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Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Brown's Daily Word 8/2/17


   Praise the Lord for this new month of August.  The Summer season is still sizzling and simmering.  People are on vacation, traveling, going to family reunions and class reunions, and engaging in all the social transactions of Summer.  We are excited that we will get to spend some time with all our grand children at different times and in different settings.  We spent some time picking blueberries yesterday and we also labored with much love in our garden in the  evening.  Praise the Lord for the cool breeze that wafts over the fields and the hills.  It is refreshing and exhilarating.  The sunset was brilliant in the western sky, looking as picturesque as if the Master Artist has just put His finishing touch on celestial canvas.  One of the local honey growers who has over a thousand hives has placed several hives near our garden plot.  He has started harvesting honey for the season.  We could smell the fresh honey as we drove past the hives. 



    I have been talking to some of the colleagues and fellow servants about organizing a Living Nativity in mid-December.  We are planning to hold it in the Town Square.  We are excited at the prospect.  The Lord has given countless reasons to celebrate and rejoice.



    I hear from so many of you through social media and in so many other forms.  Praise the Lord for your affirmation and warm fuzzies.  I am encouraged and blessed beyond and above.  I hear from one of my former colleagues on a very regular basis.  From 1975 to 1977 we were part of a ministry team serving together in a large teaching hospital in Corpus Christi, TX.  We last saw each other in May of 1975.  Nevertheless we are connected and linked through Jesus our Lord.  He corresponds with me on a regular basis, provoking me to run the race well.  He and his wife served the Lord with obedience and much joy.  The Lord blessed them with a multifaceted ministry.  His dear wife is suffering with Alzheimers over  the last many  years.  Her dear husband has been her caregiver.  He is been so faithful, so dedicated, and so much in love.  Both are in their 80's.  They are the salt of the earth in our Lord's kingdom.



    During my active years in ministry I was privileged to serve in the Board of Directors of the Mission Society based in Atlanta, GA.  I was blessed to have met some wonderful, gifted, and special leaders, movers, and shakers from around the world. Some came from the Southern States of Kentucky, Alabama, and Georgia.  They were all a breed apart.



    I was watching a program yesterday, in which they were interviewing some of the people in Kentucky who still live in the spirit of the pioneers.  One couple they interviewed was a very special couple who couple still live on the their family farm with their extended family.  They love the farm, they love the family, they love the land, and they love the Lord.  The couple shared that they have been married for 74 years.  They looked vigorous, vital, and vibrant.



    I read this morning about a man who worked as a janitor, living a quiet and simple life.  He was good and wise steward, and at his death he left 8 million dollars as a bequest to a local hospital in Vermont.  Praise the Lord that in Christ we can live  a very rich life of receiving and giving, inhaling and exhaling.  Jesus, the giver of all good and perfect gifts, makes it all possible.     



    Praise the Lord for the gift of memory.  The Lord God realizes that we often forget what he has done for us.  In Deuteronomy. 6:12 Moses issued a final warning to Israel just before they entered the promise land, “beware, lest you forget the LORD who brought you out of the land of Egypt…”  There are memories of places, and there are places that trigger memories.



    There are some significant places in your life that elicit certain memories of people God has used in your life.   I love the story of  W. A Criswell, whose biography I have in my  study.  Dr. Criswell was a pioneer in ministry and legendary pastor of  the First Baptist Church of Dallas.  He recorded an event in his life that I think speaks the way one person can impact the life another, even though it may, at the time, seem very mundane and ordinary.  “When Criswell was 10 years old, the Texline church his family attended held a revival meeting with Dallhart pastor, Johnny Hicks.  Hicks stayed in the Criswell home where he came to know the young preacher-to-be.  During the morning service that week (they had services both day and night) …..he walked to the front of the church auditorium where Pastor/Evangelist Hicks met him and led him to Christ…. Years later Criswell was conversing with a friend, a fellow pastor in Dallas.  He told of his childhood conversion during the Johnny Hicks revival meeting.  Criswell went on to tell the story of how Hicks stayed in his home and enjoyed his mother’s cooking, and his interest in the lad, and how Criswell went forward and was met by the evangelist at the altar.  Criswell’s friend shook his head sadly, “Johnny Hicks. Just a few years ago I visited my friend Johnny Hicks at Baylor Hospital here in Dallas.  He was dying.  And on his deathbed he said, ‘ I haven’t done anything for Jesus’  Isn’t that something?  That dear old man thinking that he had failed.” There are times we feel that our labour is in vain.. But the Lord compensates.  He fills our void.. He makes our cups overflow.



    There are memories of experiences, of God answering prayer and of God’s marvelous hand of provision.  I remember in college and grad School how God always provided for my needs.  We learned some invaluable lessons on faith. These lessons on faith are not something you can be taught; they are something that you must experience to truly understand.  God knows how we think and that is the reason that he instructed Joshua to build a memorial, so that each time the Israelites saw it they would be reminded that they had not crossed the Jordan on their own ability, but because of God.  They were now a people with a powerful new sense of purpose, determined to take new territory with God.  Likewise, for the believer today, we should be able to look back and see those monumental occasions which standout as times in which God has changed our directions and give us new hope and a new sense of purpose, when we act in bold faith and decide to abandon ourselves to God and step out into the unknown to take new territory for Him.

   In Christ,

     Brown

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