Archives for June 2018

Podcast 004 – “Rose’s Story”

This summer, Arise Ministries Collective is featuring the incredible life story of Rose Speer in three segments. Today we have the honor and privilege of sharing Part One! Her story is beautifully brave and captivating. As we all have the great honor of listening to Rose’s journey, it is our prayer that her experience will grow and bolster our faith and trust God in a deep and tangible way.

What would you do if everything you knew and loved was stripped away?  Who would you turn to?  Where would you go?  Have a kleenex handy, settle in and join us as we listen to Rose’s childhood journey in the Philippines and how God held her tightly from tragedy to today.

 

About Rose Speer: Rose lives in Vancouver, WA with her husband, David (both are graduates of George Fox University), and two children, Coraleigh (14) and Malkiah (10). She is a wedding planner and party enthusiast who loves to bake, decorate cakes, host a crowd, garden, hike and watch her kids play sports.

She is passionate about helping others grow and strengthen their faith, and loves the Lord with all her heart, mind and soul. It’s not surprising that Rose’s life verse is Joshua 1:9 – “Be strong and courageous! Do not be terrified, do not be discouraged for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.”

Willamette Valley Salad

If you live anywhere near the Willamette Valley in Oregon, you’ve likely tried a variation of this salad. They serve one at the Elephant’s Deli in Portland that I love, but this one my friend Liz makes is my absolute favorite. It’s delicious paired with grilled salmon (I like carmelized onions with mine because they taste delish with the salad) or steak, and works great for a potluck! The hazelnuts make it really special, so take the time to roast them and include them if you can. I’ve added thinly sliced pears and they were a hit.  Enjoy!

For the salad:

  • 2 heads of romaine lettuce cut into bite-sized into pieces
  • 2 avocados peeled and sliced
  • 1/3 lb. blue cheese
  • 1 C hazelnuts toasted and chopped

For the dressing:

  • 1/3 C red wine vinegar
  • 2/3 C olive oil
  • 2 Tbsp Dijon mustard
  • salt and pepper to taste

Instructions:

  • Combine dressing ingredients together.
  • Put greens in a bowl.
  • Toss lightly with dressing (you probably won’t use it all – I never do)
  • Add avocados, blue cheese and hazelnuts on top

 

*To toast the hazelnuts, arrange them in a single layer on a cookie sheet. Heat oven to 350 and toast for 5-10 minutes. Shake the pan occasionally to make sure they don’t burn and are evenly toasted. Allow to cool and chop.

 

 

Kingdom Roots

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” Romans 12:2

 

We all want roots. Someplace we can turn to in times of both joy and crisis. The world strives for identity and belonging. Already, over seven million people worldwide have taken the Ancestry DNA test. This is just one of the many DNA tests helping users discover their ethnic history. Ancestry (the company) interviewed a portion of the seven million people who took their test, asking them how they felt when they received their test results. Their answers looked something like this: “When I received my results I felt like I was meeting myself for the first time,” or, “Thank you for helping me fill in the blanks in my life.” The company advertised using phrases like, “Many people are getting to know themselves better through Ancestry’s DNA test, and it’s making them feel good.”

The world wants identity. It wants roots. It thinks, if I just knew where I came from I’d know myself. As Christians, we know where we’ve come from, and we know what we’re here to do. We know our roots – We come from God and we serve the world as His children. We are here to further His kingdom. To do this we are asked to let go of ourselves and fully devote our lives to His mission. Knowing these things prepares us to step out away from the “norm” of searching for identity and realize we have already found it.

The people we try so hard to please, the groups we strive to belong to, and even the families we feel secure in – They will all pass. Our biological and social roots can’t compare to the roots we have in Christ.

In Philippians 3:20, the apostle Paul paints an image of who we are as followers of God living in the world.  He says, “But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” We are citizens of heaven – Not of a club, a small group, a school, a church, or a country, but of God’s Kingdom! We are waiting for Jesus to return and complete what He started when He came to this earth to die for us and welcome us into His family.

Our job as followers of the Lord is not to simply find the kingdom of God but to forward it. We are the Lord’s Kingdom. That is our Identity! Although we need faith to see it, it is never changing – Forever constant. Our Identity is found in our Kingdom purpose – To love God and make Him known.

 

 

About the author:

Maya is a 14-year old trying her best to remember that her roots are planted in God alone as she moves from middle school to high-school and continues to grow in her faith. She loves adventure, trying new things, deep conversation, living in the moment, dreaming big, and working hard.

Resting in the Shadow

“Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.” Psalm 91:1

I’m not sure how it started, but I remember how it ended – In complete exhaustion with a tear-filled cry for help.

My quest to live a holy, God-centered, productive life left me self-righteous, self-centered, and striving for recognition and appreciation.  It wasn’t pretty, and neither was I. I was short-tempered, frazzled, and longing for less – Chasing shadows I could never catch.

Our 120 pound Rhodesian Ridgeback is very much the same.  Every Spring the swallows invade our front yard to roost in the trees and bird boxes.  They dive-bomb anything that comes within a 10 foot radius of their nest and hatchlings.  It’s our dog’s favorite time of year. He stands under a bird box in mid-afternoon when the sun towers above the driveway and casts a perfect swallow shadow. It doesn’t take long before one or more swallows emerge to scare him away, and he chases their shadow until he simply can’t anymore.  He tires, gives up, and crashes to an abrupt halt on the grass only to start the feat again the next day.

It’s a valiant effort for a lost cause.  

While the swallow flies overhead, the dog’s eyes are focused on the ground.  He never looks up. Ever. He has no idea what he’s chasing and will never find rest catching it.  

The same is true for us, isn’t it? We scramble, tire, and fall to the ground exhausted trying to catch what we can’t see. We suffer from fear, anxiety, and lack of self-worth without knowing and submitting to what’s overhead.

Eyes focused on the earth instead of the heavens will see the shadow, but not the One who casts it.  

Unlike the swallows, the shadow God casts is constant. Almighty. Sovereign. Unwavering. Unshifting (James 1:17). We can rest under it because we are assured of it.  The author of Psalm 91 found this to be true, and by His grace, I did too.

So how do we find rest in the shadow of the Almighty?

  • Dwell in the shelter.  Spend time – REAL time in the presence of our Savior.  Praise Him in the morning before reaching for the phone.  Tell Him of His goodness. Confess transgression. Cry out to Him in need, then wait patiently for His response.  Resting in the shadow begins in relationship. The word dwell reads as abide or live in some translations, and shelter is referred to as the secret place in the ASV (American Standard Version).  To paraphrase, the psalmist is telling us to live with God in the secret places. Close the door and spend time with Him. Know Him alone before you know Him with others.
  • Understand His Word.  My life changed when I began studying and understanding the Bible.  It takes effort and commitment, but is worth every last bit of it. When we seek to understand the Truth in His infallible Word, we understand His power, control, and sovereignty.  We see His great faithfulness and trust it.
  • Spend time with others who find their rest in Him.  Being around a woman who truly knows God and understands His Word brings peace.  Her restfulness resonates. I found some of these restful women in the middle of my shadow-chasing.  They breathed the lovingkindness of Jesus and modeled how to dwell in His shelter. They were calm. They challenged me to seek the Holy Spirit’s guidance before committing to things and helped me trust His timing and sovereignty. They prayed for me, worshiped alongside me, read scripture with me.  They showed me what it looked like to walk with Him and make Him my refuge. They became my shadow-sisters, and I’m forever grateful for them.

I want to dwell where I can rest.  In His shelter and under His shadow.

 

Psalm 91

1 Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High

   will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.

2 I will say of the Lord, “He is my refuge and my fortress,

   my God, in whom I trust.”

3 Surely he will save you

   from the fowler’s snare

   and from the deadly pestilence.

4 He will cover you with his feathers,

   and under his wings you will find refuge;

   his faithfulness will be your shield and rampart.

5 You will not fear the terror of night,

   nor the arrow that flies by day,

6 nor the pestilence that stalks in the darkness,

   nor the plague that destroys at midday.

7 A thousand may fall at your side,

   ten thousand at your right hand,

   but it will not come near you.

8 You will only observe with your eyes

   and see the punishment of the wicked.

9 If you say, “The Lord is my refuge,”

   and you make the Most High your dwelling,

10 no harm will overtake you,

   no disaster will come near your tent.

11 For he will command his angels concerning you

   to guard you in all your ways;

12 they will lift you up in their hands,

   so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.

13 You will tread on the lion and the cobra;

   you will trample the great lion and the serpent.

14 “Because he loves me,” says the Lord, “I will rescue him;

   I will protect him, for he acknowledges my name.

15 He will call on me, and I will answer him;

   I will be with him in trouble,

   I will deliver him and honor him.

16 With long life I will satisfy him

and show him my salvation.”

 

About the Author: Lisa DaSilva is a wife, mom of two teenagers, and advocate for women to love God with their heart, soul and mind as they engage in responsible study of His Word.  She writes, speaks, and teaches the Bible to anyone who will read or listen.

Lisa is a teacher by trade and passion, voice for the marginalized, recovering striver, and lover of simplicity, authenticity, and all things pretty. She enjoys thrift store shopping and often has to convince people she’s an introvert.  Just a loud one.

Loving Jesus and making Him known really is her everything.  

 

 

Psalm 5

“Give ear to my words, O Lord; consider my groaning. Give attention to the sound of my cry, my King and my God, for to you do I pray. O Lord in the morning you hear my voice; in the morning I prepare a sacrifice for you and watch.” Psalm 5:1-3 ESV

Every time I read Pslam 5 it takes me back to my childhood days. My parents worked at a beautiful Bible camp in southern Oregon. I spent most of the 80’s (from birth to the age of 7) tromping around the campground, making friends with all the staff, getting beauty tips on teased bangs and blue eye shadow, sitting in on all the chapel meetings and campfire nights. To this day one of my very favorite things is the sound of voices accompanying a guitar, under the stars, with the glow of the fire illuminating all the faces circled around the flames. One of the most popular songs that we sang every week at camp was from Psalm 5. It is the chorus that truly taught my little heart how to pray. As a little girl every time I was worried, anxious or afraid it became my practice to sing my little heart out. Psalm 5 was one of the songs that I learned to pray in those moments.

Pain, anxiety, fear, loss, and grief are all part of the human experience. They touch all of us. There are moments that we have adequate words and can pour out our heart’s cry to a living and attentive God. There are other moments where we aren’t even able to articulately match words to our feelings and heart break. In those moments – can I just say – We have a King who bends His ear and listens to our groans and cries. He sees our tears and knows exactly what our hearts long and plead for. He hears our voice, He gives attention to our cries. He is good.

I love the author David’s confidence in the Lord and practical application to his prayers. He asks the Lord to hear him and turn His ear, then David states and believes – in the morning you hear my voice. Then David acts. He prepares a sacrifice for the Lord. This is an act of surrender – a physical representation of an inward conviction. David believed that God heard him, He trusted his King with the depths of his heart and the inner workings of his life. He prepared an act of surrender and then David watched. He watched, he waited, he anticipated God moving.

GOD MOVED.

The God of the universe is longing for us to turn to Him. He is available and attentively present. He longs for us to pray to Him and to trust Him with the inner workings of our lives. The things that move the deepest parts of our hearts to cry – those things move Him too. He wants to be invited in.

Come before Him.

Speak. Pray. Groan. Cry.

Then, gather all of it – and surrender it to Him. Trust. Believe. Anticipate.

And… watch.

 

Psalm 5 ends beautifully. Are you ready for it?! It’s a promise that comes for those who run to Him, love Him and choose to walk in His ways…

“But let all who take refuge in you rejoice; let them ever sing for joy, and spread your protection over them, that those who love your name may exult you. For you bless the righteous O Lord; you cover them with favor as with a shield.”  Psalm 5:11-12 ESV

Sometimes the way He moves is tangible and directly effects our circumstance – other times it’s internal and His powerful presence moves and transforms our hearts and minds to walk through our circumstance with Him. When you are a child of the King you can be certain of this – you are never without His presence.

God Almighty bends low to hear your voice. Are you praying?

The King of the universe knows you- at the depth of your being. Do you trust Him?

He is always moving. Are you watching?

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