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My Favorite Bible Study Tools

September 19, 2019 by Lauren 26 Comments

Photo by Chandana Ban on Unsplash

A few months ago I heard someone on a podcast refer to their time with God as the “daily office”.  I loved this so much that I have adopted it.  “Quiet time” and “devotions” can both be valid, but time in prayer, bible study and meditation are truly the work of the Christian life.  And my daily office is a top priority for me.  I must confess that it usually doesn’t happen in a quiet house in a cozy chair while drinking my coffee from a pretty mug.  That is – at this time in my life – a romantic dream.  And it doesn’t always happen at one time for me.  I try to attack prayer and scripture meditation before I leave the house in the morning and prayer again before I go to bed.  Key word being TRY.  And there are often short arrow prayers shot up throughout the day.  And my time reading scripture?  It sometimes happens on the treadmill or waiting in the pick up line at school.  I have two part time jobs, 2 busy kids and a house to maintain.  So I choose to make it a fluid part of my day.  It’s what works for me.

 

It can be challenging to stay connected and engaged when the most important part of my day is often sliced up into bite sized chunks.  But I have a feeling some of you might relate to a harried schedule.  So I’m sharing my favorite Bible study tools.

 

  1. an example of a planner My Christian Planner.  I use the calendar pages to write out scriptures I want to memorize, to jot down prayers and to praise God for the thing I am most thankful for that day.  It also gives me pages for sermon and bible study notes and anything else I need to write down that’s important.  You can find one like it here.  show an example of planner page
  2. The Echo app for my phone.  This prayer tool allows me to record requests, descriptions, add an image and add a reminder of when to pray (such as a surgery or doctor’s appointment date).  It also gives me the ability to mark a prayer answered or simply delete and has a prayer timer to help with this discipline.
  3. The Devotable App.  I have had the privilege to write daily devotionals for this handy instrument.  For days when time is running really short or I’m on the go, a short scripture, perspective and prayer keep me in line.
  4. The Blue Letter Bible App.  The capabilities of this tech make me a much better student.  I can search for scriptures by simple terms or exact phrases.  It also contains a concordance, explanation of original word language, translation comparison, text commentaries and cross references.
  5. NIV Quest Study Bible:  The Only Q and A Study Bible.  This new tool may become my favorite.  I was gifted a copy by the Bible Gateway Blogger Grid and am amazed by all it offers.  1000 people where asked, “What questions do you have about this portion of the Bible?”  Focus groups decided what questions should be included alongside the biblical text.  As an example, the margins beside Proverbs chapter 22 contain the answers to these questions:  “Why does God make some rich and others poor?”  “What is the explanation for God-fearing people who are poor or unhealthy?”  “Will good training guarantee that children will not rebel?” And it designates for us the top 100 most asked questions.  This Bible’s study helps include beautiful color maps, a dictionary concordance, subject index and prayers, promises and perspectives from the Bible.  Order one here to pump up your study time.  show bible

What are your favorite tools for time with the Lord?  Comment below.  One of yours might become my NEXT favorite!

Sharing is caring! If you liked this post, do me the huge honor of sharing it to your favorite social media accounts. And if you want to make sure you don’t miss anything, subscribe!

 

                                                                           And look up these great writers I link up with every week:

InstaEncouragements, Literacy Musing Mondays, Hello…Monday,

Dream Team link up, The Good. The Random. The Fun.

BloggerClubUK, Tea and Word Tuesday, Purposeful Faith,

GraceFull Tuesday Link-Up, Different Dream,

Let’s Have Coffee, Welcome Wednesday, Recharge Wednesday,

Worth Beyond Rubies, #TellHisStory Link Up, Porch Stories,

Encouraging Word Wednesday, Tune In Thursday,

Stories of Hope, Moments of Hope, IHeart Verse Link Party,

A Blogging Good Time, Fresh Market Friday, Feature Friday Time,

Friendship Friday Blog Hop, Faith on Fire, Traffic Jam Weekend,

Faith ‘n Friends, Dancing with Jesus, Grace & Truth, Booknificent

 

Lastly, my posts may contain affiliate links. If you purchase anything from one of these links, I will receive a few pennies to help offset the cost of this website at no additional charge to you. Thank you in advance for your help.

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Why I Re-Love the Word Tolerance

September 12, 2019 by Lauren 26 Comments

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

The cry for tolerance has long been a plea for groups feeling oppressed and marginalized.  For hundreds of years, religions, economic classes, political parties, and racial and ethnic minorities, and more recently – the LGBTQ+ community –  have asked for freedoms and forbearance from the majority of society.  As a teenager and into my young adult years, I grew to hate the word tolerance.  The root word TOLERATE left a bad taste in my mouth.  I thought I could either “like” someone or “tolerate” them, but I couldn’t do both.  Almost as if “tolerate” and “disdain” were first cousins.

 

I’m not sure how I arrived at my skewed interpretation.  Maybe it’s because I only ever heard the word bandied about in circles of hatred.  Maybe because each occurence of it in the news involved protests or violence or the like.  But somewhere along the way I decided I would never say I tolerate anyone.  I loved everyone – whether we agreed or not.  That was that.  And I felt like a much better Christian because of it.

 

In our current, volatile, easily offendable climate we seem to have forgotten some basics.  Like how to love, how to disagree, and even how to converse.  People and groups of all walks of life wish to be seen and heard – but don’t offer the same courtesy.  We all want people to see through the same lenses we wear.  And since the bulk of our communication is done by computer or phone, we no longer have to look at someone and see his or her pain and frustration.

 

To love is to agree.  That seems to be today’s unspoken mantra.  We vilify those who see things differently in this country and rarely try to walk a mile in anyone else’s shoes.  In A Practical Guide to Culture:  Helping the Next Generation Navigate Today’s World, the authors refer to this as ad hominem fallacy – attacking the person rather than the argument.

 

Brett Kunkle, one of the authors of the book, spoke at my church recently.  He gave this definition of tolerate – “to recognize and respect others beliefs without sharing them”.  I found a similar explanation on thefreedictionary.com.  “To recognize and respect (the rights, beliefs, and practices of others).”  I searched several dictionaries, and more negative definitions exist, but I prefer this one.  Tolerance assumes there IS some disagreement.  And yet respect and recognition coincide with it.  All people are created equal.  We are all image bearers of the Creator.  “God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.”  Genesis 1:27 NASB  All ideas and behaviors, however, are not necessarily equal.  So as long as there are people, we will have differences of opinion.  

 

We need to once again embrace the idea that debates can be civil.  Love and disagreement can lay side by side…in the same bed…under the same roof.  We need to recognize that one belief or characteristic does not a whole person make.  Just because you vote differently than I do, does not mean I can’t see that you are kind and generous and fun to be with.  And just because our socio-economic backgrounds are like night and day doesn’t mean you aren’t smart and dependable and humble.  My race, class, religion, sex, family status or sexual orientation are not the whole of who I am.  And they don’t define you either.

 

Are you a tolerant person?

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“If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. 2 If I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. 3 And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor, and if I surrender my body [a]to be burned, but do not have love, it profits me nothing.”  1 Corinthians 13:1-3 NASB

 

Sharing is caring! If you liked this post, do me the huge honor of sharing it to your favorite social media accounts. And if you want to make sure you don’t miss anything, subscribe!

 

And look up these great writers I link up with every week:

InstaEncouragements, Literacy Musing Mondays, Hello…Monday,

Dream Team link up, The Good. The Random. The Fun.

BloggerClubUK, Tea and Word Tuesday, Purposeful Faith,

GraceFull Tuesday Link-Up, Different Dream,

Let’s Have Coffee, Welcome Wednesday, Recharge Wednesday,

Worth Beyond Rubies, #TellHisStory Link Up, Porch Stories,

Encouraging Word Wednesday, Tune In Thursday,

Stories of Hope, Moments of Hope, IHeart Verse Link Party,

A Blogging Good Time, Fresh Market Friday, Feature Friday Time,

Friendship Friday Blog Hop, Faith on Fire, Traffic Jam Weekend,

Faith ‘n Friends, Dancing with Jesus, Grace & Truth, Booknificent

 

Lastly, my posts may contain affiliate links. If you purchase anything from one of these links, I will receive a few pennies to help offset the cost of this website at no additional charge to you. Thank you in advance for your help.

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Just the Way We Are

September 5, 2019 by Lauren 40 Comments

Photo by Marks of Mana on Unsplash

Last week as I walked into church with my family, I saw my daughter Shelby make a beeline for an older lady who recently began attending service by herself.  We introduced ourselves to her several weeks before and made sure in the following weeks to look for her and chat her up.  This particular morning she was sitting right inside the door and, in her special way, Shelby greeted and hugged her.  A few minutes later as our new friend made her way into the sanctuary, she passed us this note.  It’s a little difficult to read so I will translate:  To Shelby:  Shelby I love you and every day we live I thank God for the privilege to know you and your parents.  May God continue to bless us.  Love you, Florence.

 

This Sunday-go-to-meeting Shelby greeted a sweet family of little people with hugs and high fives.  They have always felt a kinship with her for being different.  We then sat down to worship beside a friend I met in the chemotherapy treatment room two years ago.  She now attends our church and sits with us every Sunday.  As Shelby laid her head on Miss Jeanette’s shoulder and settled in for a long snuggle, Jeanette smiled and I cried.  I barely held myself together as I contemplated how kind God is to give a severely developmentally challenged teenager such a sweet and important ministry.

 

As the drums and guitars of the praise music filled the room, I felt gratitude swell in my heart with the volume.  And I thought about my own service in this body of believers.  Over our 12 or so years of involvement, I’ve greeted at the door, written name tags, co-lead a life group, acted as web host for the online service and refilled the note cards in the backs of the pews.  But the last couple of years I’ve struggled to find my niche.  I longed to actually use gifts and talents God has given me as opposed to being a warm and willing body.  I believed the chores I’d done before added value, but wanted more.  I think I’ve documented here before that I am all but allergic to working with children.  The times when I bit the bullet and stepped into a classroom, I may have broken out in hives.  And yet it seemed I only ever heard about a need for more hands in the children and youth ministries.  I attended meetings about a couple of other things, but nothing fit.

 

Without a place to serve and being “between” life groups, I started to feel pretty disconnected from church.  I knew God wasn’t leading us to move on because our teen was, and is, sooooo plugged into the youth ministry and even serves in the children’s area faithfully (maybe I could learn something from her).  And yet, for a time church was so painful for me that I asked my husband if we could come in late and slip out quickly so we wouldn’t have to talk to anyone!

 

But a few weeks ago, someone invited me into a weekly gathering of women.  And we had an opportunity to share an extra vehicle with a family in need.  Then the women’s minister introduced me to a young mom of a baby girl with special needs.  She placed my hand in hers and said, “She wants someone who understands to walk with her.”  And I am.  Gladly.  Then the youth minister called me to tell me that another mom is facing a health crisis.  When he asked her how the church could come alongside her, she said, “You can tell Lauren.”  And just like that I’m serving within the body – supporting other believers in a body I love.  I may not be joining a ministry with a name and a budget, but I’m passionate about friendship and I’m getting to do friendship with intention.  Purpose.  Community.  Church.  For my daughter and for me.  Just the way we are.

 

To be honest, a couple of years ago I struggled to feel like God was kind to me.  A first for me, for sure.  And my life is still far from perfect.  In fact, we have so many loved ones facing hard, hard things right now that my daily prayers feel heavy.  But the responsibility to love them well keeps me going.  And though the world is broken, God is moving.  And I’ll never get over the fact that He uses someone as messy and faithless as me.  And He uses a 14 year old blonde haired beauty with a natural singing talent and a heart to invite.  He also uses a retail manager who does EVERYTHING with the utmost integrity.  And He uses a 19 year old who thinks like a two year old and wears her heart on her sleeve.  It’s the kindest thing I’ve ever witnessed.

4 For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, 5 so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. 6 We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us. If your gift is prophesying, then prophesy in accordance with your[a]faith; 7 if it is serving, then serve; if it is teaching, then teach; 8 if it is to encourage, then give encouragement; if it is giving, then give generously; if it is to lead,[b] do it diligently; if it is to show mercy, do it cheerfully.  Romans 12:4-8 NIV

 

 

 

 

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About Me

I love Jesus, my husband and caffeine. The order of these can change depending on how tired I am. When my two daughters, stepson, and 4 grandchildren get to be too much, I practice yoga. God graciously allows me to share our adventures, victories and flub-ups from my laptop. May He be glorified here.
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