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John and Kathy Deisher

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Thoughts

The Way of Discipleship

August 23, 2019 By John Deisher

“Discipleship is the process through which we strip away all that impedes the love and mercy and grace of Christ through us to the world.”

Leonard Sweet, “Viral: How Social Networking Is Poised to Ignite Revival”
Discipleship is done together.

Discipleship is not for the faint of heart. It requires us actively joining together with a small group of people and saying, “Hi, my name is John. I’m a sinner saved by grace, and I want that grace to flow through me to others. Help me.”

It is not about studying the Bible, though you do study the Bible.

It is not about times of fellowship, though you do have those times.

It is not about times of prayer, though you do pray.

Discipleship is about open, honest revelations of who we are. It is also about open, honest revelations of how people see us. It is not so that we lead a better, happier life. It is an intentional removing of everything that is not Christ.

Christ’s grace, mercy, and love can then flow through us to a world that is lost.

You can have a coffee club. You can have a prayer group. You can have a Bible study.

Or, you can have discipleship.

(Photo by Tobias Mrzyk on Unsplash)

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts

Choosing Joy

August 22, 2019 By John Deisher

“God save us from gloomy saints!” 

― St. Theresa of Avila
No more gloomy saints.
Photo by Ben White on Unsplash)

Joy is one of the results of a life devoted to Christ. It is on the list that we call the “Fruit of the Spirit” because when we are in Christ, the fruit is what we produce.

Produce.

As in, work to make happen.

Because not every situation brings joy in itself. We often confuse joy and happiness. If something makes us feel good, if it makes us laugh, we feel we have joy.

But joy is the feeling we get when we realize the prospect of possessing what we desire—a relationship with God and sharing that relationship with others. That is why the Fruit of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control—is produced in us as we face life moment by moment. We see each event knowing we already possess our greatest desire. We know we are loved.

And who can be gloomy when they are in love?

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: joy

Labor and Reward

August 21, 2019 By John Deisher

Farmer see the results of his labor
(Photo by Bec Ritchie on Unsplash)

“Our labor here is brief, but the reward is eternal. Do not be disturbed by the clamor of the world, which passes like a shadow. Do not let false delights of a deceptive world deceive you.” 

— St. Clare of Assisi

What legacy will we leave? What will be the result of all that we have done in our life?

In our youth we never ask that question. In our advancing years we may sometimes wonder if we should have.

Our labor is brief. What price we paid, what we endured, what we focused on, all are brief in the scope of eternity. It is a fleeting shadow, a false delight.

But the fruit of that labor is eternal. Good fruit. Bad fruit. No fruit. It is eternal.

How sad to come to the end of life and realize that it was all chasing vanities.

Who cares what is in your wallet. The bigger question is what is in your eternity?

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: eternity, reward, work

God Speaks

August 20, 2019 By John Deisher

“God is speaking. Not God spoke, but God is speaking. He is by His nature continuously articulate. He fills the world with His speaking voice.”

— A. W. Tozer, “The Pursuit of God”
(Photo by Andre Hunter on Unsplash)

One of the goals Kathy and I have set for every student we have ministered too is that they learn to hear the voice of God.

To hear God as they read the Bible.

To hear God as they pray.

To hear God as they walk through campus.

To hear God as they talk with someone.

Because God is always speaking. We have to learn to listen. Most of the time, hearing him is as simple as asking, “So, God, what are you saying?”.

You learn to hear his voice in the still, quiet time of prayer and reflection. Then it becomes easier to hear him in the midst of the noise of the daily routine.

God is speaking.

Listen.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: hear, speak

On Fire

August 15, 2019 By John Deisher

“Be who God meant you to be and you will set the world on fire.” 

St. Catherine of Siena

Just a couple of months ago, high school seniors were treated with a litany of graduation speeches designed to put a period on one part of their life and prepare them for the exclamation point of changing the future by entering college and getting a degree.

Now they are entering college and making one of the most important decisions of their you lives—what to study. And how do they make this momentous decision? Often by applying a decision making model of seeing themselves as their culture sees them.

“I like math, so I’ll study…”.

“I want to be rich, so I’ll study…”.

“I like/dislike kids, so I’ll study…”.

“What (insert name here) does looks cool, so I’ll study…”.

And four (or five or six) years later, degree (and student loan debt) in hand, many go into the workforce and discover that their career choice might have been a mistake.

So what if we spent our lives teaching children and youth to hear the voice of God? What if we taught them to know God as they are known by him? What if we gave them visible teaching moments by introducing them to how their faith and their work come together?

What if we spent less time entertaining them and more time helping them discover who they are in God?

We could probably have a generation that would set the world on fire.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: fire, student, train

Living Gladly

August 14, 2019 By John Deisher

“The greatest honor we can give Almighty God is to live gladly because of the knowledge of his love.” 

— Julian of Norwich

I love mornings. There is a freshness, a newness about them. I watch the sun rise and am always filled with a sense of delight that no two are the same.

I don’t love problems. There is a staleness, a sameness about them. I watch problems come and am always filled with a sense of dread whether no two are the same or whether they all seem the same.

But everyday I am provided both—sunrises and problems.

So, I chose to “live gladly” for the opportunities both bring.

I know God loves me, and in facing my sunrises and problems I have the opportunity to experience that love. It is my choice in how I live.

So I will live gladly.

Sunrises or problems.

Gladly.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: glad, life, love

What’s Wrong With The World

August 13, 2019 By John Deisher

“Dear Sir: Regarding your article ‘What’s Wrong with the World?’ I am. Yours truly,” 

― G.K. Chesterton

G.K. Chesterton may have been on to something. When something doesn’t go right, when a relationship sours, when a plan falls through—I may be what’s wrong.

Not always, but sometimes.

My expectations are not met (but no one knows them). My dreams are unfulfilled (though I have done nothing to advance them).

It may not be “them.” I may need to take a long, hard look at who I am and what I believe…believe about myself, believe about my relationship with God. And then do something about it.

What’s wrong with the world? It might be me.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: problems, world, wrong

A Day of Silence

August 12, 2019 By John Deisher

“In order to pray I have to be paying more attention to God than to what people are saying to me; to God than to my clamoring ego. Usually, for that to happen there must be a deliberate withdrawal from the noise of the day, a disciplined detachment from the insatiable self.” 

― Eugene H. Peterson, The Contemplative Pastor: Returning to the Art of Spiritual Direction

I just returned from our annual Spirit Walk retreat. This is a time to pray and reflect away from the routine of daily life. As a part of the retreat, we have a Day of Silence—12 hours of no talking/no music/no media.

Just a Bible, a journal, and a prayerful awareness of God.

The most common comment after our time of silence is how loud everything sounds, and how hard it is to utter those first words that break the silence (though one of our interns burst into the dining hall loudly greeting everyone with a hearty “Hello, people!”). For some, it is the first time they have been silent for an extended period and left to listen for the voice of God. But, in the silence, their prayers could echo what heard what God is saying to them.

To whom am I listening? If I am surrounded by music, podcasts, meetings, i.e. daily life, all-day everyday, what are all those voices telling me? Where are my prayers? Where is my attention? Where am I finding out who I am?

It may not be possible to have a 12 hour time of silence, but there is time every day for 30 minutes or an hour. Deliberately withdraw from the day. Turn from the noise of the day to the still, small voice of God. Pray in disciplined silence. Let him reveal who you are.

And then loudly greet everyone with “Hello, people!”.

Filed Under: Blog, Thoughts Tagged With: prayer, silence

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