Wheat or Chaff?

Psalm 1

The time of wheat harvest is upon the Palouse here in Eastern Washington. The waving golden fields are being slashed into spikey rows as modern combines gather the grain and nearly effortlessly do the work that once was grueling, back-breaking labor for hundreds of men. The process of getting wheat from field to freight trains bound for bakeries all around the world is a mystery to most of us. But that was not so to the men and women who lived in ancient times. For most of human history, wheat was scythed by hand and carried to threshing floors. There the wheat stalks were flailed and flung high into the wind. The process dropped the precious grain to the ground while the wind carried away the useless outer husks—“chaff.” In other cases, the chaff would be gathered and burned.

If you were a grain of wheat, this process of “winnowing,” as it was called, would be traumatic. You would be beaten, tossed, and dropped. But if you were the chaff, not just trauma, but catastrophe. You and the wheat would be beaten and tossed and flung high. But as the wheat safely dropped to the floor, there you are, alone, to be borne by the wind to a nameless, useless end. The wheat will remain, valuable and useful. It will become food that will nourish and sustain many. You, the chaff, will be lost and utterly useless-flung to oblivion or burned with fire.

Life is harrowing and the current times seem much like a threshing floor experience. We are being beaten, tossed and dropped. The winnowing brings turmoil, trauma. The temptation is strong to become a spiritual chameleon, to blend into the world’s pattern in an effort to avoid the chaos. There is in our fallen human heart the notion that if we just go along with what the world says we won’t have any trouble. Being “righteous” in this context is scary.

But God is at work, separating the evil from the good. As John the Baptist said of Jesus at His baptism: “His winnowing fork is in His hand and He will thoroughly clear His threshing floor; and He will gather His wheat into the barn, but He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”

QUESTION:

Are you wheat or chaff? Have you repented of the sin that separates you from God? Maybe you playing close to the fire, compromising with the world in an effort to avoid the scorn of others? Beware. Both paths are perilous.

Gratitude Eclipsed

 


Hot weather engulfing wide swathes of our country this week stir my thinking about how we are engulfed and swayed by the immediate and often lose sight of what is really important. When the heat and humidity soar we are preoccupied with how to stay cool. We find conversations everywhere focused on the communal misery of the oppressive heat. When you are enduring triple digit heat and 99% humidity, thinking about anything else is truly difficult.

It seems the same with our political climate this past year (has it been that long already?!). The waves of words and crashing craziness combined with world events that seem careering out of control have swamped me, and I imagine many others, with a high tide of anxiety about life. It has caused me to lose sight of what is true, beautiful and lovely.  I have often not noticed the beauty of daily blessings.

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Our garden is being particularly lovely just now but there I sat in my chair, staring at it all, busy mulling morosely over the political debacles unfolding, instead of praising my Creator for such a joyous panorama.

I am in good health and, shame on me, I have failed to thank Him for that good gift today. God has put so many people in my life who are delightful. I have failed to thank Him for each one. And to compound it, I have taken them for granted failing to let them know how much I love them.

He provides a comfortable and safe home for me and given me so much to do that I have grumbled about my “overload-ness” and complained about my stress. What a shame that I have not stopped to thank Him for the talent, training, time and space to do what I love. I love caring for my husband and mother. I love being able to do laundry and hang sheets on the line to dry. I love being able to cook and eat tasty food. I love being able to lie down and sleep in peace and safety. I love being able to draw and paint and make beautiful letters with my pens.  Oh, this list could go on a long time!

God is so good to me. And how have I repaid Him? With careless ingratitude stirred with sinful anxiety. I think the best antidote to this situation is a fresh reflection on Philippians 4: 4-8.

philippians 4_8

Want a Good Book?

my book: Life In Letters- A Christian Young Person's Guide to Virtue, Integrity and Peace
my book: Life In Letters- A Christian Young Person’s Guide to Virtue, Integrity and Peace

My book sales are experiencing a summer lull, so here is a code to save 20% on my book, Life In Letters: A Christian Young Person’s Guide to Virtue, Integrity and Peace. THIS OFFER ENDS JULY 31, 2016. Here is how to get your savings–

Go to Lifeinlettersbook.com.  Find the “Buy from the Author” button. when you are ready to check out enter this code: BP72516

Thanks so much for stopping by!

Creative Juices Flowing

Here is where my artistic juices have been flowing lately. I’ve spent the past several days creating in this most inspirational space. Did you notice that it is the same color as my new bedroom?

Here she takes a nervous gulp and blurts out:

studio in some semblance of order- thankfully ink smudges and dog fur not visible
studio in some semblance of order- thankfully ink smudges and dog fur not visible

“I am about to launch a serious ‘social media campaign.’ ”

This is definitely tame by the standard of many younger folks but for a “mature” woman like myself it feels like a leap into a galaxy far, far away! So here is what is planned:  I am preparing to begin uploading pics to Instagram and making a bigger presence on Face Book and be more intentional and regular in posting on my blog.

these designs will be cards for sale soon. Planning for the Studio Art Tour in September for sure
these designs will be cards for sale soon. Planning for the Studio Art Tour in September for sure

I am preparing for the Art Tour in September and so have created 4 designs for 5” x 7” greeting cards. Will be taking them to my art photographer guy today. Look for ways to order them from me sometime soon. Also planning to get a coloring book made from the black and white line drawings of the letters in my book. Busy, busy, busy. But, oh, does it feel wonderful to be back in my studio making art!

So, hop on over to my book website  –  lifeinlettersbook.com (order a book while you are there!), check me out on Instagram – (karynjeffrey) (Whoo-hoo! This is new!) or find me on Face BookKaryn Jeffrey- The Designing Woman.

my book: Life In Letters- A Christian Young Person's Guide to Virtue, Integrity and Peace
my book: Life In Letters- A Christian Young Person’s Guide to Virtue, Integrity and Peace

I’ve put an RSS feed URL here so you can get notified regularly when I post something new. I am hoping to post at least once a week and maybe add a picture of current art work on a different day.

Thanks for stopping by!  Please leave a comment– it would help to know who is looking.

 

 

Perplexing Political Problems

There are two people running for the highest office in our land. I am utterly horrified at the criminal activities and immoral stances of the one, and the boastful, careless and immoral behaviors of the other. How can I as a Christian, in good conscience vote for either one? I am perplexed. There is no parallel in Scripture for the situation that faces our nation. But I believe we can know what to do in November and today, and tomorrow and the next day.  Here is how I think that is possible.

First: pray for wisdom (James 1:5).  This requires spending time reading His Word.  You need to read in other places than Daniel and Revelation in an effort to “know the times and the seasons” Act 1:7 to the exclusion of seeking to “know Jesus” 2 Peter 1:3. You need to read other places than just a verse or two that accompanies a daily devotional booklet. (That is like eating one saltine cracker in the morning and thinking it will suffice for all your nutritional needs for the day.)  You need a well-rounded understanding of who God is and what His thoughts are. That requires time and diligent effort. Read Isaiah 55:6-13 for a powerful encouragement. This passage will give you some helpful perspective.

Wisdom doesn’t come in one “ahha!” moment that is a specific answer once-and-for-all solution. Gaining wisdom is a lifelong process. But God has promised to lead those who keep seeking Him. No time spent reading His Word is wasted. EVER!

Seek the LORD while He may be found...

Second: realize we live in a time that, to us, looks utterly out of control. But God is still sovereign and is working out His plan. He says in His Word that He will deal with boasters, liars, and wicked people of every kind. Read the first 5 Psalms. This is a short but very comforting read!

Third: don’t throw up your hands and just fatalistically say, “I can’t do anything about the political mess and God is going to rapture me out of here and I won’t have to deal with it anyway…” That is not what Scripture says about the end times… but that is another conversation altogether.

Fourth: remember we are not given directions now for our actions in November. We must keep thinking, keep praying, and keep reading. We must keep expecting God to lead us because He has promised over and over to show us the way to walk. When the time comes, the Spirit will superintend our decision. In the meantime, we need to walk quietly with our God. We need to walk in the Light He has given. We need to keep reading and seeking to know Him because He is our wisdom. He is our Peace. He is our Shepherd. His being our Good Shepherd is His promise to lead us in the perfect path at the perfect time. He knows! We don’t. Trust Him.

Keep asking for wisdom. Keep seeking to know Jesus and then trust God to guide your thinking. He is faithful and will give the wisdom, reveal Himself to you and lead you in the way you should go.

Weighed Down

“That’s heavy, man!” I can just see a bedraggled hippie guy in embroidered bell-bottom Levis gazing at me with weed-blurred eyes, offering sympathy for my troubles. As a child of the 60’s and 70’s, that phrase comes to mind whenever I think of something that is serious, sad, or overwhelming. And back in the day, the culture offered its condolences with this phrase. Now, I am needing more than this vague expression of solidarity in my misery. So where do I look?

cast your burden

This promise of keeping comes in a Psalm that talks of the evil designs arrayed against God’s own children. I look around at the world situation—seeing every sort of trouble and turmoil—from life-threatening illness in the lives of people I love, to horrors of militant evil persecuting and beheading my fellow Christians. I look at the issues in my own daily situation and realize my long and tyrannous “to-do list” is also a heavy burden.

Oh, my. I am far more weighted down with earthly cares than I knew. I must stop here. I need to slow down. I need to turn my face to Jesus. I need to consciously give Him the things that burden me, the “heavy” things. They threaten to shake me, make me topple into fear. They undermine my trust in my God Who is powerful and able and Who will keep me.

I am helpless to deal with my troubles. But He is utterly capable. He is THE Almighty God. His power and love are everlasting. So why should I keep struggling to solve my problems and settle my anxieties with my own thoughts and ways?! I can turn to Him. I can give Him my troubles and anxieties. He will carry my load. He will keep me.

There is another Scripture that is quite similar to the promise here in chapter 55.

Psalm 37:23, 24. “The steps of a man are established by the LORD and He delights in his way. When he falls, he will not be hurled headlong, because the LORD is the One who holds his hand.”

Here the promise is “skin-to-skin”… the LORD is holding my hand! So, casting my burden on Him is the thing to do. But how?
Prayer and the constant discipline of my thought life- reminding myself of what I know is true of my God and His world. He is the Almighty. He loves me. He has promised to keep me. What comfort!

Question: What are your burdens? Will you give them to Jesus and receive the promise of God’s care and protection? Or would you rather sort out your troubles in your own strength?

Mattress Cooties and Makeovers

Those mattress ads that show you all the creepy cooties that lurk in your mattress give me the shivers. The magnifying glass graphic hovers over the little dust mite beasties and a solemn voice intones, “Dust mites and shed skin cells accumulate in your mattress…blah, blah, blah.” I shudder, change the channel and try to think of something clean and new. Truth is, though, we do shed cells all the time.

“I’m not the woman I used to be.” Almost every cell in my body gets cycled to the trash, so to speak, so that what made me up physically the day I was born is long gone. The “real me” is still there… but somehow the “housing” keeps changing.

In the spiritual realm it is a little more complicated. My soul –the “real me”—exists. It IS. It doesn’t alter. When I was conceived, I was conceived in sin. The “real me” was born spiritually DEAD. The weight of Adam’s sinful rebellion had fallen on me just like it has on every human being since the Garden. I was on my way to bearing the wrath of God Almighty on my sin. But, God in His mercy chose to give me spiritual LIFE. He raised the “real” me from spiritual death to eternal life.

That action was His alone. He worked in me to know and see my sinful and hopeless condition. He gave me the faith to believe that Jesus-God in the Flesh- died in my place under His holy wrath. He gave me a “makeover.” (2 Corinthians 5:17- “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold new things have come.”) And that is where this week’s promise comes in.

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God has covenanted—PROMISED—to make me know His law, to know His holiness. He has changed that old, dead “me” for an alive and new “me.”

Ezekiel 11: 19-20 explains this transaction so I can see that I really am new, not just “improved” or “revised.” It explains what being new gives me the power to do. Listen:

“And I will give them one heart, and put a new spirit within them. And I will take the heart of stone out of their flesh and give them a heart of flesh, that they may walk in My statutes and keep My ordinances and do them. Then they will be My people and I shall be their God.”

“I am not the woman I used to be.” I have a new heart. It is written on with the finger of God. (2 Corinthians 3:2-3) It enables me to do what pleases Him. I don’t have to live under the tyranny of my sinful “old self” or the torment of the enemy of our souls. I am ALIVE! I am FREE! I am God’s child! He is my God! He did this for me! Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Question: Are you the woman or man you used to be? Or are you God’s person, with His holiness written on your heart?

Asking for a Pony

“What do you want?” I remember asking that with an exasperated sigh when being pestered by a whining child. Children’s requests are almost universally self-focused and addressed to parents who have many responses from silence to angry no’s to soft headed indulgence of foolish whims. The child often makes extravagant promises in the hope of a positive parental response. Our human parenting is so tainted by sin that we have difficulty getting a good picture of the amazing perfection of our Heavenly Father’s parenting of us.

I know that my prayers need to fall in line with God’s will. But my limited knowledge of God’s over-arching plan for the world makes it impossible for me to be absolutely sure that every request I arrow toward heaven is perfectly aligned with what God wants. So the temptation is to shrug my shoulders and sigh, “what’s the use?” and just not pray at all.

But that won’t do. We are commanded to pray. Jesus taught us to pray and we are supposed to pray with belief that we are heard. OK. So what DO I pray for? Isn’t some of what I pray for like a foolish whim that my child asks? “Mommy, I want a palomino pony for my birthday.” Really! What child asks for a plate of broccoli and a stack of books to study as a birthday gift? Isn’t it the same in the Christian walk?

Enter this amazing word from the Psalms.

Asking for a Pony

I have read this promise many times over the years and have made the assumption that surely God meant that if I was a really good girl and really doing lots of noble and good things that He would somehow be pleased enough to give me longings and desires that would please Him.

But this time, I decided to reexamine the passage. I went to my ESV Study Bible and read the notes.

“Some take “the desires” as referring to the feeling of desire, i.e. “God will shape your heart so that it desires the right things”, but the sense is rather, He will give you what your heart desires.” …as they delight themselves in the LORD, their hearts will desire the right things.”

Oh, no! That can’t be. That is TOO grand a promise. “What my heart desires?!” But there it is. Plain and simple. I am immediately reminded of the places in John’s Gospel that I have marked and read many times. Jesus Himself says six times in three chapters in John (14, 15, and 16) the exact same thing.

  • “Whatever you ask in My name, that will I do…” (14:13)
  • “If you ask Me anything in my name, I will do it.” (14:14)
  • “…ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.” (15:8)
  • “…whatever you ask of the Father in My name He will give to you. (15:16)
  • “If you ask the Father for anything in My name, He will give it to you. (16:23)
  • “As and you will receive, so that your joy may be made full.” (16:24)

These promises from Jesus’ lips must be read in context, but they have the same framework as the Psalmist lays out. The one who loves and obeys Jesus, the one who honors the Father has this amazing promise.

I am still pondering how big this promise is as I frame my prayers. I want help being organized today. I want the process of getting my book printed and published to go smoothly. I want to stay healthy so I can care for my family. I want to grow up spiritually. I want my family and friends to know and love Jesus, too. I want the world set right- the end of war and suffering. The list ranges from the mundane to the lofty, but all of it is part of what my heart desires. I am free to ask. I am assured He hears and will give what I request.

Jesus has commanded me to pray. He has promised to answer and so I get the privilege of entering into His wonderful plan for His world- by PRAYING.

Question: What are the desires of your heart? Have you taken them to Jesus?

Looking For The Way Of This Mess

What a mess I’ve made of things! My big mouth has gotten me in trouble again and my eye rolling and huffy sighs have fanned into flame a quarrel with my loved one. I have made a poor choice and now need to know how to “back up my truck” and start on the right path instead.

TEXT

I will instruct you and teach you in the way which you should go; I will counsel you with My eye upon you…he who trusts in the LORD, lovingkindness shall surround him. Psalm 32:8, 10

When I came to this promise in Psalm 32, I was struck by the personal nature of God’s word to the reader The beginning of the Psalm declares the misery of one who is living with sin and the blessed relief when it is confessed to God and forgiven. Then, God goes on to promise to give me instruction and tells me that if I trust Him by following His teaching I will be watched over by Him and surrounded by His mercy (another word for “lovingkindness”). Wow. How amazing is that?!

When I commit sin, I am definitely not going in the way God wants me to. So the question arises: how can I know my sin? Well, the Scripture is plain. When I measure myself against the 10 Commandments- not just the bare words but their implications- I am sobered and grieved at how far short of God’s holiness I fall. “All have sinned and come short of the glory of God.” Romans 3:23 “There is none righteous, no not one!” Romans 3:10. And right now, I know my behavior has fallen way short of the way a Jesus-follower should behave. So what’s a girl to do?! Ah, listen! Hear the wonderful words from God’s lips to your heart:

“I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go.”

God’s guidance is no mystery that only special people get from God. Anyone who needs His direction can find it. “Oh, yes,” you say, “that’s easy for you to say, but I haven’t heard God’s voice. I don’t know what He wants me to do.”

Really? Have you made a regular habit of reading the Bible? If not, why not? When you have, what sorts of things do you find there? Hmm. Well, there is a lot about what God expects of those who follow Him, and there is plenty about not partaking in the sinful things the world does.

Check out Galatians 5: 14-21. The whole Law is summed up in loving God and your fellow man. Then, the writer goes on to say, “the deeds of the flesh are evident, which are immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealously, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions, factions, envying, drunkenness, carousing and things like these…”

This isn’t an isolated passage. Scripture abounds in clear instruction on how to live in harmony with others and gives clear definition of sin. For instance, Philippians 2:3 says “do nothing from selfish ness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves…” THERE IT IS. SIN DEFINED AND THE RIGHT COURSE POINTED OUT. How much clearer can God’s Word to me be?

I ask again, have you been reading your Bible? If you have, it is there that you will hear God’s instruction and see the way you should go. Enjoy His loving care.

Question: Will you listen to God’s instruction by reading the Bible regularly? Will you bask in the comfort of His loving, kind gaze upon you as you follow Him?

Fear and Trembling

EVERYTHINGYOU'VE EVERWANTED ISON THEOTHER SIDEOF FEAR.

“The LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” So many things come to mind pondering this promise. The context of this promise is very specific direction from God to Joshua, at a very specific point in history so I must exercise caution and wisdom in applying this promise to my own life.
I begin by thinking of the fact that Scripture uses the whole story of the Exodus and the conquering of the Promised Land as a vast and deep picture of the triumph of Jesus in the work of the salvation He accomplished for His people. He delivered us from the power of darkness and delivered us into the kingdom of Light. (Colossians 1:13). We are made “more than conquerors who love us and gave himself for us.” (Romans 8:37).
This “saving” and this “conquering” beg the questions:
From who or what are we saved? And what or who do
we conquer? Do we really conquer anyone or anything?
There are four commands that precede this promise. God tells Joshua he is to “be strong and courageous! Do not tremble or be dismayed.” Each of these words imply that there is some reason one might be weak or cowardly and fearful. One might tremble at something that inspires fear or be dismayed at a terrible, apparently “un-fixable” problem. So what it is that would require remembering that “the LORD your God is with you wherever you go?”
The life we live in this fallen world confronts us with the enemy of our souls, satan and his evil minions who hold sway over the world until Jesus returns. They stir up horrific evil and trouble for all earth’s inhabitants. But they particularly hate and desire the downfall of the ones Jesus has bought for Himself with His own blood. Satan is our mortal enemy who wants to see us devoured. He uses our own lusts (1 John 2:16) and puppets of evil (John 8:44) in his efforts to cause us to renounce Jesus or to make a shipwreck of our faith.
This battle is real. It is against “the powers of darkness” (Ephesians 6:12) and so you and I must take to heart the encouragement that God spoke to Joshua in much the same way Joshua must have had to do. He faced formidable foes in the wicked pagan people living in Canaan. He had to deal with complex problems in leading the people to the promised place. So we must look at our evil foe in all his roaring, frightening aspects and choose not to be afraid. We must tackle the tough situations with which we are presented with courage, not cowardice.
We need to remind ourselves of the amazing truth: “the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” Before Jesus was born his parents were instructed to name Him “Immanuel”—which means “God with us.” Wonderful thought: even His name declares the glorious truth of His being with me! This promise does not say God WILL BE with you, but rather God IS with you. There is not and cannot be a time or place where God is not with me. What a wonderful promise!
Question: What causes you to be afraid? Will you cling to the promise that God is with you?