Category: Devotional

  • Book Release: Oh Sweet Minnie

    Book Release: Oh Sweet Minnie

    Energion author Linda Estes has done it again, presenting a new, engaging and uplifting book of devotionals. This book is built around lessons she learned from her dog.

    The new book is now available on pre-order sale for $9.99. It will begin shipping on September 12, 2023 at which point that sale will end.

    To commemorate this new release, we are also offering 30% off on each of Linda’s previous books. So get your devotional titles now for yourself and for gifts.

    For more about Linda Estes, her writing, and her ministry, see her author page and watch the video below:

    Featured image by Chil Vera from Pixabay

  • (From Link Your Spirituality. Kent Ira Groff is author of Energion title Clergy Table Talk.)
    “Life is difficult.” So begins M. Scott Peck’s classic The Road Less Traveled.

    “You know more than you think you do,” Dr. Benjamin Spock begins Baby and Child Care. These first lines from two 20thcentury bestsellers capture an essential human paradox. Peck paraphrases the Buddha’s first noble truth: “Life is suffering.” Spock expresses the bold ideal of human possibility. Without religious language yet with unvarnished simplicity, these two lines embody the truth that life is out of sync, yet also full of hope: Life is difficult: You know more than you think.
    Because your left-brain sees life realistically, you need your right-brain
    creativity!
    That’s the road less traveled.
    Silence for Reflection…
    -Kent Ira Groff © Adapted from What Would I Believe If I Didn’t Believe Anything? Permission is to use; just cite the source.
  • Nancy Petrey: Jesus Wept

    by Nancy Petrey, pianist, poet, teacher and author of The Honeycomb is Waiting: Poetic DevotionalsJewish Roots Journey: Memoirs of a MizpahWhy Christians Should Care About Their Jewish Roots, and Habitation of Honey.
     
    Nancy 2016 croppedNow as He drew near, He saw the city and wept over it. – Luke 19:41
    Jesus was acclaimed as the Son of David and the King of Israel as He made His triumphal entry into Jerusalem the week He was crucified. The crowds shouted hosannas to Him and welcomed Him as their Messiah (Matthew 21:9; John 12:12-13). Bartimaeus also acclaimed Him as such, when he cried out, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” (Mark 10:46-47). Jesus, likewise, identified Himself as the Son of David, in His final words of Holy Scripture: “I am the Root and the Offspring of David, the Bright and Morning Star” (Revelation 22:16).
    The Son of David is returning one day to Jerusalem, the Jewish capital, the city He wept over when the Jewish leaders rejected Him (Luke 13:34-35; 19:41). Jesus also wept when his friend Lazarus died (John 11:35). He was not only crying because of empathy with Mary and Martha in their grief, but He likely was crying about the unbelief of the crowd. He already knew that He would raise up Lazarus, and He already knows that one day He will raise up the nation of Israel! On that day “all Israel will be saved” (Romans 11:25-27). But until that day comes, He weeps over His beloved Chosen people.
    How sad that “a child was born unto them, a Son was given … a Prince of Peace” (Isaiah 9:6), and Israel rejected Him! But, wait! There is a silver lining to that cloud.

    For if their casting Yeshua aside means reconciliation for the world, what will their accepting Him mean? It will be life from the dead! – Romans 11:15 (Complete Jewish Bible)

    In other words, if Israel’s rejection of Yeshua as Messiah resulted in the Gospel going to the Gentiles, then their acceptance of Him will bring world-wide revival! Isn’t that what we all want? But how have we been praying for it?
    King David wrote, “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. May they prosper who love you” (Psalm 122:6). That is tantamount to praying for the salvation of the Jewish people, that their eyes will be opened, like Bartimaeus, to see the Son of David, their Messiah! Our own prosperity, spiritually and every other way, is tied up with this imperative. Will we be obedient?
    The tears of our Lord poured out on His people, and now we Gentiles who know Him as Savior and Lord are His people, too. We should have our prayers mixed with tears of repentance for what the Church has done to the Jewish people throughout history to harden them against their own Messiah! The Church is suffering from a case of mistaken identity! Jesus is weeping about it as He intercedes for the eyes of His Church to be opened!

    IDENTITY

    (Based on Romans 11)

    So, what is my identity now that I am saved?

    I have a Jewish Lord, so how should I behave?

    I was graciously grafted into a Jewish olive tree,

    I was a wild branch when Jesus set me free.

    The Seed of Abraham was planted in the ground –

    They’d nailed Him to a tree when I was not around.

    But He was resurrected as the Jewish Scriptures said,

    And offered all salvation by His blood He had shed.

    I later heard the story, first told by Jewish men –

    The Apostles, Paul, and all the church were Jewish, all of them.

    But when the message got to me, the Jewish roots were cut!

    Yeshua wept, because the door to heaven for Jews was shut!

    The Jews now think of Jesus as a God who’s not for them –

    The veil over their eyes has made their eyesight dim.

    But we can make them jealous if we restore His Jewish identity,

    Support the Jews and the Jewish nation; for them we must have affinity.

    And we must know our history, horrible things the Church has done,

    Identify with them in their pain, that’s how their hearts are won.

    We must repent for atrocities done in the name of our Jewish King.

    Forgive us, Lord, we did not know it was such an evil thing.

    – Nancy Petrey ~ June 18, 2016

    Most Christians are not aware of the anti-Semitic history of the Church. I recommend three resources: (1) Our Hands are Stained with Blood: the Tragic Story of the “Church” and the Jewish People, by Dr. Michael Brown. (2) How the Cross Became a Sword by Richard Booker (small booklet). (3) Why Christians Should Care About Their Jewish Roots by Nancy Petrey (40-page book). In praying for revival and preparing for the coming of the Lord, these are indispensable tools. I urge you to read one of them. You will be spellbound and shell-shocked! But at least you will be equipped for these end times.
    PRAYER: Dear Father, cause us to weep over Your chosen people like Jesus did. Give us a heart of compassion to pray for their salvation. Cause us to be more grateful that Jesus came to us through the Jewish people and that our beloved Scriptures were penned and preserved by them. May we be moved to action on their behalf, speeding the day when Yeshua the Messiah will return to Jerusalem and set up His kingdom.
     
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  • Doris Murdoch: Our New Bodies, Transformed, Transfigured, and Glorified with Christ

    – by Doris Murdoch
    From my recent Holy Land journey: Jesus on the shores of Galilee in the towns of Tabgha and Capernaum, along with Jerusalem, where He manifested Himself before His disciples.

    Sea of Galilee Shoreline next to the Church of the Primacy of Peter, Tabgha, Israel Where the Resurrected Jesus Served Breakfast to His Disciples
    Sea of Galilee Shoreline next to the Church of the Primacy of Peter, Tabgha, Israel
    Where the Resurrected Jesus Served Breakfast to His Disciples

     
    In John 20:14-17, we read about the first person to see the resurrected Jesus before He ascended into heaven. In this scripture, we read that Mary of Magdala did not recognize the voice or physical being of Jesus. Mary thought Jesus was the gardener. Jesus tells Mary not to touch Him for He had not ascended to “My Father and Your Father and My God and Your God.” Jesus confirms Himself as the Son and Mary as a child of God. Had Jesus received a “new body” prior to ascending to heaven? Did His “new body” change in the tomb as he awoke from death? When will this “new body” occurrence happen for a Christian believer? When Mary did recognize Jesus, was there familiarity in His voice tone or inflection as Jesus said her name, “Mary!” or did she understand His confirmation as the Son? Was Jesus and His spirit still bound by His earthly body? Did He receive His heavenly or divine body after ascending to His Father in heaven? I Corinthians 15:20-26 tells us Jesus is of the first fruits as a human being resurrected from the dead and all believers will come alive through Jesus Christ. As I continue through the 15th chapter of Corinthians, I understand that we must be human first, then spiritual, and last through the life-giving spirit of Jesus Christ, we become heavenly and imperishable, completely transformed and transfigured.
    After ascending into heaven, Jesus manifested Himself on earth. In Luke 24:13-35 (Mark 16:12-13), we read about two followers encountering Jesus on the road to Emmaus on the same day as His resurrection. The men did not recognize Jesus physically or by His voice. This recognition happened when their eyes were opened upon the breaking of the bread by Jesus. They returned to Jerusalem to share about the visit and to testify to Simon’s sighting of the risen Jesus found in Luke 24:34.
    John 20:19-20 shares this:

    19 So when it was evening on that day, the first day of the week (Sunday, the day of Jesus’ resurrection), and when the doors were shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in their midst and said to them, “Peace be with you.” 20 And when He had said this, He showed them both His hands and His side. The disciples then rejoiced when they saw the Lord. 

    In this scripture of manifestation, Jesus proves his identity by revealing His nail-scarred hands and spear-wounded side. Otherwise, this scripture does not identify that they did not know Him. Verse 20b says, “they saw the Lord”. In this body, Jesus could make himself recognizable or unrecognizable at His will. We do know from this scripture that the new body could walk through walls or doors. Since the scripture states that the doors were shut, this fact is significant. In verses 26b-29, we read that Jesus returns to the house when “Doubting Thomas” is present. Again, Jesus proves His identity through His nail-scarred hands and spear-wounded side. Jesus even allows Thomas to touch the wounds as proof of His reality. Jesus uses man’s senses to help them identify Him. His body is visible, but it can travel through walls; the scripture emphasizes this again by saying “doors having been shut”. His body wounds are healed but still remain visible and touchable. In the new body, will we be recognizable? Will scars of the past life be visible? Will our voices remain the same? Will we be capable of traveling through walls?
    In John 21: 1-14, we read again of Jesus manifesting Himself before His disciples beside the Sea of Galilee near the town of Tabgha. The disciples did not know or recognize Jesus on the beach. Jesus calls them children; is this word “children” a hint for recognition? After the net full of fish, John whom Jesus loved, recognized the manifestation of Jesus through the act of catching the fish in the net. John recognized the works or acts of Jesus! Peter now knows Jesus because John identifies Jesus as the Lord. Even after offering breakfast to the disciples, they do not truly know Him. They were afraid to say, “Who are you?” The statement that follows, “knowing that it was the Lord” tells me Jesus had been identified by name but not by His visual or spiritual appearance. In this transfigured body, was Jesus able to change characteristics for different types of recognition (sight, touch, voice, and acts)?
    After that Jesus was seen by over five hundred followers at once (Galilee Region, possibly on the mountain where Jesus fed the 5000 or the Mount of Beatitudes). We still read of eye-witnesses doubting Jesus’ resurrection from death. In Matthew 28:16- 20, it states:

    16 Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. 17 When they saw Him, they worshiped Him; but some doubted. 18 And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me. 19 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

    We know Jesus returned to the Jerusalem area with His disciples before ascending into heaven (Luke 24:47-49, 52). Luke 24:50-51 tells us that Jesus ascended into heaven from Bethany, the town of Lazarus.
    Revelation 3: 5 says, “He who overcomes will thus be clothed in white garments; and I will not erase his name from the book of life, and I will confess his name before My Father and before His angels.” The newly transformed bodies will be clothed in white garments, much like we envision angel appearance. White garments could also be like a karate suit, not an angelic gown and cloak (The word garments is plural.)!
    In physical death, the body goes to the grave and the spirit or soul goes to heaven. According to John 5:28-29, the separation of body and spirit is in effect until the resurrection: “Do not marvel at this, for an hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear His voice and come out, those who have done good to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment”. Right now the souls of believers who have died are in heaven. Eventually, their bodies will be resurrected and join their spirits.
    Jesus’ resurrected body was the same body as before, not a completely new body. Sometimes He was recognizable. After Jesus was resurrected, the tomb was empty. So body and soul or spirit left the burial tomb. This will not happen to man; our physical bodies will remain on earth in burial tombs or graves. For Jesus, His wounds from His crucifixion were still evident. One could touch Him so He wasn’t a ghost as we might imagine. He looked human in every way; we are made in God’s image. Jesus could speak, eat, walk, etc. After His resurrection, Jesus’ body had divine or mystical properties beyond man’s understanding. He could pass through solid walls and doors. He could appear in different forms so His identity was not immediately recognizable. In Luke 24:36, we read that Jesus could suddenly appear out of nowhere. In Luke 24:51, we read that Jesus was capable of going directly into heaven in bodily form. In Acts 1:9, Jesus ascends into heaven on a cloud.
    Our heavenly or resurrected bodies will be real, concrete human bodies, yet wholly perfected and glorified. We will be much like the resurrected body of Christ. I Thessalonians 4:16-17 describes how the earthly bodies of believers are reunited with their spirits. At the trumpet of God, “the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord”. The new bodies will join or unite with each of our perfected, waiting spirits and the new heavenly body will be complete. In completeness, these heavenly bodies will be transformed and transfigured, and glorified with Christ.

  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to
    our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: As we anticipate Christmas, which story surrounding the birth of Jesus in the Gospels best informs the meaning of Christmas for you?

  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

     

     TODAY’S QUESTION:  John the Baptist suggested several ways for his disciples to show their repentance in Luke 3. How would you convert these to our time?

    And the crowds asked him, “What then should we do?” In reply he said to them, “Whoever has two coats must share with anyone who has none; and whoever has food must do likewise.” Even tax collectors came to be baptized, and they asked him, “Teacher, what should we do?” He said to them, “Collect no more than the amount prescribed for you.” Soldiers also asked him, “And we, what should we do?” He said to them, “Do not extort money from anyone by threats or false accusation, and be satisfied with your wages.”

  • Our Advent question for today

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

     

    TODAY’S QUESTION: If your denomination or congregation doesn’t celebrate Advent, how do you prepare for Christmas?

  • Advent question of the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    According to the Gospel of John, Jesus is the light that is coming into the world. Where it shines, darkness (evil) is revealed and overcome.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: What aspect of human life are you waiting/working most for in which Jesus needs to be revealed more fully?

  • Advent question for the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    John the Baptist is a perfect Advent voice as he prepared the way for the coming of the Lord.

    TODAY’S QUESTION: How does the preaching of John the Baptist help you to prepare for Christmas, the coming of the Lord?

  • Advent question for the day

    We at EDN are in a period of reflection and contemplation for these important seasons of Advent and Christmas. Over the next few weeks, our attention will be on raising certain questions that we invite you to comment on.  We will return to our series probing controversial questions on January 4th.

    As you may have noted in our posts on the “war on Christmas,” or by merely observing the commercialization of this holiday, there are many forces at work to distract us from “the reason for the season.”

    TODAY’S QUESTION: If your congregation celebrates Advent, how does this help you to prepare for Christmas?

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