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Live According to God’s Will

Part of being a Christian means working for the Lord; it is both a duty and privilege. In speaking to his followers, Christ urged them to “let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in Heaven” (Matthew 5:16).

Unfortunately, it’s very easy to take a task that the Lord has given us and make it our own. This is because deep down we yearn to do things right for the wrong reasons. We want to feel in control or to be accepted by others. We want to be perfect moms or admirable dads. We want to be thought well of and treated with respect. These entirely human desires rest on a secret perfectionism. We want to be perfect according to our own definition, not our Heavenly Father’s.

So how can we check whether what we’re doing is for our own sake or God’s? Jesus gave us an important checklist in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:3-11):

  • Does this help me know my need of God?
  • What’s being glorified: my image or God’s name?
  • Am I hungering and thirsting for righteousness—or proving that I’m right?
  • Am I being an example of God’s mercy or showing others what a good person I am?
  • How pure is my heart?
  • Am I being a peacemaker or wanting peace for myself?
  • Would I do this for God’s sake, even if everyone thought poorly of me?

During the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). Fortunately this isn’t a command to attain the level of goodness that only God can have. The Greek word translated as perfect here also means complete. And read in context, it’s clear that in order to be complete we must do what Jesus just commanded:

“Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you… [God] causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that?” (Matthew 5:44-47).

Now here is something we can do. We can pray for those who anger us, who disappoint us, who cause us fear. We can heap burning coals of kindness and mercy upon our enemies (Proverbs 25:21-22). We can do this daily and, in so doing, grow to be more like our Father in heaven. And the more we focus on doing His will, the less likely we’ll be distracted by our own. Which is a perfect way to live.

Listening to the Bible on Your Phone

I hope this doesn’t sound too dorky but I’ve taken to listening to my Bible on my morning jog. That’s right, listening to selections from the Psalms, the Hebrew Scriptures, the epistles and the Gospels while I run.

Months ago I downloaded an app that gives me Scripture readings and for a while I would read them on my phone. Then I discovered a feature – I’m slow on the uptake with these things – where I could press a little arrow and hear the Bible on my phone.

Think about it. That’s how the Bible was originally shared (okay, not exactly on a phone). The words were read aloud. The gospels, the Psalms, the stories of Jesus. When Paul was writing his epistles back in the 50 A.D. he assumed that most people were simply going to hear his words.

Few people could read back then. And the costs of writing and copying something were enormous. Not till the advent of printing over 500 years ago did people really start getting the Bible by reading it. Not simply listening to it.

History seems to be reversing itself. The good old days have come back. With a twist. I can click on my phone and hear a man’s voice repeating Scripture that is some 2000 years old.

But why on my jog?

I confess I get a little BORED running. And need a little encouragement. I seem to get slower by the day and although my route takes me through a park with beautiful views, when I have to run up a hill, I’m thinking, this is too hard!

Instead of complaining, I take out my phone, push that arrow and hold the speaker close as I huff and puff and trudge up the hill.

I probably could use ear phones, but I hate having something stuck in my ears, and the voice reading the Scriptures is completely audible–until a plane flies overhead or a bus passes me.

It’s my morning prayer time. I lift up my eyes to the hills. From whence does my help come? My help comes from the Lord.

Just the other day I was running out of the park and a group of college-age kids were running in. All at once I heard one of them say, “Hey man, are you listening to the Bible on your phone?”

Yikes. All along I’d convinced myself that no one else could really hear. “Yep,” I said.

“Cool,” the guy yelled back. See? It’s cool to listen to the Bible. Who knew? Probably the first time anybody under 30 has said I was doing something cool. What an honor. Be cool! Listen to the Word.

Light Your New Year with Hope

I once saw hope save a woman’s life.

Emilie Batisse was 79 years old when she was struck by a hit-and-run driver, and nobody expected her to live. She insisted on staying in her musty, old clapboard house, and it was there that the nurse let me in about a week after the accident.

Mrs. Batisse lay wrapped in plaster from hips to heels, but her voice was firm. “Sit right down to a cup of tea, Norman Peale,” she said. “You’re cold.”

The little room was cluttered with the mementos of a lifetime: a paisley shawl, a child’s drawing of a horse (lavender), shelves of much-loved, much-thumbed books. Mrs. Batisse, I thought, was living in the past. Then, to my surprise, I noticed a row of about ten brand-new poetry books that looked as if they had never been opened. I asked Mrs. Batisse if she cared for poetry, and her answer was one of the greatest testimonies to hope that I have ever heard.

“I love poetry,” she said, “but I haven’t read those yet.” As she looked at them her whole face lit up. “I’m saving them for my old age.”

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She did, too. She lived to read those books many times. When she finally died at 91, she was planning a trip to Europe.

What is hope? Hope is wishing for a thing to come true; faith is believing that it will come true. Hope is wanting something so eagerly that—in spite of all the evidence that you’re not going to get it—you go right on wanting it. And the remarkable thing about it is that this very act of hoping produces a kind of strength of its own.

Every doctor is familiar with this strength-giving function of hope—so much so that Cornell University’s medical school once conducted an investigation into the effects of hope on the body. After completing the research, Dr. Harold G. Wolff wrote an article for Saturday Review in which he reported as a medical fact that when a man has hope, he is “capable of enduring incredible burdens and taking cruel punishment.”

One of Doctor Wolff’s studies involved the 25,000 American soldiers imprisoned by the Japanese during World War II. These men were subjected to long months of inhuman treatment, forced labor, insult, poor food, filth. Under those conditions, many died, and almost all were sick. But there were a few who, with identical treatment, showed only slight damage from those nightmare months in prison.

Now here is the important thing. Interviews with those men revealed no physical superiority, but simply a far-above-average ability to hope! In prison they drew pictures of the girls they would marry; they designed their future homes; in the middle of the jungle they organized seminars in business management.

Doctor Wolff believes it was hope that kept those boys well—indeed in some cases, kept them alive.

Learn to hope! It’s easy to say, but how do we do it? In the first place, I think we have to know what it is that we hope for.

If that sounds obvious, ask yourself right now what you want most out of life. For prisoners of war, the answer was easy: They wanted freedom. But for most of us, as long as we’re in reasonably good health and know where next month’s rent is coming from, desire has lost its sharp edge, and hope doesn’t work its magic in our lives.

So the first step is to find out what your one strongest desire is. Be honest with yourself and don’t be afraid to say “a larger house,” or “a prettier face and figure.” Then challenge yourself. Pretend that you’re 80 years old and looking back over a life in which your heart’s desire has been granted. Are you satisfied? Perhaps so; but if not, keep challenging yourself until you come up with your answer.

For the hope that you settle on must be your own, not one that you vaguely feel you should have, but one that in reality you do have. This is an area where people often fail in trying to learn the art of hoping. They think they ought to wish for, say, a better world. This is certainly admirable, but to be effective your hope must be fervent enough to govern everything you do. I frankly suspect that most of us would make a greater contribution to others by genuinely hoping for our emotional-physical health than by nobly pining for a better world.

And second, after you’ve defined your own hope, I think it’s important to give it a symbol—something concrete that you can center your thoughts around.

Do you remember the story of Jeremiah and the field of Anathoth? What a marvelous symbol of hope that was! Jerusalem was under seige; almost everyone agreed that the kingdom was doomed—everyone, that is, except the long-bearded old prophet, Jeremiah.

Just as the armies of Babylon reached the gates, Jeremiah taught his people a great lesson in hope. Calling together a large number of witnesses, and with a great show of attention to all the legalities, Jeremiah purchased a plot of land outside the city. For, said Jeremiah, we will be taken away, but we will come back. And during all the long years of captivity, the memory of the field that Jeremiah had purchased in faraway Judah was a symbol of the restoration to come.

In modern times, too, a symbol can give staying-power to hope.

I read once, in the Chicago Tribune, the amazing story of Leo Algimas. Among the thousands herded into concentration camps by the Nazis was Leo’s family. Like the others, they endured incredible hardships, but because they had a symbol for their hope they never slipped into the despair that engulfed so many.

What do you suppose this symbol was that gave them such courage? It was a tiny piece of paper torn from a box of chocolates made in Chicago. This particular candy company prints a little American flag on the bottom of all its boxes, and that was the scrap of paper that the Algimas family passed from hand to hand in their barbed-wire enclosure. They looked at it, held it and whispered, with eyes shining, about the army of liberation that was coming.

A symbol is not the same thing as positive proof. The Algimas family did not know that the Allies would win the war. In fact, the war news given to the prisoners was edited strongly in favor of the Germans. Hope seems to have little to do with proof. Emilie Batisse had no evidence that she would get well; it was difficult to see how the Hebrews would ever see Jerusalem again, yet they went on hoping. They were like the White Queen in Alice in Wonderland.

“One can’t believe impossible things,” said Alice to the Queen.

“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” replied the Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

And symbols help us to fix our minds on the “impossible.” The greatest symbol that the world had ever known was also the hardest to believe. A tiny baby sleeping in the manger of a stable was supposed to signal the kingdom of God on earth.

For the hope of the world, what a wonderful symbol! Hope has nothing to do with the odds and logic of the situation. Few would have believed the baby of this humble Jewish couple would change the destiny of mankind. But we know today that that is the precise thing that happened.

And He can change your personal destiny, too. Define what it is that you hope for, ask for it in His name, and no matter how impossible it may seem, the coming year is the year for your hope to start coming true.

Learn to Let Go and Let God

The Bible is the perfect place to turn when you are going through rough times. “Cast your cares on the LORD and He will sustain you; He will never let the righteous be shaken” (Psalm 55:22). These are true promises, with the seeds of inner peace hidden in them.

But it’s easy to misread these passages to mean that God is a magic problem-solver, a genie whose main job is to make us happy today. It’s easy to assume that casting our troubles on God means He will take our troubles away. Sometimes, though, He doesn’t.

I love the phrase “Let go and let God” because it sounds so simple. But there are times when we aren’t clear what it is we’re supposed to let go of. And there are other times we want to let go, we try to let go—and it just doesn’t happen. Why?

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Sometimes there’s a difference in what we want to give up and what we need to release. We might be holding tightly to something we think of as good, like better health for a loved one or changed behavior in a wayward child. And though it’s never wrong to desire good things, there are times when we have to let go of what we think is best.

Other times we grip tightly to assumptions about the way life “should” be. We think things ought to be easier or being a parent shouldn’t be so hard. We fight what we’re being asked to do—effectively resisting taking up our cross (Matthew 16:24) the way Jesus commanded. Sometimes what we must give up are our preconceived notions of how life is supposed to work.

But in every case, what “Let go and let God” comes down to is this: We need to let go of our own will. We must claim as our own the incredibly hard prayer that Jesus prayed: “Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but Yours be done” (Luke 22:42). We need to let go and let God do what God wills. This submission will lead to peace and joy, even when the way is difficult. “Father, I place my life in Your hands!” (Luke 23:46)

Know the God of the Impossible

The person who believes that seemingly impossible things can happen will develop an incredibly strong faith. In fact, you can measure your faith by your concept of the impossible. People who grow a great faith are those who believe that nothing is too good to be true.

Little minds see only little things and as a result only little things ever happen. But big minds see big things happening, for big faith brings big results. An upstate New York farmer told me once: “Think big, pray big, believe big, see God as big, and life will be big.”

Never build a case against yourself. Never settle for that which is small. Only be willing to accept from life the big things that life has to give to those who have a large faith in a God of greatness. Practice letting your mind stretch itself. Deliberately think bigger and bigger thoughts of faith. Conceive of greater things occurring through your faith. Take a deep breath and venture out beyond your depth. Do not hug the shore; do not fear high places.

You can go as far as you think you can. Think high and wide and deep and far. You will never go any higher than your thoughts or your prayers or your faith. So practice stretching your faith. You can never stretch it higher than God. But you can stretch it to Him.

These Bible verses can help you believe in the impossible:

And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us. (I John 5:14)

And he said, The things which are impossible with men are possible with God. (Luke 18:27)

But Jesus… said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible. (Matthew 19:26)

Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth. (Mark 9:23) Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward. (Hebrews 10:35)

Suggested reading: Luke, Chapter 8, which tells of some of the great things Jesus does.

Julian’s Visions

May 13, 1373. A 30-year-old Englishwoman lies prostrate in bed, dying of some mysterious illness. She can’t move her body “from the middle downwards.” What is wrong with her? The dreaded Black Death?

Some 25 million people will perish that century in Europe from bubonic plague, nearly half the population. Victims usually succumb in two days, spitting up blood, in excruciating pain, abandoned by loved ones who fear getting sick themselves.

A priest arrives to give her last rites and sets up a cross so she can gaze on it in her final hours. She can scarcely breathe now. She is more dead than alive, when all at once her pains leave her.

She enters another world–is it heaven?–where Jesus speaks to her in a series of visions, as do God and the Virgin Mary. They give her guidance. Sixteen “shewings,” as she will later call them, of God’s love.

She sees great drops of blood coming from Christ’s forehead beneath his crown of thorns, his “garland.” They are round as pellets and come fast, as she says, “like the drops of water that fall off the eaves after a great shower of rain.”

She notes the changing color of his face, first white and pale, then deathly blue, then a brownish blue. His dry, wounded skin is “rent in many pieces, as a cloth that were sagging.” Finally she sees his parched body “hanging up in the air, as men hang a cloth to dry.”

But after such horror, God speaks to her. “Behold and see! For by the same Might, Wisdom, and Goodness that I have done all this, by the same Might, Wisdom, and Goodness I shall make well all that is not well; and thou shalt see it.”

Those wonderfully reassuring words come to the woman several times in her visions, with variations, like a motif in a symphony. She asks Jesus, in her “folly,” as she puts it, if it wouldn’t have been better that God had never allowed sin to exist in the first place. If God is all powerful, why didn’t he stop sin? Couldn’t it have been abolished?

No, the Lord says, but she shouldn’t worry because “all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well.”

Despite the desperate misery around her, despite the baffling sinfulness of the world, everything circles back to God’s overwhelming love. In the first vision he holds out something round like a ball, like a hazelnut, and he puts it in the palm of her hand.

What is it? It’s the world, the universe, God tells her. He made it, keeps it and loves it.

The woman bubbles over with joy throughout her mystical journey. In heaven she sees the devil, “the Fiend,” scorned by God, and it makes her laugh. “I laughed mightily and that made them to laugh that were about me, and their laughing was a pleasure to me.”

Pleasure–a word she will use again and again to describe her visions, for in God’s workings in this world and the next there is much pleasure.

She has a dramatic vision of the soul. She sees a body lying on the ground, “heavy and horrible, without shape or form, like a swollen quag of stinking mire.” But then, out of this corpse “sprang a full fair creature, a little Child, fully shaped and formed, nimble and lively, whiter than a lily, which swiftly glided to heaven.”

Her last vision is the most frightening. She is still lying in bed and a handsome young man, “the Fiend,” comes to her side. His hair is red as rust, with full locks hanging on his temples, and his skin reminds her of ceramic tiles, with black spots like freckles.

But then his hands wrap around her neck, and become like paws holding her throat.

With that, she awakes. She sees the people who have been caring for her during her illness, mopping her damp forehead, praying, keeping vigil. Can they smell the stench of the Fiend? she thinks. She asks them. No, they seem oblivious to both the horror and the wonder.

She is cured, saved. All is well, all shall be well, all manner of thing shall be well.

The woman, known as Julian of Norwich, returned from the edge of death that day, and the visions she received consumed the rest of her life. She put them down in what is considered to be the first book in the English language written by a woman, Revelations of Divine Love.

Eighty-six chapters and about 63,500 words, a bold undertaking for someone who claimed to be “unlettered.” She became an anchorite, a religious hermit, living in a small room attached to a church. Through a window to the sanctuary, she could hear the services and Scriptures read.

Julian lived another 30 or even 40 years after her vision–it is not known for certain. Her book has survived her by hundreds of years and speaks across the ages with startling modernity.

She calls Jesus “Our heavenly Mother,” comparing his love to that of a mother who might allow a child to fall, perhaps to learn a lesson, but would never let her offspring endure endless peril.

I like to picture Julian making at the end the same journey she’d made when she was so ill. Her soul’s last flight, gliding up to heaven, where full understanding finally comes.

I see God reassuring her as he had on her first heavenly trip: “I may make all things well, I can make all things well, I will make all things well, and I shall make all things well; and thou shalt see thyself that all manner of thing shall be well.”

View our slideshow of Julian-inspired paintings!

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Is That in the Bible?

An interesting press release hit my inbox this week, citing a recent survey by the Barna Research Group. As it turns out, many people don’t know that some of their favorite biblical quotes aren’t actually from the Bible. See how much you know—which of these famous phrases is found nowhere in scripture:

“To thine own self be true.”

“God helps those who help themselves.”

“The truth will set you free.”

“God works in mysterious ways.”

As much as we at Mysterious Ways like that last one, the only phrase above that is in the good book is “the truth will set you free,” in the Gospel of John. According to Barna’s poll, only 24% of adults knew that.

However, that doesn’t make these other lines any less divinely inspired. Take the quote that inspired our magazine’s title. While it wasn’t written by God, the prophets, or the apostles, it does have divine origins.

In our inaugural issue of Mysterious Ways, contributing editor Rosie Schaap told the story behind these well-known words:

Late one stormy London night in 1763, a broken man was determined to end his life. He hired a coach to take him to the river. Only when he cast himself into the roiling Thames and drowned, he thought, would his agonizing trials finally end. He was unwavering in his resolve. He stepped down from the coach and walked through the fog toward the river’s edge. When he reached the quays, he noticed a strange man sitting there, staring at him, as if on guard. Moreover, despite the rainfall, the tides were low—too low to drown a man.

Returning home, the desperate man decided to poison himself with an overdose of laudanum, a potent drug derived from opium. But he couldn’t raise the bottle to his lips. He tried again and again. Each time, it was as if an invisible hand were pushing it away. Finally, he tried to hang himself. The rope snapped, and his housekeeper rushed in, responding to the noise. The man gave up. For reasons he could not conceive, the life that brought such despair and misery could not be ended…

That man was William Cowper, the famous English poet. It had not been the first time he had contemplated suicide, only to be held back by forces greater than himself. Four years after his dark evening in London, he sought a fresh start and moved to the village of Olney in Buckinghamshire. There, he met another man who had witnessed God’s grace at a moment of great desperation.

That man was John Newton, the celebrated Anglican preacher. Appointed to serve in Olney, Newton earned such a reputation for the power of his preaching and the depth of his convictions that people who desperately needed guidance and hope—like William Cowper—moved to town to benefit from his ministry.

Cowper took residence in a house adjoining Newton’s, and took a measure of peace in Newton’s friendship and care. Newton understood that for the fragile poet’s mind to find peace, writing would have to be part of the recovery. He encouraged Cowper to turn his creative talents to the composition of hymns, and the two collaborated on a collection of nearly 350 works known as the Olney Hymns.

In the centuries since, countless people have similarly found comfort and spiritual sustenance in the hymns written by these two men. Newton, of course, is best known for his most famous work, “Amazing Grace,” inspired by his miraculous rescue at sea. And Cowper? He composed a hymn titled “Light Shining Out of Darkness,” about the hidden workings of the world that had prevented his suicide and led him, against all odds, to where he was meant to be. It begins with a line we all know well: God moves in a mysterious way. . .

So don’t feel too bad if you’re one of those 76% who don’t know their Bible inside out. After all, the words in those pages aren’t the only ones God uses to reach us.

What’s your favorite biblical—or non-biblical—quote? Why does it have special meaning to you?

Is Lent in the Bible?



We observe Lent as the 40 days before Easter, starting with Ash Wednesday. If you want to take a moment to look at your calendar and count how many days there are between Ash Wednesday you’ll see—hmmmmm—there are more than 40 days. That’s because Sundays aren’t counted. We get Sundays off. Sundays are feast days, days of celebration. So where did this tradition come from? What is the meaning of Lent? Is the term Lent even in the Bible?

Is Lent in the Bible?

The short answer: No, Lent is not in the Bible. You won’t find that word there. But the practice of Lent comes from the Bible.

Lent is that season of the year when we honor and remember a key moment in Jesus’s ministry. Before He could set out to do what He did, before He was going to preach and teach the Gospel, He went off into the wilderness for 40 days, fasting all the while.

4 Things the Bible Can Teach Us About Lent

Golden cross on a fence surrounded by spring flowers to show lent in the bible

1. The Promise of Easter

The word Lent comes from an Old English word that means springtime, or more specifically the lengthening of the days, as happens every Lent.

Isn’t that a nice reminder that this admittedly penitential season is quietly celebrating the arrival of spring, the arrival of more sunlight, the coming of the great Light and the promise of Easter?

As the Bible tells us “Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil” (Matthew 4:1). Take note of that. He didn’t simply wander into the desert because He wanted to. He was led by the Spirit. Let the Spirit lead you this Lent.

Family praying together on the couch with a bible opened to the lent story

2. Putting Jesus First

Jesus fasted for 40 days and 40 nights while there, and for that reason we often choose to give up something as we celebrate Lent. People give up chocolate or coffee or desserts or drinks. The purpose of such fasting? It’s a way of putting Jesus first in your mind and heart. Every time your stomach reminds you of how much you’re missing that bar of chocolate or that dish of ice cream, you’re reminded of Jesus.

It’s a way of putting Jesus first in your mind and heart.

(A minor technicality: since Sundays aren’t counted in the 40 days and since Sundays are days of honoring God anyway, many people skip their fast on the Sundays of Lent.)

woman hiking in the woods for lent in the bible with her puppy

3. Go into the Wilderness

The other thing worth considering is that Jesus was in the wilderness. Think of that as another way of honoring Lent. Go for a long walk in the woods. Go on a silent retreat. Go on a phone fast for a day (talk about something difficult to give up!). Let the Spirit speak to you.

READ MORE: 5 Fun, Easy and Faith-Filled Ideas for Lent

As we know from the Bible Jesus was tempted by the devil at the end of those 40 days. He was hungry. Probably tired and lonely, too. So, what do we do when we’re led astray by dark forces or just our own selfish, ego-centric natures? Look at what Jesus did.

When commanded to turn stones into bread, Jesus responded, “It is written, ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God’” (Matthew 4:4).

When the tempter took Jesus to the top of the temple and suggested Jesus throw himself off, Jesus countered by quoting Scripture again: “It is also written, ‘Do not put the Lord your God to the test’” (Matthew 4:7).

Couple reading about lent in the Bible together

4. Scripture is Our Best Ally

And the third time, led to a high mountain and shone all the kingdoms of the world that the devil would offer if only Jesus would worship him, Jesus banishes him for the last time, saying, “Away from me, Satan! For it is written: ‘Worship the Lord your God and serve him only’” (Matthew 4:10).

Scripture is Jesus’s best ally, as it is for us.

Whatever choices you make for Lent, whether you’re giving up sweets, going on a retreat or taking on a favorite charity, let Lenten Scripture be your companion. In that way you can find Lent in the Bible.

And know that the promise of Easter is just around the corner as the days grow longer and your faith expands. Happy Lent!

READ MORE ABOUT LENT:

Inspiring Bible Verses for Overcoming Obstacles

My favorite copy of the Bible is marked and dog-eared and has been rebound three times. In The Book are promises precious beyond measure to me, because I have found that God always stands behind them solidly, unwaveringly, as surely as the sun rises and the tides ebb and flow.

The particular promises that follow are a part of the fabric of my life. Each of them represents a milestone in my personal history. I share them with you as the gold they are.

1. When I need guidance:
Know Him in all your paths, and He will keep your ways straight” (Proverbs 3:6).

2. When the answer to prayer seems slow in coming:
“Steady patience is what you need, so that after doing the will of God you may receive what you were promised” (Hebrews 10:36).

3. When I have sinned and need forgiveness:
“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).

4. When I’m lonely and long to feel Christ’s presence:
Look! I’m standing at the door and knocking. If any hear my voice and open the door, I will come in to be with them, and will have dinner with them, and they will have dinner with me” (Revelation 3:20).

5. When I do not feel good enough to be acceptable to God:
“For by grace you have been saved through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God—not because of works, lest any man should boast” (Ephesians 2:8,9).

6. When I am tempted:
“…God is faithful. He won’t allow you to be tempted beyond your abilities. Instead, with the temptation, God will also supply a way out so that you will be able to endure it” (I Corinthians 10:13).

7. When I need physical strength and good health:
“If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you… He will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit which dwells in you” (Romans 8:11).

8. When I wonder if God understands what I’m up against:
“But Jesus the Son of God is our great High Priest who has gone to heaven itself to help us; therefore let us never stop trusting Him. This High Priest of ours understands our weaknesses since He had the same temptations we do, though He never once gave way to them and sinned” (Hebrews 4:14, 15).

9. When troubles multiply:
“… we triumph even in our troubles, knowing that trouble produces endurance, endurance produces character, and character produces hope—a hope which never disappoints us, since God’s love floods our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given to us” (Romans 5:3, 5).

10. How I know there is life after death:
“… I am the one who raises the dead and gives them life again. Anyone who believes in Me, even though he dies like anyone else, shall live again. He is given eternal life for believing in Me and shall never perish” (John 11:25, 26).

How to ‘Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus’

A favorite hymn in our family urges the listener to “Turn your eyes upon Jesus; Look full in His wonderful face, And the things of Earth will grow strangely dim, In the light of His glory and grace.”

It’s a beautiful sentiment. But how are we supposed to do that?

It was easy for Peter, right? He actually saw Jesus—with his natural eyes—walking on water. He asked Jesus to call him out onto the waves, and when Jesus did, Peter walked on water—until he was distracted by the storm raging around him. But what about us? How do we “turn our eyes upon Jesus?” I don’t think it’s all that different from Peter’s experience:

1) Ask for help from Jesus.

Peter asked Jesus, “Master, if it’s really You, call me to come to You on the water” (Matthew 14:28, The Message). We can do that. Theologian Andrew Murray wrote, “What folly to think that all other blessings must come from Him, but that prayer, whereon everything else depends, must be obtained by personal effort! . . . Just as He will give all other grace to answer prayer, so, above all and before all, He will bestow the grace of a praying heart.” So ask Jesus to help you turn your gaze to Him.

2) Turn away from your circumstances.

As Peter found out, you can’t “turn your eyes upon Jesus” and simultaneously watch the wind and waves. So, turn away from your circumstances. Stop fixating on your problems or the day’s newscast. Give it a rest. Or, rather, give yourself a rest from the things that stir up anxious thoughts.

3) Turn away from yourself.

To use another metaphor, “Consider how the wild flowers grow” (Luke 12:27, NIV), as Jesus said. How do wildflowers grow? They don’t struggle or stress. They don’t “work” at growing. They don’t “look inward.” They turn toward the sun. They open themselves to the sun’s rays. So, turn to the Son in prayer and open yourself to Him.

4) Close your eyes and focus.

Maybe you’ve been driving in the car, the radio blaring, when you wanted to be careful not to miss a turn or spot an address. What did you do? You turned off the radio! It may seem silly to some, but you knew that fewer distractions equals more focus—and better vision.

So it is with turning your eyes upon Jesus. Close your eyes, and you’ll see Him more clearly. Slow down and you’ll find Him more quickly. Seek him with the eyes of your heart, giving Him time to “enter your vision,” and the things of the earth will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace.

How to Deal with Negative People

Do you have a negative person in your life? Someone who “gives free reign to…complaint” and “speaks out in bitterness” (Job 10: 1)? How do you handle that person?

First of all, it’s important to emphasize that, if the unhappiness is chronic, overwhelming and deep-seated, you should urge the individual to get counseling or other professional assistance. Someone suffering from clinical depression is ill and needs a trained therapist and possibly medical help.

But if the negativity is a matter of habitual attitude rather than illness, then try these strategies to help lead the pessimist toward a more positive view of things.

1. Look first to yourself.
Before you can convince anyone else to be more optimistic, you need to root out all negativity in yourself. “How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye?” Jesus said. “You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye” (Matthew 7: 4-5).

When you have cleared your own mind of negativity, fill it with thought of God and verses of Scripture that give hope, such as: “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on you” (Isaiah 26:3); “With God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26); and “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31).

This exercise should be repeated whenever you feel yourself slipping into negativity.

2. Model a positive outlook.
The positive person refrains from gossip, complaining, criticism, angry outbursts, hopeless statements—even such seemingly harmless ones as gripes about how bad the weather is or how discouraging the news. Instead, he or she is an example of kindness, good humor, patience, generosity, hopefulness. This kind of person makes everyone he or she meets feel better. Take the Apostle Paul’s advice and speak about “whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable…excellent or praiseworthy” (Philippians 4:8).

3. Strengthen and share your faith.
“Preach the gospel,” St. Francis of Assisi is reported to have said, “and, if necessary, use words.” Of course, a positive example goes only so far; if someone has never heard the Good News about how Christ changes lives, then we believers are called to share it. Choose your opportunity tactfully and let your negative friend know about your beliefs and the Bible’s promises. Invite him or her to your church to experience a Christian welcome.

This, of course, takes courage. Pray for the Holy Spirit to empower you to speak about your faith “with all boldness and without hindrance” (Acts 28:31). Look for an opportunity to share with your negative friend the truth that God intends only ultimate good for us. The Bible says so in no uncertain terms. “‘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).

4. Pray for the person.
The best thing to do for a negative person is to pray for him or her. This may come easily for you if that person is a personal friend—but Jesus commanded us to go further and pray for our enemies. Be “faithful in prayer” (Romans 12:12) as you seek to help lift someone from the throes of negativity into the power of positive thinking.

Hold on to Hope

Remember when you were a child and made a wish on the first star that appeared in the evening sky? “Star light, star bright…I wish I may, I wish I might…have the wish I wish tonight.” And how many birthday candles have you blown out, with friends and family urging you, “Make a wish!”?

Once adulthood arrives, “wishes” are often relegated to daydreams or packed away as silliness. But hope—ah, that’s something else entirely!

Hope is the cord that connects us to God, the very thing that enables God to work in our lives. Repeatedly the Psalmist points to the power and benefits of hope. “No one who hopes in you [God] will ever be put to shame” (Psalm 25:3). “The eyes of the LORD are on those who fear him, on those whose hope is in his unfailing love” (Psalm 33:18). “Why, my soul, are you downcast? Why so disturbed within me? Put your hope in God” (Psalm 42:11).

Hope goes beyond wishing; hope is believing, expecting, anticipating a reality yet to come. Here’s how hope can help in your life:

Hope heals.
Just as your body needs rest to recover from hurt or injury, so does your wounded spirit. When life’s troubles surround you or the future looks bleak, “Find rest, O my soul, in God alone; my hope comes from him” (Psalm 62:5). Hope makes strong. Hope enables you to develop spiritual muscles to combat whatever comes your way. “Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength” (Isaiah 41:2). “Be strong and take heart, all you who hope in the LORD” (Psalm 31:24).

Hope anchors your faith.
“Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we don’t see” (Hebrews 11:1). Raise your eyes above everyday woes and look to your Divine Helper.

Hope is a gift from God.
“‘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).

Claim God’s promise of hope…today!