Wednesday, May 11, 2011

May 11, 2011

Say a prayer for me, the cook at school is sick and I have been called to atleast start the day in the kitchen,  so I need to get on the road.


Meditating


"If you keep your feet from breaking the Sabbath and from doing as you please on
 my holy days, if you call the Sabbath a delight and the Lord's holy day honorable,
and if you honor it by not going your own way and not doing as you please or speaking
idle words, then you will find your joy in the Lord."

-Isaiah 58:13-14

Memorizing Scripture, especially paragraphs of Scripture, sounds so time-consuming.
Little wonder people say, "I can't ... where will I find the time?"

The best time to invest in memorizing Scripture is the time that already belongs
 to the Lord. The Lord's Day is a twenty-four hour period set aside for you to spend
specifically on spiritual objectives. How does God ask you to spend your time on
 His holy day? He simply asks that you do not do as you please, or go your own way,
pursuing your own pleasures; He asks you to find delight in honoring Him on His
special day.

When is the best time to meditate on what you've memorized? Rehearsing God's Word
is a great way to close out the evening. After all, God established that our day
 should begin in the evening anyway ... "and the evening and the morning were the
first day." This was how the Sabbath day was observed, and for good reasons. The
 last important thoughts on our minds in the evening remain in our subconscious
throughout the night and unconsciously set our mental attitudes for the day.

When we go to sleep meditating on Scriptures we've memorized, we follow the advice
of Psalm 63:6, "On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of
the night."

Lord of the Sabbath, I want to look at Your day as ... Yours! Forgive me when I
crowd Your day with my goals. Yes, I do have time to memorize and meditate, and
I will remember that this is the Lord's Day.

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