“Be very careful, then, how you live
-not as unwise but as wise,
Making the most of every opportunity
Because the days are evil.”
Ephesians 5:15-16 Read More→
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“Be very careful, then, how you live
-not as unwise but as wise,
Making the most of every opportunity
Because the days are evil.”
Ephesians 5:15-16 Read More→
Popularity: 4% [?]
I know it’s been a while. I don’t blame you if you don’t recognize me. Let me reintroduce myself. I’m Amber who used to be pretty regular at doing Blog Spotlights and would occasionally send Pattie some Daily Encouragements and a Blog Post or two. I wish I could say that I had disappeared because God was doing amazing things in my life and he was keeping me so busy that I just didn’t have a minute to sit down and type a few words. But, I can’t say that. Something else was keeping me away.
I was really surprised to see that I wasn’t the only one that felt like she had disappeared. My favorite Peanut Butter Ball chef admitted that she hadn’t been able to come here and write in her post Forgiveness. I really understood about wanting to, but not being able to do it.
What was keeping me away, you ask?
I was afraid. But, let me start at the beginning. A little over a year ago I quit my job. I didn’t find another one. I had been volunteering at church, but the ministries that I’m involved in do not allow me to attend Sunday School or Wednesday night church. Then, about five months ago, I got pregnant. Now, your first thought may be that I was afraid that we wouldn’t have the money. That was a concern, but not what was foremost in my mind. You see, two years before I had my son I had my first miscarriage. Then I had another. So my knee jerk reaction was to worry that I would lose this child too. I didn’t want to be afraid. I knew that it wass wrong to fear and that I needed to have faith. I needed to believe God’s promises. Over and over I begged God to take away my fear. I cried out to him to protect me and my tiny little baby. I finally began to ask him to show me why I was so much more afraid this time, after I’ve had one successful pregnancy, after I had passed the most dangerous stage for miscarriage, after every visit to the doctor showed that our baby was growing and thriving. Why was I paralyzed by fear?
It wasn’t until a week ago when I was diagnosed with iron deficiency anemia that things began to make sense.
There are two periods of my life that I will immediately name as the times that God grew my faith the most. My husband’s deployment and when I was pregnant with my son. I am no stranger to fear. This time something was different.
While I was working it was easy for me to stay fed. I mean that figuratively and literally. I listened to Christian radio everyday on the way to work and back, I ate lunch with my friend with whom I shared great food and even better conversations about religion. God even worked through our patients to minister to me, and at the time we were attending a church where I was able to ago to Sunday School as well as serve the church. My spiritual platter was spilling over the sides.
This time around, my life had transitioned into a much different routine. We started going to a larger church where I served gladly! I sing with the praise and worship team, I work with AWANA on Wednesdays and I started substitute teaching at the school. I felt like I was giving a little bit back of what had been given to me. It’s work that I love doing. But I didn’t realize that little by little I was depleting my spiritual health, until it was too late. I was sick. Very sick. And I knew that my heart was yearning for something but I was so far gone, I couldn’t tell what it was that I needed. Then I was attacked by Satan’s most dangerous weapon: Fear. The fear that consumed almost every minute of my day was a disease. Not a physical illness, but a spiritual one.
When we get sick we try to take care of ourselves and we take medicine. When my doctor called with the results from my bloodwork, she told me to eat right and take iron. Honestly, my eating habits have been pretty sorry lately. I’ve always tended to be nutritionally conscious. Blame it on being raised by a Home Economics teacher. But, combined Morning (meaning All Day) Sickness and first trimester fatigue depleted my reserves quickly. I wasn’t taking in the nutrients I needed to thrive.
After I prayed to God to tell me why I was so scared this time, he revealed to me that just as I was physically undernourished, I was spiritually anemic too. My Daily Bread routine had been reduced to occasional Bible readings. Reading my Bible was good. But it wasn’t enough to fight off spiritual attacks and minister to others. I realized that I had been starving for the food, the bread of life, that I had had in such abundance before. Just like our bodies require certain amounts of nutrients and calories for us to stay healthy, our spirit needs constant replenishment for those times that we use up our spiritual stores of energy like when we are facing times of trial or an onslaught of spiritual warfare.
God showed me that to get well, to get rid of the disease of Fear, that I need to make some serious effort to continually nourish my mind. I have to quit relying on spiritual snacks to supply everything I need and pull belly up to the banquet table. I’m going to have to feed myself a well balanced diet of the Word by reading daily, listening to teachers and making a point to interact with my Christian friends. And I’ll supplement all that with a good dose of Christian music.
I’m struggling with Fear even as I type this. But I’m getting better everyday. If you are struggling with fear in your life, pray that God will show you how to fill your mind with his love and hope leaving no room for fearful thoughts. Reach out to someone that you can trust to help you through your trial and above all be willing to accept the truths of God’s instruction in your life.
Scripture to snack on.
God is love. 1 John 4:16
If we have love, there is no need to fear. 1 John 4:18
God will deliver us from our hunger and thirst. Psalm 107:5-6
Jesus is the Bread of Life. John 6:32-33
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Today marks the official halfway point of our 8-week study! Congratulations! You are doing great!
Discussion Questions for Embracing the Detours
1. What unexpected disasters have you experienced in your spouse’s absence? Share both the funny and the serious.
2. This week you learned about the value of trusting God in the middle of chaotic situations and drama. What tips or techniques do you call on to stay calm when the unexpected comes calling?
3. Detours are not always bad things. What fun experiences did you list to answer the question on page 43 regarding the back-road detours?
4. Which detour seems to hit home with you the most – marriage detours, family detours, financial detours, or life detours? How can you better cope with these particular detours?
5. Detours in deployment happen to every military family. How did you learn this week to face these detours with confidence in God rather than to take on a defeated mentality?
6. A challenge from this week was to get off the sidelines and run the race God has for you. How can you put this challenge into action this coming week?
7. You spent a lot of time this week in Genesis 39-42, studying the life of Joseph. What stood out to you in those scripture passages as you studied them?
8. Joseph learned from his detours and his unfortunate experiences, and they helped him to be the leader he was in the end. How have your detours and unfortunate experiences made you more thankful or more equipped to handle life’s situations and circumstances?
9. What else about the chapter that stood out to you this week you’d like to share with us?
Homework for next week: Read Chapter 4, The Desert of Enough in Tour of Duty.
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Hi ladies! Welcome to Week Two of our online study! I hope you’ve had a chance to read the first chapter and answer the questions. Don’t forget to take time to comment about your thoughts and also, comment on what others in the group say.
Please be sure to look at the discussion questions posted below and answer those in the comments of this post. Please know that if there are some questions listed you don’t feel comfortable in answering, that’s ok. Share your answers and also feel free to add any comments or thoughts you had about the chapter as you went through it. Remember that the more you share, the more you can encourage and bless or challenge other ladies who may be the ones who need to hear what you say!
Ch. 1 – The Road Less Traveled Discussion Questions
1. What were your initial thoughts about this chapter/this topic this week? What’s one thing that stuck out to you?
2. On pg. 11, what were your early expectations when you were first married or you first became a military wife?
3. What are some of the things you’ve done to prepare for deployment?
4. In this chapter, we describe deployment as hills, valleys, sharp turns, U-turns, thick fog, desert heat and stormy wet roads. Have you experienced some of these conditions? Which ones? What are you experiencing now?
5. In the section, “God has His best in mind for us” (p. 13), we talk about the big picture and “God’s best” versus “our best.” What is the difference? How have you seen this played out in your own life?
6. We talked about choosing bitterness versus trusting God. It’s easy to resent God for what He allows to happen to us. How can you trust Him despite your circumstances?
7. Which letter of the SET acronym do you struggle with the most? What steps can you take to struggle less with it?
8. What’s the hardest thing about deployment for you? What do you need to do to turn this fear/challenge/struggle over to God? (And how can the rest of us pray for you in this?)
YOUR HOMEWORK FOR THIS WEEK: Read Chapter 2 in Tour of Duty.
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As I pondered Wives of Faith’s theme for this next season, “Come As You Are,” I am reminded of the scripture Mark 5:25-34. This is the story about a woman who had an issue of blood for twelve years. She spent all of her money on many physicians and still was not healed. She had heard about Jesus and heard He was in town. Somehow she knew if she could just touch the hem of His garment, she would be healed. She made her way through the crowd, came behind Jesus and touched His garment. Immediately, she felt in her body that she was healed of the affliction. Jesus knew someone had touched Him because He felt the power go out of Him. With excitement and enthusiasm, He asked the disciples who touched Him. Because of the crowd of people pressing up against Him, they did not see who it was. Finally, when Jesus sees this woman face to face, He tells her that her faith has made her well and to go in peace and be healed of her affliction.
Imagine for a moment that you are this woman, sick for twelve years, having seen many doctors with no relief and you are broke. You had heard that this man named Jesus who healed a multitude of people and performed many miracles was in town and He could heal you. You are desperate for some relief and will do anything to get to Jesus, even if all you could do is touch the hem of His garment. You have played this image over and over in your head. You have gone back to the people that told you about Jesus and asked them to tell you again about this man that can heal you. You go to where He is and make your way through the crowd to only touch the hem of His garment. Immediately, you feel relief. Afterwards, with a sense of awe and reverence, you finally have an encounter with this man named Jesus. You see the excitement in His face because He knows that you heard about Him from others, you asked about Him, you came to see Him and you exercised your faith. With much love and kindness, He cups your face in His hands, just like a father would his child’s, and blesses you. After receiving His blessing, that peace that passes all human understanding comes cascading over you. You walk away from Him never to be the same, changed forever.
Have you ever been sick and tired of being sick and tired? I can only imagine that this is the place she was in and was very desperate for some relief. Are you desperate for some relief? You may not need relief in your body, but maybe your mind or your soul needs relief.
I think we can all agree that the military lifestyle can wreak havoc on our body, mind and soul if we allow it to. You may be doing just fine and that is great, but do you know someone that is desperate for a healing? Do you know someone that is desperate enough to push through a crowd just to touch the hem of His garment? If so, tell them about Wives of Faith, tell them this is a safe place and they are more than welcome to come as they are. This is a place where Jesus is introduced to some and shared more intimately with others. It is the cry of all of us at Wives of Faith that military wives from all walks of life will hear about Jesus from you, they will come to Wives of Faith to receive from Him and we will all go on our journey of life carrying His peace.
Dear Lord, I am desperate for some relief in my life. I do believe that you are the Great Physician and You will bring healing to my life and other lives. I long to hear You say to me, “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your affliction.” Help me share with other daughters the healing that You so graciously give. Amen.
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