It turned out to be a busy week, but here are a few good reads I saw online:
How Can a Writer Survive When Chaos Is All Around? "Some days I'm not certain living unruffled is a possibility for someone as flawed as me. Anytime life throws me a curve, I begin reacting to the busyness instead of concentrating on walking with God through the chaos." Good thoughts, not just for writers.
The World Tells Us How It Really Feels. "What should we say, then, to the world which so regularly mocks Christianity, blasphemes Christ, and hates Christians, especially if they dare preach the gospel?"
Driven by Fear to the God Who Casts Out Fear. "Whether it's a career goal, a desire for a child, or an avenue of service to God, it's easy to allow the sheer size of the dream to overwhelm us with fear. By grace, may we let our fear drive us to the One who casts out all fear."
The False Identity of Vanity, HT to Challies. "Vanity is often defined as someone who has an excessive love of themself—an over-the-top, prideful attitude that thinks, "I am the fairest." Vanity is certainly not less than this. There are many who live in self-admiration of the way they look or in excessive pride over their gifts and talents. . . . But there is another aspect to vanity that is equally harmful."
The Crooked Apple Tree, HT to Challies. "There's no way that tree could ever hide the fact that it has seen terrible trouble. And yet, for all that, the tree still fills up with apples every year. The old crooked apple tree beside my friend's home in a restored ruin encourages me. Living in this broken world brings trouble to humans, too."
Words That are Fitting, HT to the Story Warren. "Suffering is uncomfortable—certainly for the person enduring it, but also for those who witness it. We can feel uncomfortable with a friend's expressions of grief or anger or agony, so we may say things to her to cheer her up or calm her down that does the opposite of what we intend—our words hurt rather than heal. We may even say things that are ultimately true but said at the wrong time."
Seasons of a Reading Life, HT to the Story Warren. "In some seasons, reading happens as easily as breathing. It is the thing I will prioritize and order my free time around. In other seasons, reading is more work. I find myself giving way to other demands on my time, to other things that take higher precedence."
The Issue of Wealth in the Bible, HT to Challies. "We examined every case in the Bible where an individual was identified as having substantial material possessions and the means of acquiring these goods was disclosed. We found that in the twenty-one cases meeting these criteria, the means of acquisition was a reliable indicator of whether a person received approval or disapproval"
Mom, Will You Hold This? Just as kids ask us to hold their stuff while they play, so we hold their imaginations. Sarah Dixon Young shares ways to both guard and foster children's imaginations.
My quote for today is longer than usual, but it was so good, I wanted to share it. I heard it on Chuck Swindoll's Insight for Living program on BBN Radio on August 1. I had trouble getting such a large quote to fit with the program I use (WordSwag).
"I may, I suppose, regard myself, or pass for being, as a relatively successful man.
People occasionally stare at me in the streets–that's fame. I can fairly easily earn enough to qualify for admission to the higher slopes of the Internal Revenue–that's success.
Furnished with money and a little fame even the elderly, if they care to,
may partake of trendy diversions– that's pleasure.
It might happen once in a while that something I said or wrote was sufficiently heeded for me to persuade myself that it represented a serious impact on our time–that's fulfillment.
Yet I say to you — and I beg you to believe me–multiply these tiny triumphs by a million, add them all together, and they are nothing–less than nothing, a positive impediment–measured against one draught of that living water Christ offers to the spiritually thirsty,
irrespective of who or what they are."
– Malcolm Muggeridge
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