The Daily Guide. grow. pray. study. from The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States "Living the good life as a nomad for God" for Wednesday, 12 October 2016
Genesis 15:1 Some time later the word of Adonai came to Avram in a vision: “Don’t be afraid, Avram. I am your protector; your reward will be very great.”
5 Then he brought him outside and said, “Look up at the sky, and count the stars — if you can count them! Your descendants will be that many!” 6 He believed in Adonai, and he credited it to him as righteousness.
13 Adonai said to Avram, “Know this for certain: your descendants will be foreigners in a land that is not theirs. They will be slaves and held in oppression there four hundred years. 14 But I will also judge that nation, the one that makes them slaves. Afterwards, they will leave with many possessions. 15 As for you, you will join your ancestors in peace and be buried at a good old age.
25:8 Then Avraham breathed his last, dying at a ripe old age, an old man full of years; and he was gathered to his people.
-------
We might be tempted to think, “Of course Abraham was content—everything in his life had worked out well.” Not actually—God promised him a land, but when he died he was still a nomad. God promised that he’d become a great nation, but when he died that hope rested in his one son Isaac (cf. Hebrews 11:9-10, 13). Genesis 15:6 provided the key to Abraham’s good life—he “trusted the Lord.” And that was enough.
• What are some ways your life has been better because of choices your grandparents or other people who lived before you made (e.g. someone who set up a scholarship program that helped you)? Do you believe they could have felt a sense of contentment and
satisfaction about those choices, even if they did not specifically get to see you benefit from them?
• Are there ways in which you need to trust God because you do not see particular promises or life directions “paying off” immediately? What opportunities do you have to invest time, energy or material goods in ways that will help others in the future, even if you are not around to collect the award(s) or hear their gratitude expressed?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, teach me how to view life through the lens of eternity, as you do. Help me to trust that there are vast spheres that lie way beyond my immediate ability to perceive. Amen.
-------
Insights from Wendy Connelly
Wendy Connelly is wife to Mark and mom to two kids and is a seminary student at Saint Paul School of Theology.
In Greek, the word for nomad is νομάς (nomas), which means: one who roams about for pasture. What, then, does it mean to be a “nomad for God?” I think it’s to sense the Spirit’s wind, not knowing where it comes from or where it will land us, and chasing it with wild trust and expectant hope. To carry the shelter of God within us and everywhere we roam, not searching for it outside ourselves. To be a nomad for God is to trust extravagantly in:
God’s provision in seasons of drought
God’s vision through blinding sandstorms
God’s protection when enemies surround us
To be a nomad for God is to be truly free – deeply rooted in our wandering – and this is the good life.
-------
"The good life: Spirit-guided, not selfishly guided"
Thursday. 13 October 2016
Galatians 5:16 What I am saying is this: run your lives by the Spirit. Then you will not do what your old nature wants. 17 For the old nature wants what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit wants what is contrary to the old nature. These oppose each other, so that you find yourselves unable to carry out your good intentions. 18 But if you are led by the Spirit, then you are not in subjection to the system that results from perverting the Torah into legalism.
19 And it is perfectly evident what the old nature does. It expresses itself in sexual immorality, impurity and indecency; 20 involvement with the occult and with drugs; in feuding, fighting, becoming jealous and getting angry; in selfish ambition, factionalism, intrigue 21 and envy; in drunkenness, orgies and things like these. I warn you now as I have warned you before: those who do such things will have no share in the Kingdom of God!
22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 humility, self control. Nothing in the Torah stands against such things.
-------
In Roman times (and today) some people think the outcomes and qualities Paul listed in
Galatians 5:19-21 are part of a good life, either as “fun” or as side-effects of the pursuit of “fun.” But the apostle sketched a different vision, saying “you shouldn’t do whatever you want to do.” He vividly contrasted a Spirit-powered life with the negative outcomes produced when we live solely to satisfy our selfish desires, and left no doubt which life he believed is better.
• With gentle irony (and deep seriousness) Paul followed his list of the fruit of the Spirit with the phrase “There is no law against things like this.” Why would anyone make a law against qualities that make life so much better? When have you let go of your own agenda, and found that God had given you something better, deeper and more freeing than what you thought you wanted?
• In The Message, verse 16 says “My counsel is this: Live freely, animated and motivated by God’s Spirit.” Have you found freedom from some of the areas that result from doing
whatever you want, from living as though you were your own God? Can you list areas
where the Spirit has animated and motivated you to a better way of life?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, through your Spirit continue to animate and motivate me to live beyond and above just my selfish desires. Guide me to that wonderful life against which there is no law. Amen.
-------
-------
"A compelling, God-given purpose for life"
Friday, 14 October 2016
Acts 20:17 But he did send from Miletus to Ephesus, summoning the elders of the Messianic community. 18 When they arrived, he said to them, “You yourselves know how, from the first day I set foot in the province of Asia, I was with you the whole time, 19 serving the Lord with much humility and with tears, in spite of the tests I had to undergo because of the plots of the unbelieving Jews. 20 You know that I held back nothing that could be helpful to you, and that I taught you both in public and from house to house, 21 declaring with utmost seriousness the same message to Jews and Greeks alike: turn from sin to God; and put your trust in our Lord, Yeshua the Messiah.
22 “And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Yerushalayim. I don’t know what will happen to me there, 23 other than that in every city the Ruach HaKodesh keeps warning me that imprisonment and persecution await me. 24 But I consider my own life of no importance to me whatsoever, as long as I can finish the course ahead of me, the task I received from the Lord Yeshua — to declare in depth the Good News of God’s love and kindness.
-------
Does living a “good life” mean avoiding danger? Not always. Paul and his colleagues were traveling to Jerusalem to deliver an offering from the Gentile Christians of Greece to help their suffering companions in the faith there. He told the elders of the church in Ephesus that he was sure arrest and prison awaited him in Jerusalem. Yet he concluded his witness about how he lived with a sense of well-being and “success” by saying, “Nothing, not even my life, is more
important than completing my mission.”
• Think of a time when you gave up something you valued to help someone else (e.g. money,
your time, your caring attention to someone who was hurting, etc.). Then recall a time when you pursued an item that you prized solely for yourself. Reflect on how the two experiences affected you. How lasting was the joy and well-being, the sense of a good life, in each case?
• Do you have a life mission? If you’re like many people, your first thought may be, “No—I
really don’t.” But Paul’s words can help nearly all of us begin to locate that “mission” (even if we haven’t consciously chosen it). Of what would you say “Nothing is more important than ____________”? As the answer to that comes into focus, prayerfully consider whether it better fits God’s definition of a good life, or that of the society around us. Ask God to help you make any needed course corrections.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, I do not want to miss out on the mission you call me to, the most
important reason that you’ve given me life. Give me a clear sense of what that mission is, and the strength to live into it. Amen.
-------
-------
"An Rx for the good life"
Saturday, 15 October 2016
Philippians 4:4 Rejoice in union with the Lord always! I will say it again: rejoice! 5 Let everyone see how reasonable and gentle you are. The Lord is near! 6 Don’t worry about anything; on the contrary, make your requests known to God by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving. 7 Then God’s shalom, passing all understanding, will keep your hearts and minds safe in union with the Messiah Yeshua. 8 In conclusion, brothers, focus your thoughts on what is true, noble, righteous, pure, lovable or admirable, on some virtue or on something praiseworthy. 9 Keep doing what you have learned and received from me, what you have heard and seen me doing; then the God who gives shalom will be with you.
-------
Do you want a good life? From a Roman prison cell (cf. Philippians 1:13-14), the apostle Paul bore radiant witness to the quality of life God offers us. As we hand over our anxieties to God in prayer, he said God’s peace, purity and contentment flow in and through us, no matter what our situation. If we have any question about whether the apostle believed he had had a good life, we can read what he wrote to his young friend Timothy, again from a prison cell: “I have
fought the good fight, finished the race, and kept the faith. At last the champion’s wreath that is awarded for righteousness is waiting for me” (2 Timothy 4:7-8).
• Paul connected our ability to live a good life, filled with God’s peace and joy, with the mental “diet” we choose. Like a spiritual nutritionist, he advised, “If anything is excellent and if anything is admirable, focus your thoughts on these things: all that is true, all that is holy, all that is just, all that is pure, all that is lovely, and all that is worthy of praise” (verse 8).
With reality TV, tabloids reporting who was seen with someone they weren’t supposed to be with, negative political ads and celebrity tweets seemingly everywhere, does that strike
you as naïve, idealistic and impossible to follow? Or might it hold a key to helping you live with more peace and a stronger connection with God?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, remind me to bring my anxieties to you, not to my well-worn escape
mechanisms. Focus my thoughts on all that is true, holy, just, pure, lovely and worthy of
praise. Amen.
Family Activity: Gather or create the following: play money, pictures of items a child might want to buy (toys, vacation, junk food) and pictures of ways to give (missionary, charity, church). Assign a pretend purchase price to each of the items. Pass out play money, giving each family member different amounts. Show your family members their choices of items to buy and ways to give. Invite your family to spend their play money however they would like by
purchasing the items on pictures or giving to the places/people in need. After each person has spent their money, discuss the choices people made. Discuss the importance of a God-given life mission for each person, and for you as a family. Ask God to help you each pursue a truly good life.
-------
-------
Prayer Requests – cor.org/prayer
Prayers for Peace & Comfort for:
• Eileen Markley and family on the death of her brother Gerry Cromwell, 10/1
• Jerry Lesjack and family on the death of his brother-in-law Bill Koresky, 10/1
• Van Torian and family on the death of his mother Joan Torian, 9/27
• Libby Hawkins and family on the death of her father Gene Bowling, 9/26
• Joy Wheeler and family on the death of her mother Beebs Downing Wheeler, 9/25
• Page Campbell and family on the death of her sister D’Arlene Aldrich, 9/24
• Charlene Perry and family on the death of her mother Marcella Karel, 9/17
• Carolyn Barnette and family on the death of her brother-in-law Martain “Keith” Croft, 8/24
-------
5 Then he brought him outside and said, “Look up at the sky, and count the stars — if you can count them! Your descendants will be that many!” 6 He believed in Adonai, and he credited it to him as righteousness.
13 Adonai said to Avram, “Know this for certain: your descendants will be foreigners in a land that is not theirs. They will be slaves and held in oppression there four hundred years. 14 But I will also judge that nation, the one that makes them slaves. Afterwards, they will leave with many possessions. 15 As for you, you will join your ancestors in peace and be buried at a good old age.
25:8 Then Avraham breathed his last, dying at a ripe old age, an old man full of years; and he was gathered to his people.
-------
We might be tempted to think, “Of course Abraham was content—everything in his life had worked out well.” Not actually—God promised him a land, but when he died he was still a nomad. God promised that he’d become a great nation, but when he died that hope rested in his one son Isaac (cf. Hebrews 11:9-10, 13). Genesis 15:6 provided the key to Abraham’s good life—he “trusted the Lord.” And that was enough.
• What are some ways your life has been better because of choices your grandparents or other people who lived before you made (e.g. someone who set up a scholarship program that helped you)? Do you believe they could have felt a sense of contentment and
satisfaction about those choices, even if they did not specifically get to see you benefit from them?
• Are there ways in which you need to trust God because you do not see particular promises or life directions “paying off” immediately? What opportunities do you have to invest time, energy or material goods in ways that will help others in the future, even if you are not around to collect the award(s) or hear their gratitude expressed?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, teach me how to view life through the lens of eternity, as you do. Help me to trust that there are vast spheres that lie way beyond my immediate ability to perceive. Amen.
-------
Insights from Wendy Connelly
Wendy Connelly is wife to Mark and mom to two kids and is a seminary student at Saint Paul School of Theology.
In Greek, the word for nomad is νομάς (nomas), which means: one who roams about for pasture. What, then, does it mean to be a “nomad for God?” I think it’s to sense the Spirit’s wind, not knowing where it comes from or where it will land us, and chasing it with wild trust and expectant hope. To carry the shelter of God within us and everywhere we roam, not searching for it outside ourselves. To be a nomad for God is to trust extravagantly in:
God’s provision in seasons of drought
God’s vision through blinding sandstorms
God’s protection when enemies surround us
To be a nomad for God is to be truly free – deeply rooted in our wandering – and this is the good life.
-------
"The good life: Spirit-guided, not selfishly guided"
Thursday. 13 October 2016
Galatians 5:16 What I am saying is this: run your lives by the Spirit. Then you will not do what your old nature wants. 17 For the old nature wants what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit wants what is contrary to the old nature. These oppose each other, so that you find yourselves unable to carry out your good intentions. 18 But if you are led by the Spirit, then you are not in subjection to the system that results from perverting the Torah into legalism.
19 And it is perfectly evident what the old nature does. It expresses itself in sexual immorality, impurity and indecency; 20 involvement with the occult and with drugs; in feuding, fighting, becoming jealous and getting angry; in selfish ambition, factionalism, intrigue 21 and envy; in drunkenness, orgies and things like these. I warn you now as I have warned you before: those who do such things will have no share in the Kingdom of God!
22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 humility, self control. Nothing in the Torah stands against such things.
-------
In Roman times (and today) some people think the outcomes and qualities Paul listed in
Galatians 5:19-21 are part of a good life, either as “fun” or as side-effects of the pursuit of “fun.” But the apostle sketched a different vision, saying “you shouldn’t do whatever you want to do.” He vividly contrasted a Spirit-powered life with the negative outcomes produced when we live solely to satisfy our selfish desires, and left no doubt which life he believed is better.
• With gentle irony (and deep seriousness) Paul followed his list of the fruit of the Spirit with the phrase “There is no law against things like this.” Why would anyone make a law against qualities that make life so much better? When have you let go of your own agenda, and found that God had given you something better, deeper and more freeing than what you thought you wanted?
• In The Message, verse 16 says “My counsel is this: Live freely, animated and motivated by God’s Spirit.” Have you found freedom from some of the areas that result from doing
whatever you want, from living as though you were your own God? Can you list areas
where the Spirit has animated and motivated you to a better way of life?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, through your Spirit continue to animate and motivate me to live beyond and above just my selfish desires. Guide me to that wonderful life against which there is no law. Amen.
-------
-------
"A compelling, God-given purpose for life"
Friday, 14 October 2016
Acts 20:17 But he did send from Miletus to Ephesus, summoning the elders of the Messianic community. 18 When they arrived, he said to them, “You yourselves know how, from the first day I set foot in the province of Asia, I was with you the whole time, 19 serving the Lord with much humility and with tears, in spite of the tests I had to undergo because of the plots of the unbelieving Jews. 20 You know that I held back nothing that could be helpful to you, and that I taught you both in public and from house to house, 21 declaring with utmost seriousness the same message to Jews and Greeks alike: turn from sin to God; and put your trust in our Lord, Yeshua the Messiah.
22 “And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Yerushalayim. I don’t know what will happen to me there, 23 other than that in every city the Ruach HaKodesh keeps warning me that imprisonment and persecution await me. 24 But I consider my own life of no importance to me whatsoever, as long as I can finish the course ahead of me, the task I received from the Lord Yeshua — to declare in depth the Good News of God’s love and kindness.
-------
Does living a “good life” mean avoiding danger? Not always. Paul and his colleagues were traveling to Jerusalem to deliver an offering from the Gentile Christians of Greece to help their suffering companions in the faith there. He told the elders of the church in Ephesus that he was sure arrest and prison awaited him in Jerusalem. Yet he concluded his witness about how he lived with a sense of well-being and “success” by saying, “Nothing, not even my life, is more
important than completing my mission.”
• Think of a time when you gave up something you valued to help someone else (e.g. money,
your time, your caring attention to someone who was hurting, etc.). Then recall a time when you pursued an item that you prized solely for yourself. Reflect on how the two experiences affected you. How lasting was the joy and well-being, the sense of a good life, in each case?
• Do you have a life mission? If you’re like many people, your first thought may be, “No—I
really don’t.” But Paul’s words can help nearly all of us begin to locate that “mission” (even if we haven’t consciously chosen it). Of what would you say “Nothing is more important than ____________”? As the answer to that comes into focus, prayerfully consider whether it better fits God’s definition of a good life, or that of the society around us. Ask God to help you make any needed course corrections.
Prayer: Lord Jesus, I do not want to miss out on the mission you call me to, the most
important reason that you’ve given me life. Give me a clear sense of what that mission is, and the strength to live into it. Amen.
-------
-------
"An Rx for the good life"
Saturday, 15 October 2016
Philippians 4:4 Rejoice in union with the Lord always! I will say it again: rejoice! 5 Let everyone see how reasonable and gentle you are. The Lord is near! 6 Don’t worry about anything; on the contrary, make your requests known to God by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving. 7 Then God’s shalom, passing all understanding, will keep your hearts and minds safe in union with the Messiah Yeshua. 8 In conclusion, brothers, focus your thoughts on what is true, noble, righteous, pure, lovable or admirable, on some virtue or on something praiseworthy. 9 Keep doing what you have learned and received from me, what you have heard and seen me doing; then the God who gives shalom will be with you.
-------
Do you want a good life? From a Roman prison cell (cf. Philippians 1:13-14), the apostle Paul bore radiant witness to the quality of life God offers us. As we hand over our anxieties to God in prayer, he said God’s peace, purity and contentment flow in and through us, no matter what our situation. If we have any question about whether the apostle believed he had had a good life, we can read what he wrote to his young friend Timothy, again from a prison cell: “I have
fought the good fight, finished the race, and kept the faith. At last the champion’s wreath that is awarded for righteousness is waiting for me” (2 Timothy 4:7-8).
• Paul connected our ability to live a good life, filled with God’s peace and joy, with the mental “diet” we choose. Like a spiritual nutritionist, he advised, “If anything is excellent and if anything is admirable, focus your thoughts on these things: all that is true, all that is holy, all that is just, all that is pure, all that is lovely, and all that is worthy of praise” (verse 8).
With reality TV, tabloids reporting who was seen with someone they weren’t supposed to be with, negative political ads and celebrity tweets seemingly everywhere, does that strike
you as naïve, idealistic and impossible to follow? Or might it hold a key to helping you live with more peace and a stronger connection with God?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, remind me to bring my anxieties to you, not to my well-worn escape
mechanisms. Focus my thoughts on all that is true, holy, just, pure, lovely and worthy of
praise. Amen.
Family Activity: Gather or create the following: play money, pictures of items a child might want to buy (toys, vacation, junk food) and pictures of ways to give (missionary, charity, church). Assign a pretend purchase price to each of the items. Pass out play money, giving each family member different amounts. Show your family members their choices of items to buy and ways to give. Invite your family to spend their play money however they would like by
purchasing the items on pictures or giving to the places/people in need. After each person has spent their money, discuss the choices people made. Discuss the importance of a God-given life mission for each person, and for you as a family. Ask God to help you each pursue a truly good life.
-------
-------
Prayer Requests – cor.org/prayer
Prayers for Peace & Comfort for:
• Eileen Markley and family on the death of her brother Gerry Cromwell, 10/1
• Jerry Lesjack and family on the death of his brother-in-law Bill Koresky, 10/1
• Van Torian and family on the death of his mother Joan Torian, 9/27
• Libby Hawkins and family on the death of her father Gene Bowling, 9/26
• Joy Wheeler and family on the death of her mother Beebs Downing Wheeler, 9/25
• Page Campbell and family on the death of her sister D’Arlene Aldrich, 9/24
• Charlene Perry and family on the death of her mother Marcella Karel, 9/17
• Carolyn Barnette and family on the death of her brother-in-law Martain “Keith” Croft, 8/24
-------
Download the GPS App
The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection
13720 Roe Avenue
Leawood, Kansas 66224, United States
913.897.0120
-------
No comments:
Post a Comment