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Friday, November 14, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 11-14-14

    Praise the Lord for this season of harvest and Thanksgiving.  Praise the Lord from all good and perfect gifts come.  Praise the Lord for this season.  Jesus is indeed is the Lord of this season and He is the Lord of all seasons.  We are preparing and are excited for our Thanksgiving banquet that will be held on Saturday, November 15, 2014.  We will be serving at 5 PM and again at 6 PM.  This will be a traditional Thanksgiving  menu with Turkey, homemade apple, pumpkin pies, etc. 
    We will begin the Advent season with a very wonderful Christmas banquet that will be held on Saturday the 6th of December at the Church Fellowship Hall.  Chef Justin Clark is preparing a formal Christmas banquet.  The dinner will be served at 5:30 PM, followed by a powerful Concert by the St. Petersburg Men's Ensemble, from St. Petersburg, Russia, at 6:30. 
    We are getting ready for our annual Living nativity presentation that will be held at the center court of the Oakdale Mall on Saturday the 20th of December, 2014.  It will be held from 5 to 7 PM.  We will be participating in Hallelujah Chorus from Handel's Messiah at 6:30 PM.  It will be a "Flash Mob".  All musicians and singers are warmly invited to join.  It will be glorious as we sing a part of "Handel's Messiah".  The Down Town Singers will be presenting  Handel's Messiah in Binghamton on Friday the 19th of December at 8 PM.  It will be a full length presentation with full orchestra and gifted soloists.  We are so blessed.  We get to celebrate ... we get to worship.  
     We are joining churches around our great Land in collecting Christmas Shoe Boxes on Sunday the November 16, 2014.  Indeed, we will get to give and share in the work of the Gospel around the corner and around the globe.  Let the Lord provoke all of us rise up as the shepherds did and go to the Manger where,  "the Holy Child of Bethlehem is born". 
    Before we get into the Advent season, let us celebrate Thanksgiving with gladness and gratitude. 
    Thanksgiving Day was near. The first grade teacher gave her class a fun assignment—to draw a picture of something for which they were thankful.  Most of the class might be considered to be from poor families, but still, many would celebrate the holiday with turkey and other traditional goodies of the season. These, the teacher thought, would be the subjects of most of her student's art, and they were.
    But Douglas made a different kind of picture.  Douglas was a different kind of boy.  He was the teacher's idea of a true child of misery, frail and unhappy.  As other children played at recess, Douglas was likely to stand close by her side.  One could only guess at the pain Douglas felt behind those sad eyes.  Yes, his picture was different.  When asked to draw a picture of something for which he was thankful, he drew a hand.  Nothing else.  Just an empty hand.
    His abstract image captured the imagination of the other students.  The teacher asked the class, "Whose hand could it be?"  One child guessed it was the hand of a farmer, because farmers raise turkeys.  Another suggested a police officer, because the police protect and care for people.  Still others guessed it was the hand of God, for God feeds us.  And so the discussion went—until the teacher almost forgot the young artist himself.  When the children had gone on to other assignments, she paused at Douglas' desk, bent down, and asked him whose hand it was.
    The little boy looked away and murmured, "It's yours, teacher."
    She recalled the times she had taken his hand and walked with him here or there, as she had the other students.  How often had she said, "Take my hand, Douglas, we'll go outside."  Or, "Let me show you how to hold your pencil."  Or, "Let's do this together."  Douglas was most thankful for his teacher's hand.
    I have been reading Psalm 145, which  encourages us to think about God's hand in our lives.  As we get ready to celebrate Thanksgiving let's remind ourselves that his hand is always there for us even when we might not sense it.  Of 150 psalms, this is the only one that has the title "A psalm of praise."  David said, "Every day I will praise you."  Whether in good times or in dark times he would offer up praise to God.  Psalm 145 reminds us that God's hand touches our lives.  We are called to praise Him.
    Our God's mighty acts are awe-inspiring and his greatness is without limit.  Even with intensive search no one can find its depths.  Psalm 145:3, "Great is the LORD and most worthy of praise; his greatness no one can fathom."  Our God is able to supply all that we need.  He is mighty, loving, forgiving, and His resources are more than adequate for all our needs.
    We are used to limitations in life: We all have a limited amount of time.  We have a limited amount of patience.  We have a limited amount of money.  We have a limited amount of strength.  We have a limited amount of insight.  God, however, has no limits.  We can never exhaust the depths of his love, mercy, understanding, generosity, and so much more.  A person who recognizes that God is gracious, loving, and merciful understands God more completely than a person who merely realizes that God is powerful.  God's glory is in his grace to people, his generosity and goodness.  God is gracious, which means he is full of generosity, kind, good, and his gifts are given freely to his people.
    In spite of all the wrong that I have done, the Lord is gracious and compassionate to me.  As the father of the prodigal son welcomed him home after his rebellion, so God welcomes home his children.
    During a British conference on comparative religions, experts debated what, if any, belief was unique to Christianity.  They began eliminating possibilities.  The Incarnation?  Other religions had different versions of gods appearing in human form.  Resurrection?  Again, other religions had accounts of return from the dead. The debate went on for some time until C. S. Lewis wandered into the room. "What's the rumpus about?" he asked, and heard in reply that his colleagues were discussing Christianity's unique contribution among world religions.  Lewis responded, "Oh, that's easy. It's grace."  After some discussion, the others had to agree.
    The notion of God's love coming to us free of charge, no strings attached, seems to go against every instinct of humanity.  The Buddhist eight-fold path, the Hindu doctrine of Karma, the Jewish covenant, and the Muslim code of law, each offer a way to earn approval.  Only Christianity dares to make God's love unconditional. God's grace sets us free from trying to earn God's forgiveness.  Common sense tells us that we can never meet the standards of God's holiness.  Grace tells us that everything is all right in spite of so much in us being so wrong.  God is patient and does not punish us as we deserve.  He is compassionate with those who are weak, make foolish mistakes, and are discouraged.  Our Lord God is powerful.  He is gracious and He is faithful.  He is with us in prosperity even as He is with us in adversity.  He has promised never to desert us.  God has proven throughout history that he is faithful.  God keeps his promises.  God lifts up those who have fallen.  God sustains those who are ready to fall.  God provides for our needs and desires.  In Psalm 94:18 we read, "When I said, 'My foot is slipping,' your love, O LORD, supported me."  And again in Psalm 37, "The steps of the godly are directed by the Lord.  He delights in every detail of their lives.  Though they stumble, they will not fall, for the Lord holds them by the hand."  Our Lord God is near to us.  He is Emmanuel ... God with us.

    Our Lord  is nearby to each of us and attentive to our special needs.  God is near to all who call upon him.  If we were to draw a picture of what we  are thankful for this Thanksgiving would we  draw an open hand like little Douglas?  Psalm 145 encourages us  in a very personal way to think about God's hand in our lives.  On this Thanksgiving let's remind ourselves that his hand is always there for us even when we  might not sense it.  This year at Thanksgiving let us  remember that God is to be praised.  God is mighty—he can be your strength.  God is gracious—he loves and forgives you.  God is faithful—he can supply what we need.  He is with us.  All that we desire is in Jesus Christ our Lord.

In Christ,
 Brown

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