Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Ending This Blog Soon

I will be ending this blog soon. I have turned my family devotional blog into a website where I will be posting daily devotions and other random things as time goes by. Head over and take a peek. leadingfamilydevotions

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

New Family Devotions Blog

I decided a couple of weeks ago to begin a new blog. The intention of this new blog is to help Fathers lead their families in nightly devotions. These devotions can also be used by anyone at anytime. I am trying to post a devotion everyday. These devotions are fairly simple and easy. These devotions are the actual ones we are doing at night as a family. Enjoy! I pray that they will encourage you to gather your family together every night to seek the Lord! Scott 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Meditating On Scripture

Psalms 119:97-100 "How I love Your instruction! It is my meditation all day long. Your commands make me wiser than my enemies, for they are always with me. I have more insight than all my teachers because Your decrees are my meditation. I understand more than the elders because I obey Your precepts."

How would you like to be wiser than those whom dislike you; to have more insight than all of those who teach you, and have a greater understanding than the elders of your church? All of this is possible if you will simply obey and meditate upon scripture all day long.

Wisdom is moral goodness in character, thought and actions. Understanding is the ability to separate and discern ideas. Insight is intelligence. So, through meditating on scripture alone, you and I can have the ability to separate and discern ideas, understand those ideas, and have those ideas become such a part of us that they change our character to the degree that we become morally good and wise.

How many other things do you meditate upon during the day? Do those things give you insight and understanding to the degree that you surpass all those around you in wisdom?

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Where Do You Go For Comfort?

"This is my comfort in my affliction, for Your word has given me life." Psalm 119:50

Affliction can be a thousand different things. All that Job experienced was affliction. The Israelites were afflicted for four-hundred years under the hands of the Egyptians. The book of Hebrews tells us in chapter eleven that all of the Old Testament heros were afflicted because of their faith. And Paul considered all of his trials and troubles to be "light afflictions." But during these afflictions that we are all sure to face; where are we to go for comfort?

The Bible tells us that the place where we are to go during our afflictions is to itself. We are to run to it's promises. We are run to it's truth. We are to run to it's examples. We are to run to it's Author. And we are to run to it's Beginner, it's Fulfiller, and it's Pointer; to the incarnate Word of Life, Jesus Christ!

Think for a moment where we go though for comfort. Food? Distraction? Entertainment? Exercise? The list could go on and on couldn't it? We find ourselves in affliction and we run to a million of different sources which will never give us true comfort and life.

The Psalmist says tells us that God's word is his comfort during affliction, and it should be ours as well. God's purpose for allowing each affliction is so that we will become more and more complete (James 1:2-4). And we find our comfort during this chiseling process by clinging to the "word that has given me life."


Monday, May 27, 2013

What to do When our Children Complain...Again

It is difficult being a husband and a father. I am the father of four children who are blessings from the Lord. I have two older and two younger. The younger ones are 3 and 1-1/2 years old.

One of the greatest difficulties I find is dealing with my children when they whine and complain. Sometimes I do not know what to do about it. I decided to look into the Bible to see what God thinks about complaining.

As I searched the Bible, I found out that God actually hates it when his people whine and complain. The Israelites were in the wilderness for forty years due mostly to their complaints. They were slaves in Egypt for four-hundred years prior to their forty year desert experience. The people were being provided for in every way, yet complained about almost everything. When they would complain, the Bible says that God’s anger burned within him. Have you ever felt that way? Ya, me too.

What happened in these circumstances is that Moses would intercede for the people. Moses would plead to the Lord that he would show mercy to the people; that he would not give them their deserved judgement. Moses here is a picture of Jesus Christ. He is the one who intercedes on behalf of his complaining sheep.

What does this mean for us and our complaining children. Well first, it is not wrong to have anger burn within you when your children are complaining against your authority. Ephesians 5:1 tells us that we "are to be imitators of God." This means that in every way, we are to mimic God. He is perfect and we are to strive towards that goal with the help of Jesus and the Holy Spirit. If we are putting good and righteous restraints upon our children, and not unjust and needlessly burdensome restraints, then we have every right to have anger burn within us at times. But then what? We are to look for the Person Moses pointed us to, to Jesus Christ; he is to be the mediator between my anger and my children's sin of complaining. My children deserve to be punished for their complaining. Jesus pleads with me on behalf of his shed blood for their sins. He accepts them because his death was sufficient to make atonement for their complaints. And because of this, my anger is suppose to subside. Then, I must use good and godly wisdom and discipline to correct them towards thankfulness. After all, the Israelites still needed to wait forty years to make it to the promise land.

It's hard being a dad, but not nearly as hard as being God! He is infinitely more patient and kind than me.  

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Looking at Worthless Things

Psalms 119:37 Turn my eyes from looking at worthless things; and give me life in your ways.

How many things do you look at during the day that are worthless? I'm not here even thinking about things that are sinful to look at like pornography and the like; but things that have no worth.

The writer of Psalm 119 is contrasting having life in God's ways, from looking at worthless things. So presumably looking at worthless things takes away the ability to have a life which accords to the way God intended, and looking at things of worth gives a life which does accord with the way God intended. How many of us want to live a life the way God wants us to live that same life? I do, I do! But is it as simple as changing the things that I look at? Maybe.

What are the things of worth that God intends for my eyes to be gazing upon? Well, Psalm 119 alone mentions the Hebrew word for life 15 other times. Each time the word is mentioned, it is linked with some synonym for God's Word (the Bible). Whether it is a promise from the Bible, or a precept, or a law; each time the author of Psalm 119 mentions what gives us life, it is linked to something God has said in His Word.

So, I ask the question again; how many things do you look at during the day that are worthless? I am sorry to say that I look at plenty. Mostly these days, the worthless things I look at are associated with screen time. Things that I see while I am browsing through Flipboard, Reeder, or Safari on my iPhone or iPad. They are not things that are sinful to look at, but they sure don't have much worth. They are mundane things, like the third news article of the same event, but from yet another perspective; a rumor as to what the new iPhone will look like, or Monday morning humor from Kevin DeYoung's blog. Maybe you do not have any issues of looking at these worthless things, but how about the TV, Home and Garden magazine, Readers Digest, or E! Hollywood gossip?

I am not going to keep listing the things that we look at that are worthless, you know what your eyes linger over way better than I. You know those things that occupy your mind and that they are not giving you life according to God's ways. Will you give them up? Will I give them up? What is on the line if we don't? Whatever you determine the answer to this question is, we must begin where the author of the Psalm did; by praying through Jesus that God will turn my eyes.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

An Obvious Break From Blogging


It is nearly irrelevant that I would write a post on the topic of taking a break from blogging; as I know that it is blatantly obvious that I have taken a break from blogging because I am indeed not blogging. Nonetheless, I thought I would share a couple of the reasons why.



I have not only taken a break from writing blogs, but largely from reading them as well. I find that for myself, I grow more by reading books rather than blogs. Blogs are nice as they are short snippets of truth that are easy to read. But I see that they lack the depth to produce any change in my life. The blogs that do have an impact on me are written by individuals that I know are avid readers. Out of the overflow of what they are reading, they blog. This has not been the case for my blog writing. I have not written out of the overflow of my reading of books and I think it is evident in the content that I write.



Another reason I am taking a break is that I have four children and my wife to shepherd. I have been using the time I would normally blog to write devotions and things for my family instead of the world of bloggers. I think this is a better use of my time, and I think it honors God more.



I am not deleting my blog, but rather I will post from time to time on various topics as The Lord provides opportunities.



In Christ,


Scott