The Journey Home

Sue’s Views
Board games really bring out the true character of a person! There’s the competitive ….. ‘must win at all costs’ type! Then there’s the strategic ….. ‘takes their time before making a move’ type. The aim of the game is to get home! The Israelites journey was something like a board game. They started out well ….. but then they would find themselves back where they started! They won some battles ….. but lost some as well. They had to learn to trust God and not rely on their own strategies. Their goal was to get to the Promised Land which was to be their new Home!

Pass it On

Sue’s Views
We had the privilege of hearing a Word from our founding Pastor David yesterday. One thing I love about our church is that our leadership has been generational. What I mean by that is that each senior Pastor has trained and then handed the baton onto the next senior Pastor ….. who in turn did the same. There has been an incredible flow of leadership which has produced security in the people. A huge part of Moses job was to train Joshua to take the people into the Promised Land. Joshua stayed close to Moses and watched his every move. God assured the people ….. ‘As I was with Moses ….. so shall I be with Joshua.’ Training is such an important role. Those we train will go further than we ever did. That is a successful life!

Moses and the Rock

Sue’s Views
 I’ve always felt sorry for Moses! He led those ungrateful people for 40 years ….. and then God wouldn’t allow him to enter the Promised Land. And it was because one day ….. when the people were complaining about having no water to drink ….. God told him to speak to a rock ….. but in his frustration ….. Moses struck the rock with his rod instead! It seems a minor misdemeanour ….. but God saw it differently. Moses had walked and talked with God all those years so maybe he was held to a higher standard. The more we know ….. the more is required of us. But one thing I’ve come to understand is that Moses had fulfilled his God given purpose ….. and it was someone else’s job to take Israel into Canaan. We must not covet someone else’s blessing. We just need to make sure we do our own the best we can. All the glory must go to God!

Grasshopper Mindset

Sue’s Views
When the spies told the people they’d seen giants in the land God had told them to possess ….. they said ‘ We felt as small as grasshoppers and that is how we must have looked to them!’ Moses reminded them of how God had carried them on His shoulders for 40 years and no harm had come to them. There is no safer place than on Daddy’s (or Pa’s) shoulders! But instead of seeing themselves looking down on the giants ….. they had adopted a ‘grasshopper’ mindset! How you see yourself will determine how others see you. The Israelites had been slaves for 400 years. It has been said that Moses hardest task was not getting them out of Egypt ….. but getting Egypt out of them! How about you? Does your past determine how you see yourself? Can you picture yourself on your Father’s shoulders ….. looking down on your enemies?

Pruned

One night, my husband told our kids a Chinese story at bedtime. It went something like this…

There was a man who lived near a bamboo forest. He liked to walk in the forest, and often cut down some of the bamboo to use for building and other useful purposes. There was one bamboo in the forest that was particularly tall and lovely, and he thought it would be perfect as a pipeline to carry water through. As he approached the bamboo with his knife, the bamboo indignantly said to him “please don't cut me down! That's going to hurt, and anyway I'm too tall and lovely to be cut down!” The man replied, “you are tall and lovely, and that will make you very useful! But you're no use to me unless I cut you down.” The bamboo very much wanted to be useful, but being cut down just seemed far too painful. The man came back the next day, and the next, waiting for the bamboo to give its consent. Finally the bamboo plucked up enough courage and said “Ok, cut me down!” It braced itself for the knife, and as the man cut away, it was indeed very painful. Finally the cutting was finished, and the bamboo breathed a sigh of relief. As he lay recovering from the painful experience, the man said to him, “now we need to cut off all your extra branches. You need to be nice and smooth.” “What?!” said the bamboo, “I thought we were finished! But if you must, go ahead and cut off my branches”. So again the man took his knife to the bamboo and began the painful process of cutting off the branches. It took some time, and the bamboo winced at each branch being removed. Finally the man removed the last branch, and the bamboo breathed a sigh of relief. “I'm sorry, bamboo”, the man said, “but there is still one more thing we need to do, and it will probably be the most painful of all”. The bamboo was upset, but he had learned that the pain was part of the process of becoming useful, so he said “ok, whatever you must do…” The man said “we must hollow you out. We must remove all the obstructions that will stop the water flowing.” As the man knocked out the obstructions one by one, the bamboo began to feel lighter and lighter. Even though it was painful, it also felt good in a way. Finally, the bamboo was hollow and ready to be used. As the man started to allow the water to flow through the bamboo, he could feel it, cool and refreshing. He saw the water going out to the fields to water the plants, and watched as they began to grow and produce food.

I have resisted that knife before. Have you? Who wants to willfully endure pain? 

In John 15, Jesus says “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful.” 
I have watched people prune lovely rose bushes right back to little sticks, and fruit trees with huge lovely branches cut right back… I thought, “why on earth did they do that? It looked lovely, and now it looks terrible!” And yet, the next year, the rose bush was full of lovely new blooms, far more than the year before. The fruit on the fruit tree was big and plump, and there was lots of it! 
I remember the realisation one night that I actually had to make the painful decision and say the words (with a genuine attitude), “you know, you're right…I'm sorry”. I felt the resistance, the desire to self-defend, to shift the blame, deflect… but I felt the pruner standing there quietly saying, “let me prune that away”. It felt like a knife cutting to my heart, like a skillful surgeon's knife taking out a tumour of pride. Ouch! And afterwards… I felt lighter. I felt freer. Perhaps, like that bamboo, I felt the life-giving water flowing through easier… 
How often we want to be that bamboo that stays in the forest. We're happy with how things are there, and we feel safe with our branches and foliage making us look good perhaps, or look flourishing. But as long as we stay there, we're not useful for the many things that need to be done… things that we could not imagine or plan ourselves. We have no purpose, other than for our own gain. But as we slowly allow the pruner to do the pruning, we find that we're much happier being useful than we ever were looking good.

Pass it on!

Sue’s Views 
I am now into the book of Deuteronomy on my journey through the Bible. Deuteronomy means ‘second law’. Why was there a need for a second telling of the Law? Because by this time ….. all those who had come out of Egypt had died during the wilderness wanderings. Apart from 2 men ….. Joshua & Caleb ….. Moses had to teach the Law to a brand new generation. He taught them the history of their ancestors ….. where they had come from ….. how special they were to God ….. and where He was about to take them. Every new generation needs to learn that so they can develop their own faith. What are we passing on to the next generation? A Joshua and Caleb spirit ….. or a fear of the giants?

Are We There Yet?

Sue’s Views
If you have children ….. you have probably heard the question ‘Are we there yet?’ ….. from the back seat! Probably when you are just leaving your street! But imagine going on a journey that lasted 40 years! That’s what happened to the nation of Israel. The amazing thing is that their clothes and shoes didn’t wear out ….. their bodies stayed strong ….. and they lacked nothing! Sometimes ….. journeys can be tiresome ….. but our attitude determines the length of the journey!

Testing

Sue’s Views
Today marks the beginning of a new week ….. a new month ….. and a new season! And yet we are in lockdown again! If you are frustrated ….. spare a thought for the Israelites! They set out on a journey that should have taken 11 days ….. but ended up taking 40 years! Their constant complaining and griping meant that God had to wait until the generation that left Egypt had died in the wilderness. He couldn’t take them into the Promised Land with that attitude. A new season requires a new mindset! What old habits ….. patterns of thinking ….. and bad attitudes need to die before you can enter into the promises of God? The wilderness years were years of testing. We could see this time of lockdown also as a time of testing. Are we going to complain ….. point the finger ….. and act in rebellion? Or are we going to look for the miracles and provision of God along the was! Food for thought!