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Do Not Depart

Encouragement and Tools to Abide in God's Word

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Faith Resources for Special Needs Families {Let The Children Come}

November 20, 2013 by Caroline 5 Comments

Let the Children Come - monthly feature on helping children to abide in God's Word via DoNotDepart.com

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Welcome back to Do Not Depart! If you haven't already, subscribe to the Do Not Depart RSS feed or email updates to receive regular encouragement and tools to abide in God's Word. This post may include affiliate links. To read our full disclosure policy, click here. Thank you for supporting this site!

Disclosure: Some affiliate links are included below. See the bookstore page for full disclosure. Thank you for supporting this site!

Faith Resources for Special Needs Families {DoNotDepart.com}

How many of you parents have a child with special needs? What challenges arise in teaching your children about your faith?

Back in May, we discussed 4 tips for including kids with special needs in family Bible study time (and why to include all kids). Today, we want to offer a few resources you can use.

Bible-Focused Resources for Special Needs Families

  • Grapevine Studies provide family Bible studies that are very focused on Scripture. Grapevine’s unique twist focuses on the kids drawing stick figures to add in a tactile component to learning Bible characters and events. These studies work well for families and for Sunday school classes. (I reviewed two of their studies on my personal blog, including some modifications we implemented to address my son’s special needs.)

  • Not Alone provides encouragement in the faith for special needs families.
  • Jennifer Janes writes on special needs parenting often, including this great 10-days series on encouragement for parents of kids with special needs.
  • Rachel Wojnarowski writes about special needs and faith on her blog, like this post with seven ways churches can love on families with special needs.
  • (in)able and (in)cluded is a community of special needs families formed through (in)courage. Visit for great encouragement and meet other families who can relate to your challenges.
  • We also love Seeds Family Worship songs for both typical-developing kids and kids with special needs.
  • Do you know someone with a child with special needs but don’t have experience with special needs yourself? Read this post from Beautiful in His Time for ideas on how to encourage a special needs mom.
  • Our good friend and former team writer, Sandra Peoples, and her husband recently released a new Bible study for parents of kids with special needs. Held: Learning to Live in God’s Grip is geared towards special needs families, but I would Held: Learning to Live in God's Grip by Lee and Sandra Peoplesrecommend anyone who is around kids to with to take a look at this book. This Bible study reminds parents that God is in control, even (and especially) in those situations where we have no control. Lee and Sandra discuss specific Bible passages and how they relate to special needs families asking how? and why? and what do we do? They include a chapter on how to interact with acquaintances and family members who just don’t understand your unique situation, handling situations together in your marriage, facing fear, and continuing to grow in your faith through numerous challenges.
    Sandra and Lee are also working on a series of videos to go along with the book! Stay tuned to Sandra’s site for more information. Find purchasing information here.

Sandra is kindly offering one copy of Held for one of our readers! Enter through the Rafflecopter widget below. This giveaway is open until the end of the day (EST) on Sunday, November 24th, 2013.
a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

If you have a child with special needs, what resources are you looking for that you haven’t found yet? What’s one of your favorite sites for encouragement in the faith?

The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving {guest post month}

November 19, 2013 by Guest Post 3 Comments

The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving {guest post month on DoNotDepart.com}

This guest post is from Sandra Peoples. See her full bio at the end of the post.

I love this time of year. I love hopping on Facebook and reading what all my friends are thankful for. I love holding hands with family members around the table and remembering the blessings God has given us. I love putting Colossians 3:17 into practice, “…do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.”

But sometimes giving thanks is hard.

My middle son has autism. He struggles to communicate. He had digestive and sleeping issues. Can I give thanks in that?

We’ve been in the process of adopting for more than three years. We were recently matched with a little boy in China. But we still have to wait. Wait up to two months for a document to process. Wait until the Chinese government clears us to travel. Can I give thanks in that?

We all have situations in our lives that are difficult right now. Money issues, marriage issues, job issues, family issues. Leakey faucets, broken dryers, a car that needs new tires before it snows. How can we give thanks?

The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving {guest post month on DoNotDepart.com}

Psalm 50:14 says, “Offer to God a sacrifice of thanksgiving.” It’s such a short phrase it’s easy to read over quickly. The psalmist Asaph is admitting that sometimes thanksgiving is a sacrifice. A sacrifice was offering something to God that costs you greatly–your first born lamb, your finest grain, or the best of your produce. And what ever you sacrificed had to be put to death, burned up, cease to exist.

In times when it’s hard to give thanks, we must also sacrifice. I can give thanks for my son’s diagnosis when I sacrifice (put to death) my ideas of “normal” expectations of how he should be. I can continue to give thanks through our adoption process when I sacrifice (put to death) my time line and expectations. I can give thanks when I sacrifice (put to death) the idea that all our money and time actually belong to us, instead of God.

I can offer God sacrifices of thanksgiving because of my situations (not in spite of my situations).

God gives us opportunities to practice what we learn in His Word. This month, as we all share what we’re thankful for, His Word reminds me sometimes there is sacrifice in thanksgiving. The sacrifice doesn’t take away the joy of thanksgiving; it often adds to it.

What situation are you in that you can give thanks in, even though you have to sacrifice something in order to give thanks?

The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving {guest post month on DoNotDepart.com}

 

Sandra Peoples is a pastor’s wife and mom to three boys. She is the author of Held: Learning to Live in God’s Grip, a Bible study for special-needs parents. Connect with her on her site.

Praise and Thanksgiving

November 14, 2013 by Caroline Leave a Comment

Praise and Thanksgiving {donotdepart.com}

Praise and Thanksgiving {donotdepart.com}

“I will praise God’s name in song and glorify him with thanksgiving.” – Psalm 69:30 (NIV)

We pray today that all our hearts may be lifted up to Him in song of praise, of thanksgiving, of glory to Him.

How can you praise Him today? What’s your favorite song to sing when praising?

Stay tuned next week for more guest posts to finish out the month!

Christian Parenting Resources {Let the Children Come}

November 13, 2013 by Caroline 2 Comments

Disclosure: Affiliate links are included below. See the bookstore page for full disclosure. Thank you for supporting this site!

We have a great Christian parenting resource to share with you this week.

It comes from Bundle of the Week and has 5 great ebooks for parenting through faith.

And, it includes one of our favorites – an ebook from former team writer, Teri Lynne Underwood! Yay, Teri Lynne!

See below for details.

Bundle #46: Christian Parenting

This week’s bundle includes encouragement for the weary mom, practical parenting tips and devotions to help you focus your heart even from the trenches of parenthood.

Get all five of these ebooks at a discount of more than 70% off:

Parenting from the Overflow by Teri Lynne Underwood
In Parenting from the Overflow, Teri Lynne offers a biblically-based framework for living in the abundance God has for each of us…and modeling that life for our children.Rather than focusing on tips and techniques, she explores how our lives can overflow with qualities such as love, patience, grace, and courage — all rooted in God’s work in us, not our efforts or abilities. This is a practical and encouraging ebook, filled with honest stories from her own journey of learning to lean into God so the overflow of Him pours onto those around her.

Devotions, Advice & Renewal for When Motherhood Feels Too Hard by Kelly Crawford
Motherhood is hard. That’s a fact. It’s labor-intensive, requiring the extraordinary courage and sacrifice of women who know much of their labor will not receive earthly accolades. Mothers are the “wind beneath the wings” of the next generation. If a group of people needs encouragement and help, it’s the mothers of our day! Kelly’s Devotions, Advice & Renewal for When Motherhood Feels Too Hard is a book you will want to read over and over, written in small snippets for daily renewal. It is refreshing and inspiring, casting a vision for motherhood you may have never known and offering practical “survival tips” for the overwhelmed mom.

The Heart of Simplicity by various authors
Today’s typical lifestyle is marked by busyness, consumerism, and stress. We, as women, often complain that there’s not enough time to “do it all.” Do we suffer from a lack of time? No. We suffer from a lack of eternal perspective. How we invest our time on earth will impact eternity in a million ways. In The Heart of Simplicity, more than a dozen Christian women share their experience simplifying their lives from the inside out to build homemaking foundations focused on Christ. When we are faithful to focus on what is truly essential in our homemaking, we can build an eternal legacy…one simple day at a time.

Refuel Your Inner SuperMom by Rosann Cunningham
Refuel Your Inner SuperMom offers practical advice and encouragement for the mom who strives to do and be her best but who, due to the often overwhelming chaos of life, has simply lost her focus, her motivation and her groove. Take the journey with Rosann as she shares the depths of her heart and her own failures in motherhood, marriage and life, while taking positive, intentionally focused steps to getting her SuperMom groove back. This isn’t your average “How to Become SuperMom” book; it’s written and designed in a way that allows it to be more of a journey of self-discovery and intentionally focused lifestyle change — for the better. And all for the glory of God.

The Family Table by Arabah Joy
The Family Table is a beautifully designed ebook packed with over 50 ideas, activities, games, and recipes to spark intimacy, connection, laughter, service, hospitality, and making memories as a family. Arabah gives you a sneak peek into what other families are doing to revolutionize their time around the family table as well as the tools you need to approach your mealtimes intentionally as well.

The Christian Parenting bundle is only available through 8am EST on Monday, 11/18. Get yours today!

Committing to Daily Bible Reading {guest post month}

November 12, 2013 by Guest Post 11 Comments

Committing to Daily Bible Reading {guest post month on DoNotDepart.com}

This guest post is from Ali Shaw. See her full bio at the end of the post.

“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” (Psalm 119:105)

Being in God’s Word daily is life changing. God’s Holy Word works to change our hearts as He sanctifies us through a growing relationship with Him. Any time is a good time to make the commitment to daily Bible reading, but autumn is an especially great time to start planning for the upcoming year.

Committing to Daily Bible Reading {guest post month on DoNotDepart.com}

Making the Commitment

Of first importance is making the commitment to read daily. For successful follow through, the reward of your goal must be worth the effort involved. (Think Phil 3:14.) A lot of well-intended people desire to read the Bible daily, but without a definite goal in sight and a reward in mind, good intentions easily get pushed aside. What do you consider the rewards of your efforts? What will drive you forward when your schedule gets busy or life “gets in the way”? What measures can you put in place to enforce accountability?

As a busy woman, here are a few rewards that drive me:

  • A period of peace and rest each day with my Savior
  • An ever-deepening relationship with God
  • Learning (I’m a life-student!)
  • Enlightened understanding (of even familiar passages)
  • Growth of personal peace and contentment as my faith deepens
  • The trickle-down effects that my commitment and spiritual growth have on my family

Choosing a Plan

After the commitment has been made to pursue daily Bible reading and your rewards are set before you, a plan should be chosen. This is the fun part! A huge number of Bible reading plans are available, so choose a plan that you’ll enjoy and that realistically fits you. Set yourself up for success. Remember, this goal is for Bible reading, not necessarily Bible study. I believe it’s crucial for Christians to both read the Bible for broad knowledge and study it for deeper understanding. Both are important elements in your walk. Choose a plan that will encourage you to read daily, and mark things down that you’d like to revisit later for Bible study.

So, where do you look for Bible reading plans and what should you choose? Great plans are available online as well as in Bible apps for smartphones and tablets, or you can come up with your own. Pray for God’s wisdom as you make your choice. If you’ve never read through the entire Bible, that’s a highly rewarding goal! It can be done in one year in just a few minutes a day. Or you may prefer to read daily concerning a certain topic. If your plan is shorter than one year, line up several plans so that when one ends your momentum is not lost—just begin the next plan!

Some resources that may be of help when choosing a plan and tracking your progress:

  • YouVersion Reading Plans {Also look for “The Bible” YouVersion app}
  • BibleGateway Reading Plans
  • ESV Bible Online Reading Plans (click “plans” on top left)
  • Bible Reading Progress Record

Tracking and Accountability

After you’ve made the commitment and chosen the plan, the next step is to do it. It seems so simple! So why do people burn out? Oftentimes, they aren’t keeping their goals before them. The task appears too big and the end too far ahead. Keeping the rewards in mind each day are helpful. You might write them on your tracking form or Bible journal and pray about them before you read each day. Use a tracking form to see your progress, and set up a method of accountability. Share your journey with your spouse, a friend or mentor, or even on social media.

Taking the time to share your progress on Facebook, Twitter, or even a captured image of your Bible time on Instagram are all great ways to hold yourself accountable and even encourage others to follow suit. If you fall behind, be kind to yourself! Try adding a few minutes to your reading time each day until you’ve caught back up, or reassess your goals if your life has unexpected changes that prevent you from catching up.

So, as 2013 wraps up and 2014 looms before you all fresh and new, consider making or renewing a commitment to meet with God daily as you read the pages of His Word. May you be richly blessed with a deepening relationship with Christ as He sanctifies your heart and grows you into a mature child of God.

Ali Shaw guest post on Do Not Depart

 

Alison Shaw can’t believe how blessed her life is!  She’s the wife of 20 years to her awesome, supportive soul mate, and momma to three beautiful daughters aged 19, 14, and 5. She’s learning to serve her Precious Lord more and more, day by day. You can catch her blogging at www.heartfeltreflections.wordpress.com to see the latest of what God’s been teaching her!

Speedbumps in Bible Study {guest post month}

November 7, 2013 by Guest Post 8 Comments

Speedbumps in Bible Study {guest post month at DoNotDepart.com}
Speedbumps in Bible Study {guest post month at DoNotDepart.com}
Original photo credit – Ryk Neethling

This guest post is from Wendy Widder. See her full bio at the end of the post.

Have you ever been reading the Bible and run across a word or phrase that makes you scratch your head and say, “That seems kind of random.” There’s one in the second half of Daniel 1:2, where Nebuchadnezzar took some of the vessels of the Jerusalem temple “to the land of Shinar” to put them in his god’s treasury (ESV).

Many translations replaced the word “Shinar” with “Babylonia/Babylon,” because they’re pretty much the same place and who’s really heard of Shinar anyway? (This is a good reason to use a more literal translation, like the ESV, NASB, or NRSV, for serious Bible study.) But eliminating “Shinar” from the story is like leveling a speedbump – something in the text that slows you down long enough to look up and wonder if you have been missing something in an otherwise familiar story. If you’re really going to hear what the text says, you’ve got some homework to do.

Shinar – The Beginning of Babylon

Shinar is only mentioned a handful of times in the Bible, mostly in Genesis. It first appears in Genesis 10:10, where we learn that Nimrod’s kingdom got its start in the region of Shinar. Then in the very next chapter, it’s on the plain of Shinar that the city of Babylon is born. You probably know the story – a group of people decide to build a city with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so they could make a name for themselves (Genesis 11:4).

The tower of Genesis 11 was a ziggurat, part of a temple complex. Every Mesopotamian city had one. Such a tower functioned as a staircase for a god to make his way down to earth, where he could hang out in his temple and accept gifts from worshipers. Worshipers built ziggurats for the ease and convenience of their gods. But did you catch why the settlers at Shinar built their tower? To make a name for themselves. They are a little confused about their place in the hierarchy of beings. The builders at Shinar blurred the lines between the divine and the human.

Ironically, the God Yahweh did come down to Shinar (perhaps He even used their little staircase), and, after assessing the situation, put an end to their city-building by confusing their language – and so the name “Babel,” meaning “to confuse.” The people confused about their role as humans had their language confused and they scattered.

But the city does get finished by someone, and in the Bible, Babylon becomes the epicenter of all things anti-God. “Shinar,” however, essentially disappears.

Shinar – The End of Babylon

So why does Daniel 1:2 use the obscure word? I think it’s a speedbump to make you think about the story of Babylon’s beginning, because you’re about to learn the story of its end. Babylon emerged out of the blurring of the lines between deity and humanity, and it will end in the same way. The king who dominates the book of Daniel – Nebuchadnezzar – may worship his god in his Shinar temple, but he will act more like a god himself. And the ultimate end of Babylon will come on a night when a certain King Belshazzar will make even Nebuchadnezzar look almost saintly.

In the first verses of Daniel, we discover that the true God has come to Shinar again – but this time He’s on a covert operation: His temple vessels are tucked away in the treasury of the god there and some of His choicest human vessels are on their way to the palace of the king there. God will once again confront confused humans in Shinar, and before the city of Babylon falls, everyone will know who’s God and who’s not.

What speedbumps have you encountered while studying the Bible? How can you keep your eyes out for deeper learning?

 

Wendy Widder

 

Wendy Widder lives in the Pacific Northwest, where her easiest get-away is the Canadian border. She loves teaching and writing about the Old Testament, and she can be found online at wendywidder.com and wendylynnwidder.wordpress.com.

Learning to Be Thankful {guest post month}

November 5, 2013 by Guest Post 9 Comments

Learning to Be Thankful {a guest post from Lindsey Bell on DoNotDepart.com}

Learning to Be Thankful {a guest post from Lindsey Bell on DoNotDepart.com}

This guest post is from Lindsey Bell. See her full bio at the end of the post.

I never thought I would need to learn to be thankful.

As a teenager and young adult, I was typically cheerful. Of course, I had my bad days, but most of the time, I was positive.

Lately, though, I’ve realized I’m not as upbeat as I used to be.

The daily demands of being a stay-at-home mother, combined with multiple miscarriages, left me feeling less than thankful about my life.

About a year ago, after our fourth miscarriage, I decided something had to change. I was tired of crying all the time and tired of failing to enjoy the kids I have because of my constant desire for another.

Basically, I was tired of being discontent.

That’s what led me to this verse in 1 Thessalonians: “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

What I love about this verse is that Paul wrote these words to a group of believers who were being persecuted for their faith.

He didn’t write them to happy-go-lucky believers who didn’t have to worry about anything. No, he wrote them to believers whose lives were being threatened, quite possibly on a daily basis.

These were men and women who—by appearance alone—had few reasons to be thankful. Torture was a very real possibility. So was prison and death.

Nonetheless, Paul challenged these people to be thankful in all circumstances.

A Thankfulness Challenge

As I thought about this verse over the past year and tried to wrap my head around how it’s possible to be thankful in situations like these, God taught me a few things:

1. We don’t have to thank God for the pain, but we do need to thank him in the pain.

In our day-to-day lives, this means thanking God for being with us in our trials and for helping us through the difficult days. It means recognizing He can use anything—even our most painful trials—to bring about something good.

2. We need to expect difficulties.

One of the reasons our miscarriages have been so difficult is because I mistakenly believed God would never allow this much pain into my life. I thought He would protect me from it.

Unfortunately, God never promised us pain-free lives. In fact, in John 16:33, Jesus promised the opposite: “In this world, you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”

Pain is a part of life, and we’re not going to escape it simply because we follow Jesus. Learning to expect difficulties can help prepare us for when they come.

3. We need to count our blessings.

When we focus on what we don’t have, we fail to enjoy the things we do.

Pain has a way of blocking our view. It’s like driving into the sun as it rises in the morning. If you look directly at it, it will prevent you from seeing anything else. But take your eyes off of it, and you can see your surroundings more clearly.

Take your eyes off your pain and fix them instead on Jesus.

It won’t remove the pain, but it will help you get through it…It will help you see the blessings that were hidden by the tears.

What has helped you be thankful in all circumstances?

 

Lindsey BellAbout Lindsey Bell:

Lindsey Bell is the author of Searching for Sanity, a parenting devotional that will be released in January 2014. She’s also a stay-at-home mother of two, minister’s wife, avid reader, and chocolate lover. You can find Lindsey online at any of the following locations:

Her blog: www.lindsey-bell.com

Her website: www.lindseymbell.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com/LindseyMBell

Facebook: www.facebook.com/AuthorLindseyBell

Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/LindseyMBell01

He Knows Your Name

October 31, 2013 by Kathy Howard 4 Comments

Have you ever felt alone? Vulnerable? Just one woman lost in a crowd of faces. Unknown and nameless.

The month of October we’ve explored six women in the Gospels that the writers left unnamed. Six women in need. Seven women who encountered Jesus and would never be the same.

Their stories give us hope. We’re reminded that no matter how small we feel Jesus sees us and knows us. No matter how great – or small – our need, Jesus cares and is able and willing to provide.

  • Maybe like the woman who had been crippled for 18 years you need freedom from some physical prison.
  • Maybe like the widow from Nain you are overwhelmed with grief and loss.
  • Maybe like the poor widow you’re down to your last penny.
  • Maybe like the Canaanite woman you have a desperately sick child.
  • Maybe like the woman caught in adultery you need forgiveness and restoration.
  • Maybe like the woman at the well you’re an outcast in need of redemption.
  • Maybe like the woman with the issue of blood you’re desperate, without hope.

Jesus showed unconditional love to all these women. He miraculously met their needs beyond their wildest expectations.

He is able to do the same in your life. Come to Him today. Reach out in faith.

He knows your name.

Trembling Faith

October 29, 2013 by Caroline 15 Comments

Imagine bleeding. For years. Without a discernible cause.

All the local doctors can’t figure it out. You’ve spent your life savings trying to find someone who had an answer.

And nothing.

You’re broken.

You’re exhausted.

You’re rejected.

Trembling Faith {Nameless Women in the Gospels} - DoNotDepart.com
Photo Credit

But, there’s this Man. One Man who comes as a Savior for all. It’s your last bit of hope.

You feel worthless. You don’t mean anything to the community around you anymore because of your ailment.

Why would this Man even want to look at you, much less heal you?

But you know His power. And you think, “If I could only touch His cloak. I know I’d be healed. Because I have hope of who He is” (expounding of Matthew 9:21)

And you receive more than you even expected. Instantly.

Courageous Faith, Graceful Healing

The women subject to bleeding (Luke 8:40-48, Matthew 9:18-26, Mark 5:22-43) endured this circumstance. Another nameless woman, her story even occurs in the middle of someone else’s story.

Almost as an aside: “…And a woman was there…” (Luke 8:43)

Much of our own stories are in the middle of others’, aren’t they? But that doesn’t leave our own stories worthless.

This woman didn’t even want to be seen. Perhaps she feared she would be deemed unworthy and rejected once again. Or maybe told nothing could be done for her as other doctors had for twelve years.

But with one touch, she was “immediately” healed (Luke 8:44).

Would you expect instant healing? I wouldn’t. And yet it was so dramatic within her and so instant, she felt the change.

But, just as instant, Christ felt the change, too.

He asked who touched him.

You can almost hear the disciples smirk. Of course people touched Him. They were surrounded by pressing masses of people.

I imagine Christ didn’t really need to ask who touched Him. He knew. But, He gave the opportunity for our nameless woman in this story to come forward on her own.

And come forward she did… trembling (Luke 8:47).

Would Christ take this healing away? Because she touched Him without asking, would she be punished? Because, by touching Him, she ceremonially defiled Him because she was unclean herself?

I would think questions like these.

Who am I to think I’d be worth Christ’s healing?

But that’s grace. It’s undeserved, as is any of the love Christ gives. And all the more beautiful.

Maybe this woman trembled because of fear of how Christ would respond or because of the ramifications of an ostracized, unclean person touching Someone so great. Instead, He told her to “Go in peace” (Luke 8:48) and continue with the courageous faith that carried her to Him.

Maybe she also trembled because of the amazing gift she had just been given. She believed, she knew He could heal her. And He did. Instantly. She was freed from suffering (Mark 5:29).

I would tremble, too.

I pray to have this woman’s faith and trust in a God who gives.

“I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!” – Mark 9:24

How have you persevered in your faith over long-standing trials? How does this woman’s story, and Christ’s reaction, inspire you?

A Divine Appointment

October 24, 2013 by Kathy Howard 9 Comments

Please welcome our guest blogger Mary Boswell. Mary blogs regularly at The Calm of His Presence.  Look for Mary’s bio at the end of the post.

Slowly, with her shoulders slumped from the weight of her reputation and the words of those who shunned her – the woman walked to the well. She was lonely, an outcast with no friends. The only ones who welcomed her company were men who wanted to use her then discard her.

But that day, as she sought relief from thirst, she met a man who didn’t care what kind of reputation she had – he was a man who wanted to meet her deepest need.

As the Samaritan woman walked up to the well Jesus said to her, “Will you give me a drink?”

I wonder, does she think, “Is this man really talking to me?”

She responded, “You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?” In those days Jews didn’t associate with Samaritans.

But Jesus persisted, “If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks you for a drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living water. … Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”

How wonderful, she thought. “He will give me water and I won’t have to come to this well in the heat of the day trying to avoid the stares and whispers of others.”

But Jesus desired to meet her on a deeper level. He asked personal questions – letting her know that he knew of her multiple husbands and present adulterous relationship.

Squirming, she changed the subject as Jesus revealed the most painful parts of her life. Her hope was to distract him with other questions.

Through this conversation the woman revealed that she knew the Messiah was coming – not realizing that this man was Jesus. But, she soon learned that she was in a divine appointment with the Messiah.

Then Jesus declared, “I who speak to you am he.”

Just like Jesus wanted to know and fill the deepest needs of the Samaritan woman (John 4:1-26), He also wants to know and fill your deepest needs.

Are you like the Samaritan woman, lonely and an outcast? Do you struggle with feelings of insecurity and doubt? Do you seek acceptance and reassurance from the world? Have you made mistakes but have a hard time forgiving yourself?

Jesus desires to give you His source of living water. He knows your deepest needs. Through him you will never be alone. Through Him you will always be accepted. He will give you security and confidence in Him. And He will give you true forgiveness found only in the Cross.

So sweet friend will you come to the well? Your divine appointment with Jesus is waiting.

Mary BoswellMary Boswell is a wife, mom & daughter of her Heavenly Father. As a former Critical Care Nurse & mom to 2 lively, active children she knows what its like to be in a chaotic, unpredictable environment. God has carried her through several difficult, life changing trials but through each one she as leaned on the arms of God. You can find Mary at her blog The Calm of His Presence where she seeks to live in God’s calming presence.

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