Thursday, August 30, 2007

August 20th and Vacation

Fireworks


In my last journey update I mentioned that August 20th is a Hungarian holiday and that we have a large fireworks show (which is located just outside my apartment windows). There was a major thunderstorm earlier in the day, but it cleared up and it was a beautiful display. The photos never do it justice but these are some pictures that I took.

AND I haven't been posting lately because I went on a short vacation. After the busy non-stop ministries of summer, where we often don't take a day off, each team member was given three comp days. My Team Leader, knowing that I don't really stop and relax well at home where I am always thinking about everything to be done, recommended that I go away somewhere. So I packed my bags and my teammate, Brenda and I went to Slovenia. More about the wonderful time that I had to come...
FIRST

I joined book club called FIRST. On the first of each month I'll have a post about a new Christian fiction book along with information about the author and the first chapter of the book.

I just joined in August so I have not read the book referenced below. I can't give any recommendation for it since I haven't read it, but you can visit the author's site if this book interests you. Next month I should, hopefully, have read the book for October 1st and be able to comment and give my pro and con thoughts on it.

Enjoy, Rachelle




It is September 1st, time for the FIRST Day Blog Tour! (Join our alliance! Click the button!) The FIRST day of every month we will feature an author and his/her latest book's FIRST chapter!



This month's feature author is:

CAMY TANG

and her book:

Sushi for One?


(Zondervan, September 1, 2007)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Camy Tang is a member of FIRST and is a loud Asian chick who writes loud Asian chick-lit. She grew up in Hawaii, but now lives in San Jose, California, with her engineer husband and rambunctious poi-dog. In a previous life she was a biologist researcher, but these days she is surgically attached to her computer, writing full-time. In her spare time, she is a staff worker for her church youth group, and she leads one of the worship teams for Sunday service.

Sushi for One? (Sushi Series, Book One) is her first novel. Her second, Only Uni (Sushi Series, Book Two) comes out in February 2008!

Visit her at her website.

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Chapter 1

Eat and leave. That’s all she had to do.

If Grandma didn’t kill her first for being late.


Lex Sakai raced through the open doorway to the Chinese restaurant and was immediately immersed in conversation, babies’ wails, clashing perfumes, and stale sesame oil. She tripped over the threshold and almost turned her ankle. Stupid pumps. Man, she hated wearing heels.

Her cousin Chester sat behind a small table next to the open doorway.

“Hey Chester.”


“Oooh, you’re late. Grandma isn’t going to be happy. Sign over here.” He gestured to the guestbook that was almost drowned in the pink lace glued to the edges.

“What do I do with this?” Lex dropped the Babies R Us box on the table.

Chester grabbed the box and flipped it behind him with the air of a man who’d been doing this for too long and wanted out from behind the frilly welcome table.

Lex understood how he felt. So many of their cousins were having babies, and there were several mixed Chinese-Japanese marriages in the family. Therefore, most cousins opted for these huge—not to mention tiring—traditional Chinese Red Egg and Ginger parties to “present” their newborns, even though the majority of the family was Japanese American.

Lex bent to scrawl her name in the guestbook. Her new sheath dress sliced into her abs, while the fabric strained across her back muscles. Trish had convinced her to buy the dress, and it actually gave her sporty silhouette some curves, but its fitted design prevented movement. She should’ve worn her old loosefitting dress instead. She finished signing the book and looked back to Chester. “How’s the food?” The only thing worthwhile about these noisy events. Lex would rather be at the beach.

“They haven’t even started serving.”

“Great. That’ll put Grandma in a good mood.”

Chester grimaced, then gestured toward the far corner where there was a scarlet-draped wall and a huge gold dragon wall-hanging. “Grandma’s over there.”

“Thanks.” Yeah, Chester knew the drill, same as Lex. She had to go over to say hello as soon as she got to the party— before Grandma saw her, anyway—or Grandma would be peeved and stick Lex on her “Ignore List” until after Christmas.

Lex turned, then stopped. Poor Chester. He looked completely forlorn—not to mention too bulky—behind that silly table. Of all her cousins, he always had a smile and a joke for her. “Do you want to go sit down? I can man the table for you for a while. As long as you don’t forget to bring me some food.” She winked at him.

Chester flashed his toothy grin, and the weary lines around his face expanded into his normal laugh lines. “I appreciate that, but don’t worry about me.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yeah. My sister’s going to bring me something—she’s got all the kids at her table, so she’ll have plenty for me. But thanks, Lex.”

“You’d do the same for me.”

Lex wiggled in between the round tables and inadvertently jammed her toe into the protruding metal leg of a chair. To accommodate the hefty size of Lex’s extended family, the restaurant had loaded the room with tables and chairs so it resembled a game of Tetris. Once bodies sat in the chairs, a chopstick could barely squeeze through. And while Lex prided herself on her athletic 18-percent body fat, she wasn’t a chopstick.

The Chinese waiters picked that exact moment to start serving the food.

Clad in black pants and white button-down shirts, they filed from behind the ornate screen covering the doorway to the kitchen, huge round platters held high above their heads. They slid through the crowded room like salmon—how the heck did they do that?—while it took all the effort Lex had to push her way through the five inches between an aunty and uncle’s chairs. Like birds of prey, the waiters descended on her as if they knew she couldn’t escape.

Lex dodged one skinny waiter with plates of fatty pork and thumb-sized braised octopus. Another waiter almost gouged her eye out with his platter. She ducked and shoved at chairs, earning scathing glances from various uncles and aunties.

Finally, Lex exploded from the sea of tables into the open area by the dragon wall-hanging. She felt like she’d escaped from quicksand. Grandma stood and swayed in front of the horrifying golden dragon, holding her newest great-granddaughter, the star of the party. The baby’s face glowed as red as the fabric covering the wall. Probably scared of the dragon’s green buggy eyes only twelve inches away. Strange, Grandma seemed to be favoring her right hip.

“Hi, Grandma.”

“Lex! Hi sweetie. You’re a little late.”

Translation: You’d better have a good excuse.

Lex thought about lying, but aside from the fact that she couldn’t lie to save her life, Grandma’s eyes were keener than a sniper’s. “I’m sorry. I was playing grass volleyball and lost track of time.”

The carefully lined red lips curved down. “You play sports too much. How are you going to attract a man when you’re always sweating?”

Like she was now? Thank goodness for the fruity body spritz she had marinated herself in before she got out of her car.

“That’s a pretty dress, Lex. New, isn’t it?”

How did she do that? With as many grandchildren as she had, Grandma never failed to notice clothes, whereas Lex barely registered that she wasn’t naked. “Thanks. Trish picked it out.”

“It’s so much nicer than that ugly floppy thing you wore to your cousin’s wedding.”

Lex gritted her teeth. Respect your grandmother. Do not open your mouth about something like showing up in a polkadotted bikini.

“Actually, Lex, I’m glad you look so ladylike this time. I have a friend’s son I want you to meet—”

Oh, no. Not again. “Does he speak English?”

Grandma drew herself to her full height, which looked a little silly because Lex still towered over her. “Of course he does.”

“Employed?”

“Yes. Lex, your attitude—”

“Christian?”

“Now why should that make a difference?”

Lex widened innocent eyes. “Religious differences account for a lot of divorces.”

“I’m not asking you to marry him, just to meet him.”

Liar. “I appreciate how much you care about me, but I’ll find my own dates, thanks.” Lex smiled like she held a knife blade in her teeth. When Grandma got pushy like this, Lex had more backbone than the other cousins.

“I wouldn’t be so concerned, but you don’t date at all—”

Not going there. “Is this Chester’s niece?” Lex’s voice rose an octave as she tickled the baby’s Pillsbury-Doughboy stomach. The baby screamed on. “Hey there, cutie, you’re so big, betcha having fun, is Grandma showing you off, well, you just look pretty as a picture, are you enjoying your Red Egg and Ginger party? Okay, Grandma, I have to sit down. Bye.”

Before Grandma could say another word, Lex whisked away into the throng of milling relatives. Phase one, accomplished. Grandmother engaged. Retreat commencing before more nagging words like “dating” and “marriage” sullied the air.

Next to find her cousins—and best friends—Trish, Venus, and Jenn, who were saving a seat for her. She headed toward the back where all the other unmarried cousins sat as far away from Grandma as physically possible.

Their table was scrunched into the corner against towering stacks of unused chairs—like the restaurant could even hold more chairs. “Lex!” Trish flapped her raised hand so hard, Lex expected it to fly off at any moment. Next to her, Venus lounged, as gorgeous as always and looking bored, while Jennifer sat quietly on her other side, twirling a lock of her long straight hair. On either side of them …

“Hey, where’s my seat?”

Venus’s wide almond eyes sent a sincere apology. “We failed you, babe. We had a seat saved next to Jenn, but then . . .” She pointed to where the back of a portly aunty’s chair had rammed up against their table. “We had to remove the chair, and by then, the rest were filled.”

“Traitors. You should have shoved somebody under the table.”

Venus grinned evilly. “You’d fit under there, Lex.”

Trish whapped Venus in the arm. “Be nice.”

A few of the other cousins looked at them strangely, but they got that a lot. The four of them became close when they shared an apartment during college, but even more so when they all became Christian. No one else understood their flaws, foibles, and faith.

Lex had to find someplace to sit. At the very least, she wanted to snarf some overpriced, high calorie, high cholesterol food at this torturous party.

She scanned the sea of black heads, gray heads, dyed heads, small children’s heads with upside-down ricebowl haircuts, and teenager heads with highlighting and funky colors.

There. A table with an empty chair. Her cousin Bobby, his wife, his mother-in-law, and his brood. Six—count ’em, six— little people under the age of five.

Lex didn’t object to kids. She liked them. She enjoyed coaching her girls’ volleyball club team. But these were Bobby’s kids. The 911 operators knew them by name. The local cops drew straws on who would have to go to their house when they got a call.

However, it might not be so bad to sit with Bobby and family. Kids ate less than adults, meaning more food for Lex.

“Hi, Bobby. This seat taken?”

“No, go ahead and sit.” Bobby’s moon-face nodded toward the empty chair.

Lex smiled at his nervous wife, who wrestled with an infant making intermittent screeching noises. “Is that …” Oh great. Boxed yourself in now. Name a name, any name. “Uh … Kyle?”

The beleaguered mom’s smile darted in and out of her grimace as she tried to keep the flailing baby from squirming into a face-plant on the floor. “Yes, this is Kylie. Can you believe she’s so big?” One of her sons lifted a fork. “No, sweetheart, put the food down—!”

The deep-fried missile sailed across the table, trailing a tail of vegetables and sticky sauce. Lex had protected her face from volleyballs slammed at eighty miles an hour, but she’d never dodged multi-shots of food. She swatted away a flying net of lemony shredded lettuce, but a bullet of sauce-soaked fried chicken nailed her right in the chest.

Yuck. Well, good thing she could wash—oops, no, she hadn’t worn her normal cotton dress. This was the new silk one. The one with the price tag that made her gasp, but also made her look like she actually had a waist instead of a plank for a torso. The dress with the “dry-clean only” tag.

“Oh! I’m sorry, Lex. Bad boy. Look what you did.” Bobby’s wife leaned across the table with a napkin held out, still clutching her baby whose foot was dragging through the chow mein platter.

The little boy sitting next to Lex shouted in laughter. Which wouldn’t have been so bad if he hadn’t had a mouth full of chewed bok choy in garlic sauce.

Regurgitated cabbage rained on Lex’s chest, dampening the sunny lemon chicken. The child pointed at the pattern on her dress and squealed as if he had created a Vermeer. The other children laughed with him.

“Hey boys! That’s not nice.” Bobby glared at his sons, but otherwise didn’t stop shoveling salt-and-pepper shrimp into his mouth.

Lex scrubbed at the mess, but the slimy sauces refused to transfer from her dress onto the polyester napkin, instead clinging to the blue silk like mucus. Oh man, disgustamundo. Lex’s stomach gurgled. Why was every other part of her athlete’s body strong except for her stomach?

She needed to clean herself up. Lex wrestled herself out of the chair and bumped an older man sitting behind her. “Sorry.” The violent motion made the nausea swell, then recede. Don’t be silly. Stop being a wimp. But her already sensitive stomach had dropped the call with her head.

Breathe. In. Out. No, not through your nose. Don’t look at that boy’s drippy nose. Turn away from the drooling baby.

She needed fresh air in her face. She didn’t care how rude it was, she was leaving now.

“There you are, Lex.”

What in the world was Grandma doing at the far end of the restaurant? This was supposed to be a safe haven. Why would Grandma take a rare venture from the other side where the “more important” family members sat?

“My goodness, Lex! What happened to you?”

“I sat next to Bobby’s kids.”

Grandma’s powdered face scrunched into a grimace. “Here, let me go to the restroom with you.” The bright eyes strayed again to the mess on the front of her dress. She gasped.

Oh, no, what else? “What is it?” Lex asked.

“You never wear nice clothes. You always wear that hideous black thing.”

“We’ve already been over this—”

“I never noticed that you have no bosom. No wonder you can’t get a guy.”

Lex’s jaw felt like a loose hinge. The breath stuck in her chest until she forced a painful cough. “Grandma!

Out of the corner of her eye, Lex could see heads swivel. Grandma’s voice carried better than a soccer commentator at the World Cup.

Grandma bent closer to peer at Lex’s chest. Lex jumped backward, but the chair behind her wouldn’t let her move very far.

Grandma straightened with a frighteningly excited look on her face. “I know what I’ll do.”

God, now would be a good time for a waiter to brain her with a serving platter.

Grandmother gave a gleeful smile and clapped her hands. “Yes, it’s perfect. I’ll pay for breast implants for you!”

© Camy Tang
Used by permission of Zondervan

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Valley of the Shadow

Valley of Shadow

I was sent an article called Cancer’s Unexpected Blessings: When you enter the Valley of the Shadow of Death, things Change, published at
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2007/july/25.30.html.

It is really a great article all-around and I’d recommend you read the whole thing, but there was one quote that stood out to me because it impacts where I often find myself.

“Third, we can open our eyes and hearts. God relishes surprise. We want lives of simple, predictable ease—smooth, even trails as far as the eye can see—but God likes to go off-road. He provokes us with twists and turns. He places us in predicaments that seem to defy our endurance and comprehension—and yet don't. By his love and grace, we persevere. The challenges that make our hearts leap and stomachs churn invariably strengthen our faith and grant measures of wisdom and joy we would not experience otherwise.” Tony Snow

I could relate to this quote, not in the experiencing the Valley of Death scenario but in the setting of experiencing the battles of everyday life. When life seems too hard (and it often does living here) I close my eyes and imagine an easier life, “even trails as far as the eye can see.” But that is not God’s plan, for me or for any of His children. I love the description “God likes to go off-road.” I can imagine him calling out in an adventurous tone, “Come on, follow me and we’ll explore unexplored pathways.” Yes, invariably there is hurt along the way: climbing the tall mountain peak leaves us out of breath, often with bruises and occasionally with injuries. But then there is just what Snow mentioned, strengthening and joy; vistas and experiences that change us and make the moments of our lives richer.

This quote echoed of C.S. Lewis’ refrain, “Further up and farther in.” God has more in store for us than we can ever imagine!

Monday, August 20, 2007

Journey, an update 8-20-07

Heidi's Shower

Praise the LORD, O my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits – who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s. Psalm 103:1-5

God has been so good to me and I just want to take a moment and Praise Him for all His goodness poured out into my life. It is good to praise the Lord and to remember all His blessings poured out on me: a weak, forgetful, sinner. I read once how the words in these verses, sins and diseases, can actually be translated rebellion and perversions. God takes away our rebellious hearts and He is able to heal the perversions that disease our soul. God’s grace is overwhelming and His love is amazing! While I was still His enemy, in love He made a way for me to become a cherished daughter. He pursued me in His love, just as He even now pursues so many who are still running from His love. Praise the Lord for His redemption – may it reach to the ends of the earth and enfold all those who will come to Him. Thank the Lord that I can have the privilege of participating in bringing this unfathomable redemption to the people of Hungary.

The picture above is from the prayer shower we had for Heidi this week.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Faith My Eyes

A Hometown Road

I was listening to my iTunes as I was working on my computer and I paused when this song came on. It's the song of a sojourner thinking of the hometown and people left behind even while the road away from home streches out ahead. The lyrics describe a lot of the thoughts that have been flitting through my mind lately and I thought I would share them. How often do I mistake my happiness for blessing? It is much like a prayer for my life: Help me Lord to trust the mystery of your leading. Keep me faithful be it a light or heavy load. Help me to walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes.

Caedmons Call Lyrics: Faith My Eyes (excerpts)

As I survey the ground for ants
Looking for a place to sit and read
I'm reminded of the streets of my hometown
How they're much like this concrete that's warm

beneath my feet
...
But if I must go,
I trust...
Life is better off a mystery
...
Hometown weather is on TV
And I imagine the lives of the people living there
And I'm curious if they imagine me
Cause they just wanna leave;
I wish that I could stay

But I get turned around
And I mistake my happiness for blessing
But I'm blessed...
Still I judge success by how I'm dressing

So keep on coming with these lines on the road
And keep me responsible be it a light or heavy load
So keep me guessing with these blessings in disguise
I'll walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes

So I'll sing a song of my hometown
I'll breathe the air and walk the streets
Maybe find a place to sit and read
But the ants are welcome company


So keep on coming with the lines on the road
And keep me responsible be it a light or heavy load
So keep me guessing with these blessings in disguise
I'll walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes


I'll walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes.
And I'll walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Joy or Happiness

tulips

Last night I had the third conversation, in the last month alone, that I have had with different people about the difference between joy and happiness. I was tired and not very articulate, but I wanted to share an article which I think talks about it much better than I ever will.

In my life I have really wrestled with the difference between these two concepts. God gives us joy that originates in the very center of our being. He gives us life and hope and peace, but I firmly believe that He NEVER promises His children happiness: i.e. - good circumstances. We may get good circumstances in our lives, but it isn't a promise. When Christ calls us, He calls us to come and die, to take up our cross and lay down our lives. We are PROMISED persecutions. Trials and burdens are normal by-products of living in a fallen world. I believe that many Christians experience unnecessary feelings of guilt when they are sad about their circumstances, because they don't understand the difference between joy and happiness.

Read Anne Robertson's article at: http://www.stjohnsdover.org/99adv3.html

Friday, August 10, 2007

Journey, an update 8-10-07

“I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers. I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray also that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints, and his incomparably great power for us who believe.” Ephesians 1:16-19a

I’ve been thinking quite a bit lately about identity: being verses doing and what defines worth in God’s eyes. In truth, worth is defined; we are defined; by the blood of Christ. It is our position as God’s children, because of the sacrifice of Christ on the cross, which makes us valuable and defines our existence. I love Paul’s prayer here in Ephesians 1. He doesn’t pray that the Ephesians will be effective but, that they will know God better. He doesn’t pray that they will make the world marvel at their amazing works but that they will know the HOPE of God, found the riches of his inheritance (relationship as heirs and the promise of heaven) and his power (the same power that raised Christ from the dead).

Letting Christ be our identity is actually a freeing thing. We often talk about surrendering our material things to and for the Lord, but we need to go beyond just the material and lay down ourselves. After that initial surrender of our flesh and our sin, at the foot of the cross, Christ renews us into a new creation. But we must learn to walk in this renewal, laying down our false perceptions, including the perceptions of where our value comes from. This is radically different from what the world teaches. But if we can just grab hold, for even a moment, of how God truly sees us – then we can find the freedom to let go of the things that weigh us down. If our eyes are opened and our heart’s enlightened to our position as cherished heirs who have an eternal hope, then we can begin to live in the power of the gospel.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Identity - Being God's Unique Creation

God's Unique Creation


I was reading an article called “The Tech Effect” online, from Christianity Today, and I was struck by one the quotes there. My thoughts are completely unrelated and outside the boundaries of the article. This is the quote:

“When I started [preaching], I was very focused on the question of effectiveness. I found myself drowning because unless I saw some really big life change happening, I felt like a failure. I had a therapist (I'll admit it), and he said to me, "Shane, I went from being an average therapist to being a really great therapist when I simply offered interventions and I stopped being invested in the outcomes." That was a big insight for me. So for me good preaching is being connected to who God's made me to be, and not investing my identity in the outcomes.” Shane Hipps

This quote references the very thing that can make life and ministry so difficult. Success is NEVER about the response of someone else. Whether or not people ever respond to the gospel has absolutely nothing to do with my success. Whether 10,000 people respond and are changed by the gospel has nothing – ZERO – to do with my success. God and God alone is the creator out outcomes, the changer of hearts!

I find that, especially in western society, we are overwhelmingly concerned with results and quantifications. But that is not at all what God is concerned about. God is concerned about much bigger things like: our relationships, our character, whether we are true worshippers: men and women after His own heart.

I wish the church (as a whole worldwide body) could truly wrap their minds around the real definition of Biblical success. Hey, I wish I could wrap my mind around the true definition of Biblical success! How many broken and discouraged people could find new hope? The freedom of truly finding our identity in Christ, regardless of the outcomes, regardless of the opinions of others (even other believers), could have an indescribable impact on the world.

I am learning, and will likely spend my entire life trying to figure out, how to base my estimation of my worth on who God has called me to BE and not on what I am doing, the results of my actions or the opinions of others. I hope you can find the freedom Christ offers by basing your identity solely on who He is calling you to BE. Keep shining, let Him control the results!

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Things that define

Cross


We all have things that define us. Some of them we didn’t have a choice in…who your family was, what country you were born in, physical limitations or advantages, the perceptions of others, etc. But some things we do have a choice in. What we become, what we like, who are friends are, what hobbies we pursue, banker, author, musician, waitress, etc. These are things that we use to define us.

Some of the things that define me… American, English speaker, lover of nature, “country girl” who prefers jeans and boots but still loves jewelry, seeker of wide open spaces, crazy about horses, cherisher of solitude, cat lover, photographer, singer, a fan of acoustic guitar and hammer dulcimer, renewed by wilderness, enthralled by books and the list goes on.

Then there comes a time in life where we may, for one reason or another, have to give up the things that we have chosen to define us. And that is tough. It is hard to sell the horse you can’t afford, move to the city when you’d rather live a thousand miles from anywhere, move to another country where you set aside your nationality/culture and language for another one. You take a different job than the one you hoped for, you live in a different place than you would want, you may not be a mother or a wife when you want to, you may not be physically able to pursue your dreams, things aren’t all you imagine that they could be and you try to blend in, adapt, adjust. Then, you have to start looking for definitions of self that are beyond the superficial.

I guess many people would consider me pretty adjustable. I’ve lived in a number of different places. I’ve had jobs that are as different from each other as night and day. But, honestly, sometimes it makes me sad when I feel like I am slowly letting go of the things that have in some way or another defined my life. Oh, I’m still and American and always will be, but I’m actively trying to blend into another culture. And I’m still a county girl at heart even though I live in the center of a city of two million people. But the outward things that I would choose to define who I feel like I am are far away and removed from the reality of where I am now.

The thing I have to remember, the thing that is hard to wrap my mind around is that in truth none of these things define me. I might want to be defined by them but the only thing that really defines me is my relationship with Jesus Christ. He defines me.

I am a sinner. I am forgiven because of the blood of Christ. I am accepted. I am loved. I am a child of the King, a cherished daughter. I have a purpose within His perfect plan. I have eternity in my heart and will always be longing for something beyond my reach. I have a home waiting for me where everything will be made right and Christ will reign. I could go on for pages and pages and pages with all of the Biblical definitions of who I really am.

The challenge is letting Christ be my definition when I can’t be exactly the woman I would choose to be on this earth. He defines me and I am learning, struggling, wrestling with the truth that His definition is the only one that is really real and that His definition is enough.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Journey, an update 8-2-07



“But the Scripture declares that the whole world is a prisoner of sin, so that what was promised, being given through faith in Jesus Christ, might be given to those who believe.” Galatians 3:22

While we were at camp I wrapped up my personal study in 2 Corinthians and moved on to Galatians. This morning when I read this verse it seemed to summarize a lot of what I had been thinking on and teaching at camp.

We had a wonderful camp, emphasizing daily in our Bible reading times that we come to God through faith and belief and that He can set us free from the bondage of sin. Praise God that it is not our own efforts that bring us to God. We believe and He gives. What a beautiful message. I was encouraged again as I presented this message every day and felt the truth of it reaffirmed in my heart.