Finished Furnished

What you see here is a dream come true.  (Some dreams change as you age, Friends, so gimme a break.)  This is a picture of our new basement bathroom.  So new the sticker is still on the toilet that had never been used & there is still clean-up & decorating to do.

Our basement - near five years in our imaginations, over four years in a savings account, near two years in pay-as-we-go construction -  is almost finished.  Can I get an, "amen"?

Carpet will be installed next week.  Got to paint the trim before then.  Paint the doors as soon as possible within the next weeks too.  I need that, "amen," again.

Yet, one problem.  Small one.  We've spent the savings we had to finish it so well, that we do not have enough left to fully furnish it.

I'm hearing a story.  A parable.  Jesus speaking.  Consider the cost before building a tower.  I know its a parable of discipleship, but its a building analogy & I've got building going on, Friends.  And there is a lesson for Christ following disciples in my post today too.  Back to my basement...

It is not fancy finish, but a good one.  Quality construction.  Materials that will last.  Surfaces that look nice & hopefully endure better.  We do have three rambunctious kids remember.

So, here we are at the place where we can say, "finished," and the basement built by faith is now challenging our flesh.  Good stewardship is being challenged by good salesmanship.  The challenge is our potential indebtedness in order that our fully finished basement might be a fully furnished basement.

It will be fully finished soon.  It sure would be nice if it was fully furnished too.

The furnishing are not upstairs already.  Upstairs is furnished.  Upstairs has none to spare.  These furnishing would be all new to us.  We are, as my wiser-than-the-average wife said, "basically furnishing a whole other house except for the kitchen" downstairs.  There's some sobering perspective for you.  Two complete bedrooms.  One larger than our master.  Plus a new den as large as our living room upstairs.

So we could do 12 or maybe 18 months "same as cash." One local furniture store has even "Gone Bananas" (their sale name) with 48 month financing.  We can get what we want now & pay along the way.  However, here we find another problem.  There is only so much cash in our monthly budget for all the that great "same as cash" stuff we'd like to have.

We got more ways to spend that we got means to pay.

(Terrible English, I know, but memorable I hope.)

As Americans we are regularly tempted to buy now & pay later.  It sounds good, but it is a temptation because we still have to pay & it may be for things we really don't need.

But Melanie & I are choosing faith, good stewardship, & prudent budgeting.  We won't have all the furniture we want right away, but we won't have the stress of paying for it either.

We pray that you'll join us in the practice of good, biblical stewardship.  While you are at it, feel free to stop by & join us for a seat on our unfurnished yet fully carpeted basement floor too.

 

Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, "Never will I leave you or forsake you."  Hebrews 13:5

 

Welcome

Welcome to my new site!

Yes, I took the cyberplunge with my own site.  It is plainer than an old shoe box now.  The framework is all here.  It just needs to be better furnished.

If you were a subscriber to my Blogger site, then you will need to subscribe anew to this site.  Just a few clicks one time & you are good to go.  Use the delivery system of your choice at the right.  We'll add more options as we are able or you ask.

Note herein that you can easily share these posts with anyone through most any electronic means by using the "share" icon at the bottom of each entry.

Thanks SO much for joining me here.

To God be the glory!

 

Watching You


Lord, forgive my failures in Fatherhood. Make me into the father you desire & my children deserve. Give me strength to serve when I am tired. Give me courage to do right when it is tough. Give me restraint to hold my tongue & harness my actions when I am angry. Give me wisdom to discern their growing hearts. Let me love them, the three precious children you have entrusted to me, as sacrificially as you love me. Amen.

 

Terrifying Power

Does this photo terrify you?

I get the willies just looking at it. I wouldn't want to walk there much less ride my mountain bike. Take note that his wheels are not on the ground. And that "ground" is only a narrow ledge.
These are the Cliffs of Mohan where one false move sends you 600 feet to the Irish rocks & Atlantic waves below.
Crazies - that is riders - exult in "riding the edge." Navigating the terrifying treachery of this trail includes jumping four foot gaps & riding along four inch ledges. I question if they are riding the edge of sanity.
Terrifying.
Flashback nearly 2000 years from Irish Cliffs to dusty Nazareth. Mark 6:1-6. Jesus goes back to his hometown synagogue the first time as a Rabbi. He is initially welcomed. Miracle making, powerful preaching rock star of his day. Yet, familiarity with "the carpenter" & contempt for "Mary's son" with no mention of his earthly father allowed his hometown crowd to label & dismiss him.
Mark 6:5 offers terrifying truth, "He could not do any miracles there except lay his hands on a few sick people."
The previous chapter plus, Mark 4:35-5:43, delivers a potent story trio with one purpose: displaying Jesus' awesome power. Jesus' power over nature, 4:35-41, calming the storm. Jesus' power over evil, 5:1-20, casting out the legion of demons. And 5:21-43, Jesus' power over sickness & death. Yet, here in his own hometown we learn the power of unbelief.
Mark 6:5 is one of the boldest statements of the Gospels. It tells us something Jesus will not to.
Jesus is God in flesh. Omnipotent. He CAN do anything. Yet Jesus chooses to limit his limitless power in accordance with the faith of people.
Terrifying.
Mark 6:6 reports of Jesus, "And he was amazed at their lack of faith." The only other time Jesus is said to be amazed in the Bible is by the faith of the Centurion who believed Jesus could heal his sick servant from a distance by word alone (Luke 7:9). Yet, the LACK of faith in his hometown amazes him.
What about you?
What do you think God can't do?
He can't change me. I'll have this habit forever.
He can't change them. They will always be that way.
He can't change the situation. I shouldn't even pray about it.
Do you realize that your lack of faith may be THE very reason he has not changed "it" whatever it is?
Terrifying.
You have power to stop the very thing that you need. You hold the keys to terrifying power. The power of unbelief.
Confess. Repent. Ask for faith.
May we live by faith fearing only of the holiness of God with no fear of our own faithlessness.

 

Humility Welcome


A dear Friend just delivered a great line that I must share.

"We welcome humility."

Let that marinate on your mind.

Profound.

We welcome humility because Jesus lived it & calls us to live it as well. Love one another. Honor one another. Serve one another. Lay down your life. Be honest. Confess your sin. Share your life. And you can think of many more.

God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the...

Did you guess, the humble?

Yes, God gives grace to the humble.