Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“An antidote to sin”

Today’s Scripture, from the Apocrypha--not found in most Bibles--touches on the issue of idolatry. And while this entire idea may seem to be totally irrelevant to us today, the tendency to put our trust or reliance in physical, observable things--whether they be people or objects--is still very much with us. Indeed, would I be remiss in saying that we often turn to these things for help, or for support and security, long before we turn to God? I suspect that this may well be true. Anyway, something to think about.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Out of the blue”

Sorry for taking so long to send this out (had to travel to Edmonton and back today). Today’s meditation touches on something we all know all too well--the unexpected. The good news is that it is of no surprise to God, and not too big or difficult either. What is more is that He is always there, and always ready and able to help, if only we will let Him.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Making use of what you’ve got”

One of the most insistent and dangerous lies of the enemy of our souls is that we don’t really have choices in life, or that those choices don’t matter. Both of those are outright lies. Even though we may not always have ‘big’, seemingly world-changing or altering choices, we do have lots of individual, incremental and daily ones. All of us have been endowed by the Almighty with singular and unique gifts, gifts of ability or interests or experience that no one else on earth has in exactly the same way that you do. That means that using them will be of incredible benefit to those around us for no one else can have the impact that you do. And likewise, with the choices that we have within the realm of our own individual freedoms are likewise quite unique and individual. Each of us has a constellation of contacts, people we meet up with, that is unlike any other person. And so, what we do and say is crucial.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Running out of options”

One of the baptismal questions that we are asked in our baptismal service (BAS p. 154) is ‘do you put your whole trust in his grace and love?’ I think that many--or most--of us, if truly honest, would have to say, ‘Sort of’ or ‘Sometimes’ or ‘Yes, but’, or something of the sort. Seldom do we put our full and unqualified trust in God, preferring, instead, to use God as ‘a last resort’ and trust in other things first. I suspect that most of us will trust in ourselves, our family and friends, the latest news or scientific developments, or church or government, before we put our full and complete trust in God. (Not, by the way, to say that none of these fore-mentioned things are not to be consulted!). But, how often are we, like David in our psalm, at our wit's end, running out of options, and forced to rely on God and on God alone? Anyway, it is something to ponder--and pray about.

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Phil house Phil house

“The sure foundation”

Today’s passage and meditation touch on a rather crucial subject, namely our foundations and how we build upon them. What this put me in mind of was that perhaps I, and each of us, should preface everything we do or say with two questions:

a) number one: in this word or action, am I truly building upon Jesus, basing it on Jesus, or am I building it on something else, things perhaps like our own ideas or prejudices, or our own agenda, or our own comfort zone, or our own pride?

b) and number two: is this word or action calculated to build up the church and its people, to strengthen and empower them, or potentially to harm or hurt them or render them less effective and healthy as follow members--and builders--of the church?

My guess is that far too often we say and do things without thinking--almost as a reflect action--without considering what impact they might have on others and on the church as a whole. And, when you think that the church--and each and every part of it, each and every member--is so vital and important that Christ died for them, it makes our treatment of them all the more important.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

”Some incredible ‘marching orders’”

To be quite honest, folks, when I initially took on the Christian faith--or more accurately, Christ Jesus--as an adult, I found the Christian life and all that it encompassed, to be quite daunting, and really, quite impossible. My record ‘up at bat’ (to use a baseball analogy) was more characterizes with strike outs than with runs--much less home runs! In fact, my attempts left me quite frustrated and quite depressed. I did not realize that what I was attempting was--quite frankly--impossible. I was trying to live like Christ, without the power, the power of the Spirit, that He possessed and that animated and empowered His life.

It was not until I discovered the reality of that same Spirit, the presence and the power that He alone can give, that I experienced anything by way of a change. I found that I was much more ready, and much more able, to carry out the duties and be that kind of person that Paul describes in today’s passage. Today’s little spiel is much too short to go into my discoveries of what the Spirit meant to me, but I would be quite happy to share more of that with anyone who is interested.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“What pleases God”

I have a surprise for you today, not one but two meditations. It comes about from the fact that I misread my devotional guide today, a guide put out by the Forward Movement in the United States. Whatever Scripture the day’s author chooses is normally the one that I use for my meditation. This way I can’t give in to the guilty pleasure--or bad habit--of just choosing passages or themes that I particularly like but have to sometimes subject myself to passages that I would never choose, not in a million years.

Well, today the selected passage was Psalm 40, but I didn’t ready the page correctly and got Psalm 50. It wasn’t until later that I realized that it should have been something else, so I ended up reading and meditating on both of them.

Both of the passages have a curious interconnection, namely how we are to please God. Psalm 40 talks about us trusting God with our needs and actions, and obeying Him, and Psalm 50 suggests that we put this trust and obedience into practice by giving God thanks. Indeed, as the apostle Paul was to say later on in Philippians (Philippians 4:6) what better way is there to express our trust in God than thanking Him even before we see the results.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Quite an indictment”

I have a surprise for you today, not one but two meditations. It comes about from the fact that I misread my devotional guide today, a guide put out by the Forward Movement in the United States. Whatever Scripture the day’s author chooses is normally the one that I use for my meditation. This way I can’t give in to the guilty pleasure--or bad habit--of just choosing passages or themes that I particularly like but have to sometimes subject myself to passages that I would never choose, not in a million years.

Well, today the selected passage was Psalm 40, but I didn’t ready the page correctly and got Psalm 50. It wasn’t until later that I realized that it should have been something else, so I ended up reading and meditating on both of them.

Both of the passages have a curious interconnection, namely how we are to please God. Psalm 40 talks about us trusting God with our needs and actions, and obeying Him, and Psalm 50 suggests that we put this trust and obedience into practice by giving God thanks. Indeed, as the apostle Paul was to say later on in Philippians (Philippians 4:6) what better way is there to express our trust in God than thanking Him even before we see the results.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Those who cannot see”

Today’s Scripture and meditation raise some very important questions, namely how we view life and reality--in other words, how we see. Even among people of faith how people view things can vary widely--just consider the varied views on Covid, or on government and government regulations, or on medical advice and information, or on the press and social media, or on pretty well anything. And that isn’t even touching on the really contentious issues like gender or race or sexual orientation.

Anglicans have typically looked to three things as a basis for authority, Scripture, tradition and reason, with Scripture being primary. But, even here, we can have issues, for not everyone interprets Scripture similarly or takes the same ‘lessons’ from tradition or reason. I think that I can truthfully say that probably most of us, myself included, tend to rely on or turn to sources that apply these authorities in the same way that we do. We tend to turn to sources we agree with and shy away with ones we don’t.

So, all of this incredibly affects the way that we see. In my meditation I suggested some ways that we might counter these tendencies. I guess, when it comes down to it, we just have to take a humble attitude, recognizing that we don’t have a stranglehold on the truth and being willing to listen, and take seriously, what other people have to say. Not very definitive. Sorry.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“God’s purposes revealed”

Today’s passage and meditation form a timely and much needed reminder, namely that our work as Christians is never finished, either in spreading and propagating the Gospel, or in living it. Both of these require diligence and our constant attention.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Something most distasteful—and unwelcome”

Yesterday we talked about being found in Christ. However, there is something of a problem with this: we don’t quite fit. We have a few rough corners that get in the way, and a few bits and pieces--these may be something as obvious as sin, or as ordinary and unnoticeable as few bad habits or faulty attitudes or not so nice personal agendas--that don’t quite jive with the character of Christ.

So, what does God do? He does a bit of pruning, a bit of refining--what today’s passage and meditation call disciplining. And, of course, as you might well guess, this isn’t always pleasant--or welcome either. But, it is done in love and for our own sake, and it is most necessary.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Unpacking the truth”

The ancient mystics often talked about ‘being found in Christ’ and such similar things, but, if you are like me, you dismissed them as hopelessly impractical and totally removed from our real world, our everyday world. And yet, we find this similar thing all through the New Testament, repeatedly suggested as the only way to live the Christian life.

Now, I have steered away from such talk because, for me, it conjured ideas from eastern religions where the believer is taken up or subsumed in the Almighty, becoming one with that deity, but also losing their identity and personality. But that is not the way with us and Christ. Indeed, just the opposite. In Christ, we become more completely ourselves, more the persons that God made us to be, more free to be that person because God’s life and power now lives in and through us.

And so, for me, in that vein, living in Christ, ‘being found in Christ’, becomes wonderfully attractive. What do you think?

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Remember”

Psalm 78 enjoins those who know and follow the Lord to tell their story, their story of what God has done for them, to their children and children’s children. and is this not key to how our faith will continue to spread and be preserved through the generations. Years ago a certain Christian educator posed the question, ‘will our children have faith?’ It is a good question, and one that will probably be given the answer ‘no’ unless we decide to share our story with others. And so, it is essential that we both remember what God has done and share that with others around us.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Beaten at his own game”

Here, in today’s account of Jesus’ calling of His first disciples, we have something truly remarkable--and if you are at all like me--also quite challenging, and even, to a certain extent, a bit frightening. Here are four disciples who decide to leave everything to follow Jesus, and who do so, after daring to trust Jesus in something that they ‘thought’ they knew backwards and forwards. In other words, they were willing to let Jesus take them out of their comfort zones. Does that sound challenging, even scary? It certainly does for me. But then, who are we following but the very one who has conquered the very worst that life can throw at us, even death itself--and who did so, simply out of His love for us! So it means that we have a Saviour who is quite capable, and certainly worthy of our trust.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“The hand-writing on the wall”

I don’t know about you, but the whole idea of accountability is one that has often engendered feelings of uneasiness, and sometimes, even feelings of fear. Writing exams, for instance, in high school or university, were never pleasant times for me, as they were bound to show up where I had not studied enough. And likewise, the yearly performance reviews that I ‘endured’ as a social worker filled me with dread, as there were always areas where I had fallen short, and my examiners were not always known to be that sympathetic to one’s failings, no matter what the reason.

We are also called to be accountable to God, but fortunately, in Him we have a much more sympathetic ear, for He knows perfectly well what it is like for us. Today’s meditation touches on that issue of accountability, in particular in the areas of the gifts that God has so graciously given us. It asks whether we have made use of those gifts, and if so, whether we have used them to the glory of God and the increase of His kingdom--and not for some personal ends or goal or glory. It is something well worth looking at.

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Michael Stonhouse Michael Stonhouse

“Listen up”

Today’s passage and meditation really ‘set me on my ears’ so to speak. I am certainly interested in seeing revival happen in Lloydminster, and indeed, throughout Canada and elsewhere. And, I would certainly like to see our churches renewed and revitalized. So, the incident that happened on that epic Pentecost day so many years ago certainly piques my attention. Was it simply the preaching, or the circumstances? Or was it the Holy Spirit? Remember that the assembled Christians had prayed for days and days--for ten days at least-- for the coming of the Spirit, as they awaited His arrival (the ascension happened 40 days after Easter and Pentecost 50 days, and they tarried in prayer during the interval--see Acts 1:14). So my question for myself initially, and for everyone else as well, is this? Am I willing (are we willing) to devote ourselves to prayer as they did? I’m afraid that far too often I am rather reluctant to do so, and find plenty of other things to occupy my time and attention. Just something to ponder.

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