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 “Religion and Spirituality”

Just for Fun (2015-09-02 Daily)

I take myself way too seriously . . . .  Even though our family’s motto is “Live. Laugh. Love,” and our catch phrase is “Have fun,” it seems lately I’ve laid aside my wardrobe of mirth and frivolity and donned a straitjacket fashioned from the chainmail of solemnity. Okay, okay, dramatic overwriting aside, it appears I’ve lost touch with my inner child. While he’s out playing in the dirt somewhere, or catching toads, or throwing rocks at sparrows, the outer adult has allowed himself to be caught up in the rigidity, busyness, and gravity of the world. But what did King David say? “Through the praise of children and infants / you have established a stronghold against your enemies, / to silence the foe and the avenger” (Psalm 8:2 NIV®). And Jesus scolded the disciples when they tried to keep the people from bringing kids to Him so He could pray over them. “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them,” He said, “for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these” (Matthew 19:14 NIV®).

So what is it about the praise of children that so effectively establishes that stronghold against the enemy? Why did Jesus say “the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these?” Children trust absolutely, yes. They laugh and romp and play, of course. But I think the real key to the kingdom is the undiminished joy of living life moment-by-moment. Joie de vivre as they say in Quebec! Or in New Orleans, Laissez les bon temps roulez! Laughter is the praise of children, and who can remain down and out when that glee pierces your heart and puts life back into proper perspective?

For years after Hannah was born I made a concerted effort to allow myself to be a kid again. I reveled in making up silly songs, loved reading kids picture books (even without Hannah being present), and looked forward to weaving brand new stories during car rides. I got down on the floor and built towns out of Lincoln Logs and skyscrapers out of Legos. We made up knock-knock jokes and corny riddles that caused Mary to snort. But over the past several months it seems my sense of fun’s been sidelined by an overdose of worldly cares, from money woes to anger about the Government’s implementation of asinine public policies to nervousness about terrorism. These petty worries have piled onto my jollity and executed an immaculate Pumphandle Powerslam. But I’m never down for the count.

While I salivated after taking delivery of my 10,000W gas powered generator, Hannah drooled over the box it came in. “Dad, can you open the box now so I can have it?” she asked. Over and over and over again. When I finally got to it, Hannah hovered around me like a fruit fly buzzing around a glass of wine.

“I may have to cut open one of the sides,” I cautioned. “The generator’s too heavy to lift out.” She whimpered a bit but watched with restrained anticipation as I popped the lid and sliced the corners of the crate.

“Wow! It’s a garage!” she exclaimed.

After I slid the 240 pound machine out of the carton and off the pallet, I carried her “garage” into the house and sicked her on it. She spent hours—no, days!—creating forts and hidey holes and various secret dwelling places with that box. Using additional material newly arrived from a furniture delivery, she built a porte cochère and tried to build a covered hallway. She even invented a lock for her door by weaving a piece of nylon rope through four holes, two on one flap, two on the other. “Try to open my door,” she called from inside her secret hideout. I grabbed the rope but the door wouldn’t open. “Now try it,” she said. I tugged the lock and the doors swung open.  She giggled in delight.

Joy, Forts

One bright cool morning I stepped onto the back porch to breathe in God’s glory and found Hannah crouched under the prickly pear, building a contraption out of cardboard and bamboo skewers. “Look at my fire pit, Dad!” she called, smiling big. “We can toast marshmallows over it when I get it done.” I told her the whole fire pit would burn up if we tried to light a fire on it, but she continued building, undeterred. Later she constructed a fort out of cholla cactus sticks, three porch chairs, and two beach towels, and spent another hour trying to coax our border collie to hang out in there with her.

Joy, Forts

Observing Hannah play opened my eyes to just how far I’d let myself drift away from joy’s center, how danged serious and depressed I’d become over the past few months. Her intensity and focus on the moment—not a millisecond before it or after it—reminded me of an experience I’d had sitting on a hard plastic bench at the mall. While Mary shopped, I parked my butt in the kids’ corral and watched Hannah, shoeless, laughing, and squealing, romp around on the squishy foam playground. Hannah and the other kids frolicked unabashed, unashamed, not caring a wit about what other people thought about them, they were just little bundles of pure joy experiencing each moment immersed in their interaction and imagination. They worshiped God by being what He created them to be—His children.

King David wrote, in Psalm 16:5-11 (NIV ®):

 

Lord, you alone are my portion and my cup;

    you make my lot secure.

The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places;

    surely I have a delightful inheritance.

I will praise the Lord, who counsels me;

    even at night my heart instructs me.

I keep my eyes always on the Lord.

    With him at my right hand, I will not be shaken.

Therefore my heart is glad and my tongue rejoices;

    my body also will rest secure,

because you will not abandon me to the realm of the dead,

    nor will you let your faithful one see decay.

You make known to me the path of life;

    you will fill me with joy in your presence,

    with eternal pleasures at your right hand.

 

Eternal pleasures are derived by keeping ourselves centered in God’s holy presence and living life moment-by-moment, as children do. We give Him the glory and He rains down His gladness. We immerse ourselves in His reality and He never leaves our side. We praise Him and His sovereignty and He smacks the enemy upside the head. “This day is holy to our Lord,” said Nehemiah. “Do not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10b NIV®). Now where’d that inner child run off to? I’ve got a rubber band, a paper wad, and a toilet paper tube. Wonder what kind of trouble we can get into this time . . . .

Joy, Angel

 

 

Copyright © 2015 by David C Hughes

God’s Will (2015-08-07 Daily)

For each one of us, there is only one thing necessary: to fulfill our own destiny, according to God’s will, to be what God wants us to be.

–Thomas Merton, No Man Is an Island

 

The will of God is not something you add to your life. It’s a course you choose. You either line yourself up with the Son of God . . . or you capitulate to the principle which governs the rest of the world.

–Elisabeth Elliot

 

 

For decades I struggled with the oft-asked question, “What is God’s will for me?” More than thirty years ago God planted a seed in my heart. He gave me the desire, the talent and the ability, patted me on the back, and said, “Go forth and write.” But fear scared me off. Big time. Over those three decades I struggled with embracing His will and chose instead to run after the desires of the world in the hope of “eventually” living out His plan . . . and ended up miserable. I had sold my soul to the demon of financial security and allowed it to take over virtually every aspect of my life. I served Mammon and ended up wondering why I trudged through life like a depressed Pig Pen from the Peanuts comic strip, surrounded by a great cloud of angst and despair.

I knew what God’s will was, I knew what He’d crafted me for, but I chose to conform myself to the pattern of this world . . . and wondered why I was so conflicted. I was the double-minded person James wrote about in James 1:8, unstable in everything I did. Quite frankly, I did it all in the name of God’s will, hoping to accumulate enough money in my striving to one day retire and finally live out His intended path for me. Problem was, I’d grown weary, sick, unmotivated, and lazy.

But God, in His faithfulness, had a way of reminding me He had much bigger plans for my life: just when I thought I’d retire with more than a million dollars, the stock market went bust. Five times. Just when I thought I deserved a bigger raise at work, I received a below-average bump-up. Just when I thought I’d received enough below-average bump-ups, I got yet another one to drive the point home. And just when I thought it was time our company went after a new military aircraft project, the government put the kibosh on spending.

Don’t get me wrong, God was not the One Who made me weary, sick, unmotivated, and lazy. No, it was me, my pride, and my belief I could do it all on my own. After all, I’m a true-blooded American, for whom “rugged individualism” is a birthright. Only it doesn’t work that way in God’s Kingdom. When I finally woke up, trusted His Word and His promises of provision, and jumped off the cliff of security into the brilliance of God’s arms . . . everything clicked into place. . . and here I am, living out His will as a writer under the covering of the Great I AM.

And the money I’d fretted and worried and agonized over for all those years? God redeemed it. It took a while, but He convinced me to let it go and use it to finance the alignment of my life with His will. “I was young and now I am old,/” King David wrote in Psalm 37, “yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken / or their children begging bread” (Psalm 37:25 NIV®). I had to finally quit relying on my own understanding and trust God fully. I have to admit, though: countless times since taking that leap I’ve whined to God about future provision. “I’ve given you provision,” He gently reminds me. “Your 401K is that provision.” Like manna in the desert.

Maybe I was lucky, knowing God’s will from the outset, but when you know something but don’t act on it out of fear, it’s worse than keeping your head buried in the sand. Ignorance is bliss, the old saying goes. I can vouch for that. Knowledge is power, but not acting on that knowledge when it aligns with God’s will can become hell on earth, pure and simple. But what, exactly, is God’s will? And how do you discover what His will is for you?

Let me begin by asking it this way: What is the desire of your heart? Chances are the desire of your heart is His will for you. After all, He’s the One Who planted it there. God doesn’t dish out dreams, desires and talent and expect us to squander it on false living or earthly wants. He expects us to search for it, recognize it and move out on it for His glory and our pleasure. Jesus said it clearly in the Gospel of John: “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10 NIV®). He wants us to spit in the devil’s face (the “thief”) and live fully alive!

Carve this into your heart: God made us for His glory, and His will motivates us to please Him in all we do. “Give to the LORD, O families of the peoples,” King David sang after the Ark of the Covenant was placed in the tabernacle. “Give to the LORD glory and strength. Give to the LORD the glory due His name; Bring an offering, and come before Him” (1 Chronicles 16:28-29 NKJV). And in Psalm 147:11 (NKJV), the psalmist wrote, “The LORD takes pleasure in those who fear Him, / In those who hope in His mercy.” Our only purpose in life, our only pleasure, is to love God and love others; all else is vanity, as the Preacher of Ecclesiastes pointed out.

“All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be,” King David wrote in Psalm 139 (verse 16 NIV®). God fashioned us to produce good works ordained even before we were born. As such, God planted His will in us from the start, and our purpose is to discover that will and align our lives with it. “For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works,” the apostle Paul declared to the church in Ephesus, “which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:10 NIV®).

So in this you can be sure: God does indeed have a purpose for your life, planted in your heart and firmed up before you even took your first breath. But how do you find it? The apostle Paul explained how to test and approve God’s will in Romans 12:1-2 (NIV®): “Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God–this is your true and proper worship. Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is–his good, pleasing and perfect will.”

In other words, give your life over to God by making an earnest commitment to live for Him and no longer for yourself (yes, this is hard!). Then dive into God’s word, reorienting yourself to His truth and allowing Him to replace the lies the enemy has planted in your mind with His infallible truth. Once God’s truth enters your mind and begins sinking into your heart, He’ll reveal His will for you. Test it, to ensure it’s God’s will and not a goal driven by selfish motivation, or planted by the devil, keeping in mind that God may ask you to do something totally unexpected, totally wild and totally nerve-wracking with your life. Like quitting a steady six-figure job with a virtually-guaranteed six-figure retirement to become a writer. Gulp!

But once your life aligns with His will, God “will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19 NIV®), including pouring out joy despite circumstances and peace that transcends all understanding. “You did not choose me,” Jesus told His disciples in the upper room the night of His betrayal, “but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit–fruit that will last . . .” (John 15:16 NIV®).

So . . . what is God’s will for you? Have you earnestly sought it out, giving your life over to His perfect plan? What holds you back? Pray, search your heart, transform your life by aligning your thoughts with God’s truth, test and approve His will, and step out in faith. Believe me, the leap off the cliff is worth it. And the swan dive into the ocean below? Beautiful . . . .

 

 

Copyright ©2015 by David C. Hughes

Post Navigation