An Incredible Article and My Reaction

Note these are just my personal thoughts on an article written for believers, specifically what it means to be a living sacrifice .

Here are some of the major points:

“…if you find yourself trying to devise a way of serving God that seems more agreeable to your comforts, remember this: Jesus sacrificed everything for you”

Would I like my trials to be different? Easier to deal with? Not consuming nearly everything these last 6 months but even the last 2? Of course.

1. But these trials (just like everything) is playing out the way they are tailored specifically so I get the most from the trial.

2.  It involves people using phrases and language that I resonate with and can comprehend. It uses every form of media, visual, audio and every sensory input tailored made be the surest quickest form of my brain to not only take in, but process and comprehend.

3. And he will not let be in the crucible one second longer than is necessary. He is sovereign over all of this.

4. This does not negate the pain, the struggles, the loss or any of what I am feeling because if I negated my feelings I’d negate the lesson. I need to be able to mourn and grieve what I’m choosing to leave behind in the sanctification process. If I won’t miss it or have a hard time of letting go of a personal aspect or attachment to something then the point is mute. In layman’s terms, I never liked white wine, so why would I care if I was told not to drink it anymore? Am I dying for a cigarette even to ease the pain and stress? Yes. But if you were never a smoker, and hated the very smell of smoke this would have no effect on you.

Hopefully this makes sense, but my biggest takeaway is that He is the ultimate silversmith. He holds us over the crucible watching the entire time (meaning He not only sees us, but everyone around us, and He is WITH us day and night watching) and will not keep the silver in any longer than is absolutely necessary because it will ruin it otherwise. How does a silversmith know when the refining process is complete? When He can see His reflection in the silver.

is sanctification a lifelong process? Yes. Did He promise trouble? Yes. But He said He would be WITH US IN ALL OF IT. And to “take heart for I have overcome the world” (John 16:33)

“He will not let your foot be moved; he who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”
‭‭(Psalm‬ ‭121‬:‭3‬-‭4)

“No temptation [regardless of its source] has overtaken or enticed you that is not common to human experience [nor is any temptation unusual or beyond human resistance]; but God is faithful [to His word—He is compassionate and trustworthy], and He will not let you be tempted beyond your ability [to resist], but along with the temptation He [has in the past and is now and] will [always] provide the way out as well, so that you will be able to endure it [without yielding, and will overcome temptation with joy].”
‭‭1 Corinthians‬ ‭10‬:‭13‬ ‭AMP‬‬

Here is the article from Joni and friends:

Living Sacrifices

Published On: May 21, 2025|
 
https://joniandfriends.org/daily-devotional/living-sacrifices/ 

 

“Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God – this is your spiritual act of worship.”

Romans 12:1 

What immediately comes to mind when you hear the word “sacrifice”? Articles in National Geographic magazines about bloody offerings in Aztec temples? The streams running red with lamb’s blood outside the temple of Jerusalem? Whatever comes to mind, it’s probably not a pretty picture.

But sacrifice is what God asks of us. Living sacrifice. Now that tickles my imagination. I picture myself on an altar, and as soon as God strikes the match to light the flame of some fiery ordeal, I do what any living sacrifice would do. I crawl off the altar!

This is exactly the dilemma Christians face. First, we are to present our bodies, that is, give them in the Lord’s service as a freewill offering. And because our sacrifice is a living one, it involves a choice. The gift of salvation does not require us to become a living sacrifice…we are not forced onto the altar…we are not coerced to stay on that altar. It is a choice we make out of love.

If presenting yourself as a living sacrifice seems downright distasteful, if you find yourself trying to devise a way of serving God that seems more agreeable to your comforts, remember this: Jesus sacrificed everything for you. Please don’t argue with the Lord about how heavily he stokes the fire of your trial. Just get back up on the altar. It’s your spiritual worship!

I realize, Lord, that my trust and obedience is all you ask of me through my trials. Forgive me when I sneak off the altar or try to turn down the flame of my trial. As my High Priest, you know best how to tend the altar. 

Uncovering Lies and Good News

There are some noteworthy things that have happened recently that have been real game changers.

 

At the women’s Bible study, we are going through a book called Leverage which was written by the Barrick family through their organization Hope Out Loud. The Sunday they came to visit was so powerful because it was all about healing – mentally, emotionally physically, and spiritually.

 

As many of you know, I have already been going through a lot of dark times with health, and as God would have it, I had recently only just discovered a young gentleman on Instagram named Hyden Daum  who is deaf, but has short snippets where he both speaks quite clearly, but also signs Bible verses, but digging into them. This has been particularly helpful when in overload, I remembered being at a summer camp and learning a song in sign language and being surprised that some of those same signs I still remembered. What is most impactful to me? Is that when flooded or too exhausted or too much in pain to even think straight I can look at a number of different sign language terms or phrases and see how they express what I do not even have the vocabulary for. That has been truly transformational because despite my verbose writing there are times when I cannot think of the right word or can only think of the first two letters of a word or phrase, especially under times of stress. But what has been most enlightening is that in combination with these videos and that Sunday when Jen ended, she taught us the sign language for one of her favorite songs as we all sang along.

 

They really are a number of hugely powerful sign language phrases that I think better convey the real meaning of the word or phrase then when we use actual vocabulary. For example, look up the sign language for Trinity.

 

No one will fully be able to explain the Trinity but the sign language of taking three fingers pulling it down behind the hand in front and then bringing your original hand in front of the other only holding one finger up invokes three separate entities that in my opinion through this sign go into the mystery beyond our comprehension and emerge in front as one just as Jesus did when he came to earth both as God and man. Now that is just completely my brief interpretation and poor attempt at an explanation, but I hope you understand that just like body language some things are conveyed so differently then when we use our words.

 

Since that visit when they spoke a good number of Weeks the only thing that has gotten me out of bed has been the fact that if I woke up today God has a reason for it. The main reason is to spread the gospel. I may not say it in so many words with every person I interact with but what I can do is try and show love, sympathy, and empathy and recognize we only know a 10th of what anyone is ever going through. Am I ever going to beat someone over the head with a Bible? No. Because at the end of the day all I can do is tell you how faithful God has been in my life and how he has changed my life.

 

If you decide to make that decision it has to be your decision and yours alone because there are going to be nights when it is only you and God at 3:00 AM.

 

Remembering the joy on Jen’s face when she spoke, her laughter Was bittersweet because I was so happy for her even though she is not fully healed to the point where she was prior to the accident.

 

So back to the study tonight as we’re going through their book, one of the questions was what are the lies we believe that keep us from spreading the gospel? If I have something in me that has enabled me to continue to get up out of bed and go to work and function and cook and shower then it is certainly more than capable of tearing down the lies. I either know I am unaware of how deep they go or am unaware of as of yet.

 

In the interest of relatability, I think one of the ones that they happen to give us an example and that goes deeper than I was aware of was “I’m not good enough”.

 

So for all of you who think you are not good enough, here are some ways I am not good enough and realize that they are lies.

 

1.        “No one cares about me”. If people actually cared, they would make the time to reach out. Now I do have to say there is a huge, massive, cultural difference, living in farmlands where many families not only are very large, but have as land owners been in this area for generations. As such they have built in friendships and people to go to and communities built in because everyone knows everyone else because they have all lived down here for generations and have gone to the same schools, etc., at nausea.

The truth is that people do care. I may not have many physical friends down here but there are still a good number of dear friends online that I regularly communicate with and this church is very promising in the interactions I have had since I have started attending on Palm Sunday. Plus I do have a few friends from town and other churches that reach out from down here.

2.        I would have made a horrible mom so that is why, even after my hysterectomy and I had planned to adopt everything fell through. I was never meant to be a mom because I could not handle it especially with having mental health be a factor.

This one is one of the hardest because it combines the self-esteem part of not feeling good enough, but also what they call in psychology, fortune telling and black-and-white thinking. Essentially, it’s distorted thinking.

 

I have come to terms as best I can with not being a mom, but more importantly, I know that God’s reasonings is beyond my comprehension. It even says “His ways are higher than our ways” (Isaiah 55: 8-9). There may be many distinct reasons but trying to work out why something did not work out it is not only futile, it is a fool proof recipe for emotional disaster.

Even now there are times when I feel like a bad cat mom because I cannot play with Goldie down on the floor or brush her like I used to before my injury or even take the pressure of her lying next to me or on me for more than maybe 10 minutes. I would have to wager that unless you are an animal lover, the idea of feeling like a bad pet parent may sound absurd. But it is a very real thing, especially when you consider the research reasoning and popularity for emotional support animals.

 

Needless to say, I do believe in that one meme (although I do not know how theologically sound it is) but that God created animals that could not speak our language just to prove the existence of unconditional love.

 

Which does make me wonder if one atom was naming all of the animals in the garden if they could actually talk and they had a discussion about it. Not so much that the animal came up with the idea of its name, but told Adam it’s different traits and specific talents and that’s how Adam came up with the name.  (Is there any theological basis for this? No. It’s just one of the many strange quirks of how my brain works. That keeps me up at night).

3.        I’m not good enough and don’t look good enough or I’m not interesting enough because if I was, why am I still single?

This is very similar to the previous about distorted thinking, but this takes into account projection and comparison and remembering countless things that have been said to me or I have said to myself that back all  this up.

 

Is it terribly lonely and hard being single with no kids and few friends in an area you barely know? Yes of course it is. Especially when those are the first few questions when making small talk. And consequently, how successful that small talk will be if you have things in common like kids at the same school or a spouse who loves football (just for the record. The only football I love is the original football, soccer).

But again, this goes back to the verse of his ways being higher than my ways, his plans higher than mine. And most recently I’ve been waking up quite early and have just started praying. What a relationship be nice? Yes. But above and beyond everything else, my relationship with Christ comes first.

Do I think I’m guaranteed a relationship? No. Not a romantic one at least. I think that’s why the church body is so important.  But what has been paramount is getting to know what Psalm 46:10 means when it says “Be still I know that I am God.”

I think I have been learning all about my faith and what it means to me on an entirely different level than what it did when I wrote my first book. It’s not that those things are untrue, but that when I wake up for example, I just lie here and talk to God. I have still got a long way to go on the listening as far as discernment and not judging silence as Him not being right next to me. What I think in fact, it is is the deepening of my understanding of the relational aspect of my faith. What it means to see God as an actual friend and talk to Him as such. To have time to go over how he’s been faithful and to ask him for strength. To admit that there are so many things I cannot do in my own willpower such as running my parasympathetic nervous system, or breathing, or sometimes making it through the day.  But the point is is that I don’t have to.  God willingly takes that on and wants to show me how He will be faithful again this day if He chose to wake me up.

 

I’m not guaranteed the next breath. None of us are. But again these blogs and posts is not me trying to force you into believing something because that’s not belief that’s coercion. And be at 3 AM or in the middle of the day your decision is up to you because the help will only come if you ask of your own volition and actually believe for yourself.  But I can tell you that He does listen and wants you and loves you so much they sacrificed Christ his son for your sake to take on the penalty that none of us could pay. But the good news is that this is a free offering.  And I stretched hand.  Salvation cannot be achieved by volunteering here giving to this charity or even just attending church. It has to be an actual dialogue where you realize Grace is being extended by adopting us into his family, redeeming us, no longer holding any of our past against us and setting us free to have a relationship with God, have a Holy Spirit live inside us to help us throughout the day, intercede for us, and have Christ “no longer call us servants, but friends” (John 15:15).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Is Comfort?

People go to the hospital to get better. Some hospitals supply you with the clothing, some out of curiosity others out of restrictions on what can and cannot be worn, who can and cannot visit or at the levers least what those visiting hours are. If there for an extended period, you may have your clothes checked while you are in what they supply you and after a period of waiting you can get back into your old clothes.

What does this have to do with anything? Specifically, that somethings instantly covey a message. For some, scrubs mean a time of having a surgery, others, being inpatient, others working at the hospital, or even as a pharmacy technician at a CVS or Walgreens. Somethings bring back memories of either getting help, feeling safe, getting clean or other times having a horrible experience and a very real struggle.

In all of the above scenarios there very well may be an overlap. You may have felt safe technically but had a horrible experience. Or you may have felt uncomfortable in their clothes be their rules but had albeit I am sure a very intense but ultimately life changing, positive experience.

So what do we put on to feel safe? A deceased relative’s favorite shirt? A cherished gift from someone very dear like a shawl or even a hat or sweatshirt with your favorite team that you bought together at the game you and a good friend both attended? Or perhaps a blanket someone made or gifted you when they knew you needed it?

Maybe it is someone’s ring or cross, a pin, earrings, or watch.

What are we called on to put on every day as Christians? The armor of God (see Ephesians 6 below). But does it make us feel safe?

Personally, while praying and doing so I would tend to answer yes, but does it always last throughout the day and night? No to be brutally honest. It is not that I doubt the effectiveness of each piece of armor but rather that so many pieces are bombarded what feels like constantly, I feel fatigued and worn out from all the spiritual attacks.

And that is why we are called to not only remember the last line to cover all the armor in prayer but to “pray without ceasing” (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18).

It is not within our own power that we can even put on these pieces let alone hold them up. The breastplate of righteousness is partially demonstrated through what Aaron wore in the Old Testament, but now we wear the breastplate of Christ’s righteousness not because we have made or had a priest make a sacrifice or say a prayer for us- it is because of our own declaration of faith in Christ’s final atonement for our sins (and any who come to Him) on the cross as the perfect sacrifice that gives us the right to wear it. Unlike repeated sacrifices needed in the Old Testament, God does not see our sins and our past as needing to be atoned for again and again but the righteousness of Christ. His sacrifice was a grace given out of love and freely offered. A mercy we do not have any way of saying it was earned by this act of good work or writing a check to that organization or even attending church. It is a personal choice we made to accept His taking our place and having an ongoing, continually deepening, and growing relationship with Him that makes this all possible.

He promises to carry our burdens and that includes strengthening our arms to have the shield of faith protect us from the barrage of attacks be they verbal, mental, emotional, spiritual, from others or even from ourselves.

Does this all mean that we will never sin again? No. But it does mean that we, as believers who have truly surrendered our lives over to Him, have the Holy Spirit living inside us, “interceding for us with wordless groans”(Romans 8:26) when we don’t even have the strength to formalize the right (or even perhaps even clear enough to pick out one thought alone) words.

So to reiterate, what do we put on to feel safe? Any number of things. But what do we put on and do to know we are safe? The armor of God and prayer.

We made not feel it but His eye is always upon us (Psalm 34:15). He promises to never leave us or forsake us (Joshua 1:5). Jesus is at the right hand of the Father praying on our behalf (Romans 8:34), the Holy Spirit intercedes and guides us (Psalm 32:8).

Here is the Ephesians 6 words on the armor of God but I specially chose the amplified version as they provide additional references to look up as well if you are so inclined.

Ephesians 6:12-18 AMP

“For our struggle is not against flesh and blood [contending only with physical opponents], but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this [present] darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly (supernatural) places. Therefore, put on the complete armor of God, so that you will be able to [successfully] resist and stand your ground in the evil day [of danger], and having done everything [that the crisis demands], to stand firm [in your place, fully prepared, immovable, victorious]. So stand firm and hold your ground, having tightened the wide band of truth (personal integrity, moral courage) around your waist and having put on the breastplate of righteousness (an upright heart), [Is 11:5] and having strapped on your feet the gospel of peace in preparation [to face the enemy with firm-footed stability and the readiness produced by the good news]. [Is 52:7] Above all, lift up the [protective] shield of faith with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God. [Is 59:17] With all prayer and petition pray [with specific requests] at all times [on every occasion and in every season] in the Spirit, and with this in view, stay alert with all perseverance and petition [interceding in prayer] for all God’s people.”

https://bible.com/bible/1588/eph.6.12-18.AMP

What Am I Eating?

Thoughts on 1 Corinthians 10: 18-21 (verse at the end).

 

What sacrifices are the pagans making that I am partaking in?

Ie who is not a true believer in my life? (Obedience and trust in God vs self reliance and not being truly repentant to the point that you’re willing to change as He guides. See Matthew 7 verses below)

 

What is being offering as a means of receiving a remedy of security, comfort, justification or sense of well being that isn’t truly from God that I am partaking in?

 

It may not be obvious. It most likely isn’t. What am I doing, how am I acting, what am I saying, what words am I using, what am I focusing the most on? What am I spending the most time on? What am I spending the most money on? What am I talking about the most?

 

I’d wager it might even have to be something discerned through the good from the best. (See Mary and Martha at Jesus’s feet). The enemy loves to masquerade as an angel of light. Ie false teachers or even well intentioned advice or books or other people… fact check very very very hard against the Word of God.

 

What is taking my eyes off Jesus? It is my rights and comfort or His will and depending on Him? What is keeping me from showing and sharing the gospel?

 

What have I intentionally grown accustomed to, justify, don’t see as that big of a deal that is actually spiritual warfare and I’m eating mental, emotional, spiritual poison?

 

1 Corinthians‬ ‭10‬:‭18‬-‭21‬ ‭ESV

“Consider the people of Israel: are not those who eat the sacrifices participants in the altar? What do I imply then? That food offered to idols is anything, or that an idol is anything? No, I imply that what pagans sacrifice they offer to demons and not to God. I do not want you to be participants with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons. You cannot partake of the table of the Lord and the table of demons.”

‭‭

““Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but underneath are ravenous wolves. So by their fruits you will know them.

“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name? Did we not drive out demons in your name? Did we not do mighty deeds in your name?’ Then I will declare to them solemnly, ‘I never knew you. Depart from me, you evildoers.’

‭‭Matthew‬ ‭7‬:‭15‬, ‭20‬-‭23‬ ‭NABRE‬‬

https://bible.com/bible/463/mat.7.15-23.NABRE

 

Food for thought but ask for discernment from the Holy Spirit and decide with Him if you agree. Please feel free to share other resources as well:

How to Distinguish A True Christian From a Hypocrite”:

https://www.biblestudytools.com/bible-study/topical-studies/how-to-distinguish-a-true-christian-from-a-hypocrite.html

Abiding and Asking

There is a lot of controversy over asking and it be given- I’ve been experiencing a lot of heartaches both recently and in the past about things being “unanswered”. Or if I have the right to even keep asking, or wanting to give up asking because of the prayers not being seemingly answered or that I have already been given an answer and missed it or it is a no that I keep hoping will change into a yes (like for healing for example).

However, I need to remember it is always yes, no, or wait. My feelings don’t change the fact that He promises to listen to and answer prayers.

1.     The wait may be longer but I will learn so much more if I open my hands, stop thinking the outcome is in my time (maybe He’s working on the other side too) but more importantly in surrendering to waiting I learn the gift of His presence when He says “Be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10).  I have never felt Him more palpably than when I just sat to be brutally honest, stopped talking, thinking, analyzing and just said “speak, your servant is listening”. (1 Samuel 10:3b). In my head it normally goes more like “ok God, I’ll just stop talking now. I’m here. I’m ready. Speak Lord your servant is listening”.

2.     If the answer is no, it means He has something better in mind that I can’t even imagine. And who knows what is may very well also be protecting me from by that no?

3.     The following is an AI generated response that I’m copying as I’ve found it most helpful. Hopefully you do as well.

4.     Please feel free to free to share any thoughts on how you view this verse, the entire concept and/or even the response given via AI (as I don’t have a full Oxford library of commentaries 😊). God Bless

John 15:7 – “Abiding and Asking” Text (ESV):

“If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.” — John 15:7

I. Contextual Background of John 15

John 15 is part of the Farewell Discourse (John 13–17), where Jesus prepares His disciples for His impending death, resurrection, and departure. This section is rich with Trinitarian theology, covenant imagery, and deep relational instruction.

Key themes of the chapter:

  1. Union with Christ – Described metaphorically as the True Vine and His disciples as branches (vv. 1–8).
  2. Fruitfulness – The natural outcome of abiding (vv. 2, 5, 8).
  3. Love and Obedience – The relational foundation of abiding (vv. 9–17).
  4. Persecution – The world’s response to those who abide in Christ (vv. 18–27).

John 15:7 is positioned centrally in Jesus’ metaphor about abiding in the vine and speaks directly to the power of prayer that flows from intimate union with Him.

II. Word Study & Greek Analysis

1. “Abide” – Greek: μένω (menō)

  • Definition: To remain, stay, dwell, continue.
  • Theological Meaning: Suggests not just physical presence, but enduring relationship, spiritual constancy, and obedience.
  • Usage in John 15: Occurs 11 times in vv. 1–10. It conveys the centrality of a continual relational union with Christ, the Vine.

2. “Words” – Greek: ῥήματα (rhēmata)

  • Definition: Utterances, spoken words.
  • Distinction: Different from logos (the Word in a broader sense), rhēma often implies specific sayings or teachings of Jesus.
  • Implication: Not just hearing, but internalizing and treasuring Jesus’ teachings.

3. “Ask” – Greek: αἰτέω (aiteō)

  • Definition: To request, petition, often used in prayer contexts.
  • Form: Present imperative – suggests ongoing, confident asking.

4. “Will be done” – Greek: γενήσεται (genēsetai)

  • Definition: Will come into being, will happen.
  • Passive voice: Indicates the action is performed by God on behalf of the one asking.

III. Hermeneutical Principles and Interpretation

A. Covenant and Conditionality

The verse is structured conditionally:

  • “If” you abide in Me → conditional upon relational constancy.
  • “And” My words abide in you → not mere profession, but a word-saturated life.
  • “Then” ask whatever you wish → prayer becomes powerful when desires align with divine will.

This is not a blanket promise for selfish prayer fulfillment. Instead, it is rooted in covenantal faithfulness and alignment with God’s character and mission.

B. Theological Echoes and Allusions

  • Psalm 1:2–3 – The blessed man delights in God’s law and bears fruit.
  • Jeremiah 17:7–8 – The tree planted by water (symbol of the faithful one).
  • Matthew 7:7–11 – Jesus’ teaching on asking and receiving from the Father.
  • 1 John 5:14 – “If we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.”

IV. Literary and Structural Context

Verses 1–8 form a cohesive unit:

  • vv. 1–3: Jesus as the Vine, the Father as the Vinedresser.
  • vv. 4–6: The necessity of abiding to bear fruit.
  • v. 7: The power of abiding faith.
  • v. 8: Glorifying the Father through fruitfulness.

Verse 7 is the hinge point between the internal relationship (abiding and obedience) and external expression (prayer and fruitfulness).

V. Theological Commentary

A. Abiding as the Center of Discipleship

Jesus’ repeated use of menō underscores that abiding is the foundation of discipleship, not a mystical state but a practical reality: staying with Jesus, submitting to His Word, and cultivating intimacy through love and obedience (cf. John 14:23–24).

B. Prayer Aligned with Divine Purpose

The promise that “whatever you wish” will be granted is not a blank check, but assumes that one’s wishes are shaped by Christ’s indwelling Word. As we abide, our desires conform to His; our prayers reflect His heart.

Thus, this verse underscores a transformative model of prayer: union leads to communion, and communion leads to empowered intercession.

C. Fruitfulness and God’s Glory

In verse 8, Jesus says:

“By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.”

This places answered prayer in a larger doxological context—our fruitfulness (which includes prayer outcomes) glorifies God and validates our discipleship.

VI. Application and Reflection

  1. Examine your abiding: Is your relationship with Christ marked by constancy, intimacy, and obedience?
  2. Immerse in the Word: Do Jesus’ teachings shape your values, prayers, and lifestyle?
  3. Pray boldly, yet humbly: Are your prayers driven by self or shaped by Scripture and Christ’s mission?

Conclusion

John 15:7 is not a formula but a relational reality. It shows that power in prayer flows from a life rooted in Christ and His Word. The verse challenges us not only to pray more but to abide more—to become people whose wills are so intertwined with God’s that what we ask is what He desires to give.