Sunday, April 8, 2012
April 8, 2012 - Rev. Ken Dunnington
Saturday, April 7, 2012
April 7, 2012 - Greg Shipley
Friday, April 6, 2012
April 6, 2012 - Greg Shipley
January 19, 2009 was a day that changed my life forever. My wife, Lori and I had just entered into a new chapter in our lives. Our daughter, Karen had married a wonderful man in September and I had just retired from Montgomery County after 35 years of service. We had planned our first winter vacation to the Caribbean since my job did not allow out of state travel.
The day started off like most, Lori got up early to go to the gym and then off to work. I had decided to take a couple of months off before looking for a part time job or doing volunteer work. She called me before lunch to say she was going to Hagerstown for a meeting and wondered where the snow came from since the weather man hadn’t forecast any. I made a couple disparaging remarks about weathermen, told her I loved her and would see her at dinnertime. Around three o’clock the door bell rang and there were two state policemen asking if they could come in. These were the first of many angels that began to take care of me. Of course, I could have never imagined the news they were bringing me. I think I only heard every other word, “50 vehicle accident, blinding snow squall, tractor trailer, is Lori Shipley your wife?” The troopers were compassionate and professional, offering to stay with me, make phone calls or anything I needed. I made the calls I was able to make and then waited. My parents arrived and some of my other family came to help me, my Calvary Church Family.
Over the next few hours all of Lori’s family and mine arrived, but my Calvary Church Family just kept coming and coming. It was dark, it was cold, it was wet, and the evening wore on but it didn’t matter; God’s angels kept coming. They did everything; made phone calls, brought food, gave hugs, shared tears… you name it. A couple of them were a thousand miles away and within twelve hours they were hugging Karen and I.
This was only the beginning; Calvary was there for us at every turn. No matter what I needed someone was there to reach out and help. This did not end after a few days, not after the memorial service, not after a month, not even after a year. When Karen announced she was pregnant, I knew the twins were going to have more ‘Grandmas, Aunts and Uncles’ than we could imagine. I find it very easy to get caught up in details at church like taking care of the facility, budget problems, new programs etc., but when your church family lifts you from despair and carries you; it is like no other feeling in the world. This experience has taught me the real power and value of having a church family.
Prayer: Lord, we mourn for Lori, who set an example for us in her prayers, her presence, her gifts, her service, and her witness. We are thankful for our church family, which she did so much to build, that blesses us with comfort in your name. Amen.
Prayer concern: those who mourn.
April 5, 2012 - Pat Herber
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
April 4, 2012 - Becky Kile
Wednesday, September 24, 1986, was a day that changed my life, perhaps more than any other. Coming off the tennis court, I was told that my husband, John, had called and left a message for me to come right home. Racing through my mind were possible reasons that had made this imperative – it must be something terribly wrong for him to have left that urgent message. I thought of our three children and of other family members. What could be going on?
Arriving home I learned that the older of my two brothers was dead, having taken his own life. I’ll never forget the feeling of disbelief. This could not have happened – not Bill. He was the strong capable one – the person who had the physical and personal magnetism to make everyone look up to him and want to be around him. How could this have happened to him? It was outside the realm of the possible in the world, as I had known it.
My co-workers wrote substitute lesson plans. My church family and other friends cooked, visited, and called to let us know we weren’t alone. I joined a group at Hospice with others who had experienced a suicide of family members. There was no way to make sense of it or to rationalize it – Bill was always the fearless sibling who could do anything. Although I was two years older, it was he who taught me to ride a bike and to swim.
Being with John, my sister, my other brother, my dad, my children and Bill’s son and daughter helped me gradually accept that we could draw strength from each other and try to adjust to the emptiness Bill’s death left. Gradually, God’s quiet voice told me that yes; life would be different, less joyous for now. God was my strength and support. For Bill’s children and my own, I needed to get through the nightmares and empty days. God was there when I called on Him, empowering me to go on. His reassurance made it possible to acknowledge that time would bring a kind of healing that I had never needed before, even though I had experienced the death of a parent and grandparents. Twenty six years later I thank God that I had His “still small voice” through this time that changed my life.
Prayer: Lord, we thank you for the times you answer our prayers with strength and encouragement. Amen.
Prayer Concern: families affected by suicide.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
April 3, 2012 - Dave Adams
Monday, April 2, 2012
April 2, 2012 - Lindsey Howard
Sunday, April 1, 2012
April 1, 2012 - Jenn Duthoy
Saturday, March 31, 2012
March 31, 2012 - Grace Dobson
Friday, March 30, 2012
March 30, 2012 - Chuck Kinsley
Thursday, March 29, 2012
March 29, 2012 - Rev. Harry C. Cole
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
March 28, 2012 - Bobbie Parsons
When we visited our eldest daughter when she lived on Long Island and we traveled on the Long Island Expressway, I was always grateful I did not have to do the driving because of the heavy traffic and aggressive drivers. But the time came when our son-in-law was seriously ill in the hospital. His family came from Oregon and I went to help out. One day several family members needed to be taken to the Islip airport in rush hour on the Expressway. My purpose in being there was to support our daughter so I knew I was the one to volunteer to take them; although I felt very anxious, especially with my 4 year old grandson in the car.
As we got in the car I prayed, "Father God, I can't do this alone. I need you to drive this car." A second later I heard a voice in my head say very clearly, "Bobbie, you only have to drive one block at a time." That is what I did and all went well.
That experience reinforced my understanding that in difficult times, instead of relying on myself, if I turn to God and put my trust in Him, God will give me that extra dose of energy, courage and wisdom to carry me through.
Prayer: Father God, thank you for the energy, courage, and wisdom you provide us in times of need. Help us to remember that, when we feel we need help, we can always rely on you.
Prayer Concern: Travelers.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
March 27, 2012 - Angela Mayer
Monday, March 26, 2012
March 26, 2012 - Desiree Baker
Sunday, March 25, 2012
March 25, 2012 - Isam Ballenger
Housekeeping notes
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
March 20, 2012 - a Samaritan woman
Monday, March 19, 2012
March 19, 2012 - Jonah
Sunday, March 18, 2012
March 18, 2012 - Paul
Housekeeping Notes
Saturday, March 17, 2012
March 17, 2012 - Becky Bostian
Friday, March 16, 2012
March 16, 2012 - Chuck Colson, part two
It is Pride which has been the chief cause of misery in every nation and every family since the world began. Other vices may sometimes bring people together: you may find good fellowship and jokes and friendliness among drunken people or unchaste people. But Pride always means enmity -- it is enmity. And not only enmity between man and man, but enmity to God. ...In God you come up against something which is in every respect immeasurably superior to yourself. Unless you know God as that -- and therefore know yourself as nothing in comparison -- you do not know God at all. As long as you are proud you cannot know God. A proud man is always looking down on things and people: and of course as long as you are looking down, you cannot see something that is above you.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
March 15, 2012 - Chris Auth
I have only told a very few about the entirely of these events, but I have been thinking about them a lot lately, as if something, or someone, has been encouraging me to share even more. Perhaps I have held the story close out of fear of embarrassment, of not being believed, of the haze of memories after all of the years, or quite simply being accused of making it all up. When the call to write these events came, I could only imagine that the hands of fate, or coincidence, or God was tapping me on the shoulder once again, saying “Don’t be selfish and keep this to yourself – it is ok to share.”
I suppose the day that changes your life should be momentous with horns and trumpets blaring, but, my day began just like any other except for an extreme amount of bodily, physical pain. Understanding what the day meant to me requires a bit of scene setting…
As a 20 year old college junior, you figure you have your life in front of you and that anything is insurmountable. Well, to be quite honest those October weeks of 1990 was about all I could handle.
It began innocently enough on a Monday, with class all day and football practice in the afternoon. But, by the end of the day, something was not quite right with my stomach. I had come down with some type of bug and I couldn’t shake it. Tuesday was the same class and practice routine. However, by Wednesday I could not even get out of bed to go to class, and did not make practice either. This was quite unusual for me, as class was something that I rarely, if ever, missed. Then to miss practice on top of it was a sign to those around me that I must really be sick. A trip to the infirmary yielded what I expected, a diagnosis of some type of flu/infection/cold and treatment of rest, liquids, etc.
I desperately tried to get back to “normal” on Thursday and Friday as that weekend was parent’s weekend at school and my family was coming to visit and watch the football game on Saturday. I was determined to be ready for the visit and the game. My body, unfortunately, had other ideas. There was no normal on those days, just an ever increasing malaise that was unshakeable. It was one of the weirdest feelings I can recall when knowing something deep inside your body was not right and not knowing how to make it so.
My parents arrived on Friday and stopped by my dorm room. My mother, a nurse, took one look at me and pronounced we were going to the doctor immediately. I somehow convinced her that I needed to be at the game the next day and once I agreed to go to the infirmary again, I convinced everyone that I was well enough to travel to the team hotel for our customary night away before Saturday’s game.
That evening was the most miserable I think I have ever been, tossing and turning, laying on the floor and even sitting in the bathtub unable to shake the constantly growing pain in my stomach and in my back. Eventually, I vomited and was relieved because I figured that was what my body had been trying to do all week. I was terrified because I didn’t feel any better, and actually felt worse. This is when I came to grips that something was seriously wrong. I made it through the rest of the night and back to my room to rest before the game – to which of course I still had intentions of going. My only concession was that I decided I would talk to the coach and tell him that I just wasn’t up to playing, but would be on the sidelines in civilian clothes. He agreed.
I managed to make it to the sidelines to cheer on the team, but found myself making several trips back to the locker room, each time getting sick. Somehow I made it to the end of the game and finally relented and agreed to head back to the infirmary to see if something could be done. Once seen, we agreed to go to St. Vincent’s Hospital emergency room right away. A battery of tests indicated that I likely had a ruptured appendix and that it had leaked into my body and created peritonitis, requiring immediate surgery. The gravity of the circumstances sunk in, as had my foolishness for allowing it to go so long prior to getting the correct medial attention. I overheard my mother and the doctors talking that if I had let it go another day, it would actually be life threatening. As it stood, I had taken a simple 45 minute operation and created a several hour ordeal.
Here comes the life changing part…As I was being wheeled to the operating room, my mother was on one side of the stretcher and my dad was on the other looking down at me with both love and worry. I can still remember my mom rubbing my left hand in the same spot over and over. So much so, that I asked her to stop because she had made that area numb.
It was at this time that I took a deep breath, closed my eyes and silently said the words that I still vividly recall, “God, I cannot do this on my own – I am leaving it in your hands. I am scared and need your help. Please let me wake up alive and please care for my family whether I do or I don’t.” At that very instance I felt a rush of wind/air and feeling of fullness enter my body that I had never felt before or since. Almost as immediately, I knew that it was the Holy Spirit filling my body with the love and protection that I had just asked for. I instantly had the most serene sense of calm that I had ever known. I was going to be ok. I looked at my mom and dad, told them so and continued on to the operating room. This entire episode lasted perhaps 30 seconds at most, but it couldn’t have been more timely or powerful.
When I woke up in the recovery room, I looked over and saw my mom sitting in a chair next to me, her eyes closed. Despite the pain I was in, I started to smile, chuckle and cry all at the same time. I was alive and it was validation of the feeling that I had several hours earlier. If I hadn’t known it before, I did now – I had been saved by God through his Holy Spirit and well, I think that is worth a smile, a chuckle and some tears. My mom immediately thought something was wrong, but I told her, “I am just fine and I am going to be ok.”
That day was a watershed for me, because there were so many people who were unbelievably kind to me and my family while I was in the hospital and throughout my recovery. Very rarely in life, do you truly get a chance to know what people think of you, but I can honestly say that I was overwhelmed by the love and kindness and support that I was shown. I can only think that too was the work of the Spirit and I am forever grateful.
That life changing feeling I had on the stretcher that day in October 1990 has never left me, although I do find myself searching for it at times. I wish I could say I have not “fallen down” as a person since that day, but the reality is that I sometimes wish I were a better person and was always a shining example. However, I am ALWAYS steeled by the knowledge and conviction that God and His Spirit do exist and that on that day I was given special insight to Him and myself.
Honoring that, remembering that, and now by sharing that, I hope I stand a little taller, laugh a little louder, act a little kinder, love a little stronger and ultimately feel a little fuller – not of myself, but of the Lord, once again.
Prayer: Lord, at times we must surrender all to your will. We thank you for the people you put in our lives who overwhelm us with love and kindness. Amen.
Prayer Concern: those who need healing.
March 14, 2012 - Chuck Colson
Charles Colson served as Special Counsel to President Richard Nixon from 1969 until 1973, during which he became involved in the Watergate scandal. The story of his experiences in prison and his ministry after his release is fairly well known. This story, from his biography, talks about a day where Colson's conversion began, before his imprisonment.
The story begins in the offices of Raytheon, a defense contractor, which was considering whether to hire Colson's firm after he left the White House in 1973, and before his indictment. Tom Phillips, Raytheon's president, was at the center of a strong internal debate on whether to hire him. Phillips later recalled:
It was a fight between Mr. Practical and Mr. Integrity, and it was creating a major breach within the company. I thought Colson could deliver the results we wanted but I was also nervous that taking him on we might risk getting dragged into the Watergate affair. At the time I was a relatively new Christian. So this breach inside the company came into my prayers every day. Basically I prayed, "Please, God, make Colson go away." I said this many times until one night I thought I heard a voice saying, "No, tell Chuck Colson about me."
Later, Colson and Phillips would meet about the work. Colson had been warned before the meeting that Phillips might talk about religion, but the subject did not come up until Colson asked about it.
"Tom -- uh -- Brainerd tells me that you have become involved in some religious activites," he said.
"Yes, that's true, Chuck. I have accepted Jesus Christ. I have committed my whole life to Him and it has been the most marvelous experience."
For all his fine words, Phillips did not succeed in making his experience sound marvelous. His body language sent all the wrong signals to his guest. "Tom looked very embarrassed and uncomfortable," recalled Colson. "He didn't make eye contact with me. He looked away, gazing up at the clock on the wall. I wasn't impressed." In addition to feeling underwhelmed by Tom Phillip's declaration, Colson was baffled by it, for he had no idea what the words he had just heard really meant.
Colson made his excuses and left. Initially, he did not intend to follow up on this conversation. But the more he reflected on it, the more he became intrigued with what he had seen and heard. The biggest surprise had been the change he noticed in Tom Phillips. The harried, overworked chief executive he remembered from previous encounters had been replaced by a warmer, more radiant, and more serene human being. "There was a new compassion in his eyes and a gentleness in his voice," recalled Colson. At the same time he could not begin to understand how Phillips could possible say his life wasn't worth anything when he was president of the biggest corporation in New England, enjoying a #250,000-a-year salary, big bonuses and stock options, a beautiful home, and a happy family life. Yet there was one point of contact that did touch a raw nerve with Colson. Phillips had spoken of the emptiness of his pre-Christian life. Colson was feeling the pangs of a similar emptiness. The comparison nagged away within him as he returned to Washington. For his part, Tom Phillips had a quiet certainty that his conversation with Colson about religion would soon be resumed. "I was pretty sure he would call," he said. "He may not have known it himself, but to me it was clear that he was both hurting and seeking. So yes, I thought he would get back in touch."
The summer of 1973 was a turbulent time for Colson as the legal problems for him and the Nixon administration mounted. Colson recalled this springtime conversation with Tom Phillips many times over that summer and eventually led Colson to call Tom Phillips. That conversation will be the topic of another devotional.
The text is drawn from Charles Colson: A Life Redeemed by Johnathan Aitken, published by Waterbrook Press in 2005. The book consists of 448 pages and this story appears on pages 192-194.
Prayer: Dear Lord, sometimes it is difficult and awkward when we try to tell your story, but we are thankful that your Spirit prevails in spite of our shortcomings. We ask for your strength and assurance as we work to spread your word in our words and our deeds. Amen.
Prayer Concern: those who bear witness.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
March 13, 2012 - Rev. Dr. Raymond Moreland
Have you ever stood in the muddy waters of the Jordan River in the Holy Land? Well, I have. Mark’s Gospel describes the scene of Jesus standing there as the hands of his cousin, John the Baptist, who pushed him under the waters and raised him to the air again. But in that moment, the New Testament writer says that the heavens were “torn open” and the Holy Spirit descended upon Jesus and a voice proclaimed for all eternity, “This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased.” Here was Jesus’ moment of validation of who he was and the way his and ministry.
After 44 years of ministry I have been privileged to share many moments of validation in the lives of many individuals. Validation is sort like saying, “well done, you are my boy, you are my daughter.” We all need validation; Jesus certainly did and that is why he went to John. But validation of life can come in many ways. While working on my PhD thesis I was privileged to share in the lives of persons living and dying with HIV-AIDS. I recorded their testimony of lives of tremendous physical pain, struggle and death; and I learned the resiliency of their spiritual and faith journey as well.
One experience I shall never forget. A young man named David (which means “beloved one” in Hebrew) was a young person in my youth group in Annapolis. He had been in 21 foster care homes during his life and then he went off to find his way in life. He lived in Colorado and became infected with the virus that causes AIDS. Yet for nearly 20 years he kept in touch with me by phone and letter. I received a call one day from a nurse at the local hospital telling me that David was in a semi-coma condition and was not expected to live. David had given her many weeks before my phone number. She asked me to speak to David. How could I - he was in a coma? But she put the phone next to his ear in the bed and I told David over the phone that I loved him and God loved him no matter what and that he was not just a foster child but a “child of God”. In a few moments, the nurse came back on the line and said that when I began to talk into David’s ear by phone, his eyes opened – he recognized my voice. David needed to know that he was valued by God – that he was loved by God and that nothing could separate him from the love of God. A few hours later, the nurse called to let me know that David had died peaceably. His journey was over – he just needed to know how valuable he was in the eyes of God. Isn’t that what God was saying to Jesus at the Jordan? Isn’t that what God was saying to you and I at the cross – we have been validated by God’s love – and nothing can ever separate us from that love.
Prayer: God, we take comfort in knowing that you love us no matter what. We are thankful for the ways you let us know that we are your children and that you are well pleased with us. Amen.
Prayer Concern: those with HIV and other chronic illness.