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Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. (Rom. 12:2)

 


As you reflect today, think about the way in which you relate to the world. Do you conform and do what most of your fellows are doing, or do you have the courage to avoid the patterns of the world? It is most likely always easier to simply conform. When you do what everyone else is doing, no one notices you. However, some of the things everyone else is doing may be wrong for you. How will you know? Keep in contact with your Creator, and regularly ask Him/Her what you should do.

I know you have heard the story of the lemmings that, once started, follow their leaders off the cliff and into the sea. Many of us are a bit like those lemmings; we are compliant and do what we are told without giving thought to whether what we are doing is right, or if there might be something better to do.

If we are willing to renew our minds on a daily basis, we will be able to examine some of the things we do just by rote. We may begin to see places where we do something merely because it is the way we have always done it. Must it be done this way? Might we find a better way, one that creates fewer problems and betters our environment? Take a look at some of the automatic things you do today. Ask God to help you keep your mind alert and aware, and who knows what you may be able to see!

Taken from “Ta;ls with our Creator” for March 5th

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Most of us feel upset and resentful from time to time, and for some that feeling seems to almost always be with us.  The word “resent” means literally to refeel, so those who carry resentments are simply replaying unhappy times in their lives over and over again.  One lady I worked with at one time kept saying to me, “But how can I feel happy when my husband is gone.”  I would usually tell her that she could feel sad that he was no longer with her, but she could begin to let go of the constant feelings of grief.  She insisted that wasn’t possible.  She would tell me that no matter how engrosing whatever she was doing was, she would also be thinking of how much she missed her husband and about all the things she wished she had done differently in her life with him..

It is very difficult to shift our thinking from one channel to another, but it can be done with lots and lots of practice.  The process can begin with the realization that no matter how hard we work at it, we can not change reality.  My patient’s husband was not going to come back, and she would never be able to change the way her life with him had been.  By spending so much of her energy resenting the fact that he was gone, she was in effect poisoning the current monments in her life.  We talked about the fact that her husband would not have wanted her to think that way, and gradually she began to see that she could begin to shift her thinking to more positive thoughts.

Many people allow their thinking to get stuck in certain tracks, and they come to believe that it is not possible to change this.  Their take on life is that they feel what they feel, and there is no way to feel differently.  In recent years, science has come a long way toward proving that what we think determines what plays out in our lives.  It doesn’t do so directly, of course, or we would all be winning the lottery all the time.  But when we think we are helpless to change our thinking, we find that is true in our lives.  When we begin to think about all the ways we might be able to shift our thought processes, we find we can do that occasionally.  Since practice makes perfect, we find that our ability to change our thinking can grow.

To give you an example of how this words, I will tell you that my parents lived through the “great depression” just prior to my birth.  It colored their lives and I grew up thinking that no matter how much I had, it was never enough.  Eventually I realized that my thoughts were always of scarcity, so scarcity was what I attracted to my life.  I worked very hard at shifting my thoughts to abundant thinking.  I would get mail from many worthy causes asking for donations.  In the past, I always felt that I did not have enough to give funds away.  Slowly I sifted my thinking to the realization that I might not have much, but I had more than many others, so I opted to share the little I had.  Since I was sending out abundant thoughts into the universe, the abundance in my life grew and grew.

If you have decided you want to learn to control your own thoughts (which will indeed change the way you view life and the people in it) you can begin by taking baby steps and progress from there.  Whenever, you find your thinking is going around and around like a hamster on a wheel, tell yourself that you would like to change the way you are thinking.  The way that works best for me is to ask for help from a power greater than myself.  I simply say, “Please help me not think this way.”  It helps if you have some more positive thoughts available.  Think about something for which you are grateful.  Think, perhaps, about the reward you will give yourself when you have achieved a change in thinking.  Above all else, do not be discouraged when your thoughts shift back into an old rut.  Simply allow yourself to be aware that this has happened, and try again.  It will work if you work at it.

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But when Jesus heard it, He answered him saying, “Do not be afraid; only believe, and she will be made well.” (Luke 8:50)

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’ve never been a serious scripture reader. However, one year during Lent, I committed to daily readings of scripture. I tried to give myself enough time to pray first and then listen to hear what God might want me to get from the passage. I would then read slowly so that certain passages or phrases might stand out and/or have special meaning.  At times, nothing would leap out at me, but on occasion, it did. One time I’d been reading from the book of Luke and I got to the eighth chapter in which Jairus comes to Christ, seeking help for his dying daughter. Before they can get to her, someone comes to say that the daughter has died, and Jesus responds with the passage above.

 

 

No doubt about it! Those words did seem to leap off the page. “Do not be afraid, only believe.” I found myself saying those words over and over and realizing how hard I found this to do. Though I do believe, I often lack the faith to believe completely. I tend to believe with reservations. I’d like to fully believe, but often I don’t.

 

 

Today, I have accepted the paradox that the more I believe, the more I know I need help with my unbelief. Generally, it boils down to the fact that while I believe, I lack sufficient trust in certain areas. I know God cares for me—I know this without reservation. Still, when things don’t go my way,  I hang on to faith and trust only so long before I begin to think of things I can do to help the situation. It’s hard for me to just sit back and allow the power of Spirit to do its work, even though I know that when I manage to do so, things work out much better overall.

 

Taken from “Talks with our Creator” for February 12th

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SIGHT VS. VISION

 

 

Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful. (Heb. 10:23)

 

 

 

 

 

 

We all have those days when we may feel more hopeless than hopeful. It can happen even on days when we are not dealing with major difficulties or trauma. Many of us are sensitive to weather conditions and the barometric pressure may affect us both physically and mentally. The above passage points out that “he who promised is faithful.” Still, for most of us human creatures, we can begin to doubt fairly easily.

Today, let us take a few quiet moments and evaluate our emotional state. Many of us get so busy with living life that we rarely even pause to check out how we are feeling. Is something bothering us? Can we think of a way to deal with this or let go of it.  We all have some ways to stay positive and hopeful that work for us.  For me, it is a great help to remember that the sun is always shining.  Even when it is raining or snowing, the sun is there behind the clouds.

There is much in our lives that is always there, even though our vision of it may be obscured for any number of reasons. I need to be able to see the sun with my internal vision even when I may not be able to see it with my eyes. My prayer for us all today is that we may find internally sunny weather no matter what we see outside.

Taken from “Talks with our Creator” for January 16th

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Ask and it will be given to you, seek and you will find; knock
and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks
receives; he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks,
the door will be opened. (Matt. 7:7-8)

 

 

 

 

 

We all have phrases, slogans, or sayings which especially speak to us.  One I’m fond of tells me that God will never close a door but that He will also open a window. There have been times in my life when I’ve had doubts about where that window is and how long it will take it to open, but it’s always shown up eventually.

 
Helen Keller put it this way, “When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us.” How true that can be.  Helen Keller was an extremely remarkable lady. Being human, we hate it when doors close—especially if we feel they should have remained open.
We can then get so focused on the door now shut that we fail to be open to the beauty we might find from any number of windows were we to stop bemoaning that closed door.

 
Today, examine some of the ways in which you may be struggling with doors that have closed or are closing. Are you failing to see the open windows? Have you even made an effort to look for them? Are you failing to realize that each day, each moment brings us a new beginning? Perhaps you don’t see the open windows because they are in unexpected places. If you spend some time reflecting upon where you might find those opening windows, you may have a better chance of locating them. You may also find you’ve become more accepting of those closed doors.

 

Taken from “Talks with our Creator” for July 10th

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