Saturday, November 2, 2013

God's Boston Glee Party?

October 31, 2013

"A Boston Glee Party" was the banner headline on the Sports section of the Sarasota Herald Tribune  announcing the Red Sox had won the World Series. Did you get the pun?

Ten years ago, almost to the day, the Sox won their first world series in 86 years. I mused then, "did God smile on the Red Sox? Was it because Curt Schilling tucked a cross inside his shirt when he pitched or was it David Ortiz pointing skyward as he crossed home plate after each homerun."

Did you notice yesterday what David Ortiz said when he received the Most Valuable Player trophy?
He first thanked God.  Or was it the signs in the stands that read, "We have faith," that brought God's favor?

"I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed-Nothing will be impossible for you."
(Matthew 17:20)

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

One nation under God?



July 4, 2013

This is our nation's birthday. We pledge to our flag, "One nation under God..." But we are not one nation under God. There are even those who want to ban the word God from our pledge. That offends me and its an insult to those who have died defending our nation.

I know if we keep our pledge to God he will keep his promises to us. May God continue to bless America.

"If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face
and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from Heaven and will forgive their sins and
heal their land." (2 Chronicles 7:14)

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Angel on a bridge?


 
May 2013
 

“Occasionally I see reports of happenings that can not be humanly explained-of visitors unexpectedly appearing to assist in times of crisis, or warning of impending danger. These can only be explained as the Intervention of God’s angels.”

      Bill Graham, Hope For Each Day

 

When I was 19 years old I lived in Tracy, California, and had been out with some friends in Stockton, about 20 miles away.  I was driving home alone about 2 am old Highway 50. The highway splits into two high narrow bridges over the San Joaquin River, one for north bound and one for south bound traffic. The bridges are steep so that you can’t see the other side until you get to the top. 

 

There was no traffic on the road at that hour and I was traveling the speed limit. I was in the left hand lane going up the south-bound bridge when, for some unexplained reason, I steered into the right hand lane. A moment later I was in the middle of the bridge when out of nowhere, a car came speeding the wrong way in the lane I had just left.

If I hadn’t changed lanes there would have been a head on collision in the middle of that high and narrow bridge. There was nowhere to go except over the edge into the river below.  I know that I would not have survived the crash or the river.

 
Decades later I still shiver at the thought of what could have happened that night.  There was no reason for me to change lanes. I was saved by an angel that night, I’m absolutely sure. 

 

“For he shall give his angels charge over you,
to keep you in all your ways.” Psalm 91:11

 
Mary (Kiser) Bartlein
Panther Ridge, Florida

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Pray Specifically



 


April
 
 She is introduced as Ms Julie. You don’t use last names when you are running from an abuser. She rode a bus to Florida with one suitcase and the clothes on her back. She had been directed to a shelter. She obtained a job waiting table at a restaurant within walking distance of the shelter.  
 
 
 
"What I really needed was a car to go on interviews and find a better job. So I prayed very specifically for a four-door Camry (she had had one once) so I could take people to church with me. I wanted a clean beige or brown car.


 
"A few days later I received a call from a caring organization that donates used cars to needy people. They had heard of my plight and called to say they had a car for me.

 
“When I arrived to pickup my car I was told the donor had taken it to a car wash. A few minutes later a car entered the parking lot and I knew it was a gift from God. It was a sparkling beige four-door Camry and it was clean.”


 
Ms Julie


Sarasota County

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Long Distance Jump Start


 
Week of January 13
 

It’s been a long day and we are all tired by the time we land at Tampa International Airport. We still have another hour to drive home to Sarasota.

 
The exhilaration of seeing our son graduate earlier that day from Navy boot camp at Great Lakes, Illinois is fading  and exhaustion is taking over.

 
By the time Marcia and I retrieve the bags including her mother’s luggage, it is nearly midnight. Now the challenge is to find our car in the color coded parking garage with its monorail system and stops named for aviation pioneers.

 
Alleluia! We find it on the first try.

The bags are loaded in the trunk, mom flops into the back seat, Marcia and I in the front. I turn the key and it won’t start. I try again. No luck.

 
Now what?

 
Marcia announces, “we can call triple A and wait for them to find someone to come out and help us, or we can pray right here and right now.”

 
There is a groan and a barely audible “Oh No,” from the back seat.

 
Marcia places her hands firmly on the dash and says, “Lord—its late, we are tired-you know our situation- we need your help to start this car and get us home in one piece. Thank You Lord.” 

 
The car starts on the very next try.

 
“I’m a believer now,” says the voice from the back seat.

 Robert DesRosiers, Sarasota


Reprinted from Go Figure Sarasota/Manatee with permission
available at Amazon.com.
 

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Pizza Hut Providence

Spiritually charged yet physically depleted and running on adrenaline, I steered the oversized van into the parking lot of a South Carolina Pizza Hut.

I and the students with me were several hours into our drive home to Southeast Florida following an incredible week of Summer Camp with 700 other students from church youth groups throughout the United States.

The kids had said their goodbyes to new friends, exchanging numbers and promising to stay in touch after spending six action-packed days and nights together. It was a week filled with inspiring worship and innovative biblical teaching, wacky relays, a rousing camp talent show and a funky costume contest. Several of my students made life-changing spiritual decisions and all of us felt a closer connection to our heavenly Dad.

The theme for the week was Servanthood—allowing God to minister to others through us.

I planned our meal stop after the lunch rush so we could get in and out and back on the road as quickly as possible. As my jovial, chattering students filed into the restaurant, we barely noticed the tables cluttered with half empty plastic cups, crumpled napkins and crusty dishes. Focused on exuberantly sharing their camp experiences with each other while keeping an eye on the restroom lines, the kids were totally unaware of their surroundings. Soon we realized we were the only ones in the dining room, and our group occupied most of the tables.

Fifteen minutes passed, then twenty, and soon the chatter died down long enough for us to realize we had not seen a server and we hadn’t even been offered menus.
At that moment I saw a pregnant young woman emerge from the kitchen and briefly stop behind the counter near the cash register.. Being careful not to cast a glance our way, she disappeared back into the kitchen without a word. By this time thirty-five minutes had passed and the kids were hungry and cranky. I was frustrated and antsy to get back on the road. By the time she appeared again, we had logged forty-five minutes at our stop, and still had no menus.
I approached the counter intending to complain. In that moment God helped me to see the situation through his eyes. No longer did I see a dirty restaurant with lazy employees ignoring a dining room of restless students and their anxious leader.

Instead I saw an overwhelmed expectant mother, not much older than the students in my group, tired and alone and dying to prop up her swollen feet.

Instead of explaining the rush we were in and asking why she was not taking care of us, I heard myself asking if she had a damp cloth I could use.

Without a word I started going table to table gathering dirty silverware, stacking plates and plastic cups and delivering them to the counter. One by one I noticed my students slowly and quietly beginning to follow suit. Once the dishes were cleared I washed the table tops with the cloth she had given me. This continued until every table in the place was clean.

The mood began to transition from impatient exasperation to compassionate assistance. Each student’s silent service was an act of pure worship, filling us with reverent gratitude, and I believe it made God smile.

The meal we received from that South Carolina Pizza Hut brought with it the realization that God had given us the perfect setting to flesh out the biblical principle of Servanthood we had just learned at camp.

What an amazing gift!

Julie Smith Searer
Northport

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Brace Yourself

January 2012

We are driving home from lunch after church in a driving rain, As usual I’m sitting in the back seat of our van beside our six-month old baby, Rachel. She is strapped in her rear facing car seat and is having a serious crying episode.
After several minutes of trying to comfort her, I realize that she has a very soiled diaper. No wonder she is screaming. I said to my husband, Bob, who is driving, “Brace Yourself, I’m taking her out of her car seat for a minute to change her diaper.”
I place her on the carpeted floor and change her diaper and remove her stained pants. I think I was still leaning over tying the dirty items in a publix plastic bag when I hear Bob yell, “WATCH Out!”
Our van is T-boned, hit right in the back seat drivers side door. The impact busts out the window beside me and sends our van spinning in the middle of the intersection (Bahia Vista and McIntosh. Rd.)
“Oh my God,” we are in a wreck and Rachael is not in her car seat. Glass is raining over both of us. All I see is little Rachael in mid-air seemingly suspended there for a moment, her bright blue eyes looking right into mine. And then wooosh…she sails out the window…floating like a frizbee through the rain…across that intersection landing in a puddle, on her bottom, screaming and crying.
I am screaming, “my baby, my baby.” My sweet Bob, who doesn’t know Rachael has been ejected, turns around to see about us only to find me stuck in my seat yelling and pointing across the road screaming, “Go get her, please. Go get her.”
A kind man in a light blue sweater, who sees the accident, gets out of his car to help. He cautions about not picking her up. Try telling a daddy he can’t pick up his crying baby who has been thrown 30 feet through the air, landing in a puddle inches from the metal base of a utility pole.
Bob says he knew she was “whole” when he put his hands under her to lift her into his arms. The kind man in the blue sweater, holds a poncho from sea world over Bob and baby and walks them back as I crawl over the front seat and out of the van.
The ambulance arrives with the EMT’s who see our baby bleeding from the mouth, strap her on a back board and take us all to Sarasota Memorial Hospital. Several tests are made while we wait three hours for the storm to pass so that Bay Flight can air lift her to All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg. Only patient and flight crew can go in the helicopter so our pastors drive us to St. Pete.
There are four days of MRI’s, ct scans and other tests. Everyone is amazed there are no broken bones, internal hemoraging. The bleeding from her mouth turned out to be a small glass cut. Doctors and specialist kept coming in and out of Rachel’s room, all amazed and totally not accepting that she is really ok. They all keep telling us that when someone is thrown from a spinning vehicle the ending is always sad, severe injury or death.
Yes, finally everyone agrees. This is a miracle.
Bob and I are so thankful that our baby was not seriously injured and following checkups have confirmed she is 100% fine. She truly was touched by an angel. When we share her story people can not help themselves from wanting to touch her.
She is now eight-years-old and we look at every day as a true gift. Thank you for reading Rachel’s story and pass it on. Choose to live your life today to the fullest. Brace yourself and live today with passion.
Dundie Crisp The Paddocks, Sarasota