Author: J Brad Mitchell

  • Still Standing – Devotion 7

    I don’t know about you, but some days I feel beat down, defeated, and deflated.  It is as if the world has turned against me and I am simply seeking shelter.  Even when I feel like I am doing the right thing, am on the right track, and finding the right pace, I get tripped.  Something happens that makes it seem as the ceiling is falling in and I just want to curl into a ball to keep from getting hurt any more.  Maybe you have felt that way when you have lost a loved one.  It could be that you heard the diagnosis that would forever change your life.  You could have lost your job or heard devastating news that starts your world spinning faster than an out of control merry go round.  You don’t know where to turn, you don’t know what to do, and you aren’t sure how to even take the next breath.  The wind has been knocked out of you and you just want to retreat.

    It just might be that God has been preparing us for just a time as this.  When we are faithful and obedient to following God, he has a way of planting us firmly right where he wants us.  He has a way of ensuring that we are deeply rooted so that when the storms come, we will not be moved.  We may be shaken, but we are right where we need to be.  We may lose our leaves, but we will not lose our foundation.  God is caring for us and protecting us even in the middle of all of life’s challenges.

    Where is your foundation?  Where are you planting roots?  Are you allowing God to work in and through you to prepare you for the storms ahead?  He knows exactly what you need and what is to come.  May he plant you deep in the waters so you will withstand all that is ahead.

    Focus Scripture:

    Psalm 1:1-3

    Happy are those
    who do not follow the advice of the wicked,
    or take the path that sinners tread,
    or sit in the seat of scoffers;
    but their delight is in the law of the Lord,
    and on his law they meditate day and night.
    They are like trees
    planted by streams of water,
    which yield their fruit in its season,
    and their leaves do not wither.
    In all that they do, they prosper.

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    Photos included in Devotions are captured by David Cain – The Cain Gallery.  Photos are available for sale by contacting The Cain Gallery

  • The End of a Day – Devotion 6

    I am constantly amazed at the ways that God speaks to us in the ordinary.  My attention is captured in the smallest, yet most powerful reminders that God is with us.  One of those reminders is a sunset.  Sunsets happen every day.  Some are plain, ordinary, and unremarkable.  The sun went down as expected.  Some are noteworthy.  Those are the times we actually look up to notice something is unique.  And then there are the breathtaking.  Those are the sunsets that cause us to stop, gaze, and be filled with wonder.  They are rare but treasured.  I can’t help but imagine that God is the greatest artist ever and he paints in such a way that we are halted from the ordinary just to capture a glimpse into the extraordinary.

    Sunsets chime an alarm that this is the conclusion of a day.  We are to wrap up the day of triumphs and struggles.  It is a signal of a time to rest, a change to the pace of the day.  Sunsets can be a powerful reminder that we can only do so much and should trust God to work as we rest.  We may find we conclude the day with excitement or with disappointment (or simply gratitude that this day has ended).  Regardless of how we feel or what the day held, God is helping us to understand that this day is coming to an end.  We can breathe.  Tomorrow will begin with new challenges and opportunities.  For now, simply embrace the time to rest, relax, and let God paint the ending of the day.

    Focus Scripture:

    Genesis 1:14-18

    14 And God said, “Let there be lights in the dome of the sky to separate the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years, 15 and let them be lights in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth.” And it was so. 16 God made the two great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars. 17 God set them in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth, 18 to rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good.

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    Photos included in Devotions are captured by David Cain – The Cain Gallery.  Photos are available for sale by contacting The Cain Gallery

  • A Glimpse of Beauty – Devotion 5

    Beauty can stop you in an instant, often in the most unexpected places.  It can even happen on a walk that we have taken hundreds of times.  We travel by the same tree or area so many times that we miss what is actually happening, the progress of the becoming.  We don’t do it on purpose, of course.  It isn’t as if we have simply ignored what has occurred.  It has just become mundane, a part of our daily landscape.  So we move on like always.  Until it happens.  The beauty that we have long ignored shines so bright it stops us in our tracks. Maybe the sun was shining just right that the colors drew us in, calling us to look closer.  Maybe the blooms were so magnificent that to pass them by would have been impossible.  Maybe we were struggling with the thoughts that sometimes overwhelm us and God whispered to us through the most delicate of his creation.  Whatever happened, it is a gift which we should not pass by.  It is a joy that we should not miss in our daily lives.

    What might we miss today in the rush to get things done and to move on through our checklist?  What joys might be awaiting us if we simply took a moment to slow down and pay attention?  How might God speak to us through his creation if we were only aware of our surroundings?  God is at work.  God speaks in the soft whispers of his breathtaking work.  Don’t miss it.  It just might be the answer you’ve been searching.

    Focus Scripture:

    Psalm 136 (selected scriptures)

    O give thanks to the Lord, for he is good,
    for his steadfast love endures forever.

    who alone does great wonders,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
    who by understanding made the heavens,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
    who spread out the earth on the waters,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
    who made the great lights,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
    the sun to rule over the day,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;
    the moon and stars to rule over the night,
    for his steadfast love endures forever;

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    Photos included in Devotions are captured by David Cain – The Cain Gallery.  Photos are available for sale by contacting The Cain Gallery

  • Redemptive Rain – Devotion 4

    There is something intoxicating about the smell of rain.  If you pay close attention, you can tell when rain approaches simply by the scent.  I am not alone in my love of this smell.  I know because there is an attempt to make products that mimic this scent.  There are valiant attempts but ultimately fall short.  I’m not sure duplication is even possible.

    As an adult, I have probably spent more time in the rain than I did as a child.  At some point, I just let go and didn’t worry about if I got wet or not.  I have even been known to simply stop and allow the rain to fall directly on my face, soaking up the goodness of a weighty cloud.  I find the rain cleansing, even redemptive.  It feels as though I am being set free as the water washes over me.  I imagine as I close my eyes that God is washing away my impurities, the things which hold me back from following him.  I embrace the release of my insecurities and my fears.  I allow it all to simply fall off of me in a sign that I really am free.  I am redeemed.

    If I’m honest, it isn’t the rain that is offering all of this to me.  Rain is simply water falling from clouds.  It is, rather, the love of God that is raining down on me.  That is where the true freedom, the actual redemption is found.  It is in God’s love that we find cleansing and hope.  We find the promise of forgiveness and the release of those things which hold us down.  It is in God’s love that we begin to dance, dance in the rain.

    May God’s love wash over you today and may he fill you with hope for a new start.

    Focus Scripture:

    Psalm 51 (select verses)

    Have mercy on me, O God,
    according to your steadfast love;
    according to your abundant mercy
    blot out my transgressions.
    Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity,
    and cleanse me from my sin.

    You desire truth in the inward being;
    therefore teach me wisdom in my secret heart.
    Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;
    wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.

    10 Create in me a clean heart, O God,
    and put a new and right spirit within me.

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  • Listen for the Bells – Devotion 3

    If I listen really carefully, I can hear the church bells ringing in the distance.  They are faint, but just loud enough to distinguish the proclamation of love.  They sing songs of joy and redemption.  They play notes of hope.  The proclamation is that all may not be well, but all will be well.  In the end, all will be well.  But I have to listen, intently.  I could certainly miss it all in the movement of life.  The noise of the day could drown out the proclamation.  It could all muffle the sound of hope.  If I get distracted by the day’s activities, I miss the songs of peace.

    For me, that’s exactly what happens when I don’t take the time to meditate and hear God.  The noise of the world drowns out the sweet, small whisper from the Creator that all will be well.  I get caught up in my own agenda trying to accomplish the to-do list without considering the One that sets me free of it all, the One that calls me to simply be.

    So today, I stop and listen.  Today, I hear the church bells ring loud and free.  I receive the message that I am loved, I am forgiven, I am HIS.  I hear God speak to me, “It is well, it is well.”  May you take a moment to hear God speak to you today.  Set aside the noise and chaos of life to simply hear God speak, in the sweet, loving whisper, that you are enough.  It is well.

    Focus Scripture:

    Leviticus 3:25-26

    25 The Lord is good to those who wait for him,
    to the soul that seeks him.
    26 It is good that one should wait quietly
    for the salvation of the Lord.

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    Photos in Devotions captured by David Cain, The Cain Gallery.  All photos available for purchase by contacting The Cain Gallery

  • The Road to Somewhere – Devotion 2

    When we are following God, we often have no idea where we will go.  That is not a new idea for me, though.  I am as directionally challenged as they come.  I have spent hours running and on a bike without a clue of where I was.  I had no idea how I got there and no idea of how to get home.  Some people would tell me to depend on a compass, but to me, it just seems to spin and that really tells me little to nothing.  Some will tell me to retrace my steps.  That’s great if I had steps to retrace, except I don’t know how I got to where I am.  If I turn around, it doesn’t look any clearer than when I look forward.  I usually simply depend on the person I am following.  Even if I am leading the group, I constantly confirm that I am still on the right path (just to make sure they are not depending on me to actually know where we are going – they usually only make that mistake once).

    All of this may sound like a significant problem, almost a disability.  It can even make me sound a bit helpless.  But I, instead, think about how God has created me to follow him.  Since I am not accustomed to knowing the way, I can rest in him to show me.  I am better equipped to seek him at every turn rather than trying to plow through my own way.  And if I try to go it on my own, it doesn’t take long before I look around and realize that I am, once again, lost.  This provides me the opportunity to stop, be still, and listen.  God can lead me to the right path.  Maybe being directionally challenged is God’s plan for me all along.  Maybe I’ll just follow him.

    What path are you taking today?  Who are you following?  How might you seek a new direction, a road to somewhere with Someone that loves you?  May our paths be guided and directed by God, may he redirect us when we are off course, and save us when we are lost.

    Focus Scripture:

    Psalm 25:4-5

    Make me to know your ways, O Lord;
    teach me your paths.
    Lead me in your truth, and teach me,
    for you are the God of my salvation;
    for you I wait all day long.

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  • Life Giving Water – Devotion 1

    Love and discipline, joy and struggle, peace and storms, hope and chaos, beauty and power…in our minds, it can be difficult to understand how these can take place at the same time.  We can feel so trapped when we are actually so free.  We can feel so overwhelmed when we have been given so many gifts.  We feel the push to love but the pull to hold tight to what we have.  And yet, God is doing amazing things in the middle of these counterintuitive moments.  He is working miracles when we feel abandoned.  He is providing triumphs when we only see defeat.

    Water is one of those great miracles.  We need water to live, it is a significant part of our bodies.  It fills our stomachs and cleanses the dirt from our lives.  Water is a beautiful miracle.  Yet it is also powerful.  It can come in such force to create electricity.  It can wash out cities and completely demolish lives.  It is a beautifully refreshing yet powerfully dangerous creation.

    Jesus’ message was that he could provide living water.  This is more than refreshment from a well.  This is a life changing overflow.  This is the most powerful expression of life – this is true life.  We crave this living water.  We seek this living water.  We want it to flow freely in and through us.  Yet, the great power of this flow can change our lives.  It can create in us such love that we love recklessly.  It can fill us in such a way that we are willing to set all things free that we thought were so important in order to follow.  This living water can give us true life.  It just might destroy what we thought life should be.  But in the end, it will be life giving, beautiful, and more than we could have ever expected.   Flow freely God, through me, in me, around me…flow freely in your beauty and grace.

    Focus Scripture:

    John 4:13-15 “13 Jesus said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, 14 but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.” 15 The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.”

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  • The Leftovers

    Home for me is defined by smell.  Growing up in a community with almost all family, you could go into almost any house and feel at home.  You were welcomed and loved.  Each family treated you as if you were their own.  You knew you were home when you walked in the door and smelled food cooking or a fresh cake baking.  It was not unusual (and still isn’t) to walk into my grandparent’s home and smell cake layers in the oven.  Those were times when you stayed around, even if you thought about going to play.  You could watch Grandma stirring the chocolate icing she had made from scratch.  She would attend oh so carefully, never letting it set as it would not come out as she wanted.  While she stirred, the cake layers would bake in the wall oven.  The home smelled like joy.  If you hung out long enough or if you timed it just right, those cake layers would come out of the oven and that chocolate would be done.  For some, that might mean the cake would be assembled.  But for me, that meant the crumbs in the pans would be left and someone would have to lick the spoon after the icing was poured.  And THAT was victory!  There is nothing like the left over parts in a pan of a fresh baked cake with the leftover icing to make my day.  My heart still beats a little faster when I think about the excitement.  If this doesn’t sound like much to get excited about, it is because you haven’t tasted my Grandma’s chocolate split layer cake.  All she did for each cake took such precision yet she did it as only Grandma can – with such ease and natural giftedness.  She made it look so easy.  Sitting across the bar enjoying the “leftovers” is something I will always treasure.

    There have been many times I wanted Jesus to sit across the bar with me and tell me what I should do, what path I should take, and what’s next.  I craved the fellowship with him that is comforting and loving, reminding me that I do not have to be perfect.  I wanted to know that I was loved just the way that I was.  I simply wanted to enjoy leftovers with him, lick the icing, and have him tell me I was good enough.  I just wanted to please him.

    I think I might have missed him all along.  Maybe, just maybe, he was sitting across from me…And he just happens to look a lot like my Grandma.

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  • Feasting at the Table

    One of the most difficult parts of our current situation is the lack of physical community.  Online community is fine and needed and welcomed.  But this is a short term fix.  In the long term, we crave community, the time together to fellowship, socialize and just enjoy the company of others.  It is built into us, even for those of us that are introverts.  To work alongside of others, to strive together, to build together, to serve together is crucial.  We are stronger together.  One of the most essential parts of community is fellowship around the table.  Sitting at the table with friends, neighbors and strangers helps to develop bonds that far outlast any meal.  The ease at which we share, the peace at which we feast, and the joy of the blessings of the meal are priceless.  There is nothing that really replaces that need.  It is something that our bodies were built for.  We are missing it, but it will return.  I can only hope that it returns with such expectant joy that we spend many valuable hours around the table with others.  May our homes be filled with new friends, may we build relationships with those we have not gotten to know, and may we feast with our community in such joy that our lives are forever changed.

    Now, that may sound a bit idealistic.  It may feel like I am asking a lot of a meal and maybe I am expecting too much.  How would a simple meal actually change anything?  Why would this activity of which we can participate at any point becomes so pivotal?  Meals really can change things when God is present.  And I think that is most evident in the scripture for today.

    Luke 24:13-32

    13 Now on that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles[f] from Jerusalem, 14 and talking with each other about all these things that had happened. 15 While they were talking and discussing, Jesus himself came near and went with them, 16 but their eyes were kept from recognizing him. 17 And he said to them, “What are you discussing with each other while you walk along?” They stood still, looking sad.[g] 18 Then one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answered him, “Are you the only stranger in Jerusalem who does not know the things that have taken place there in these days?” 19 He asked them, “What things?” They replied, “The things about Jesus of Nazareth,[h] who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, 20 and how our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him. 21 But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel.[i] Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things took place. 22 Moreover, some women of our group astounded us. They were at the tomb early this morning, 23 and when they did not find his body there, they came back and told us that they had indeed seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. 24 Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said; but they did not see him.” 25 Then he said to them, “Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have declared! 26 Was it not necessary that the Messiah[j] should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?” 27 Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures. 28 As they came near the village to which they were going, he walked ahead as if he were going on. 29 But they urged him strongly, saying, “Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.” So he went in to stay with them. 30 When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. 31 Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight. 32 They said to each other, “Were not our hearts burning within us[k] while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?” 

    These two people were forever changed.  Their hearts burned and it was not from indigestion.  Their lives had been renewed as their hope was refueled.  They had a reason to keep moving forward.  They had a joy that was unmistakable.  They were different and it happened around a table.  It all happened at a meal, that one unforgettable meal…not because the dish was the most outstanding dish they had ever tasted, but because of the presence of those around the table.  Table fellowship changed them and it changes us.

    They have traveled with this man, this man that didn’t seem to have a clue about what had been going on in Jerusalem.  He actually had missed the chaos of Passover and all that had occurred.  But then he began to speak.  He opened up the scriptures as they had never heard before.  He explained Moses, the Exodus, the prophets…the mysteries were not so mysterious any longer.  He helped them to understand what had been so challenging.  This Messiah wasn’t so hidden – all they needed was right there in the Scriptures.  If they were just willing to listen, to hear, to allow the words to fill them…then they could find what they needed for life, for hope, for a future.  This was fascinating and motivational.  But this was not the pivotal point that they experienced.  This was important – the Scriptures helped them to realize the works of the Messiah, they were guided by the word in faith and action, they were given hope where they had lost all hope.  But their pivotal moment came around the table.  The man was planning to move right on, but being hospitable, they encouraged him to come and sit at the table.

    They did not have to invite him.  They had spent all day with him.  They could have just let him continue on his journey.  But if they had not invited him, they would have missed the experience.  If they had hesitated to have him around the table, they would have missed the one that loved them more than they could imagine.  They would have had a lesson, they would have gone through life understanding more, they would have had the Scripture explained…but they would have missed the personal fellowship with the man if they had not welcomed him to the table.

    When it was that they sat at the table with him, enjoying the meal and the fellowship, their eyes were opened.  They realized that the man they had traveled with was actually Jesus.  They were given the privilege to see, to truly see for the first time ever, that Jesus was right there before them.  And they saw him at a meal.

    I wonder what we might see if we spent time with people around the table?  What might we miss when we decide who is worthy to sit at the table and who is not?  Could it be that we miss seeing Jesus when our table is reserved for those that are like us?  Jesus shows up in the most unexpected ways at the most unexpected times.  It just might be that he shows up for us when we welcome others to the table.

    When this stay at home order ends, when we begin to gather, may our tables be full of joy and laughter.  May our meals be with those we don’t know and those we can’t wait to know better.  May our stomachs fill with good things and our hearts burn from the experience of being with other children of God.  And may God fill our experiences with glimpses of him. May it happen around the table.

    The Family-Style Dinner Table in the Woods_.

  • Restoration

    I sit on my back patio this morning working remote and considering how our world has been turned upside down in just a few short weeks – just craziness.  After a while, all that’s going on begins to beat us down and make us weary.  Our souls can just be so very weary and tired.  There are signs of hope that pop up – I find just enough to encourage and motivate.  There are loving notes being sent, positive thoughts being shared, and kind texts floating around finding their way to just the right person at just the right time.  There is food being shared and face masks being made.  There are so many good things.  But those seem so small if we get caught up in the overwhelming weight of it all.  They can get lost in the darkness of these times and the depth of the troubles (at least if you watch the news).  But this morning, the birds still sing their beautiful song, the sun shines extra bright and the breeze is a welcome refreshment to the craziness we call life.  I lay my head back in the sun and these words echo in my heart… “He restores my soul”  Yes!!  In the middle of the turmoil, chaos, and unknowns…God restores my soul.  So we soak in the love and allow God to do what God does best – restoration.  May God restore your soul today.

    He restores my soul