|

Home
Our History
Weekly Devotional
Monthly Newsletter
Images
Downloads
Directions & Map
Related Links
Contact Us
|
Weekly Devotional
May 14, 2012
God’s Peace be with you all.
Our devotion this
week is from Lutheran Hour
Ministries
“Superheros”
Yet You are He who took me from the womb; You made me
trust You at my mother's breasts. On You was I cast from
my birth, and from my mother's womb You have been my
God. Be not far from me, for trouble is near, and there
is none to help. Psalms 22:9-11
Superheroes are supposed to wear a
cape.
The superheroes I'm talking about today are pretty well
disguised. True, they may seem to be like everyone else.
They're not.
The superhero we call "mom," using only two eyes, manages to
see all the things that escape the rest of us. Sitting at
the kitchen table, helping her second-grader with his
homework, she can see in the living room her three-year-old,
trying to stuff a peanut butter and jelly sandwich into the
VCR.
Like the rest of us, these mothers have two lips, but those
lips, when pressed to the forehead of an ill child, can
accurately record a temperature to within a tenth of a
degree. They can heal any wound that doesn't call for
stitches. They can, with a smile, brighten up the darkest
day, and bring down heaven's wrath upon the tot who is bent
on misbehaving. The mother we're talking about has only two
ears, but she can hear the silence that says something is
not right in her baby's bedroom. They can pick up the first
whimper of a child who is coming down with a cold. Like a
patriot missile, they can zone in on a bad word that was
spoken a half mile away.
Mom's brain is different, too. She can hear your
thoughts and knows when you're giving her lip, even when
your lips aren't moving. They know when you haven't
scrubbed your face, even when you wet the washrag. They know
who started the argument, and who pushed whom, first.
Moms know. I don't know how they know, but they know.
The only shortcoming moms seem to have is they lie a
lot. They can be up all night changing the bed sheets and
pajamas of two children who have the flu, but still say they
"slept just fine." When there are six members in the family
and only five ice cream bars, they say that, in recent
months, they've developed an allergy to dairy products.
Moms, liars that they are, say they don't mind their
birthday being forgotten or getting a new waffle iron for a
25th anniversary.
Moms have a whole list of excuses why their children are too
busy to call them on Valentine's Day and Mother's Day.
"After all, my children are very busy, and they do have
lives of their own." That's a hard lie for them to pull off,
but moms say it with that tone that says you'd better not
challenge them.
Mothers are special. No one can argue it; no one can deny
it, or debate it. But as special as mothers are, I would
like to spend a few moments talking to you about an
exceptional subspecies of the maternal: I want to talk about
the Christian mother.
Christian mothers are unique. They are exceptional -- not
because of any personal quality they naturally possess, or
because of any extraordinary gene they've inherited.
Christian mothers are unique because they know Jesus.
Knowing Jesus means that Christian mothers see the world
differently; they react differently; they behave
differently; they hope differently. Every aspect of their
lives is changed because they know Jesus and they believe
His holy Word.
Christian moms are special because they want their children
to know the Savior, just as they do. And that is cause for
thanksgiving.
THE PRAYER: Dear Lord, for a superhero Christian mom,
I give thanks. For children who have no such mom, I pray You
will intervene. In the Name of the Savior who loves me with
a greater love than mom, I pray it. Amen.
In our prayers
this week: Wayne Camp, Mike Culbreth,
Ann, Daniel, Norm, Jane, Bobby, and Pat.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Judson
|
Mailing
Address:
P. O. Box 161000
Boiling Springs, SC 29316
(864)
599-8802
Worshiping
at:
7420 Highway 9
Inman, SC
29349
Click here
for more devotionals
|
|