Grateful, yet Grieving

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Well-Watered Garden

April 27, 2023 by Pam Luschei

Isaiah 58:11 (NIV)

The Lord will guide you always;
he will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land
and will strengthen your frame.
You will be like a well-watered garden,
like a spring whose waters never fail.

Today’s verse is full of promise and hope. More than ever before in my life, I’ve found God’s promises to be true in the midst of a storm or a sun-scorched land. Max Lucado reminds us; “We never expected to see Jesus in a divorce, death, lawsuit, or jail cell. We never expected to see him in a storm. But it is in the storms he does his finest work, for it is in storms he has our keenest attention.”

My dear friend Brenda has discovered God’s presence in her sun-scorched land. In 2021, a few months after her mother died, she was diagnosed with acute leukemia. She began her journey at her local hospital receiving chemo then was referred out at City of Hope in Duarte, California, a 2-hour drive from her home. It was here she spent over 100 days receiving a bone marrow transplant from her older brother. Amidst her treatment, her sister died suddenly.

During the painful, grief-filled, unknown journey, Brenda clung to hope. We chatted on the phone every Tuesday, crying, praying, and lamenting. A year later, Brenda is no longer in the sun-scorched land. Earlier this month, she received the news that her stem cell transplant is 100 percent engrafted and she shows no sign of cancer. Like a well-watered garden, she is now flourishing.

In reflecting on the first part of this verse in Isaiah is the promise of God’s guidance, direction, and leading us wherever we are; in a dry place, in a desolate space, in a place with no signs of growth or life. Here is where God comes to satisfy us. He starts in a place that we don’t want to be. It’s where He can do His work, providing, protecting, and producing yet unseen results, as we wait and trust Him.

In that dark, dry place is where we can be strengthened by His presence, His promises, and prayer.  

From the place that looks hopeless comes a well-watered garden showing signs of life. It’s where the Lord has watered our souls as we’ve waited, walked, and remained dependent on Him during the storm. 

Thriving doesn’t come when life is going well. Out of the parched places we are growing into a well-watered garden.  

Dear Lord Jesus,

Thank You for the promise that You will always lead us, satisfy us, and strengthen us.  Give us peace as we trust You in the parched places.  Help us as we cling to You, tightly holding on to hope. Thank you for the promise of your presence.  In Jesus Name, Amen.

April 27, 2023 /Pam Luschei
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Guaranteed Satisfaction

March 30, 2023 by Pam Luschei

Psalm 90:14 (NIV)

Satisfy us in the morning with your unfailing love,
that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days.

When I first moved to California, there was a car salesman who had a television commercial that would announce, “Satisfaction guaranteed” accentuating each syllable like a military sergeant. His pronouncement was believable. It was a promise to make certain you were happy with his product.  

It doesn’t take us long to discover that our search for satisfaction isn’t guaranteed. Disappointment and disillusionment dash our hopes in people, stuff, and experiences. These shiny things appeal to our dissatisfaction but don’t completely meet our deepest needs. We go into relationships desiring to meet a need for feeling special. Stuff and experiences invite us to look for status and safety. But it’s short-lived and unsustainable.  

This verse in Psalm 90 is a request and desire from the psalmist to have God satisfy him with something that truly meets his deepest need, his unfailing love. God’s love supplies what we truly need; God’s love is faithful, complete, and never runs out. We don’t have to earn it or perform. Nothing can separate us from his love. 

In Romans 8:38-39 (NIV), Paul reminds us that “neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, neither the present nor the future, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” 

Tony Horsfall, in his book, “Working from a Place of Rest” says, “we are God’s beloved children, loved by him, unconditionally and eternally. This gives us our security and self-worth and meets our need for significance.”

The second half of the verse is the “so that” or the equal sign of what results with this satisfaction: a sense of contentment and joy that is solely based on the endless and eternal love from a God who keeps all his promises. 

Dear Lord,

Let this verse be our desire every morning, to have You, and You alone, satisfy us in the deepest places with Your unfailing love. Sustain us, surround us, as we invite You, to meet our deepest needs. Thank you, Lord, for a love that will not let us go. In Jesus Mighty Name, Amen.

March 30, 2023 /Pam Luschei
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Prescription for Pain: Pause and Recall

March 16, 2023 by Pam Luschei

Psalm 13:5-6 (CSB)

“But I have trusted in your faithful love; my heart will rejoice in your deliverance. I will sing to the Lord because he has treated me generously.”

Pastor and author, Tim Keller, says, “The Psalms are a medicine chest for the heart and the best possible guide for living.” Over a 1/3 of the Psalms are laments; prayers expressing pain that lead to trust. Psalm 13 is the heartfelt expression of David’s pain. The first two verses ask the hard question; “How long, Lord?” David repeats the same question four times; he’s wrestling with his thoughts, burdened by his suffering, and expressing his sorrow to God, and pleading for an answer. 

Haven't we all been there? Or maybe you are there now? How much longer must I wait?

How long will this last? How will this end? How much more can I take?

Then comes the word that changes the tone of his plea: But. A stop sign that pivots the entire chapter and turns the corner. Here’s the key that unlocks the door to trust. David stops and remembers the past; “I have trusted.” He’s been there before and remembers the taste in his mouth of God’s faithfulness and love.

“My heart will rejoice.” David takes what he recalls and sticks his hope for the future that he won’t be where he is for much longer. He will rejoice and he will sing again. It’s coming soon.

Then the final statement is the answer to his why question; because; because David has been treated generously in the past.

What he knows about God in the past provides what he needs now to put hope in the future. He doesn’t stay in the same place. His memory bank has a deposit that he can withdraw to keep going. We can do the same. Like David, we can remind ourselves of God’s faithfulness from the past to sustain us in the present and carry us in the future. 

Dear Lord Jesus,

Thank you that we can look back and see Your great faithfulness. Thank you that, You, Lord, are able to give us eyes to see You in our questions and fears. Help us not forget Your faithful love, because You, have treated us generously and lavished your grace on us. We are grateful. In Jesus Name, Amen.

March 16, 2023 /Pam Luschei
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Fixed Focus

March 02, 2023 by Pam Luschei

2 Chronicles 20:12 (New International Version)

“For we have no power to face this vast army that is attacking us. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you.”

There are times when life slams us down and we can’t see straight. We are left to ask questions and face the reality of not knowing what to do. I’ve had moments when I honestly don’t know what to do, except to say, “help, Lord.”   

The story that precedes today’s verse is about King Jehoshaphat (I love his name) who was told there is a battle coming, with a “vast number.” In verse 3, Jehoshaphat, “was afraid and he resolved to seek the Lord.” He goes on to pray to the Lord in verse 6, and says, “Power and might are in your hand, and no one can stand against you.”  

The steps in his strategy don’t sound like a military general planning his response to being attacked. He doesn’t consult with his staff or design a battle plan. Quite the opposite.

First, Jehoshaphat resolved to seek to the Lord. Resolved means “firmly determined to do something.” He didn't wait or worry or throw up his hands. He went directly to the Lord.  

Second, he knew God was powerful and could be trusted. “No one can stand against you.”

Jehoshaphat had history with God from the past that built his faith to trust God in the present. Finally, he recognized his powerlessness and placed his eyes on God. His vision and focus were fixed on the God he knew, powerful in the past, faithful in the present, and trustworthy in the future.   

What battle are you facing today? What decision feels heavy and unclear? Where is your focus?  

We don’t have to know what to do. We have a Savior that we can run to in our powerlessness and fix our gaze on His face. God is faithful to help us when we don’t know what to do.  

Dear Lord,

I am powerless without You. You are my only source of power. Give me a fixed focus on You, before the battle, in the battle, and after the battle. Help me keep my eyes on You amidst the distractions around me. In Your Mighty and Powerful Name, Amen.

March 02, 2023 /Pam Luschei
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