God Lives Under My Bed

Jesus said, Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.” Matthew 19:14 (NIV)

I wanted to share the following story. I don’t know who wrote it but I have read it more than once when a friend has emailed it to me. Thank you Kevin’s brother for sharing it with others. We could all learn a lesson from the Kevin’s in the world. Don’t you agree? If this story touched you like it has me, please click on the comments link after this entry and share this post with others who need to know Kevin.

I envy Kevin. My brother, Kevin, thinks God lives under his bed. At least that’s what I heard him say one night. He was praying aloud in his dark bedroom, and I stopped to listen, “Are you there, God?” he said. “Where are you? Oh, I see. Under the bed.”

I giggled softly and tiptoed off to my own room. Kevin’s unique  perspectives are often a source of amusement. But that night something  else lingered long after the humor. I realized for the first time the very different world Kevin lives in. He was born 30 years ago, mentally disabled as a result of difficulties during labor. Apart from his size, (he’s 6 foot 2 inches), there are few ways in which he is an adult. He reasons and communicates with the capabilities of a 7-year-old, and he always will. He will probably always believe that God lives under his bed, that Santa Claus is the one who fills the space under our tree every Christmas and that airplanes stay up in the sky because angels carry them.

I remember wondering if Kevin realizes he is different. Is he ever dissatisfied with his monotonous life?  He’s up before dawn each day, off to work at a workshop for the disabled, home to walk our Cocker Spaniel, return to eat his favorite macaroni-and-cheese for dinner and later to bed.The only variation in the entire scheme is laundry, when he hovers excitedly over the washing machine like a mother with her newborn child. He does not seem dissatisfied.

He lopes out to the bus every morning at 7:05, eager for a day of simple work.  He wrings his hands excitedly while the water boils on the stove  before dinner, and he stays up late twice a week to gather our dirty laundry for his next day’s laundry chores.

And Saturdays – oh, the bliss of Saturdays! That’s the day my Dad takes Kevin to the airport to have a soft drink, watch the planes land, and speculate loudly on the destination of each passenger inside. “That one’s goin’ to Chi-car-go!”  Kevin shouts as he claps his hands. His anticipation is so great he can hardly sleep on Friday nights.

And so goes his world of daily rituals and weekend field trips. He doesn’t know what it means to be discontent. His life is simple. He will never know the entanglements of wealth of power, and he does not care what brand of clothing he wears or what kind of food he eats. His needs have always been met, and he never worries that one day they may not be.

His hands are diligent. Kevin is never as happy as when he is working. When he unloads the dishwasher or vacuums the carpet, his heart is completely in it. He does not shrink from a job when it is begun, and he does not leave a job until it is finished. But when his tasks are done, Kevin knows how to relax. He is not obsessed with his work or the work of others. His heart is pure. He still believes everyone tells the truth, promises must be kept, and when you are wrong, you apologize instead of argue.

Free from pride and unconcerned with appearances, Kevin is not afraid to cry when he is hurt, angry or sorry. He is always transparent, always sincere. And he trusts God. Not confined by intellectual reasoning, when he comes to the Lord, he comes as a child. Kevin seems to know God—to really be friends with Him in a way that is difficult for an “educated” person to grasp. God seems like his closest companion.

In my moments of doubt and frustrations with my beliefs, I envy the security Kevin has in his simple faith. It is then I am most willing to admit that he has some divine knowledge that rises above my mortal questions. It is then I realize that perhaps he is not the one with the handicap.

I am. My obligations, my fear, my pride, my circumstances—they all become disabilities when I do not trust them to God’s care. Who knows if Kevin comprehends things I can never learn? After all, he has spent his whole life in that kind of innocence, praying after dark and soaking up the goodness and love of God. And one day, when the mysteries of heaven are opened, and we are all amazed at how close God really is to our hearts, I’ll realize that God heard the simple prayers of a boy who believed that God lived under his bed.

Kevin won’t be surprised at all!

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He Knows What He’s Doing

“I know what I’m doing. I have it all planned out—plans to take care of you, not abandon you, plans to give you the future you hope for.” Jeremiah 29:11 (MSG)

In conversations with two different friends today, I was reminded of how big our God is and how we often forget that He is the One in control. Because I used to be the poster child for “control freaks,” I understand when I see others who struggle to completely trust God with all aspects of their lives.

It has been a journey of over 10 years–and I’m not there yet–but I have come to see life at age 58, as an adventure. His mercies are new just as the day dawns and brings hope. We can’t live without either…His mercies and hope.

In today’s rapidly changing world, many of us live in fear. Unemployment is high and so are gas prices. People have lost their homes. Families are relying on relatives and the kindness of churches and other non-profits to help put food on the table. Some don’t know when they will eat again. Life is uncertain.

Ben Franklin was once quoted as saying “but in the world nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes.”

I would add that there is one more thing of which we can be certain. Our God loves and has plans for each one of us. He will take care of us and will not abandon any of His sheep. Our future is in His hands.

He knows what He’s doing. Do you trust Him?

 

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Everything You Need

I wanted to share the following devotional by Max Lucado because he is one of the most inspirational pastors I know and I love reading his books. I have been blessed to hear him speak at a Women of Faith conference and hear him preach at his home church in San Antonio. At left is a photo of Mr. Lucado with our 2008 Rio Bravo, Mexico mission team. (I’m on the right of Max.) We spent the night in San Antonio and attended church services at Max’s church before continuing our journey to Mexico.
by Max Lucado

Are you hoping that a change in circumstances will bring a change in your attitude? If so, you are in prison, and you need to learn a secret of traveling light. What you have in your Shepherd is greater than what you don’t have in life.

May I meddle for a moment? What is the one thing separating you from joy? How do you fill in this blank: “I will be happy when ________________”? When I am healed. When I am promoted. When I am married. When I am single. When I am rich. How would you finish that statement?

Now, with your answer firmly in mind, answer this. If your ship never comes in, if your dream never comes true, if the situation never changes, could you be happy? If not, then you are sleeping in the cold cell of discontent. You are in prison. And you need to know what you have in your Shepherd.

You have a God who hears you, the power of love behind you, the Holy Spirit within you, and all of heaven ahead of you. If you have the Shepherd, you have grace for every sin, direction for every turn, a candle for every corner, and an anchor for every storm. You have everything you need.

How would you fill in the blank? Respond to this post below.

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Instantly Answered

I wanted to share the following devotional by Margaret E. Taylor, Hemet, California, that appeared in “Guideposts,” to offer encouragement to my readers.

(I am always amazed when God answers a prayer. Sometimes a prayer is answered after weeks, months and years of prayers. However, sometimes my prayers are answered so quickly, I am in awe of HIS power. Has God answered one of your prayers quickly? Share them by clicking on the comment link at the end of this post.)

By Margaret E. Taylor

We all know that God always answers our prayers in his own way and in his own time. When he answers them immediately, however, we can’t help but be amazed. Even in the Bible, when Mary—the mother of John Mark—and her household were praying for Peter’s release from prison, they were astounded when Peter himself came to their door.

I remember the day my husband, Stan, and I sold our car. We had been trying desperately to raise money for the surgery I was facing. We had gone from dealer to dealer, trying to sell our car, but most were offering far too little for it.

That evening as we sat in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant, we bowed our heads and I prayed aloud about it. Just as I said amen, a woman walked over, leaned down and spoke through the car window.

“Would you be willing to sell your car?” she asked.

“Wha-what?” I stammered in disbelief.

Then she related how she wanted to help a young college student who desperately needed a car. She and the student had been looking all afternoon, but couldn’t find one that was right, So they’d pulled into the parking lot to pray. She didn’t know why, but something told her to ask us.

Something, indeed.

 

Isn’t God awesome? Don’t forget to share your answered prayer stories by clicking on the “comment” link.

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Who Started This Christmas Stuff?

In all this rush to find the perfect gift and have the perfect Christmas, it is so easy to forget that the only perfection was born in a dirty manger in a small obscure village over 2,000 years ago to peasants. He wasn’t born into a royal family but He is royalty indeed!  He is our Jesus, the One who came so that we might have everlasting life. But we have to accept the gift…God’s gift to us. If you have not accepted Jesus as your Savior, I pray that God will open your eyes and your heart to the real beauty of this sacred season.

I wanted to share the following story I received via email this morning. May it remind you WHO started all this Christmas stuff. Merry Christmas!


A woman was out Christmas shopping with her two children. After many hours of looking at row after row of toys and everything else imaginable; and after hours of hearing both her children asking for everything they saw on those many shelves, she finally made it to the elevator with her two kids.

She was feeling what so many feel during the holiday season time of the year – overwhelming pressure to go to every party, every housewarming, taste all the holiday food and treats, getting that perfect gift for every single person on our shopping list, making sure we don’t forget anyone on our card list, and the pressure of making sure we respond to everyone who sent us a card.

Finally the elevator doors opened, and there was already a crowd in the car. She pushed her way into the car and dragged her two kids in with her and all the bags of stuff. When the doors closed, she couldn’t take it anymore and she stated, “Whoever started this whole Christmas thing should be found, strung up and shot.”

From the back of the car, everyone heard a quiet, calm voice respond, “Don’t worry, we already crucified Him.”

For the rest of the trip down in the elevator, it was so quiet you could have heard a pin drop. This year, don’t forget to keep “the One who started this whole Christmas thing” in your every thought, deed and words. If we all did it, just think of how different this whole world would be.

“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son; that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)

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Let’s Pray for Our President

I am your servant, Lord God, and I beg you to answer my prayers and bring honor to yourself by having pity on your temple that lies in ruins. Please show mercy to your chosen city, not because we deserve it, but because of your great kindness. Forgive us! Hurry and do something, not only for your city and your chosen people, but to bring honor to yourself.”  Daniel 9:17-19 (CEV)

When Daniel was young, he was taken into Babylonian captivity. However, he never converted to their ways. Through divine wisdom from God, Daniel was able to interpret dreams and the visions of kings and became a prominent figure in the court of Babylon.

While we may never become a prominent figure in our government, we do need to pray for our leaders, especially our president. During Daniel’s time, God’s people were in turmoil. Jerusalem had been destroyed and its people taken into captivity.

Today our country is in turmoil with high unemployment rates, high gas prices and the rising cost of necessities. Many have lost hope as home foreclosures continue to increase and more families seek assistance from social agencies and churches. Our country has the highest number of homeless at 13 percent than any other industrialized nation.

Recently, I read a newspaper article buried on the back page of a section. However, it gave me hope because two members of Congress, Reps. Dan Boren and James Lankford, recently presented copies of the book, Obama Prayer: A Book of Prayers for the 44th President,  to the other 434 U.S. House members. The book, written by Chuck Garriott, was received by the members with positive feedback.

Lankford said, “It’s a nonpartisan issue to me to say we have a responsibility to pray for our leaders.”

Whether we like our president or not, we need to pray for him. In fact, it is in our country’s best interests to pray for all of our leaders. As God’s servants, it is our responsibility. Will you join me in praying for President Obama?

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His Word Endures Forever

“All people are like grass, and all their glory is like the flowers of the field; the grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of the Lord endures forever.”–1 Peter 1:24-25 (NIV)

            Working in my flowerbeds brings me pleasure. Not only do I like getting my hands dirty in the soil, I like the reward that comes from my effort. When bushes grow, seeds sprout and flowers bloom, I see the results of my hard work. The benefits of their beauty are a bonus.

Last spring, I purchased a packet of Morning Glory seeds at a local dollar store. I had never had any luck growing this very fast-growing annual vine known for its trumpet-shaped flowers, which come in blue, pink, purple, scarlet, white and multicolored blooms, attracting hummingbirds, bees, ladybugs and butterflies.

Blooms open in the cool of the morning, hence, the name Morning Glory. During the fall, flowers open all day. They usually bloom from summer until fall frost. My Morning Glory plant grew fast, covering my brick mailbox with its profuse vine. However, I was disappointed when it didn’t bloom this summer. I had watered it, fertilized it and waited for the flowers to appear. Several neighbors had also planted seeds next to their mailboxes.  While out walking my dog each day, I enjoyed the flowers growing abundantly on their vines.

According to the information I had read about this flower, the vines die with a winter frost but will reseed themselves each year. However, my vine had not produced any flowers. Although I had only spent a buck plus tax for the packet of seeds, I had looked forward to seeing its blooms. The morning after our first heavy frost in mid-October, I went out to retrieve my mail. I was amazed when I noticed several buds on the vines not destroyed by the frost.

Excited about my discovery, I immediately called a neighbor with whom I had lamented about my bloomless vine. Like me, she couldn’t believe the vine had bloomed after a frost. In this instance, seeing is believing.

Each morning, I admire the flowers that now open daily to greet the sun as well as me when I visit my mailbox. Viewing their purple flowers is a reminder to me that God never gives up on us, even if we turn away from Him.

Revisit the Bible stories to see how many times God was disappointed by humanity’s behavior. Men and women turned away from Him repeatedly and continued to sin. When God chose Noah to build the ark, then flooded the earth, destroying the rest of the world’s inhabitants, He also made a promise in the form of a rainbow as a reminder that He would never do it again.

When Abraham and Sarah grew impatient after God promised them a son, they took things into their own hands. Abraham had a son by his wife’s servant. God could have changed His mind after this disobedience. However, He didn’t.

Just as my late-blooming flowers bring hope, so does God’s Word. It endures forever.

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Memories in a Small Wooden Chair

“Remember today that your children were not the ones who saw and experienced the discipline of the LORD your God: his majesty, his mighty hand, his outstretched arm…” Deuteronomy 11:2 NIV

The small wooden chair is 80 years old. How do I know? Because it belonged to my daddy, who would have been 85 this past April. He received the small chair as a present on his fifth birthday.

Several years before my daddy passed away, I asked him if I could have the chair. It wouldn’t fetch a fortune, even if it is considered an antique. No amount of money would lead me to sell it.

I’m sure my grandmother used the chair as a spot for time-out to discipline my father when he was a child and misbehaved. I know, as the youngest of four boys, that my daddy was probably spoiled. I also know he was quite mischievous and probably warmed the seat of the wooden chair many times.

I had asked for the chair before he died because I knew it would be a reminder of my father that I would treasure. There’s nothing fancy about the homemade piece of furniture. Paint spots of different hues grace its simplicity. After my parents married, my mother had used it at different times as a step stool when she was painting cabinets and walls. However, that only adds to its history.

The Israelites, who were brought out of captivity by God, had a common history. They were witnesses to God’s power and His deliverance out of the hands of the Egyptians. The Hebrew people saw the Red Sea part and they fed off the manna from heaven.

The Hebrew people would forget time and time again what God had done for them in the wilderness. Each time they ran into trouble, they would cry out to God for help. When they deserted Him and began to worship false gods, God still came to their rescue. Their children and their children’s children would only hear the stories of His grace, passed down from generation to generation.

I was not a witness to my daddy’s scoldings and time-outs in the tiny wooden chair but its presence in my house today serves as a wonderful reminder just like the stories passed down through generations that remind us of our Heavenly Father’s discipline and love.

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I Believe in Miracles

I wanted to share the following with my readers because I believe in the everyday miracle of HIS love. Do you?

Believe in Miracles
by Mary Lou Carney

“It’s a miracle!” Those words are sure to get attention wherever they’re uttered. After all, most of our lives are spent with things happening in predictable ways: summer follows spring; we wake from sleep each morning; birds sing and rabbits hop. We operate within the laws of the universe, knowing that sunsets and sunrises are as inevitable as allergy season.

The Gospels record more than three dozen miracles centered around Jesus, including:

· The virgin birth (Luke 1:26-38)

· Changing water into wine (John 2:1-11)

· Healing many who were sick with various diseases (Matthew 9:1-8; Mark 3:1-6; Luke 8:43-48)

· Raising the dead (Luke 7:11-17; Luke 8:49-56; John 11:1-44)

· Calming the stormy sea (Matthew 8:23-27)

· Feeding 5,000 men and their families (Matthew 14:16-21)

· Walking on water (John 6:16-21)

· Defeating death with his own resurrection (Matthew 28)

But what about today? Do miracles still exist? Absolutely! Christian people around the world encourage each other with true stories of God’s power to protect and heal.

The biggest miracle of all, though, is one we experience daily: God’s love for every one of us — a love that is undeserved but oh-so-very real. “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” (1 John 3:1).

Why has God chosen to love and adopt us flawed creatures? It’s a mystery…and a miracle.

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Lessons in the Rain

“Let my teaching fall like rain and my words descend like dew, like showers on new grass, like abundant rain on tender plants.”–Deuteronomy 32:2 (NIV)

When my grandchildren spend the night with me, it is an opportunity for us to spend quality time together. I’m always amazed at the information they inhale as readily as we breathe in the fresh air when we spend time in God’s great outdoors.

Currently, Cheyenne and Brennan are attending church activities with me on Wednesday nights where they are learning more about the Bible. Bible Time Quiz Kids, designed for first and second graders to learn about God’s Word, uses games and contests to help the children memorize scripture and learn Biblical facts. To make it fun, females and males vie to win points. They are also learning practical application for their daily living.

While reading the Bible and memorizing scripture is important, we need to learn to apply it to our daily lives. As my grandchildren and I were out for an early morning walk recently, it began to sprinkle. Still about a mile from shelter, we started racing for my house as it began to rain harder. We were about 200 yards from my house when the rain stopped suddenly.

My grandson, who had a small wooden cross around his neck, a cross I had brought back to him from my recent mission trip to Costa Rica, said, “Nana, it worked.” When I asked Brennan what worked, he replied, “My prayers.”

Puzzled, I asked him about the answered prayers. He replied, “I was holding the wooden cross in my hand as we ran and I asked God to stop the rain.”

My heart leaped with joy as I realized that this precocious six-year-old knew the power of our Heavenly Father. He had asked and God had responded. I don’t believe in coincidences; however, I do believe God hears and answers prayers in response to our belief. While He doesn’t answer every prayer, I truly believe He answered my grandson’s prayers in response to his childlike faith.

Jesus says, in Matthew 19:14, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”

What about you? Do you have childlike faith?

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