Joy! Joy! Joy!

Clap your hands, all peoples! Shout to God with loud songs of joy! Psalm 47:1 ESV

Not that I always am well prepared, but I do prefer to have some semblance of a message and a list of hymns to get us started each week at Life Care Center. But, even on the weeks when I have everything carefully mapped out, I have found that the residents love having the chance to pick a song themselves. This week’s suggestion from one of our seasoned saints was so great and we had such a blast singing it together, that I wanted to share it. It just goes to show, that getting older, doesn’t require us to lose our joy or our sense of fun. I do hope you will not only get a smile from our impromptu session, but that you will sing along and experience the joy that only Jesus can give.

God Leads His Dear Children

A few nights ago, as my wife and I went for a walk by our pond we were surprised to see a small alligator. Now, since we live in Florida this was not unheard of, but there had not been any alligators in our pond for a few years. A few minutes later as we made the turn around the end of the pond, we came upon a mother duck who must have also spotted that alligator, hurriedly leading her eight little ducklings to another pond. She had wisely decided that though the alligator was small, our pond was no longer a safe place for her babies!

As we watched her leading her ducklings with their tiny feet hurrying to keep up, I was reminded of the precious hymn, “God Leads His Dear Children Along.” The lyrics tell us that just like that mother duck, our Good Shepherd is watching out for us and leading us to safe green pastures. Sometimes the way is through the flood, sometimes through the fire, but no matter where He leads, He makes the way through the blood of Jesus. Our Good Shepherd knows the path ahead and no matter how steep the way, we need to remind ourselves that He always knows what is best for us!

All That God Has Planned

A man named Lazarus was sick. He lived in Bethany with his sisters, Mary and Martha. This is the Mary who later poured the expensive perfume on the Lord’s feet and wiped them with her hair. Her brother, Lazarus, was sick. So the two sisters sent a message to Jesus telling him, “Lord, your dear friend is very sick.” John 11:1-3

The last couple of weeks have been challenging for us. Between unexpected major repairs to our home along with a severe arthritis flareup in my right hand, we have had to abandon most of our summer plans, including our annual trip North to be with our family and friends. But I am thankful that our kids will come see us in July, and when I called my doctor, he agreed to see me right away, and today, after lots of prayers and a week of steroids, I happy to report that God has given me back the use of my right hand. These couple of weeks reminded me of the story in the Bible that begins when Mary and Martha send a message to Jesus to please come because their brother Lazarus is sick.

God is Most in Control When we Are Not! Just like Martha, I love making plans and I hate being late in completing them. The problem is that when we get everything on our checklists done on time and under budget, it leaves no space for God’s grace. But when we can’t do what we planned, then we start asking God for help. That is how this story begins. The ladies urgently sent a message for Jesus to show up, but guess what: He didn’t come, and Lazarus died. Jesus knew He could have gone to Bethany and healed Lazarus, but He decided not to. Has God ever decided to do something like that in your life? I know He has in mine! But the story doesn’t end there. Though Mary and Martha’s plans had crashed and burned to ashes, God’s plans were just getting started!

We Grow Closer to Others When we Need Each Other: In Luke chapter Ten, when we first met Martha, we can see that she loved to serve, and best of all she loved serving Jesus. But what Martha couldn’t understand was why her sister Mary just sat around listening to Jesus while she had to do all the work. But after their brother Lazarus died, Martha’s attitude of criticism changed. She no longer wasted her energy trying to manage Mary’s choices. Instead, after Lazarus died, the two sisters had to stick together as their brother was laid to rest. Until Jesus came, their only comfort came from each other and the people who showed up to help. Then when Jesus finally came, we don’t read a single word of criticism. Their mutual loss had brought Mary and Martha closer to each other and more dependent on Jesus than ever.

Closing the Door to Our Old Plans Opens the Door to God’s New Ones! Just like the day when Mary and Martha had to say their goodbyes to Lazarus as the stone was rolled over the entrance to His tomb, there are mornings in all our lives when it feels like everything is falling apart. We have to finally admit that our plans are never going to work out. Our ideas have failed, and we need to close that chapter forever. But rolling the stone over the door to our dreams is the beginning, not the end of God’s plans for our lives. There is more to the story that God can only tell, when we wait to see what He will do next. Though the sisters didn’t know it at the time, the best was yet to come, when Jesus called Lazarus out of the tomb!

Now I can’t possibly know what your situation is this morning, but Jesus does. He knows you have called for Him to come. You have wept at His feet asking God why He has allowed these things to happen and why He hasn’t intervened. But Jesus is not through with us. He has a new chapter for our lives, just as He did for Mary and Martha. But before we get to experience that plan, we may have to unwrap it and set it free to do all and only what God has in mind!

Then Jesus shouted, “Lazarus, come out!” And the dead man came out, his hands and feet bound in graveclothes, his face wrapped in a headcloth. Jesus told them, “Unwrap him and let him go!” 
John 11:43-44 NLT