Tag Archives: Monday

Just Another Day, or Not

“At the Lord’s command Moses recorded the stages in their journey. This is their journey by stages…
Numbers 33:2 (NIV)

We’re experiencing what is likely to be Summer’s final blast of heat here in Iowa. Yesterday afternoon Wendy and I were invited to our friends swimming pool to cool off and enjoy before autumn followed by winter irrevocably descends upon us. It was a glorious afternoon.

Of course, the conversation with friends eventually led to “So, what does your week hold?” The reality is that right now my life is in a pretty static daily rhythm that, to be honest, can easily feel like a rut. I spend an hour early each morning working on my book. Then I have my quiet time, meditate on a chapter-a-day, write this post, record the podcast. exercise, breakfast, work projects, marketing, networking, message prep for next Sunday, dinner, time with Wendy, and then to bed.

Rinse-and-repeat.

Do you ever wake up in the morning feeling like you’re in the movie Groundhog Day? Here we go again.

In today’s chapter, God commands Moses to record every stage of the Hebrews’ journey from Egypt to the Promised Land. Of late I’ve been listening to The Bible Project’s prodcasts on the Exodus as I walk. It’s been fascinating as they’ve unpacked that the Exodus theme is repeated over and over and over again throughout the Great Story

The road out of slavery.
The road in-between and through the wilderness.
The road in to the Promised Land.

The entire book of Numbers is about the road in-between and God commands Moses to record every stage of the journey and there are a lot of them. Only a very few stages that are listed have any detail provided. Most of them are simply that they went from one place and camped at another place.

Welcome to the life journey in which exceptional moments both high and low in which I experience the road out and the road in are connected with the long slog of the road in between. Every day I trek from Point A to Point B and sometimes it seems I’m not getting anywhere at all.

So why would God tell Moses to record it to be remembered forever?

Because every stage of the journey is an important part of the journey. Even the mundane days in which we simply move the ball forward are important. Jewish people read today’s chapter as liturgy. There are lessons to be learned in the daily disciplines of simply doing what needs to be done to get where God is leading.

Because God is present and faithful at every stage of the journey. It is easily forgotten that God is doing something novel in this Exodus journey. In those days a god was fixed to one location and had a temple they visited. Yahweh was literally dwelling with and traveling with His people on the journey. This was unique. No other gods did that. It is a reminder that I worship Jesus, Immanuel, which means “God with us.” He is present with me and in me on this mundane 21,689th day of my slog through the earthly wilderness. He is leading me to a Promised Land. My job is to follow every day.

Because we all need to look back from time to time. Glancing back, I can see how far I’ve come. I’m not where I was. I’ve progressed. I’ve grown. I’ve matured. Glancing back also reminds me of mistakes I don’t want to repeat, lessons I want to remember, and all of the ways God has blessed and faithfully provided.

In the quiet this morning I’m staring down a rather boring and mundane Monday. How about you?

Let’s lace ‘em up, my friend. This morning I’m reminded that we’re getting somewhere, even if it feels like Groundhog Day.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

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(Don’t) Be Afraid, (Don’t) Be Very, Very, Afraid

The Lord is good,
     a refuge in times of trouble.
He cares for those who trust in him…
Nahum 1:7 (NIV)

The prophet Nahum lived and wrote his prophecy in troubled times. The kingdom of Israel had been split in two, the northern kingdom called Israel, and the southern kingdom called Judah. When Nahum wrote his prophecy the northern kingdom had been attacked and decimated by the Assyrians.

The Assyrians were known for their brutality and cruelty. When they conquered a city, they would mercilessly hack the limbs off their victims and then leave the limbs and bodies stacked like a pyramid outside the city gates. It was their calling card, the sign that the Assyrians had been there. Now that the northern kingdom of Israel had experienced it, the southern kingdom of Judah feared a similar Assyrian attack.

Fear and anxiety are common emotions. Today I find it common for people to experience economic fear (When will the economy get moving again? Will we experience what happened in Greece? Is the stock market going to collapse?) and fear of terror-ism (When’s the next 9-11? Are ISIS terrorist cells on our soil just waiting to attack? ). There is anxiety about global politics (Will Iran get a bomb and attack Israel?) and climate change (Will global warming  create disastrous change in weather patterns?). When Wendy and I watch or read the news we will often observe to one another that there seems to be one major theme: “Be afraid. Be very, very afraid.

Nahum also lived in a time of fear, and his prophetic message was to encourage his readers not to give into fear, but rather to trust in God. Nineveh (the capitol of the Assyrian empire), he prophesied, would be destroyed. His prophetic word was fulfilled. Assyria was destroyed by the Medes and Persians in 612 B.C.

It’s Monday morning as I write this post. The first Monday of a new month. For some of us, even the prospect of what the coming week holds brings anxiety. There is uncertainty about what we’re going to do in the coming month and how we’ll get through. Nahum’s message is a good one. Notice that he doesn’t promise freedom from trouble, but that we will find God a caring refuge in whatever comes our way.

Today, I’m choosing not to give into anxiety and fear, but to trust God to be a caring refuge for whatever comes my way.

 

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 42

English: Monday Morning :: duo pop & Folk Fran...
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Why am I discouraged?
    Why is my heart so sad?
I will put my hope in God!
    I will praise him again—
    my Savior and my God!
Psalm 42:11 (NLT)

It’s not only Monday morning as I write this post, but it’s also the first morning back from a week of vacation. Wendy and I did what we hardly ever do, which is to try and unplug from work. Despite a few frantic e-mails and phone calls from work that I couldn’t ignore, I did pretty well at pushing the tyranny of the urgent to the back burner. It was refreshing, and I would be lying to you if I told you that I was really excited about the pile of e-mails, the pressing deadlines, and the dropped balls which I am facing this morning.

The thing that I noticed about today’s chapter is the juxtaposition of the questions “Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad?” with the clear statements of determination “I will put my hope in God. I will praise him again.” The truth of the matter is that life is full of Monday mornings. The “back to work blues” is a familiar emotion.  The important thing is not to exclude God from these moments, but to recognize God within them. When we choose to realize God’s presence in every moment – even a Monday morning back from vacation – and consciously decide to praise God in and through every circumstance, we find ourselves on the path toward both maturity and wisdom.

Chapter-a-Day Proverbs 15

The Dinner Party. about 1821. By Henry Sargent...
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For the despondent, every day brings trouble;
      for the happy heart, life is a continual feast.
Proverbs 15:15 (NLT)

This past Saturday night Wendy and I hosted a dinner party for a handful of friends. It wasn’t anything fancy schmancy. We simply made a light dinner with some sandwiches, chips and a few bottles of wine. Wendy made one of her fabulous cheesecakes for dessert. All day long we putzed around the house getting ready for our company. Wendy and I had truly happy hearts as we prepared for our evening.

As I read the above Proverb this morning, I was reminded of our friendly feast. It was life giving in both the preparation and the execution. So much so, in fact, that after the last guest left Wendy and I cleaned up and then found ourselves chatting until we had to remind ourselves that it was the wee hours of the morning and we both had obligations at church in a few short hours.

Each day, even busy Mondays, can be a life giving feast, or they can be a sorrowful, miserly spread. The difference is in the condition of my heart.

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