Judy A Knox

Dewdrops of Grace

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Sunrise and Sunset: Evidence of God’s Goodness

March 6, 2017

Arizona is known for its glorious sunsets. From the back window of my house I can watch the changing colors blaze across the western horizon. At times the view is absolutely breathtaking. This photo was taken a few blocks from my house. A few weeks ago, the sky turned a shade of red so intense I couldn’t think of anything on earth to compare it to. The camera on my phone was unable to do it justice.

The psalmist David said, “They who dwell in the ends of the earth stand in awe of your signs; You make the dawn and the sunset shout for joy” (Psalm 65:8). Yes, sunrise and sunset must take place every day, but God arranged atmospheric conditions so we’re frequently treated to a beautiful display of vibrant color. He didn’t need to do that. The spectacular colors are a bonus.

The real message in sunrises and sunsets is their predictability. Every day the sun comes up, and every evening it goes back down. No need to be sad when it sets, or to worry whether it will rise again the next morning. It will. Some days the sky may be covered in thick clouds that hide the sun from view, but we don’t doubt that it’s up there shining away, or worry that it won’t rise again the next day. We can count on it.

In the same way, we can always count on God to do what His Word promises He will do. Like the sun shining behind the clouds, even in the darkest times He’s there, working behind the scenes. God told Jeremiah the prophet, “I am watching over My Word to perform it” (Jeremiah 1:12). Some versions say he is hastening to perform it. Our God is faithful. He knows what His Word says, and He is actively engaged in bringing it to pass.

Some days, when things don’t seem to be going as we hoped, we may have a hard time seeing God at work in our lives. At times like this, I find myself wondering, “Where is God in all this?” Of course, the answer is simple. He’s right where He belongs. The problem is not with Him, but with my losing sight of Him in some way. I have let clouds of doubt, fear, or other negative emotions block my view of God’s grace and goodness.

The antidote is equally simple: open up the Bible and read what He says about who I am and what I have in Him. “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God” (Romans10:17). When I refocus on the truth of God’s Word, the clouds soon clear.

Consider some of the words God is hastening to perform, such as His promise never to leave us or forsake us (Hebrews 13:5), and the assurance in Lamentations 3:22-24 that “His mercies are new every morning.”

Next time you see a glorious sunset, remember that those amazing colors are just “God’s little extras.” Remember the important message of every sunrise and sunset: God is “on the job!” He is faithful. We can count on Him.

 

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Karen Wingate: The God of Second Chances

February 17, 2017

I posted this article on Thursday, but it has come to my attention that not all of my subscribers received the email. So if you are receiving it for a second time, please forgive me. I wanted to be sure everyone got the opportunity to read it!


This blog is all about discovering God’s goodness in everyday life. Karen Wingate is a fellow author whose blog, “Grace on Parade” has the same purpose as mine. In this guest blog post she shares a story from her college days about how God rescued her from a bad situation and brought something really good out of it – my favorite kind of story! Enjoy!

When I attended the University of Arizona, colleges required students to take two credits of physical education for graduation. For me, High School P.E. was little more than a personal nightmare. I’m so old, I come from the generation where we had to wear those dopey little blue bloomers. My large high school offered P.E. electives, but my poor vision limited my choices. The classes I took turned into disasters every time.

How refreshing to discover the U of A had an abundance of choices, stuff I could do. My first credit, an aerobics class, was taught by an understanding but tough instructor. When I ran the mile in less than seven minutes, my entire class cheered. Victory, sweet victory at last. I could do this athletic thing!

The next semester, I chose a swimming course. I loved to swim but never learned how to swim well. My idea of swimming was to churn my arms in the shallow end and keep my head above water. I signed up for the advanced beginner class; after all, I wasn’t a beginner, was I? That class was for those who had never set a tootsie inside a swimming pool.

The first day was a particularly cold January day in Arizona, the state where people laugh at the thought of indoor swimming pools. I quickly realized I was in over my head – literally. I couldn’t see the instructor even with my glasses which I couldn’t wear in the pool. The teacher had no heart, no mercy, and no patience. He dumped his students in the deep end and started to teach us a complex stroke. He yelled at those who weren’t moving like he wanted us to move. That meant me. Several classmates tried to help me, but he barked at them to pay attention.

I trudged back to the locker room, tears mingling with the waters of defeat from the swimming pool. In God’s perfect timing I bumped into my aerobics instruction from the previous semester.

“Karen, what is the matter?” she asked.

In broken sobs, I explained what happened. I admit, I was a total wreck. She didn’t even know about my past history with sports. Everybody told me how important physical activity was – how could I do it if no one let me? And how would I graduate if I didn’t get that P.E. credit?

“We can fix this.” Mrs. Sorenson’s confident words stopped my tears as if she had turned off a water spigot. By the next Monday, she had me enrolled in a beginning beginner class with an enthusiastic, compassionate instructor. The class was half full of foreign students from Saudi Arabia who were more nervous about getting into the pool than I was!

Here’s the next God-part. Mrs. Sorenson didn’t know the instructor’s assistant was a senior, dual majoring in physical education and special education. The instructor partnered me with the assistant who at times let me put my hands on her body so I could feel the movement of the different strokes.

I learned to swim – and enjoy swimming – like I never had before. I even got the inflated lung award at the end of the semester for staying under water the longest while swimming the freestyle!

Giving His children a second chance is nothing new to God. The apostle Peter found his second chance on the Sea of Galilee. After refusing to acknowledge that he was acquainted with Jesus during Jesus’ trial, Peter felt terrible. In fact, the Bible says he wept bitterly. I can only imagine the hours of agony and regret he must have experienced on Friday and Saturday after Jesus died. Even after Christ rose from the dead, would He want to have anything to do with Peter? Talk about a loyal friend – not!

Imagine the beautiful scene a couple of weeks later. After the man on the shore told them to put their fishing nets on the other side of the boat, Peter and his buddies caught a miraculous amount of fish. Realizing it was the risen Lord, Peter left the others to do the clean-up work and waded toward Jesus. The Bible doesn’t record the conversation between the two in that private moment, but later on Jesus reinstated Peter and gave him a key position of leadership in the newly established church. Despite Peter’s major mess-up, Jesus gave him a second chance, a huge second chance.

Do you still suffer from guilt, fear, defeat, or shame from your past? Just like with Peter, Jesus wants to do mighty things with your life even though you’ve messed up or others have messed with you.

Think of those around you who have made mistakes and who have hurt you. Maybe they need to experience God’s second-chance ministry through you. Who needs to hear you say, “We can fix this”?

Go do it! Whether you’ve messed up or you’ve messed with others, be a second-chance Christian. You can do it because your God is a God of second chances.

Karen Wingate www.graceonparade.com is a freelance writer and women’s ministry facilitator. For years, she wrote Vacation Bible School curriculum for Standard Publishing and has written for a number of national magazines including Decision, Guideposts, The Upper Room, and The Lookout. She is currently working on a set of historical fiction novels and a book about how God gave her miraculously improved eyesight after being born legally blind. Karen’s blog at “Grace on Parade” shares how Christ followers can reflect the grace of Christ to a hurting world. You can find more of her blog posts at www.graceonparade.com.

 

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Where Does Joy Come From?

February 10, 2017

bible-1310882_640“The joy of the Lord is my strength.” Most of us are familiar with this scripture in Nehemiah 8:10. We have sung it, declared it, and experienced it. In my book A Widow’s Might I share about how, in my own life, unexplainable joy came into me and with it came strength that kept the intense pain and sadness of missing Alan from overpowering me and turning into despair.

Joy is a powerful thing. It’s a fruit of the Spirit so it’s in us at all times. However, we don’t always experience it. Just because something is in us doesn’t mean that we’re releasing it into our situations or our lives.

I’ve contemplated this Bible verse many times, kind of wondering, where does this joy that is our strength really come from? How does it work? Why do some believers seem to have more of it than others? Yes, it’s a fruit of the Spirit, but how do I release it into my life? As one who enjoys learning about scientific things, I’m interested in knowing what makes things work.

Well, usually anyway. Some things I take for granted. I don’t really know what makes a car work, nor am I curious about it. I know if I keep it maintained, fill it with gas, and keep air in the tires, then when I need to go somewhere it will get me there. My grandson Luke, on the other hand, has a keen interest in what makes a car work. His knowledge helps him take better care of his car, and when he’s driving, his awareness of all those mysterious workings under the hood enhances his driving experience.

The same principle applies to understanding Bible passages. We see things happen in our lives when we apply the truth of scripture, but we don’t always know how they work. Like my enjoying the benefits of driving a car whose workings I don’t understand, we believe what we read in the Bible, stand on that truth, and see God working in our lives. But when we get a revelation of what makes it work, our experience is enriched.

A few nights ago the leader of our women’s ministry at church shared a scripture that absolutely blew my mind, and answered the questions I had been pondering. The verse is Jeremiah 15:16: “Your words were found and I ate them, and Your Word was to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart; for I am called by Your Name, oh Lord God of hosts.” So that’s where unspeakable joy comes from! It comes from the Word.

Suddenly it clicked! The entire time Alan was in the hospital, I was starting every day in the Word of God, I was reading the Bible aloud to him for hours at a time, and I was singing to him, and to myself, songs that were Scripture set to music So when Alan went to be with the Lord, I had been saturating my heart in the Word of God. When the ultimate trial came, that Word brought me joy, which in turn brought strength, enabling my heart to rejoice despite all I was going through.

I guess when you get right down to it, whatever the question may be, the answer is always “the Word.” The best way to know God and be close to Him is spending time in His Word. Then when our road takes a turn we weren’t expecting, we aren’t completely knocked off the path. Supernatural joy will sustain us through the hard times.

Isn’t it cool the way God uses the Bible to explain the Bible! He not only tells us what we need (joy, for example) but He tells us where to find it! Yay God!

 

 

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Our Ever Present Help… No Matter How Small

February 3, 2017

car-1836574_640Does God really care about little stuff like messy windshields? CLICK HERE to check out my guest post on Karen Wingate’s “Grace on Parade!” And watch for a future guest post from Karen, coming soon on this blog.

Discover God’s Goodness in Everyday Life!

 

 

 

 

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Judy appeared on the Andrew Wommack Ministries' Gospel Truth program. You can see the videos by following these links:

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