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Verse of the Day

A Work Day Prayer
Written by April Gilford   
Wednesday, 24 September 2008 09:18

Lord, give me the strength to get through this day at work.  Help me to focus my mind and my energies on the tasks expected of me.

Let my interactions with others reflect your love and compassion.  When I face difficult people or situations, lend me your wisdom and guide me through.

I place all my worries and distractions in your care and trust that you will keep my family and home safe.

Let my accomplishments be for your glory and not my own.  May the work I do today be with a willing heart and with thanksgiving that you have supplied a way I can provide for myself and my family.

Let me by guided by the Holy Spirit and do all things in Christ's name.

Amen.

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 24 September 2008 09:33 )
 
Children Learn By Imitation
Written by April Gilford   
Sunday, 21 September 2008 22:17

Children learn by imitating the behaviors of the people around them.  Speech is learned by mimicking sounds and then connecting those sounds to objects, people or ideas.  A toddler playing house will reenact events that have happened in her own household.  Our children are, at times, a rather uncomfortable reflection of ourselves.  And just as they learn by imitating us, God's children learn by imitating Him.

To be a child of God means to strive everyday to follow His word and live out his commands.  Christians look to Christ as the example we are to follow.  And just as with our own children, imitating Christ is a process.  In the beginning of our faith walk, we learn to imitate the Lord's Prayer and to recite the Ten Commandments.  My son memorized books from my reading them alound long before he could read them.  Only after he had memorized letters, imitated the sounds I made for each letter, and watched how those letters came together to form words, could he read on his own.  Now, after years of practice, he writes his own stories.

The true point of this lesson is that it is okay to be a Christian and still have questions.  God knows he did not give us clear cut answers to everything.  He did give us a way to learn them, though, through the process of learning by imitation.  As we memorize and begin to apply what we have learned, we discover new truths just like my son writing his own stories. 

God prepares each lesson carefully for us as we do for our kids.  I know that my son can't learn to work algebraic equations before he can perform basic addition, subtraction, muliplication and division.  His brain is not developed enough in kindergarten to understand the abstract formulas of trigonometry or calculus.  But through years of imitation by doing math homework and copying teacher's lessons, he will one day be able to.  

If you have questions about faith, or the Bible, or concepts of Christianity, don't get discouraged.  Keep practicing by imitating Christ.  Even if you don't understand right now, someday soon God will deem you ready and reveal a whole new level of His awesome power and grace and omniscience.         

 

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 21 September 2008 22:42 )
 
Remember, Too, September 12
Written by April Gilford   
Friday, 12 September 2008 07:07

The long-awaited dawn finally appeared the morning after 9/11.  Most of the country had gotten little, if any, sleep.  The Twin Towers lay in mountains of rubble.  The Pentagon smoldered around the collapsed section of the E Ring.  A remote stretch of land in Pennsylvania was scarred and blackened, the debris field barely recognizable as the remains of a passenger jet.  Official information was hard to come by, and no one yet had any accurate count of the number of victims.

We watched and listened in dismay for a word from our President and First Lady.  At that moment, they were the Father and Mother of the United States.  We wanted Mrs. Bush to comfort us, to stand as a quiet pillar of strength as when we were children and looked to our mothers for calm reassurance when frightened.  Like to our own fathers, we longed for President Bush to reaffirm our conviction that what had just happened to us was unacceptable and would be dealt with swiftly and decisively. 

The rising sunlight revealed the black cloud that could be seen from space still hovering over New York.  Weary searchers continued to frantically clamber over concrete and steel, listening for signs of life.  The horror of the day before still left our mouths agape and tears in our eyes.  Then, something began to change in our neighborhoods, towns and cities.

Across the country, diners and delis filled to capacity as people sought the company of others.  Parents, grandparents, siblings and cousins picked up the phone to call one another and say, "I love you."  Co-workers stopped to buy extra doughnuts and coffee to share around the office.  Children were kept home from school just so the family could spend time together.

Anyone with special training in search and rescue or first response was on the way to New York however they could get there.  The nation stood poised for a single word of what was needed at Ground Zero.  Food?  Done!  Clean water?  Done.  First aid kits?  Already boxed and ready to go.  People who had not set foot in a church in years joined prayer vigils, lit candles and tried to send comfort and strength across the miles to those in need.

We waived at one another on the streets because it felt right.  We smiled at every youth because it seemed on that day they were the most precious gifts our country had.  The nation's defense system was at DEFCON 3, and we swelled with pride as every soldier reported to his or her duty station, rigid with the determination that not one more of us would perish at the hands of the enemy. 

We will never forget 9/11 and the price paid by nearly 3,000 people to the terrorists.  We should not forget September 12, 2001, and the fact that we were not terrorized but galvanized.  What changed the morning after the attacks was our perception of ourselves.  We were not Democrat or Republican, rich or poor, gay or straight, black, white or latino.  There was only one word that described us on that day: American.  That word encompassed everything that we were as a nation and as a people.  It meant that each and every one of us mattered. 

 

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Last Updated ( Friday, 12 September 2008 09:34 )
 
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