Robert & Kay Camenisch encouraging and equipping relationships

It’s Time to Claim What’s Ours!

Of all the people on the earth, God chose Abram. He called him out of his land, his family, and his idol-worshipping background. Then the Lord cut a covenant with him.

He promised to be Abram’s shield and to give him an exceedingly great reward (Gen. 12:1)—i.e. to be His protector and His provision. Furthermore, He promised to give him vast land holdings and descendants as numerous as the stars.

As if that weren’t enough, God promised to be intimate with him. He said, “I will be your God, and you will be My people.” He used possessive pronouns to describe the relationship. The promises were made to Abram and to his children for generations.

Abram, later renamed Abraham, had it made. The Almighty God promised to care for him and to have his back. And his descendants were included too.

After the ritual of cutting the covenant, the Lord further clarified the boundaries of the land that was promised to Abraham.

Genesis 15:18-21 says, “To your descendants I have given this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the River Euphrates–the Kenites, the Kenezzites, the Kadmonites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Rephaim, the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Girgashites, and the Jebusites.”

Abraham didn’t have descendants yet, and somebody else would live in that land for a while—even for generations. But God said, “To your descendants I have given this land.” To God, it was a done deal. He already gave it to them, His chosen people.

The boundaries ran from the Nile in Egypt, to the Euphrates River. The rivers mark the Fertile Crescent, from Egypt all the way from the southeastern point of the Mediterranean Sea, up the Mediterranean Sea and curving in the shape of a crescent, down past Babylon to the Persian Gulf. The route through the Fertile Crescent was over 1,600 miles. The land of the Hittites was also included, extending the territory north and northeast of the Mediterranean.

The land encircled by the crescent is not choice land. It’s full of rocks or is desert. Today it would roughly contain Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, parts of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, and the southeastern part of Turkey. That’s quite a territory. And it is the location of the oil wells that have made those nations rich and the people who are determined to wipe Israel off the map.

Even though it was all declared Israel’s, they never settled beyond the strip along the eastern Mediterranean. They didn’t hold to God’s words, “To your descendants I have given this land.”

Instead, they were satisfied with a little strip along the beach. Pagans maintained possession of the rest of their land.

We could exclaim over how short-sighted and foolish they were to not conquer what God had promised. But first, we need to look inward?

Through Jesus Christ, we are part of a new and better covenant. He has given us better promises. He is still our provider and protector, He paid the debt for our sins offering freedom for true intimacy, He is with us always, promised us peace and joy—and so much more.

But, of the riches He’s promised, how much have we—His chosen—claimed? Are we settled in the fullness of the Promised Land? Or are we camping on the beach, struggling to keep our heads up?

How often do we strive without taking thought to claim His protection and/or provision, His strength, grace, or blessings? His peace and joy? Do we really trust Him in all things?

He desires to give us the keys to the kingdom of heaven (Mt.16:19). It’s ours. But, if we’re content where we are, He’ll let us pitch out tents on the beach just as the descendants of Abram did.

Jesus has already done it all. If we’ve claimed Him as our Lord and Savior and are among the chosen, it’s already ours.

But we must believe, seek His face, and step forth in faith.

The New Testament is full of riches we have in and through Jesus Christ. I cannot cover it here, but God tells us, “Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, Nor have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared for those who love Him” (1 Cor. 2:9).

It’s time to claim what’s ours.

Lord, thank you for choosing me. Help me to love you more. Forgive me for my contentment and shortsightedness. Open my eyes and ears to see and hear what You have prepared for me. Give me the faith to follow You without reservation and to know the fullness of life in you. May Your kingdom come, Your will be done, and Your name be glorified through me.

Snares for Today’s Christian – Part 3: What Can I Do?

As darkness gets darker in the world, I’m tempted to make my voice heard and fight 1349021113jjoqofor my rights. When pushed, my tendency is to push back.

But I’m reminded that Jesus, who was without sin, didn’t push back when He was pushed. He went to the cross as a lamb to slaughter.

However, I don’t live in Jesus’ day. Maybe God will call me to be vocal, to fight what I see as evil. But for now, He’s called me to be sure my heart is clear, that I’m right with Him, so that when I, personally, am confronted with darkness, I will respond with life and light.

The obvious deviations from God’s design that are increasingly accepted do not tempt me. They are not likely to become a snare for me, but that doesn’t mean I’m lily white.

I’m prone to less obvious sin. Things such as fear, pride, judgment, and self-sufficiency sneak in unnoticed.

If I want to drive back darkness and build the kingdom of God, my first order of business is to get myself right with God. I need to be one with Him so my ears and heart will be open to hear His directions and carry His work with His power.

God has given me steps to take to maintain a right relationship with Him. Some of them are:

BELIEVE: How can we follow if we do not believe? Don’t fall into the trap of framing your beliefs around your experiences or desires.

STAND: Stand firm in Christ and on His Word, don’t be trapped by the lures of the world.

LOVE: If we don’t have love, we like clanging gongs (1 Cor. 13:1) and all our efforts toward change are in vain.

SOW PEACE: Respond to attacks in a spirit of peace, showing love and respect. Leave an opening to share Christ’s love.

  • Ephesians 6:15: Shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace;    Eph. 6:15
  • 1 Peter 3:10:  Refrain your tongue from evil. Turn from evil and do good. Seek peace.
  • Matthew 7:12:  Treat people the way you want to be treated.
  • (Also Gal. 5:22-25, Matt. 5:9)

PRAY WITH THANKSGIVING AND PRAISE: Pray for God’s kingdom to be established, in the church and in the world.

These things don’t call for great heroics or direct confrontations. They are basic training. Nevertheless, we are dependent on God working in us to faithful even in the basics. If He doesn’t build the house, we labor in vain as we build it—beginning with the foundation.

May the Lord help us to be a light in the midst of the darkness, free from the snares of the enemy that would try to hold us back. And may we be prepared to hear His voice and be obedient to what He asks of us.

Help us, Lord, to “watch out that the light in [us] may not be darkness” (Luke 11:35 ).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Don’t Always Believe What You Hear

Part of growing up involves developing a belief system. In that process, were you ever told to be careful, because you can’t always believe what you hear?

Developing a belief system involves learning to discern good from bBelieve stone file9461329485464ad, right from wrong, truth from falsehood, and fact from opinion. Believing a lie, can mislead you in life. It begins as toddlers learn to listen to, believe, and obey their parents. As they grow, obedience expands to babysitters, teachers, and such.

Part of the process is learning who has authority and choosing whether to trust or believe what each authority says. As a person matures, he is responsible for his own decisions. Those personal decisions are based on his own belief system, which develops from his experiences as well as things he was taught.

We all went through the process. However, we generally weren’t conscious of it. Furthermore, we probably weren’t warned to guard against believing those messages that were never spoken.

Some of those unspoken messages are harmful, and sometimes they hang around for years, like one I believed from school.

Creative writing was always difficult for me. I’d rather go to the dentist than to write a story. I did all right on research papers, but not on creative assignments.

However, one day, we had to write an iambic pentameter poem. (In case your fgirl doing homeworkorgot, iambic pentameter has particular guidelines for the number of lines, beats on each line, and the rhyme scheme.) I wrote about the time I climbed Grandfather Mountain in North Carolina right after a big rain. I labored to get a good grade on that assignment.

The climb involved numerous obstacles, such as fog, rain, steep climbs, slipping down on the wet path, and a huge fallen tree blocking our way. I described the difficulties, painted pictures of perseverance over obstacles, and climaxed in victory. I worked hard to meet iambic pentameter standards. I even had a hidden meaning as I alluded to struggles we face as we journey through life.

Finally, I had a winner on a creative writing assignment.

My paper was returned without comment—and with a big red C at the top of the page.

I didn’t bother ask what was wrong with it. What I heard was, “You can’t write. You’ll never be a writer.”

Why ask? I’d done my best, and all hope for improvement was squashed.

That belief held me back for over thirty years.

During that time, I kept articles or notes that seemed important and made outlines of things that struck me as insightful, thinking someday they might be useful. I even organized them in notebooks, and kept them for years, moving them from place to place.

Today, they take up about 18 inches on a shelf. Recently, I tried to weed them out and make space for books, but it was a waste of time. I hardly threw anything out.

For thirty years, I had the heart of a writer, but I believed a lie—even though it was never spoken.

I finally became aware of the lie when I searched for answers to help some people we were counseling with their anger problems, and God pushed and prodded me until my findings became a book, Uprooting Anger: Destroying the Monster Within. Not until after the book was published did I begin to believe I could write.

Meanwhile, for twenty years I prayed that Robert, my husband, would write a book on a seminar that he does for churches. I believe the church needs to hear it, but it never got written—not until I realized it was mine to write, with Robert’s input and guidance.

That book, The Great Exchange: Bound by Blood, has just gone to the publisher. It will be available in June. I am excited and relieved. And amazed, because in high school, I heard that I couldn’t write. And I believed it.

All thesetyping on computer years, I could have been honing my skills. More importantly, I could have experienced the purpose, joy, and fulfillment that I now find through writing.

In this process, I’ve learned that, with work, I can write. Furthermore, I am called to write—just don’t ask me to make up a story.

Through Paul, God said that “we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Eph. 2:10).

If we believe a lie from our past and it’s keeping us from the work God prepared for us, we’re missing out on His blessing—and so is the kingdom of God. People are finding freedom from anger through Uprooting Anger, and I believe others will understand the Bible and draw closer to God through The Great Exchange.

We need to be careful not to believe all that we hear, but to look to God for what we believe—about who we are and what we are to do, as well as what is right and wrong and what is fact or opinion.

Have you believed a lie that kept you from fulfilling all that God prepared for you to do?

 

 

 

What is God’s Work for You?

Do you sometimes wonder what God’s workWork in Progress sign 2 is for you? Do you ever feel like you’re drifting without purpose? Or are you overwhelmed by the demands of life? How do you find the work God has for you?

Someone who was following Jesus asked that very question, saying, “What shall we do, that we may work the works of God?” Jesus’ response suggests that we may complicate the question.

“Jesus answered . . ., “This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent” (John 6:28-29).

Simple, huh? Just believe. The work that God wants us to do is believe in Jesus.

You say, “But that’s too simple. I thought you were talking about work.

I was, and I am. Sometimes it’s real work to believe. I found belief to be hard when the pantry was low and the checkbook was too. It was even more difficult when I sat in the hospital waiting during Robert’s 2nd heart attack. God did not give any assurance that Robert would survive.

However, the time it was hardest for me to believe was the period when I thought I couldn’t do anything right. I didn’t see how anybody could love me–especially God.

I grew up in a Christian family and had always known God’s blessing and His love. I also knew that “God so loved the world that He gave His only son” (John 3:16). Loving the world was one thing, but I couldn’t believe He could still love me–because I’d messed up too badly after experiencing His tender love.

I searched the Bible, but I couldn’t find where God said He loved me. I desperately wanted to believe, and I worked at it for weeks, but it was hard.

Consequently, I couldn’t stand myself and life was miserable.

One day, I finally escaped to be alone in the corner of a quiet park. I sat in the car, hiding under a big tree as I wrestled with God. Eventually, I said out loud, “I don’t deserve it, but I know You love me. I don’t understand it, and I can’t find it, but I know the Bible tells me so.”

It was work—hard work, but I chose to believe. That labor finally led to peace in my heart.

Your struggle is probably different. The nature of our struggles is irrelevant. No matter what the situations is, we choose what we believe in the midst of trials. We can place our trust in our own experience and understanding, or we can trust in what we know to be true of God, based on His Word—even if we can’t find it in the moment.

Either is work, but when we choose to believe in our own understanding, we are alone.

On the other hand, if we receive and believe the truth of God and accept it “not as the word of men, but for what it really is, the word of God, [it] performs its work in you who believe” (1 Th. 2:13). In those times when it’s difficult, if we choose to believe, the SpI Believeirit of God helps us. He quickens His Word in us. In our weakness, He makes us strong and brings the peace and confidence that we long for.

That time of deep doubt about God’s love produced in me the foundation of an unshakable confidence in His love for me.

Any other work we do will not satisfy us if we don’t have a foundation of belief. Neither will it be pleasing to the Lord, because “without faith, it is impossible to please God” (Heb. 1:6).

Our work is to believe in Jesus Christ. From that foundation of faith, He can lead us to other work that will glorify Him.

Lord, “I do believe; help my unbelief” (Mark 9: 24).