Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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TerryLema

TerryLema

The Power of Prayer

by TerryLema January 12, 2020

I try to spend time talking with God every day, but Tuesdays are special. On Tuesday mornings I meet with a group of people in an “upper room” at the Oregon Trails Church in Middleton for community prayer. Tuesday night I meet with another group at our own church for prayer. We pray for our world, our nation, the church, the outpouring of God’s Spirit, the unsaved, our communities, first responders, people we know that are going through difficult situations and anything else the Holy Spirit puts on our hearts.

Jesus had a lot to say about praying, the Gospels are full of His admonitions to pray, how to pray, when to pray. And Paul was succinct when he wrote, “pray continually.” [1 Thess 5:7]

I saw a request on Facebook recently. Someone had posted a request regarding a family member who was sick. They asked that we “send healing thoughts.” That, of course, got me thinking about praying and the power of prayer.

The power in prayer rests not in our words. Some of us pray eloquently, some of us pray simply. I doubt the style matters to God. Likewise, let’s never forget the power in prayer does not flow from us (our healing thoughts) – it flows from the One to Whom we make our requests. The power to answer prayer is in God and God alone. Our “healing thoughts” don’t carry any weight or change anything. If anything is going to happen to give life, bring healing, or change circumstances, it will come from God.

Jesus said when we pray, we are to begin … Our Father who art in heaven …. He immediately puts our attention where it belongs on Almighty God.

January 12, 2020 0 comment
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As the Father sent …

by TerryLema January 11, 2020
“The world is looking for beautiful, self-confident people to lead and entertain it. But God is looking for humble, Christ-dependent people who will love the world as He does.” –Leonard Ravenhill

I was touched deeply when I saw that quote the other day, especially the phrase … “Christ-dependent people who will love the world as He does.”

 Honestly, I am not sure how much I love this world. Oh, I love God’s beautiful creation, the mountains, the oceans, the flora and fauna, and one of my favorite pastimes is to sit somewhere and watch the amazing array of God’s people walk by, each different, each one unique. But do I really love this world as God does?

God was willing to sacrifice His only Son for the salvation of this world. Jesus was willing to come and walk this dusty life and even die on a cross to fulfill the Father’s will. Do I love that way?

Jesus twice told His disciples that He was sending them into the world as the Father had sent Him. He told them once just before His death, “As you [Father] sent me into the world, I have sent them [my disciples] into the world,” and once after His resurrection, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.” [John 17:18, 20:21]

I guess He wanted to make sure they understood what He was asking of them … the same sacrificial love that He exhibited for them was now to be exhibited through them to others. That hasn’t changed down through the centuries. Those early disciples were to flood the world with God’s sacrificial love … the latter disciples (us) are to do likewise. God help us, Amen.

January 11, 2020 0 comment
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Be Imitators

by TerryLema January 10, 2020

I was reading in Ephesians the other morning and as I passed Chapter 4, verse 32 (Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you), I came to a screeching halt at the next verse. “Therefore, be imitators of God, as dearly loved children, and walk in love, as Christ also loved us and gave himself for us, a sacrificial and fragrant offering to God.” [CSB Ephesians 5:1]

Are you as shocked by that verse as I am? We are commanded to imitate the holy, righteous, all-loving God. Now, I realize there are some parts of God (such as His perfection!) that we will never be able to attain. And I also realize that Paul’s command to imitate God has nothing to do with our salvation, and everything to do with our sanctification (becoming more like Christ Jesus). Still it is a breath-taking command.

It drew me up short and made me question my heart’s motivations and desires. What am I modeling my life after?

When our sons were little, they were enamored with their father’s construction equipment. He had a backhoe and big truck, they wanted toys just like his. Bob was able through a dealership to get miniature backhoes exactly like his. The boys were ecstatic. Their “excavations” in the dirt outside modeled what Bob did on a much grander scale to make a living. They were so delighted to be able to imitate their father.

Paul reminds us that we are to be imitators of God – as His “dearly loved children.” Our desires are to be like Him as much as we can be. We are to desire His godliness, His righteousness, His wisdom, His grace, His love to flow not just to us but through us to touch others.

We should want people to see Christ in us. And we should work each day, with the power of His Spirit to achieve just that. “Be imitators of God.”

January 10, 2020 0 comment
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Casting

by TerryLema January 9, 2020

People and nations are anxious right now with the trouble rising in the world. Blame is being tossed about. Political parties and individuals are taking sides, so are many world leaders. No one seems to know when or how it will all end. I could tell them how it will ultimately end, all they have to do is read the Book of Revelation…the King of Kings and LORD of Lords returns and sets up His eternal Kingdom, but that probably is not what they want to hear.

 They want to know how it is all going to end in the here and now. Will we see more war? Will we send our young men and women to war in foreign lands? Or, perhaps, will the war come to us in our land?

Anxiety is rising. So, as Christians what are we to do. Peter tells us that we are to “Cast all your anxiety [care] on [Christ Jesus] because he cares for you.” [1 Peter 5:7 NIV]

The word for “cast” that Peter uses is significant. It is “epirrhipto” and it means to throw, to cast upon. Part of its root (rhipto) means to fling with a quick or deliberate toss.

Peter was a fisherman. He knew all about casting his nets out onto the water. He spent years quickly and deliberately flinging and tossing nets. When he says to “fling, cast or toss” our cares “quickly and deliberately” onto Christ Jesus that is noteworthy.

Oh, one last thought … when Peter cast his nets out, he expected to draw them back in with a return of fish. May I be so bold as to add, when we cast our care upon Christ Jesus our LORD, we too can expect a return … a return of peace and comfort and strength.

January 9, 2020 0 comment
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by TerryLema January 8, 2020

The recent events between the United States and Iran brought two Scriptures to mind this morning. The first was a warning from Jesus that “In the world you will have tribulation.” [John 16:33]

The second from Ps 120:7: “I am for peace; But when I speak, they are for war.”

Much (most?) of what happens in this world … in this life … is out of our control. We manage as much as we can, but ultimately bodies age and fail, or illness strikes, recessions hit, or wars break out when we must watch as we send our young men and women into harm’s way in foreign lands.

We can protest, vote politicians in or out, become active in a political party, and still tribulation and war happen. In this world not everyone (nor every nation) is for peace, in fact too many are for war.

Yes, in the world we will have tribulation, but Jesus didn’t just leave us with that sad warning. He surrounded that warning with words of hope. “These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.” [NKJV]

In Him we have a peace that goes beyond understanding. Even amid trouble we can possess “good cheer” because ultimately our Prince of Peace will return to set up His Kingdom and every and all trouble will be forever banished.

In the meantime, we wait, we pray, and, yes, sometimes we even grieve.

January 8, 2020 0 comment
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May the God of Hope Fill You

by TerryLema January 7, 2020

The Christmas decorations are down and put away for another year. One grandson has returned to Western Oregon, and our son, daughter-in-love and two other grandsons are back in California. The house is a little darker without the Christmas lights and our hearts a little lonelier without our loved ones.

We are blessed to have our youngest son, daughter and son-in-love here in Idaho. It’s still hard to have more than half the family in other places. And while I know that having everyone here is only a brief respite from the separations, I still get sad when life goes back to being what it is.

Now I am looking forward to spring when we will travel to California for a birthday, and early summer when we hope to travel to the Oregon coast for a vacation that will include a visit to our grandson. During the times of separation, I live on hope of the next visit.

Hope is a marvelous four-letter word. I can think of nothing worse in life than to be without it. I find it interesting that you don’t find the word hope (the Greek elpis) very often in the Gospels, but it is found repeatedly in the other New Testament books. I think that must be because when Jesus was walking among them, they didn’t need “hope.” It wasn’t until He returned to the Father that their need for hope became real and vibrant.

It is in our separations and sadness that we need hope. It is when life take a turn we aren’t expecting or one we aren’t pleased with that we need hope. It is when we feel lost or lonely or isolated that we need hope. Paul ends his marvelous letter to the Romans with a prayer. “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” [15:13]

That is also my prayer for you (and for me) for 2020.

January 7, 2020 0 comment
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Treat Other Likewise

by TerryLema January 6, 2020

We’ve turned over a new year and a new decade – 2020. I am praying and hoping that in “twenty-twenty” our nation begins to see more clearly. I am praying and hoping that we treat each other with more compassion, kindness and courtesy, that we drop the labeling and name calling, and that we put to death that hypercritical spirit that seems so pervasive and acceptable in our culture, our politics, our media.

I wonder what would happen to our society if we truly embraced those words of Jesus in Luke 6:31, “just as you want men to do to you, you also do to them likewise.” [NKJV]

Unfortunately, we seem to have lost touch with that Golden Rule. Instead our culture (and yes, even our contemporary Christianity) has produced an atmosphere where all we really care about is ourselves. I often think we see a perfect visual illustration of that in the current trend of “selfies” – taking pictures mainly of ourselves instead of others.

This behavior has produced a people who cloak their self-righteousness in a display of false humility. We express our “concern” for others in a way that doesn’t really care at all about other people but seeks only to build ourselves up in our own eyes.

Someone asked me if I was making any resolutions for this new year. I said, no. I seldom make resolutions because I am perfectly aware of my record at actually keeping them. But I think I just might make a resolution for the new decade – that I work to have more compassion for people, display more kindness and practice more courtesy. In other words, that I live out the Golden Rule in every area of my life.

January 6, 2020 0 comment
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Simple Life-Altering Truth

by TerryLema January 5, 2020

There was one last point in my message last Sunday. The first, God for us. The second, God with us. Now even more there is God in us.

When we understand the Incarnation, the central truth of Christianity, we must understand that it is more than the manger. For the baby Jesus in the manger would not even be remembered except for the cross. And the Jesus on the cross would have long since faded into history except for resurrection. And while the resurrection was glorious and earth and heaven shaking, it would have limited our relationship with Christ Jesus if it ended there.

It didn’t end there. Following the resurrection was the wondrous ascension of Christ Jesus to the Right Hand of the Father where He did as He promised … He sent the Holy Spirit to indwell those who come to God by grace through faith. Acts begins with the giving of the Holy Spirit, “All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.” [Acts 2:4]

As we continue into the book of Acts, we read of that continual infilling of the Spirit into people who place their faith in Jesus. We must understand that God’s good, good purpose for His creation wasn’t just to restore relationship and then leave us alone, His plan was to make us like Him. His purpose is to once again be able to point to His children as “made in the image of God.”

Simple life-altering truth contained in nine words: God for us, God with us, God in us. If you are making any resolutions to begin 2020, it might be to never forget those nine little words and how much they have changed our lives here on earth as well as in eternity. Thank you, Father.

January 5, 2020 0 comment
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It’s What Sets Apart

by TerryLema January 4, 2020

Not only is God for us (yesterday’s devotion), there was a second point to my message last Sunday. Three more words that should move us to praise and thanksgiving. They are: God with us.

God with us, Immanuel, is what we celebrated this past holiday season. The Incarnation, God becoming man, is the central truth of our faith. C. S. Lewis said that “Every other miracle prepares the way for this, or results from this.”

 God with us is what sets Christianity apart. If you remove the Incarnation, Christianity is just like every other religion.

Our God chose to demonstrate His love for us by coming to walk this dusty planet with us. Isaiah tells us that the child to be born is God’s Son given: “For unto us a Child is born, Unto us a Son is given; And the government will be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.” [9:6-7]

God with us experiencing our difficulties, our griefs, our challenges. He knew what it was to be rejected, misunderstood, scorned, and in pain. He understands poverty and even homelessness. (“Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head.” Matt 8:20)

How can we ever think He does not understand what we go through each day? God for us, and God with us. But there is even more … tomorrow.

January 4, 2020 0 comment
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God For Us

by TerryLema January 3, 2020

In Bible College I took a class that was to teach how to preach. The professor used the 3-point model. There was to be an introduction, three points and a conclusion. If you come to The Way in Middleton, Idaho, you’ll find I don’t follow that model very often, but I did last Sunday. Three Points expressed with nine words conveyed last week’s theme.

Over the next few days I want to look at those three points. The first is “God for Us.” Paul wrote in Rom 8:31-33: “What, then, shall we say in response to this? [Since] God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all-how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?”

 God is for us. Paul states that as a given fact. God is for us. Even before Adam and Eve rebelled against God’s goodness, (and passed that rebellion onto every member of the human race) God had a plan to restore us to fellowship. That’s God’s good, good purpose. Because God is immutable (never changes) He is constantly moving toward the fulfillment of His good, good purpose.

I am always humbled remembering God is for me. Whenever we sing the Chris Tomlin song, “Jesus Loves Me,” I cry. I cry especially at the lines “Jesus, He loves me, He loves me, He is for me; Jesus, how can it be, He loves me, He is for me.”

I truly believe that those words, “how can it be” should be emblazoned on our minds. How can it be that God loves us so, so, so much that He would give His only Son for us. Just thinking about Who God is and what we are should keep us from any pride, arrogance or thoughts of exclusiveness.

God for us. How can it be?

January 3, 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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