Mike spoke about Christian suffering today. After being at the fabulous women’s retreat last week where Angel spoke about suffering as gaps in our lives, I’ve been thinking about this concept and the Biblical teaching that Christ’s power is made perfect in weakness. It is amazing that God’s power shone greatest at the seemingly weakest point of Christ’s life. His suffering and death.
Well, today Mike spoke about the continuation of Christ’s sufferings through His people, the Church. He asserted that we are called to suffer for others. Christians are to suffer for the Church. This always strikes me as I examine my life and see that I am not suffering. I am working to live as comfortably as possible as a follower of Christ. This is not what the Christian life it supposed to be.
We are called to sacrifice our time, energy, money, plans, and more. We are bid to come and die as followers of Christ. What a great charge for me to hear. What a great message for our church as we move forward. What amazing hope that suffering actually makes me better, makes others better, and makes Christ more beautiful.
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This past weekend was the UPC Women’s Retreat in Daytona Beach. It was a great weekend. I learned new things, was reminded of old truth and enjoyed spending time with other women at the beach. One of the things that the speaker Angel Richard spoke about briefly was meditation. Meditation is something that has always seemed so nebulous to me. I have heard it explained in the past as thinking about scripture or mulling it over in your mind. This type of definition kind of made sense to me, but I wasn’t ever sure how to do it. Angel explained meditation as simply “asking questions” while reading scripture. When she said this, the “light bulb” went on in my head. “Oh,” I thought “well I can do that.” During our Saturday morning devotion time, she gave us a passage of scripture and four questions (written by Martin Luther) to use to meditate on the passage. These questions really helped me think about and absorb the truth that was presented in the psalm that I had just read. I plan to write these questions out on a note card and put them in my bible so I can remember them and use them as a guide to come up with my own.