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Friday, November 16, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 11-16-12

Praise the Lord for this Friday before Thanksgiving. One of my friends wrote to me stating, "I am Thankful for the Grace of Jesus Christ". Praise the Lord for His unfailing and redeeming love and amazing grace. It appears that the world, particularly the middle East, is an inferno. We see chaos and massive confusion all around. In the face of it all, in the midst of it all, we turn our eyes and hearts to Jesus Christ, the Risen One who is upon the Throne. "The Kingdoms of this world have become the kingdom of our God and His Christ, and He shall reign for ever. Plan to gather in the House of the Lord this coming Lord's Day praising and worshipping Him and giving thanks to Him.
Psalm 24:1 says, “The earth is the Lord’s and everything in it.” When we give thanks to Him for all that He bestows, it reminds us that it is a privilege that God has loaned us everything we have. 1 Corinthians 4:7 says, “What do you have that you did not receive from God? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?”

The story is told of a poor man who was given a loaf of bread. He thanked the baker, but the baker said, “Don’t thank me. Thank the miller who made the flour.” So he thanked the miller, but the miller said, “Don’t thank me. Thank the farmer who planted the wheat.” So he thanked the farmer, but the farmer said, “Don’t thank me. Thank the Lord. He gave the sunshine and rain and fertility to the soil, and that’s why you have bread to eat.”

Everything we own we ultimately received from God and we owe Him thanks. James 1:17, “Every good and perfect gift is from above coming down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like the shifting sand.”

Dr. Dale Robbins wrote, “I used to think people complained because they had a lot of problems. But I have come to realize that they have problems because they complain. Complaining doesn’t change anything or make situations better. It amplifies frustration, spreads discontent and discord, and can invoke an invitation for the devil to cause havoc with our lives.” Complaining makes us miserable. Psalm 77:3 says, “I complained and my spirit was overwhelmed.”

Philippians 2:13 says, “Do everything without complaining or arguing, so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a crooked and depraved generation, in which you shine like stars in the universe.”

Ephesians 5:19 says, “Sing and make music in your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything.” Always is the key word, not just on Thanksgiving but every day. In Daniel 6 we read that Daniel got down on his knees three times everyday and prayed and gave thanks to his God.

I read recently that if you own one Bible, you are abundantly blessed, because a third of the people in the world do not have access to a Bible. If you awoke this morning with more health than illness you are more blessed than 1 million people who will not survive the week. If you have never experienced the danger of war, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony of torture, or the pangs of starvation you are more fortunate than 500 million people on earth. If you have food in your refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof over your head, twenty dollars in your pocket and a place to sleep you are richer than 75 percent of the world. O, God forgive me when I whine.

I love the story of Lois Stahling, who is one of the most thankful persons. Lois loves the Lord and loves to be in His House every Lord's Day. When Lois was in the prime of her life she had a stroke and was confined to a wheel chair. She is still mentally alert but she cannot walk and do a lot of other normal activities. She lives in a convalescent home and the only time she really gets out is once a week to go to church. The highlight of her week is Sunday morning when someone comes from her church to pick her up. Lois is a person who has all the reason to be angry and bitter about her circumstances, all the reason to shake her fist at God. Instead, she is thankful for whatever little blessing she has.

In Christ,

Brown



A special Community-wide Thanksgiving service be held on Saturday November 17, 2012 at the historic First United Methodist Church in Endicott, located at 53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, New York. The evening will begin with coffee Fellowship at 6 PM followed by a service of worship and thanksgiving, which will start at 6:30 PM. The worship band from the Davis College will be leading in worship; Dr. Dino Pedrone, the president of Davis College, will be preaching. Aric Phinney will be at the piano with Yancey Moore at the Organ. This special Thanksgiving service is sponsored by the Union Center United Methodist Church, 128 Maple Drive, Endicott.
All are welcome. For Information call, 607-748-1358 or 607-748-6329

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 11-15-12

Praise the Lord for this new day. The Lord blessed us with a wonderful Wednesday Evening gathering. The food was delicious. Once again the fellowship was sweet and the Bible study was a great blessing. One week from today America the beautiful will celebrate Thanksgiving Day. It is the day and season that reminds us our total dependence upon the Lord God Almighty, the King of Creation. It is a reminder that how much we need the Lord.

Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today and creates a vision for tomorrow. ~Melody Beattie

Back in the 70's, a woman wrote an article I find interesting. She said that her cousin had invited them to "Come for a thanksgiving dinner on Saturday, March 20th." She wrote: "She was not celebrating an early Thanksgiving. She was saying that all was well with her husband, who had finished a battery of hospital tests. "In our family," she said "we sometimes have as many as ten thanksgivings in one year. They mark happy events for which there are no formal celebration dates: a job promotion, a graduate degree, a good medical report. Sometimes we celebrate with a dinner party, sometimes with a picnic or outing, but always with as many members of our clan as we can round up."
Just think . . . 10 Thanksgivings a year! Yet in Colossians 3:17 we're told that 10 thanksgivings a year would not be enough for a Christian that tried to follow Paul's advice: "And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him." In WHATEVER we do… every day of every year… we should be giving thanks. We should be known as a "thankful people". In fact, Colossians 2:7 declares that we should be "…overflowing with thankfulness." In Ephesians 5:20 we're told that we should be "…ALWAYS giving thanks to God the Father FOR EVERYTHING, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ."
We, as Christians, should be known as a thankful and grateful people, in EVERY aspect of our lives.


Thou hast given so much to me,
Give one thing more, - a grateful heart;
Not thankful when it pleaseth me,
As if Thy blessings had spare days,
But such a heart whose pulse may be Thy praise.
~George Herbert


In Christ,

Brown



 
A special Community-wide Thanksgiving service be held on Saturday November 17, 2012 at the historic First United Methodist Church in Endicott, located at 53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, New York. The evening will begin with coffee Fellowship at 6 PM followed by a service of worship and thanksgiving, which will start at 6:30 PM. The worship band from the Davis College will be leading in worship; Dr. Dino Pedrone, the president of Davis College, will be preaching. Aric Phinney will be at the piano with Yancey Moore at the Organ. This special Thanksgiving service is sponsored by the Union Center United Methodist Church, 128 Maple Drive, Endicott.
All are welcome. For Information call, 607-748-1358 or 607-748-6329

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Brown's Daily Word 11-14-12

Praise the Lord for this Thanksgiving season in America the Beautiful. Alice and I spent the last weekend in Boston where our precious grandchildren Micah, Simeon, and Ada live with their parents. Micah is now 7 years old. Simeon is 5 and young Ada will be 2 in January, 2013. We had a blast. Praise the Lord for the simple gifts and simple pleasures of the is life that come to us from our Lord and Savior.
We will gather for mid-week fellowship and study this evening at 6 PM with a very special meal prepared with much love, followed by Bible Study at 6:30 PM and then choir practice at 7:30 PM.

One week from tomorrow we will be celebrating "Thanksgiving". One of the readings for Thanksgiving day is Psalm 126. “our mouths were filled with laughter, our tongues with songs of joy.” Rejoicing is the theme of this psalm. Joy characterizes the Christian journey.
The Broadway musical Fiddler on the Roof describes life as “One season following another, laden with happiness and tears.” Life includes sadness; “There is a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance” (Ecclesiastes 3:4). Joy is not the absence of sorrow; it is the ability to have faith and be thankful in the midst of all conditions. Joy is as unpredictable as the One who gives it, so much so that C.S. Lewis titled his autobiography Surprised By Joy.
Joy is the outcome of the Christian life; we don’t generate it—The Lord does. None of us has joy within ourselves. People seek to attain joy through entertainment, which offers temporary, artificial joy. The vast entertainment industry in our nation is a sign of the depletion of joy in our culture. The joy of Psalm 126 is past, present, and future: “We were filled with laughter” and “songs of joy”, vs 2; “we are filled with joy”, vs 3; and we “will return with songs of joy” vs 6. This joy is lavished on Israel, giving the nation a reputation for blessedness. In vs 2: “Then it was said among the nations, ‘the Lord has done great things for them’.” The “nations” refers to the heathen gentiles, who became convinced that Israel had something special that set them apart—a God who took care of them. The gentile nations were impressed; they admitted that God had accomplished “great things” for Israel.
We are given comforting assurance in verse 5: “Those who sow in tears will reap with songs of joy.” The image here is of harvest time. Sheaves were bundles of grain, usually wheat or barley, cut and gathered together. The joy in harvest was a highlight of the year, a time of great blessing.
Joy is essential to our lives; it is the experience of knowing that we are loved, and that nothing in this world can take that love away. We often discover joy in the midst of sorrow. During the most painful times we become aware of a spiritual reality larger than ourselves, that enables us to hope. Henri Nouwen writes, “My grief was the place where I found my joy.” We may undergo hardship, but God will have the last word. This means we can rejoice even when our wishes are not realized.
Joy is not an escape from sorrow. We foolishly think we can achieve joy by eliminating the things in life that hurt us. We are experts in constructing futile strategies for achieving joy. When we come to the end of our resources we realize that joy is what the Lord gives, not what we work up. True joy enables us to face reality, because we do so with the assurance that our Lord is working in our lives, even the things that cause us pain, to bring about His perfect will.


In Christ,

Brown




A special Community-wide Thanksgiving service be held on Saturday November 17, 2012 at the historic First United Methodist Church in Endicott, located at 53 McKinley Avenue, Endicott, New York. The evening will begin with coffee Fellowship at 6 PM followed by a service of worship and thanksgiving, which will start at 6:30 PM. The worship band from the Davis College will be leading in worship; Dr. Dino Pedrone, the president of Davis College, will be preaching. Aric Phinney will be at the piano with Yancey Moore at the Organ. This special Thanksgiving service is sponsored by the Union Center United Methodist Church, 128 Maple Drive, Endicott.
All are welcome. For Information call, 607-748-1358 or 607-748-6329