Labels

Showing posts with label Resilient. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resilient. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2023

The “New Monasticism” and God’s “Back Up” Plan - Purity 933



The “New Monasticism” and God’s “Back Up” Plan -   Purity 933

Purity 933 01/05/2023  Purity 933 Podcast

Purity 933 on YouTube: 



Good morning,

Today’s photo of a paddleboard following a sunshine pathway reflected on the waters of Portsmouth Harbor in the United Kingdom comes to us from a pastor friend who incorporates exercise, nature appreciation, and prayer for an immersive spiritual practice that involves body, mind, and spirit and who shared this view back in August of 2022.   

Well, It’s Thursday, and as is my habit I share this “water and sunshine pathway” as a visual representation of the pathway of Christian Discipleship and invite all who read or hear this message to take the true path less travelled by putting your faith in Jesus Christ and making the daily decision to follow Him and to make your life an all encompassing immersive expression of your faith.  

I took 10 hours of Tuesday to do a retreat in my home, fasting, praying, and absorbing John Eldredge’s book “Resilient” and am currently on day 2 of his One Minute Pause App’s program “30 days to Resilience” and am enjoying the process of renewing my intention to follow the Lord in all things as I unwittingly “took a break” my morning prayer routine during my recent holiday stay-cation.       

One of the nuggets of wisdom that Eldredge shared in “Resilient” was that the mistake that many people are making is trying to “figure out how to fit a little more God into their crowded lives” and he suggest that we do the opposite. We should start with God. We should center our lives on Him and work outward from there. He suggests that we call this reorientation the “new monasticism”.  

As someone who has had the intention to surrender to God’s will and has increasingly done so over the last 12 years, I can relate to this idea. After my divorce, I thought of and only half-jokingly referred to my place “down by the River” as “Monk House” because I decided that since my faith and decision to follow the Lord was a major factor in the dissolution of my marriage, I wasn’t going to waver in my commitment to the Lord and I was prepared to live the rest of my life alone.  I never dreamed that the Lord would bring a Christian woman into my life who would accept me and the way of life that I have chosen by following the Christian Disciple’s path.  

So what Eldredge calls the “new monasticism” is what I call the path of Christian Discipleship.  

In Resilient, Eldredge encourages his readers to “write a prescription” for their new God centered life, to imagine what your life would be like if you reoriented your life to follow your spiritual aspirations and to actually implement them.  

But Eldredge also recognizes the reality of life on earth and the necessity to deal with our responsibilities and suggest that whatever plan we decide to make to make our lives of faith an immersive experience, that we make them REALISTIC, a plan that we could implement that would not disrupt the needs to meet our responsibilities but that would change our “default responses” from “worldly” to Godly.  

So is this path all praying, fasting and Bible study?

No, although I believe I would be leading you astray if I didn’t say that traditional spiritual practices, such as prayer, bible study, worship, praise, thanksgiving, fasting, solitude, silence, meditation, service, and mission are not important. These practices are proven to be used by the Lord to transform our hearts and minds and cause us to know and love Him more.  

But there are the normal activities of life and the meeting of our physical needs and responsibilities that also to be met.  

One day a way from my 10 hour retreat, I was excited to consider the possibilities of what I could do with my evening hours as part of this new intention to use that time as a part of this “new monastic” lifestyle. 

But while certainly not perfectly spiritual, most of my evenings over the past year have already been dedicated to the things of God as I have had my schedule filled with different activities surrounding my overall “ministry” of encouragement, activities at my local church, and the volunteer work I do for Freedom in Christ ministries. My “dance card” was pretty much full in 2022 and I already see that the calendar is filling up for this year. 

The only shift that I will need to make is to make the wise decision to use the few days that are not full to find my rest and comfort in doing just that: resting. And when I feel the “need” for entertainment, to remind myself of how the things of God renew the mind and feed the soul where secular entertainment will either cause you to long for the things of this world or prove to be unsatisfying.  

But we have to keep our “prescription” to this “new monastic” life realistic.  We also have to take care of our responsibilities around work, family, and the maintenance of our home which really encompasses the spiritual practice of “good stewardship”. 

So even though I imagined absorbing more Christian teaching or entertainment, last night I felt the pressing need to “clean house” in terms of the data on my laptop.   Producing 394 blog posts and the audio and video files for the mt4christ247 podcast and YouTube Channel creates quite an archive of media and with the new year begun I decided to “back up” these data files to a hard drive to keep them but to free them from my laptop’s memory.  

So after dinner I sat down to clean house and it took my well beyond my normal bed time to “get ‘er” done. So much for rest, but it is finished and I am glad I completed what I thought as a responsibility, to attempt to keep things running smoothly for another year of encouragement, and to protect last years work from any unforeseen data disasters.   

But as I was doing it, I had to wonder why I was doing it.  My exposure to eastern mysticism,  Buddhism, in my past impressed upon me the idea of impermanence as that philosophy of suffering looked unblinkingly at the harsh reality that this world was passing away every moment. 

If we look at history, we see entire civilizations have passed away and only a few relics exist to tell us that they were even here. As much as large temples and ruins can tell us of the society’s existence and the artifacts can tell us who was ruling, what of the common people and their stories. Very little evidence exists to tell us about them. 

So I know this.  It is doubtful that even our descendant’s, our great great grandchildren will remember us.  And what if you don’t have kids? Is our keeping photos, mementos, family heirlooms, or data files all just pointless?   

In the natural world it very well may be pointless.  My harddrive will probably become obsolete or fail over time or just get tossed out in the trash at some future date. When we think of that and the impermanent nature of the world its depressing, tragic. 

But GOD… right?  HA Ha, Because of Christ, I’m gonna live forever, gonna live forever!

Yes, my keeping my files on a hard drive might prove to be a silly waste of time in the grand scheme of things but even though that “back-up” might fail me, God never will.  

The word of God indicates that Christians will live with the eternal one, forever. 

And as for our memories and “files”, God’s is omniscient – He knows everything, and while He won’t hold our sins against us, He remembers everything.  

So if we even get a small piece of God’s wisdom and omniscient nature in eternity, we could not only be blessed with “total recall” being able to remember all of the moments of our lives with a “photographic memory, we will also be blessed with the ability to know what was worth remembering. The things that we think are worthwhile or important now about our worldly lives and our pasts may prove to something that is best forgotten.

And that’s why we should embrace Eldredge’s suggestion to live a God centered life. God is the One that matters. His wisdom, His knowledge, His ways, and His love are the things that will carry on forever.

And so keep walking and talking with God, and try to let go of the things that will not last and pursue the One who will cause us to prosper and thrive for all eternity.   

Time is too short for me to share a Bible Verse from “The NLT Bible Promise Book for Men” but we will try to share one tomorrow. 

________________________________________

As always, I invite all to go to mt4christ.org where I always share insights from prominent Christian theologians and counselors to assist my brothers and sisters in Christ with their walk.

Today we continue sharing from A.W. Pink’s “The Sovereignty of God”

As always, I share this information for educational purposes and encourage all to purchase Bonhoeffer’s books for your own private study and to support his work.  This resource is available on many websites for less than $20.00.

THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD

By  ARTHUR W. PINK

CHAPTER ONE

GOD’S SOVEREIGNTY DEFINED, concludes

God is sovereign in the exercise of His grace. This of necessity, for grace is favor shown to the undeserving, yea, to the Hell-deserving. Grace is the antithesis of justice. Justice demands the impartial enforcement of law. Justice requires that each shall receive his legitimate due, neither more nor less. Justice bestows no favors and is no respecter of persons. Justice, as such, shows no pity and knows no mercy. But after justice has been fully satisfied, grace flows forth. Divine grace is not exercised at the expense of justice, but “grace reigns through righteousness” (Rom. 5:21), and if grace “reigns,” then is grace sovereign.

Grace has been defined as the unmerited favor of God*; and if unmerited, then none can claim it as their inalienable right. If grace is unearned and undeserved, then none are entitled to it. If grace is a gift, then none can demand it. Therefore, as salvation is by grace, the free gift of God, then He bestows it on whom He pleases. Because salvation is by grace, the very chief of sinners is not beyond the reach of Divine mercy. Because salvation is by grace, boasting is excluded and God gets all the glory.

The sovereign exercise of grace is illustrated on nearly every page of Scripture. The Gentiles are left to walk in their own ways while Israel becomes the covenant people of Jehovah. Ishmael the firstborn is cast out comparatively unblest, while Isaac the son of his parents’ old age is made the child of promise. Esau the generous-hearted and forgiving-spirited is denied the blessing, though he sought it carefully with tears, while the worm Jacob receives the inheritance and is fashioned into a vessel of honor. So in the New Testament. Divine truth is hidden from the wise and prudent, but is revealed to babes. The Pharisees and Sadducees are left to go their own way, while publicans and harlots are drawn by the cords of love.

In a remarkable manner Divine grace was exercised at the time of the Saviour’s birth. The incarnation of God’s Son was one of the greatest events in the history of the universe, and yet its actual occurrence was not made known to all mankind; instead, it was specially revealed to the Bethlehem shepherds and wise men of the East. And this was prophetic and indicative of the entire course of this dispensation, for even today Christ is not made known to all. It would have been an easy matter for God to have sent a company of angels to every nation and to have announced the birth of His Son. But He did not. God could have readily attracted the attention of all mankind to the “star;” but He did not. Why? Because God is sovereign and dispenses His favors as He pleases. Note particularly the two classes to whom the birth of the Saviour was made known, namely, the most unlikely classes—illiterate shepherds and heathen from a far country. No angel stood before the Sanhedrin and announced the advent of Israel’s Messiah! No “star” appeared unto the scribes and lawyers as they, in their pride and self-righteousness, searched the Scriptures! They searched diligently to find out where He should be born, and yet it was not made known to them when He was actually come. What a display of Divine sovereignty—the illiterate shepherds singled out for peculiar honor, and the learned and eminent passed by! And why was the birth of the Saviour revealed to these foreigners, and not to those in whose midst He was born? See in this a wonderful foreshadowing of God’s dealings with our race throughout the entire Christian dispensation—sovereign in the exercise of His grace, bestowing His favors on whom He pleases, often on the most unlikely and unworthy.[1]

---------------------------more tomorrow------------------------

Join our “Victory over the Darkness”, “The Bondage Breaker”, "Freedom in Christ" series of Discipleship Classes via the mt4christ247 podcast!

at https://mt4christ247.podbean.com, You can also find it on Apple podcasts

(https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-mt4christ247s-podcast/id1551615154). The mt4christ247 podcast is also available on Google Podcasts, Amazon Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartradio, and Audible.com. 

These teachings are also available on the MT4Christ247 You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@MT4Christ247

Email me at mt4christ247@gmail.com to receive the class materials, share your progress, and to be encouraged.

My wife, TammyLyn, also offers Christian encouragement via her Facebook Group: Ask, Seek, Knock (https://www.facebook.com/groups/529047851449098 ) and her podcast Ask, Seek, and Knock on Podbean (https://feed.podbean.com/tammalyn78/feed.xml)

“The views, opinions, and commentary of this publication are those of the author, M.T. Clark, only, and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of any of the photographers, artists, ministries, or other authors of the other works that may be included in this publication, and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of any entities the author may represent.”

Encouragement for the Path of Christian Discipleship



[1] Arthur W. Pink, The Sovereignty of God (Swengel, PA: Bible Truth Depot, 1949), 32–33.

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Becoming Resilient - Purity 932


Becoming Resilient -   Purity 932

Purity 932 01/04/2023 Purity 932 Podcast

Purity 932 on YouTube: 



Good morning,

Today’s photo of a waterfall over a large outcropping of rock with trees drawing close to get a drink, under blue skies comes to us from Fred Dimmick who captured this view on January 1st during his new Years day visit to Cliffside Lake in Highland NC. 

Being unfamiliar with the lay of the land around Cliffside Lake, its hard to say but based on the other photos Fred shared of his trip, it looks to me that Fred may have had to “climb down into it” to get this shot but whether it required much or little effort to capture it, I appreciate it, and thought it was a good visual representation of arriving at the first “hump day” of the new year as I am finally returning to work after an extended Christmas stay-cation and for me it not only feels like I am going up hill but it feels like there is some rushing resistance to going in and resuming my regular work responsibilities. 

Well, it’s Wednesday, and due to my vacation and some creative scheduling at work it feels like a Monday because I have had a few irrational thoughts and temptations to “not go in”.  The flesh or the devil was suggesting I extend my vacation, call in sick, or just quit to remain in the peace of “doing nothing”.   

But while God has given us free will to choose our path, I know that any efforts to “feel good again” or “to be happy” that only involve creating pleasant circumstances and that ignores logic and our responsibilities is either selfish or the schemes of the enemy and will usually lead to feelings of dissatisfaction if not out right negative consequences.     

Sure I could call in sick, but I’m not sick, that would be a lie. So we can’t or shouldn’t do that. Once we start living a lie, we open the door the enemy and disrupt our harmony with God. Disciples of Jesus follow the “Truth”, The Way, and The Life, Lying and living dishonestly is the polar opposite of the way we should go and not only goes against the word of God, it is in direct opposition of who we are in Christ.  It’s not only denying God’s word, lying and being dishonest denies our identity as adopted children of God’s royal family. It is behavior most unbecoming for children of the King, and it leads to trouble. So let’s not do that. 

Sure I could use up more vacation time, but should I?  I don’t think so.  The truth is I think I have had too much time off and unfortunately because I was in “vacation mode” I unwittingly took a vacation from one of the core disciplines of my daily spiritual practice which I believe was a big reason or at least a contributing factor of why I seemed to abandon my senses and over indulged in sweets and foods that I know that pack on the pounds. 

So this morning as much as the flesh and the devil tried to convince me to “take one more day” or to “just quit!”, I am going back to work, in more ways than one.  Not only am I going back to my “day job”, I have already returned to my senses in terms of the foods I will consume and have started the practice that I allowed to go by the wayside over the last week.  

Yesterday, I realize hadn’t been praying in the mornings like I normally do.  At my countryside home my “prayer closet” is literally that – a closet – and while TammyLyn has made space for me there with a desk and enough space to pray because the set up is different than my place down by the River, I let my morning prayers slip.  

What’s so important about morning prayer? 

Well, besides drawing close to God to thank Him for all that He does, my morning prayers also include a “stronghold buster” that sets my intention to be mindful of my health goals.  So during my vacation, while I did manage to exercise in the cramped confines of the living room, I failed to pray like I normally do and would just go straight to Bible Study and blogging.  The technological limitations of countryside made the overall process slower so even though I didn’t pray, I ended up finishing around the same time or much later that I normally do while at my place in Stuyvesant.  So I quickly adapted to not praying and didn’t even realize I wasn’t doing it and the consequences of not setting my intention to “break that stronghold” resulted in compromise. 

So yesterday, I was highly convicted about this “vacation” and decided to repent and resume my prayer life and to take the last day of my time off to do a mini retreat in my home.  I spent the work day hours yesterday in my room fasting, praying, and reading/listening to John Eldredge’s “Resilient”. 

I have his book on Kindle and Audible so after I uploaded yesterday’s blog and podcast, I shut off my phone and started listening and reading through “Resilient”, highlighting the key points in the text on Kindle while I listened to Eldredge read through his work on Audible.  

The audiobook is actually an extended edition of the book and includes Eldredge leading you through the “skills” at the end of each chapter and in other places in later in the book.  The “skills” are guided prayer/meditation sessions that draw you closer to the Lord.  Eldredge has developed an App. “One Minute Pause” that you can download for free and use to make these “skills” a part of your faith walk.  The App even includes a free program of these “skills”, “30 days to Resilient”, where you can build your capacities of mental and emotional resilience through your faith with morning and evening “pauses”. 

So as I read through, highlighted, and listened to Resilient, I also “paused” at each “skills” session to go through the guided prayers/meditations.  I started the “retreat” around 6:30 am and even though the audiobook is only 6 hours and 41 minutes long, I didn’t finish the book and the “retreat” until 4:30pm or so.  So I spent the whole day, about 10 hours, just being fed some really good teaching based on God’s word and in prayer. I only took a few breaks to fill my water bottle and to use the bathroom and did a 20 minute cardio session as I drew close to the end. Chapter 9 is a longer chapter and Eldredge in his audio book suggests taking a break midway through and I took his advice. 

So how was it? 

It was quite the experience. I highly recommend “Resilient” and would encourage everyone listening or reading this message to go out and get it.  I am so on board with the “skills” that I learned that I downloaded the “One Minute Pause” App and started the “30 days to Resilient” this morning.  

While I would still recommend Dr. Neil Anderson’s “Victory Over the Darkness, Bondage Breaker, Freedom in Christ – The Steps to Freedom in Christ” for anyone new to the path of Christian Discipleship to learn the paradigm shifting truths of the reality of the spiritual forces of darkness, who we are in Christ and to establish our freedom in Christ by going through “The Steps” first.  I would recommend “Resilient” and suggest that it’s “skills” should be experienced and be considered for possible integration for one’s spiritual practice.  

While I am new to the material and realize that every Christian path is different, I would say that “Resilient” needs to become part of the library of anyone who is serious about following the Lord.  While the skills – prayerful – meditations – may not be for everybody, your free to choose that for yourselves, the material in the book, which addresses the trauma of the Covid-19 pandemic and the possible dangers that face the body of Christ in its wake, makes “Resilient” more than worthy for purchase.  Simply stated, I believe “Resilient” is necessary reading for the church in the 21st century.    

As compelling t\as he implications that our recent and current events may mean in terms of prophecy and the return of Jesus Christ, Eldredge’s book should be read simply because of the fundamental truths it contains regarding the ability for the Lord to empower us and to make us resilient in these days and times.   

So its back to work and back to reality, but I go back with a renewed sense of hope and the assurance that the path of Christian Disciple is the way to go.   In these days and times we need to be “resilient” – to be able to withstand and recover quickly from difficult conditions – and when we keep walking and talking with God we receive the strength, guidance, and love to be just that. 

  ----------------------------------------------

Today’s Bible verse comes to us from “The NLT Bible Promise Book for Men”.

This morning’s meditation verses are:

2 Timothy 2:3-4 (NLT2)
3  Endure suffering along with me, as a good soldier of Christ Jesus.
4  Soldiers don’t get tied up in the affairs of civilian life, for then they cannot please the officer who enlisted them.

Today’s verses encourage us to endure suffering as a good Christian soldier and indicates that we shouldn’t get tied up in the concerns of this world but seek to please the One who enlisted us.

Yup, we’re in the army now, Christian soldiers,  but before you look to put a “whippin’” on somebody realize that our battles involve enemies that are not flesh and blood and that most of the fighting we will have to do will be on the battlegrounds of our hearts and minds.  

And the Apostle Paul “gets it”. He knows that resisting the flesh, the enemy, and this world system isn’t easy. It will involve suffering that simply we will have to endure. 

The world will increasingly hate us for following Christ but even though the world will reject you, keep in mind that this world is temporary and we have been “drafted” into an eternal kingdom by the highest authority and power that exists, God.  So listen to Paul and don’t get “tied up in the affairs of civilian life” and seek only to march to God’s calling and to please Him.    

___________________________________________

As always, I invite all to go to mt4christ.org where I always share insights from prominent Christian theologians and counselors to assist my brothers and sisters in Christ with their walk.

Today we continue sharing from A.W. Pink’s “The Sovereignty of God”

As always, I share this information for educational purposes and encourage all to purchase Bonhoeffer’s books for your own private study and to support his work.  This resource is available on many websites for less than $20.00.

THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD

By  ARTHUR W. PINK

CHAPTER ONE

GOD’S SOVEREIGNTY DEFINED, continues

God is sovereign in the exercise of His love. Ah! that is a hard saying, who then can receive it? It is written, “A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven” (John 3:27). When we say that God is sovereign in the exercise of His love, we mean that He loves whom He chooses. God does not love everybody*; if He did, He would love the Devil. Why does not God love the Devil? Because there is nothing in him to love; because there is nothing in him to attract the heart of God. Nor is there anything to attract God’s love in any of the fallen sons of Adam, for all of them are, by nature, “children of wrath” (Eph. 2:3). If then there is nothing in any member of the human race to attract God’s love, and if, notwithstanding, He does love some, then it necessarily follows that the cause of His love must be found in Himself, which is only another way of saying that the exercise of God’s love towards the fallen sons of men is according to His own good pleasure†.

In the final analysis, the exercise of God’s love must be traced back to His sovereignty or, otherwise, He would love by rule; and if He loved by rule, then is He under a law of love, and if He is under a law of love then is He not supreme, but is Himself ruled by law. “But,” it may be asked, “Surely you do not deny that God loves the entire human family?” We reply, it is written, “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated” (Rom. 9:13). If then God loved Jacob and hated Esau, and that before they were born or had done either good or evil, then the reason for His love was not in them, but in Himself.

That the exercise of God’s love is according to His own sovereign pleasure is also clear from the language of Eph. 1:3–5, where we read, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ: According as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him. In love having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself according to the good pleasure of His will.” It was “in love” that God the Father predestined His chosen ones unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself, “according”—according to what? According to some excellency He discovered in them? No. What then? According to what He foresaw they would become? No; mark carefully the inspired answer—“According to the good pleasure of His will.”[1]

---------------------------more tomorrow------------------------

Join our “Victory over the Darkness”, “The Bondage Breaker”, "Freedom in Christ" series of Discipleship Classes via the mt4christ247 podcast!

at https://mt4christ247.podbean.com, You can also find it on Apple podcasts

(https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-mt4christ247s-podcast/id1551615154). The mt4christ247 podcast is also available on Google Podcasts, Amazon Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartradio, and Audible.com. 

These teachings are also available on the MT4Christ247 You Tube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@MT4Christ247

Email me at mt4christ247@gmail.com to receive the class materials, share your progress, and to be encouraged.

My wife, TammyLyn, also offers Christian encouragement via her Facebook Group: Ask, Seek, Knock (https://www.facebook.com/groups/529047851449098 ) and her podcast Ask, Seek, and Knock on Podbean (https://feed.podbean.com/tammalyn78/feed.xml)

“The views, opinions, and commentary of this publication are those of the author, M.T. Clark, only, and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of any of the photographers, artists, ministries, or other authors of the other works that may be included in this publication, and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of any entities the author may represent.”

Encouragement for the Path of Christian Discipleship

 



[1] Arthur W. Pink, The Sovereignty of God (Swengel, PA: Bible Truth Depot, 1949), 30–31.