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Hear the Hush of Jesus’ Spirit

“Surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” Matthew 28:20

Wherever you’re reading this, stop a moment and enjoy the quiet. The phone may be ringing, the office buzzing with coworkers, your house full of loud children. But stop where you are and listen behind all that.

Can you hear it? Maybe you can, maybe you can’t.

I often have a tough time hearing it through the busyness of life, but I believe it’s there. It’s the hush of Jesus’ Spirit.

It may seem impossible, but we really can hear it no matter how loudly life shouts. Jesus’ Spirit has always hovered in a hush.

Genesis 1:2 says, “The earth was formless and empty, and darkness covered the deep waters. And the Spirit of God was hovering over the surface of the waters.” How different a crazy day affects us when we stop in the chaos to acknowledge that the Savior of the world and of our present moment hovers all around us, never leaving us alone, always covering us with His presence. What a picture that provides of His promise to be with us always, even to the end of the age.

READ MORE: SCRIPTURE TO DE-STRESS

Okay, so then what happens at the end of the age? More good news. Jesus’s holy presence will still beckon His own to Him when this earth passes away: “When everything is ready, I will come and get you, so that you will always be with me where I am” (John 14:3).

If you belong to Jesus, you always have His holy hush covering you. Listen for it; you can be sure of it despite the din around you.

Faith step: What daily circumstances threaten to drown out the beckoning hush of Jesus’ Spirit in your life? Talk to Him about it, and ask Him to sensitize your own spirit to hear His.


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Hearing God

When the people saw the thunder and lightning and heard
the trumpet and saw the mountain in smoke, they trembled with fear.
They stayed at a distance and said to Moses, "Speak to us yourself
and we will listen. But do not have God speak to us or we will die."
Moses said to the people, "Do not be afraid. God has come to test
you, so that the fear of God will be with you to keep you from
sinning." The people remained at a distance, while Moses
approached the thick darkness where God was.

—Exodus 20:18–21

The most famous of the Dodger fans…was named Hilda Chester,
a plump, pink-faced woman with a mop of stringy
gray hair…During the games Hilda lived in the bleacher
seats with her bell…With her fish peddler voice, she'd say,
"You know me. Hilda wit da bell. Ain't it trillin'? Home wuz
never like dis, mac." When disturbed her favorite line was,
"Eacha heart out, ya bum."

—Peter Golenbock, in Bums: An Oral History of the Brooklyn Dodgers (1984)

The soundtrack of a ballpark is very satisfying for most fans. In fact, there is a certain "all is right with the world" feeling when we hear the crack of the bat, the pop of the ball in a glove, and the umpire's voice yelling, "Safe!" above a roaring crowd. Even the nasal-voiced hot dog vendor roaming through the stands can go toe-to-toe with talented vocalists of our day.

But what if you couldn't hear any of that? Would it still be baseball? Late in the 1993 season, when minor-leaguers are called up to the big leagues for a cup of coffee, an outfielder by the name of Curtis Pride made he debut with the Montreal Expos. The second-place Expos were at home, battling the Philadelphia Phillies for the division lead, when Pride stepped to the plate with the home team down 7–4 and two men on base.

He wasted no time, ripping a double on the first pitch that scored both runners. The capacity crowd of Olympic Stadium nearly brought the house down with their cheers for the young rookie. Time was called, and the Expos third base coach ran out to second base, but instead of congratulating Pride, the coach asked Pride to take off his helmet.

"What's wrong with my helmet?" wondered Pride. Then he understood that third base coach Jerry Manuel wanted him to tip his helmet to the fans and acknowledge their cheers. Pride obliged, only then realizing that the people were thundering their applause for him.

You see, Curtis Pride is deaf. He can't hear the crack of the bat or most of the other sounds that we associate with baseball. With only 5 percent of his hearing intact due to his mother contracting rubella during her pregnancy, Pride has to read lips and sense vibrations from loud noises. But he communicates quite well and has vowed never to allow his disability to slow down his baseball career. "My other senses are more sensitive," he says. "Smell, feel, and seeing are much sharper because of my [lack of] hearing."

After the game, a reporter asked Pride if he could hear the cheering, standing on second base. "Here," Pride said as he pointed to his heart. "I could hear it here."

"How do you hear God speak?"

"There have been many times that I wished I could hear God speak to me audibly to give me direction. Sometimes I think it would be great to simply surf over to www.willofGod.com so that I could understand what God is saying. Or maybe God would just arrange the clouds into letters and spell out his plans for my life. I would even take a text message on my cell phone from God."

But those are all methods of communicating from the outside in. Instead God has put the Holy Spirit in our hearts to speak to us from the inside out, so that we might develop other spiritual senses—a growing faith, the mind of Christ, conviction, a persevering heart, a spirit that bears witness with another Christlike spirit.

To hear God speak is not like picking up the phone and hearing some mindless chatter from someone. God doesn't speak just for the sake of hearing his own voice. Instead, God speaks with the intent of moving us into action, to produce change in our lives. Maybe that's why a lot of Christians don't really listen to God. They don't really want to change. "You speak to us, Moses [or pastor or Sunday school teacher or famous TV preacher], and we will listen. But don't expect us to get into God's Word this week so that we might hear God speak to us. We're afraid that if we hear God speak to us, we will surely die."

Never were truer words spoken. To hear God speak will cost us dearly. To hear God speak, we must die to our self-centered nature, die to the noisy chatter of the world, and desire to obey whatever we hear. And many churchgoing people simply are unwilling to do that.

On the other hand, maybe real life doesn't begin until you hear God speak. For to hear God speak in your heart is the most satisfying sound of all.

Intentional walk: Lord, I want to hear you speak. But there are so many other voices competing for bandwidth in my brain that I struggle to know which one is yours. I want to silence the competing signals that I receive from the media around me and to listen intently for your unmistakable voice above the chatter of the world. Help me take off my helmet today, that I might here your voice and sense the applause of heaven when I act upon your Word.

Grow Your Faith Garden

And the seed that fell on good soil represents those who hear and accept God’s word and produce a harvest of thirty, sixty, or even a hundred times as much as had been planted! Mark 4:20 (NLT)

So often, reading this parable or hearing it taught as I grew up in the church, the focus was on the harvest. This verse is rightfully linked with Jesus’ words in John 4:35, which says the fields are ripe for harvest.

In the church I grew up in, this harvest, ripe for the picking, has to do with winning converts to the faith. Since it came after Jesus’ conversation with the Samaritan woman and the subsequent conversion of many in her town, that makes sense. But so often we think, What do I have to do to get busy harvesting?

Yet Jesus is not saying the good seed represents a farmer who does the harvesting. It represents the soil. Good soil, in which seeds can grow.

And how does soil become good? As a gardener, I can tell you: the soil can’t become good on its own. In fact, the Gardener has to work with it. It has to be broken apart so that is softened. It has to have rocks and weeds pulled from it. Good soil has organic matter in it: nutrients produced by the decay of dead leaves or manure. Circumstances in my life that, at the time, felt like “manure” have often been used by God to help me to grow.

So if Jesus is telling us to be “good soil” so that our hearts can be fertile ground for his word, perhaps we will have to submit to Him, allowing Him to break us, to pull the weeds of materialism and worry and perhaps even “fertilize” us with what feels like dying to self.

Faith step: How is Jesus trying to work the soil of your heart? Are you resisting Him because it feels difficult? Ask Him to help you see the purpose of the struggles in your life.

Download your FREE ebook, Mornings With Jesus: 31 Daily Devotions to Bring You Closer to Christ.

Graced with God’s Bounty

When I was nineteen, I lived alone and barely scraped by. Disaster struck when an accounting error cut my paycheck by half and I had to wait a month for reimbursement. The rent was due, and it took every cent I had to pay it.

I was too proud to tell anyone about my problem, and a week before payday all I had left was a box of spaghetti. I carefully divided the spaghetti into seven piles. “Lord,” I said, “if you could teach me that trick with the fishes and loaves, I’d really appreciate it.”

I had scorched the only pot I owned, so I cooked the spaghetti in my copper teakettle. As I broke that day’s pile in half so it would fit, tears streamed down my face. Hadn’t God heard any of my prayers?

It seemed ludicrous to say grace, but I did and I felt better. After my pitiful dinner, my friend unexpectedly stopped in. Deb had noticed I’d been losing weight, and finally I admitted that I was broke.

She called her husband, who brought over six bags of groceries, and made me promise never again to let pride keep me from asking for help. God had shown me His bounty, not with fishes and loaves, but through the concern of a loving friend.


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God’s Word Is Full of Treasures

“Have you understood all these things?” They said to him, “Yes.” And he said to them, “Therefore every scribe who has been trained for the kingdom of heaven is like a master of a house, who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old.” Matthew 13:51–52 (ESV)

Do you ever find your eyes glazing over as you read familiar stories in the Bible? Recently I was reading through some of Jesus’s parables, and my brain tuned out. I’ve heard or read the stories a hundred times. Then I reached verse 52 and blinked. I felt as if Jesus was reminding me that whether an insight is new to me or is old and familiar, it has value. Both new and old bring spiritual treasure into my life.

When I was younger, I chafed at the formal liturgy of our congregation. Repeating the same Scripture-based lyrics each week seemed tedious. Yet set to melody, that repetition of Scripture settled deep into my memory and my heart and often hums through my mind even today. Later, I attended churches with new music and cutting-edge worship styles. I found new treasure as I explored different ways to pray, to fellowship, and to praise.

The same truth applies to our reading of the Bible. No matter how old and familiar the chapters are, Jesus often gives us fresh insights. A verse that spoke about one issue a year ago may take on deeper meaning after our recent experiences. I’m learning to stay more alert as I read the Bible.

God’s Word is a storehouse full of treasures. Some are old and familiar, but each time we dig in, Jesus can bring us fresh grace and truth.

Faith Step: Read one of your favorite chapters of the Bible. Ask Jesus to help you glean one new treasure from the familiar words.

God’s Healing Power

God’s Healing Power

Daily Devotion for January 15, 2018

For I will restore health to you, and your wounds I will heal, declares the LORD….
—Jeremiah 30:17 ESV

If you or someone you love is facing emotional or physical pain, turn to God in prayer. Fill your mind with the healing power of His Word. Read and reread healing scriptures such as Psalm 30:2, Psalm 103:3, Jeremiah 30:17. Quiet your mind as you focus on God’s restorative power, welcoming His word to your body and spirit.

Today’s Prayer:

Great Physician, even when I’m not feeling my best, I can be grateful for Your care. I commit myself to Your loving arms.

View Previous Devotion
Adapted from 60 Days of Prayer, a bi-monthly print publication

God Looks at the Heart

But the LORD said to Samuel, “Do not look at his appearance or at his physical stature, because I have refused him. For the LORD does not see as man sees; for man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.” 1 Samuel 16:7 (NKJV)

Cleaning out my bathroom cabinet the other day, I realized something. I have a ton of beauty products. Over the years, I’ve likely spent more time and money on my appearance than I care to remember and contributed heavily to the billion-dollar beauty market. From creams to mascara, I seem to have purchased enough to help keep the industry healthy. Part of the reason is I am among those who like to enhance their appearance. Who doesn’t want to look younger and prettier? But this verse is a great reminder that our outward appearance doesn’t matter at all to Jesus. He nurtures the beauty in our hearts.

During Jesus’s ministry, He came across groups of people who were concerned with the way they appeared. In Matthew 23, he told the Pharisees, “Woe to you . . . hypocrites! For you are like whitewashed tombs which indeed appear beautiful outwardly but inside are full of dead men’s bones and all uncleanness.” Jesus recognized the deep spiritual deficiencies—ones that only He could fill. And Jesus let them know He didn’t care about their presentation, but rather about the passion of their hearts.

Yes, in my time I have been passionate about my appearance, but I’m most grateful that Jesus only wants to look at and continue to nurture the goodness of my heart.

FAITH STEP: Ask the Lord to give you eyes to see Him in the face of every person you meet.

God Is with Us

God Is with Us

Daily Devotion for December 27, 2017

All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had said through the prophet: “The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call Him Immanuel.”
—Matthew 1:22-23 NIV

Have you ever wondered why Jesus wasn’t named Immanuel? In Hebrew Immanuel means “God is with us.” Jesus did not have to bear the name Immanuel because He was God among humankind. This is the message of Christmas: God is with us.

Today’s Prayer:

Heavenly Father, thank You for being Immanuel!

View Previous Devotion
Adapted from 60 Days of Prayer, a bi-monthly print publication

God Heals Heart First

When I taught a kindergarten Sunday school class, the kids loved to act out Jesus’ healing of the paralytic. Four children became the four eager friends of the “volunteer” paralytic whom they carried around the room in the middle of a blanket, each holding a corner. With great determination, they broke through the roof (usually a barricade of chairs) to bring their friend to Jesus, Who was surrounded by other people. When Jesus saw the faith of these devoted friends, He told the paralytic that his sins were forgiven, and the paralytic was healed.

I had always assumed that was the main message of this story—because of the faith of a few good friends, this paralytic was healed—until last year when our eighteen-year-old daughter Kendall suffered a baffling auto-immune disease that caused her to lose her hair. In her depression and discouragement, she seemed paralyzed in her faith, so her father and I began to “carry” her to Jesus in our prayers. We prayed fervently for the healing of her disease, but we seemed to hit a barrier: Her condition worsened.

Related: My Prayer Rock

That’s when I found another message in this passage. It’s not uncommon to pray for physical healing first, but Jesus has something greater in mind. He healed the paralytic’s heart first by forgiving his sins, because when a heart is healed, a person receives the strength and trust to endure, whether physical healing occurs or not. We “acted out” this Scripture with our daughter, carrying her to Jesus with the faith that He would heal her heart. Our prayers were answered.

Now when I read this passage about the miracle of Jesus healing the paralytic, I see a greater message: Because of the faith of a few good friends (or family members), healing can happen. Especially when our prayers are for healing first in a person’s heart.


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Free Yourself of Temptation

“No testing has overtaken you that is not common to everyone. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tested beyond your strength, but with testing he will also provide the way out so that you may be able to endure it.” 1 Corinthians 10:13 (NRSV)

Am I so different from everyone else? Are my temptations more difficult to resist or more alluring, more dangerous than the temptations of others I know?

But it’s so hard, Lord! I have wants and needs. I don’t like to deny myself anything. It just doesn’t seem fair.

“Blessed is anyone who endures temptation. Such a one has stood the test and will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him. No one, when tempted, should say, ‘I am being tempted by God, for God cannot be tempted by evil and He tempts no one” ( James 1:12–13, NRSV).

Blessed, You say? Can’t I be blessed any other way? Something easier, perhaps? “But when one is tempted by one’s own desire, being lured and enticed by it; then, when that desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin, and that sin, when it is fully grown, gives birth to death. Do not be deceived, my beloved” (James 1:14–16, NRSV).

Am I being deceived right now? Is my impulse to gamble more than wanting to have a little fun? Are the angry things I say when I know I am in private more than harmless venting? Is the inclination to make up stories or tell fibs more dangerous than I think?

“Live by the Spirit, I say, and do not gratify the desires of the flesh. For what the flesh desires is opposed to the Spirit, and what the Spirit desires is opposed to the flesh; for these are opposed to each other, to prevent you from doing what you want” (Galatians 5:16–17, NRSV).

I am free in You, Lord: free of my urges and desires, free of temptation, free to live with an eye to eternity. Praise You! “For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under the law but under grace” (Romans 6:14, NRSV).

Faith step: Think of a temptation you face on a regular basis. Use Scripture to help you form your prayers for strength.

Feel the Power and Protection of Jesus

Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. Matthew 5:4 (NIV)

A man in my neighborhood was robbed and beaten to death. I saw the report on the evening news. While I did not recognize the man’s name or face, I grieved the loss of his life. I grieved for my city that is plagued with high rates of unemployment, poverty, and crime. I have considered packing up and moving to another neighborhood or another city and state. Each time I make this proposal to my husband, he reminds me that unemployment, poverty, and crime are problems across the nation. He is right.

There is nowhere to run from these problems. My protection or safekeeping is not a place. My protection is a person, and His name is Jesus. Gospel artists sing, “Jesus is a fence!” And what is considered the Psalm of Protection says, “Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the LORD, ‘He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust’” (Psalm 91:1–2, NIV).

Newspaper headlines make it clear that no city is without the presence of evil. While school students engage in community service and volunteer work, school shootings are at an all-time high. While police officers serve and protect, incidents of police brutality also occur with saddening regularity. In life, we have a myriad of reasons to mourn, and by all means, let us freely mourn because there is a promise in our tears. When our hearts are heavy, Jesus comes quickly to comfort us. His arms embrace us. He is our safe harbor and rock for all the ages.

Faith Step: Throughout the day, softly say the name of Jesus. Feel the power of His name seal you in His peace and protection.

Faith Is a Lifelong Journey

“What I’m trying to do here is to get you to relax, to not be so preoccupied with getting, so you can respond to God’s giving.” Matthew 6:31 (MSG)

Last May, I adopted a rescue dog. Rue wasn’t socialized, either to people or other animals. She is, as a result, fearful and bossy—a bad combination. At first, she was afraid of everything: a cookie sheet, a knock at the door, aluminum foil. She shied away, then fell back on her herding-breed attributes to take control of the situation. That she was confused and didn’t know the situation was never out of control in the first place didn’t faze her in the least.

She’s like that person who feels threatened and, instead of retreating, decides to take over. Her training now is to realize her master has things under control so she has no need to take over. Rue is improving, but it’s a long process. She’s a stubborn girl with an established pattern of coping. She wants her own way. She’s sure she’s right.

I want something better for her. I want her to relax, knowing I’ll take care of her. I’m glad she wants to please me, but I don’t need her in a hyperalert state, thinking everything depends on her. I want her to realize I’ve got this. Rue needs to learn to trust.

This has hit pretty close to home as I work with her because she reminds me of myself, always trying to help Jesus make everything work out the way I think it should. Meanwhile in my Bible reading, I hear Him say to stop worrying. His Father knows my needs and will satisfy them. Like Rue, I can’t quite believe that, so I keep trying to make stuff happen. When will I learn?

As with Rue, it’s a process.

Faith Step: Do you, like me, sometimes try to be the answer to your own prayers? Today, hand your anxious thoughts to Jesus. He can and will take care of you.