A Meditation

The Therapy of Thankfulness

The Therapy of Thankfulness. . . In the Thick of Things

A Reading from Roger Ellsworth

And as day was about to dawn, Paul implored them all to take food, saying, “Today is the fourteenth day you have waited and continued without food, and eaten nothing. Therefore I urge you to take nourishment, for this is for your survival, since not a hair will fall from the head of any of you.” And when he had said these things, he took bread and gave thanks to God in the presence of them all; and when he had broken it he began to eat. Then they were all encouraged, and also took food themselves.

Acts 27:33-36

In Acts 27 we find the Apostle Paul “in the thick of things.” You know what I mean by the thick of things: serious trouble or dire circumstances! I wonder if the phrase is an offshoot of “the thick of battle,” which refers to that part of battle in which the heaviest fighting occurs.

But back to Paul; a prisoner of the Roman government, he was sailing to Rome to stand trial before Caesar (Acts 26:32). The charge leveled against him was sedition, that is, the inciting of rebellion against the government (Acts 24:5-6).

That would seem to be trouble enough. But Paul’s trouble was only beginning. His ship encountered a “tempestuous head wind,” which was called “Euroclydon,” that is, a northeasterly wind.

This storm was so severe, that Luke, the author of Acts, says: “… we were exceedingly tempest-tossed” (v. 18), and “… no small tempest beat on us” (v. 20).

To make things worse, this storm continued for several days, two weeks to be exact! (v. 33).

The sailors had given up all hope. But in the midst of their despair, Paul came to offer encouragement and hope. One of the ways in which he did this was by giving them food.

Now here is a remarkable thing—in that setting of crisis, fear, confusion and exhaustion, Paul did not merely offer food. He first “gave thanks to God in the presence of them all” (v. 35).

If there has ever been a time in which the giving of thanks might seem to be out of place, this was it!

Paul could have said: “The men are preoccupied with the storm. There is no point in giving thanks.” Or he could have said: “The men are in no mood to have religion crammed down their throats.” Or he could have said: “The men will think I am crazy to thank God for food with this storm going on. Why thank God for the food when He won’t stop the storm?”

But Paul expressed thanks just the same. It was a situation that would seem to call for bitterness, anger and skepticism, but Paul used it as an occasion for thanksgiving.

Why did he do it? Some would say it was mere force of habit, that Paul was observing his routine without thinking. That won’t work. Paul was far too thoughtful, far too devoted to Christ, and far too genuine than to do this out of habit. This was a sincere expression of worship to God.

By doing this, Paul was declaring his conviction that God is with us in every situation. There would be no need to pray if God were not there to hear the prayer.

Paul was also registering his firm belief that every good thing comes from God, even something as common as food, and that we owe thanks to Him. We must be thankful for the big things (v. 24), but we must not think that we exhaust our responsibility in so doing. We must also be thankful for the small things. By the way, if we are always thankful for small blessings, we will never fail to be thankful for large blessings.

Paul was also showing his companions that we are blessed even while we are burdened.

And what resulted from Paul’s simple act of thanksgiving? Luke says “… they were all encouraged …” (v. 36).

Thankfulness never fails to leave a favorable impression. Sourness also leaves an impression but never a favorable one.

So let’s make up our minds that we can go through life humbly grateful or grumbly hateful, and let’s make it our business to choose the former.

With all his difficulties Paul was a grateful man. Do you wonder what he would say if he were asked to name the thing for which he was most grateful? I think he would say: “Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift” (2 Cor. 8:9). That gift, of course, is Christ and the eternal life we can receive through Him.

Be grateful for all God’s gifts, and don’t ever fail to be grateful for the greatest of His gifts.

 

Posted by James Holmes in A Meditation, Guest Posts, Social, 0 comments

Dad’s Old Bible

Dad’s Old Bible–A Reading from Roger

From time to time, we like to share a reading from the My Coffee-Cup Meditations. Here’s one we think you will enjoy reading; it’s based on a text from Psalm 119 and you will find it in The “Thumbs-Up” Man (more info HERE)…

From God’s Word, the Bible

Your word I have hidden in my heart,

That I might not sin against You.

Blessed are You, O LORD!

Teach me Your statutes.

With my lips I have declared

All the judgments of Your mouth.

I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies,

As much as in all riches.

I will meditate on Your precepts,

And contemplate Your ways.

I will delight myself in Your statutes;

I will not forget Your word.

(Psalm 119:11-16)

It’s very old now, published in 1975. The pages are brown, and it has a musty smell. Some of the pages are loose. It is my Dad’s Bible, a King James Version.

I have many Bibles. I have the KJV, NKJV, ESV, NASB, HCSB, NIV, the Amplified Bible, and the Living Bible. I have Study Bibles with all sorts of detailed notes and explanations. I have plain Bibles with nothing but the Bible books themselves and four or five maps in the back. I have expensive and inexpensive Bibles. I have large-print and regular-print Bibles. I have Bibles with black, burgundy, brown, and blue covers.

But no Bible is more precious to me than Dad’s Bible. As I open it I find the page where he wrote his name.

It is somewhat surprising to me that my Dad was not much of a Bible marker. I am. I underline and write notes in the margin. I seem to recall someone, after looking at all the underlinings in my Bible, asking: “If you underline the whole Bible, how is it different from one that is not underlined at all?”

My Dad did underline a little. One of the few verses, interestingly enough, comes from the tiny prophecy of Obadiah: “But upon mount Zion shall be deliverance, and there shall be holiness; and the house of Jacob shall possess their possessions” (v. 17).

I’m not sure why that verse was so special to Dad. My guess is that it made him look forward to that glorious day in which the people of God will possess all that God has promised to give them.

One of the underlined verses in the New Testament is John 6:29—“Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent.”

This verse points out the importance of believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. While still a young man, my father came to faith in Christ. He loved and served the Lord Jesus. It is no surprise that one of his underlined verses is Philippians 1:21—“For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”

Another verse he marked in Philippians is Paul’s warning to rejoice in Christ and put no confidence in the flesh (Phil. 3:3).

One of the more heavily marked sections is in Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians: “For this we say unto you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep. For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord” (1 Thess. 4:15-17).

Dad died on August 4, 1985. His body lies alongside my mother’s in little Greenhill Cemetery, just outside Vanburensburg, Illinois. His soul is already with the Lord, and now his body waits for the sound of the trumpet, the voice of the archangel, and the shout of Jesus. That body will then spring from the grave, will be instantaneously changed into a body just like the resurrection body of Jesus (Phil. 3:21), will be re-joined to his soul, and he will soul and body be forever with the Lord.

How do I know these things to be true? They are all right there in Dad’s old Bible.

 

Though the cover is worn

And the pages are torn,

And though places bear traces of tears,

Yet more precious than gold

Is the Book, worn and old,

That can shatter and scatter my fears.

 

When I prayerfully look

In the precious old Book,

Many pleasures and treasures I see;

Many tokens of love

From the Father above,

Who is nearest and dearest to me.

 

This old Book is my guide,

This a friend by my side,

It will lighten and brighten my way;

And each promise I find

Soothes and gladdens my mind

As I read it and heed it today.

(Author unknown)

 

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My Sanctified Dog, Gus

Enjoying Learning from a Dog

This evening in family devotions, we used a reading from Tim Ellsworth in which he recounted some lessons he learned from his dog. The Bible reading comes from 2 Peter:

 

… [G]row in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be the glory both now and forever.
Amen.

2 Peter 3:18

My Sanctified Dog, Gus

I miss our morning conversations the most. Every morning I would go outside to see my dogs. While they were both happy to see me, Gus expressed his joy in a much more vocal way. It was almost as if he were singing to me with a “roo, roo, roo” type of sound that must have annoyed the neighbors. Sometimes I had to go back into the house just to get him to stop.

He was always thrilled to see me at any time of the day, but only in the mornings was I greeted in such a raucous manner. I came to call it my morning conversation with Gus. It was like he had been waiting all night to see me, and he simply wanted to tell my how his night had been.

I got Gus when he was just a puppy, probably only about three weeks old. He and his momma, who was half golden retriever, were residents of the local dog pound when I came in looking for two dogs to replace those we had just lost. Gus was the only pup to survive from her litter of seven, and I took both him and his mom.

Gus (whom we named after the great Christian thinker Augustine) was a tiny little guy, fitting in the palm of my hand. He was entirely dependent upon his mother, Suzy, and when she would walk off and leave him behind, he would sit down, throw back his head, and let loose with a mournful cry. You would think his world had come to an end because his mom was a few yards away. He eventually grew to be almost twice her size, but he never stopped being her pup.

My mornings are a lot quieter now. At eleven years of age, Gus had been dealing with arthritis in his legs for some time. His condition had steadily worsened despite an increase in the pain-killing medication he was taking. It got to the place where he could hardly walk.

So we had to say goodbye. I knew for weeks that the day was coming and tried to prepare myself as best as I could. But it was still terribly difficult. He was my good and faithful friend, and a kind and gentle soul.

Through the pain he experienced late in life, Gus demonstrated to me what I grew to love most about him. The older he got and the more his legs hurt, the sweeter his disposition became. No one would have blamed him for being grumpy and sour, but that wasn’t how Gus reacted. He simply loved us more and was all the more cheerful about life. Maybe he knew his days were numbered, and he wanted to make those days count.

It’s probably not possible for a dog to be godly and to grow in sanctification. But all the same, Gus showed me what I must aspire to be like as I get older. Assuming that I live for at least a few more years, I’ll most likely have to deal with a variety of aches and pains. Most people do. And many of them don’t adjust very well. They become cranky and grouchy, and seem to take no enjoyment in their remaining days.

Gus wasn’t that way at all. Just the opposite! Even until the day of his death, he was a jolly, loving, and sweet fellow, perhaps more so than he had ever been. I hope the same will one day be said of me—that as I approached death, my life reflected Christ more than ever before.

My mornings may be quieter without Gus, and I certainly miss his daily greeting. But maybe the silence will give me the opportunity to ponder the lessons he taught me and to ask myself if I’m growing in grace and love for the Lord and for His people. I pray God would make it so.


Excerpt from The “Thumbs-Up” Man, Roger Ellsworth and family, Great Writing Publications, used with permission.

You may purchase the book from any bookstore or from Amazon or online HERE.

Posted by James Holmes in A Meditation, Guest Posts, Social, 0 comments

Pleased with the Progress

Prototype Books Soon to Be Approved for Printing

It’s exciting to see what the prototype books look like, and now that most of the small editorial corrections are in place, we are nearly ready to upload more files to the printers to get these books properly into circulation. In reflecting with the author, Roger Ellsworth, on the wording for the final chapter of “When God Blocks Our Path,” we thought some wording needed to be worked on.

Here’s a snippet from some of the rephrasing that we worked on:

At the time, it may have seemed a hard providence for Paul to have his path blocked while he was seeking to advance God’s kingdom. Having to be in Troas was not what he wanted. And there were many other difficult circumstances he faced—shipwrecks, beatings, persecutions to name just a few! His words in Acts 14:22 still apply today: “We must through many tribulations enter the kingdom of God.” In it all, he knew from the words God gave him, Romans 8:28, that “…all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.”

Be sure to get hold of these books for yourself and for others you would like to share the wonderful message of God’s love and grace!

In the picture: Jim Holmes holding the books close to his heart!

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Flip Through Some of Book 2’s Pages

Peruse the Early Pages of Book 2!

We love to make the reading experience a good one, so here is a way you can read some pages from The “Thumbs-Up” Man from the comfort and convenience of wherever you are right now!

We like to say, “Try Before You Buy”!

So, please enjoy reading the few pages below and see how easy it is to interact with the way the pages flip back and forth.

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Tell Me What You Think You Owe

Enjoy This Reading from “A Dog and A Clock.”

From God’s Word, the Bible… 

 “Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has washed My feet with her tears and wiped them with the hair of her head. You gave Me no kiss, but this woman has not ceased to kiss My feet since the time I came in. You did not anoint My head with oil, but this woman has anointed My feet with fragrant oil. Therefore I say to you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little.”

Then He said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.”

And those who sat at the table with Him began to say to themselves, “Who is this who even forgives sins?”

Then He said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you. Go in peace.”

From Luke 7:36-50

 

Tell Me What You Think You Owe…

Tell me what you think you owe the Lord, and I will tell you how much you feel like serving Him. If you think you owe a great deal, you will gladly serve and worship Him. If you think you owe very little, you will not be much interested in service or worship.

The truth of the matter is every Christian owes the Lord the same amount. He has done no less for one than He has for others. We all come into this world in a very sad and sorrowful condition. We come in with a sinful nature that causes us to be alienated or separated from God.

The piercing question is this: How can sinful human beings ever hope to enjoy fellowship with the perfectly holy God? To put it another way, how can guilty sinners ever stand acceptably in the presence of the holy God?

The answer is that sin must be taken out of the way, and there is only one way that sin can be removed from between God and us. Its penalty has to be paid! What is the penalty for sin? It is eternal separation from God or the eternal wrath of God!

There are only two ways for the penalty for our sins to be paid: we either have to pay it ourselves, which means we must be separated from God and heaven forever, or someone has to pay it on our behalf. In order for someone else to pay the penalty for our sins, such a person must, of course, be free from sin. We see the logic of this. If someone has sins of his own, he would have to pay the penalty for those and could not, therefore, pay the penalty for anyone else.

Jesus is the only person who ever lived without sin (John 1:14; 1 Peter 1:19; 1 John 3:5). Because He had no sins of His own, He could pay for the sins of others.

This is what His death on the cross is all about. There He received the wrath of God in the place of sinners. Because He was God in human flesh, He could receive in a finite length of time an infinite measure of wrath. This is the reason He cried out from the cross: “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Matt. 27:46).

The cost of sin is God-forsakenness in hell, and, on that cross, Jesus endured God-forsakenness for sinners. All who realize the depth and guilt of their sins and entrust themselves fully to Jesus in the work He did on the cross are released from the sentence of God’s wrath (John 3:16,36; Rom. 5:8-9;1 Thess. 1:10; 1 Peter 2:24).

What do Christians owe the Lord? A debt that can never be paid! We have been delivered from the wrath of God and given eternal life through Christ. In referring to a debt we owe, I am not suggesting that we must work for our salvation. Not for a moment! The Apostle Paul says: “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast” (Eph. 2:8-9).

We do not work for our salvation but from our salvation. Because we have been saved by the redeeming death of the Lord Jesus, we work to show our love and gratitude to Him.

It is not easy to show gratitude to the Lord by worshiping and serving Him. There are always a thousand things to occupy us. Some people excuse themselves from worship and service because they feel that they don’t have the time. Other people do so because they have been offended or hurt. Yet others do so because they don’t agree with the direction the church is going.

The answer to each of these excuses is the same: What do you owe? If you say that you owe nothing less than deliverance from the wrath of God to Christ, you must surely go on to say that He is worthy of your time and energy and that no hurt or disagreement is great enough to offset the debt.

What I have been saying is pointedly expressed in these words from Isaac Watts:

 

When I survey the wondrous cross

On which the Prince of Glory died,

My richest gain I count but loss,

And pour contempt on all my pride.

 

Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast,

Save in the death of Christ my God;

All the vain things that charm me most –

I sacrifice them to His blood.

 

Were the whole realm of nature mine,

That were a present far too small:

Love so amazing, so divine,

Demands my soul, my life, my all.

Buy your copy of A Dog and A Clock and be sure to get a copy for a friend, family member, or work colleague, too!
Posted by James Holmes in A Meditation, Social, 0 comments