Saturday, September 28, 2019

“My Life Message”

Be ready at all times to answer anyone who asks you to explain the hope you have in you; but do it with gentleness and respect. -1 Peter 3:15b-16 (TEV)

God made you to be a member of His family; a model of His character; a magnifier of His glory; a minister of His grace; and a messenger of His good news to others.” -Rick Warren in The Purpose-Driven Life, p. 295.
God wants to say something to the world through me.” -Warren, ibid. p. 296.

M My life message, uniquely mine,
Y Yielded to God, a gift divine.

L Life’s lessons learned, I gladly share
I Insights and wisdom gained through prayer.
F Finite, this message is to be shared on earth,
E Encouraging others to seek the new birth.

M Message, meant to be shared, to be told,
E Essential for a Christian who must be bold,
S Stating how God has worked in a life,
S Showing how God leads through triumph and strife.
A Always telling the good news again,
G Goal: To get others a new life to begin;
E Expressing gladness as the message goes out;
Helping others to believe and not to doubt.

A Prayer for Sharing My Life Message:
Lord, Make me available to people and their needs.
Rekindle my passion for souls so that I can witness to Jesus’s saving power.
As David of old, I pray: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.
Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation, and uphold me with Thy Spirit.
Then will I teach transgressors Thy ways, and sinners shall be converted unto Thee.”
Yes, Lord, “Renew a right spirit within me.” Amen. (-Psalm 51:10; 12-13)

-Georgianne ETHELENE Dyer Jones
Composed February 6, 2004; revised Septemberr 28, 2019

(After reading Chapter 37, “Sharing Your Life Message” in Rick Warren’s book, THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIF. Nashville: Zondervan, 2002.)

Sunday, June 23, 2019

The Blessing of Peace

For today’s devotional I give you an original poem written in 2010 and revised June 22, 2019. I pray reading the scripture and the poem will bless you. 
 
The Blessing of Peace
The Lord will give strength unto His people; the Lord will bless his people with peace.” -Psalm 29:11 (KJV)

May God give peace to you, my Christian brothers; and love, with faith from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.” -Ephesians 6:22 (TLB)



Today a brand new year
stretches before us like the pages
of an unwritten book.
In our country and in the world
turmoil exists;
there seems to be little peace,
a lack of trust, no rest from trouble,s
and absence of direction and purpose.


Yet within the heart of every child of God
it is possible to have peace, joy, gratitude,
love, hope and vitality.
These are gifts of promise
from the Almighty who orders the universe
and visits every believing heart, saying,
I will give strength to my people;
I will bless my people with peace.”


Peace is not a result of outward circumstances,
although we can be buffeted about by them.
Peace is a gift from God, as is love.
We love because He first loved us.
We have peace because He is the author of peace.
He will assist us to write “Peace” on the pages of our lives.
I know not what this new year holds, and good it is
that I cannot see the pitfalls, challenges ahead.


But these truths I know with assurance:
I walk with God; God walks with me.
In the pathway, with Him leading
there will be, every day and night,
peace, joy, gratitude, love, hope and vitality.
How do I know? Can I count these as reality?
Yes! How can I answer so emphatically?
Because I walk with God and He walks with me.


- Georgianne Ethelene Dyer Jones
(Composed January 10, 2010; revised June 22, 2019)

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Jesus Does All Things Well

And they were astonished beyond measure, saying, ‘He has done all things well. He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak.” – Mark 7:37 (ESV)

In today’s adult Sunday School lesson for those studying from Explore the Bible series (“Mark.” Nashville: Lifeway Press. Spring, 2019. Pp 55-63)), you will recognize the key verse above as our suggested memory verse for today’s lesson. Jesus had just healed a man who was deaf and mute. This miracle happened “on the other side” of the Sea of Galilee, in the Decapolis area (“Decapolis” meaning area of ten cities, occupied mainly by Gentiles). The people themselves became the proclaimers of Jesus’s miracle of healing the deaf/mute man. The Bible tells us, “they were astonished.” Perhaps many in that audience had not seen a miracle of healing like this before. Who was this man who traveled with twelve other men about the area, healing, feeding thousands with a few loaves and fishes, casting out demons? Jesus of Nazareth?
      Jesus and His disciples had been on a trip, seeking to get away from the crowds. Yet people still went to Jesus, wherever He was, to listen to His teachings and to seek His healing.
      He and the disciples had left northern Galilee and traveled to the region of Tyre, northwest of Galilee. Two towns in that Gentile area were Tyre and Sidon, both located on the Mediterranean Sea. At Sidon, a Syro-Phoenecian (Canaanite) woman had approached Jesus, asking that he heal her daughter “possessed with a demon” (see Mark 7:25-30). Although Jesus asked her If she did not know that “the children” (Jews) should be fed first, the woman, showing her understanding, replied, “Lord, even the dogs (Gentiles) under the table eat the children’s (Jews’) crumbs.” Because of her humility and her faith, Jesus healed her daughter. The woman went home to find her daughter peacefully sleeping and healed! Oh, the faith and daring-to-approach-Jesus of this mother who loved and wanted the best for her daughter.
      Then, a long journey, back to the Sea of Galilee, and crossing “to the other side (Gentile territory), Jesus and the disciples are at Decapolis. A man deaf and mute is brought by friends to seek Jesus’ healing. Jesus’ healing of this man is reminiscent of the prophecy of Isaiah in 35:5-6: “Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then shall the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute sing for joy.” Jesus was fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy in their very midst. Did those who were “exuberant” at the deaf/mute man’s healing realize that Jesus was the One Isaiah wrote about hundreds of years before—the promised Messiah?
      On “this side” of Jesus’s death and His sacrifice for our sins, we can truly rejoice, because we know that Jesus indeed is the promised Messiah, the Son of God, our Savior. Like the people who saw the healed man, we can proclaim that He healed us from our sins that separated us from God. “For by grace have you been saved through faith. And that is not your own doing; it is the gift of God; not a result of works, so that no one may boast.” (Ephesians 2:8-9/ ESV). Indeed, the healing of the deaf/mute man was a miracle. But Christ’s forgiving our sins and giving us the status of “Redeemed Child of God” is a miracle, for His GRACE (God’s Redemption at Christ’s Expense) is ours by faith, confession and acceptance! Praise be to God. Jesus, indeed, “has done all things well” in restoring us to God’s favor and giving us purpose for living in this life and eternity beyond this life! Selah! - Ethelene Dyer Jones 04.07.2019.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Jesus Does All Things Well

And they were astonished beyond measure, saying, ‘He has done all things well. He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak.” – Mark 7:37 (ESV)

In today’s adult Sunday School lesson for those studying from Explore the Bible series (“Mark.” Nashville: Lifeway Press. Spring, 2019. Pp 55-63)), you will recognize the key verse above as our suggested memory verse for today’s lesson. Jesus had just healed a man who was deaf and mute. This miracle happened “on the other side” of the Sea of Galilee, in the Decapolis area (“Decapolis” meaning area of ten cities, occupied mainly by Gentiles). The people themselves became the proclaimers of Jesus’s miracle of healing the deaf/mute man. The Bible tells us, “they were astonished.” Perhaps many in that audience had not seen a miracle of healing like this before. Who was this man who traveled with twelve other men about the area, healing, feeding thousands with a few loaves and fishes, casting out demons? Jesus of Nazareth?
     Jesus and His disciples had been on a trip, seeking to get away from the crowds. Yet people still went to Jesus, wherever He was, to listen to His teachings and to seek His healing.
     He and the disciples had left northern Galilee and traveled to the region of Tyre, northwest of Galilee. Two towns in that Gentile area were Tyre and Sidon, both located on the Mediterranean Sea. At Sidon, a Syro-Phoenecian (Canaanite) woman had approached Jesus, asking that he heal her daughter “possessed with a demon” (see Mark 7:25-30). Although Jesus asked her If she did not know that “the children” (Jews) should be fed first, the woman, showing her understanding, replied, “Lord, even the dogs (Gentiles) under the table eat the children’s (Jews’) crumbs.” Because of her humility and her faith, Jesus healed her daughter. The woman went home to find her daughter peacefully sleeping and healed! Oh, the faith and daring-to-approach-Jesus of this mother who loved and wanted the best for her daughter.
     Then, a long journey, back to the Sea of Galilee, and crossing “to the other side (Gentile territory), Jesus and the disciples are at Decapolis. A man deaf and mute is brought by friends to seek Jesus’ healing. Jesus’ healing of this man is reminiscent of the prophecy of Isaiah in 35:5-6: “Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then shall the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute sing for joy.” Jesus was fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy in their very midst. Did those who were “exuberant” at the deaf/mute man’s healing realize that Jesus was the One Isaiah wrote about hundreds of years before—the promised Messiah?
     On “this side” of Jesus’s death and His sacrifice for our sins, we can truly rejoice, because we know that Jesus indeed is the promised Messiah, the Son of God, our Savior. Like the people who saw the healed man, we can proclaim that He healed us from our sins that separated us from God. “For by grace have you been saved through faith. And that is not your own doing; it is the gift of God; not a result of works, so that no one may boast.” (Ephesians 2:8-9/ ESV). Indeed, the healing of the deaf/mute man was a miracle. But Christ’s forgiving our sins and giving us the status of “Redeemed Child of God” is a miracle, for His GRACE (God’s Redemption at Christ’s Expense) is ours by faith, confession and acceptance! Praise be to God. Jesus, indeed, “has done all things well” in restoring us to God’s favor and giving us purpose for living in this life and eternity beyond this life! Selah! - Ethelene Dyer Jones 04.07.2019

Sunday, March 31, 2019

The Disciples, Sent Out to Proclaim “Repent!”

So they went out and proclaimed that people should repent.” (Mark 6:12)

Jesus had been with his twelve chosen disciples for several months since calling them. They had traveled with Jesus during what scholars call his “Galilean Ministry.” They had heard him teach in synagogues, teach by the Sea of Galilee, teach in parables, (a story with a spiritual application) and heard Jesus explain to them more fully what the parable meant and how it applied to the Kingdom of God.
They had seen him still a storm on the Sea of Galilee by simply speaking “Peace! Be Still!” to the winds and the waves. They had seen him heal a paralytic let-down when a piece of the roof of the Galilean house (maybe the disciple Peter’s house?) was removed so the friends of the paralytic could lower him to Jesus’ feet and the man could be healed. And he was healed, miraculously.
They had seen the woman with an issue of blood for twelve years, who merely touched Jesus in the crowd, and he was aware of her touch and healed her. They had gone to Jairus’ house with Jesus because Jairus’ daughter was ill unto death. Before they arrived at Jairus’ house, servants met them and told Jairus that his daughter had already died and he should not “bother” Jesus. Then Jesus told Jairus not to be afraid, but to believe. They proceeded on to the synagogue leader’s house. Jesus asked the mourners to leave, to go outside. Jesus, Jairus and his wife, and Peter, James and John proceeded to where the twelve-year-old girl was already “laid out,” dead, awaiting burial. Jarius, a leader in a synagogue—not a priest but one who could plan synagogue programs and lead them—was hazarding the loss of his job for asking Jesus to help his daughter. That’s because the Pharisees and other religious “rulers” were so opposed to Jesus that they were already planning how they would kill the man Jesus. The religious leaders definitely did not believe He was the Messiah promised hundreds of years before by Isaiah and other of the Hebrew prophets. Animosity was growing against Jesus. But Jesus took the hand of Jairus’ daughter, and told her to arise and walk, and she did. And then Jesus asked that the girl be given something to eat (perhaps addressed to her mother and father).
They had seen Jesus heal the demoniac, casting out “demons” which went into pigs and the pigs drowned themselves in water. People who owned the pigs “on the other side” of the Sea of Galilee from the Hebrew side, did not like that the pigs had died when demons came out of the man, and entered their property—the hogs. But the healed demoniac was “dressed, and in his right mind” and seated among those who next gathered to hear Jesus teach. And in the midst of all this confusion and controversy, Jesus divided the disciples up into six teams, with two disciples on each team, and told them to go without a change of shirt, with no money, no food, but they could wear sandals on their feet and had a staff (like a shepherd’s staff) that might be used as what we call a “walking stick.” They were to stay in the first house that invited them as guests and work out from it throughout the village(s) they entered. And, if people were unkind to them in the towns, as they left, they were to “shake the dust off their sandals” as a testimony against the people there who did not welcome them and receive their message. And what was their main message? “They went out and proclaimed that people should REPENT.” (Mark 6:12. ESV). They also were granted power by Jesus to heal and to cast out demons. But repent? What does it involve? To repent is to recognize sin in one’s life—the fall from God’s grace because of disobedience, wrong-doing, doing one’s own will instead of seeking God’s will. The second step of repentance is being sorry for breaking God’s law, falling from God’s original state of grace for each person. And then repentance further is accepting God’s provision for confession of one’s sins, and depending upon the sacrifice for sin offered by the Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross. In Old Testament times, a flawless lamb, or for poorer people, a dove or other offering was brought to atone for sin. After Jesus sacrifice, He became the bearer of GRACE by which a person is saved. A good way to describe God’s GRACE is: “God’s accepting our Repentance (regret for sin) at Christ’s Expense.” Recall the great revivals held in our youth at our churches when many repented and confessed Christ as Savior, I was one of 23 during revival week in July, 1939, who was saved by my repentance and faith, and baptized to show my burial and death to intentional sin, and rising from the water as a symbol of following Jesus and expecting everlasting life with Him! Selah! - Ethelene Jones. 03.31.2019

Sunday, March 24, 2019

A House in Order

A House in Order

A good name is better than precious ointment,
and the day of death than the day of birth.”
-Ecclesiastes 7:1 (ESV)


If I could know my day of death,
The time when life’s curtain parts,
Would I be more apt for the journey,
Be ready in body and heart?

Or would I rue my days at their end,
No more sunrises, sunsets to see?
Would I want to cling to earth’s dark shore
Instead of crossing to celestial lea?

Have I built here to leave behind
A monument of sorts,
A good name better than costly ointment,
And good deeds of my life’s reports?

I’ll leave these judgments to others,
And especially to the Lord God of hosts
Who will meet me and journey with me
To my place in His heavenly post.

Knowing when to depart is not troublesome,
Nor is its uncertainty a cause for alarms.
For when the Lord is ready for me to go
He will bear me lovingly in His arms.

-Ethelene Dyer Jones
July 10, 2014

I wrote this poem July 10, 2014, over 4 and ½ years ago. We had a saying in the mountains where I grew up (beautiful Choestoe Valley, located on the Nottely River, “between Enotah Bald and Blood mountains, the two highest peaks in Georgia): “Get your house in order; because no one knows the day of his departure from this earth.” It sounds like a gruesome saying, one that makes one very aware of death and departing earthly life. But actually, this adage gives sound advice, because it helps to keep persons “on task.” Good housekeeping was an earmark of a godly woman, the “lady in charge of the household.” She kept the house in order, good food prepared three times a day and served attractively’; her children clean and well dressed and in school, and. To emphasize again: “her house in order.” This is good spiritual advice, too, for we ought also to keep “confessed up,” “jobs done up,” and ”attuned to the Lord God” who made us and who will call us to our heavenly home when our work on earth is finished. Is your house in order? Are you ready to “meet the Lord” in glory? Food for spiritual thought. - Ethelene Dyer Jones. March 24, 2019

Sunday, February 3, 2019

The Scriptures, Our Guide for Life

All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.” -II Timothy 3:16-17 (KJV)

The Bible, God’s Word, is a guide to teach us about our need for salvation; and once we know Jesus as Savior and Lord, the Bible becomes our life textbook teaching us how to learn about and live a Christian life. I became a Christian at age nine. I had already been going to Sunday School all of my life to that point. After my conversion in our summer revival at Choestoe Church, July, 1939, and my baptism in August of that same year, I became “hungry” for the Word of God, studying and reading it daily and depending upon its truths to lead me “in paths of righteousness.” In college, I received a minor in Biblical studies. This study prepared me to serve better as a minister’s wife and as a Sunday School teacher many years of my life.

Paul, in writing to his “son in the gospel,” Timothy, gave several points we should notice in the two verses from II Timothy 3:16-17. (I gave it above in the King James version because that was the version I had, and memorized, when I was a new Christian). Let us look closely and prayerfully at Paul’s writing about God’s word:

All scripture is given by inspiration of God.” Men wrote the 66 books of our Bible, but first, inspiration, or what to write, came from God’s revelation to the various writers. The men were as “scribes” writing down what the Holy Spirit of God revealed to them. The English Standard Version translates these verses from Timothy this way: “All scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God my be competent, equipped for every good work.” Eugene Peterson in his version, The Message Bible, translates it thus: “Every part of Scripture is God-breathed and useful one way or another—showing us truth, exposing our rebellion, correcting our mistakes, training us to live God’s way. Through the Word we are put together and shaped up for the tasks God has for us.”

I accessed Dr. John MacArthur’s commentary on 2 Timothy 3:16-17. He notes: “Sometimes God told the Bible writers the exact words to say. He notes from Jeremiah 1:9-11 that prophet’s testimony as to how God inspired him to write: “Then the Lord put out his hand and touched my mouth. And the Lord said to me, ‘Behold, I have put my words in your mouth. See, I have set you this day over nations and over kingdoms, to pluck up and to break down, to destroy and to overthrow, to build and to plant.’ And the word of the Lord came to me a second time, saying, ‘What do you see?’ And I said, ‘I see an almond branch. Then the Lord said to me, ‘You have seen well, for I am watching over my word to perform it.’ “

Many people in biblical times, from Moses, who is given credit for writing the first five books of the Old Testament, known as the Pentateuch, to David, King of Israel, who wrote many of the Psalms, to Isaiah and Jeremiah and the other prophets, each of which prophetic book bears the name of the prophet/writer, to the writers of the New Testament, beginning with the gospels, the story of Jesus on earth and His sacrificial death for us, the letters by Paul the Apostle and General Letters, bearing the names of those who wrote them, to the Revelation by John the Apostle, --we have our 66 books of our Bible, our textbook for the Christian life. It has been miraculous how the Scripture has been preserved through thousands of years to become our inspiration, our source of instruction, and our “textbook” for living a life pleasing to God. Dr Ray Van Neste who wrote the study guides for I and II Timothy in the ESV Study Bible (Wheaton, Il.: Crossway, 2008) states: “The divine origin of Scripture is the reason for its power to convert and its usefulness in training.  Because Scripture comes from God himself, “all” of it is profitable in a wide range of ways, ultimately leading to righteousness.” (p. 1242. Study note.). Thank God for His inspired Word, our guide for the Christian life. -Ethelene Dyer Jones for Sunday, February 3, 2019.