Sunday, August 25, 2013

The Mystery of Prayer



“And all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” –Matthew 21:22

I cannot explain the mystery
Of lifting hearts in prayer:
But this I know with assurance:
God hears and answers there

From His infinite dimensions
Where He dwells in power supreme,
And we approach Him on His throne
With faith our foremost theme.

“Ask and you will receive,”*
Boldly He sets prayer’s estate.
“Seek and you shall find,”*
And with seeking learn to wait.

“Knock and it shall be opened,”*
To vistas yet unknown!
What privileges beyond  reckoning
Prayer holds for God’s very own!

What things we ask in prayer,**
We ask in faith, believing;
And when the time is right
God grants we’ll be receiving.

A warning comes, “Ask not amiss,”***
To satisfy selfish desires,
But ever seeking the will of God,
To this aim true prayer aspires.

                -Ethelene Dyer Jones

*Matthew 7:7:  Ask and it shall be given you; seek and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you:  For every one that asketh receiveth; and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.”
**Matthew 21:22: “And all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.”
***James 4:3: “Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts.”

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Dealing with Conflict



“For if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you, but if you do not forgive others their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.” –Matthew 6:14-15 (ESV.

In human relationships, conflict is bound to occur.  This applies in many situations.  Marital conflicts bring disagreements or quarrels between husband and wife.  Children and parents disagree, on discipline, on directions a child may want to go that parents think will bring unwanted consequences.  In the workplace, jealousies or disagreements set people at odds.  In church life, “one side” disagrees with “the other side” about the work and mission of the church.  Wherever the conflict, it causes ill will and hard feelings, broken relationships.

Jesus was well aware that such conflicts are a part of human interaction.  He put it quite well on an understandable ratio:  “forgive others so your heavenly Father will forgive you.”  Because of our human nature, forgiveness is not always easy to accomplish.  A conflict arises between a mother and a daughter, a father and a son, parents and children.  The mother, father—those parents—might pray earnestly for the child whom they know is at odds with them.  The rift continues.  Sweet fellowship has been broken.

A wise observer of human relationships once said:  “You can spend the rest of your life praying for someone to change, but if unforgiveness is in your heart, God cannot answer your prayers.”  (in Allen, Lucile, comp.  Time Out for the Spirit.  Carmel, NY:  Guideposts, 2007, p. 188).  A mother had prayed long and hard about a conflict she was having with her daughter.  The friend’s word of advice made her realize she had not really forgiven her daughter, and until she was able to do so, the conflict would continue. The rift was mended with her determination to forgive her daughter and also telling her so.  A sweet relationship was restored.

Whatever you area of conflict, examine your willingness to forgive.  Know that there is a direct relationship between God’s forgiving us our trespasses as we are willing to forgive those who have trespassed against us.  Forgiveness brings not only relief of mind but it restores fellowship.

Prayer:  Today, Lord, let me examine relationships.  Where forgiveness is needed, give me the grace to forgive so that I may know the joy of restored fellowship with the offended person and with You.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.  –Ethelene Dyer Jones  08.18.2013.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Recognizing God’s Claim on My Life



“Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:  Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you:  and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world.  Amen.” –Matthew 28;19-20 (KJV).

I remember the time and place and my decision made there as a milestone and a very important affirmation in my spiritual life decisions.  The first had occurred when I was a child of nine and accepted Christ as my Savior in a summer revival at Choestoe Baptist Church, where I had been spiritually nurtured and taught to that point.  Another highlight came at Camp Pinnacle at Clayton, Georgia in the summer of 1948 (August) at a camp for what we then called Young Woman’s Auxiliary members, a missions group sponsored by Woman’s Missionary Union.  I was there because I had been chosen by my peers and faculty advisor to be president of the College YWA at Truett McConnell College for the year 1948-1949.  We were at Camp Pinnacle to get inspiration and direction for our leadership roles in the coming year.  Added to the training were periods of inspiration when we were challenged to make a real difference and consider God’s claim on the direction of our life.

Miss Sarah Stephens, Youth Director for Georgia Woman’s Missionary Union at that time was our major leader for the encampment.  It was our last night.  We were gathered by the lake at Camp Pinnacle.  Miss Stephens, an excellent and challenging speaker, had made clear the needs of the world—far away and close at hand—and had given each of us a candle attached to a piece of wood.  If we would sincerely seek God’s claim on our life and follow His leadership, even if it meant going as a foreign missionary, we were invited to put our candle afloat on the Camp Pinnacle Lake and watch as they all floated out on the current, giving light in the darkness that surrounded us.  With great seriousness and a prayer in my heart, I dedicated my life to God’s purpose for it.  I was sincerely seeking to stay attuned and follow His leadership.  At that time, I could imagine getting prepared to go to some far-away land and take the good news of Jesus Christ to those who had not heard it before.

In the years immediately following, I did not lose sight of the candles on the water and the challenge through Miss Stephens from God that He had a claim on my life.  The great commission, as Matthew 28:19-20 is known, became a very vital part of my belief and followship pattern.  Step by step, from that point in the summer of 1948, God opened opportunities and challenges for more education, for directions my service should go.  As it turned out, the greater part of my working life was spent as a teacher and as the wife of a minister and director of missions in the mountain area—not far from the very geographic area where I grew up.  The vision of far-away lands and the needs there did not ever go out of my vision and my mind, but I was to be one of those who, as a noted missionary observed, “held the ropes” as others “descended into the mines.”  I was to challenge, teach, lead and counsel those of the mountain area to be aware that missions does not have a particular geography—but outreach and helping persons find God’s will and way can be at home or abroad.  Each area is important.  Wherever one is led are people who need to hear God’s Word and be challenged.

A lighted candle, mine, joined by several other lighted candles put afloat by those who were listening to a challenge to serve became a high point in my spiritual decision-making.  In the years since, I have been reminded again and again of the promise I made to God in the summer of 1948.  That decision remained with me and made a significant difference in my life and service to Him.  –Ethelene Dyer Jones  08.11.2013.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

When Severe Illness and Death Come




“Do not be anxious for anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God.” –Philippians 4:6 (ESV).

     I could have been younger than eight when I first experienced death of someone dear to me. But I remember several dear kin with serious illnesses that ended in death from the time I was eight and onward.  My first impression of a death that touched me deeply was that of my Great Uncle Dallas, my mother’s uncle, in 1938.  He was a kindly gentleman, wise and interesting to listen to as he told of life as it had been when he was young.  My family liked to visit him.  He became very ill, and although we prayed for him, we got the word of his death.  My mother went to help her cousin Aria, Uncle Dallas’s daughter, make all the arrangements for the “laying out” of the corpse and preparations for the funeral, including cooking for the large crowd of relatives that came from near and far.  My father helped Moody, Aria’s husband, make the homemade casket in which to bury Great Uncle Dallas.  As a young child of eight, observing all this activity at that mountain home, I became aware that, even though the people were sad, they set about the tasks before them with resolve and stoicism.  They seemed to find comfort in talking about the good life of faith Great Uncle Dallas had lived.  Very early, at age eight, I learned of belief and a very important adage that my Christian relatives lived by:  “Thanksgiving is the antidote to worry and grief.”
     Later that same year we learned that my Aunt India, my mother’s older sister, had cancer.  Although Grandfather took her to Downey’s Hospital in far-away Gainesville for help, the doctors at that time did not have adequate treatment for invasive cancer.  She lived a few months, in great pain much of the time.  She died on April 2, 1939, a little more than a month before I turned nine.  I was especially sad at her passing, for she had taught me already how to embroider, and helped me to make a “Dutch Doll” quilt top.  Poor as my beginning stitches were, and as much as I yet had to learn about sewing, Aunt India was a mentor to me.  I was bereft at her passing and wondered how I would ever overcome my grief at such a young age.  But I learned to remember Aunt India’s smile, her words of encouragement, the patience and devotion she extended to me.  I learned to give thanks for the loving life of this “old maid” aunt, sister of my mother, who had loved me unconditionally.
     The next death that affected me greatly came when I was eleven years old.  On December 17, 1941, shortly after Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, and the United States declared and entered World II.  My brother Eugene and cousins Clyde and others had volunteered to go into the Army Air Force.  Clyde, who had a car, came to tell us that Grandfather, who had also suffered with dread cancer for several months, had died.  When I saw Clyde’s car approaching our house, I knew that he was bringing news of Grandpa’s death.  Again I had to remember that “Thanksgiving is the antidote to worry and grief.”  During the time of Grandpa’s wake and funeral, I was just one of many of his young grandchildren and other relatives who heard accolades of his life.  Many talked of the good and progressive farmer he was, ahead of his time in progress by installing a Delco power plant to provide electricity for his mountain home; running a country store at which he allowed poor people to have things on credit and loaned money to those in dire financial straits;  having at mill and sawmill at which people ground their corn and sawed logs into lumber; of how well he represented his county as a state legislator.  Grandpa was gone, but his influence and memory lingered on.
     Then came that Valentine’s Day in 1945, with my brother Eugene wounded somewhere in an Army Hospital in Italy, and my mother very ill at our Choestoe home.   I was fourteen when my mother died.  This death was definitely the most devastating I had experienced so far.  Overnight, I grew from a young teenager of fourteen to an adult with more responsibility than my young years could seem to bear.  Since nine I had been a Christian, and already I had developed a strong faith, thanks to good teachers and good Christian examples.  Philippians 4:6 had gratefully become one of my life verses.  At my dear mother’s funeral, our pastor, Rev. Claude Boynton, read and expounded upon Proverbs 31:10-31 as a summary of my mother’s exemplary life.  At that point, sad as I was, I gave thanks for having a godly mother and determined that when I should come to the end of my own life, I would have lived, with God’s help, to be worthy of having the same scripture passage read at my funeral.
     Perhaps this “Insights and Inspiration” piece has been too sad, too personal.  My intention is for it to represent victory, the joy of living an overcoming life, of being able to release anxiety and adopt thanksgiving as a way of life.  A dear younger friend recently wrote, “My tears became prayers that only God could understand and answer.”  What joy can come, even in grief, if we but allow God’s power to shine through.  –Ethelene Dyer Jones  08.04.2013.