Category Archives: Uncategorized

Holy Week: Musical Encouragement #2

Luther’s note:  As we enter the second day of Holy Week, our attention is fixed on the passion of our Lord.

The group that recorded yesterday’s Musical Encouragement, “It is Well with My Soul,” during the limitations of the Covid 19 pandemic — The David Wesley Virtual Choir — has since gone on to record other hymns in the A Capella style that allows us to hear music from the world’s first instrument: The human voice.

As we ponder the valleys and the mountains of our Savior during this week of reflection, prayer, and re-commitment; I hope the words of the hymn, “Christ Alone,” will help prepare your mind and heart to receive (as John the Baptist proclaimed upon first seeing Jesus), “The Lamb of God, Who takes away the sin of the world.”

Without Him, we have nothing. With Him, we have everything.

Click here, and be encouraged by the matchless love of God for us — in Christ alone. Have a blessed week!

Holy Week: Musical Encouragement #1

Luther’s note:  Today’s encouragement came to me a few years ago from my good friend and fellow Kansan, Todd L.  Our musical encouragement is a rendition of Horatio Spafford‘s hymn, “It is Well With My Soul,” performed by a large group of Nashville, Tennessee-based singers who — with respect to Covid19 physical distancing guidelines during the pandemic — did their respective solo parts on their cellphones. The “parts” were then engineered by sound and video technicians and the result is truly arresting! 

Click here, and be encouraged by our eternal Hope.  Have a blessed Holy Week!

Tagged , , , ,

“The angel of the LORD went up from Gilgal to Bokim and said, ‘I brought you up out of Egypt and led you into the land I swore to give to your ancestors.  I said, ‘I will never break my covenant with you, and you shall not make a covenant with the people of this land, but you shall break down their altars.’  Yet you have disobeyed me.  Why have you done this?”  (Judges 2:1-2, NIV)

Resonant in this scripture — which recounts the disobedience of the Children of Israel when they did not utterly subdue the inhabitants of the Promised Land, but allowed them to coexist with them in the land, albeit as “servants” or “slaves” — is the peril of allowing anything that is ungodly to inhabit our lives.

The problem with allowing any ungodly thought or deed to persist in one’s life — even in a small, seemingly insignificant way — is that after a while the “slave” becomes the master; and the “servant” becomes the one that is served.

In the case of the ancient Israelites, it wasn’t too very long before they were worshiping at the pagan altars and incorporating forbidden practices into their lives.  I am sure that their chosen course of action seemed enlightened at the time, but the outcome of disobedience to God is always the same: Our own eventual destruction.

Today, choose life.  Choose God.  None of us ever succeeds in riding the “tiger” that is ungodliness.  – Luther

Tagged , ,