Judy A Knox

Dewdrops of Grace

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Take Time to Remember

March 16, 2017

Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about memorial stones. In the Old Testament, we read about memorial stones people set up to commemorate a special event or encounter with God. The morning after Jacob wrestled with God, he set up a stone (Genesis 28:18-22) as a reminder of his experience at that place. After Joshua led the children of Israel across the Jordan River, God told them to take twelve stones from the middle of the riverbed to the new land where they were going. He also had twelve stones placed in a pile in the middle of the river as a memorial of their crossing into the Promised Land.

In our day, we have memorial stones as well: war monuments, wedding rings, tassels from our graduation hats, inscribed cornerstones on buildings, blue ribbons from a long-ago fair. Objects like these serve as symbols or reminders of important times or places in our lives.

Not all memorial stones are physical objects; many are actions we take to celebrate important events. Communion, for example, is a tangible reminder of Jesus’ death on the cross. He broke the loaf of bread and gave it to the disciples as a reminder of His body, broken for them. Then he shared the cup of wine with them, as a reminder of His shed blood. “Do this,” he said, “in remembrance of Me” (Luke 21:19). Two thousand years later, Christians the world over continue to observe the breaking of bread and sharing of the cup, to “proclaim His death until he comes” (1 Corinthians 11:26). This is not just a ritual or tradition, but a time to ponder what Jesus did for us.

These examples in the Bible show us the importance of remembering our special encounters with God, and all the good things he has done in our lives. In Deuteronomy 6:11-12, before the Israelites crossed over the Jordan into the promised land, He warned them,” When you have eaten and are full beware, lest you forget the Lord who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.”

We find a story in Matthew 16:5-12 showing us that Jesus was not pleased when his disciples failed to remember the two times He fed thousands of people with a few loaves and fish. ”Do you not understand or remember?” He asked them (v. 9). Remembering God’s goodness in the past helps us trust him in our present circumstances.

Forty-five years ago, on March 16, 1972, at a prayer meeting with a group of friends and neighbors, I asked Jesus to become my Lord and Savior. After the prayer meeting ended, we all went to McDonald’s for dinner. We all had Shamrock Shakes. A year later, when the anniversary of that day came around, one of my friends said, “Remember how we all went out for Shamrock Shakes after the meeting where you got saved?” So she and I went to McDonald’s for Shamrock Shakes to celebrate my new life in Christ.

Now every year in the middle of March you’ll find me pulling into the McDonald’s drive-up window or walking into the restaurant, ordering a Shamrock Shake. Sometimes I go by myself and quietly contemplate that day, and the life I’ve had since then because of what Jesus did for me. Other years I may share the experience, and my story, with others. I’m pretty sure I’ve never missed a year.

The recipe for those shakes has changed many times in the last forty-five years. Sometimes they’re really quite tasty; other times they taste like toothpaste. (Actually, this year they’re pretty good!) The flavor is not important. The Shamrock Shake is my special memorial stone, a touchstone reminding me of the friend who cared enough about me to go out on a limb, sharing the Gospel in the rather unusual way God told her to share it with me, as well as all the other friends who were with me on that day.

For several days before I head to McDonald’s, I begin thinking about that Shamrock Shake, and how what happened on that day in 1972 changed my life. Do you have a special, unique object or tradition that serves as a memorial stone in your life? I’d love to hear about it.

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Our High Position

March 11, 2017

This morning I was reading Psalm 91. Sometimes when I’m reading something very familiar, I go into it thinking I already know everything it says. But reading God’s Word is like peeling back the layers of an onion with a center you never reach. And today I saw something new.

God is speaking about the one who “dwells in the secret place of the Most High” (v. 1). In verse 14 He says, ”Because he has set his love upon Me, therefore I will deliver him; I will set him on high, because he has known My Name.”

This is mind-boggling when we really think about being set on high. God is “on high” in heaven ruling the universe. According to Ephesians 2:6, we are “seated in heavenly places with Christ Jesus.” If so, then we are seated “far above all principality and power and might and dominion, and every name that is named” (Ephesians 1:21), just like Jesus – above every sickness and disease, every negative emotion, every hindrance we may encounter. If we can name it, we are seated above it! How amazing is that!

So many scriptures came flooding into my mind about the authority God has given us in Christ. What really got me excited though was thinking about why I have been set on high. Why have I been given this authority over the power of the enemy? Is it because I wrote a couple of Christian books, or because I was faithful about reading my Bible every day, or went to church when I didn’t really feel like it?

While those might be good things, they aren’t the reason. That’s the really awesome thing about all of this. It has nothing to do with anything I have done or not done. According to Psalm 91:14 God has set me on high, past tense, done deal. I don’t need to earn my way back there every time I miss the mark. I am there for one reason, and that is because I have known His Name.

And this is true about all of us who acknowledge Jesus as the Son of God who died for us. So it isn’t arrogant for me, or you, to say that we have been set on high, or to talk about the authority we have over all the power of the enemy, because it’s not about us. It’s about God; it’s about what Jesus has done for us. We know His Name, and that is enough.

Sometimes it’s hard to see ourselves as ones who are set on high. We may be dealing with fear, doubt, or other negative thoughts and emotions. We may have a problem in our physical body that we don’t appear to be receiving healing for. But this isn’t because we’re not seated on high. God has put us there. It’s because we need a greater revelation of who we really are, and where we really are.

Step number one is getting into that secret place of the Most High, which I am coming to realize more and more means getting into the Word of God, not just reading it but meditating on the verses that stand out. When we come to that place where we truly know His Name, and walk in the power of His Name, we’ll become more and more like who we really are, ones who have been set on high.

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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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