The GatheringPB Blog

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Have Courage

Do not look forward to what might happen tomorrow;
the same Everlating Father who cares for you today will take care for you
tomorrow and every day.
Either He will shield you from suffering or he will give you unfailing strength to bear it. Be at peace, then and put aside all anxious thoughts and imaginations.

 


Henry van Dyke said: Time is too swift for those who fear, too long for those who
grieve, too short for those who rejoice, but for those who love
-- time is eternity.

   

 I share this with you...written by Roy Lessin

The Heart of a Father

"See how very much our heavenly Father loves us, for He allows us to be called His children, and we really are!..." I JOHN 3:1 NLT

The heart of a father is found in the heart of God. In order for a man to be the kind of father that his children need, a man must understand what kind of a father God is to his children. Here are four important areas to consider:

1. Leadership

Children need leadership. A father has been called by God to instruct his child, point his child to the path of life, and show his child how to walk upon it. A father is a child's spiritual leader. From a father's lips, a child needs to hear wise words and wise counsel; from a father's steps, a child needs to see the importance of wise choices and good decisions; from a father's love, a child needs to discover his purpose, his identity, and his true worth.

A Dad is respected because he gives his children leadership.


2. Care

Children are very needy people. Every child needs to be cared for and have his or her basic needs met. A father has been given the main responsibility of caring for and providing for his children. A man's work is a God given way for a father to care for his family. No work is small or insignificant in the eyes of God. A man's work is honorable and is a doorway through which a father helps to express his love and care for his children in practical ways.

A Dad is appreciated because he gives his children care.

3. Time

Every child has a need to spend time with his father. Being a father is about being together with your child to share life's joys and God's blessings. Every moment a father spends with his child is another opportunity for good to happen in a child's life. A father needs to value and guard his time with his children. Time is a precious gift that a father can give his children and it will have far greater value than any material gift he could ever buy for them.

A Dad is valued because he gives his children time.

4. Himself

Even greater than a father giving his child the gift of time is when a father gives his child the gift of himself. When a father gives the gift of himself, he is saying to his child, "I am not only spending this time with you, but you have my complete attention. My eyes are upon you, my watch-care is over you, my thoughts are with you, and my love is around you. When God spoke to Abram, God gave him this precious promise, " ‘...Fear not, Abram: I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great reward.' " GENESIS 15:1 KJV

A Dad is loved because he gives his children the one thing they treasure most-himself.


In CRAZY LOVE Francis Chan in Chapter Five....Serving Leftovers to a Holy God...speaks of lukewarm as in Revelation 3. He states..."as I see it, a lukewarm Christian is an oxymoron"...what do you think? Certainly deserves reflection time.

CRAZY Love

Posted by: Coach Schue in intimacy with Goddisciple mencrazy love on

I, like many, are reading Francis Chan's CRAZY LOVE-overwhelmed by a relentless God. I am using it as a basis for a discipleship study Palm Beach Cardinal players.

Jeremiah 1...verse 5 

 5 "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
       before you were born I set you apart;
       I appointed you as a prophet to the nations."

As Francis says "In other words, God knew me before he made me."

I am reflecting on those words...He knew me even before I was born and he has the desire to know me today and for me to KNOW Him and the JOY that comes from that relationship. What an invitation! Intimacy with my dad. Can it get any better?.........I am planning on it!




Easter Children

Posted by: Coach Schue in Untagged  on

 

With Easter Sunday behind us we now live as "Easter Children".......we are in the season of Easter until Pentecost.

In the Christian church year, the two major cycles of seasons, Christmas and Easter, are far more than a single day of observance. Like Christmas, Easter itself is a period of time rather than just a day. It is actually a seven-week season of the church year called Eastertide, the Great Fifty Days that begins at sundown the evening before Easter Sunday (the Easter Vigil) and lasts for six more Sundays until Pentecost Sunday (some traditions use the term Pentecost to include these Fifty Days between Easter and Pentecost Sunday). These seven Sundays are called the Sundays of Easter, climaxing on the seventh Sunday, the Sunday before Pentecost Sunday.  This is often celebrated as Ascension Day (actually the 40th day after Easter Sunday, which always falls on Thursday, but in churches that do not have daily services it is usually observed the following Sunday). Ascension Day marks not only the resurrection of Jesus from the dead, but his exaltation from servanthood to Ruler and Lord as the fitting climax of Resurrection Day (Eph 1:20-22).

These special days and seasons are a means to shape sacred time, a structure in which to define what it means to be Christian and to call God’s people to reverent and faithful response to God. Easter encompasses a time of preparation (Lent; Advent for Christmas) as well as a following period of reflection on its significance for the life of God’s people (Pentecost; Epiphany for Christmas). However, while Epiphany following Christmas focuses on the mission of God’s people to the world, the Pentecost season following Easter focuses on the church as the witness to the resurrection.

So may we all Live the Life We Represent!


Six Hours One Friday

Posted by: Coach Schue in Untagged  on


Following Jesus

Posted by: Coach Schue in Untagged  on