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Divine Abundance

When you go down to the seashore, you find what is practically an unlimited supply of sea water at your disposal. There are billions upon billions of gallons there, but the amount that you can carry away will depend upon the vessel with which you have provided yourself. If you take a ten-gallon can, you can get ten gallons, but if you take only a pint pot you can take away only a pint, and if you have nothing bigger than a thimble, you would not be able to take away more than a thimbleful.

So it is with divine abundance. The only limit is the limit of our capacity to receive.

Thou openest thine hand, and satisfiest the desire of every living thing (Psalm 145:16).

This raises the obvious question of “What kind of vessel are we”? Do we really believe that infinite abundance is available to us? Do we truly feel that we deserve infinite supply? Do we feel that unlimited blessings will be good for us?

Our thoughts beliefs and feelings are what constitute our vessels. They are what shape and mold our capacity to receive God’s blessings. Our actions determine how we fetch and use our blessings and God’s infinite grace.

The Bible affirms God’s desire that we live abundantly in joy and gladness each day. When we claim God’s blessings, accept our right to them and grow our capacity to receive them, then they will flow abundantly into our lives. This does happen because we are perfect. It happens when we follow God’s will, believe God’s promises and act accordingly.

Growing the vessel,
Z gardener

Never Look Back

Never look back. Always go right ahead. Even if you are quaking, go right ahead. Jesus said the man who puts his hand to the plow and then turns back, is not worthy of the Kingdom of Heaven. He also said: Remember Lot’s wife (Luke 17:32).

No matter how unattractive or how dangerous the road ahead may be, it is better than the road back. The road ahead may be veiled from sight – but you must teach yourself to regard the unknown as friendly. Remember that God is always on the road ahead.

…cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee (Psalm 143:8).

Of course, the statement above assumes right actions. Those activities which are good, God-centered and positive. That does not mean we should never look back when engaged in bad behavior. In fact, the quicker we turn back from such thoughts, words and deeds, the better.

On the other hand, when our course is plotted according to God’s will in our lives, we should not second guess it and should not quit moving forward. And be sure of this, God’s course will pass through every manner of obstacle and challenge as it is traveled. The Adversary does not want us to travel the path of freedom from sin and guilt. So. when the evil one whispers in your ear that, “This path is too hard, turn back, there is an easier way”, say to him “Get thee behind me Satan, for I live and travel by every word of the living God”. Then move ahead.

For ahead lies the paradise God created for us here and forever in Heaven. It is there for every single child of God who perseveres, trusts God and never quits.

On course,
Z gardener

Why Worry?

Nothing is really worth worrying about. Nothing is really worth getting angry or hurt or bitter about. Positively nothing is worth losing your peace of mind over.

These important truths follow logically upon the following fact: you are going to live forever – somewhere. This means that there is plenty of time to get things right again if they have gone wrong. No matter what mistake you may have made, enough prayer will overtake it and cancel it. If those you love seem to be acting foolishly, you can help them with prayer to be wiser, and, meanwhile, if they suffer, it means that kindly nature is teaching them a lesson that they need to learn.

But suppose something awful should happen? Well, what then? Suppose you lost everything and landed in the poorhouse. What then? Think what a wonderful demonstration you could make there, and you would probably learn several valuable lessons there, and, anyway, it would be quite interesting. Suppose the whole universe blew up. What then? When the dust settles, God will still be in business and you will be alive somewhere, ready to carry on.

Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and He shall sustain thee: He shall never suffer the righteous to be moved (Psalm 55:22).

Worry is the mental equivalent of rust. It slowly erodes our faith, peace and health. It accomplishes nothing positive and in fact, prevents us from focusing on the good. Anger and hate are the mental equivalent of acid. They eat away at our lives while burning and scarring our thoughts and emotions.

Peace is the emotional equivalent of a soothing balm. It soothes and protects us from life’s hurts. Love is the mental equivalent of vitamins. It fortifies us, heals us and gives us strength. Like good nutrition, rest and exercise, positive faith, expressed in our lives make us whole, healthy and fit.

Let us this day seek peace and love to express joy, wholeness and satisfaction. Then our gardens will flourish and we will be able to overcome all hurt, fear, worry and anger.

Planting peace,
Z gardener

Divinity Within

Perhaps the second best prayer ever written is the Scotsman’s Prayer – “Lord give us a good conceit of ourselves.” You cannot have too much respect for yourself. You cannot have too much confidence in yourself. You cannot claim too much for yourself. But remember that you must realize these things as being the expression of God in you and not independent qualities of your own. You must also accept them as being true for every other human being.

Nothing but failure can come of self-depreciation. Of course, it is true that stupid people can get the malady called “swelled head” – and this ends in a fall – but the realization of one’s divine selfhood never gives swelled head. It gives wisdom, balance, poise, and steady progress. Think, talk, live your divine, glorious selfhood, and it will demonstrate itself in your life.

I have said, Ye are Gods; and all of you are children of the most High (Psalm 82:6).

Yes, brother and sisters, you heard that right. You are a God! Within each of us is the spark or seed of the divine. And just as our children have the seed or spark we planted in them, so do we all have God’s spark within us.

We are all capable of divinity in our thoughts, words and deeds. Yet, we are as infants in our spiritual lives and must grow, mature and learn in order to become fully divine. As spiritual children, we must follow God’s will to manifest our divinity.

So, as we grow in spiritual knowledge and understanding, we attain access to our divinity. And each day that our spiritual lives mature, we become more Christ-like. Just as a gardener learns the soils, seasons and sustenance needed in order to create a beautiful garden, so we must learn the ways of God, that our gardens will flourish and wing,

Still plowing,
Z gardener

No Office Hours

God has no office hours. There is never a time when God is unavailable. Day or night, summer or winter, God is always present; always ready to heal, to comfort, to inspire. It is not possible that you could turn to God in prayer without receiving help.

The one thing required of you is that you shall turn to Him wholeheartedly, and that you shall expect Him to act. The greater the emergency, the easier will it be to demonstrate. The most powerful of all prayers is simply “Be still, and know that I am God.”

For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong in the behalf of them whose hearts is perfect toward him. (2 Chronicles 16:9).

No matter how alone we feel or how impossible our predicament seems, it is within God’s power to meet our needs. The difficulty arises when we can’t turn to God with our whole heart. In those circumstances we must ask for God’s help to turn our hearts to him. God is there to heal our hearts whether they are filled with fear, hurt, disappointment or even anger at God. What is required of us is that we “turn” to God. Because while God is always available, we hold the key that opens the door to God. That key is our heart.

When we recognize that we can not overcome a problem alone, then we must seek God. That can be as simple as looking up and saying “Father”. It is that act, that moment in time in which God flows into our situation and assumes control. Then God will be present to us and will act for our best good. And if our hearts are truly turned to God, our eyes will be opened, our souls nourished and our burden will become our blessings. We will be returned to our gardens and be comforted by the power and grace of God.

With all my heart,
Z gardener

Beware the Dog!

He that passeth by, and meddleth with strife belonging not to him, is like one that taketh a dog by the ears (Proverbs 26:17).

If, when those around you are talking negatively about something or someone, you chip in with your negative contribution, you are taking a strange dog by the ears – so look out! If you get emotionally entangled in what is not your affair, through indignation, self-righteousness, hatred, or otherwise, you have seized the dog again – and he will bite. And even to think negatively concerning such matters in the secret chamber of your own heart, will bring you proportionate and natural punishment.

It is always right to think rightly about any person or situation, and if you do this many opportunities will come to you to help people practically, without any breach of law, and without coming near the dangerous dog.

Just think how much better all our lives would be if we only added positive contributions to strife-filled situations. Then we would be reducing strife and increasing harmony. When folks are talking bad about someone in a situation not concerning us, we could remain silent rather than joining in. This would keep us away from “the dog”.

Or even better, we could raise our voice for tolerance, forgiveness or understanding. Such actions would then create the possibility for the conversation to take a better direction. If the parties reject that counsel, we may not get invited to participate in such conversations in the future. That would be okay also, because we still would not be grabbing someone else’s dangerous dog by the ears.

Petting the dog,
Z gardener

It would probably be safe to say that more than half of the evil in the world is due to well-meaning busybodies who just cannot refrain from interfering. Needless to say, such people never have harmony or success in their own lives, for it is an invariable rule that he who minds his neighbor’s business, neglects his own.

To interfere mentally in any situation involves you in the consequences just as much as would a physical interference. Of course, where it is your duty to concern yourself in any matter, you must do so – constructively and spiritually – and then the consequences to you can only be good.

For every man shall bear his own burden (Galatians 6:5).

This does mean that we should neglect those around us who we can help. Interference is not help, it is injecting oneself into another’s affairs that are none of that person’s business. The obligation to help those around us, to counsel those who depend on us and to share our concerns with those we love always exist. But when we are not asked for help, or when we have no obligation to counsel, then the appropriate action is to be available, respond when asked and to direct love toward those about which we have concerns. When we inject ourselves into the affairs of those to which we have no duty or from which we have no invitation, then we have “gone from preaching to meddling”.

Bearing up,
Stan

A Dependable Recipe

When you make a cake, you know that whatever you put into your mixing bowl will appear in the cake itself, and, on the other hand, that unless a particular substance does go into the mixing bowl, it cannot appear in the finished article.

The thoughts and beliefs that fill our minds ultimately appear in the cake of experience, and to realize this is to save oneself a lot of trouble. No one puts kerosene in the mixing bowl because no one wants it in the cake, for everyone knows that, if it does enter the bowl, in the cake it will be.

…They that plow iniquity, and sow wickedness, reap the same (Job 4:8).

We have all heard the computer phrase “junk in/junk out”. The same applies to our lives. If the thoughts, words and deeds we inject into our lives are loving, affirming and uplifting, then our lives will be joyful, hopeful and rewarding. If, on the other hand we fill our minds, mouths and lives with fear, negativity and condemnation, then our lives will be dreadful, fearful and depressing. There is no other way. That which we put in our lives will determine the output of our lives.

So today, let us sow in our gardens the seeds of faith, hope and love. Then with regular plowing, care and time, we will reap from our gardens all the joy, peace and confidence promised by God.

Sowing joy,
Z gardener

The Use of Intelligence

It is your duty to God to run your life on intelligent lines. God gives us all as much intelligence as we can possibly need, but, unfortunately, in most cases we use very little of it.

Ask yourself today if you are really conducting your life intelligently. Are you eating and drinking intelligently? Do you select your reading intelligently? Do you spend your money intelligently? Do you consider intelligently the things that you hear, or do you just accept them uncritically? Do you exercise intelligence in carrying out your daily work? Do you seek to approach each new problem with intelligence instead or mere emotions?

Have you intelligent plans for the future? Do you know what you would really like to do or to be, and if not wouldn’t it be only intelligent to go to work and find out and then draw up an intelligent plan for gaining your desire?

The world needs more intelligence. There is plenty of will, but because people will not use enough intelligence, mankind everywhere is in difficulties. Your intelligence is the light of God in your soul.

Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus (Philippians 2:5)

God gave human’s dominion over everything on the earth, ordered us to to be good stewards of the creation and gave us the intelligence to accomplish it. This intelligence is bestowed on us so that we may discern how to do God’s will in all ways. Intelligence was not given to us so we would blindly accept or reject what we are told. Whether in matters of the spirit or the physical world, we are endowed with intellect to investigate, quantify and and qualify that which we experience, or that which we are told. Whether it derives from a priest, politician or a pamphlet, God expects us to use our minds to make rational judgements about that which we experience, feel or think.

The use of intellect has its limits and still must yield to God’s truth. But that truth must be accepted fully and embraced by our intellect or it will not yield total faith. We must accept God with our heart, soul and mind if we are to fully express faith and have Christ’s mind in us. That does not mean we have to understand every mystery of the Bible or know how God accomplishes his will. It simply means we must use our intellect as well as our hearts and souls to be in full communion with God.

If it is our purpose to fulfill God’s will here below, we must employ all God’s gifts in fulfilling God’s plan for our life. Then, the creation we are to rule and protect will be a flourishing garden, because it was ordained by God and cared for using the intellect given to us by God.

Think God,
Z gardener

Let God!

People often say, “I try to do so-and-so, but I fail.” The explanation for their failure is contained within the words themselves. You should never “try”; you should “let” – let God. When you “try” to do things, you are working from the outside. When you let God do them through you, you are working from the inside and success must come.

If you will reread the creation chapter in the Bible you will notice that God creates by “letting.” God said “let,” at every act of creation, and it was done. Now God creates by means of you if you will let him, but you must let. Someone said, “Let go and Let God,” and this is a wonderful recipe for overcoming fear or getting out of a tight place. In any case, the rule for creation is always to let.

Is any thing too hard for the Lord? (Genesis 18: 14).

One of the hardest parts of living a godly life is the “letting go” part. Adam and Eve faced that situation and failed. We humans have been having trouble with it ever since. Our genes, our culture and our ego all scream that we must be in charge of our lives and are responsible for ourselves. Yet, it is when we turn our lives over to God and let God run the show , all our needs are met for our best good. Of course, we must do our part in living according to God’s will and caring for the garden God gave us. When we do this, there is nothing that we can’t accomplish if God is in command.

Letting go,
Z gardener