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Thoughts

Enjoy the Moment

October 3, 2019 By John Deisher

Every man must render an account before God of all the good things he beheld in life and did not enjoy.”

— a saying from the Jerusalem Talmud (Kiddushin)
Every man must render an account before God of all the good things he beheld in life and did not enjoy.” — a saying from the Jerusalem Talmud (Kiddushin)
Photo by Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

I was at a theme park one time waiting in line for the newest, latest and greatest ride. The line for people getting off passed my line at one point, and I heard someone ask one those getting off the ride how they liked it.

The person replied, “I had the time of my life, and I didn’t enjoy a minute of it.”

The Preacher in Ecclesiastes wrote that there was nothing better for a person than to enjoy what they were doing because that was their reward.

The reward is enjoying what you are doing. The reward is not something that comes after you finish doing something. It is what you are doing that moment.

Each moment gives us a chance to enjoy the good things in front of us. It is a shame if we miss them because we are waiting for something else.

Don’t seize the day. Enjoy the moment.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: enjoy, God, life

Live the Situation

October 2, 2019 By John Deisher

“A waiting person is a patient person. The word patience means the willingness to stay where we are and live the situation out to the full in the belief that something hidden there will manifest itself to us.”

— Henri J.M. Nouwen
"A waiting person is a patient person. The word patience means the willingness to stay where we are and live the situation out to the full in the belief that something hidden there will manifest itself to us."

I was reading yesterday and came across two quotes I didn’t care for.

“Embrace the fear.”

“Love the pain.”

They go against everything that is within me. I want to reject the fear and avoid the pain. It is not easier to do that, but it is a preferable price to pay.

Maybe that is why I am not always a patient person. I don’t want to embrace the fear and love the pain enough to see if there is something hidden in the moment where I find myself.

So I must learn to believe. I must stay put and live out my situation fully. I must be patient.

Embracing the pain. Loving the fear.

Finding what is hidden.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: fear, life, live, patience

The Family Business

October 1, 2019 By John Deisher

“I have rightfully no other business each day but to do God’s work as a servant, constantly regarding His pleasure. May I have grace to live above every human motive, simply with God and to God.”

― Henry Martyn
“I have rightfully no other business each day but to do God's work as a servant, constantly regarding His pleasure. May I have grace to live above every human motive, simply with God and to God.”

Photo by Jessica Lewis on Unsplash

Sometimes we get confused.

We think we are the master and God is the servant.

I don’t know that we mean to think that, but that is the way it works out. We pray and ask God to meet our needs. We do it with the best of intentions because we know that he loves us and has good things for us. 

Then we arise from our prayers and go live our life. OUR life.

I am the master. God is the servant.

So what if instead we begin the day by saying this prayer, “Thy will be done, Father. What does it look like through my life today?”

And then listen to the Father and go do it; a life lived “simply with God and to God”.

Just working in the family business.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: God, prayer, servant, work

Silences

September 30, 2019 By John Deisher

[Spiritual direction} listens to the Silences between the spoken Sounds.”

— Eugene Peterson
“[Spiritual direction} listens to the Silences between the spoken Sounds.” — Eugene Peterson

Photo by Hannah Donze on Unsplash

It isn’t hard to find places of silence.

What is hard is finding the desire to be in those places.

We fill our lives with the sounds of man…noise that follows us all day. News, social media, music, chats. Sounds that speak to us of our own importance. Sounds that we hope provide answers. Sounds that mask our true fear.

We are fearful of the silences.

In the silences, doubts can now be heard. Words that were used to harm us, shame us, repeat themselves over and over in the silences. In the silences we play over and over again the failures of our lives. We despair.

So we drown our fears in sound.

But, it is in the silences that we also find God. He waits there because he is the answer to those doubts. He is the answer to those fears. He is the one who turns death into resurrected life.

He answers not with words, but with his presence—his presence in the silence with love, acceptance, approval, direction, comfort, patience.

We have to desire to be in the silences and listen. There we will find God.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: direction, God, silence, sound

Craftsmanship

September 26, 2019 By John Deisher

The Christian shoemaker does his duty not by putting little crosses on the shoes, but by making good shoes, because God is interested in good craftsmanship.”

― Martin Luther
“The Christian shoemaker does his duty not by putting little crosses on the shoes, but by making good shoes, because God is interested in good craftsmanship.”
Photo by Nicolas Hoizey on Unsplash

I don’t remember what the project was that I was working on, but I remember my wife’s response when she came to look at it after I said I was finished.

She said, “I think you can do better.”

Better? It worked. Wasn’t that enough?

I was a little angry, a little hurt. I had expected praise because I had finished it.

What I got was, “I think you can do better.”

And she was right.

It was good enough. It worked.

But it was not my best. It was not a display of my craftsmanship. So I started over. I gave it my best.

If you are called by Christ to do what you do, then be God’s craftsman today. 

Make good stuff. Make God stuff.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: craftsman, God, make

Think Deeply

September 25, 2019 By John Deisher

Multitasking is the drive to be more than we are, to control more than we do, to extend our power and our effectiveness. Such practice yields a divided self, with full attention given to nothing.” 

— Walter Brueggemann (Sabbath as Resistance)
"Multitasking is the drive to be more than we are, to control more than we do, to extend our power and our effectiveness. Such practice yields a divided self, with full attention given to nothing."

Photo by @plqml | @feliperizo.co on Unsplash

Think deeply.

I can’t remember who said that to me as a student, but it has stuck with me. I have found I need time and quiet to do that, so I get up early to read, to think.

Think deeply.

If I am reading my Bible, I read my Bible. If I am listening to a podcast, I listen to the podcast. If I am reading, I read. If I am thinking, I think.

But mostly, I listen. I listen for the voice of God.

And I think deeply.

In his book Deep Work”, author Cal Newport wrote, “The key to developing a deep work habit is to move beyond good intentions and add routines and rituals to your working life designed to minimize the amount of your limited willpower necessary to transition into and maintain a state of unbroken concentration.”

Slow down. Be present. Put down the phone. Take off the headphones. Pause and focus.

Listen to God.

Think deeply.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: focus, God, think

The Best

September 24, 2019 By John Deisher

We are not necessarily doubting that God will do the best for us; we are wondering how painful the best will turn out to be.”

— C.S. Lewis
"We are not necessarily doubting that God will do the best for us; we are wondering how painful the best will turn out to be."

I worked in sales at one point in my life. It was in the earlier days of home computers, and people were beginning to want a computer for themselves or their family. These computers were very expensive.

So, they would come to our store. They would ask questions. They would play with the computer and run the software and connect online to AOL or Prodigy. They wanted the best.

At some point, they would ask the question, “What is this going to cost me?”.

They knew they wanted the computer. They knew how helpful it would be — keeping up with their finances, playing games, connecting to the world. They knew that to prepare for the future their children needed access to a computer at home. They knew it was for the best.

We called the question “the pain point”. Was the the pain of paying that much money worth the benefit of owning the computer? Was it worth it to have the best?

Our job as salesmen was to help them see that it was.

But all we could do was wait for them to make a decision — yes or no.

We want God’s best. But, there is a price, a “pain point”.  The Holy Spirit helps us see that paying the price is worth it.

But we have to make the decision — yes or no.

Choose “yes”. God’s best is worth the pain. It is worth the price.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: best, God, pain

Heroes

September 23, 2019 By John Deisher

Fairy tales do not give the child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon.”

— G.K. Chesterton
"Fairy tales do not give the child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for him is a St. George to kill the dragon."

My children used to love VeggieTales. Well, actually, I did, too.

My favorite was Larry. He looked at life differently. He saw it as an adventure. And, he had no use for a hairbrush because he had no hair. I can identify with that.

But my favorite memory of him was when he became LarryBoy. His catch-phrase was simplicity itself. He knew the situation called for someone to do something heroic. So he would declare:

“I am that hero!”. And he was. He was the hero needed for the moment.

We don’t need more problems. We don’t need more things to fear.

We need a hero.

When Peter and John ran to the tomb, they thought they would be the heroes to an unfolding drama. They would catch whoever removed the body of Jesus. (Hat tip here to Eugene Peterson and his great story about this in his book Five Smooth Stones for Pastoral Work)

But Jesus didn’t need a hero. He was that hero. He faced that biggest dragon we face, death, and defeated it.

So Peter and John became storytellers. Their story was one where people faced financial problems, sickness, lies, betrayal, even death, and declared that there was a hero for us.

Jesus.

Yes, dragons exist. But so does the dragon killer.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: Chesterton, Christ, hero

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