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In Creative Hands

Tuesday night I made a purse out of loose ends I found around the house. I cut the body out of the legs of black cotton jeans, discarded when I was 40 pounds heavier. The zipper I ripped out of a fanny pack on which “Gold Strike” was embroidered. I don’t know what that phrase means or where it came from, except the back of my closet.

I stiffened the sides with reinforced plastic left over from our old jewelry business sign. The ribbed nylon strap I repurposed from a fleece stadium blanket carrier. I don’t do football. But I do do creativity. I love making new functionality out of useless objects. The purse is just the right size for my wallet, phone, and voice recorder, and the strap is just the right length so the bag is tucked under my arm.

Isn’t that what our creative God does with previously useless pieces of our lives? Those third grade piano lessons? The daydream you had when you were sixteen about piloting an airplane? What about the idea in early adulthood to preach the gospel in the inner city?

Are they really loose ends that God won’t do anything with? Or will God yet use them in unexpected ways? Will he soon sew together previously useless objects into a container that will carry his glory into the world?

Father, you are the master Creator. Help us believe that you will yet mold the useless parts of our lives into patterns that you will fill with your glory. 

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Surprised by Grace

On May 8, I wrote about three extra pounds I needed to lose before I came out to Colorado for the birth of our first grandson.  I just knew I wouldn't be able to resist eating the cookies and chunks of nutty granola treats that had been a downfall on previous visits.

But guess what? God had a different plan.  I lost a pound before I got here and I've lost two pounds here. Who knew I could resist? I had it all figured out–what I needed. But, once again, God showed me his power and grace.

Don't we all have areas where we just know how it's going to be? We know what's going to happen, especially if we don't do what we need to do. If we don't apply for that job a week before the deadline, we can't possibly be hired. We think if we've smoked for fifty years, we'll never quit. Maybe eating is your issue, too, and you just know you'll go to the grave in the body size you are now. You've made your bed and you'll just have to lie in it, just like your Mother always said.

Turns out, though, Moms are not always right. Sometimes God's surprising grace overrides Moms and our own expectations to bless us with a new experience of him.

Holy Spirit, thank you for your fresh manifestation of grace. May every reader be surprised by your gracious power today.

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Wanting What We Don’t Want

In a March, 2001 quote, Christian philosopher Dallas Willard
says, “One of the hardest points to get past in spiritual formation is that in
order for me to be spiritually transformed, I have to want to not want what I now
want.”

I thought of this yesterday when I realized that a part of
me thinks it’s okay not to lose the three pounds I gained on our March vacation.
I thought I was all in agreement about losing. If I don’t eliminate them now, I’ll
gain three more when I go help my daughter with the birth of our first grandchild
in June. Not until yesterday morning, when I stopped and thought more seriously
why my efforts over the last few weeks haven’t been working, did I notice her
hidden in the corner.

Lifting her nose, she said:  “My clothes still fit, my lipid panel numbers
are okay, what’s the problem here?”

I pulled her out into the light: “Oh, no you don’t. If I don’t
lose these pounds now, I’ll gain more in June. I won’t be so mindful of my
eating then. I am not going there.” 

Sometimes, even as Christians, we fully want to disobey in a
particular area. But aren’t we usually of two minds? Part of us wants to do the
right thing; part of us wants what it wants and doesn’t want to change. Part of
us wants to read the Bible, the other part says, “Oh, what’s the use?” Part of
us wants to tithe, the other says, “I need that money myself.” One part says, “Don’t
even look,” while another part says, “Just one glance at that X-rated site won’t
hurt.”

With renewed prayer, I managed to reduce my portions
yesterday. By grace, I’ll do it again today. Jesus is Prince of Peace. He is
the one who exposes and settles our conflicts. Only he gives power to change
our wants.

Lord, we come to you, just as we are, conflicts and
all. Please grow our internal peace and unity.

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