Saturday, December 2, 2017

Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever. Hebrews 13:8

The Christian converts of Jerusalem felt their city would soon be capital of the entire world, for Jesus was to return, establish His Kingdom and rule with justice and peace.  The reality was, their city would soon be obliterated from the face of the earth for the rest of their lifetime. The faith of the early church was going to be tested and stretched as Rome did its worst.

Hebrews is the last epistle written. Paul writes, only a few years before the destruction of David’s City, not knowing the future, but knowing His LORD.

Aside from John’s account of the empty tomb, there are no words in scripture that give me more hope than these.  Before the world was created Jesus was there and as man fell short of the perfect image of God there was a plan of redemption and restoration. Today, I am a sinner saved by grace because everything He’s ever done for anyone else (as scripture tells),  He will do for me and you, all because our Eternal Savior loves.

You are loved,

Gretchen

Friday, December 1, 2017

The past of the righteous is like the morning sun, shining ever brighter till the full light of day. Proverbs 4:18

Solomon, the second son of King David and Bathsheba, is the primary author of the book of Proverbs. He was an intellectual, business man, botanist, zoologist, politician, poet and moral preacher. Kings came from the ends of the earth to hear him and “pick his brain.’ But for all his fame and fortune, Solomon held the pursuit of wisdom in the absolute highest esteem. He wrote his writing is a practical guide to the ethical standards that God designed and set throughout the entire Biblical story.

Proverbs chapter 4 speaks to the value of seeking wisdom, but verse 18 likens righteous wisdom to the rising sun of each new day. It continues to grow brighter and brighter until it eradicates all darkness, a darkness that causes failure and defeat.

The quest for wisdom makes very logical sense, and keeps you walking in the Sonshine.

Have a Great Weekend Eve,

Gretchen

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. Proverbs 3:5

When do you lean? When you are relaxed or when you are tired to the bone? That’s the case with me. Otherwise I’m quite content to be upright under my own strength. Exhaustion from worry or grief and/or an unguarded leisure are the greatest states of vulnerability. In anxious panic we seek logical understanding and reason. When we have the world by the tail on the down hill swing, we don’t need anyone’s advise or support, we just want cheers.

According to dictionary.com trust is the reliance on the integrity, strength, ability and surety of a person or thing, confident expectation, hope. The wise author of this wisdom book tells us that our default action and reaction should be set to trust the LORD with crazy inhibition.

Don’t lean on anyone or anything, just trust the LORD.

Have a Blessed Day,

Gretchen

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

The eternal God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms. He will drive out your enemies before you, saying ‘Destroy them!” Deuteronomy 33:27

Moses was at the end of his life. From Pisgah, the highest peak of Mount Nebo, he could see the Promised Land, but he would not set foot in it. Joshua would lead the people home, but first, Moses would speak his final chapter. He was addressing these words to the twelve tribes of Israel, but also to the ages and that includes me and you.

God’s covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob/Israel was that through the nation of Israel all nations would be blessed. This passage is specifically to Israel, but through the Blood of Jesus, of the House of David, of the Tribe of Judah, we are heirs to this Kingdom. What God did for them He will do for us. He’s THAT kinds of God!

He is our refuge, our protection from danger, our absolute security and comfort. The victory has been settled so run, jump and snuggle down into the eternal, everlasting, never changing arms of God.

Have a Wonderful Wednesday,

Gretchen

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

So that having been justified by His grace, we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life.Titus 3:7

The letter to Titus is called a Pastoral Epistle. Titus was a Greek/gentile convert of Paul’s who submitted to circumcision, a Jewish law, even though Paul said it was not necessary to achieve mercy and grace. Paul wrote this letter to Titus, who was in Crete, advising and him as he oversaw other pastors of the early church.

Titus’ task was to bring those who had salvation into a life worthy of The One who gave His life for theirs without getting tied up in works verses grace. We are not saved by our own works, but our works must reflect God’s image and His work in our life.

The word ‘justified’ comes from the word just and its cousin justice. In a court of law, justice is found when all facts have been given and truth has been discerned. The judge then declares what is just and seals it forever with the slam of his gavel. God’s justice is grace, a free from sin because I said so defense! God has declared us NOT GUILTY and ends all debate with His seal, the Blood of Jesus. Why? Because He chooses to.

The Cretans were a tough crowd. They were famous for taking the truth and making a mess of it, but this one thing Paul wanted them to understand! Faith alone brings about salvation, but our behavior afterwards is living proof of where our faith has taken us.

Love,

Gretchen

Please keep my family in your hearts and prayers. My cousin Mark Jones, the only son of my father’s brother Wendell, passed away after a short battle with cancer. Our hearts are broken, our only solace is the promise of a wonderful reunion we will have someday and the Throne of God.

Monday, November 27, 2017

For no matter how many promises God has made, they are “Yes” in Christ. And so through Him the “Amen” is spoken by us to the glory of God. 2 Corinthians 1:20

Paul establishes a church in the Corinth, a very modern, metropolitan Greek city with a strong culture of pagan worship that included casual, sexual immorality. Membership of this congregation ranged from slaves to upwardly mobile businessmen. A major crisis arose when converts wanted the blessing of salvation, yet clung tightly to the convenience and fun of loose living. Paul addressed the issues of division that sin caused and then wrote the letter we call I Corinthians. He continued his missionary journey through Asia but waited anxiously for news of this group of new believers that he loved so deeply. In the mean time this former persecutor became the persecuted and lived through many tribulations including a near death experience.

News arrives that the Corinthian church has listened to Paul’s counsel and returned to holiness. Paul is of course relieved and thrilled. He plans to visit but first writes them a letter known as II Corinthians. He tells of God’s comfort through all his trials that ultimately led him to greater understanding and compassion for others. He also addresses the question of integrity and constancy that came into question by nefarious leaders seeking personal power rather than true ministry. This constancy is seen through God’s fulfillment of His promises through His Son Jesus the Christ. The church has stability because God is unchanging, He is YES to all He said He would do and we, through faith are the completion, the Amen, of God’s purpose and great love.

God’s truth and mercy endure forever, His plan is and always has been the same…… for you and me to have eternal life!

To God Be the Glory,

Gretchen

Sunday Stories, November 26, 2017

The Secret Heart of Gifting

Tis the season to………get or give and probably a little of both. It’s called gifting and there are many options to choose from: Simple Gifting, Over Gifting, Re-gifting, Extravagant Gifting, Cheap Gifting, Thoughtful Gifting, Thoughtless Gifting, Late Gifting, Early Gifting, Guilt Gifting, Love Gifting and many more. Here’s the big deal that ties it all together……..that thing you offer and that thing you receive tells far more about the giver than the getter.

When I graduated from high school in central Arkansas my maternal grandparents made a trip from southeast Iowa to celebrate the occasion with my family and friends. On my special day I opened four big boxes of lovely, delicate china! I was seventeen years old and had a complete, eight piece place setting of winter white dishes trimmed with ice blue flowers and silver accents.

Comments over dinner revealed the secret of my treasured china. It came by way of grocery store stamps. Nothing was said to me directly, but I overheard others discussing the diligence my grandmother put toward her gift. Sometime during my sophomore year of high school grandma began shopping exclusively at one particular market. It wasn’t bargains or high quality fare, but the stamp she was awarded for every dollar she spent that kept her returning each week to the same grocer, until she reached her goal, china for me.

The innocence of youth protects us from many truths our lack of experience can’t responsibly process but in the following years I came to realize the poverty my mother knew growing up. She was a child of the World Wars. Her mother went to work in the city factories, her father remained a civilian and farmed for the war effort. Her childhood was cut short by a society that asked her to take up the slack and become nanny and housemaid to her younger siblings. Life was not often kind but when she grew to adulthood her mother was incredibly proud of the woman she became. I could see it in the old eyes that followed my young mother around the room during family togetherness. I am the oldest daughter of the oldest daughter my grandmother held in such high esteem, and that is why I was the recipient of the most extravagant graduation gift my grandparents were ever able to give. It wasn’t because I was Gretchen, but because Cleta Cuppy, poor but proud was determined to give. This gift told the story of my grandmother’s character, not mine.

In this season, as we are blessed by other’s bounty, remember to look beyond the hands that give to the heart that first acquired. It isn’t about getting what we want or what we need, its about the gift of human connection that God wove into His creation. The gift speaks the soul of the giver. AND if you stop by my house for some hot chocolate, you will find a cabinet, a gift from my parents, filled with my graduation china, and then you will turn to a cluttered refrigerator door covered with notes and coloring book pages artfully filled by small hands with big love. Each item represents a human heart and the heart of a Good, Good, God who gave the Greatest Gift of All.

Merry Christmas and Peace of Earth, Good Will Toward Man.

Love,

Gretchen

Saturday, November 25, 2017

For this is what the LORD says, He who created the Heavens, He is God; He who fashioned and made the earth, He founded it; He did not create it to be empty, but formed it to be inhabited. He says: “I am the LORD and there is no other.” Isaiah 45:18 I strongly recommend you read the entire chapter.

Isaiah is delivering God’s declaration of who He is, God! And He actually says, “Don’t mess with me!” (Paraphrased verse 9) Strong but beautiful! It isn’t just God’s authority that is pronounced, He specifically tells the purposefulness in His creation and gives detail to the future. King Cyrus’ days are 150 years to the future. (Verse 1)

According to Robert Mogan, author of a devotional book, Then Sings My Soul, a poem by Swedish Minister Carl Boberg, written in 1885 was inspired by Isaiah chapter 45. It was set to a melody and traveled around the world, withstood a few revisions and additions before ending up in the hands of George Beverly Shea, musical director for the Billy Graham Crusades. In 1957 George sang this new worship song in New York City. The hymn…..HOW GREAT THOU ART!

Have a Blessed Weekend,

Gretchen

Friday, November 24, 2017

In God I trust and am not afraid. What can man do to me? Psalm 56:11

This song was written by David when the Philistines had captured him in Gath. The accounts of David’s captivities in I Samuel do not mention this event, but David’s words give a vivid picture of his thoughts, anxiousness and response to his dire situation and God’s saving power.

David’s emotions have overwhelmed him, his efforts are futile UNTIL, he remembers “When I am afraid I put my trust in You!” Verse 3.

I am stepping away from commentary for a moment and giving direct statement: Satan’s greatest weapon is this, “If you had sought God’s counsel when you should have then you wouldn’t be in this mess now.” Perhaps satan is correct. In David’s case there is not enough evidence to make that judgement and it isn’t my place anyway. It is also true that often, no one is to blame for life’s tragic events, a sinful world begets grief. What is correct is that satan’s opinion (or anyone else’s) does not bind God’s hands/power when we call to Him and rest in His arms. Satan and his gifts of shame and guilt (don’t confuse these with humility) will hobble your run to the Throne of God. Find the same victory that David did. Do not be afraid, trust God!

There is no Black Friday in the Sonshine, 🙂

Gretchen

Thursday, November 23, 2017

For it is written: “Be Holy, because I am Holy.” I Peter 1:16

It would not be commanded of us if it were not possible. Yes, we suffer and face persecution but those things strengthen and validate our faith.

We are called to represent the life and standards of the One who left Heaven’s perfect peace and suffered a horrendous, cruel death so that we could have life eternal.

God does not use unattainable expectations to toy with our lives. He is good, wise and powerful. If He asks it, He provides it. He is Holy, therefore, as His heirs, we can be also.

Happy Thanks Giving,

Gretchen