MARTHA VANCISE

Writing for 21st Century Pilgrims

A Fresh Battery

A Fresh Battery

 

The rechargeable batteries for my Nikon camera carried a strong charge for several years, but after a while the batteries would only recharge enough for a couple shots. I finally had to admit, it was time to buy a new expensive battery.


In my young adult years, I heard older people longingly speak about the six-week revivals that changed communities. To me, what I was experiencing and witnessing in my generation was powerful and satisfying. I thrived on ten-day revivals and camp meetings. Now that I’m older I find myself wishing my grandchildren could experience the awe I felt when walking into a camp meeting where we worshiped God with exuberant singing and left spiritually satiated.

Here and there, people still find refreshment in scattered revivals and camp meetings, but these events are increasingly rare. While stadium crusades currently draw crowds in the southern hemisphere, they now have little appeal to North Americans or Europeans. Some methods of communicating Christ no longer carry the power that they did in the past. It’s time to ask ourselves, “Should we keep trying to go back and revive what served one generation well but carries a weak signal to a  rising generation?”

Charles Cowman, co-founder of OMS* said, “Find God’s plan for your generation and get in line with it.” Where and how is God changing lives in the rising generation?  We must ask that God reload our lives with a new vision – the vision he has for the rising generation. We must ask how to encourage and support those who are battling evil that never entered our mind or imagination when we were young. God’s plan continues through all generations but each generation must embrace a fresh vision of God and his plan for their generation.

Fresh visions are costly. They come through prayer, the study of God’s Word, fasting, cultural awareness, a concern for those who have never known God’s forgiveness, and encouragement for those who struggle in their walk with God. Fresh visions come through a willingness to set aside our familiar, comfortable way of thinking and allow God to show us his ever-unfolding plan.

Martha Hawn VanCise©

* (Formerly Oriental Missionary Society, now One Mission Society)

Christ in YOU?

Christ in YOU?

When the virgin Mary said, “May it be to me as you have said,” she submitted to the Spirit’s formation of the Christ child within her body. She knew that allowing Christ to be formed in her could result in divorce or possibly stoning. Nevertheless, she trusted the Lord to handle the uncertainties of what lay ahead.

 Several years later, the  Apostle Paul pleaded with the Galatians to allow Christ to be formed in their hearts. His concern for them was so intense that he said, “I am again in the pains of childbirth until Christ is formed in you.” He did not downplay the price of Christ being formed in his life but said, “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me.”

The cost of bearing the Christ-life has never been higher in many countries. During the last century, more Christians have died for their faith than all the past Christian martyrs together.

For most of us, though, allowing the Christ-life to govern our steps may never bring physical death, but each day more stones are lobbed our way with the intention of destroying our faith in Jesus Christ. Court rulings, the news media, cultural correctness advocates, the entertainment industry, and the educational system from Pre-K through post-graduate programs pelt believers in Christ with sneers and contempt.

As we consider Mary’s “May it be …”
Let us examine  our own faith
Let us each renew our “May it be –  May Christ be formed in ME!

To them, God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. (Colossians 1:27)

I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. (Ephesians 3:16-17)

Martha Hawn VanCise©

Right Now!

Right Now!

I find it hard, Lord, to watch you sleep in the boat
While winds rip,
Waves swamp,
And I’m flung about by unexpected course changes.

I’m clinging to promises, but…
Terrified that trust might slip my grip.
I know the boat won’t go down with you in it, but..
Right now I would rather that you DID SOMETHING!

I would really appreciate it, if you would
put a stop to this
Right Now!!

Martha Hawn VanCise©
Photo: Public Domain

Abandoned Projects

Abandoned Projects

Abandoned NGO (non-government organizations) projects dot Haiti. In the past, individuals and churches started emotion-based projects to help the needy. When funding and zeal shrunk, though, they walked away leaving only a skeleton of their dreams.

***

In recent years Jeremiah’s words, “For I know the plans I have for you … plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future,”  have become a motto for many Christians. Emblazoned on wall hangings, cards, and memories, the words remind us that “God has an exciting, wonderful plan for us!”

As we continue on our Christian journey, though, the blessings we expected from God may not materialize. No matter our age or length of walk with God, we may at times wonder if God has abandoned plans to give us a productive future.

When David hid in wilderness caves he must have occasionally wondered if God had abandoned the plans to make him king. Later in life, King David reigned over Israel, but he continued to face adversaries who challenged the God-given purpose of his life. While David trusted God to fulfill his purpose he still cried out, “Do not abandon the works of your hands.” (Psalm 138:8)

No matter our age or where we are on our spiritual walk, there will be pauses in our lives—times when useless weeds seem to be the only thing that appears on the project site of our life. We may long to see more progress in God’s plan. As we age, we may look at the edifice of our lives and wonder if God has rolled up the blueprints for our lives and left us alone with our memories.

GOD IS NEVER FINISHED WITH US

God will not abandon the project he has started in our lives. He will finish what he has started.

There has never been the slightest doubt in my mind that the God who started this great work in you would keep at it and bring it to a flourishing finish on the very day Christ Jesus appears.
(The Message – Philippians 1:6)
The Lord will fulfill his purpose for me; your love, O Lord, endures forever —do not abandon the works of your hands. (Psalm 138:8)

Martha Hawn VanCise©

Golden Apples

Golden Apples

 

 

I often post signs from writers who have encouraged and guided me in my walk with God.  Some means of inspiration, however, have come from people who have never written a book.

These people have left memorable comments in some off-the-beaten-track setting. Some have passed on and others may have forgotten the words they spoke, but I have treasured these “aptly spoken words” for 10, 20, even 60 years.

Some people’s hearts are better than their theology. Leslie Wilcox

Things may be black and white for me but I have to allow for gray in other people’s lives. A missionary in Haiti

Some trials in life knock the fluff right off your faith. Cheri Santiago

 God doesn’t tease. Lena Price

I know more than I understand. Daniel Frost

I don’t pray that God will lighten the burden but that he will broaden and strengthen my shoulders. Spoken by Marie Ditto in a prayer meeting when I was a small child.

How good is a timely word. …  A word aptly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of silver. Proverbs 15:23: 25:11

 

Martha Hawn VanCise©
Photo: TrengoveStudios.com