Goliath Moment

Have mercy on me, O God, have mercy! I look to you for protection. I will hide beneath the shadow of your wings until the danger passes by. I cry out to God Most High, to God who will fulfill his purpose for me.
—Psalm 57:1-2

After my treatment ended several years ago and my life changed dramatically, I thought I knew what God wanted me to do. I felt His anointing on me for ministry, and specifically for a certain area of ministry. At first, everything fell into place. I felt forward momentum, a strong confirmation of my calling, and a taste of walking in my destiny. Then, everything seemed to come to a halt. Every move I made toward my calling, I came against a brick wall. There were “border bullies” at every turn. I began to feel like King David with my one “Goliath moment” and then relegated to the caves for 13 years. In some areas of my ministry calling, I’m still hiding in the caves.

David was anointed King of Israel but he had to wait for years to realize God’s promise. The calling itself was unmistakable. When God sent the Prophet Samuel to Jesse’s house to anoint his son king, the Lord rejected the first seven sons Jesse presented. Finally, Samuel ordered the youngest son, David, to come in from the field where he was tending the sheep. Samuel knew immediately this was God’s chosen one. He poured olive oil on his head and anointed him king on the spot and the “Lord came upon him from that day on” (1 Samuel 16:13).

Soon after, David had his moment of glory.  When the Philistine and Israelite armies faced each other for battle, Goliath, the Philistine giant, challenged the Israelites to settle their dispute with a single combat. David, armed only with his shepherd’s staff, his sling, and five smooth stones, faced Goliath’s taunting threats: “You come to me with sword, spear, and javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies—the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. Today the Lord will conquer you, and I will kill you and cut off your head. And then I will give the dead bodies of your men to the birds and wild animals, and the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel! And everyone assembled here will know that the Lord rescues his people, but not with sword and spear. This is the Lord’s battle, and he will give you to us!” (1 Samuel 17:45-47). And the Lord did. With a single stone from his sling, David toppled the giant and then killed him with his own sword.

After his triumph over Goliath, David must have had no doubt his anointing was for real. Then everything came to a halt. Saul, the current king of Israel, had deliberately disobeyed and lost favor with God. When Saul realized David would become the next king, he became jealous and obsessed with killing David. David spent the next 13 years running for his life. He wrote many of the Psalms during this time of hiding in caves and waiting for God to act. When we read his raw emotions as he cries out to God for mercy, there is no doubt he wondered whether God’s calling on his life would ever come to pass (Psalm 142).  Yet he always ends each Psalm praising God and trusting Him to fulfill His promises.

Perhaps like David, you find yourself hiding in the caves, waiting for God to make good on His promises.  He may be using this time to refine, teach, and prepare you as He prepared David for his future responsibilities as king. Saul, his predecessor, had great promise but failed due to character issues. Perhaps he wasn’t ready to be king. God was getting David ready. David had many opportunities to kill Saul and speed up God’s timetable, but he resisted. Don’t be impatient and strive to make things happen. God may be using your time in the cave to build your character and get you ready. When you are tempted to doubt your calling, stand on your Goliath moment and trust God to fulfill His purpose for your life.

Excerpted from Peace For Each Hour by Mary J. Nelson; Copyright © 2013; ISBN 978-1938388170; Published by Comfort Publishers; Unauthorized duplication prohibited.

Love Came Down

The Word became human and lived among us.
—John 1:14

Mary decorating tree 2012I’ve been blessed to have celebrated many Christmases in my life. I won’t tell you exactly how many, but lots. The older I get, the faster time passes. It feels like I just take the Christmas tree down, and it’s time to put it back up again. As I reflect on the years gone by, I have to admit I experienced my first real Christmas in 1999. This was the Christmas I finally “got it.” I was at the Christmas Eve worship service halfway through my chemo treatments and wearing a wig to cover my bald head when our worship leader sang, Emmanuel, God is With Us.  The words pierced my heart. God is with us. The same God who created the heavens and earth, set the stars in place and called them by name, came to earth as a humble baby. Love came down. I couldn’t wrap my mind around a God who would give up His rights as God and make Himself nothing; a God who would take the humble position of a slave and appear on earth in human form (Philippians 2:6-7).Christmas lights

Why would He do such a thing? God sent His Son to earth to restore what Satan stole in the Garden of Eden. It was always His intention to live in intimate relationship with us, but after the “fall,” mankind was banished from His presence. From that point on, generation after generation of people repeatedly turned their hearts away from God to follow their sinful nature, even though He extended His mercy countless times. By the time Jesus came, the Jews were hopelessly oppressed by the Roman Empire, desperately waiting for their long awaited Messiah to come to establish a new kingdom and rule the world with justice.

Christmas tree 2012They had good reason for hope. Over 300 prophesies said He would come to save them. Micah foretold of a Ruler who will “stand and lead His flock with the Lord’s strength, in the majesty of the name of the Lord his God,” and “He will be the source of our peace” (Micah 5:4,5).  The prophet Isaiah said the people who walk in darkness will see a great light—a light that will shine on all who live in the land where death casts its shadow (Isaiah 9:2). He prophesied the mission of Jesus when He said: “The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is upon me, for the Lord has anointed me to bring good news to the poor.  He has sent me to comfort the brokenhearted and to proclaim that captives will be released and prisoners will be freed” (Isaiah 61:1).

The ministry of Jesus officially began when he visited the synagogue in His boyhood home of Nazareth and read the prophetic words of Isaiah that He had come to heal the brokenhearted, release the captives, restore sight to the blind, and free the downtrodden from their oppressors  (Luke 4:18). Then He added: “The Scripture you’ve just heard has been fulfilled this very day” (Luke 4:21)!  But this was not His only purpose for coming. After He destroyed sin’s control over us by sacrificing His life on the cross, He sent the Holy Spirit to restore the relationship we had with Him in the Garden by dwelling in each believer.Christmas presents 2012

This year, like every year, I’ll enjoy choosing special gifts for my loved ones and carefully wrapping them in beautiful paper and ribbons to put under the tree. With each package I wrap, I never forget that the first gift wrap was swaddling clothes. There are many things you might want for Christmas this year, but there is only one thing you truly need. Jesus satisfies every want and need you will ever have. The best Christmas present you will ever receive is the privilege of living in His “presence.” Love came down. Receive the gift!

Excerpted from Peace For Each Hour by Mary J. Nelson; Copyright © 2013; ISBN 978-1938388170; Published by Comfort Publishers; Unauthorized duplication prohibited.

Heaven’s Gate

No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined what God has prepared for those who love him.
–1 Corinthians 2:9

Charlotte NelsonOn October 22, 2012, my mother-in-law, Charlotte E. Nelson, drew her last breath on earth and took her first breath in the Lord’s blissful presence. There are no human words to describe that moment when Heaven touched Earth and took her home. The angels were there and she was greeted by her husband, parents, family and friends at Heaven’s gate. The radiant smile and the serene, peaceful countenance on her face was proof of that first moment she saw what no eye had seen, heard what no ear had heard, and blissfully received what no mind had imagined.

Charlotte was an amazing woman who cared for her family, worked hard, and impacted the lives of many people during her 94 years on this side of Heaven. She taught this city girl many things, like the secret to tender meat and dark gravy (dark brown speckled roaster) and to never throw away the turkey carcass (make soup with the leftovers!). She knit, sewed, gardened, canned, and made the best apple crisp I’ve ever tasted from the apples on the tree in her own front yard. It wasn’t all hard work on the farm where she and my father-in-law raised their family of four children. There are many stories about the exciting trips she took with my father-in-law in their private airplane, and in later years, their fifth wheel trailer.  She loved to golf with her grandchildren on the little course across the road from the farmstead and passed on to them both her passion for the game and her natural ability to shoot the ball straight.

In her later years, our greatest joy was praying with Charlotte and reading the Bible together. She loved Jesus and knew exactly where she was going when her full life on this earth was over. She knew she was going to a place where her every desire would be satisfied more abundantly than she could ever dream. We know we will see her again because Jesus defeated death (1 Corinthians 15:54-57). He said: “I am the resurrection and the life. Anyone who believes in me will live, even after dying.  Everyone who lives in me and believes in me will never ever die (John 11:25-26). God created each one of us with a deep longing in our heart to live in relationship with Him, and He never stops pursuing us.  His free gift of love comes with no strings attached. There is nothing we can do to earn it, and there is nothing we have done that is beyond His Son’s outstretched arms of forgiveness. Charlotte knew Heaven is her home and Jesus is the way. Accepting His love offering is the most important decision we will ever make.

Charlotte's 90thWe are also reminded of the tremendous responsibility we have to pass on this same assurance to the next generation. Moses gave instructions for passing on our faith heritage when he told the Israelites to repeat God’s commands “again and again to your children “and to “talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up” (Deuteronomy 6:7). Paul saw in Timothy a deep faith inspired by his godly heritage passed down by his grandmother Lois and his mother Eunice that would enable him to live boldly to fulfill his calling in Christ (Acts 16:1-3).

Our children will follow in our footsteps. They will do what they see us do, and they will become who we are. God is trusting us to love, nurture, train, teach and prepare our children and grandchildren to walk in the abundant life He has promised in this life and the life to come (John 10:10). The weight of this responsibility can feel heavy at times, but we can always trust in God´s strength, wisdom, and grace and stand on the promise that “a child trained up to choose the right path will remain on it” (Proverbs 22:6).

Charlotte is home now. We love her and we’ll miss her.  But we take great joy in knowing that those in Christ never say goodbye for the last time. Her legacy will last from generation to generation. She will live through our memories, our laughter, our golf swings, our craft projects, our turkey dinners, and our faith stories. And we look forward to that day when she will greet us at Heaven’s gate!