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PWTE Daily Devotion

Where Are the Air Traffic Controllers?

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It must be a moment of anxiety when pilots lifted off their balloons at the annual Balloon Classic at Memorial Park in Colorado Springs.  These big lumbering airships are not that maneuverable. They’re at the whim of the wind.

Colorado Springs, Colorado
Colorado Springs, Colorado

Doesn’t it seem that our lives are often blown about by different winds?

We’re blown by the wind of anger.  We’re blown by the wind of jealousy.  We’re blown by the wind of inadequacy.

At Jesus’ resurrection a new wind was blown on the disciples and is still blown on the church through the waters of baptism.  It is the wind of God’s Spirit.

“After he had said this, he breathed on the disciples and said, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit.'” John 20:22 God’s Word to the Nations

Though we might not always feel the breath of the Spirit, it is this Spirit of the resurrected Christ that leads and directs our lives.  It is this Spirit who will eventually bring us to our own resurrection where we will no longer struggle with the different winds of anxiety that seek to guide our lives.

Copyright Douglas P. Brauner

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Inspiration

Boldly Creative – by Amy Brauner

In my natural state, I am timid and meek.  Although my introverted soul loves to be able to be a wallflower, observe, and stay quiet, quite often I find my resistance to be in conflict with what God is calling me to do.  He calls me to be bold in my hope, faith, and actions.  Eek!

My radical act this year came in the form of Crocheting Through Lent.  It was an idea that manifested in October of last year where I thought about how crocheting could be used as an alternative devotional.  Playing off the idea that in a prayer shawl we crochet our prayers into every stitch, why couldn’t the Word also be imprinted on an item?

unnamed (1)Then I also thought about how crocheters have a tough time finishing projects, especially ones as big as a blanket. I thought that Lent would be a great time to combine all my thoughts because (a) Lent is a spiritually demanding period in the church and crocheting squares would be a good discipline to do while reading a verse, and (b) it’s a reasonable time frame to ask people to complete a project.  And so “Crocheting Through Lent” was born.

Some may think that the idea is the hardest part of this scenario.  For me that was the easy part.  Taking the idea and making it a living, breathing operation takes a lot of courage.  It means being vulnerable and letting the potential for people to mock and tear your work to pieces.  However, God asked me to be bold and give my idea wings; trust that I don’t have to control every aspect of the plan.  My pastors supported the idea and I had 14 women sign up to participate weekly in devotions and crocheting during Lent.

The results are more than what I could have planned or hoped for

  • 13 blankets completed
  • A beginner to crochet signed up and completed her first blanket
  • One participant said she has gone to Zion for several years and this is the first time she participated in a Lent devotional
  • Two blankets went to two parents who have a 6 year old son battling Leukemia
  • One blanket was donated to the Loveland Chaplains and was given to a woman who recently lost her husband.

unnamed (2)I could go on and on with the stories that are filled with all the blankets that were made.  This program affected not only the woman’s lives who crocheted the blankets, but it affected the recipients.  Can you imagine what would have happened had I not put my words into action?  I am in no way taking credit for the results of this crochet devotional…that is completely God.  What I do want to make clear is that God can open doors, windows, paths for us to take.  WE must then follow through and say, “Ok God.  I see the path.  Please help me boldly walk it.”

__________________

Amy Brauner is an avid crocheter who lives in Loveland, Colorado along with her husband and two children. She is an active member of Zion Lutheran Church, as well as my wonderful daughter-in-law.

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PWTE Daily Devotion

Shaken to the Core

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“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling.” Psalm 46:1-3 English Standard Version

The drive to the top of Pikes Peak is one of the most beautiful drives you will ever take. There are opportunities to pull your car to the side and enjoy majestic vistas. This picture is of one of those vistas before reaching the summit.

Pikes Peak, Colorado
Pikes Peak, Colorado

I can’t imagine Pikes Peak being “moved into the heart of the sea” but I have experienced a couple of minor earthquakes in place I’ve lived. One tremor lasted a couple of seconds. The other lasted longer, shaking me out of bed.

There is always the potential of a natural disaster intruding on our lives. Tornadoes, hurricanes, and earthquakes can change our lives in a moment, yet it doesn’t take a natural disaster to impact our lives.

Our lives can be shaken as much by good things that happen to us as well as bad things. A new baby can shake us as much as the death of a spouse. A new job can turn our lives upside down as much as a foreclosure on our house.

In the good and the bad, God is our “very present help.”

There are many things that will shake us to the core. Maybe you’re facing such an event, good or bad.

Because of Christ, and the promise of his presence, you can face the fears of the future because Christ Jesus is your “refuge and strength” even as your world shakes around you.

Copyright 2015