Being a Faithful Friend – June 4, 2017
FAITHFUL
FAITHFUL…this is the word I think of when I think about my husband.
For thirty-eight years he has been faithful, not only to me, but to our family, to those we minister to in our church and in our community and even as he has ministered around the world…But especially, he has been faithful to His God.
I looked up the term, “FAITHFUL” this morning.
According to Merriam Webster Dictionary, it means “loyal, constant, staunch, steadfast, resolute.”
Dictionary.com describes being faithful as being “true” and “devoted.” The website states that being faithful “implies the qualities of stability, dependability, and devotion…long-continued and steadfast fidelity…unswerving adherence to a person or thing or to the oath or promise by which a tie was contracted.”
The Oxford Dictionary describes “FAITHFUL” as being “firm and not changing…remaining loyal and steadfast…true to the facts or the original.”
Www.BibleStudyTools.com describes being faithful “as a designation of Christians…full of faith, trustful, and not simply trustworthy.”
Faithfulness is not a characteristic often found in today’s culture. Rarely do we find people who are faithfully committed over the long term to their jobs, their churches, their friends, and even their families. It seems that the more affluent our society has become through the years, the less we value anything as permanent. Everything, even relationships have become “disposable”.
Proverbs 20:6 states: “Most men will proclaim every one his own goodness: but a faithful man who can find?”
Well, I found one! I am truly blessed!
This man is humble and does not consider his own goodness. (Even though he is good, because of Jesus!) And he is faithful…loyal, trustworthy, steadfast, resolute, true, devoted, full of faith. My dear husband is a true example of long-continued, steadfast fidelity. He has remained true to the promise me made to me made on a Sunday afternoon in Asheville, NC, thirty-eight years ago today, as we stood before our church family and Joe’s dad, our pastor, vowing to be faithful to one another,
“In sickness and in health, in poverty as in wealth, in the bad that may darken our days and the good that may lighten our ways, remaining true to one another until death alone parts us.”
We have both changed…we’ve aged…we’ve changed careers…we’ve become more alike in a lot of ways, yet we have learned how absolutely different we are in our thinking. We have grown in our love for one another and in our love for our Lord Jesus Christ. We were once two young lovers (pretty much it was “love at first sight”). We became parents…we had a little baby girl who died…we matured…we learned a little more about trusting our heavenly Father…we moved…and we moved again…we became in-laws…we became grandparents…we became empty-nesters (just a few weeks ago)…
How can I describe my husband?
He is my FAITHFUL BEST FRIEND on this earth.
Because he has trusted in the Faithful One…the One who never changes… “Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and forever.”
My husband has remained true to this most important fact, and because of this, he is “full of faith, trustful, firm and not changing.”
It is WHO he is…It is WHO he belongs to. His identity in Jesus Christ makes him faithful. He is a follower of Jesus, a disciple, seeking to love his Lord with all his heart, soul, mind, and strength and to love others as himself.
You will not hear this man praise himself, yet he always seeks to recognize the best in others, building them up. He is gracious. He is kind. He is thoughtful. He is faithful.
I am reminded of an old song that I learned many years ago in Atlanta, GA, as I sang with an ensemble at Hawthorne Baptist Church under the leadership of Dr. Jerry Cline. Made popular by Steve Green in 1988, this song describes the aspirations of the life of my husband since his youth. Certainly, my husband is not perfect, as none of us are. However, he is truly an example of rare faithfulness found today.
We’re pilgrims on the journey
Of the narrow road,
And those who’ve gone before us line the way,
Cheering on the faithful, encouraging the weary,
Their lives a stirring testament to God’s sustaining grace.
Surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
Let us run the race not only for the prize,
But as those who’ve gone before us
Let us leave to those behind us,
The heritage of faithfulness passed on through godly lives.
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful,
May the fire of our devotion light their way,
May the footprints that we leave
Lead them to believe,
And the lives we live inspire them to obey,
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful.
After all our hopes and dreams have come and gone,
And our children sift through all we’ve left behind,
May the clues that they discover and the memories they uncover
Become the light that leads them to the road we each must find.
Words and Music: Jon Mohr / Copyright 1988 Birdwing Music/Jonathan Mark Music
Retrieved June 3, 2017 from http://www.homecomingmagazine.com/article/find-us-faithful/
We’re pilgrims on the journey
Of the narrow road,
And those who’ve gone before us line the way,
Cheering on the faithful, encouraging the weary,
Their lives a stirring testament to God’s sustaining grace.
Surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
Let us run the race not only for the prize,
But as those who’ve gone before us
Let us leave to those behind us,
The heritage of faithfulness passed on through godly lives.
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful,
May the fire of our devotion light their way,
May the footprints that we leave
Lead them to believe,
And the lives we live inspire them to obey,
Oh may all who come behind us find us faithful.
After all our hopes and dreams have come and gone,
And our children sift through all we’ve left behind,
May the clues that they discover and the memories they uncover
Become the light that leads them to the road we each must find.
Words and Music: Jon Mohr / Copyright 1988 Birdwing Music/Jonathan Mark Music
Retrieved June 3, 2017 from http://www.homecomingmagazine.com/article/find-us-faithful/
Faithful Men, Living By Faith – June 3, 2017
Faithful Men, Living By Faith – June 2, 2017
Living By Faith, Faithful Men – June 1, 2017
Living By Faith, Being A Friend – May 31, 2017
Living My Own Message
By Diane Hunt
There I was face down pleading with God for insight and wisdom, tears welling in my eyes. I believed Psalm 77:1, I cry aloud to God, aloud to God, and he will hear me. Morning after morning I was on my face literally crying out to God, but I did not feel like He was answering me.
I had spent a year studying and preparing for a women’s conference that I was speaking for and it was time to start laying out the outline and the sessions. Whenever I begin preparation I pray 1 Corinthians 2:2-5 and often post it in an obvious place to keep it before my face while I work. “For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. And I was with you in weakness and in fear and much trembling, and my speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.” I genuinely desire the women at a conference to hear from God not from me.
But this time my thoughts were so garbled that I struggled to make sense of the massive amount of information floating around in my head. Every passing day the tension grew. I spent hours a day for weeks writing, rewriting and then starting over. In 18 years of speaking I have never had such a battle.
My message was from the book of Joshua and I was excited about what I learned from Israel’s journey to cross the Jordan into the Promise Land – finally returning to the land God promised Abram generations before in Genesis 12:1-3 “Now the Lord said to Abram, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”
I have prepared and shared many messages for women’s meetings, conferences, seminars and weekend retreats and my hope is always that God will make it absolutely clear to me what He wants me to say. Still, there I was on my face pleading with God for His message. What was I to say? What was my point or rather what was His point? What did He want to say to this group of women I was going to be speaking to?
To be honest over the weeks that followed my faith was frustrated because day after day I did not get the discernment I sought. I knew God heard me but I did not feel that He answered me. I did all I knew to do – for a year – but was disappointed that God was not giving me clarity.
I started to mold the 5 messages from Joshua around these two questions: (1) Will you walk by faith or will you walk by sight? (2) What is the difference between a non-believer that cannot walk by faith, and a believer that does not walk by faith?
Since the Garden of Eden there have been two choices and only two choices:
Choice #1 – To walk by faith, believing and trusting God
Choice #2 – To walk by sight, unbelieving and not trusting God
In Numbers 13, Moses sent 12 spies into the land of Canaan. Ten of the 12 returned with a report filled with fear “So they brought to the people of Israel a bad report of the land that they had spied out, saying, “The land, through which we have gone to spy it out, is a land that devours its inhabitants, and all the people that we saw in it are of great height. And there we saw the Nephilim (the sons of Anak, who come from the Nephilim), and we seemed to ourselves like grasshoppers, and so we seemed to them.” Numbers 13:32-33
Their report led the people of Israel to respond in unbelief and it had dire consequences.
Two of the spies Caleb and Joshua, returned with a faith-filled report. And Joshua the son of Nun and Caleb the son of Jephunneh, who were among those who had spied out the land, tore their clothes and said to all the congregation of the people of Israel, “The land, which we passed through to spy it out, is an exceedingly good land. If the Lord delights in us, he will bring us into this land and give it to us, a land that flows with milk and honey. Only do not rebel against the Lord. And do not fear the people of the land, for they are bread for us. Their protection is removed from them, and the Lord is with us; do not fear them.” Numbers 14:6-9
This is a great example of the two choices: walking by sight (10 spies) and walking by faith (Caleb and Joshua).
Finally, the weekend arrived. I still had little confidence that I had God’s message for the women. I had knots in my stomach from the time we crossed over the Delaware Memorial Bridge into New Jersey.
Friday night’s session began and I shared the first message about Joshua. As the weekend progressed I pulled back the curtain of my own life to give a behind-the-scenes commentary of my experience of the previous weeks.
As I stood on the platform sharing my heart about what God had shown me through my year-long study in Joshua, it occurred to me that I was living my own message. My journey itself was the testing ground for my own question. Will I walk by faith or will I walk by sight?
I wanted God to lay it all out for me so I could see it and feel it and know it. Yet for His own reasons His message was revealed in the midst of my sharing. Oh, sure I had my notes but as I look back it really was all Him. Was He faithful? Absolutely! Did God answer my prayers? Yes, just not in the way I wanted or expected.
My own journey had times of strong faith and times of weak faith but even as I walked, the act of putting one foot in front of the other was evidence of faith because…faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Hebrews 11:1
Diane is a writer, Biblical Counselor, and Women’s Conference and Retreat speaker. She has been on the staff of America’s Keswick since 1999 and continues to serve part time remotely from her home in North Carolina. Diane is married with 2 children, 3 step-children and 11 grandchildren. She loves to hike, camp, travel, and play with her grandkids.
Living By Faith, Being A Friend – May 30, 2017
Living By Faith, Being A Friend – May 29, 2017
I watched the movie, Hacksaw Ridge, for the first time tonight. What an example of true faith and being a friend! What courage and conviction!
May we remember, respect, and honor those who served and made the ultimate sacrifice to preserve and protect our freedom. May we be willing to stand true to Jesus Christ who delivered us from eternal death and gave us true freedom. May we hallow (respect) His name, remember His ultimate sacrifice, and honor Him with our lives no matter the cost for His glory and kingdom!
“Greater love has no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13)