What does it mean to you that God does not treat us as our sins deserve? What do you have to thank him for today, in that regard?
Prayer prompt for Tuesday, Oct. 16
What if we paused and thought about everything we said today before the words came out of our mouths? Prayerfully try to be slow to speak.
Prayer prompt for Monday, Oct. 15
Today, let’s not just hear what people say to us, but really listen to their words & the unspoken meaning behind them. Who can you pray for?
Prayer prompt for Sunday, Oct. 14
Ask the Holy Spirit to defuse the time bomb of your temper today. Make efforts to be slow to anger when things don’t go your way.
The Bus Bullies (Prayer Devotional for the week of October 14, 2012)
Back in the days before zero-tolerance bullying policies and on-board cameras, I had an assigned seat in the second row of the school bus, and the two boys who sat behind me were relentless with their pestering. One of them would poke me in the shoulder and then yank his hand away each time I turned around. I tried ignoring them, but I had a sore spot on my shoulder from the day-in, day-out jabbing. It was awful.
Granted, my little brother and I used to argue like cats and dogs, but we never got into a hand fight. Up to this point, I had never lifted a fist to anyone in my entire life, but these two boys had pushed me over the limit. One afternoon on the way home from school, I finally mustered up my courage and turned around to face the bullies. In the tone of voice that I reserved for my brother when he got on my last nerve, I told them: “Touch me one more time, and I am going to deck you!”
Obviously, they didn’t believe me, because within seconds, one of them poked my shoulder again. I whipped my arm around the seat so fast that I back-handed one of them across the face before he could duck. As they both sat there in shock, I turned to look at the driver to see how much trouble I was in. She just glanced up at me in the rearview mirror, made eye contact briefly, smirked, and kept driving. She never said a word to me about it, and they didn’t poke me anymore.
Was I justified in standing up to those boys? I’d like to think so, but even still, I keep thinking about all the times I must have pestered God the same way those boys tormented me. Every time I willfully sin and repeat the same mistakes over and over again, I wonder if it causes him pain. How many times have I poked at that same issue, just testing the limits to see how much he would take?
Thankfully, “God is sheer mercy and grace; not easily angered, he’s rich in love. He doesn’t endlessly nag and scold, nor hold grudges forever. He doesn’t treat us as our sins deserve, nor pay us back in full for our wrongs” (from Psalm 103, The Message). Amen to that! This week, let’s work on being more like James described: “quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (1:19, NIV).
Prayer prompt for Saturday, Oct. 13
Spend time today thanking God for clearing our guilty consciences through Jesus’ sacrifice. Let that gift lift your heart in gratitude!
The what-ifs we don’t want to discuss
I’ve talked before about anticipatory grief and how sometimes my mind jumps straight to the what-if in a frightening situation. I also vented recently about the many folks I know who are fighting (or have fought) cancer. Since that post, the neighbor has died, and the friend has exhausted treatment options.
Personally, I think it’s a dangerous thing to say, “I could never handle [insert major life catastrophe here].” I’m not saying that we ought to invite calamity into our lives, but if we negate our ability to survive disastrous circumstances, then I believe we discount God by inadvertently saying that he’s not able to get us through whatever the what-if scenario is. Consider the book of Job in the Bible. He lost everything that we hold dear — his wealth, his health and even his children. He was targeted because he was strong in his faith, not because he was a rebel who made a spectacle of himself and had to lie in the bed he made.
I also advise against saying things like, “If I were in their shoes, I would [insert definitive statement about how you would handle their problem].” How do we really know how we would respond until/if we are faced with that situation? I don’t personally believe that suicide or euthanasia is ever the answer, and yet I think of elderly or injured people who are sustained by feeding tubes. When we turn off that level of support, aren’t we letting them die? Isn’t that what many people want — to not be kept alive by machines? Where is the line? How do we decide where to draw it?
What do we say to the person who is out of treatment options for cancer? What about the person who quits treatment that doesn’t show promise? What about the one who chooses not to pursue treatment at all, but lets the disease run its course for however long it takes?
How do we know when it’s ok to let go and say goodbye?
I was thinking about Elijah today, because he had to figure out the answer to that question. 2 Kings 2 tells about his mysterious disappearance/rapture into heaven. Somehow, God had revealed to him that he was about to leave, so his apprentice Elisha stayed on his heels the whole day, not wanting to miss a moment. I wonder who else he may have left behind. I am not a Bible scholar, but I imagine he probably wasn’t married, given the nature of his role as a prophet. However, I wonder if he had parents or siblings.
We think it’s so awesome (and don’t get me wrong – it is!) that Elijah was delivered to heaven in such an amazing fashion, and yet there were those (like Elisha) who were left to grieve his loss. Elisha knew it was coming, and he was better prepared for the farewell. Others thought that Elijah might reappear somewhere else, but Elisha knew that he was gone.
God’s miracles occur in bizarre ways, sometimes. They may not always result in physical healing, and that’s a difficult thing for me to wrap my head around, especially when prayers have been offered in faith. Sometimes, I think, God moves like he did for Elijah and escorts people home, rather than leaving them to roam the Earth.
The ones left to pick up their cloaks, figuratively speaking, have to try to figure out what the new “normal” is supposed to look like without them.
Prayer prompt for Friday, Oct. 12
What would it look like if your heart-house was presentable to God? Would you need to clear out some cobwebs & get rid of some old junk?
6 weeks post-op!
It has been a packed week — I finished my last physical therapy appointment and got released by my orthopedist. The doc said that by Christmas, I should catch myself doing things that I didn’t realize I could do (bending and putting weight on it in the course of my day), and by Easter, I ought to feel like-new.
I hope he’s right, because I was thinking earlier today about taking the boys roller skating one weekend, but there’s no way I’d get out there just yet! Just the thought of falling down makes me a little nervous of getting back out on skates ever, but maybe the doc is right and there will be a day – relatively soon – when I don’t feel timid on my knee anymore at all.
I did walk down a flight of stairs without holding the handrail this week, but I was hovering my hand close to the bar, just in case! I guess it’s more intimidating going down because if you fall going up, there’s something to grab hold of before you face-plant. O.o
Since it was my last appointment, the physical therapist took some measurements to compare with my first visit. At that time (about 1.5 weeks post-op), I could bend my knee 97 degrees. (Lying on a flat surface & pulling my feet toward my booty as far as I could, unaided.) She was pleased and said that beyond 90 degrees was really good, at that point. The baseline of my “good” knee was 139 degrees.
Well, today, I made it to 136 degrees with my surgery knee! I’m happy about that. It isn’t comfortable to hold it that tightly scrunched for very long at all, but I’m glad that I was able to bend it that far (without pulling on it with my hands or a strap for assistance).
I still have some swelling, as you can see, but they both said that it will go down, eventually. The scars don’t look too bad, either. They’ll fade, over time. I’m trying to make it to the Y twice a week before work, even if it’s just to ride the recumbent bike for 10 min. Tonight, I demonstrated a couple of my at-home exercises/stretches to my eldest two, and they were sympathetic to the difficulty level. 🙂 That made me feel better! I think that having them do the exercises with me will a) remind me to do them! and b) be fun to do together.
Prayer prompt for Thursday, Oct. 11
Have you ever found a piece of food trash long after the fact? Eww, gross! That’s how unchecked sin becomes, so don’t let it rot your life.
