David C. Hughes, Writer

“For the LORD your God will bless you in all your harvest and in all the work of your hands, and your JOY will be complete." –Deuteronomy 16:15

Archive for the tag “Jesus”

God’s Favorite (2014-12-04 Daily)

Mom always liked you best!

–Tommy Smothers

 

I drove the Chevy Traverse east on Airport Freeway through the mid-cities between Dallas and Fort Worth, trying my darndest to keep the big SUV between the lines and doing my best to keep my mama calm.  Light rain exercised the windshield wipers and the brake lights glaring through the streaked glass exercised our patience; we’d left Aledo three hours before Mom and Dad’s flight was scheduled to depart, but the construction, the rain, and the stop-and-go traffic ramped up my mother’s nervousness.  “When will we get out of this?” she asked.

“When we get to airport entrance,” I replied.  I prayed for God to keep us safe while I drove, and also that we’d arrive at the airport in plenty of time for my 73-year-old mom and my 72-year-old dad to make it through security and to their gate without a glitch.  I’d driven to DFW Airport hundreds of times, and I felt confident we’d arrive safely, with time to spare.

After an hour, the traffic opened up like Moses parting the Red Sea, and I accelerated from 20 to 65 and held it there until we approached the toll gates at the airport entrance.  I parked the Traverse and held the umbrella over my mom’s head as we crossed the access road and headed into the terminal.  We embraced, said our “I love you’s” and good-byes, and I watched as Mom and Dad stripped off their coats, removed their liquids and gels, and pushed their trays along the stainless steel conveyor to the x-ray machines.  Being over 65, they didn’t have to take off their shoes.  Thank God for small favors.  They soon merged with the crowd working its way through the security gate, and when I was sure they’d cleared the TSA checkpoint, I hustled back to the car.

The moment I walked through the glass door onto the access road, I saw that, even though it was still raining, the sun was doing its best to push aside the rolling purple clouds and declare its dominance over the morning.  I couldn’t help but smile.  I hurried to the car, texted Mary to let her know I was leaving the airport, and nudged the Traverse back onto DFW’s main access road toward the toll booths.  Three dollars poorer, I emerged from the airport and started for home as the dark clouds wrestled to regain ground lost to the sunshine.

As I followed the exit road from DFW onto Texas 183, I reflected on the days we’d gotten to spend with my parents and my sister as they helped celebrate my 50th birthday party; their presence had put the icing on the cake!  A bit melancholy, I blended into the light traffic as the sun again reasserted itself.  And suddenly I found myself driving through the arch of a rainbow stretching from one side of the highway to the other, bright, thick, brilliant, complete, an Old Testament promise proclaiming itself to a New Testament world.  I could see where both ends kissed the ground, and it was ethereal as the rainbow’s feet slid along the edges of the highway at the same speed as the SUV.  And I choked up.  “Thank you, Jesus,” I cried.  “Thank you.”

In that moment I knew God was assuring me that my parents’ passage back home to Virginia would be safe and peaceful, that my drive would be covered with His Grace, that all was well and would continue to be well, no matter what.  In that instant I felt God’s love, palpable, viable, oh-so-real reach through the windshield in that rainbow’s ROYGBIV, grab me up, and smother kisses all over my face.  And I couldn’t help but think about the times my wife has told me “You’re God’s favorite.  He loves you; He always answers your prayers.”  But you know what?  God has no favorites.  He doesn’t!  He smothers kisses on each and every one of us.  He paints the sky with rainbows, whispers sweet “I love you’s” in our ears, holds our hands, even sings to us!  All He asks is that our hearts, our minds, our souls receive that love and reflect it back to the world and light the Way for the lost.  Like any good Daddy, all He wants is for us to notice His gifts, acknowledge the Giver, and know He is God.

I’d prayed that my family’s flights to Texas would be uneventful.  They’d left Roanoke, Virginia under clear skies, and they’d arrived at DFW Airport early.  Thank You, Jesus.  I’d prayed for good weather for my birthday party as more than 75 folks had RSVP’d affirmative, and Friday, March 21, 2014, the day of my party, had dawned clear, and the temperature had risen to near 80 degrees under sunlit skies.  Temperatures the rest of the weekend remained in the 50’s and 60’s, with off-and-on rain and a stout wind.  Thank You, Jesus.  I’d prayed for a safe return for my sister as she flew back home to be with her family, and she arrived without incident.  Thank You, Jesus.  And I’d prayed for a safe drive, an on-time arrival at DFW, and a safe trip back to Roanoke, Virginia for my parents; we arrived, they arrived.  Thank You, Jesus.

“A new command I give you,” Jesus told His disciples during the Last Supper.  “Love one another.  As I have loved you, so you must love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (John 13:34-35 NIV®).  As I have love you, Jesus said.  As I LOVE you.  I recently saw a post on Facebook, an excerpt from Jefferson Bethke’s book Jesus>Religion:

 

“I was just lying there, swimming in my own shame and guilt, when this still, small voice whispered into the depths of my soul:

I love you.

I desire you.

I delight in you.

I saw you were going to do that before I went to the cross, and I still went.”

 

He LOVES you more than you can even fathom.  He DESIRES you more than you’ll ever know.  He DELIGHTS in you more than you can even imagine.  And He gave His very life for you so that you can fathom, so that you can know, and so that you can imagine.  “He will take great delight in you,” wrote the prophet Zephaniah, “in his love he will no longer rebuke you, but will rejoice over you with singing” (Zephaniah 3:17b NIV).  He’s singing over you right now.  Right now!  You can’t tell me you’re not your Daddy’s favorite . . . .

 

Copyright ©2014 by David C. Hughes

 

The Epiphany of Joy, Chapter 15: Joy in a Person (3 of 3)

“Fast-forward a couple of years,” continued Kayla McMillan, “and this is where my joy really started.  For several years I was in depression and nobody knew it.   I had my first boyfriend and he cheated on me and it was one of those ‘Oh my gosh, nobody’s gonna like me now’ moments.  After him, it just kind of crumbled, and I asked ‘God, do You even care about me?’  I remember several times asking Him, ‘Why am I here? I’m on this planet to do nothing.  What am I supposed to do right now?  I don’t care about anything, I have no hope.’  There was no hope for me.”

But the Lord soon answered her questions very dramatically.  One day, as she drove to school, she saw a spider on the windshield of her truck.  “I used my windshield wipers to get it off and it flew to the driver’s side.  I rolled down the window, grabbed a water bottle, and hit it, and as I hit it I swerved.  I was looking down for some reason, when all of a sudden I heard ‘Look up!’  And I thought, Okay, it’s just me in the car, but He goes, ‘Look up, look up, look up!’ and I looked up, but it was too late.  I hit the guardrail, broke it completely off.”  She had crossed onto a bridge the moment she swerved, and as she punched through the guardrail, missing both a tree and a sign, she threw her arm across her face and thought, This is it. This is it.  This is where I die.  I’m coming to see Jesus.  This is it.  “I flipped and I ended up upside down.  I opened my eyes—it felt like hours later—but I opened my eyes right after and I thought, What’s going on right now? and there was smoke everywhere.”  She realized that, miraculously, she was okay.  She grabbed her phone and crawled out through the driver’s side window, now collapsed to half its original height from the six-foot drop.

A neighbor had heard the crash and called 9-1-1 as he hustled to the scene.  When he arrived he asked Kayla is she was okay, and as the reality of the moment came rushing in, she started crying.  The man advised her to call her parents, and on the fifth try her dad answered.  Because she was so distraught, Kayla handed the phone to the neighbor, who explained what had happened.  He told him to meet her at the hospital.

Soon the ambulance arrived.  “I was sitting on the edge of the bridge where the guardrail was gone,” Kayla said, “and looking at all my stuff spread out everywhere. I was all muddy and blood was everywhere, and they walked up to me and said ‘What are you doing?’ and I said, ‘What do you mean?’ and he said ‘You should not be there—you should be in there.’”  The emergency worker pointed at the mangled truck lying upside down in the creek bed.  At that instant her neck started hurting, so they put her in a neck brace, loaded her into the ambulance, and rushed her to the hospital.

“They got all the monitors hooked up and they took X-rays, and I found out I had no broken bones, no kidney damage—everything was intact.  Everything.”  The neck pain, she learned later, had been caused by the stress of the situation; she had been hunching her shoulders to the point of pain.  And the doctors told her that if she hadn’t flung her arm across her face as she plunged off the bridge, she would’ve ended up with a mangled face because of the flying glass.

“I had a bruise and it went away the next day.  I hit my knee against the wheel and my hip against the dashboard, so I had a little bit of tenderness, but no scar.  I went home and I was just kind of lying there and I heard God clearly say, ‘Do you see it now?  You’re not done.  There’s a reason why you’re here.  I have more for you.  I could’ve taken you, but I decided not to because I have more for you.’  I said, ‘Okay,’ and from then on I knew this was my turnaround.  That was the climax.  I need to live every day like He’s called me to, and I said, ‘I’m not gonna be depressed anymore, there’s a reason why I’m here, and I’m gonna go do what He’s called me to.’”

Since then she’s shed her depression, clothed herself in God’s mercy, and allowed Him to transform her into a living, breathing expression of the fruit of the Holy Spirit.  “I just want to give other people hope—don’t give up on yourself,” she said.  “Don’t let the enemy steal your joy.  I know the end of the story, so why get defeated?  He’s been defeated, so why do we still let him defeat us?”

With folks like Jason, Amy, and Kayla, who so readily demonstrate what it means to live joy moment-by-moment, the answer to that question is: we don’t have to.  “You are the light of the world,” Jesus said.  “A town built on a hill cannot be hidden.  Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl.  Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:14-16 NIV®).  Indeed, each of us is called to be a light for others to glorify God and to be examples of His grace, mercy, power, love.  And joy.

 

Copyright © 2014 by David C. Hughes

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