Give: To Enter Wholeheartedly

For from his fullness 
we have all received, 
grace upon grace.
(John 1:16 ESV)



It may seem a bit early to be thinking about Christmas, but the giving and receiving season will be here before we know it. I love gifts. And I love giving them. Finding that special something that expresses my love to my family and friends brings me great joy.

I really like the idea from 3o Ways to Wake Up Your Quiet Time, where Pam Farrel invites us to consider what gift we could give to God as the season approaches and into the next year:

Each year at Christmas I like to take a quiet time and consider what gift I’d like to give God in the next year. Sometimes it’s a monetary donation to an organization that will help the Bible get integrated into people’s lives. Sometimes it’s a spiritual commitment that will help the Bible get better applied to my own heart.

Here is a list of specific ideas, Pam suggests:

Send a gift to the person who led you to Christ or discipled you.

Send a gift to the church(es) that have helped you grow.

Thank a school teacher.

Send a gift to a helping ministry like a crisis pregnancy clinic, a battered woman’s shelter, a rescue mission…

Send Bibles to places and peoples in need.

Send a kid to camp. 

©Pam Farrel from 30 Ways to Wake Up Your Quiet Time (IVP). For more devotional books by Pam http://www.Love-wise.com


What gift will you give God this Christmas?

Legacy: A Gift By Will

The grass withers and the flowers fall,
but the word of our God stands forever.
(Isaiah 40:8 NIV)



What does it take to leave a legacy? First, you must have something to leave behind. Second, it is beneficial to have a legal will. Yet, the most needed thing is a willingness to give it away. As we quiet our hearts before God, we not only benefit ourselves, we also are impacting others with a spiritual legacy.

A tangible way to share this legacy is to be present with others. To offer to be in God’s presence with them in your every day, ordinary life. We can extend prayer for others while we are in our own solitude and we can petition God together in community.

One of the many gifts God gave to us is the written Scriptures. I used to love learning Bible stories in Vacation Bible School. And as a teenager, we had youth leaders who encouraged us to read the Bible to get to know God more. I even remember my first quiet times spent in the attic space off our bedroom, which my sisters and I made into a secret hideout. I would climb in that space with my Bible, a little quiet time notebook and my heart open to God. I would read a short passage of Scripture and write down a phrase that I liked, along with a prayer back to God about the verses.

Spending time in God’s word became a sacred memory, that grew out of a willingness to set aside  the time and space, which I could have filled with other activities.

Today, in 30 Ways to Wake Up Your Quiet Time, Pam Farrel reminds us that we can leave a spiritual legacy for others. Most times, I think that my quiet time is for me, but what a wonderful gift to give to others, by spending time in God’s presence praying for and contemplating Scripture for someone else. 

Pam suggests this idea, which may take a commitment of your will to accomplish, but would be well worth it. (I have not done this myself, but I am asking God to give me one person to do this for as a special gift, as a legacy to encourage their spiritual growth.)

Here’s the idea: 

Try reading the Bible through  and marking it up to give as a gift . . .point out the verses that you think would encourage or strengthen [another person] . . . by highlighting, underlining and writing notes in the margin. Recall verses that helped you choose a career . . .or navigate a significant transition. (She asked one son to give titles to the Psalms; for another she wrote titles for each chapter in the book of Ruth with observations or questions for the son to contemplate.)

Pam did this for each of her three boys. She doesn’t say how long it took her, but what a gift! Here’s how this gift of time and love impacted her quiet moments:

As I read through the Bible for my three sons (one Bible for each son), I gained a new appreciation for Scripture. I valued my time in the Word more because not only was I growing as an individual, I was building a legacy.

©Pam Farrel from 30 Ways to Wake Up Your Quiet Time (IVP). For more devotional books by Pam http://www.Love-wise.com
As I look at the magnitude of this gift, I think I could never do it. I would have to adjust my expectations and dedicate my Bible reading to mostly preparing the gift Bible for the recipient. I think it would be an interesting way to invest my time with God and for the other person. 

If going through the whole Bible seems like too much, brainstorm with God for other creative ways to leave a Scriptural legacy for someone special in your life. Maybe a journal with special verses that you are praying for them or a scrapbook with pictures and favorite verses to encourage them at a certain season of life or on a special occasion. 
Have you ever had anyone leave you a spiritual legacy? 
If so, how has it impacted your life?


Here’s another creative way to leave a Scriptural legacy that I read about over here. This is the second time recently that I have heard about Journibles. My friend, Lynn, directed me to Healthy Spirituality by Jean Wise, who also reviewed the Journibles. And today my friend, Kelly, showed me the post at New Nostalgia.

Desire: Strong Intention or Aim

 
On the seventh day of Christmas my True Love gave to me,
seven synonyms for Desire.
 
 
Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. (James 1:17 NIV)


Choosing one word for the year to inform my path. Others came up with the idea and so I wanted to try it this year. Here’s a link that gives tips on how to choose your word. It will be interesting to see how one word informs a year full of living and choosing and believing and breathing God’s word.

Desire (v): to long or hope for.
Seven Synonyms: Crave, Hunger, Long,
Thirst, Want, Wish, Yearn



Desire. That’s my one word. It comes from the Latin, “de-” (from) plus “sider, sidus” (heavenly body). From those roots, I reach out to the Maker of the heavenly lights, rooting my desire in Him. Asking that my desires this year be imbued with His perfection and goodness, knowing full well that my human desires may be tainted by selfishness and pain.
 
Desire. Disguised want. I wanted to choose “want” for my focal word, but it didn’t look or sound as nice as desire. Want defined comes out a little more on the half empty side; it has various nuances like to be needy or destitute or to be in need of. Lack would be a good synonym.
 
Desire. Want. Lack. What do these words have in common? An outside source that fulfills. Invitation to live with less than, to embrace my own neediness, to confess my destitute state, these truths compel me to stay near the Shepherd, who is good and promises me that I shall not be in want.
 

Linking up with: One Word 365 Community

and

Only A Breath