Going on a God Hunt – Part 28

Once again, I want to continue today to explore a very critical spiritual disciple that we call Going on a God Hunt. What we’re doing is learning how to begin to look for evidences of God making His presence known in our everyday worlds. Specifically, we’re exploring evidence of God at work in our lives through unusual linkage or timing.

I’ve tried to underscore how important it is that you get into the habit of daily writing down these special sightings:

  • Any obvious answer to prayer.
  • Any unexpected evidence of God’s care.
  • Any help to do God’s work in the world.
  • Any evidence of unusual linkage and timing.

Making a written record of these God Hunt “Sightings” needs to be a part of your everyday routine. There’s a regular time you do it, and also a designated notebook you write them in. If that doesn’t become a part of your fixed schedule, before long you’ll just forget about doing it, and then, sooner than you expect, you’ll not even remember there was a time when I was writing blog posts on this topic and you went on a daily God Hunt.

That’s why I’ve been so insistent that you get a notebook and mark it as your God Hunt Diary. If you’ve already done so, good for you. If you haven’t, then get one and start writing in it today.

You may also benefit from reading blog posts from an experienced “Hunter.” My wife, Karen, posts her God Hunt“Sightings” on her blog. You can read those blog posts by clicking here.

Let me share some selected paragraphs about the value of written prayers or journaling from Karen’s book The God Hunt: The Delightful Chase and the Wonder of Being Found:

 Keeping a record of God’s daily work over a lifetime is a powerful way to know him. Have you tried journaling before and failed? Why not try again? Experiment with a different format this time. Ask yourself the question, What kind of journal works best for me? If for a while you don’t keep up with this discipline, pick up your neglected prayer journal without self-chastisement and begin again. Nudging any kind of an exercise toward discipline always includes stops and starts.

Be assured that the whys and hows of journaling are up to the diarist. Some people work better in their journals in the morning. I am an early morning person, and I love to start my day ordering my soul before the Lord, examining yesterday’s evidence of God. My husband, on the other hand, is a night person, so before he prepares for bed, he looks back over his day and records the work of God in his journal. No matter whether you thrive in the morning, midday or night, you must find the formula that is personal for you. In the book English Diaries, editor Arthur Poson by verifies this individuality: “Diarists need only consult their own convenience and mood, they need obey no rules, they may follow their own inclination to write regularly, irregularly, fully or briefly.”

You don’t have to be a literary giant to keep a good journal. In an article on the topic, Psychology Today noted, “Last year, thousands of Americans with no literary pretensions whatsoever started producing stories of surpassing interest that will probably never be published. They were writing their own, often eye-popping, tear-evoking journals, not because they felt they needed therapy, but because they wanted to put their lives into perspective and find in them some deeper meaning.”

In fact, it is important not to give into the pretensions that urge us to leave behind a record that is publishable. An acquaintance I once knew explained that she had sworn a friend to promise to burn all her journals should anything tragic happen. “I couldn’t write freely if I thought someone would be reading what I wrote after I died,” she explained.

An imperative rule to follow when writing a prayer journal is to avoid editing. Your writing does not have to be grammatically correct (or politically correct); what you are trying to capture are those instant impressions of your soul in a state of being awakened to your God. You need to be free to be frank, honest with your emotions and self-revealing.

Look at this enchanting entry from the diary of Elizabeth Fry, the one-day Quaker prison reformer, “I went to town feeling very close to God, but being seen and admired by some officers sent me home as filled with the world as I went to town filled with Heaven.” She was sixteen. *Later on as an adult she wrote again about keeping records, “That is the advantage of a true journal. It leads the mind to look inwards.”

I’m going to stop for today. But, after you’ve enjoyed a most pleasant weekend—including a time of worship with your church family—I respectfully suggest that you return to my blog on Monday. I will continue writing more about this pertinent topic.

——————————————–

Sunday’s coming. Do you have your sermon ready? Is it relevant? Will it effectively motivate your congregation to walk more in step with the Master? What about that Sermon Series you’ve been thinking about?

Or, if you’re someone who plans well ahead, have you asked yourself what you will preach for your Easter Sermon, your Advent Sermon, your Christmas Sermon?

David Mains and Mainstay Ministries can help. We offer a wide variety of Sermon Starters and Full Sermons that will give you Sermon Ideas to help you prepare for regular Saturday or Sunday sermons, Mid-week Bible Sermons, and Sermons for special occasions.

We also offer assistance as you create Topical Sermons, Sermons Series, and sermons for special times of the year. We have resources available to help you with Advent Celebrations, Advent Sermons, Christmas Sermons, Easter Sunday Sermons, Patriotic Sermons, and more.

For more information on how to create better Bible Sermons and how to turn Sermon Ideas into Sermon Outlines, and then into effective, meaningful Sunday Sermons, please click here to visit David Mains’ website.

You will also find a variety of resources for pastors and congregations at the Mainstay Ministries website. Just click here.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

Going on a God Hunt – Part 27

After taking my normal mid-week break yesterday to share a “Preaching Tip” with pastors, I want to continue today to explore a very critical spiritual disciple that we call Going on a God Hunt. What we’re doing is learning how to begin to look for evidences of God making His presence known in our everyday worlds. Specifically, we’re exploring evidence of God at work in our lives through unusual linkage or timing.

As we continue our discussion please allow me to share with you an illustration from Karen Mains’ book The God Hunt: The Delightful Chase and the Wonder of Being Found:

 My son Joel remembers this amazing story from his days as a film student at Columbia Performing Arts School in Chicago. “I had given my final film project to a student friend to hand in to my professor so I was shocked when I received a B grade and was told that my last project hadn’t been completed. Checking this out, I discovered that in my haste, I had torn off the unused film, then mistakenly given my edited film project to another student who was finishing his senior project, thinking it was the extra unused film.”

“When I explained this to my professor, he gave me back the processed, but blank film and said I could try to complete my project and raise my final grade. He allowed me only one session in the editing suite at an odd hour to rework my project. Now this was a commuter campus, and the students who were supposed to give me a ride into the city so that I could redo my project were two hours late in picking me up. All I could do was pray and say, ‘Lord, you are going to have to help me do eight hours of work in six.’”

“However, because I was late, I ran into the film major to whom I had given what I thought was the canister of unused film. I could not have run into him earlier—‘amazingly’ his class was taking a short, three-minute break, and he was standing in the halls. I told him my sad tale, and we ran over to his apartment in the city. Lo and behold, he had not filmed over my project. There in his packed refrigerator freezer was my edited work—complete, unspoiled, with the torn end perfectly matching the torn end of the empty film that had been turned in to the professor.

“Not only did I avoid spending six hours in the editing suite, but I had the proof in the matching torn ends that the story I had told the professor was true.”

So, when going on a God Hunt, don’t forget to take note of unusual linkage or timing. That pretty well sums up what I’m saying to you this particular blog post on this topic. When going on a God Hunt, don’t forget to take note of unusual linkage or timing.

It’s sad when Christians lose the special sense of God’s presence in their lives, but it happens all the time. What I’ve tried to do during this series of blog posts is simply help you reconnect with the Lord. My blog posts haven’t come anywhere near resolving all the problems that could impact on your feeling cut off from heaven. But they’re a start. And sometimes that’s all a person needs.

——————————————–

Sunday’s coming. Do you have your sermon ready? Is it relevant? Will it effectively motivate your congregation to walk more in step with the Master? What about that Sermon Series you’ve been thinking about?

Or, if you’re someone who plans well ahead, have you asked yourself what you will preach for your Easter Sermon, your Advent Sermon, your Christmas Sermon?

David Mains and Mainstay Ministries can help. We offer a wide variety of Sermon Starters and Full Sermons that will give you Sermon Ideas to help you prepare for regular Saturday or Sunday sermons, Mid-week Bible Sermons, and Sermons for special occasions.

We also offer assistance as you create Topical Sermons, Sermons Series, and sermons for special times of the year. We have resources available to help you with Advent Celebrations, Advent Sermons, Christmas Sermons, Easter Sunday Sermons, Patriotic Sermons, and more.

For more information on how to create better Bible Sermons and how to turn Sermon Ideas into Sermon Outlines, and then into effective, meaningful Sunday Sermons, please click here to visit David Mains’ website.

You will also find a variety of resources for pastors and congregations at the Mainstay Ministries website. Just click here.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

Going on a God Hunt – Part 26

I want to continue today to explore a very critical spiritual disciple that we call Going on a God Hunt. What we’re doing is learning how to begin to look for evidences of God making His presence known in our everyday worlds in four key ways:

  1. Any obvious answer to prayer.
  2. Any unexpected evidence of His care.
  3. Any help to do His work in the world.
  4. Any unusual linkage or timing.

Specifically, we’re exploring evidence of God at work in our lives through unusual linkage or timing.

Yesterday, we had just finished reading 1 Samuel 24:1-12 when I stopped for the day.

Young David is scrambling for his life. A jealous king is after him with 3,000 carefully chosen strong warriors. Having tracked David into the desert, the monarch has to take a bathroom break, and wouldn’t you know it, he chooses the very cave where David and his men are hiding out. I would say that qualifies for unusual linkage or timing. Wouldn’t you?

It’s dark enough in the cave that David can sneak up and actually cut off a corner of Saul’s robe. David doesn’t kill Saul, but he certainly could have. His men gave him every reason to.

They whisper “This is the day the Lord spoke of when he said, ‘I will give your enemy into your hands for you to deal with or you wish.” It certainly appeared to them that this was exactly what God had done.

Apart from David’s response of sparing Saul, which takes us in a different direction, there can be little doubt but what God was involved with this perfect setup. I mean there wasn’t a man in that cave, including Saul, who wouldn’t later testify that the Lord himself had arranged these circumstances.

Unusual linkage or timing—they kind of go together.

Tomorrow, as I always do on Wednesdays, I will post a “Preaching Tip” blog especially for pastors. But, if you will be so kind as to return on Thursday, I will continue sharing about this key spiritual discipline we call Going on a God Hunt.

——————————————–

Sunday’s coming. Do you have your sermon ready? Is it relevant? Will it effectively motivate your congregation to walk more in step with the Master? What about that Sermon Series you’ve been thinking about?

Or, if you’re someone who plans well ahead, have you asked yourself what you will preach for your Easter Sermon, your Advent Sermon, your Christmas Sermon?

David Mains and Mainstay Ministries can help. We offer a wide variety of Sermon Starters and Full Sermons that will give you Sermon Ideas to help you prepare for regular Saturday or Sunday sermons, Mid-week Bible Sermons, and Sermons for special occasions.

We also offer assistance as you create Topical Sermons, Sermons Series, and sermons for special times of the year. We have resources available to help you with Advent Celebrations, Advent Sermons, Christmas Sermons, Easter Sunday Sermons, Patriotic Sermons, and more.

For more information on how to create better Bible Sermons and how to turn Sermon Ideas into Sermon Outlines, and then into effective, meaningful Sunday Sermons, please click here to visit David Mains’ website.

You will also find a variety of resources for pastors and congregations at the Mainstay Ministries website. Just click here.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

Going on a God Hunt – Part 25

For any who are new to the series of blog posts, the God Hunt is simply choosing to recognize God anytime He intervenes in your everyday life. In this series I have trained you to look for God in:

  1. Any obvious answer to prayer.
  2. Any unexpected evidence of His care.
  3. Any help to do His work in the world.
  4. Any unusual linkage or timing.

Here’s an example from Glen Pease, “Coincidence or Providence?” found at Faithmania.com:

Catherine Marshall wrote a book on the life of her late husband, Rev. Peter Marshall. She wanted to know more about Peter’s stepfather, Peter Findlay, but did not know how to obtain it. One night while dining with a couple of new friends, she told them of her desire to learn more about his stepfather. One of the friends replied, “Certainly you couldn’t be speaking of Peter Findlay?”

“Yes, why?” she answered.

“I worked beside him for years in the same office at Stewarts and Lloyds in Glasgow. I knew him well. What do you want to know?” the man said.

Of the hundreds of thousands in the Washington, D.C., area, the one man who knew Peter Findlay invited Catherine to join them for dinner.

Now that’s unusual linkage or timing!

Here’s an example from 1 Samuel 24:1-12:

After Saul returned from pursuing the Philistines, he was told, “David is in the Desert of En Gedi.” So Saul took three thousand chosen men from all Israel and set out to look for David and his men near the Crags of the Wild Goats.

He came to the sheep pens along the way; a cave was there, and Saul went in to relieve himself. David and his men were far back in the cave. The men said, “This is the day the Lord spoke of when he said to you, ‘I will give your enemy into your hands for you to deal with as you wish.’” Then David crept up unnoticed and cut off a corner of Saul’s robe.

Afterward, David was conscience-stricken for having cut off a corner of his robe. He said to his men, “The Lord forbid that I should do such a thing to my master, the Lord’s anointed, or lift my hand against him; for his is the anointed of the Lord.” With these words David rebuked his men and did not allow them to attack Saul. And Saul left the cave and went on his way.

Then David went out of the cave and called out to Saul, “My lord the king!” When Saul looked behind him, David bowed down and prostrated himself with his face to the ground. He said to Saul, “Why do you listen when men say, ‘David is bent on harming you’? This day you have seen with your own eyes how the Lord delivered you into my hands in the cave. Some urged me to kill you, but I spared you; I said, ‘I will not lift my hand against my master, because he is the Lord’s anointed.’ See, my father, look at this piece of your robe in my hand! I cut off the corner of your robe but did not kill you. Now understand and recognize that I am not guilty of wrongdoing or rebellion. I have not wronged you, but you are hunting me down to take my life. May the Lord judge between you and me. And may the Lord avenge the wrongs you’ve done to me, but my hand will not touch you.”

What an incredible narrative this is. I’m going to stop for today. But, if you’ll come back to this blog tomorrow, I will continue this fascinating story.

——————————————–

Sunday’s coming. Do you have your sermon ready? Is it relevant? Will it effectively motivate your congregation to walk more in step with the Master? What about that Sermon Series you’ve been thinking about?

Or, if you’re someone who plans well ahead, have you asked yourself what you will preach for your Easter Sermon, your Advent Sermon, your Christmas Sermon?

David Mains and Mainstay Ministries can help. We offer a wide variety of Sermon Starters and Full Sermons that will give you Sermon Ideas to help you prepare for regular Saturday or Sunday sermons, Mid-week Bible Sermons, and Sermons for special occasions.

We also offer assistance as you create Topical Sermons, Sermons Series, and sermons for special times of the year. We have resources available to help you with Advent Celebrations, Advent Sermons, Christmas Sermons, Easter Sunday Sermons, Patriotic Sermons, and more.

For more information on how to create better Bible Sermons and how to turn Sermon Ideas into Sermon Outlines, and then into effective, meaningful Sunday Sermons, please click here to visit David Mains’ website.

You will also find a variety of resources for pastors and congregations at the Mainstay Ministries website. Just click here.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS