2016: Page 103

It was an early start to what turned out to be a beautiful spring day.  The morning cleaning and building prep was finished shortly before sunrise so I did some office work as the sun came up.  The rest of the workday was spent running chainsaw as I began the brush clean-up process following our recent sale of timber from the property.  While I made some progress, this will be a fairly long term project as I work my way through the woods.  Even with the sounds of the chainsaw, the birds were singing loudly throughout the day.  When I would stop to refuel the saw, the birds would come over to see what I was doing.

The sun was shining brightly and the temperature was nearing 50 degrees so we headed down to Potato Creek after work.  We arrived around 5 PM and an eagle was waiting to greet us.  He didn’t stay around long tonight.  I managed just two photos before he flew off, soaring through the sky in increasingly large circles before heading home for the night.  After seeing the eagle, we began our hike around the loop to see one of the osprey nests and get some exercise in.  Along the trail we hiked is a small pond that overflows into the lake.  As we walked past, the beauty of the trees and sun reflecting off the still surface of the water caught my photography eye.  There was enough of a breeze that the lake itself was too rough to capture much reflection off the surface, but this protected pond had a mirror-like surface.

As I noticed the contrast between the water on one side of the trail compared to the other, I thought about how we are supposed to reflect the nature of Christ in our lives.  And then I thought about all the studies and surveys I have read that indicate there is very little difference in the average lives of those who ought to reflect Christ and those who are not yet in relationship with Him.  Then I began to wonder if the scene in front of me might reveal one of the reasons why Christ is often not seen clearly in those who belong to Him.  Could it be that we are so tossed about by the winds of life and the winds of compromise that we are never still enough to accurately reflect anything?  God calls us to be still and know that He is Lord.  It is through an inner stillness — a peace that surpasses understanding — that the people around us can see the character of Christ reflected through us.  As we live with a growing trust in God, the waves that often distort the reflected image begin to  calm and become ripples which soon become smooth water.  

I pray that you and I would seek a stillness in Christ that allows for Him to be seen clearly through us.  I pray that our trust of God would grow in ways that create an increasing stillness in our lives.  I pray that we would understand that times of wind and waves come but that they don’t last forever.  I pray that we would always look to God to calm the storms in our lives that keep us from reflecting Christ accurately.

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2016: Page 102

After a long and productive weekend, page 102 was back to a Monday routine.  The day began early with bathroom cleaning, sweeping floors, and taking out trash.  When I took the trash out in the pre-dawn twilight, a couple deer were standing just beyond the dumpster watching me as I came out of the building.  I stopped where I was and decided I would enjoy the moment more by watching them rather than going back in to get my camera and take the chance they would leave before I got back.  As I watched, another deer came from behind the garage and joined the first two . . . then another . . . and another . . . and another . . . and another until 7 deer gathered and slowly walked into the woods to disappear for the day.

Once the building was ready for the day, I continued my Monday routine by going before God in prayer to work on the prayer guide He would have me write for next week.  As I sat with God, I decided to go with the topic of kindness to follow up this week’s focus of self-control.  Just as God’s Spirit should be producing self-control in our life, it ought to be producing a kindness that the people around us would notice.  Once next week’s prayer guide was written, I spent the rest of the work day writing and doing follow-up from the weekend’s convention contacts.  When I got home my family and I headed down to Potato Creek where we got in a 3+ mile hike and photographed some of the beauty of God’s creation.

While there were a variety of wildflowers blooming, the first photo I took at the park today was of a dandelion blossom.  As I photographed that, several things went through my mind.  The first was a mental flash-back to my ag classes in high school a “few” years back.  In the class, a weed was defined as any plant growing where it wasn’t wanted or desired.  In other words, there wasn’t a set class of plants that were weeds and a set class that were not.  It all depends on the perspective of the person viewing the plant.  While most people, including myself, would view a dandelion as a weed if it were growing in their lawn, when I find it blooming along the trail in the woods it is no longer a weed but a wildflower in my eyes.  Then I thought about the parable Jesus taught about the weeds which were sown among the wheat.  The servants wanted to go in and pull out all the weeds while the crop was still growing.  The master would have none of that plan because it would result in wheat being pulled up along with the weeds.  The instruction was to leave the field be and at the harvest the master would have the weeds separated  from the wheat with the weeds being burned and the wheat being stored up in the master’s barn.

I pray that you and I would recognize the value of people who are different from us and realize that their value is not based on our differences but on the value we have because of our common Maker.  I pray that we would not be guilty of destroying part of God’s harvest by our desire to “weed” the place where we live.  I pray that we would always leave the “weeding” that needs done to God as He rightly determines where each person belongs when the final harvest is brought in.

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2016: Page 101

Well, I’ve made it past the 100 page mark in this page-a-day journey I began at the beginning of the year.  Page 101 has been a cold, dreary, rainy day outside that was made better by being a Sunday so it included Bible study and worship with my church family at Deer Run.  After lunch I spent some time relaxing, going through yesterday’s photos, and answering questions online about the cameras I use.

This morning’s sermon at Deer Run was from the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus states that you are the salt of the earth and the light of the world.  In the years I served as dean of the 5th & 6th grade camp weeks, I would alternate years using salt and and then light as the theme for the week.  We generally expect Jesus to be the salt and light that changes the world so it often comes as a surprise to learn He expects us to fill that role.  When we are immersed into Christ, He puts His Spirit within us so that we can be the salt and light that the world needs to experience.  We become the container through which God pours Himself out into the world so that people would come to know Him.  I know this because Jesus says that our light should shine in such a way that people glorify God because of our good works.  

As I went through the sunset photos I took at Lake Michigan yesterday, I was drawn to the light shining through the spray of water from the waves and reflecting off the surface.  I thought about the power of the waves as they crashed over the lighthouse piers.  I thought about the danger of being caught in the path of these waves as they wash over anything in their path.  Then I thought about the power of Jesus who commanded the waves to be still one night and the wind died down and the sea became calm.  It is this power that call us the salt of the earth and the light of the world.  Think about that if you doubt your ability to be salt and light.  The ability doesn’t reside with you, it comes from the One who speaks the word and calls you to be such.

I pray that you and I would live a life of worship that enhances the worship that takes place when we gather with other believers.  I pray that we would recognize our role as salt and light in the lives of the people around us.  I pray that we would be confident in God’s power to make us effective as salt and light through the word spoken by Jesus.  I pray that everything we do would bring glory to our Father who is in heaven.

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2106: Page 100

Page 100 was a full day which began with a snowy drive from the hotel to Great Lakes Christian College for the second day of the Michigan Christian Convention.  Once at the convention, the day was filled with great conversations about the prayer ministry and the resources God has gifted me to write.  When I packed up to head home, I had two empty boxes so I estimate about 150 books made it into the hands of people who would use them.  I stopped by Lake Michigan on the way home to catch the setting sun on a very cold evening.  The beauty that I was able to see and photograph was worth the cold fingers as the wind came off the lake.

As I worked on the timing to catch both lights on at the same time, I thought about the teaching that Ben Merold shared at the convention today.  In addressing the topic of “Church Relevant”, he addressed a growing trend where churches often sacrifice many important Biblical doctrines, and sometimes even the gospel itself, in order to pursue being relevant to the culture we live in.  He made a series of statements that he termed a paradox.  I’ve been chewing on these statements since I heard them and I believe they are worth your time and energy to chew on them as well.  He said the first century church was never relevant to the culture it existed in — in fact, it generally stood in complete opposition to the current culture of its time.  The second statement on relevance reflects what scripture teaches made the first century church attractive within the culture it operated in.  He said the first century church was always relevant to the needs of the people who lived in the culture it existed in.  

I fear that far too often church leaders have decided the church must look more like the culture so people will feel comfortable, all while neglecting the actual needs that people experience because of the culture of the world they live in.  Jesus said that the world would know we are His disciples, not by how much we look like the world but by how much we look like Him.  While the design and technology behind lighthouses has changed over time, the purpose has always been to make them as effective as possible in meeting the need of guiding ships away from danger and safely into the harbor.  The one thing a ship’s captain needs from a lighthouse is for it to function as it was designed to.  I’ve always appreciated, and been saddened by, the story told of life-saving stations along the coastline becoming clubs of comfort and prestige as they would do away with the tasks of going out on the water and saving lives from storm-tossed ships.  In an attempt to be relevant to the people living on land, they were no longer relevant to the needs of the people caught in the storms out on the water.  

I pray that you and I would constantly seek wisdom and direction from God in living the gospel in a way that is relevant to the needs of the people around us who are caught in the storms of life.  I pray that we would never lose sight of our calling and purpose to make disciples.  I pray that we would be more concerned about directing people away from danger and toward Christ than we are about blending in with the culture in a way that we are no longer noticed.

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2016: Page 99

If each day carries a predominant theme, then page 99 seemed to have the theme of “Bloom Where You’re Planted.”  After sleeping in longer than what I thought I might, I made the 2 1/2 hour drive to Lansing, Michigan to set up the Impact Prayer Ministry display at the Michigan Christian Convention.  When I arrived, I sat in on a session being taught by Ben Merold as I waited for a break to be able to set up the display.  It is interesting that at a convention with a theme of “Relevant”, Ben continues to teach material that I’ve heard him do for a lot of years yet it remains relevant because it continues to work.  For many, when they talk about the church no longer being relevant, they mean it no longer works for them.  God’s Word is always relevant because it works, but it only works in our favor if we apply it.  

At the first break I was able to set up my display and begin talking to people about the work God continues to do through the prayer ministry.  Then during the lunch break I had lunch with a Great Lakes student that was a part of the children’s ministry I led in my early years at Deer Run.  It was exciting to hear her enthusiasm for a mission trip she plans to take this summer and to listen to her pursuit of God being lived out.  The afternoon was filled with a lot of great conversations that were an encouragement to me and I pray were an encouragement to those I talked with and shared the prayer-based resources with.  

As the convention took a dinner break, I was still full from lunch so I grabbed my cameras and took a walk that was almost a 3 mile round-trip from the college to a nearby park.  There was a chill in the air and an occasional flurry of snow but I still managed to get some photos I liked.  With spring’s reluctance to show up, there were not a lot flowers showing color yet but there were patches of daffodils blooming at various places in the woods along the trail.  At the turnaround point of the trail was a small pond with ducks, gulls, and geese gliding across the water looking for bread that someone evidently had been feeding them.  As I walked back toward the college, my mind entered a period of darkness for some reason . . . or for no reason.  The inner questioning of what am I really doing returned and the enemy began to replant the seeds of doubt and despair that anything I do makes a difference anywhere.  It was as this battle was going on within my mind and spirit that I noticed the randomness of the daffodils.  They weren’t always in a place that made sense and they weren’t always in a place that was very noticeable.  Where they were didn’t seem to matter, they were simply doing what they were created to do and blooming where they were planted.  

When I returned to the convention, there were more conversations with people as they came in for the evening session/concert.  Then during the concert, Andrew Peterson talked about struggling with intense sadness for periods of time and finding how God would use memories from the midst of those struggles to form songs.  As he shared in song and testimony I felt that God wanted me to share with him so after the concert and after he had signed CD’s and books for people, I thanked him for his music and his testimony and gave him a copy of each of my poetic devotional books telling him that it was usually in the times of my greatest depression and discouragement that God would put poems in my mind that I wrote down and eventually put into books.  I don’t know if he will read them or even do anything with them, but I did what I believe God wanted me to do in sharing them.  God planted me in this place at this time so my faithful response is to do my part in blooming where I’m planted.

I pray that you and I would realize there is some type of work for us to do wherever we are.  I pray that even when the “work” God calls us to do is rest, that we would be obedient in doing it.  I pray that we would make the most of the opportunities to encourage the people around us.  I pray that we would allow God to use even the seasons of discouragement we face to cause us to listen more intently to Him.  I pray that we would do the things His Spirit prompts us to do even when they are outside of our comfort zone and may not make much sense to us.

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2016: Page 98

Page 98 has had a Friday feel to it as I finished preparing for this weekend’s Michigan Christian Convention.  A big part of the prep today was getting the building ready for Sunday which included my Friday cleaning.  But before that could happen, the day began with our fire alarm company in the building doing an annual inspection and testing of of our detection system.  The final report states that everything passed with no deficiencies in the system — a report I like to hear! 🙂  Once the inspections were taken care of I did some financial record-keeping for the church missions account and caught up on the latest newsletters from the missions Deer Run helps to support.  As I worked in the office snow would fall throughout the day, sometimes fairly light and sometimes quite heavily.  The sun fought to come out at times but always seemed to be overtaken by the snow clouds.  In the breaks between snow times, the wildlife would become active and try to brave the snow until it became heavy then they would disappear until the next clearing.

As I watched the bunnies, squirrels, and a variety of birds come and go, I thought about their persistence in both enjoying the day and finding shelter when needed.  At one point a pair of cardinals sat outside my window singing for me . . . or perhaps more likely, singing for each other.  I thought about how easily many of us tend to give up when circumstances are less than ideal.  Or maybe we don’t give up, perhaps we take the other extreme and stubbornly continue something when we ought to be seeking shelter and rest.  Perhaps we have difficulty singing in the calm because we have failed to take shelter within the hand of God during the storm.  Maybe we feel we have endured a storm one time too many so we have quit coming out to sing once the storm passes.  

God tells us that in this world we will have trouble but that we should be encouraged because He has overcome the world.  While they don’t seem to like to be out in it, the wildlife seem to come out and celebrate the snow as they drink in the moisture that it leaves behind.  Sometimes, particularly in the midst of it, we tend to forget how much the “inclement weather” in our life helps us to grow.  It is when we appreciate the growth process and the necessity of all that helps accomplish that, we are able to sing God’s praises for all that He is and all that He provides.

I pray that you and I would seek God at all times of our life.  I pray that we would look to God for the wisdom in knowing the things we need to endure and knowing when it is time to retreat into a season of rest.  I pray that we would learn to praise God for both the things He brings us to and the things He brings us through.  

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2016: Page 97

Page 97 began with flashes of lightning and the booming sounds of thunder as a storm rolled through early in the morning.  After being gone from work for two days, my morning felt like a Monday as I worked on my typical Monday tasks.  I know, most people dread Monday’s but I tend to enjoy them as that is my usual day to spend time with God working on the prayer guide for the following week.  As that task got shifted to today this week, it was a prayer guide focused on self-control that came out of my prayer time.  Once the prayer guide was written, I worked on some things in the building and started gathering the material, information, and books I will take to the Michigan Christian Convention for an Impact Prayer Ministry Display.  

After my work day I came home and continued going through the pictures I took during our little state park and covered bridge excursion.  It is difficult to go through 500 photos trying to pick out a handful of them to represent what we saw in order to share them on social media.  The photo I’ve included with today’s page is the first one I took when we arrived at McCormick’s Creek State Park late Sunday afternoon.  We had checked into our room and went out for a walk before dinner.  There was a loop trail marked “moderate” on the map that would pass by the waterfall and it began and ended near the lodge so we got out Susan’s trail wheelchair and started our hike.  With recent rains, the waterfall was beautiful so we spent some time there taking pictures before continuing down the trail.  It wasn’t long before the “moderate” trail became more rugged and Susan had to walk down some “steps” before continuing her ride.  The final set of steps we took led to the creek bed where we discovered that the creek bed itself was the trail for the next section.  The wheelchair wasn’t going to work on that so we turned around and went back to the lodge for dinner.  Our after-dinner “moderate” trail wasn’t a lot closer to my definition of moderate, but with Susan walking through some of the more rugged sections we made it through that entire trail.

Many times, people begin the Christian life thinking that the path ahead of them should be an easy walk.  When compared to a life of sin, the path taken by a Christian is often mistakenly believed to be a path of ease and comfort.  Unfortunately, many people become greatly disillusioned when their path of life changes from easy to moderate and then from moderate to rugged.  The blue skies, warm temperatures, and pleasant paths that we experience when the weight of our sins are washed away quickly change to cloudy skies, cool temperatures, and rocky paths.  And then there are times when the storms of life come and the walk becomes more rugged than we ever expected.  The problem, both in my hike at the park and in our Christian walk, is not that we’ve been misled but rather that we’ve not paid attention to the trail guide for either walk.  As I went back and read the information I picked up when we entered the park, the trail descriptions described steps, ravines, and the creek bed as all being part of the trails I chose to take.  The easy start to each trail wasn’t designed to fool me, it was simply a part of the ebb and flow of the park terrain.  When we read the Christian life “trail guide”, we find that God has made it clear that we will have trouble in this life.  Yes, there are times of peace and comfort but those aren’t designed to fool us into thinking the Christian life is easy rather they are designed to give us times of rest.  

The key to finishing the hike, whether the park hike or the Christian life, is to simply keep pressing on.  God’s call and expectation for each of us is that we would be found faithful — that when Jesus returns for us, we are still walking the path we’ve chosen in Christ.  I pray that you and I would enjoy the days when the path we walk is easy.  I pray that we would spend time with God in His Word so that we better understand the full nature of the path He has called us to.  I pray that we would be faithful in walking that path not only on the easy days, but on the moderate and rugged days as well.  I pray that when Jesus returns we would each hear those words, “Well done good and faithful servant!”

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2016: Page 96

Page 96 was the final day of our little spring break getaway and we covered a lot of territory.  Between Monday and Tuesday, we visited 4 Indiana State Parks and 15 different covered bridges spread across 5 counties.  While there were a lot of highlights that were photo worthy, the greatest highlight of the trip was just enjoying life together as a family.

We left McCormick’s Creek State Park this morning with partial addresses for the first 5 bridges we hoped to photograph.  When I started putting them into my GPS, many of the addresses were not valid or understood, so we enjoyed some beautiful countryside driving as we figured out where the next bridge would be.  My phone turned out to be more helpful as I could look up the bridge by name and then it would give me directions.  This worked well until we hit several areas where I had no cell service.  We still managed to find the five I had begun my list with and then went on to find six more today to go with the four we photographed yesterday.

The bridges were nice and I think I took some decent photos of them, but I find the natural beauty of creation draws my attention a lot more than even the incredible works of man.  Today the beauty of a cloud dotted blue sky and a variety of wildflowers called out to be noticed.  As we were driving to one of the bridges, an owl flew in front of the truck and landed on a tree along the road.  I managed one photo of him in the tree and one of him leaving as he wasn’t too thrilled about us stopping to take pictures.  My current favorite of the day is the flower I’ve added to this page.  It has such a remarkable purity and beauty and the contrast of the thin leaves helps to draw that out.  

As I think about the day, I think about a simpler time when people would accomplish great tasks without the availability of our modern equipment simply by working together.  These covered bridges served a need and many of them were built by farmers who harvested the timber from their land and got together to put a bridge across a creek so their task of getting places was easier.  I think that many times we don’t accomplish what we could and should because we don’t believe we have the proper equipment, skill set, resources, permission, you name it.  So instead of working together as God has called us to, we sit back and bemoan the fact that nothing gets done anymore like it used to.  God has created us to not only need Him, but to need one another.  He equips each of us with gifts, abilities, and resources that are only a part of what is needed to accomplish His purpose in our lives.  It is when we allow Him to combine what He’s given us with the things He has given others, that the body of Christ functions as it should.

I pray that you and I would recognize the beauty of a simple life that honors Christ.  I pray that we would make everything God has given us available back to Him to use with the gifts He has given others to accomplish the good works He desires for us to do.  I pray that the body of Christ would not only talk about being one, but that we would learn to work as one.

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