WHY

The mission of COUGARS Daily is for the encouraging of believers in living out their faith daily in a 'post modern' and sometimes 'Anti-Church' culture. It is also a platform for seekers to feel comfortable asking tough questions. Please welcome everyone as we comment and post daily about 'A Slice of Infinity' from RZIM as well as challenge each other to walk behind the Good Sheppard.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Vision Minded by Danielle DuRant

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

today's snippet is a little long, but if you are a runner, you will likely enjoy it.

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

“Catherine Ndereba knew the gold medal was hers.”(1) So opens an article in Kenya’s national newspaper on the Beijing Olympics’ women’s marathon. Having missed it by only 12 seconds in 2004, Ndereba set her sights on winning Kenya’s first gold medal for a woman.

Though perhaps not a familiar name outside of the sport, Catherine Ndereba is one of the most accomplished runners ever. She has won the Boston Marathon a record four times and Chicago twice. In 2001 she shattered the women’s world best time by almost a minute, even after running the last fifteen miles mostly by herself. And so as I watched American record holder and 2004 Olympic medalist Deena Kastor hobble off the course with a broken foot at mile 3, I questioned who might challenge Ndereba. Once again she was running with characteristic ease at the back of the large lead pack--her typical strategy--covering each mile with her seemingly effortless stride. Yet as the race wore on and I saw her gesture to her teammates to pick up the pace, I wondered aloud when she might do the same. But she seemed relaxed and unworried, her vision for gold and not record time pulling her closer toward the amazing Bird’s Nest stadium where she would run the final lap and a half around the track before a wildly enthusiastic crowd.

Vision. An oft-quoted definition says it “a clear mental image of a preferable future imparted by God to His chosen servants.”(2) It was a vision of God’s glory and his sovereign hand upon the future that spurred on Ezekiel, Daniel, and Isaiah. Yet such vision not only afforded them hope for the years to come but also much-needed perspective and encouragement in their immediate situation. In fact, when John received the most extensive visions since recorded in Scripture, he was in exile and his fellow Christians were suffering under intense persecution. God’s very first words to him are, “I am the Alpha and Omega... who is, and who was, and who is to come, the Almighty” (Rev. 1:8; see also 21:6). The One who is the beginning and the end is Almighty, literally “the one who has his hand on everything.” So John is offered double vision, if you will, of God’s compassionate and steadfast hand from the first to the last. Likewise, throughout the book of Isaiah the prophet held fast to this vision of God’s continual faithfulness, whereas Ahaz, seeing only his immediate crisis, resisted God’s promised sign and so witnessed neither present comfort nor future hope (see Isaiah 7).

Running on a trail recently I thought of how critical this perspective of vision is. That is, if you look too far ahead you soon find yourself tripping on what is right at your feet, but if you look only at your feet you may find the trail abruptly ending into a steep ravine or fallen tree. You need double vision--a sense of both the immediate and distant--in order to maneuver such terrain.

Perhaps Catherine Ndereba was having similar thoughts after the marathon. The Kenyan newspaper article continues, “The four times Boston Marathon winner knew that she was ahead of the pack but suffered a rude shock when she saw Romanian Constantina Tomescu headed for the National Olympic Stadium to steal the Olympic marathon gold medal with Ndereba having to contend with the silver, Kenya's first medal at these Games.”(3) Unknown to Ndereba until the final turn into the stadium but evident to scores of television viewers and spectators on the course, Tomescu had broken away at a water station several miles earlier and continued to increase her lead.

Ndereba commented after, “I didn't see her breaking away... and, after all, I normally run my own race and I don't look at other athletes, even Tomescu knows that.... I thought I was in the lead and only when we got to the stadium I saw her and was a bit surprised but it was too late to do anything. If I'd seen her earlier, definitely I would have pushed."

I thought of her loss: here was a world champion and Olympian medalist with attainable gold but somehow her eyes--and not her legs or lungs--had failed her. Or so it seemed. Instead, Ndereba expressed elation for her second place finish and said, “My strategy was to start strong and finish strong because God says He is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end.” Though not looking far ahead, like the faithful prophets of old she had a wider perspective and praise to the One who has his hand on everything. Vision minded, she looked disappointment and disbelief in the face, remarked, “No man can do what the Lord has done for me,” and broke into a gospel song, mahali nimefika nimeona mkono wako (“Where I have reached, I have seen your hand”).

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

The Great Metaphor by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Oh, that you would burst from the heavens and come down!
How the mountains would quake in your presence!
As fire causes wood to burn
and water to boil,
your coming would make the nations tremble.
Then your enemies would learn the reason for your fame! (Isaiah 64:1-2)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

These few stanzas make use of repeated words and paired images to convey an intensity about human longing for the transcendence of God. The cry is not merely for God’s presence, but a presence that will tear open the heavens and cause mountains--even Mount Zion and the children of God--to tremble. Set in the opening line, the Hebrew word qarata is as illustrative in tone as it is meaning. The guttural sound and sharp stop in its pronunciation contribute to the severity of the word itself, which means to tear, to rend, to sever, or split an object into two or more parts. “Oh that you would rend the heavens...” “If only you would cleave the heavens and come down...”

...whether uttered metaphorically or literally, the cry for God to tear open the heavens and come down is a cry no mind conceived, nor ear perceived how thoroughly God would answer. For those who read this passage in light of Christ, fully taking in its poignant image the heavens tearing like a garment, the tearing of the temple curtain comes unavoidably to mind. “Then Jesus cried again with a loud voice and breathed his last. And at that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. The earth shook, and the rocks were split” (Matthew 27:50-51). The incarnation, death, and resurrection of Christ was God’s radical answer to an ancient longing. The Word himself is God’s response to the great metaphor of a God who rends the heavens like a garment, a God who is so present that He comes down, causing the earth to quake at his own face.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Amos, Acedia, and Ease by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

What sorrow awaits you who lounge in luxury in Jerusalem,
and you who feel secure in Samaria!
You are famous and popular in Israel,
and people go to you for help. (Amos 6:1)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

“Acedia” ... is a word that has fallen out of use in the last thousand years, written out of our minds and vocabularies, but not out of our lives. The Latin word refers to spiritual torpor or apathy. It is the spiritual equivalent of sloth--inactivity or unconcern in the practice of virtue. The term was most often used in monastic circles, considered an adversary that materialized in the drastic lives of the monks. But the question at the heart of acedia--“Why bother?”--moves far beyond the walls of the monastery, and perhaps particularly in the hearts of those who find themselves weary of feeling, those who would sooner choose the ease of apathy than the work of relationship, the simplicity of self over the sacrifice of community.

Like weariness or despair, acedia creeps into our lives and moves us to spiritual indifference. It comes when we are tired of feeling, weary of living with care and attention, lulled to sleep by comfort or disinterest. At this description, Amos’s portrayal of Zion may not feel so far off after all. In fact, at the time of Amos, the people of Israel were perhaps struggling with something quite like acedia. Reeling in false security and erroneous confidence from their own economic affluence, the Israelites were living in a deplorable state of existence, warned Amos, blind and isolated by their focus on self, impervious to their own indifference at the situation around them. It was in the midst of this, their most opulent and apathetic juncture, when the shepherd proclaimed: “Woe to those who are at ease in Zion, and to those who feel secure on the mountain of Samaria” (Amos 6:1).

Comments:
Relationships can be difficult - outright hard. At some stages we can be hit with 'acedia' and decide not to press in because 'it's just not worth it.' May I encourage you to keep on in your relationships? Develop strong bonds with those whom you know are listening to God. Then, when you feel God has told you it is time to move on, you have someone with whom you can talk; someone to help you hear and understand the true voice of the most high God. At some points we may be told to wipe the dirt off our sandals and move on, but when I feel 'indifference' to other peoples sin setting in on me, I hope to be able to 'see' that indifference and pray that God would once again break my heart for the sins of my neighbor.

The kingdom of God is at hand!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Encore! by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Because of the LORD's great love we are not consumed,
for his compassions never fail.
They are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
I say to myself, "The LORD is my portion;
therefore I will wait for him." (Lamentations 3:22-24)

Look at the lilies and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully as they are. 28 And if God cares so wonderfully for flowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith? (Luke 12:27-28)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

Jesus spoke of the kingdom as belonging to the likes of little children, and many have speculated the child’s ability to see the world with wonder as one of the reasons for it. G.K. Chesterton saw the child’s ability to revel in the monotonous as another. The child’s cry for more, reasoned Chesterton, is a quality of the very God who created them. “It is possible that God says every morning, ‘Do it again’ to the sun; and every evening, ‘Do it again’ to the moon. It may not be automatic necessity that makes all daisies alike; it may be that God makes every daisy separately, but has never got tired of making them. It may be that He has the eternal appetite of infancy; for we have sinned and grown old, and our Father is younger than we. The repetition in Nature may not be a mere recurrence; it may be a theatrical encore."

For the child on the slide or the toddler with a story, “Do it again!” is far from a cry of boredom or routine, but a cry for more of life itself. This is likewise the joy of the psalmist, the cry of the prophets, and the call of Christ... Jesus asks that we consider the kingdom around us like little children, and thus, something more like God--finding a presence in faithful recurrences, grace in repetition, rumors of another world in the ordinary world around us. Here, even those within the most taxing of life’s repetitions--the daily care of an aging parent, the constant burden on the shoulders of those who fight against injustice, the labor of hope in a difficult place--can find solace.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

The Snare of Misplaced Affections by Margaret Manning

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Gideon made the gold into an ephod, which he placed in Ophrah, his town. All Israel prostituted themselves by worshiping it there, and it became a snare to Gideon and his family. (Judges 8:27)

“A person will worship something, have no doubt about that. We may think our tribute is paid in secret in the dark recesses of our hearts, but it will out. That which dominates our imaginations and our thoughts will determine our lives, and our character. Therefore, it behooves us to be careful what we worship, for what we are worshipping we are becoming.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Wherever your treasure is, there the desires of your heart will also be. - Jesus (Matthew 6:21)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

While there are many applications to be drawn out of the story of Gideon, we cannot help but see the warning to us all about the perils of misplaced affections. A desire for honor became the snare for all of Israel and perpetuated their propensity towards idolatry. Subtle and seemingly innocuous, our desires can quickly become entities we worship. It is a reminder to us all to ask: “What are our desires, and what do they tell us about what we love?”

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

In the Belly of Darkness by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

He said,

“I cried out to the Lord in my great trouble,
and he answered me. I called to you from the land of the dead,
and Lord, you heard me! You threw me into the ocean depths,
and I sank down to the heart of the sea. The mighty waters engulfed me;
I was buried beneath your wild and stormy waves.
Then I said, ‘O Lord, you have driven me from your presence.
Yet I will look once more toward your holy Temple.’

“I sank beneath the waves, and the waters closed over me.
Seaweed wrapped itself around my head.
I sank down to the very roots of the mountains.
I was imprisoned in the earth, whose gates lock shut forever.
But you, O Lord my God, snatched me from the jaws of death!
As my life was slipping away, I remembered the Lord.
And my earnest prayer went out to you in your holy Temple. (Jonah 2:2-7)


A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

Sadly, Jonah's idols of self and comfort returned not long after the prayer was finished and his life was spewed back into normalcy. As he rages over the death of a plant and the saving of Nineveh, Jonah doesn’t want to see the God who saved him. The scene brings to mind Isaiah's description: "Surely the hand of the LORD is not too short to save, nor his ear too dull to hear, but...your sins have hidden his face from you" (59:1-2). Even so, the book ends on a note bidding us to see that God is always about the work of salvation. Whether in the lives of nations "who know not their right from their left" or in the lives of men and women blind with self and sin, God moves faithfully among us. Might we remember in distress and in safety, salvation comes from the LORD.

Comments:
How often it seems we push against God to enact our plan upon the world. May we continually be mindful of Jesus' prayer to Our Father: Your Kingdom Come, Your will be done! In what ways might we bring about the kingdom of God today? Jesus went about declaring that the kingdom of heaven is at hand while teaching, healing the sick, causing the blind to see, etc. In what way can I bring teaching, dignity and healing into the lives of those I come in contact with. Perhaps it is buying a homeless man a cup of coffee. Perhaps it is simply listening to the cashier at the store when I'm in a rush. Perhaps it is moving forward in real relationship with a close friend. Perhaps it is healing the sick. God, please grant us each the courage to let your life live through us.



*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - clothing such as new underwear in the package, shorts and t-shirts; hygiene items as well as back packs/camping gear are all greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Monday, August 18, 2008

No Greater Communion by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Jesus called a little child to him and put the child among them. Then he said, “I tell you the truth, unless you turn from your sins and become like little children, you will never get into the Kingdom of Heaven. So anyone who becomes as humble as this little child is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven. “And anyone who welcomes a little child like this on my behalf is welcoming me. (Matthew 18:2-5)


A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

Showing us a child as a sign of the community of God’s kingdom, Jesus is saying something deliberate about the kind of community he is drawing together. Little children love readily with all of themselves. Their connections and unity are genuine, perhaps because the mind has not yet been deterred by suspicion, disappointment, or pride. As such, their hearts grasp something about communing we often do not. G.K. Chesterton, who said he learned more by watching children than any philosophy book, once observed that children have in their ownership the obscure idea of loyalty even to a thing. The child who has gone to bed without his toy does not only feel that he is sad without it. He also feels in some transcendental way that the toy is sad without him.

I believe Jesus urges us to see that those who will be like children, like men and women aware that the love we seek also seeks us, will find the kingdom of God. The very community we long for is governed by one who longs for us to be in it. If God is like the shepherd willing to leave the flock to go out searching for the one who has strayed, there is nowhere we can flee from his presence; there is never a time we won't belong. Indeed, there is no greater love, no greater connection, no greater communing.


*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - clothing such as new underwear in the package, shorts and t-shirts; hygiene items as well as back packs/camping gear are all greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Collapsible Walls by I'Ching Thomas

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

"Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had its foundation on the rock. But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash." (Matthew 7:24-27)

" 'Because they lead my people astray, saying, "Peace," when there is no peace, and because, when a flimsy wall is built, they cover it with whitewash, therefore tell those who cover it with whitewash that it is going to fall. Rain will come in torrents, and I will send hailstones hurtling down, and violent winds will burst forth. When the wall collapses, will people not ask you, "Where is the whitewash you covered it with?"

" 'Therefore this is what the Sovereign LORD says: In my wrath I will unleash a violent wind, and in my anger hailstones and torrents of rain will fall with destructive fury. (Ezekiel 13:10–13)


A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

Clearly we live at a time in history when the storm is beating endlessly against the foundation of our walls from all directions. Our belief in an absolute standard of morality is confronted by relativism; our conviction in the authority of scripture is challenged; our reverence in the person of Christ is mocked, and our attempt to live a simple lifestyle is constantly distracted by the lure of consumer advertising and its promise of a better life.

Yet, there are no two ways about it: if we are to be like the wise builder, then we must construct our foundation on the rock by practicing the righteousness we have learned.

As Thomas a Kempis writes in The Imitation of Christ, "To many the saying, 'Deny thyself, take up thy cross and follow Me,' seems hard, but it will be much harder to hear that final word: 'Depart from Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire.'" We will find that the cost demanded of us is no less than a radical submission to the exclusive lordship of Jesus. However, the reward comes when we find our house still standing after the final storm leaves and when the sun breaks through again.


*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - clothing such as new underwear in the package, shorts and t-shirts; hygiene items as well as back packs/camping gear are all greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Slumber and Sleep by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

For in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy. (Exodus 20:11)

"Say to the Israelites, 'You must observe my Sabbaths. This will be a sign between me and you for the generations to come, so you may know that I am the LORD, who makes you holy. (Exodus 31:13)

Then he said to them, "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. (Mark 2:27)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:

As I sit here daydreaming of sleep pods and power naps, I realize that we evidently need that reminder again and again. The seventh day is a gift, a nap pass--a gentle invitation, albeit a powerful sign between God and humanity. It is a day set apart from appointment books and pressing schedules to remind us that the most pressing aspect of our lives is that we are creatures made in the image of our Creator. Who we are is most authentically realized and most dynamically lived out when we are resting in the presence of God, sleeping like Lazarus in the bosom of Abraham and the care of a Father who guards us by day and night.(2)

Whether or not the notion of paying for a nap actually catches on, it is probably not reflective of the universal longing--and need--for napping. "Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest" said Jesus to a crowd in Galilee. Yet if we slow down long enough to consider it, we might realize that Christ is also talking to us. We might remember that rest is not only a luxury, but that it is something he knows we need. We might remember that the labor of God is far more significant than our own. We might remember--and rejoice--that the God who watches over us neither slumbers nor sleeps.


*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - clothing such as new underwear in the package, shorts and t-shirts; hygiene items as well as back packs/camping gear are all greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Dear Friends,

Our fellow Cougar, Pat Castle's grandmother died this past Monday. Please remember him and his family in prayer.

-Chad

Monday, August 11, 2008

Lost and Found by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

"The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.

"Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. (Matthew 13:44-45)

"Slow was I, Lord, too slow in loving you. To you, earliest and latest beauty, I was slow in love. You were waiting within me while I went outside me, looking for you there, misshaping myself as I flung myself upon the shapely things you made. You were with me all the while I was not with you, kept from you by things that could not be except by being in you. You were calling to me, shouting, drumming on deaf ears. You thundered and lightninged, piercing my blindness." - Saint Augustine, Confessions, trans. Garry Wills, (New York: Penguin, 2006), 234.

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
Like the disciples on the mount who fell on their faces as Jesus became "like the sun" and "as white as light," it seems God brings us again to that place where we are awed by his glory, his goodness or mercy--his fearful existence. And like the disciples, like Job and Isaiah, we are reminded that we are in the presence of the Father in all his glory. Whether we are aware of it or not He is always near, his glory declared day after day, the work of his hands proclaimed night after night.

*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - clothing such as new underwear in the package, shorts and t-shirts; hygiene items as well as back packs/camping gear are all greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Meekness and Majesty by L.T. Jeyachandran

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.



Wisdom unsearchable, God the invisible,
Love indestructible in frailty appears.
Lord of infinity, stooping so tenderly,
Lifts our humanity to the heights of his throne!

O what a mystery! Meekness and majesty,
Bow down and worship for this is your God!
- Graham Kendrick

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
When Philip asked Jesus to show the Father to him and his colleagues, he did not quite know what he was asking for. He must have assumed that he would be able to see the God of the Old Testament, the fearsome one of whom his ancestors were so scared that they had asked Moses to go and listen to Him instead of hearing Him directly (Exodus 20:18-19; Hebrews 12:19). Philip must have thought that the one whom Jesus so familiarly addressed as Father would have been of somewhat manageable proportions! Perhaps Philip (and we along with him) would not have been surprised if Jesus had said something like this in reply: "You know it is really very difficult to see Him, but I will try my best to see what can be done." Instead, Jesus replies, "Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father" (John 14:8-9).

...There is a unity between the Father and the Son that we cannot ignore. In chapter 10, John records Jesus proclaiming his oneness with the Father. He uses the neuter gender in the Greek language, implying oneness of substance or essence, and emphatically not oneness of Person. (If he had wanted to mean oneness of Person, he would have used the masculine gender.) This is fundamentally important but is not often heard. Simply put, Jesus says that he is of one essence with the Father, but is not the same Person. As a result, we see a continuing invitation from Jesus to "come and see" his actual humanity, the uniqueness of Christ, the person of God incarnate.

Today, at the right hand of God, we have an intercessor who is "the Man Christ Jesus" (I Timothy 2:5). In other words, the humanity that Jesus assumed is with him forever. In that humanity, the redeemed Church is made a worthy and compatible partner to the Lamb. It is a heavenly marriage in which we are worthy only because the Bridegroom is God who has forever become Human, and we are humans who have become participators in the divine nature by the promises of God (II Peter 1:4).

Comments:
It is quite interesting to consider Christ retaining his human-ness.



*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - summer clothing like shorts and t-shirts as well as back packs are greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Draw Me Near by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Jesus said to her, "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; (John 11:25)

Who, being in very nature[a] God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
7but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature[b] of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
8And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross! (Philippians 2:6-8)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
In The Problem with Pain, C.S. Lewis refers to pain as God's megaphone to rouse a deaf world. Convincingly, he explains what we know to be true of suffering, pain, and evil, what we know of the meaning offered in Christ's suffering and the strength we are given to bear it when the peripheral questions of life are answered by a good God. Years later, in the pages of A Grief Observed, Lewis describes watching his wife lose her battle with cancer and wrestling with God through the pain. He is then writing as a man who bitterly, tortuously, and intimately knows what he knows to be true of God and evil, suffering and Christ though his soul is breaking. Writes Lewis, "Your bid for God or no God, for a good God or the Cosmic Sadist, for eternal life or nonentity, will not be serious if nothing much is staked on it. And you will never discover how serious it was until the stakes are raised horribly high." He continues, "Nothing will shake a man--or at any rate a man like me--out of his merely verbal thinking and his merely notional beliefs. He has to be knocked silly before he comes to his senses. Only torture will bring out the truth. Only under torture does he discover it himself."

Comments:
Have you ever wondered what someone might do to scare Lazarus after Jesus raised him? I.E. "Hey Lazarus, you better do this or I'm going to kill you."



*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - summer clothing like shorts and t-shirts as well as back packs are greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Beauty in Brokenness by Margaret Manning

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

Will Your lovingkindness be declared in the grave,
Your faithfulness in Abaddon?
Will Your wonders be made known in the darkness?
And Your righteousness in the land of forgetfulness? (Psalm 88:11-12)

(Psalm 139)


(
Isaiah 61:3, 45:3)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
Tony Snow, former White House Press Secretary, considered his cancer a "calling" and in a recent article written in Christianity Today said, "We are fallen. We are imperfect. Our bodies give out. But despite this--because of it-–God offers the possibility of salvation and grace."(1) That possibility of salvation and grace is beauty in brokenness.

Somehow, uniquely, God desires to use those difficult moments of our lives to bring forth something extraordinarily beautiful. Even the natural creation attests to this truth. In fall, we marvel at the gorgeous, lush colors of burnt amber, burnished orange, brilliant red, and bright yellow leaves, even as that beauty belies the slow and gradual death of those leaves. Winter buries those leaves under the cold, dark blanket of snow and frost. And yet, death brings forth life. Spring bursts forth year after year with jonquils, iris, lilies, and all the beautiful pastels of new life.

... so often, that face of Christ is demonstrated with beautiful radiance through the broken and dark places in our lives.

Today, if you are experiencing hardship, difficulty or personal darkness, seek the light and beauty of Christ, for he longs to be present to you, to give you a garland of beauty instead of ashes, to call you by name, and to bring forth treasures of darkness. He is there in the brokenness with you.

Comments:
Often the subject of pain and suffering is brought up when discussing God's existence. Let us not forget that God suffered the ultimate in the death of a child. May we understand that our God is not one who is 'above' suffering, but is the suffering servant we cling to.

Please remember my mom's sister, Barbara today. She has gotten out of a 5 day rehab and gone deeper into her alcohol abuse. Please pray for her to receive light in her darkness and for her husband and sisters (4) to have strength, courage, wisdom and peace.

*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - summer clothing like shorts and t-shirts as well as back packs are greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Monday, August 4, 2008

A Congregation of One by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

This left Jacob all alone in the camp, and a man came and wrestled with him until the dawn began to break. (Genesis 32:24)

But don’t just listen to God’s word. You must do what it says. Otherwise, you are only fooling yourselves. (James 1:22)

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
Expanding on G.K. Chesterton's clever aphorism that between one and two there is often a difference of millions, F.W. Boreham notes the massive difference between a congregation of one and a congregation of two: "A congregation of one takes every word in a direct and personal sense; but, in a congregation of two, each auditor takes it for granted that the preacher is referring to the other."

The times in life when God seems to speak most clearly to me are often the least pleasant. Yet perhaps it is in tears and distress that I stop listening for others, and find myself most desperate to hear God myself. While we are in Christ a body of believers transcending history, race, and language, so we are a congregation of one, seeking the voice of our maker.


Comments:
I often find myself listening with someone else in mind. I hear things that my mind says, 'oh, how great that would be to say to 'so-and-so'. Thus, making me feel better about myself and my viewpoint.

When God has a word meant for me, I want to give Him my full attention.

Practical Application:
Instead of writing in the margins of your Bible, perhaps keep a journal of your daily reading. Keeping a separate writing area when God gives you something specific about a certain verse or passage, allows you to return to this passage for fresh words that won't get muddled by what you thought of them last time.

*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - summer clothing like shorts and t-shirts as well as back packs are greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.

Friday, August 1, 2008

The Wrong Side of the Window by Jill Carattini

Take about 5 minutes to read this snippets version of The previous day's 'A Slice of Infinity'. Follow up by reading TODAY'S SLICE and forward any comments on your faith journey.

"God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God." (2 Corinthians 5:21).

A Slice of Infinity Snippets:
...Frustrated beyond belief, he watched his 17-hour flight take off without him... Needless to say, my husband's first bout with international travel did not set well with either of us.... Being that close to making a flight, and yet missing it, left a sickening twinge in both of our stomachs.

... Missing the flight seems incredibly intensified by the reality of being oh-so-close. And yet, it was missing the flight at all that was the problem. Whether he missed the plane by five or fifty minutes, he still missed the flight.

I confess it is easy for me to think of sin on a similar scale, in dramatic levels of "badness" or "forgiveableness." But the Greek word hamartia and its corresponding Hebrew word, each translated "sin" in the Old and New Testaments, counter this mentality. Both mean in the original language, "to miss the mark" or "to be without a share in." The apostle Paul's declaration to the Romans--namely, that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God,"--gives us a dramatic picture. In the presence of God, our vantage point is similar to staring at a plane you are supposed to be on from inside the terminal. It doesn't matter how close we are to making it; the problem is that we all fall irreparably short... Thinking about the depravity around me does not remove the stains I sense inside me, at least not permanently. Even when I am feeling "in" all of the right inner circles and mostly on top of the average, there is something about the mark I have set that convicts me. I expect behavior from people that I do not exhibit personally. I hold excuses for myself that I refuse to entertain when it comes to others. Their missing the mark, however greatly, doesn't wipe away my own missing of it. Had there been a person running into the terminal ten minutes after my husband had been told he missed the flight, it might have made him feel less alone in his frustration, but it certainly would not truly have consoled him. For it would not have put him any closer to being on the right side of the window. He needed someone to bridge the gap.

Christ became for us the righteousness we cannot offer, filling the gap we cannot cross. For all have missed the mark, falling short of the glory of God, and all who believe are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. In the presence of God, like Isaiah who trembled at the throne of glory, we gaze at the mark we fearfully miss: his fullness, his faithfulness, his glory. Standing with Christ, we hold all we lack, and we view it from the right side of the window.


*The Street Church is in need of donations for the homeless - summer clothing like shorts and t-shirts as well as back packs are greatly appreciated.
*To comment on this thread, visit the blog.
*Read today's slice and email me with your comments/questions/prayers for
our next posting.
*Check out Life Devotions and see if you would like to receive their daily snippets.
*Invite friends and family to join us on this faith journey.