Archive for October 4th, 2009

Update to Prayers

Sunday, October 04th, 2009 | Author: Skip Moen

From Ruth Olson who requested prayer in Spetember.

Thank you, Skip, for contacting me.  I haven’t been well and trying to regain my strength.  You can tell the prayer warriors that they can get on my website to see my update at www.gentledoves.org if you allow that sort of thing.

Otherwise, ending last week, I had a bone biopsy and 5 radiation treatments daily all in a row, for my right side of my pelvis from front to back, and the tip of right hip.  I am cautioned not to fall because if the pelvis fractures, I will be on bed rest until it heals.  My left arm has cancer also but they are just watching that to see what it does.

We are praying that the cancer will NOT spread.  This type of bone cancer can spread to the liver, lungs and brain.  The doctor at Mayo said that I will have a good life, if it doesn’t spread.   The Lord is able.
Thank you.  And thank you for your gift from God that you share with all of us.  I have received several emails from your friends who are praying for me.
ruth olson

Explore www.gentledoves.org for update on Ruth’s health.

Hospital Need

Sunday, October 04th, 2009 | Author: Skip Moen
Hello Skip:
I am coming before the body of Christ for a need.
As you may recall, I was to get some money for a contest I entered several months ago, and I was counting on the money.  As of this date, it has not been sent, and I keep praying, but am now wondering if I will get it at all.
I had to go the emergency room yesterday, for I was concerned about my heart as the night before, I felt pains in my left arm, and while in the hospital had several tests done, and two more are recommended, but I just don’t have the money for the other two tests nor the money to pay the hospital bill.  Had I gotten the contest money, i could have paid for it all, and while I haven’t gotten a no on the contest $$, I am not given any direct answers  as to when it will arive, although I have called several times.
I know the Lord is our provider.  I am not one that likes to be in debt, and i don’t believe it’s Biblical to be in this situation, and it seems the economy is dictating differently.
To sum it all up, I am asking if the body of Christ can help me pay some of this hospital bill.  The choice I had was to pay $5,000 incrementally, or use a credit card and have it reduced down to a little under $2,000, which I decided to go with, but $2,000 right now might as well be $10,000.00
I don’t like doing this, and it’s not as much a matter of pride as it is feeling like it is my responsibility, and I take my responsibilites seriously.
I do thank you for listening and continuing to feed us with God’s truth.
Thanks, God bless, Ellen McFarland, Clearwater, FL
NOTE:  At God’s Table is sending $1000 to Ellen tomorrow.  If anyone else wishes to contribute, please let me know.
Skip

A Picture A Day

Sunday, October 04th, 2009 | Author: Skip Moen

Padova, Italy

for your Sunday reflection

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Moveable Feast

Sunday, October 04th, 2009 | Author: Skip Moen

For in the day of evil He hides me in His booth; in the covering of His tent He hides me; Psalm 27:5

Booth – The Hebrew word, sok, is the basic word behind the Feast of Sukkoth. This is the feast of the harvest, celebrated in the Fall, the fifteenth day of the seventh month according to Exodus 34:22 and Leviticus 23:34-36. For seven days the people move from their homes to temporary shelters called “Sukkah.” The action recalls the wandering in the wilderness. The central imagery surrounds the booth made from palm branches and poles. This shelter becomes the “tent” for the people and a celebration of the tent of meeting that God provided during the forty years. All of this imagery is tied to the Tabernacle, the visible presence of God among His people.

When David needs to run and hide, he knows where to go. He goes to God’s tent, the shelter God provided for His people in the wilderness. The pictograph adds to the imagery. The consonants samech-kof are the picture of support by an open hand. Furthermore, this imagery contains the picture of turning toward what is open or allowed or covered. In other words, sok is about coming into the presence of God’s shelter where I find His covering and care. If I really need to run and hide, there’s no better place than God’s tent. That’s the same imagery of the festival during Sukkoth. Every year, God’s people are required to remember His provision and protection, not only as a reminder of His intervention with the children of Israel following the exodus, but also as a reminder of His continuing grace each year of our lives. The festival connects us to the God who acted on our behalf with our ancestors and who is acting on our behalf right now. It is history repeated.

Perhaps one of the great tragedies of contemporary Christianity is the loss of historical reality. Yes, we have the stories of the Old Testament, but we no longer have the presence of the Tanakh. We left that behind when the church shifted its foundation from Israel to Athens. What a shame! To see the faithfulness of God in the present is to experience a celebration that connects us with the same God who cared for all those freed slaves. I think God knows how desperately we need tangible reminders. He knows that the pressures of this world and the pace of this life too often cloud our vision of His grace and goodness. So, He established a series of feasts to be repeated every year as a way of continually connecting us with His eternal care. Recovering that connection is vital to the growth of the Body. Five thousand years of reminders of God’s provision and protection certainly give us ample evidence of His reliability when we need it most. Spending a week in booths teaches everyone a great lesson. Apparently it is a lesson worth repeating.

So, next time you need to go fishing, remind yourself of camping for a week in God’s tent. Then you will be filled with the reality of His unfailing care. “I am the Lord who brought you out of the house of bondage.”

Topical Index: sok, Sukkoth, Psalm 27:5, Exodus 34:22, Leviticus 23:34-36