Your Open Word e-Devotional for September 27th

Published: Sun, 09/27/15

Image




Hello ,


Kyle Idleman shares the following:  


When I started a new church in Los Angeles County, California, I found that I was overwhelmed with pressure and stress. I was working more than seventy hours a week. My wife would ask me to take a day off, and I would say, "I can't." I wasn't sleeping at night, and I started to take sleeping pills. When the church was about a year old, I woke up in the night, and I had this strange sense that God was laughing at me. As I lay in bed, I wondered, Why is God laughing at me?


It would take five years before I finally got an answer to that question. Here's how it happened: when we moved into our current house, I saved the heaviest piece of furniture for last-the desk from my office. As I was pushing and pulling the desk with all my might, my four-year-old son came over and asked if he could help. So together we started sliding it across the floor. He was pushing and grunting as we inched our way along. After a few minutes, my son stopped pushing, looked up at me, and said, "Dad, you're in my way." And then he tried to push the desk by himself. Of course it didn't budge. Then I realized that he thought he was actually doing all the work, instead of me. I couldn't help but laugh.


The moment I started laughing at my son's comment, I recalled that middle-of-the-night incident and I realized why God was laughing at me. I thought I was pushing the desk. I know that's ridiculous, but instead of recognizing God's power and strength, I started to think it all depended on me.*


When we begin to take our eyes off the only One who can help us to change, and put them on ourselves, and our ability to change, we will always come to crisis of belief...and we should!  Only God can provide what we need that will help us be all that He wants us to be.  Only through His power can we ever hope to be victorious.



Have a great day and God bless!




Pastor Mike / The Open Word 
















































































* Adapted from Kyle Idleman, Not a Fan (Zondervan, 2011), pp. 96-97
Share: Facebook Twitter Google+ LinkedIn StumbleUpon