also includes a bellyboard. The surface satisfies him. "Sarah, however, convinced him to take the plunge. Forty feet offshore, she shouted for him to paddle out. He did. The two plunged into the water where she showed hi

"If God is our guardian, why do bad things happen to us?"

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 60). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Good question. Max says, " Have they? Have bad things really happened to you? You and God may have different definitions for the word bad . Parents and children do. Look up the word bad in a student dictionary, and you’ll read definitions such as 'pimple on nose,' 'Friday night all alone,' or 'pop quiz in geometry.' 'Dad, this is really bad!' the youngster says. Dad, having been around the block a time or two, thinks differently. Pimples pass. And it won’t be long before you’ll treasure a quiet evening at home. Inconvenience? Yes. Misfortune? Sure. But bad ? Save that adjective for emergency rooms and cemeteries. "What’s bad to a child isn’t always bad to a dad. When a five-year-old drops her ice cream cone, it is a catastrophe to her. Her father has a different perspective." He goes o

"The Spirit comes to the aid of our weakness."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 55). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) Yes He does! Max says, " What a sentence worthy of a highlighter. Who does not need this reminder? Weak bodies. Weak wills. Weakened resolves. We’ve known them all. The word weakness can refer to physical infirmities, as with the invalid who had been unable to walk for thirty-eight years (John 5:5), or spiritual impotence, as with the spiritually 'helpless' of Romans 5:6 (NLT)." He goes on, "Whether we are feeble of soul or body or both, how good to know it’s not up to us. 'The Spirit himself is pleading for us.' "Imagine: your value to God is so great that your needs top the Holy Spirit’s to-do list. Did you have any idea that your needs are being described in heaven? The Holy Spirit 'prays for us with groanings that cannot be expressed in words. And the Father who knows all hearts knows what

"God is never irritated by the candle of an honest seeker."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 48). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) And that is such a great thought. Right before this thought, Max says, " Ah, but God is not angry with Job. Firm? Yes. Direct? No doubt. Clear and convincing? Absolutely. But angry? No." He goes on, "If you underline any passage in the book of Job, underline this one: 'I had heard about you before, but now I have seen you.' Job 32:5 (TLB) "Job sees God—and that is enough. "But it isn’t enough for God. He will give Job a chance to begin again." Max continues, "The years to come find Job once again sitting behind his mahogany desk with health restored and profits up. His lap is once again full of children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren—for four generations! A new beginning indeed. "If Job ever wonders why God doesn’t bring back the children he has taken away, he doesn’t ask. Ma

"Blame our exhaustion on a peculiar pride we have in margin-less living."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 40). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) That's where we live, isn't it? Max says, " We are proud of our long hours and late flights. Weariness is a badge of honor. If we aren’t swamped and overworked, we almost hate to admit it. "The consequence? A society of exhaustion. People pushed and pulled in a thousand directions." He goes on, "Are you among them? You don’t have to be. Jesus has an invitation for you. 'Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest' (Matt. 11:28 NASB). "Rest. Isn’t that what we need? Rest for the soul. God has plenty to offer." Max continues, "The story is told about a poor man who lived in Eastern Europe in the early 1900s. Seeking a better life for himself and his family, he scraped together enough money to buy a third-class ticket on a steamship to New York City. He plann

"One stumble does not define or break a person."

A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 25). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) That is so true, we hope! Max says, " When you lost your job, flunked the exam, dropped out of school. When your marriage went south. When your business went broke. When you failed. The voices began to howl. Monkeys in a cage, they were, laughing at you. You heard them. "And you joined them! You disqualified yourself, berated yourself, upbraided yourself. You sentenced yourself to a life of hard labor in the Leavenworth of poor self-worth. Oh, the voices of failure." He goes on, "Failure finds us all. Failure is so universal we must wonder why more self-help gurus don’t address it. Bookstores overflow with volumes on how to succeed. But you’ll look a long time before you find a section called 'How to Succeed at Failing.'" "Maybe no one knows what to say. But God does. His book is written for fail

"It’s one limitation we all share."

  A thought by Max Lucado, from his book,  Begin Again   (p. 16). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition.  (Click on the book title to go to Amazon to buy the book.) So what is it? I want to know? Max says, "We are blind. We can’t see the future. We have absolutely no vision beyond the present. I’m not talking nearsightedness or obstructed view; I’m talking opaque blindness. I’m not talking about a condition that passes with childhood; I’m describing a condition that passes only with death. We are blind. Blind to the future." He goes on, "It’s one limitation we all share. The wealthy are just as blind as the poor. The educated are just as sightless as the unschooled. And the famous know as little about the future as the unknown. "None of us know how our children will turn out. None of us know the day we will die. None of us know if another pandemic is on the way. We are universally, absolutely, unalterably blind." Later he says, "There are times in life when everyt