Categories
PWTE Daily Devotion

Called to Thrive Even in Drought

God excels at creating life when we’re surrounded by death.

You can listen to today’s devotion by clicking on this SoundCloud link.

For the sin of this one man, Adam, caused death to rule over many.
But even greater is God’s wonderful grace and his gift of righteousness,
for all who receive it will live in triumph over sin
and death through this one man, Jesus Christ.
Romans 5:17 New Living Translation
Delta Ponds, Eugene, Oregon, Copyright Douglas P Brauner
Delta Ponds, Eugene, Oregon, Copyright Douglas P Brauner

I took this picture on August 6, 2015, yet it looks like one I’d take in October or November. My home state of Oregon is under a severe drought and it shows itself in the trees, bushes and ponds. This is not the time of year that you’d expect to hear the crunching of dead leaves under your feet, yet that was too often the sound that I heard. People are nervous, scared and praying for rain.

However, I was surrounded by life in the midst of this drought.

I experienced this life at the Delta Ponds wetlands just a hop, skip and jump from the home in which I was raised. We called them the gravel pits when I grew up. We fished here. We swam here. I smoked my first cigarette here. I rode my bike around the gravel pits on my way to pick beans, and later, to weigh those beans for the pickers. They have always been a source of life for me.

And because the gravel pits have been turned into a wetland park (of which I am very grateful), life thrives here even in times of drought. I saw turtles, frogs, blue and green heron, great egrets, ducks and bees. I witness a mother wood duck caring for her little ones. I heard the familiar sound of Killdeer. I scared a nutria into a deep dive.

Like Oregon, our lives experience drought. There are times when it seems that the leaves of life are falling and we’re thirsting for relief. We might even feel that God has left us or that it’s his fault that we’re experiencing this drought. Paul reminds us that sin is real and that through this sin death rules. Yet, greater still is the life that we have through the one who speaks into our drought of sin with his merciful words from the cross, “Father, forgive them for they don’t know what they are doing.”

For the next several days we’ll walk through our times of drought as I share pictures from the Delta Ponds wetlands. May we experience the hope of life as we witness the thriving life of the gravel pits in midst of drought.

Copyright Douglas P Brauner

Categories
Podcasts

PWTE Episode 007: Thoughts on Being Judgmental

Copyright a2gemma "Point!" Flickr https://goo.gl/hr1icP http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Copyright a2gemma “Point!” Flickr https://goo.gl/hr1icP http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

In this episode of the Praying With The Eyes podcast my co-host, Richelle Hecker, and I discuss what it means to be judgmental and how judgmentalism affects our lives. We’ll define what it means to be judgmental and how it differs from making judgments as well as how we can address judgmentalism in the Christian Community.

Blog: Thoughts on Being Judgmental

Scripture:

Categories
PWTE Daily Devotion

What’s the Use?

God renews us even when we feel useless.

 You can listen to today’s devotion by clicking on this SoundCloud link.

“That is why we are not discouraged.
Though outwardly we are wearing out,
inwardly we are being renewed day by day.”
 

2 Corinthians 4:16 God’s Word to the Nations

Nobody sits at this picnic table. It lies far removed from any public access as it occupies space on land that was for sale and had been for quite sometime.

There were probably family gatherings shared around this table. Laughter, stories and card games might have encircled this table, but do so no longer. At that time there was no rust.  There were no rotting boards. It could hold the weight of many people. But now it sits, slowly deteriorating over time.

Copyright Douglas P Brauner
Copyright Douglas P Brauner

Some of us reading this blog today feel like the picnic table in its hay day. We can run a marathon, climb a 14er and pull and all-nighter. There are others who feel our physical health slowly slipping away and others who know exactly what this table is experiencing.

It’s true that life changes. Our bodies wear out. We frequent the chiropractor more often, the doctor more often, the optometrist more often.

However, we’re being renewed daily by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Outwardly our lives might resemble this picnic table, but for those who are in Christ, God is daily at work renewing us.

By the way, this piece of land was purchased shortly after this picture was taken. There’s still hope for this picnic table.

There’s still hope for you.

Copyright Douglas P Brauner