Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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TerryLema

TerryLema

If you have ever been a prodigal …

by TerryLema December 21, 2020

One of the most precious chapters in all the Gospels is Luke 15, the chapter of the lost and found. All the sinners and tax collectors were flocking to Jesus, which angered the religious leaders. So, Jesus reminded them of how it is to be lost. He gave three stories, the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son, which we know as the “Prodigal Son.”

I do not know if you have ever been a prodigal, lost, alone, desperate, hungry. I do not know if you have stood outside the Presence of God and wondered if you would be welcomed in the Father’s House.  Would He accept you as you come to Him in sorrow and repentance? Would He welcome you with open arms as the Prodigal Son’s Father did in the story Jesus told? Would there be a feast in your honor?

Or would He reject you, spurn you, disregard you as the Prodigal’s older brother did to Him?

We know that God so loved us that He sent His very own Son to save us. When we come to the door of the Father’s House through Christ Jesus in sorrow and repentance, we are welcomed and treasured by Him. God Himself, in human flesh, paid the ultimate price for us, He will not reject us when we come to Him.

Unfortunately, too often, the church behaves more like the Prodigal’s older brother than she does the Father. Too often we reject our wounded, drive them from our presence with our attitudes and arrogance. But God expects the church to be as loving, compassionate, and welcoming to prodigals as He is. We would do well to remember our own acceptance despite our sinful pasts.

One of my favorite videos is the one of Michael English (read his story in “The Prodigal Comes Home: My Story of Failure and God’s Story of Redemption”) returning to sing with Christians who could have rejected him but did not. He was welcomed back.

What a great time this Christmas to reach out to prodigals and remind them they are missed and loved.

(773) Michael English - Lord, Feed Your Children [Live] - YouTube
December 21, 2020 0 comment
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Christ Alone

by TerryLema December 20, 2020

One day Jesus was preparing His disciples for His departure. He told them in John 14 that there were many dwelling places in His Father’s House and when He left them (through His death on the cross and subsequent resurrection and ascension), He would come back again for them. He told them “You know the way to where I am going.” [John 14:4 HCSB]

It was then that Thomas spoke up and asked a question – probably a question that all were thinking but only He was bold enough to ask.  “Lord, we don’t know where You’re going. How can we know the way?”  [vs 5]

I am so thankful for Thomas’ boldness to speak up because Jesus’ response to that question has given hope and assurance to multitudes throughout every generation.  “Jesus told him, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.’” [vs 6]

Jesus is “the” way to the Father, the “only way” to the Father. He was quite clear that “no one” comes except through Him. (Either He was telling the truth, or He was not. And if He was not, then there is no hope, no assurance of salvation.) Of course, the resurrection proved Christ was not just telling the truth, but is The Truth.

It is in Christ alone that our hope is based. He alone is our source of everything – the fullness of God in human flesh. He is our way, He is our truth, He is our life.

I rejoice today, not in my efforts, not in my goodness, not in my works, but in Christ alone.

(773) The Booth Brothers - In Christ Alone (Medley) [Live] - YouTube
December 20, 2020 0 comment
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A Manger, A Cross

by TerryLema December 19, 2020

I got an email this past week requesting volunteers for a live nativity in our area. It has been cold these past few weeks, so I am not sure if they got all the volunteers needed. I know it is too cold for me to spend hours outside, and I doubt there were any old women in the stall that first Christmas anyway.

But then again, as I thought more about that, maybe there were. Maybe Joseph found a mid-wife or a woman nearby to help. Or maybe, he did not. We are not told a lot about how the birth of Jesus took place, just the where and the why.

It is that why that always amazes me at this time of year. Jesus came to set us free from sin and death. The Scriptures are abundantly clear that mankind got itself in a mess – a mess that only God could fix. God made a way.

Last Sunday in church we sang a Christmas song with one line that has played through my mind every night this week. “He made a way in a manger, a way through the cross ….”

The manger is nothing without the cross, the resurrection, and ascension of Christ Jesus to the right hand of the Father. Christ Jesus made the way for us. Through His cross and resurrection, He overcame death and the grave. He made us alive with Him, forgave us all our sins, erased our debt, and opened the way to the Father’s House. Christmas is all about the cross.

“And when you were dead in trespasses and in the uncircumcision of your flesh, He made you alive with Him and forgave us all our trespasses. He erased the certificate of debt, with its obligations, that was against us and opposed to us, and has taken it out of the way by nailing it to the cross.” [Colossians 2:13-14 HCSB]

(773) the Ball Brothers - It's About the Cross (OFFICIAL video) - YouTube
December 19, 2020 0 comment
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A Week to Go

by TerryLema December 18, 2020

It is one week to Christmas 2020. It may not be the Christmas celebration we planned on, family may be missing, we may be isolated at home. But it is the remembrance celebration of just how much God loves us. Nothing can change that!

As we approach these next few days, I want to listen to music. Some will be Christmas music; some will not be the typical songs we have attributed to this holiday season. But each one tells us a story of God’s love and is tied to God’s Precious Son coming to us.

Perhaps the most beloved of the modern Christmas carols is “Mary, Did You Know?” written by Mark Lowry. It asks the profound question of just how much Mary understood about this Babe she nursed.

She knew what the angel told her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore, the holy One to be born will be called the Son of God.” [Luke 1:35 HCSB]

But did she know that this was God Incarnate, Immanuel, God with us? Did she know that this Holy One was the Great I Am?

She did know that a miracle had taken place in His conception. And we know that she kept these things in her heart and pondered on them. Maybe that was enough.

Mark Lowry, Guy Penrod, David Phelps - Mary, Did You Know? [Live] - Bing video

 

December 18, 2020 0 comment
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Christmas Bells

by TerryLema December 17, 2020

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) wrote a poem entitled, “Christmas Bells.” It was turned into a song with which we all are familiar. Longfellow wrote the poem as a 57-year-old widowed father of six children, the oldest of which had been wounded and nearly paralyzed in the Civil War. The poem captures the conflict in his heart.

He heard the bells on Christmas ringing from his home in Cambridge, he knew the promise of the angels in Luke 2:14 of “peace on earth,” but what he saw around him was a world of injustice and violence.

Like the psalmists of old, he wrestles with what he sees in this world, and what God has promised. I think we might have thought the same thoughts in this difficult year. But like the psalmists of old, Longfellow remembers that God shall prevail. Reading Christmas Bells this morning gave me hope … I pray it does the same for you.

I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play,
And wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime,
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Then from each black, accursed mouth
The cannon thundered in the South,
And with the sound
The carols drowned
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearth-stones of a continent,
And made forlorn
The households born
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And in despair I bowed my head;
“There is no peace on earth,” I said;
“For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

December 17, 2020 0 comment
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Little Ones to Him Belong …

by TerryLema December 16, 2020

I love the music of Christmas … not just the carols or the modern songs … but the hymns, choruses and songs that tell of the reasons for Christ’s coming.

One of the most precious of all is the simple song, “Jesus Loves Me,” that we have taught our children to sing.

My favorite version is sung by Marshall Hall (link below). I have shared it before, and I never tire of watching the faces of the people in the audience as they listen to the words as they drive deep into their souls just how much God loves them.

Jesus loves me, He will die. Heaven’s gates He’s gonna open wide. And He will wash away all our sins. And let His little child come on in!”

“Yes, Jesus loves me.  Yes, Jesus loves me. Yes, Jesus loves me!  The Bible tells me so.

For God so loved us … “For God loved the world in this way: He gave His One and Only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life.” [John 3:16 HCSB]

Christmas is so deep and yet so simple. God so loved us that He came.

As we stand before the manger this Christmas season, let us remember that.

Jesus Loves Me - Marshall Hall / GVB - Bing video
December 16, 2020 0 comment
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How Joyful!

by TerryLema December 15, 2020

I have been thinking more about Norman, the 7-year-old- who told Santa that he is ‘good all of the time.’ I, of course, am not a ‘norman.’ I am pretty much an ‘un-norman,’ needing the forgiveness of God repeatedly.  I am much more like the prodigal son than I am Norman. It does not take much to remind me that I am just a sinner saved by God’s amazing grace.

But as Romans 4:7 reminds me, there is much joy in being a sinner saved by God’s amazing grace. “How joyful are those whose lawless acts are forgiven and whose sins are covered!”

I am especially awestruck at this time of year when I consider the babe in the manger and what it cost God to bring that forgiveness to me.

Philippians tells us Jesus, the Word, left the glories of heaven to come to this earth, taking on our human flesh, taking on our human condition, taking on our punishment. He did it for the “joy that was set before Him.”

Now that joy is mine as I see all my sins covered by the Blood of the Lamb of God on that cross. That joy is mine knowing that I am forgiven and forgiven again. Every time I come to my Precious Savior in repentance, I know that His forgiveness will touch my sorrowing heart.

When I fail, the Father calls me to sorrow and to repent, and when I do, I am forgiven – again.

Bill & Gloria Gaither – Forgiven Again [Live] – Bing video

 

December 15, 2020 0 comment
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Dear Santa …

by TerryLema December 14, 2020

Don’t you love children’s letters to Santa.  One little boy wrote, “Santa if you brining presents with batteries bring the batteries.” That sounds like a child who has had to wait in the past for his parents to do a rush trip to a store before he could play with his toys.

One little girl wrote, “You better bring my pony this year. Or there will be consequensis.” She even drew the pony and everything so Santa could get it right.

But my favorite is one I read several years ago and shared with the congregation this past Sunday.  “Dear Santa, there are three little boys who live at our house. There is Jeffrey; he is 2. There is David. He is 4. And there is Norman; he is 7. Jeffrey is good some of the time. David is good some of the time. But Norman is good all of the time. I am Norman.”

 Norman is good all the time. I have never been a ‘norman.’ In fact, I have almost always been a ‘norman-opposite.’ I have seldom been good. Growing up I was the one who was in trouble all the time. My younger brother, Mike, was much more a ‘norman’ than I was. That did not always serve him well since it often drove me to get him in trouble or blame him for what I had done.  (Thankfully, he still loves me, and I was able to make up for some of the things I did to him long ago!)

One day, I will stand before God. And I will give an account of my life. “So then, each of us will give an account of himself to God.” [Romans 14:12 HCSB]

When that moment happens, I will not be able to claim I am a ‘norman,’ who is ‘good all the time.’ Neither will I be able to “make up” some of the bad stuff with good stuff as I did with my brother.

But I will be able to claim something even more remarkable … I have placed my trust in Jesus!  Hallelujah! Amen!

 Trust In Jesus- Third Day - Bing video
December 14, 2020 0 comment
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Reaching out

by TerryLema December 13, 2020

We are not meant to do this walk of faith alone. We need each other. In fact, Paul wrote specifically to the Galatians that we are to help shoulder the burdens of others and that by doing so we will fulfill the law of Christ.

“Carry one another’s burdens; in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” [Galatians 6:2 HCSB]

This is particularly difficult to do this year as 2020 is a year of isolation.  Yet precisely because it is, we need to make the extra effort to check in on each other and keep the lines of communication open. But there is another side to this verse, and that is that the ones with burdens have a responsibility also.

When burdened we often draw away from others. We cease meeting with people, we back away from gatherings or routines that once marked our walk with Christ. Maybe we think no one will understand. Maybe it just takes too much effort.

As a pastor I have often seen people experiencing difficulties, and I have seen them stop coming to church and stop contacting others. It is a trick of the devil to get us alone, to make us shoulder our burdens by ourselves, to keep us from help.

So if you are burdened, reach out. Do not try to go it alone. And do not expect others to always seek you out. Make the effort to find the ones who will help you carry your burdens.

Hebrews 10:24-25: “And let us be concerned about one another in order to promote love and good works,  not staying away from our worship meetings, as some habitually do, but encouraging each other, and all the more as you see the day drawing near.”  [HCSB]

December 13, 2020 0 comment
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Power Over Sickness and Death

by TerryLema December 12, 2020

I am meditating on the power and authority of Jesus seen in Luke 8. First, His authority over the natural world when He calmed a violent storm with only His word. Then, His authority over the spiritual world when He commanded a “Legion” of demons to leave a possessed man.  Those who witnessed these events were overtaken with fear.

But Luke does not end with Jesus’ power over the natural world and over the spiritual world. He has two more incidents to report.

After leaving the region of the Gerasenes, Jesus returned to the other side of the lake. There he was immediately confronted by a grieving father, Jairus, a leader of the synagogue, whose only daughter, 12 years old, was at death’s door.  He pleaded with Jesus to come to his house. [vs 40-56]

Jesus consents, but as they travel to Jairus’ home, a woman suffering with a chronic bleeding condition that left her “unclean” for 12 years touches the hem of Jesus’ robe in faith and is healed. Jesus stopped, immediately recognizing what happened, and seeks in the crowd for the person who had anonymously touched Him. Initially everyone denies it, but Jesus was not moving until He discovered who touched Him.  (Can you imagine what was going through Jairus’ mind during this delay?)

Finally, the woman confesses, and Jesus announces, “Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace.” [vs 48 HCSB]

They get to Jairus’ house and Jesus tosses out the hired mourners who think the child is dead. He then takes the child by the hand and tells her to get up. She does. And “Her parents were astounded,” Luke reports. [vs 56 HCSB]

In Luke 8, Jesus, exercised authority over the natural creation, over the spiritual world, and finally over sickness and death. He astonished everyone who witnessed that authority. I pray we too are astonished and amazed by our Wonderful Savior and LORD.

December 12, 2020 0 comment
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Pastor Terry Lema

Pastor Terry Lema has been married for 53 years, and has 3 children and 3 grandsons. Terry graduated from Trinity Bible College, and and recently retired as Lead Pastor at The Way Church in Middleton, Idaho.

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Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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