Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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Brokenhearted

by TerryLema February 22, 2023

Ps 34:18:  “The Lord is near the brokenhearted; He saves those crushed in spirit.” [HCSB]

Psalm 34 is a song of David, written when David was not in the best of circumstances.  He had fled King Saul who was trying to kill him, and ended up in Gath, a small town on the Philistine border.  When the king in Gath learned who he was, he wanted David gone. Fearing harm, David pretended to be insane until they drove him away, finally ending up living in caves.

Yet despite the circumstances, Psalm 34 is an extremely positive song, beginning, “I will praise the Lord at all times;
His praise will always be on my lips. I will boast in the Lord; the humble will hear and be glad.”

I have been thinking lately about how deep emotional wounds can go.  They are often much harder to heal than physical wounds.  Physical wounds, if the body is healthy, simply heal themselves.  Emotional wounds need a lot of intentional work.  We must forgive, often repeatedly.  We must want to be healed – not always an easy choice.  We must work through the rejection, pain, and all the emotions that attach … and while we are doing this, the enemy of our soul is whispering why we should not!

Yet David understood that when we are brokenhearted, God draws close to us.  He understood that there is salvation for those who are crushed in spirit by life’s unfairness.  We can, through the work of the Holy Spirit in our hearts and minds, be healed of the sorrows and pains inflicted upon us.  We can be made whole.

Oh Lord, today we pray for those whose hearts have been broken, those who are crushed in Spirit.  Draw close to them and lead them to a healing place in You.  Amen.

February 22, 2023 0 comment
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Great Storms

by TerryLema February 21, 2023

“The greater the storm, the louder our song. We lift our voice up, we make your praise so glorious.”

That is a line from the song “Louder,” by Mark Redman.  That line, especially the first part, has been running through my mind repeatedly … the greater the storm, the louder our song!

Our world is ablaze with storms, both literal and figurative.  Weather patterns have been wild this year.  There have been earthquakes and volcanos, floods, and droughts. As bad as those disasters are, they have affected relatively few compared to the other kinds of storms.

Wars, conflicts, radicalism, mass murders, shooting sprees, persecutions, fears, anxiety.  It seems like the news opens every day with reports of the tempests that plague our world.

The church has felt herself assaulted in our country in ways we never thought possible.  Maybe that’s the problem, we never thought it possible!  We let our guard down.  We grew comfortable in our plush chairs and expected that would go on until Jesus came.  Whatever the reasons, in many areas of our society, Christian is no longer a welcome title.

So what should we do?  I truly believe God’s Spirit is energizing some of our new song writers and they are putting forth praise, urging us to catch the wind of the Spirit … The greater the storm, the louder our song!  The Spirit is telling the church to rise out of her plush chairs and begin to praise, praise louder and more fervently than ever before.  It’s time to sing praise, shout praise, dance praise, clap praise and live praise.

It’s time to open our doors and let the world see us and hear us praising our God! Probably even time to take our praise outside our doors!

February 21, 2023 0 comment
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Worship Walk

by TerryLema February 20, 2023

I try to do a worship walk at least four times a week, my goal is five times. Last Monday I went on my first walk of the week and when I got home I plopped in my recliner and began to laugh.

I used to walk listening to songs on my MP3 player. It played into my hearing aids. Then I broke my MP3 player, and I am too cheap to buy another one. So, I listened to my music on my phone. Unfortunately I also lost one of my good hearing devices with the Bluetooth. I am too cheap to buy more expensive devices so settled for ones that do not have Bluetooth capabilities. All that to say, I play my music on my phone for all the world to hear when I walk.

Monday is not the best day to walk in my neighborhood. It is garbage day, so my walk is spent dodging cans. Some people put their cans on the sidewalk, some put them in the gutter. Which means that sometimes I am walking on the sidewalk, and sometimes I am walking in the gutter.

Then there are the dogs that try to freak me out when I walk by. They begin to growl and bark, and I am never sure they aren’t going to come charging through the broken fence boards in many yards. And, of course, there are the smells. From the garbage cans I must walk around. All this while I am playing my worship music and praising my LORD.

As I sat in my chair I laughed. My worship walk was so much like trying to walk the narrow road in the middle of the world’s broad one. Dodging obstacles. Remaining peaceful when the enemy is threatening. Praising my LORD and praying amid the decay and stench of the world’s evil.

I even walked with a cane (some call religion a crutch), but I have found leaning on those everlasting arms to keep me going is one of the most delightful parts of walking with the LORD every day. [Deuteronomy 33:26-28]

February 20, 2023 0 comment
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A Complaining Spirit

by TerryLema February 19, 2023

One last thought about our spiritual heart health this month—that is the danger of possessing a complaining, grumbling, murmuring spirit. Philippians 2:14: “Do everything without grumbling and arguing.” [HCSB]

As a society we have become professional complainers. We complain about everything. Prices, politics, neighbors, roads, traffic, restaurants, products. Name something, anything, and you have probably heard someone complain about it.

As believers, we cannot allow a complaining habit to develop in our lives. The Greek word translated “complainer” means “one who is discontented with his lot.” It is a cousin to the word grumbler.

Complaining, grumbling, murmuring destroys the peace, patience, and joy that the Spirit of God wants to produce in our lives. It shifts our focus from the plans and purposes of God for us. It also causes us to forget the love and blessings God worked in our lives in the past.

The opposite of a complaining, grumbling, murmuring spirit is a spirit of gratitude, thankfulness, and trust. That is what should permeate the life of a believer. I would add that we can be honest with God when things are difficult and trials abound, but honesty is different from whining about our lot, or complaining about God to others!

Give us LORD, instead a spirit of gratitude for all you have done for us. Amen

February 19, 2023 0 comment
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Anger

by TerryLema February 18, 2023

I have been thinking a lot about the things that are risk factors for our spiritual hearts. Hardening of our hearts, that I wrote about yesterday, is certainly one. Another is anger. Anger acts like a poison on both our physical hearts and our spiritual hearts.

In my concordance there were 259 references to anger. Ephesians 4:31-32 commands us to “get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.” Then goes on and tells us we need to “be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave [us].” [HCSB]

James tells us that we must be “quick to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger,” and explains why, “for man’s anger does not accomplish God’s righteousness.” [1:19-20 HCSB]

We are an increasingly angry culture. Anger makes us want to lash out and hurt others. Every day there are newscasts informing us of someone (or some group) becoming angry and striking out at the focus of their anger with words or even weapons.

Anger is a danger and has no place in the life of a Christian. (Yes, I understand there is a righteous anger, but we must admit, most of us do not “suffer” from that.)

Unrighteous anger will damage our spiritual hearts. It certainly will not accomplish God’s purpose. It will, in fact, undermine God’s purposes in our lives and in the lives of others.

February 18, 2023 0 comment
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Hardened Hearts

by TerryLema February 17, 2023

I am a recipient of the promise of God found in Ezekiel 36:26: “I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will remove your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.” [HCSB]

Fifty years ago this August, I surrendered my life to the personal care of Christ Jesus my LORD and Savior. It was the best and greatest decision I have ever made. In that moment, God took my stony heart, set in rebellion against Him, and changed it to a heart of flesh capable of loving Him and desiring to serve Him.

While I was given that heart of flesh, I still must guard against things that pose risks to my spiritual heart. One such risk is found in the Book of Hebrews.  “As the Holy Spirit says: Today if you hear His voice do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion.” [3:8, 3:15, 4:7 HCSB]

We can harden our hearts when we are shown God’s truth and refuse to accept it. We can harden our hearts when we hear God tell us to do something, and we do not do it. We can harden our hearts when the Holy Spirit checks an attitude in us and we fail to heed His warning.

Every time we reject or ignore or disobey, we run the risk of hardening a part of our heart. Do that often enough and we can grow deaf to the voice of God.

The only way to soften that hardened part of our heart is to repent and allow the forgiveness of God to flood our heart, bringing back the tenderness to God that once was there.

Wouldn’t it be ironic if we allowed that beautiful heart of flesh given us by God to be hardened once again because we failed to heed Him?

February 17, 2023 0 comment
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How Much?

by TerryLema February 16, 2023

I receive a daily verse and comment from “The Berean.” The other day the verse was 2 Peter 1:2-8. Part of the comment by Richard T. Ritenbaugh answered the question about what real conversion is: “It is the transformation of our characters, our intellects, our emotions, our actions, our words, and our very thoughts, from the evil way inspired by Satan and man’s carnal nature into the divine nature—the very nature of God Himself!”

Then he asked a few questions. I halted on the first one. “So, how much like God are we?” I looked at that question for a long time, knowing I needed to change two words. “So, how much like God am I?” Ouch!

Recently I spent some time in 2 Timothy 2:22. It reads in part, “… pursue righteousness, faith[fulness], love, and peace, along with those who call on the Lord from a pure heart.” [HCSB]

I realized that the things I am to pursue (righteousness, faithfulness, love, and peace) are all attributes of God. They are the things that once acquired, will make my character come in alignment with His.

I also realized that we sometimes get a wrong impression of the word pursue. Do you remember greyhound racing – where a mechanized rabbit ran down the track always out of reach of the pursuing greyhounds. Sometimes we think that pursuing God is like that – God always out of reach.

But pursuing God is not like that. It is like the finish line of a marathon. It never moves or changes, it remains where it is while we run the race, getting closer and closer all the time. We pursue that line; we pursue our God who never changes. As we pursue, we get closer and closer to Him. We become more and more like Him.

Let us pursue with great diligence and perseverance. Amen

February 16, 2023 0 comment
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Angels Unawares

by TerryLema February 15, 2023

A group of us from The Way went to breakfast last Saturday. It was an early Valentine’s Day celebration and included singles and couples. Some of us were from The Way, and others were neighbors or relatives of church members.

As we were gathering and getting seated a lady joined us at the end of our long table. You could see the confusion on faces as no one recognized her. Someone decided to go around the table and have us “introduce” ourselves and say if we were there as part of the church or a neighbor/friend. She introduced herself as part of the church.

She seemed to have a great time during the meal, interacting with people, laughing, and acting as old friends with all. When the meal was over, I went over and introduced myself as the former pastor. As we talked, it became clear that she was a bit confused over which church we were from. It was also clear that she was lonely and hurting (telling me she lost her son).

I told her anytime she was close to our log-cabin church in Middleton to drop by. We would welcome her and enjoy seeing her again. I had a few dollars in my pocket and blessed her with that and a hug.

As we left, I thought of the Scripture in Hebrews. “Don’t neglect to show hospitality, for by doing this some have welcomed angels as guests without knowing it.” [Hebrews 13:2 HCSB]

I don’t think she was an angel. I think she was a child of God in need of some love and fellowship with other children of God. I’m glad she found us. I’m glad our group was kind, accepting, and loving to her.

 

February 15, 2023 0 comment
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Valentine’s Day

by TerryLema February 14, 2023

Today is the celebration of Valentine’s Day. Card companies, candy companies, florists, and restaurants rejoice. Servers not so much. Apparently, people spend so much on cards, candy, flowers and fancy dinners that they run low on funds by the time they get to servers.

Not sure how this celebration got started. Some tie it to a mid-February festival in ancient Rome that celebrated fertility. Other attribute it to a St. Valentine, although there are a few saints named Valentine in the Catholic church.

Americans probably began exchanging hand-made valentines in the early 1700s, and in 1840 Esther A. Howland began selling the first mass-produced valentines in America. If you google Valentine’s Day, you will get many different origins.

The world thinks of Valentine’s Day as a day of love, but it is more about romance than love. And while romance is great, and should be practiced, love is much more enduring.

We have probably all read 1 Corinthians 13, which describes what true love looks like. “Love is patient, love is kind.
Love does not envy, is not boastful, is not conceited, does not act improperly, is not selfish, is not provoked, and does not keep a record of wrongs. Love finds no joy in unrighteousness but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.”
[HCSB]

This is the kind of love our Father has for us. It is the kind of love we are to have for each other. It takes us far beyond romance. It reaches out to the lonely, the unlovely, the sick, the dying, the forgotten, the misunderstood, the rebellious and the defiant. And yes, even reaches as far as our enemies.  This kind of love changes everything in its path.

 

Amen

February 14, 2023 0 comment
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February

by TerryLema February 13, 2023

February is the shortest month. It is also a month that has a few observances, such as, Canned Food Month, National Bird Feeding Month, National Cherry as well as Grapefruit & Hot Breakfast Month. It is also American Heart Month.

I had the privilege of bringing the message yesterday at The Way. It had been over a year since I stood behind a pulpit, and I must admit I was a bit nervous. I decided to talk about our heart health, after all it is February. Just as it is with our physical hearts, there are risk factors to spiritual heart health.

God must want us to consider our heart health as the heart is mentioned almost 1000 times in the Scriptures. Proverbs 4:23 tells us the importance of heart health: “Guard your heart above all else, for it is the source of life.”

In the OT, the word for heart is often translated as “mind.” The NT also links our hearts and minds using the Greek word “kardia.” That is because the Scriptures integrate the inner being into a “whole” much more than we do now. (How often have we heard someone tell us to “Listen to your heart, not your mind.”)

Our hearts are that spiritual part of us where our thoughts, emotions, desires, and will dwell. It is the inner core of who we are as a person and it determines the choices we make, and the actions we take. That is why Proverbs 4 doesn’t end with simply reminding us to guard our hearts. It also reminds us about our thoughts, our speech, our focus, and our actions.

“Don’t let your mouth speak dishonestly, and don’t let your lips talk deviously. Let your eyes look forward; fix your gaze straight ahead. Carefully consider the path for your feet, and all your ways will be established.”  [4:25-26]

February 13, 2023 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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