Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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TerryLema

TerryLema

A Joy-filled Skip

by TerryLema September 28, 2019

I had a few errands to run last Monday. One was to return a library book and pick up two new ones. As I was walking out of the library with my books, I met a lovely lady coming in. She was probably in her 50’s, and she was almost skipping. As she drew close, she smiled and said, “I am so blessed. God is so good to me!”

I smiled back and said, “Yes, He is good to us. He loves us.”

To which, she replied, “He does love us.” Then she laughed and said, “and most of the time all we do is get in His way!”

She waved and turned back, continuing her joy-filled skip into the library. I smiled and turned towards my car; my heart surprisingly more lighthearted than when I went in. As I got in my car, I remembered a verse that I used to include with my signature on my work emails. It’s a verse I’ve tried to incorporate in every part of my life. (When I retired from St. Luke’s, a friend had this verse inscribed on a beautiful silver bookmark, which I cherish.)

“A merry heart does good, like medicine.” There is also a second half to that verse, “but a broken spirit dries the bones.” [Prov 17:22 NKJV]

Throughout life I have found that if we keep our hearts joyful before Him, we are healthy, even if our bodies are not. Joy in the LORD gives us the ability to handle what comes our way, whether good or difficult. But if we allow the struggles of life to drive out the joy, we will be unhealthy, even if our bodies are fit.

When joy disappears, the enemy of our soul builds a stronghold in our life of negativism and dryness. The opposite of the Joy of the LORD is not sadness, it is weakness and defeat.

September 28, 2019 0 comment
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Practice Hospitality

by TerryLema September 27, 2019

One of my favorite chapters in the NT is Romans 12. After all the deep theology of the previous chapters, Paul gets in our face right from the beginning … “offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God.” [vs 1]

Then he goes on to show us exactly how to do that. I was struck by verse 13 this morning. “Share with God’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.”

I had been reading the story of Jasmine, the greyhound who was rescued from a life of neglect and abuse and taken to a British wildlife sanctuary. Jasmine was an amazing animal example of Paul’s words to us. She was not only a rescue, she turned to providing love to many of the other rescues that came into the sanctuary. She practiced hospitality. You can read her story at http://www.nuneatonwildlife.co.uk/jasmine/

Each one of us is a rescue. We have been rescued from the realm of darkness and transferred into the Kingdom of Light – the Kingdom of God’s Dear Son. We have been adopted as sons and daughters into God’s family. Now it is our turn to welcome other rescues, those who are in need, those who are lonely, or hopeless, or different.

 When people come into our churches, they should be met with hospitality – our love, our welcome, a hug, a smile. Often people are unsure of how they will be treated, whether they will “fit in” or even if their presence will be noticed or received. As Believers, let’s be aware of those who come to us in need and practice good, honest, welcoming hospitality within our churches.

Jesus welcomed us. Now it is our turn to give that welcome to others.

September 27, 2019 0 comment
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That Gives Me Hope

by TerryLema September 26, 2019

Remember that beautiful love story of Isaac and Rebekah from Genesis 24 that I wrote about yesterday. It started out so good, but then the “happily ever after part” got a bit skewed. That’s because these were real people, not fairy tale or romance novel characters.

The troubles really began after Isaac prayed for Rebekah. She was unable to conceive initially, but after Isaac’s prayers for his wife, she became pregnant with twins. They jostled in her womb and drove her to consult the LORD about her condition, “if everything is all right God, why am I thus?” [25:22]

God granted Rebekah’s request and told her why. The LORD said to her, “Two nations are in your womb, and two peoples from within you will be separated; one people will be stronger than the other, the older will serve the younger.” [Gen 25:23]

That was so true. Over the next few chapters in Genesis, those twins, Jacob (who would be renamed Israel) and Esau caused their parents a lot of trouble. They fought and schemed and tried to outdo each other. They even got mom and dad involved in their squabbles. (To this day, their descendants are still squabbling.) Eventually Jacob and Esau achieved a measure of peace between them and found that living far away from each other served them well.

When I read the story of Isaac and Rebekah and their offspring, I often wonder if there were times when Isaac regretted asking God for children. Had it been me, I just might have!

And I also remember that the people and great heroes in the Bible were just that, real people. Not made up fairy tales, super heroes or characters in a novel. They were people who had struggles in everyday life just as we have. God walked was them through each one. That gives me hope.

September 26, 2019 0 comment
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“Why am I thus?”

by TerryLema September 25, 2019

I like love stories. I’m not too big on things like romance novels, but I like a good, honest, love story about real people with all their foibles and quirks. Having been married for nearly 53 years, I’m not much into “and they lived happily ever after.” I figured out that was a fairy tale about three months into it. But a good story about real people with problems to overcome is something that will win my heart. One such is the story of Isaac and Rebekah in Genesis.

Abraham sought a wife for his son by sending his top servant to his relatives in the city of Nahor. There, through divine “coincidence” the servant found Rebekah and brought her back to wed Isaac. You can read the story in Genesis 24. I love the final verse in that chapter: “And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah’s tent, and took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved her: and Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death.” [v67 KJV]

Isn’t that a beautiful story? And had it ended there we might add “and they lived happily ever after.” But we’d be wrong.

Initially Rebekah was barren until Isaac sought the LORD for his wife and she conceived. Twins. Then the trouble started. “The children struggled together within her; and she said, ‘If it be so, why am I thus?’ And she went to inquire of the LORD.” [Gen 25:22 KJV]

I can never get past that verse without chuckling. “Why am I thus?” is one of those verses that so often speaks to our lives, even our spiritual lives. We’ve been adopted into the family of God, made part of the bride of Christ. We’ve been given new life … so why do we still struggle … why isn’t it “happily ever after” instead of “why am I thus?”

I know that our struggles work for us a weight of glory we would not have without them. I know the times in my life when I struggled brought great spiritual growth. And I know that there are still times, even after all these decades when I must run to inquire of the LORD and ask, “Why am I thus? What’s going on God?” Bless His Holy Name, sometimes He tells me why, sometimes He doesn’t, but either way, He walks with me through it all.

September 25, 2019 0 comment
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Study to Show

by TerryLema September 24, 2019

I saw a meme on FB the other day that said something like that, “The Bible is not granola mix, you can’t pick out only the pieces you like.”

For those of you who are suddenly wondering what a meme is, its contemporary definition is “a humorous image, video, piece or text, etc., that is copied (often with slight variations) and spread rapidly by Internet users.”

Memes are everywhere, and I must admit that while some are humorous, I am still not sure I like them. They often attempt to define complex issues with few words. I think they have trivialized and shallowed the way in which we think. We no longer take the time or effort to read long passages or articles that investigate issues to help us form legitimate positions. They lead us to think that all we need for understanding is a cute saying or “piece of text.”

My next thought is a question … is that the way we treat the Word of God? Do we find cute little Scripture verses that we can pull out and turn into a meme and then think that we know what God is saying? Paul was quite clear to Timothy that it was going to take more than memes to handle the Word of God correctly. “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” [2 Timothy 2:15 NKJV]

The KJV translates it this way, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God ….”

Study. Be diligent. Rightly dividing the Word of Truth. There is an implied work ethic in those words. We are to spend time in the Word not just reading, or searching for memes to post, we are to study diligently. That means picking up reference books alongside our Bibles, reading things in context, understanding original word meanings, and seeing what great commentators down through the centuries have said about those passages.

Let’s not treat the Word of God like a FB post, let’s dig into it and discover all it holds for us so that we need not be ashamed before our God.

September 24, 2019 0 comment
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A Run-on Stream of Words!

by TerryLema September 23, 2019

No doubt about it, I’m a reader. I love reading. I remember as a young child sitting at the kitchen table reading the cereal boxes before school. Since I’ve retired, I have re-discovered the local library. Our city library isn’t large as libraries go, but it is part of a system. As such, I can go on-line, find the book I want and submit a request. If it isn’t housed locally, it will be shipped out to my library and I can pick it up there when it arrives.

I was reading a library book the other day and discovered that someone had taken a pen to the book and “corrected” the language of some of the characters in it. I thought who has the audacity to do that?

Seeing those corrections, however, took me back to my college days and English class. The professor abhorred “run on” sentences and there were always scribbled corrections on papers that contained them. I wonder what she would have done with the Apostle Paul’s writings.

If you have your Bible handy, turn to Ephesians 1 and read verses 3-14. In the original language that is one long run-on sentence. And a most marvelous “sentence” it is. There are no breaks in that sentence. It is as if Paul got started thinking about our wonderful relationship to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and all the blessings that are ours, and couldn’t stop.

As you read, dwell on some of his words … blessed/blessings, adopted, pleasure, praise, glorious grace, redemption, forgiveness, riches, lavished, love, hope, truth …. What a list. I think Paul was writing from the depth of his heart and it just poured out as he tried to convey all that God had done for him … and for us.

If you can, read it a couple times. Get in the middle of Paul’s stream of thought and let it carry you straight into the heavenlies and deposit you at the feet of our LORD.

September 23, 2019 0 comment
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Got a Mountain?

by TerryLema September 22, 2019

Got a mountain in your life that never seems to move? One that always seems to accompany you wherever you go? Maybe it’s an emotional mountain, one such as anger, pride, jealousy, lust, negativism, pessimism, anxiety, bitterness, apathy, entitlement, or greed. Maybe your mountain is more tangible such as drugs, pornography or materialism.

These mountains are strongholds, fortresses that the enemy builds to try to secure his rule over us. Paul promised us in 2Corinthians 10:4 that God gives us weapons to combat these strongholds. We can use these weapons to “tear down our strongholds.”

Zechariah reminded us that we can’t do it in our own power, it is not by earthly might, nor by self-power, but by the Spirit of God that mountains in our lives will be become level ground. When the stronghold is destroyed, God will bring out a finishing stone, a capstone. God will bring out that stone with shouts of “Grace, grace to it!” [Zechariah 4:7 NKJV]

I am a preacher of “grace, grace to it!” I love the grace of God. Some people mistakenly believe that grace simply lets us off the hook and we can then keep on doing the same old things. But grace, God’s grace is the power to change our lives so we don’t “end up on another hook!” Or even , God forbid, “the same hook again!”

Grace begins our walk, grace is the power to continue our walk worthy of God’s calling, and one day as we stand before our Precious LORD, grace will put the finishing touches on our lives. There will be shouts of “Grace, grace to it!” reverberating through heaven for all eternity! Hallelujah!

September 22, 2019 0 comment
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Spiritual Strongholds

by TerryLema September 21, 2019

Tomorrow in church we are going to talk about “Tearing Down Strongholds.” The Scripture verse for this is found in 2Corinthians Chapter 10. “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty in God for pulling down strongholds.” [vs 4 NKJV]

There are lots of things which will allow a stronghold to be built and fortified in our life. It might be something that happened to us in the past, such as abuse or rejection. It could be when we have allowed the world’s philosophies to take over, or when we believe the lies of the enemy of our soul more than the great and precious promises of our Father God. Whatever the origin, a spiritual stronghold will hinder our spiritual growth and keep us from being conformed to the image of God’s Dear Son, our Savior and LORD, Christ Jesus.

The Scriptures give us many weapons we can use, the Armor and Prayer in Ephesians 6, the Name of Jesus in Philippians 2. We have the blood of Jesus in 1 John 1, and even the Word of our Testimony in Revelation 12. But whatever weapon we use, there is one thing we must always remember, we must give up the delusion that strongholds are overcome by our own power. We must heed the warning and promise found in Zechariah 4:6:

“This is the word of the LORD to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ says the LORD of hosts.” [NKJV]

We will not tear down the strongholds in our lives by using earthly measures or by our own self-will. It is not by might nor power … we tear down strongholds by the power and authority of Christ through the Holy Spirit. Tomorrow – The Importance of Grace!

September 21, 2019 0 comment
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Why would you call me?

by TerryLema September 20, 2019

In 2 Peter 1:4, we find an amazing phrase that raises us into the heavens … we are given the precious promise that we may, “participate in the divine nature.” If you read yesterday’s devotion you know that does not mean we become God – not going to happen. There is a vast difference between the All-Sufficient One, Creator of all things, and the things He created! It does however mean that as Adam was made in the image of God, so we too by the power of God’s Spirit, are made in the image of our LORD and Savior, Christ Jesus (the Second Adam).

As God is love, so are we. As God is true and good, so are we. But there is even more glory contained in those five little words. We have been made members of the body of Christ. As in the natural body, the same blood that flows in the head flows through the body. The same life that raised Christ from the dead, resurrects us. We are made alive in His divine nature.

How this all works is beyond my human finite comprehensive. That it does work is testified to by the Spirit of God in me.

Should that not cause us to reflect His divine nature in every action of our life? Should not those who are around us see the “Jesus in me?” Should that not cause us to fall to our knees in worship?

When I consider such things I always come back to the thought, “Why me, God? Why would you call me to Your side, knowing what I am?” I don’t know the answer to that question any more today than I did 50 years ago. But I love my LORD more every time I ask the question. Amen.

September 20, 2019 0 comment
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Made in the Image of God

by TerryLema September 19, 2019

There are phrases in Scripture, a short blend of common words, that when seen with spiritual eyes take our breath away. They raise us into the heavenlies with our thoughts, they conform our attitudes and renew and restore our hope. I mentioned one such phrase yesterday … “useful to the Master.”

Those few little words open us up to endless possibilities. As I was considering that phrase, I accidentally came across another … perhaps one even more amazing. It is found in 1 Peter: “His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness. Through these he has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature and escape the corruption in the world caused by evil desires.” [1:3-4]

Did you see it tucked away in those verses? Five little words that carry a depth of meaning that changes everything. We have been given the promise that we may, “participate in the divine nature.”

That of course does not mean that we become God. That just won’t happen. There is a vast difference between the Creator and His Creation. But it does mean that as our father Adam was made in the image of God, so we too as we are in Christ Jesus (the Second Adam), renewed by the Holy Spirit, are also made in the image of God. This is totally a work of God, given to us through grace.

How is that reflected in our life? Certainly not by mere assertion or by arrogance. As God is love, we become love. As God is truth, we become true. As our God is a Good Father, we are made good by His goodness. As God is holy and pure, we become pure in heart. Yes, partakers in the divine nature. All that Jesus is, by His strength, power and authority should be reflected in our every word and action.

But there is even more. That will have to wait for tomorrow. God bless!

September 19, 2019 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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