Daily Devotional for March 31, 2015

Luke 22:8-13
So Jesus said to Peter and John, “Go and prepare the Passover meal for us to eat.”

But they asked, “Where do you want us to prepare it?”

Jesus told them, “As you go into the city, you will meet a man carrying a jar of water. Follow him into the house and say to the owner, ‘Our teacher wants to know where he can eat the Passover meal with his disciples.’ The owner will take you upstairs and show you a large room ready for you to use. Prepare the meal there.”

Peter and John left. They found everything just as Jesus had told them, and they prepared the Passover meal.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

My idea of a “perfect vacation” is to go somewhere for a few days and be totally pampered…no meals to cook, no dishes to wash, nothing to clean… just do as I please ALL.DAY.LONG!  It has been suggested that I can do this at home – and those of you who know what a huge homebody I am may figure that this would be a good fit!  But there would still be dishes (if only carry-out containers to dispose) and little things to be done…or reminders of tasks that I need to do. 

Think about times you have gone on vacation – or even to a friend’s house for dinner – and EVERYTHING was done for you.  All you had to do was show up and enjoy the meal and fellowship.  Someone else took care of all of the details.  Isn’t that a good feeling?  Don’t you feel just a little bit special?

Now think about this scripture passage and how Jesus had taken care of everything.  All the disciples had to do was to go to the specific house and prepare the Passover meal.  Everything was there for them…it was all arranged. The disciples simply had to follow Jesus’ directions, and they would find the right place.  And every detail of our lives is arranged by God in just this manner.  All we have to do is communicate with Him…listen for His directions…and follow them…and everything is planned and prepared.

Today, I am grateful for preparation.

  • I am grateful that God loves me…that He planned and prepared for my life eons ago!
  • I am grateful that God sent Jesus to prepare us to live according to His teachings.
  • I am grateful that Jesus died on the cross for my sins – that He prepared for my salvation long before I was even born.
  • I am grateful that Jesus has gone to prepare an Eternal place for me…and you…and all who seek Him and give their hearts to Him.
I feel incredibly special and loved.  To think that God has done all of this for me is overwhelming, in a way.  I cannot wrap my brain around such love and preparation…and yet, I will gladly accept it! 

I know that there is really no such thing on this earth as the “perfect vacation.”  But I also know that this - and so much more - awaits me in heaven, thanks to God’s incredible preparation.  I plan to enjoy every single minute of it!  Meanwhile, I will pay close attention to the daily “preparations” that God makes in my life and relish each and every one.  What about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 30, 2015

Luke 22:1-6
And now the Passover celebration was drawing near—the Jewish festival when only bread made without yeast was used. The chief priests and other religious leaders were actively plotting Jesus’ murder, trying to find a way to kill him without starting a riot—a possibility they greatly feared.

Then Satan entered into Judas Iscariot, who was one of the twelve disciples, and he went over to the chief priests and captains of the Temple guards to discuss the best way to betray Jesus to them. They were, of course, delighted to know that he was ready to help them and promised him a reward. So he began to look for an opportunity for them to arrest Jesus quietly when the crowds weren’t around.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Do you remember when you were a little kid, and maybe a group of other youngsters wanted to do something that they knew they shouldn’t…so they sought a scapegoat? Maybe they wanted to bust some windows in an old building…and they encouraged a younger sibling or friend to actually do the dirty work while they watched.  Wanting to please…and maybe motivated by some sort of incentive (like a candy bar or a special toy – or merely the approval of the older children)…the younger child agreed to “do the dirty deed.”  And then, when the damage was discovered, the older kids scattered like marbles…leaving their “patsy” to suffer the consequences.

I’ve read the scriptures about Judas Iscariot…I’ve examined some writings about his life and speculations on his motives. And here’s what I have concluded…Judas loved Jesus.  And Jesus surely loved Judas.  But Judas was “one of those people” who could be easily swayed, and this passage from Luke 22 says that the devil took advantage of this character flaw.  He (the devil) started small…planting seeds of doubt about the effectiveness of Jesus’ ministries…filling Judas’ mind with questions about why such expensive perfumed oil was used to wash Jesus’ feet…creating seemingly tiny “frictions” between Judas and the other disciples.

From there, it escalated to a point that Judas found himself accepting a paltry 30 pieces of silver in exchange for a “kiss” that he agreed to plant on Jesus’ cheek.  I don’t know that Judas ever in his wildest dreams imagined that the horrors of this Holy Week would occur.  At the most, he probably thought the Romans would rough Jesus up a bit, detain Him for a few days, then release Him and maybe tell Him to “hit the road, Jack - and never come back!”  Judas’ suicide indicates to me that he was remorseful…frightened…distraught over his mistake.  Taking his life was ultimately Judas’ worst transgression, because I believe that Jesus would have forgiven him, had he repented.

But this is how these things happen.  They start small…often with something that is seemingly innocent.  We listen to a comment here…we laugh and snicker at a racist remark there…we turn and look the other way when someone is mistreated or discriminated against.  And the first thing you know, we’ve signed on for bigger “jobs”.  We’re openly calling people derogatory names…picking up our bag and moving to another row or seat when someone we deem to be offensive sits beside us…or teaching our children to hate certain races, ethnicities, people of different lifestyles, those who do not fit our “model” of socio-economic success, and those who are too fat or have a wild hair color or body art and piercings.  We “plant the kiss” that says, “This is the person to persecute!”  And it never even occurs to us that in doing such things, we have just betrayed Jesus as surely as Judas Iscariot did that fateful night in the Garden of Gethsemane.

Hear the Good News…just as surely as Jesus loved Judas – He loves each of us.  And just as I believe that Judas could have been forgiven and set upright, I believe that each of us can experience forgiveness – and salvation/restitution through the blood of Jesus.  THIS is the Good News of Holy Week! 

We are all potentially “Judas”…but we can turn this around…today…now…this minute!  We can close the door on the devil, drop the money bag, and “turn this car around”!  Don’t you want to do this?  Aren’t you ready to sit at the feet of Jesus once again…free of any guilt, shame or remorse?  Will this be the day that you seek His forgiveness and get started?  Don’t you think it should be?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 29, 2015

Luke 19:35-44
They brought the colt to Jesus. Then, throwing their coats on its back, they helped Jesus get on. As he rode, the people gave him a grand welcome, throwing their coats on the street.

Right at the crest, where Mount Olives begins its descent, the whole crowd of disciples burst into enthusiastic praise over all the mighty works they had witnessed:

Blessed is he who comes,
    the king in God’s name!
All’s well in heaven!
    Glory in the high places!

Some Pharisees from the crowd told him, “Teacher, get your disciples under control!”

But he said, “If they kept quiet, the stones would do it for them, shouting praise.”

When the city came into view, he wept over it. “If you had only recognized this day, and everything that was good for you! But now it’s too late. In the days ahead your enemies are going to bring up their heavy artillery and surround you, pressing in from every side. They’ll smash you and your babies on the pavement. Not one stone will be left intact. All this because you didn’t recognize and welcome God’s personal visit.”

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.
 
What a difference one week can make! In the course of seven days, Jesus was heralded as a hero, arrested, interrogated, beaten to a pulp, crucified…and He rose from the grave.  Now that’s a week! 

Our pastor likes to say that “you cannot travel from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday without considering the cross.”  And he is correct! But you also cannot safely and successfully travel a single step of many of “life’s journeys” unless you “recognize and welcome God’s personal visit”.  Trials, physical abuse and executions were common in Jesus’ day.  Believe me…the mere mortals who were convicted and crucified did not rise from the dead!  And many of those who were so eager and anxious to laud Jesus as the Messiah on one Sunday were nowhere to be found by “Good Friday”.

Ours is not a solitary journey.  We cannot base our faith on one happy day…or one devastating experience.  We must embrace life as a whole...and trust God in every minute of it.  We must “recognize and welcome God’s personal visit” in each and every aspect of our life…”the good, the bad, and the ugly”…and believe that He will lead us “from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday” - and see us through what lies in between.

As difficult as life seems some days, it can never compare to what Jesus endured for us on the cross.  How can we ignore the One who did so much for us - for even one minute?  Isn’t it time we welcomed God to reign in our lives and dwell in our hearts…each and every minute of the day?  Will this be the Palm Sunday that you herald His presence…and give Him a permanent “home”?

 
©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 28, 2015

Psalm 119:103-105
Your teachings are sweeter
    than honey.
They give me understanding
    and make me hate all lies.
Your word is a lamp
    that gives light
    wherever I walk.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.
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I’ve been sewing for the kids for Easter…a dress and matching pants for Zola, t-shirts with pockets in a coordinating fabric for the boys.  Everywhere I turn in my sewing room, there are lights.  There is bright fluorescent light overhead…a bright LED light on my sewing machine, and another bright bulb on my serger.  Even my iron has a light that tells me when the device is turned on – and blinks when the iron has been left unattended for more than a few minutes!  I cannot imagine trying to sew without these lights.  Well, okay…I guess I could do without the light on the iron – or could I?!

Without a strong light source, many daily tasks would be virtually impossible.  And so it is with God.  If we do not have His “Light source” – Jesus Christ – there are a lot of things that will always loom just beyond our grasp…like true joy, peace, comfort, wisdom, and courage.  If our hearts are not illuminated with the “Light” of the Holy Spirit, we will never experience an understanding of what it means to belong fully to God.

Someone told me recently that there are those who teach and preach God’s grace and love…but really do not feed us the scriptures.  They do not give us doctrine and Biblical instruction.  My reply was that until one understands the love, grace, mercy and forgiveness of Jesus Christ…until the LIGHT of His passion – and compassion – for each of us fills our hearts and minds, we will not hear the teachings of the scriptures.  They will hold no meaning for us – at least not to the extent that God intends.

My message to you today is that God loves you…far beyond what you could ever imagine and in spite of anything you might have ever thought, said, or done.  GOD LOVES YOU…so much that He sent Jesus to light the way for you to find Him. GOD LOVES YOU…so much that He allowed Jesus to die for your sins - and then gave you His Holy Spirit to illuminate your heart. God wants His word and will for your life to be sweeter than honey…He wants you to understand how perfect His plans and promises are for each of us. 

I cannot imagine what my sewing projects would look like if I created them in the dark…and I don’t even want to think about what my life would look like without the Light of Christ!  Won’t you fully embrace His Light for yourself and walk in His ways?  Will this be the day that you begin?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 27, 2015

Psalm 119:10-11
I have tried my best to find you—don’t let me wander off from your instructions. I have thought much about your words and stored them in my heart so that they would hold me back from sin.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Have you ever misplaced something and “hunted high and low” for it?  When you finally DID locate whatever it was you were looking for, did you vow to put it in a safe place so that you would remember that it was there?  Have you ever said, “Someday, when I least expect it, XYZ will show up”…and stopped looking for whatever you lost?

This is exactly what a lot of us do with God.  I’m not talking about misplacing our Bible…although I’m sure that happens!  I’m talking about getting so caught up in our own desires and agendas and pushing God to the “back burner” to the point that He ultimately ends up under a pile of “stuff”, shoved to the corner.  And the first thing you know it, we wonder, “Where did God go?” Sadly, some of us leave Him there and assume that we’ll “find Him when we really need Him”!

The truth is that God didn’t go anywhere.  We wandered off!  And a lot of us have found our way back to God and said, “I’m ever going to let You go again!”  But then things happen, “life” gets in the way, and we slip back into old habits. 

We are reminded in this verse from Psalm 119 that we must make every effort to see that this doesn’t happen!  We must stay in constant fellowship with God…seek His word and wisdom…rest in His peace and comfort…and diligently pursue His will for our lives.  We must keep God in a place where we always know that He is there – and we must make sure that we never “lose” Him again.

Unlike some of our things that get “buried” or “lost”, God is not hard to find.  He is only a whisper away.  Will this be the day that you call to Him and give Him a place of permanent prominence in your life, once and for all?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 26, 2015

Proverbs 8:17
I love everyone who loves me,
    and I will be found by all
    who honestly search.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Greg and I watched an old episode of “The Andy Griffith Show” last night in which Opie was upset because he got a new teacher – “Old Lady Crump”!  This teacher had doubled Opie’s homework and was emphasizing the importance of the study of history.  Andy, Barney, Aunt Bee and Opie sat at the breakfast table and debated the importance of gaining wisdom about our history, and Opie got the mistaken idea that studying this subject might not be so valuable or worthwhile.

In the end, Andy made historical events “come to life” for Opie and his friends…and they decided that this knowledge was pretty important, after all.  The boys formed a “Minutemen Club” of cool kids who knew historical facts…and those who weren’t “in” were dubbed the “Redcoats”.  The bottom line was that these children discovered the value of gaining wisdom…and how it impacted every area of their lives.

The eighth chapter of Proverbs is about God’s wisdom.  If you will go to BibleGateway.com and read this entire chapter, you will find that King Solomon outlines in detail the benefits of seeking God’s wisdom.  Chief among them is the emphasis of this verse – that God is totally available to everyone who seeks Him…and that He LOVES us and our hunger for His knowledge.  I particularly like verse 9, which says, “If you have understanding, you will see that my words are just what you need.”

Like 4th graders who cannot see the value in gaining wisdom through study and homework, we often cannot comprehend the value of gaining GOD’s wisdom through time spent in fellowship with Him.  We do not grasp how “cool” it is to operate in God’s “Minutemen Club”…to be ready at a minute’s notice because we are backed by the wisdom and power of our Heavenly Father. 

We can change this…and we can start right now.  Verses 34-35 say, “Come to my home each day and listen to me. You will find happiness. By finding me, you find life, and the Lord will be pleased with you.”  Won’t you visit the “home of Wisdom” today and spend some time in fellowship with God?  Will this be the day that you begin to truly find life – and wisdom - in Him? 

   
©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 25, 2015

Proverbs 3:5-6
With all your heart
you must trust the Lord
    and not your own judgment.
Always let him lead you,
    and he will clear the road
    for you to follow.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Get ready to wave your hands in the air and say, “Noo-noo, Noo-noo!” (“Twilight Zone” theme song reference, for those of you of a certain age!). I went to bed last night praying for protection and care for several of our family members who are traveling.  I have to admit…the devil tried to fill my heart and mind with trepidation and fear.  I was awakened more than once in the night with this thought…”Trust in the LORD with all your heart…and lean not on your own understanding.” – Proverbs 3:5. I also was given the first verses of Psalm 121…“I look to the hills! Where will I find help? It will come from the Lord, who created the heavens and the earth.”

I woke up with these verses playing like a loop in my head.  And while you may think, “She must not have gotten a wink of sleep!”… I have to tell you, I slept very well!  What does this tell me?  That God is 100%...totally…in control.  He is with me, for me…even while I sleep.  God never leaves me…and He never will.  I have comfort today - for myself and for my loved ones. When I opened the outline I had prepared for this series of devotionals and discovered what was “on tap” as a scripture reference for today, I simply had to laugh out loud!  If this isn’t a sign that God is on top of the situation, I don’t know what would be!

Dozens of people I know and love are traveling because it is Spring Break.  They are having fun, spending time together as families, and making memories.  And God is watching over each of them.  I thank Him daily for this care and protection…and I know that He hears not only my prayers of praise, but also my “gentle-reminder petitions” on behalf of them.  He hears my prayers – and answers perfectly…and I am learning to fully rest in this.

With all my heart, I trust the LORD.  I learned the hard way what a waste of energy it is to doubt…to wring my hands and worry…to ask God to handle certain situations – and then pick them right back up and try to “massage” them myself!  I’m done with that.  I’m all in…believing that He is in complete control.  I still present my cares and concerns to him each day…but I fully trust Him to handle them without my interference.  I look to the hills for God’s help…and then I trust in God and His judgment.  What about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 24, 2015

Revelation 2:14-16
But our homeland is in heaven, where our Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, is; and we are looking forward to his return from there. When he comes back, he will take these dying bodies of ours and change them into glorious bodies like his own, using the same mighty power that he will use to conquer all else everywhere.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

December 11, 2007, is a date I remember vividly.  A few of you who have followed my daily devotionals for many years know that several years ago, I learned of a little boy from Bigelow, Arkansas - Job McCully - who totally stole my heart.  Job was diagnosed in July 2002 with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL).  He was four.  He underwent chemotherapy…and radiation…in preparation for a bone marrow transplant.

During Job’s hospital stays, his family was incredibly supportive…his parents, Rob and Tina…big sister Nicole, Aunt Tammy – and his maternal grandmother, Glenda, who had lived with Job’s family since he was born.  One night as Glenda lay with Job, he asked her to stay close to him. Then Job said, "Don't cry for me grandma". She wasn't crying or sad at the time and probably did not understand why Job said this.  But over the next several years, there would be plenty of times when tears flowed - for both Job and his grandmother.

Job received a bone marrow transplant in October 2002.  During his hospital stay, Grandma Glenda was often with him as a caregiver…and she was a source of strength for everyone.  In 2003, Job battled RSV pneumonia, the flu, and Broncholitios Obliterans, which caused his lungs to deteriorate…and he was hospitalized many times.  Grandma Glenda was always there with his parents to offer care and support.  Then in 2006, Grandma Glenda was diagnosed with breast cancer.  Her philosophy was [paraphrasing]…”if Job can endure all of these treatments, so can I”.  And she did.

Job was hospitalized pretty much all of the year 2007…first at Arkansas Children’s Hospital in Little Rock, then in Houston…and finally in St. Louis.  By September 2007, it did not look like this little guy – now all of nine years – would make it.  The doctors encouraged Job’s mother to sign a DNR – Do Not Resucitate – order.  They explained how dire Job’s situation was, and that there was not much left for them to do.  Tina McCully wrote in Job’s *CaringBridge journal…”They wanted me to sign it. Anyway, I just stood there and listened to them, smiled and said thank you, and walked away. The only way I'm signing that paper is if God Himself tells me to, and He's not going to do that because He is too busy HEALING JOB.”  And God did heal Job.

On December 11, 2007, Job McCully received a double lung transplant. And on February 21, 2008 – the one-year anniversary of his hospitalization, Job was released.  The family stayed in the St. Louis area for a few days to make sure that all was well.  In early March, the McCully family came home to a “hero’s welcome” in Bigelow, Arkansas - complete with a parade!  In the months and years since then, Job has survived histoplasmosis, CMV, Adenovirus, and diabetes.  For his 16th birthday in May 2014, he received a shiny, new red pickup truck.  Job is now enjoying his junior year of high school life.

Grandma Glenda survived breast cancer…but the beast returned in her kidneys.  And in the last few weeks, she was hospitalized once again.  Doctors gave her six months to live two days ago…and God called her home this morning.  This remarkable woman can now fully attest that “our homeland is Heaven”…because I am sure that she is there! 

If you visit Job’s CaringBridge page and read the posts, you will see that this family walks in some of the most powerful faith I have ever witnessed.  Whatever challenges or devastating news they have been given, their trust in Jesus remains strong.  They never doubted His presence…and they have clung to His promises.  And I know that this will not change now.

There will be times when God heals us on this earth…and times when we are given glorious bodies for all Eternity.  Our job is to never doubt His mighty power and presence in all circumstances.  The McCullys demonstrate this beautifully…and I have been incredibly inspired and encouraged by their faith and discipleship.  I can only hope that I represent Jesus even half as well.

What about you?  Do you trust in the mighty power of God in all situations and circumstances?  Are you able to say, “the only way I’m going to do XYZ is if GOD tells me to”?  Do you confidence in God’s presence in your life…and His ability to manage anything and everything?  Don’t you want to?

Please pray for the McCully family in the days to come…and for others who are sick, suffering, and grieving the passing of loved ones.  Thank God for His amazing power and presence…His compassion, mercy, and healing.  And ask God to give you the ability to recognize His presence in your life on an hourly basis… to walk in His wisdom and care - always and in all ways.


©2015 Debbie Robus

*http://caringbridgeclassic.org/ar/job/index.htm

Daily Devotional for March 23, 2015

Philippians 3:15-19
So let’s keep focused on that goal, those of us who want everything God has for us. If any of you have something else in mind, something less than total commitment, God will clear your blurred vision—you’ll see it yet! Now that we’re on the right track, let’s stay on it.

Stick with me, friends. Keep track of those you see running this same course, headed for this same goal. There are many out there taking other paths, choosing other goals, and trying to get you to go along with them. I’ve warned you of them many times; sadly, I’m having to do it again. All they want is easy street. They hate Christ’s Cross. But easy street is a dead-end street. Those who live there make their bellies their gods; belches are their praise; all they can think of is their appetites.

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

It started simply enough…I opened a drawer in the kitchen one morning, rummaged for what I was needing, and ended up taking everything out of the drawer and reorganizing it.  Soon, I had moved on to the next drawer…and the next…and a couple of hours later, every drawer in the kitchen had been cleaned and organized.  I felt like a new woman! That was early January.  I was so inspired and motivated by my newly organized kitchen drawers that I moved on to other drawers and closets. 

I am not finished, but I am just a closet and a couple of drawers away from having reorganized my entire house.  It’s not perfect…by a long stretch.  And I bet I could go back through and weed out even more unnecessary “stuff” and make things look a whole lot better.  But I am very much a “work in progress” – even in the areas of closets and drawers!

I’ll admit…more than once, I got sidetracked – and discouraged.  After all, what difference does it make if there is a mess behind the cabinet doors?  Who cares what’s in the drawers... and is it really worth my time and energy to finish this project?  I only had to think of the time I’ve wasted looking for a particular fastener or thread spool in my sewing cabinet to realize that the days I spent organizing, cleaning and alphabetizing these items will make my future sewing projects – and other activities - go so much smoother.  And I will be able to accomplish a lot more with less stress!

The old adage that anything worth doing is worth doing right is true…and nowhere more  than in our Spiritual life.  If we are going to do this “Disciple of Christ thing”…if we are going to walk with Jesus, follow His teachings, share His Good News, and bask in His blessings…doesn’t it make sense to stay on course and do the hard work? 

Jesus does not offer us short-cuts to full-blown discipleship…and with good reason – He doesn’t take them, either!  Read the New Testament and study His 30+ years on this earth.  Read Paul’s letters and see how Jesus left a legacy of ministry with His disciples…to be carried on through the generations – even to us and beyond.  There is very little that is easy and simple, once you open your heart and invite Jesus to dwell there and guide your every breath.  But oh, it’s so worth the effort.  The joy and blessings you feel in opening your Spiritual “closet and drawers” and finding peace and organization… purpose and overflow…are so worth any struggle and challenge.

Will everything stay neat and orderly?  Probably not?  Will you have to reorganize a “drawer or closet” from time to time – both spiritually and physically?  Most likely.  Will it be worth the effort?  Most definitely!

Won’t you make this the day that you start to get organized…in your Spiritual fellowship with Jesus AND maybe your physical life?  Will this be the day that you open your heart and see Christ in charge instead of chaos?  Are you ready to get busy “cleaning” and get back on the right path?  Don’t you think you should be? 


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 22, 2015

Philippians 3:12-14
I’m not saying that I have this all together, that I have it made. But I am well on my way, reaching out for Christ, who has so wondrously reached out for me. Friends, don’t get me wrong: By no means do I count myself an expert in all of this, but I’ve got my eye on the goal, where God is beckoning us onward—to Jesus. I’m off and running, and I’m not turning back.

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

On January 15, 2015, climbers Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson reached the summit of The Dawn Wall of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park.  At an elevation of 3,000 feet, this smooth sheer granite mountainside is considered to be the most difficult free climb in the world.  Somewhere around 70 people greeted the climbers atop the summit and celebrated with champagne.

This was not the first time these two had attempted the climb.  In 2010, Jorgeson broke his ankle early in an ascent and could not continue...while Caldwell got to the most difficult pitch and could not finish.  The two climbers subsequently worked on the areas of the mountain that gave them the most trouble…before attempting the full climb again in December 2014.

I watched footage of the climb on television news reports...and even from the safety of my own home, I sometimes felt like I could not “look down”. There was coverage of the men lounging in "tents" that were somehow tethered to the side of the mountain.  I marveled at how calmly they lay reading, texting, eating...as if they were perfectly secure on level ground.

Our journey as Christians is something like the free climb of El Capitan's Dawn Wall...fraught with potential for danger and disaster, yet so worth the struggle.  It is reported that these climbers…Caldwell in particular…were focused on accomplishing this ascent with something akin to single-minded obsession.  They “kept their eye on the goal” and trusted in the safety measures they had set in place – and the coaching and encouragement from each other, family members and friends – and they forged onward and upward.  And this is what we are called to do with Christ.

There will be days when we will be tempted to “look down”…there will be “injuries” and setbacks along the way.  But if we stay focused…if we keep on looking toward heaven and working toward the goal of standing before Jesus someday in celebration of a “good climb”…we will get there.  God will make it so.

Don’t throw in the towel.  Don’t let “life” beat you down and discourage you to the point that you cannot continue the “climb” with Christ.  Hear God’s voice encouraging you to reach higher…to dig deeper…to stick with Him for the long haul.  Feel His hands supporting you in safety…His arms surrounding you in love…His spirit filling your heart.  Know that you can do this…that with God, all things truly are possible.  Keep looking upward toward Heaven and working toward the goal that God has set for you in Jesus.  Now…don’t you have some climbing to do?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 21, 2015

Philippians 3:7-11
But Christ has shown me that what I once thought was valuable is worthless. Nothing is as wonderful as knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. I have given up everything else and count it all as garbage. All I want is Christ and to know that I belong to him.

I could not make myself acceptable to God by obeying the Law of Moses. God accepted me simply because of my faith in Christ. All I want is to know Christ and the power that raised him to life. I want to suffer and die as he did, so that somehow I also may be raised to life.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

I was sitting in the parking lot after attending a funeral, and I spotted a friend from church walking to her car.  I called to her and asked if she would like to ride with me to the cemetery.  She gladly accepted my offer, and as she got in the car, she said, “I wish I was dressed properly.”  She had come to the service directly from her job as a nurse, and she was wearing her white lab coat.  I assured her that she looked fine…that nobody would give her attire a second thought – other than to notice that she took time out of her busy day to attend this service!

Here’s the thing…there are times when it is important to be “prim and proper”…when wearing the right outfit is critical.  And there are times when it is simply most important that you show up!  I’ve had to make a mad dash to the Emergency Department with a loved one in the wee hours of the morning when I looked scary enough to frighten grown men!  But there was no way I was going to say to those in need or the EMTs, “Hang on a few minutes while I put on some makeup and fluff up my hair!”  I seriously doubt that very many people would pause to check their outfit in the mirror if they found themselves in a burning building! It’s all a matter of priorities!

Too often, we get caught up in what we think will “look pretty” to God…and we miss Him completely.  The moment comes and goes…we waste the connection and lose out on a blessing.  We get so mired in how many Bible verses we can quote, who killed who in the Old Testament and what sacrifices were required to atone…we worry about whether we gave enough money, sat on enough committees, said enough prayers, and participated in enough worship activities…and we are completely deaf and dumb to Jesus calling to us…”Hey…c’mon over here and let Me love on you!”

Do not misunderstand me…I believe that Christian rituals are important.  I believe in the sanctity of Holy Communion and only wish that more people fully understood its significance and the profound sacredness of this experience.  I also believe in the holiness of God’s word…all of it!  But if we don’t fully understand the lineage of all of the kings or have a firm grasp on all of the names of the leaders of this battle or that one, yet we truly know Jesus and strive to follow Him…I would say that we have our values in proper alignment.  If we are in fellowship with Jesus and understand WHY He came to earth for us and the full extent of what He accomplished on our behalf…THIS is what matters the most!  The rest will surely fall into place.

I am a “Field of Dreams” Christian…I believe in the “If you build it, they will come” philosophy.  In other words, when we focus on Jesus…when we fully commit to Him and follow His teachings, I believe all of the rest will follow – the desire to study God’s word in depth…the yearning to fellowship with other believers…the conviction to give of our “time, talents and money” to the church…and a craving for time in His presence. 

Jesus doesn’t care if we are wearing a lab coat or our “Sunday best”!  He just wants US!  And I want Him, as well.  What about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 20, 2015

Philippians 3:1
Whatever happens, dear friends, be glad in the Lord. I never get tired of telling you this, and it is good for you to hear it again and again.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

When I was teaching, my school district participated in something called PET…Program for Effective Teaching.  PET training was intense, and consisted of actual classroom instruction in this method for all teachers…followed by exercises where we taught lessons using this method while we were observed and critiqued by those trained to determine if we were implementing the concepts correctly.  So there was a lot of repetition…and some “trial and error” involved.

In PET, the concept is that each lesson has three components…the “set” – or quite literally, the set-up for the lesson…the lesson itself…and closure.  In the “set”, the teacher provides an activity, a relatable analogy, plays a game, or does something to engage the students and provide relevance…and then he/she explains what the students will be learning.  In the lesson, obviously the instruction and practice occur until the teacher is sure that the student understands the concept.  Finally, the closure reviews what was learned.  The objective is repeated during the closure to ensure that students remember it. 

Studies have shown that people best remember the first and last things they are told, so in order to remember that middle “lesson”, repetition on the front and back end is necessary.  Personally, I LOVED the PET method of teaching and have applied it to other areas of my life…from teaching a Sunday school lesson to writing these devotionals!

If you are still reading, you may be wondering what this has to do with the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Philippians – and feeling God’s presence in your life.  TV celebrity Dr. Phil and others like to say that “People don’t care what you know…until they know that you care!”  And this is what I want you to remember today…that God loves you!  He sent Jesus to die on the cross for you! 

God cares about every single thing that is happening in your life…from that test you struggled to pass to your relationship breakup to how the waiter mixed up your order at the restaurant!  He cares about your wayward child, your disagreeable spouse or aging parent(s), your health, your daily ups and downs – and even your struggle to lose a few pounds.  God numbers the hairs on your head…whether they are blond, brunette, red, grey or purple…long, short – or fairy sparse!

Until we understand how much God loves us – how much He cares for us – we will never fully understand how much He is involved with each and every detail of our lives.  We will miss out on blessings, comfort, wisdom, and peace, because we do not trust that God really IS with us…listening and loving us through every single experience of our lives.  But we can change that!  We can remind ourselves continually that “I am a child of God.  He loves me as I am.  God is always available to me…He is only a whisper away!”  And we can begin today!

Are you ready to fully recognize God’s presence…to understand how much He cares for you?  Will this be the day that you begin to operate differently…more completely in His wisdom and peace?  Don’t you think it should be?  Have you said “Hello” to God today?  Isn’t it time you did?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 19, 2015

Philippians 2:5-11
Think of yourselves the way Christ Jesus thought of himself. He had equal status with God but didn’t think so much of himself that he had to cling to the advantages of that status no matter what. Not at all. When the time came, he set aside the privileges of deity and took on the status of a slave, became human! Having become human, he stayed human. It was an incredibly humbling process. He didn’t claim special privileges. Instead, he lived a selfless, obedient life and then died a selfless, obedient death—and the worst kind of death at that—a crucifixion.

Because of that obedience, God lifted him high and honored him far beyond anyone or anything, ever, so that all created beings in heaven and on earth—even those long ago dead and buried—will bow in worship before this Jesus Christ, and call out in praise that he is the Master of all, to the glorious honor of God the Father.

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

I saw this quote Facebook…”Don't worry about what I'm doing.  Worry about why you're worried about what I'm doing.”  The author was un-cited.  As I read this scripture passage, I was struck by a couple of thoughts. I’m reading Marjorie Holmes’ book, Three From Galilee*, a fictional novel based on the lives of Jesus, Mary and Joseph.  Through this account, the reader is able to see Jesus as a real person…a little boy very much like our nephews Timothy and Nathan…or a precocious pre-teen like our nephew Chase. 

I am still reading the book, so I do not know whether this story concludes before Jesus becomes a man.  But the point is that even in this fictional depiction, Jesus took on the very ordinary life of a young boy.  He played and worked alongside Joseph, did chores for His mother, and was very much an “ordinary” boy.  Jesus set aside His “position” and became 100% human

Okay, so what does this mean for us?  It means that Jesus KNOWS what it’s like to be us…I mean, He really knows!  He understands what we have gone through – and what is ahead for us, because He lived much of it!  He endured things that – hopefully – none of us will ever have to experience…torture, unimaginable ridicule, and the most heinous of deaths.  Jesus gets us!

Again I thought about this quote…and how we are often consumed with what others are thinking and/or how they are acting.  We are so worried about what he did or she said – and WHY – and in doing so, we elevate ourselves to a level of superiority that is unmerited.  If Jesus Christ humbled Himself and didn’t “play the Son of God card” as a general rule…what right do we have to judge others and act all high and mighty?  The bottom line is that we do not know what is in another person’s heart…we have no clue what demons they battle, how well they slept last night, or what is going on behind the closed doors of their abode.  But God does.
   
So we must trust God to judge…to rule…to “fix people”…and we must concentrate on our own relationship with Him and doing what WE are supposed to do. We must look at Jesus’ model and learn His ways.  We must humbly interact with others and serve God with faithful obedience…and He will bless us in ways we cannot begin to imagine.

Where is God in these everyday situations?  Sometimes, it is hard to see His presence in many people and circumstances of our everyday living.  But I assure you…God is with us!  Just as surely as He operated through the human Jesus, God is with us, each and every minute of the day.  We can allow Him room to work…or we can muddy the waters with our meddling.  Which will you choose?


©2015 Debbie Robus

*http://www.amazon.com/Three-From-Galilee-Young-Nazareth/dp/0425205509

Daily Devotional for March 18, 2015

Matthew 5:17-18
“Don’t suppose for a minute that I have come to demolish the Scriptures—either God’s Law or the Prophets. I’m not here to demolish but to complete. I am going to put it all together, pull it all together in a vast panorama. God’s Law is more real and lasting than the stars in the sky and the ground at your feet. Long after stars burn out and earth wears out, God’s Law will be alive and working.

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

Yesterday, I attended the funeral of a man named Jerry - one of my parents’ lifelong friends. His children have been MY friends since childhood, and Jerry was even a pallbearer at my dad’s funeral nearly 16 years ago.  During the service, the pastor read from Ecclesiastes 3, where King Solomon talks about “seasons” of life – and a purpose for each one. He made the comment that sometimes things happen in life that seem perfectly horrible…terrible, painful, gut-wrenching things occur that we cannot fully understand.  But we see later that they were a “set-up” of sorts to prepare us to handle something else.  Had we not experienced the first situation, we would not have been adequately equipped to handle what happened next – or we might have missed out on understanding the joy and blessings of the latter event.

I have found this to be so true in my own life.  And if a specific experience did not help me directly…I was able to use it to help someone else at a later point.  As I read this scripture passage and Jesus’ claim that He did not come to negate what God had already said and done – but rather to enhance it – I thought of the words from yesterday’s service.  If we don’t understand the rituals and “living sacrifices” of the Old Testament…we cannot fully appreciate how Jesus’ death on the cross settled that for us – once and for all.  If we don’t grasp how God guided and cared for those who loved Him in the time before Jesus came to earth, we cannot begin to comprehend Jesus’ love and care for people He had never even met…like you and me!

There is something profound that happens in the life of a Christian when he/she begins to realize how completely God orchestrates everything…from the first day of our lives to the last – and beyond.  When we start to really understand how He “pulls it all together” – how today’s challenges and heartaches prepare us for tomorrow’s successes and joys – we begin to experience the fullness of God in a new way.  His constant presence becomes more real to us…and we are far more cognizant of how truly alive Jesus is…here…now…today…and always!

Yesterday, I sat between my mother and a dear “other mother figure”…and I considered the pastor’s words about our life experiences and “seasons”.  I thought of Jerry and these ladies…and other dear souls who were in attendance…and I was reminded of how this has “played out” in their lives over and again.  The same God who has guided and tended to these dear people of faith is doing these things in your life and mine.  Do you recognize His work?  Do you feel His presence?  Don’t you want to? 

Spend some time today talking to God about this.  Think over the events of your life and see if you don’t recognize some distinct circumstances where He has knit together the bigger picture for a blessed outcome.  Recognize God’s constant presence in your heart and mind…and trust Him to orchestrate each “season” perfectly.


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 17, 2015

Matthew 25:33-40
He will place the sheep on his right and the goats on his left. Then the king will say to those on his right, “My father has blessed you! Come and receive the kingdom that was prepared for you before the world was created. When I was hungry, you gave me something to eat, and when I was thirsty, you gave me something to drink. When I was a stranger, you welcomed me, and when I was naked, you gave me clothes to wear. When I was sick, you took care of me, and when I was in jail, you visited me.”

Then the ones who pleased the Lord will ask, “When did we give you something to eat or drink? When did we welcome you as a stranger or give you clothes to wear or visit you while you were sick or in jail?”

The king will answer, “Whenever you did it for any of my people, no matter how unimportant they seemed, you did it for me.”

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Yesterday, a card arrived in the mail from my friend Connie.  On the front was a cute little fuzzy kitten, and inside, Connie had written a note expressing how sad she was for us when she read my post on Facebook about the death last week of our cat, Lucy…and how she was praying for our peace and comfort.  DOZENS of others commented to my post to express their sympathies…and we were greatly comforted by each and every word. In each one of these gestures, I felt the love of Jesus. I felt His hand on my shoulder…His arms wrapped tightly around me…His peace and comfort flooding my heart. 

Sunday morning, the children settled on a rug at church for their Sunday school opening.  I was kneeling on the floor nearby.  Suddenly, Zola stood up and ran to me, threw her arms around my neck, and planted a big kiss on my cheek…then she ran back to her spot on the rug. That little almost-4-year-old girl will never know the impact of her gesture…but for me, it was like a kiss from Jesus!

We underestimate the power of little things…a smile…a gentle touch…a hug…a simple comment on Facebook or a wave across the aisle or parking lot at Wal-Mart.  As much as true Christian discipleship is about getting into God’s word and spending time in prayer and fellowship – with Him and others – it’s also about being the hands and feet of Jesus in ways great and small. 

Sometimes we get so busy trying to APPEAR “Christian” through things like attending worship services, meetings and Bible studies...writing out big checks to the church...and making sure that everything “looks pretty”…and we forget to “be a sheep who feeds the sheep” in Jesus’ name.  When we do this, we are instantly thrust into the “goat” pen.  I don’t know about you, but that’s not where I want to be!

Look around today.  Who needs to be “fed, clothed, healed, comforted or visited” by you in Jesus’ name?  Who is ministering to YOU in this manner?  Do you recognize the power and presence of God in these gestures?  Do you understand that THIS is our true role as Christian disciples…letting the love of Christ flow through us to others in this manner…sharing Him with each other through acts of love, respect and service?  Are you acting like a “sheep”…or have you somewhat become a “goat”?  This is the perfect day to “change pens”!  Are you ready to make a move?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 16, 2015

John 9:28-33
Then they cursed him and said, “You are his disciple, but we are disciples of Moses. We know God has spoken to Moses, but as for this fellow, we don’t know anything about him.”

“Why, that’s very strange!” the man replied. “He can heal blind men, and yet you don’t know anything about him! Well, God doesn’t listen to evil men, but he has open ears to those who worship him and do his will. Since the world began there has never been anyone who could open the eyes of someone born blind. If this man were not from God, he couldn’t do it.”

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

Someone posted a comment on a Facebook group I belong to about the history of my home town. They asked, “Where was the first hospital?” Comments began to pour in…many adding, “I’ve lived here all my life…I know this is right!”  The trouble is…many of them were not right.  Erroneous information flooded the comments to this post.

Then someone posted a photo of a page from a historical book written several years ago about our town.  The page clearly described the two hospitals in our town…which came first…who owned them…who sold them…and who bought them!  The facts were there in black and white -  yet comments continued to pour in that contradicted this documentation.

Why does this matter?  Because people will soon skew the “facts” so badly that no one will know what to believe…even though the real information is right in front of them.  What has been a fun and informative page of local history will lose followers and become a watered-down source of half-truths and fuzzy recollections.

In the spiritual world, when we fail to look at the facts and recognize Jesus, it’s as if God stops listening.  Now hear me on this…God will always hear you when you call on Him.  But when you continually skew the facts and act in half-truths…when you attempt to “have it your way” and operate under your own power…when you turn away and ignore His presence…God is not going to be so eager to rush to your rescue at the first sign of trouble!  It’s like when a toddler throws a tantrum and expects to get his/her own way.  Often the parent will simply ignore this outburst…at least for a while…and let the child figure out that what he/she is doing is not working!

So what’s the point of all of this?  In order to truly hear from God, we have to recognize – and acknowledge – Him.  He is all around us…we can find evidence of His handiwork in every activity of our day.  But too many of us are not looking - or don’t see what is right in front of us.  We most certainly have not sought the facts…dug out our Bibles and discovered how the scriptures apply to our daily living…or spent some time just sitting and “listening” for God’s voice.  We’ve walked right past the “page with the facts” about God and Jesus…and declared our lives to be in shambles.  And then we have wondered why this is! 

We can change all of this…and we should…now…here…today!  Won’t you spend some time with God and seek His presence in your life?  Won’t you sit and listen for His voice…open your eyes and “see” Him at work all around you?  What do you really know about God?  Isn’t it time you learned more?  Will this be the day that you begin?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 15, 2015

John 7:25-29
Some of the people who lived there in Jerusalem said among themselves, “Isn’t this the man they are trying to kill? But here he is preaching in public, and they say nothing to him. Can it be that our leaders have learned, after all, that he really is the Messiah? But how could he be? For we know where this man was born; when Christ comes, he will just appear and no one will know where he comes from.”

So Jesus, in a sermon in the Temple, called out, “Yes, you know me and where I was born and raised, but I am the representative of one you don’t know, and he is Truth. I know him because I was with him, and he sent me to you.”

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Another one of my high school teachers died this week.  Mr. Stark taught my 8th grade science class and my 10th grade biology class.  He also taught chemistry…a class I did not take!  Mr. Stark taught in my hometown school system for decades.  He taught my mother’s sister…my husband and me…and my siblings.  I felt like I knew Mr. Stark well…and yet, there was a lot I did not know about him.

As I read this man’s obituary, I learned that he was born in a neighboring county…that he had served in the U.S. Army…and that he had a great love for Mexico and traveled there often. I knew that he had studied our county’s history intensively and was something of an expert on Native Americans who lived in this area, and that he had collected many Native American artifacts as he scoured the countryside for evidence and information.  But I didn’t know that he was the “family historian” among his own clan.

In essence, I knew enough about this educator to call him an acquaintance…maybe even a friend.  But I didn’t really know him!  And in a nutshell, this is how it is for many of us in our relationship with Jesus.  We know just enough about Jesus to call Him a friend…to want to say that we belong to Him…to  claim salvation and forgiveness for our sins through His blood on the cross.  But we don’t really know him!  Deep down, we don’t fully embrace Jesus…we don’t trust Him completely and believe totally in His God-given power and authority over every facet of our lives.

We know Jesus enough to call on Him when “the chips are down” – to utter a quick prayer when the mood strikes us.  But we have never taken the time to stop and fully consider the impact of His sacrifices on our behalf.  We have never given a lot of thought to the suffering He endured in atonement for our sins – the ones we are committing today…now…long after He was crucified, died, was buried, and ascended into Heaven.  We have not stopped to let the incredible, inexplicable, unending love of Jesus soak into every pore of our being.  We don’t really, truly know Jesus!

But we can change this!  We can stop and listen for His voice.  We can crack open our Bibles and read what Jesus has to tell us.  We can study the Gospels and examine the teachings of Jesus…and we can apply them to our daily living in a new and profound way.  We can talk to Jesus…often…and ask Him to show us how to live in a way that pleases Him.  We can share our deepest fears with Him…our hopes and dreams…our frustrations and disappointments.  We can learn to trust that He hears us…that because of Jesus, GOD meets our every need – perfectly. 

We.can.know.Jesus…in a way that really matters.  Don’t you want this?  Are you ready to get started?  Is today the day that you will begin to truly know your Savior?  Don’t’ you think it should be?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 14, 2015

John 5:22-24, 30
And the Father leaves all judgment of sin to his Son, so that everyone will honor the Son, just as they honor the Father. But if you refuse to honor God’s Son, whom he sent to you, then you are certainly not honoring the Father.

“I say emphatically that anyone who listens to my message and believes in God who sent me has eternal life, and will never be damned for his sins, but has already passed out of death into life.

“But I pass no judgment without consulting the Father. I judge as I am told. And my judgment is absolutely fair and just, for it is according to the will of God who sent me and is not merely my own.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

When my Mam-ma Polly got older, I was given her Durable Power of Attorney.  This meant that I could make major decisions for her in matters of pertaining to her personal business and her health. I could sign papers on her behalf, make decisions such as engaging Hospice care, and choose her primary care physician.  My grandmother had entrusted me with the authority to make these decisions.  But as long as she was able to communicate with me, I still consulted her before giving my final answer.  So even a couple of weeks before she died, I asked her if she wanted to go to the ER after she fell in her room and hit her head.  She adamantly told me, “NO!”  And after I carefully assessed the situation and consulted Hospice nurses and other family members, we did not go.

Before she lost her ability to speak, Mam-ma would often wave off a major decision (literally with a wave of the hand) and say, “Whatever y’all decide is okay with me.”  Now, I will admit that sometimes she said this with all of the pitiful sarcasm her voice could muster…but in her heart of hearts, she knew that I would never disrespect her – or make a decision that I felt would be harmful in any way.  My Mam-ma Polly knew that I had her back!

God gave Jesus authority over each of us and decisions with regard to our care – and our eternal destiny.  As the One who suffered, bled and died for our sins, it seems only right that Jesus would have the say over whether our petition to belong to Him is granted or not.  But notice that even Jesus still consults the Heavenly Father…that there is a deference and respect for Almighty God – even at this “level”.

What does this mean for us?  This passage reminds us of God’s authority and power…and also of His love, grace, mercy and compassion.  Even Jesus Christ, who died for our sins and has the complete and final say over whether we are forgiven of them for all eternity, still listens for His Father’s voice.  He still respects God’s “place” as the ultimate and final word on all matters.  And we must value this, also.  We must trust that in the end, it’s all up to God…and He has our back!

We must also remind ourselves to respect the earthly “chain of command”.  We must honor the “position” of those in power and authority, even when we might not agree with their decisions.  We must always offer them respect and behave toward them as would honor and please God.  This may often mean biting our tongue and keeping our opinions – and ugly thoughts – to ourselves.

Sometimes in our earthly judgments, we have to make hard decisions that go against the preference of an elder or someone in authority.  I am not telling you to lie for your boss…or to allow your ailing or aging parent or loved one to make a choice that will be harmful to them or someone else.  This is where we must turn to God and ask, “What do I do now?” And He will answer!

I am so glad to know that Jesus chose me…that He deemed me worth saving.  And I am grateful to know that He has my back…each and every minute of the day.  I am doing all I can to honor this gift...to ensure that MY decisions mirror His will in each and every situation.  I am constantly listening for His voice and seeking His opinion…what about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 13, 2015

John 3:27-30
John replied:  No one can do anything unless God in heaven allows it. You surely remember how I told you that I am not the Messiah. I am only the one sent ahead of him.

At a wedding the groom is the one who gets married. The best man is glad just to be there and to hear the groom’s voice. That’s why I am so glad. Jesus must become more important, while I become less important.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Anyone who knew my Mam-ma Polly understands that she was a “corker”.  So one day when someone said to her of me…”You are so lucky to have such an attentive grand-daughter,” my grandmother retorted…”Aw...she’s not so hot!”  Talk about knowing where I stood!  I couldn’t help but think of this when I read John’s words to his followers, who had gotten into an argument with a Jewish man over John’s authority because he was baptizing people…and JESUS was baptizing people also. The followers saw this as a “competition” for disciples and felt that people would start to follow Jesus instead of John.

John pointed out that HE was “not so hot”…he was not the one to be followed.  John explained that he was merely the messenger who paved the way for the coming of Jesus - the true Messiah.  If you read on in this passage, you will hear John explain that God has given each of us a purpose in our Christian discipleship…that we are the messengers – and something of Jesus’ “best man”.

We have to know where we stand.  We are NOT Jesus.  We never will be, even though some of us have mentally elevated ourselves to such status.  We judge others…we decide what is acceptable and what is not…we interpret scripture in a way that suits our agenda.  We raise the name of Jesus like a badge of honor and declare that what we are saying and doing is sanctioned by Him – even when we know in our hearts that it is not.

But the Good News is that God chose us for specific, important roles in His Kingdom.  If we pay attention and listen carefully, our mission and “position” will become abundantly clear.  We will have no problem serving as “best man” to Jesus, because we will understand that our eternal success is dependent upon our heavenly help (paraphrased from John 3:27 The Message*).  It’s not about what we accomplish here on this earth – unless we serve God and further His kingdom.  In other words - in and of ourselves - we’re not so hot!

Our goal should be to serve Jesus at every turn…to pave the way for others to find Him and become His followers, also.  We will stand beside Jesus and serve as His “best man”…and be happy just to know His voice.  If we remember to give Jesus “top billing”, He will show up in our lives in ways we never envisioned.  Undergirded by His power and presence, we will experience unimaginable confidence, peace and joy. That’s more than good enough for me…what about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus   

*Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

Daily Devotional for March 12, 2015

John 3:19-21
Their sentence is based on this fact: that the Light from heaven came into the world, but they loved the darkness more than the Light, for their deeds were evil.  They hated the heavenly Light because they wanted to sin in the darkness. They stayed away from that Light for fear their sins would be exposed and they would be punished.   But those doing right come gladly to the Light to let everyone see that they are doing what God wants them to.”

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Our kitchen, living and dining areas are basically all one big room.  The “house and garden experts” call this “open concept living”.  One wall of this room is almost completely covered in windows that start about knee-high and go all the way to the ceiling.  So early on sunny mornings, this room is flooded with bright light!  And I will tell you, there have been mornings that I wished for darkness!  Every single speck of dust…every crumb…every piece of lint, fuzz (and cat hair) shows in that bright light. 

I am not nearly as diligent with my housekeeping as I once was - so there are times when it looks pretty bad.  But I will also add that in the brightest of sunrises, I don’t think there is any amount of housekeeping that could prevent SOME dust from being exposed!  And that’s just how it is with our Christian fellowship!

There is a delicate balance between wishing the morning was dark enough that God wouldn’t so blatantly illuminate our sins and shortcomings…and feeling like you have done your best and can proudly live with what His bright “Sonlight” reveals.  Because you see, we will never be perfect…and by God’s grace and mercy, this is okay.  But we cannot use this as an excuse or a license to operate in darkness and expect God to forgive and forget.

Those bright days when the house is not as clean as it needs to be are a physical reminder to me of how my life in Christ may be on any given day.  And while I may not get any more zealous with my housekeeping any time soon, I am doing all I can to maintain a spotless home for God in my heart.  I want to fellowship with Him in a way that never causes embarrassment to either of us.  I want to be able to stand in God’s bright light and know that I am flawed, but forgiven…less than perfect, but loved anyway.  I want to know that I have given Him my very best…and I have nothing to hide. What about you?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 11, 2015

John 3:17-18
God didn’t go to all the trouble of sending his Son merely to point an accusing finger, telling the world how bad it was. He came to help, to put the world right again. Anyone who trusts in him is acquitted; anyone who refuses to trust him has long since been under the death sentence without knowing it. And why? Because of that person’s failure to believe in the one-of-a-kind Son of God when introduced to him.

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

Our cat Lucy had the most demure appearance – and she was a sweet cat.  She could sit and look pretty – and innocent!  But in truth, she had her “ways” – and she ran this household!  Mabel, our calico cat and Lucy’s litter mate, stays mostly upstairs with Greg during the day…while Lucy stayed mostly with me downstairs – usually in my office.  Both cats had certain spaces in the house they claimed as “theirs”...Lucy more than Mabel.  We would catch the “girls” giving each other loving face washings…but like all siblings, we had to break up a few squabbles, too!

So Mabel has spent the last few days tiptoeing around…looking for Lucy.  It’s as if she is quite certain that Lucy will emerge unexpectedly from some nook or cranny – that she is waiting just around the corner to pounce.  Clearly, she has “trust issues”.  And this is how we often react to God.  We are quite sure that He is waiting in the wings to come down on us for something we said or did…to remind us just how awful and unworthy we are of His love and care.  And nothing could be further from the truth.

Read this passage again.  God did not send Jesus to earth just so He could say, “See how bad you are?  You are NOTHING like Jesus! What is wrong with you?!”  In truth, God sent Jesus to say, “I know you have issues…I know you aren’t perfect…but you are loved anyway.  Trust me…believe in me…and I will fix everything!”

Author and speaker Jen Hatmaker has just released a few chapters of her newest book,*
For the Love: Fighting for Grace in a World of Impossible Standards, which will be released in mid-August 2015.  In the chapter titled “Dear Church…” she writes…

Church people are regular old sinners too. If I could fix this, I would. As it turns out, the church isn’t a gathering of shiny new pennies. It lets anyone in the door! All sorts of hooligans fill the sanctuaries: kind and good ones, angry and cynical ones, mean and judgmental ones, smart and funny ones, broken and sad ones, weird and awkward ones, precious and loving ones, scared and wounded ones, brave and passionate ones, insiders and outliers, newbies and lifers and trying-one-more-timers. Just a whole bunch of human people. Every church has all these folks. It is just the hottest mess, but clearly you belong here because everyone does. Find your little faith tribe (it exists) and learn to love it with all the grace and humility you can muster.
I don’t know about you, but I take heart in knowing that God is not waiting to pounce on me for all of my misgivings.  I am forever thankful that He loves regular old sinners and hooligans like me…and I am trusting that He will cover me in His love, grace and mercy every minute of the day.  What about you?

©2015 Debbie Robus

*http://www.amazon.com/Love-Fighting-Grace-Impossible-Standards/dp/0718031822/ref=sr_1_sc_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1426102938&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=hatmaker+for+the+lov

Daily Devotional for March 10, 2015

John 3:5-8
Jesus said, “You’re not listening. Let me say it again. Unless a person submits to this original creation—the ‘wind-hovering-over-the-water’ creation, the invisible moving the visible, a baptism into a new life—it’s not possible to enter God’s kingdom. When you look at a baby, it’s just that: a body you can look at and touch. But the person who takes shape within is formed by something you can’t see and touch—the Spirit—and becomes a living spirit.

“So don’t be so surprised when I tell you that you have to be ‘born from above’—out of this world, so to speak. You know well enough how the wind blows this way and that. You hear it rustling through the trees, but you have no idea where it comes from or where it’s headed next. That’s the way it is with everyone ‘born from above’ by the wind of God, the Spirit of God.”

Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.

I love Jesus’ analogy of the wind, because this physical phenomenon is something we all accept and “understand”…yet none of us can explain the origin of its force.  And if you think about wind…sometimes it is like a gentle whisper…and sometimes it blows with a rage and impact so profound that the results are devastating…almost beyond belief!

This is how we experience the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives.  Some moments, the voice of God is just a whisper…a gentle breeze that brushes over us.  Other times, He nearly knocks us off our feet with an experience or event that says, “HEY!  Wake up!  I’m talking to you!”  Just as we readily accept and acknowledge physical “wind”…some of us need to learn to transfer this understanding to the Holy Spirit and how He operates in our hearts and minds.

Timothy sings a song from the movie “Pocahontas” about the “Colors of the Wind”.  One of the lines asks, “Can you paint with all the colors of the wind?”  Jesus “paints with all the colors of the ‘wind’” of His Holy Spirit.  Do you see them in your life?  Have you embraced Him and experienced this “born-from-above” breath from God?  Do you recognize His presence and the many “colors of the wind” in your daily living?  Don’t you want to? 

Stop what you are doing and spend some time calling on the Holy Spirit to fill you.  Say three simple words…”Come, Holy Spirit!”  Listen for the “wind” of God…and learn to recognize it as readily as you do the earthy breezes.  Let His love and care blow across your heart like a gentle whisper of wind across your face.  Get ready to see God’s kingdom come into focus…maybe for the first time ever.  Get ready to fully embrace your “new life in Christ”…and to see all of the “colors of the Wind” in every minute of your day!


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 9, 2015

John 17:24-26
Father, I want everyone you have given me to be with me, wherever I am. Then they will see the glory that you have given me, because you loved me before the world was created. Good Father, the people of this world don’t know you. But I know you, and my followers know that you sent me. I told them what you are like, and I will tell them even more. Then the love that you have for me will become part of them, and I will be one with them.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Have you ever had a friendship with someone that started out fairly rocky – until you got to know each other?  Maybe you thought this person was aloof, disinterested, or even over-bearing in some way.  Maybe you just didn’t “click” for some reason.  And maybe you almost didn’t give this person a second chance!  But then you spent some time together…you got to really know him/her…and you discovered that you’d made a pretty great friend in the process!

It’s often like this with Jesus…many people simply don’t give Him a chance.  They don’t take the time or put in the energy and effort to truly get to know Him – to see what a “great Guy” Jesus is, so to speak!

Perhaps you are one of the people who gave someone a second look and discovered a friend so precious that now you cannot imagine your life without him/her in it on a regular – if not daily - basis.  And maybe you have made this same discovery about Jesus Christ. If you haven’t…you should!

Spend some quality time with Jesus.  Read the New Testament and hear His words to the disciples…and to us as they have been shared through the ages.  Get to know Jesus in a deep and profound way…learn how loyal and loving He is.  Find out firsthand just how merciful and gracious Jesus can be…and cultivate an abiding and everlasting relationship with Him.  Get to the point where you cannot imagine a single minute without Jesus in your life…and then nurture this bond - and offer a prayer of thanks that you don’t have to ever be without Him!

Too often, we make snap judgments – about other people and situations…and about our relationship with Jesus.  In both cases, we risk missing out on some amazing opportunities and friendships.  Will this be the day that you take a second look at others – and more importantly - at Jesus?  Will this be the day that you truly get to know Jesus and learn what He has to offer?  Don’t you think it should be?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 8, 2015

John 17:12-19
While I was with them, I kept them safe by the power you have given me. I guarded them, and not one of them was lost, except the one who had to be lost. This happened so that what the Scriptures say would come true.

I am on my way to you. But I say these things while I am still in the world, so that my followers will have the same complete joy that I do. I have told them your message. But the people of this world hate them, because they don’t belong to this world, just as I don’t.

Father, I don’t ask you to take my followers out of the world, but keep them safe from the evil one. They don’t belong to this world, and neither do I. Your word is the truth. So let this truth make them completely yours. I am sending them into the world, just as you sent me. I have given myself completely for their sake, so that they may belong completely to the truth.

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

On March 1, 2015, giant panda cub Bao Bao was officially and completely separated from her mother, Mei Xiang, at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C.  This weaning process actually began several weeks earlier, as the two spent more and more time away from each other, and Bao Bao began to munch on bamboo to supplement her mother’s nursing.  Now she is completely dependent on the cane for her sustenance.

According to information found at https://nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/GiantPandas/, "Giant pandas Mei Xiang and Tian Tian are at the National Zoo under a Giant Panda Cooperative Research and Breeding Agreement, signed in January 2011, between the Zoo and the China Wildlife Conservation Association. This extends the Zoo’s giant panda program through 2015. Mei and Tian are the focus of an ambitious research, conservation, and breeding program designed to preserve this endangered species."  18-month-old offspring Bao Bao will remain at the National Zoo until she is four years old.  While she would naturally separate completely from her mother and no longer see her, this is not possible at the National Zoo, and staff members there hope that this will result in her observing the breeding cycle between her parents – and better understanding what she is to do in the wild when she is released in China.

In many ways, Bao Bao’s parents have done all they can for her…and at the end of her fourth year, the National Zoo officials will have to say the same thing.  It will be time for Bao Bao to take the lessons she has learned – all that has been instilled in her and taught to her – and carry on alone.  Every human involved in her nurture and care hopes and believes that this will be a successful venture.  Will there be trepidation and worry?  Certainly.  Will it be hard to let her go…a little nerve-wracking to trust that she will be okay and remember all that she learned?  Most definitely!  But it will still be the right thing to do…an act of tremendous love and faith – in the effectiveness and endurance of lessons and care demonstrated – and in Bao Bao’s steadfastness and faithfulness to what has been given her.

Now think of Jesus and all that He has done for us.  Consider how He taught us…nurtured and cared for us…demonstrated the right path – showed us how to serve God and honor His laws.  Jesus did all that He was supposed to do for us – and then some.  Jesus did all He could to keep us safe…and now He trusts that we learned our lessons well and will be able to serve as His disciples.

Here’s where we differ from the pandas and other “parents/offspring”…Jesus does not separate from us completely.  He does not desert us.  When He returned to Heaven, He left His Holy Spirit as “back-up”…should we choose to invite Him into our hearts.  So we always have our Heavenly Father with us…He is only a heartbeat and a whisper away. 

This is GREAT NEWS!  We don’t have to wonder and worry what to do – the Holy Spirit is always with us to give us the answer!  We don’t have to wander aimlessly…suffer or grieve without comfort…or operate in confusion and uncertainty.  Our God is always available…His presence takes many shapes and forms…and all we have to do is recognize Him.

I know that it will be a hard day at the National Zoo when Bao Bao is packed off to China. I have a feeling that with some of us, it’s pretty hard for Jesus to watch us bumble around and try to do “life” on our own.  Thankfully, we don’t have to live like this…He will draw near in a split second and set our feet on the right path.  It’s up to us to issue the invitation for Him to do just that.  Have you invited Jesus and His Holy Spirit into your heart…and do you keep Him there?  Isn’t it time that you did?


©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 7, 2015

Job 12:7-10
If you want to learn,
    then go and ask
the wild animals and the birds,
   the flowers and the fish.
Any of them can tell you
    what the Lord has done.
Every living creature
    is in the hands of God.   

Scripture taken from the Contemporary English Version © 1991,1992, 1995 by American Bible Society, Used by Permission.

Yesterday, Greg and I had to say “Goodbye” to our beloved tuxedo cat, Lucy.  We were blessed to be her “humans” for almost 16 years…having acquired her and her litter mate, Mabel – a calico – in April 1999.  Based on papers we received at the local animal shelter, we “counted backward” and declared their birthday to be March 1st. 

We knew that Lucy had been in declining health in recent months.  The once plump cat with the beautiful sleek and shiny coat of LONG black and white hair had become a virtual skeleton covered in a dull blanket of fur.  Yet she ate well, drank lots of water, purred and delighted in our affection – and she even chased a bird that made its way inside our house just two nights before she died.  (She actually caught the bird briefly…but without front claws, she could not contain it in her grip.)

Greg and I had prayed over and over that Lucy would just slip away from us – that we would awaken one morning and find her “sleeping with the angels”.  She and Mabel never really acclimated to humans – other than us – and all of these years, we have kept them completely indoors and fairly isolated.  They have not visited a veterinary clinic since they were spayed as kittens.  We did not want to have to put either of them through the trauma of a final visit to a vet for euthanasia.  So we prayed for God to spare them – and us – this situation.  And in Lucy’s case at least, He did just that.

We sat with our precious “baby” all through the night as she struggled through the stages of death.  We made her a pallet in the floor atop her heating pad (yes, our cats have “pet heating pads”) – and we lay beside her and stroked her as she steadily grew weaker.  We prayed over her…and we thanked God that - in the scheme of things - He allowed her such a peaceful passing.  And shortly after noon yesterday, her breaths slowed…and then the angels came for her.

If you think that God doesn’t care about animals and our beloved pets…read this scripture passage from Job again.  And if you think that a God who cares so much for animals of all sizes and species doesn’t care as much – or more – for you, then hear the words of Matthew 10:29-31…”Aren’t two sparrows sold for only a penny? But your Father knows when any one of them falls to the ground. Even the hairs on your head are counted. So don’t be afraid! You are worth much more than many sparrows.”

As gut-wrenching as these last few days have been for us, we have felt God’s presence.  We know that there is a place for animals in heaven…and that SOME DAY, we will see our precious tuxedo cat and our other beloved pets once again.  We know that we serve a God who is amazing, almighty, powerful…and compassionate…a God who loves two lowly sparrows – and dearly-loved kitty cats - and cares just as deeply about what happens to them as He does to us.  We know that God will sustain us - that He will fill the empty places in our hearts with His peace…and flood our thoughts with happy memories of the hundreds of days we enjoyed with this furry feline.

Don’t wait for a crisis to happen before you call on God…make Him a part of your life NOW, so that He is “at the ready” for whatever you encounter in life.  We are so glad that God was with us…that He IS with us…and we know that He has safely guided our Lucy over the “Rainbow Bridge” and into His loving care forever and ever.  He is sustaining us and filling us with hope and courage until we see her again.

The God who can comfort us in the loss of our pet can also meet any and all of your needs.  Our God can do ANYTHING!  I cannot imagine surviving without Him.  And I’m so glad that I don’t have to try.  God is with us…today…tomorrow…and always.  Do you feel His presence?  Have you asked Him to come near and be with you?  Isn’t it about time that you did? 

   
©2015 Debbie Robus

Daily Devotional for March 5, 2015

John 17:6-11
“I have told these men all about you. They were in the world, but then you gave them to me. Actually, they were always yours, and you gave them to me; and they have obeyed you. Now they know that everything I have is a gift from you, for I have passed on to them the commands you gave me; and they accepted them and know of a certainty that I came down to earth from you, and they believe you sent me.

“My plea is not for the world but for those you have given me because they belong to you. And all of them, since they are mine, belong to you; and you have given them back to me with everything else of yours, and so they are my glory! Now I am leaving the world, and leaving them behind, and coming to you. Holy Father, keep them in your own care—all those you have given me—so that they will be united just as we are, with none missing.

The Living Bible copyright © 1971 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.

Arkansas was blanketed yesterday with a heavy coating of sleet and snow.  Facebook is flooded today with pictures of children sledding, beautiful snow scenes, and reports of how many inches of “the white stuff” accumulated.  Several of our friends have posted pictures of kiddos on makeshift sleds and more – pulled through the ice and snow by their dads and friends.  This brought back fond memories of my own childhood, when we would sled on the city streets with my dad and my cousins. 

There was one particularly long, steep street that was the “go-to” hill.  It spanned about three city blocks in length and culminated at Main Street, where bales of hay and saw horses blocked any potential thru traffic.  My dad and my cousin Leo would park their pickup trucks on the street one block above Main and load up sledders to haul them back to the top of the run for another exciting trip downhill.  We did this over and over until we were frozen like Popsicles
®.  Then we would go home and warm up before returning.  A bonfire was built in the yard of one home near the top, and it seemed like half the town gathered there for a few days/evenings to share in the fun.

My dad and my cousins are all gone now…and I’m pretty sure that the city doesn’t allow sledding on this street these days – much less a bonfire in someone’s front yard!…but the memories remain. What does this have to do with the presence of God and this scripture passage?  Like the memories we make as children…the teachings of Jesus remain with us. As these adults stopped what they were doing for a few days of play, Jesus has given us His time and teachings…His love and nurture.  And in doing so, He laid a foundation for our faith…provided us with life lessons, hope and promise…and sustained us with faith and confidence as we bring Him to mind in our daily living.

I no longer engage in sledding.  Instead, I am enjoying the beauty of this snowy landscape from the warmth and coziness of my home as I look out the windows.  But I “feel” the joy and excitement of my childhood.  I recall the exuberance of chilly wind in my face, hot cocoa to warm me, and the thrill of that long ride down the hill.  I remember the lessons in “sledding technique” and safety.  And I treasure the memory of those loving adults who nurtured me and facilitated such precious memories.

In the same manner, I bask in the presence of God. I ponder the earthly life of Jesus and study His teachings…and I try to apply them to my own life.  I feel His love and nurture…and I gratefully appreciate His blessings and gifts.  I treasure the legacy that He left…the hope and promise that we will be together again in Heaven someday.  And I am incredibly comforted to know how much God loves me.

As you go about your day, consider the “memories” and legacy that God has given to you through Jesus Christ.  Even if it’s not a snowy day where you are, take some time to sit quietly and reflect on God’s presence – and His promises.  Embrace the warmth and coziness of His love and care…and thank Him for what is yet to come!


©2015 Debbie Robus