Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Merry Christmas 2013!

We send you our love and greetings
 
 for a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
 
Dale and Patti
 



 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

ADs December Devotional


 

Life finds a way 


Does it seem that life moves from simple to complicated?   Right now the airways are filled with news of the HealthCare debacle with website meltdowns and a maze of regulations and controls.  Complicated?  Yes, but simple.   These shouldn’t be issues of politics but life!  Does in seem that ministry moves from simple to complicated?  Overload on reports, faltering support, and not enough time.   Complicated?  Yes, but simple.   Our calling is rooted in life.  Jesus said, “I have come to give you life more abundantly.”   Life has a way of breaking through the complicated.  In the movie Jurassic Park when John Hammond exclaims that the park has structures in place to control the dinosaur population, Dr. Ian Malcolm reacts: “John, the kind of control you're attempting simply is not possible. If there is one thing that history has taught us it's that life will not be contained. Life breaks free, it expands to new territories and crashes through barriers, painfully, maybe even dangerously, but, uh... well, there it is…life finds a way.”   The secret of life is to keep our focus on the author of Life.   Remember how Paul handled his complications of wrong motives and envious rivalry?  “Some preach Christ out of selfish ambition.   But what does it matter? The important thing is that in every way, whether from false motives or true, Christ is preached. And because of this I rejoice. “ (Phil. 1:18)  Keep Christ your focus.  Keep in simple.   Life will find a way to crash through your barriers.

Monday, October 21, 2013

ADs November Devotional

 
Coade Stone: Enduring the Test of Time 

A form of my last name ‘Coad’ was originally rendered ‘Coade’ until a forefather Americanized it upon emigration from Great Britain to America.  Knowing this, I was drawn to a devotional from ‘Our Daily Bread’ entitled ‘Coade Stone.’  The October 16, 2013 article declared, “Throughout London, there are statues and other items made from a unique building material called Coade stone. Developed by Eleanor Coade in the late 1700s, this artificial stone is virtually indestructible and has the capacity to withstand time, weather, and man-made pollution.’  Eleanor succeeded in making an enduring type of stoneware product, which was easily molded into complex shapes that beautified England.   She succeeded where others failed.   I had to know, what was her secret?  Mrs. Coade's own name for her products was Lithodipyra "twice fired stone".   She used ball clay, a material with high plasticity that is common to that area.  Then she added crushed and once fired flint and soda lime silica with common sand to the clay mixture.   The competition was fierce but only Eleanor found the formula to create such a strong and lasting substance.   How?  She used the right combination of common materials subjected to a carefully controlled kiln firing over a period of four days.  Let’s face it, nobody wants to be ‘common’ and few of us embrace the fiery trials such as rejection with joy.  But our longevity and lasting impact in ministry may well depend on our willingness to be molded and then subjected to the Master’s kiln over His pre-determined time.   Jesus Himself, the living stone, faced rejection triumphantly and endured!  I Peter 2:4-5 (MSG) put it this way:  Welcome to the living Stone, the source of life. The workmen took one look and threw it out; God set it in the place of honor. Present yourselves as building stones for the construction of a sanctuary vibrant with life, in which you’ll serve as holy priests offering Christ-approved lives up to God.”   Coade Stone statutes have lasted over 150 year despite the harsh environment of London.    They were resilient.  So are you!  God has perfected the process of perfecting you.   Let Him.  Your ministry will endure.

 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

ADs October Devotional

Passionate or Passive, How is your Life’s Message?


August 28, 2013 marked the 50th anniversary of a speech destined to change a nation.   Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” discourse was being shaped a few days prior to the event by a group of trusted friends, including Dr. Clarence Benjamin (Behind the Dream: The Making of the Speech That Transformed a Nation).  Benjamin suggested the idea of a transaction in a bank.  “We’re coming here after the Emancipation Proclamation after all this time, to redeem a note from the signers of the Declaration of Independence.”  With the weight of the civil rights movement on his shoulders, Dr. King started methodically to deliver his message using this carefully crafted language.  From the crowd, gospel singer Mahalia Jackson shouted out, “Tell ‘em about the dream, Martin.  Tell ‘em about the dream.”  Benjamin writes, “I saw him take the written text and hold it to the left side and look out at the more than 250,000 people.   Seeing this, I said to somebody, ‘These people don’t know it, but they’re ready to go to church.’”  Benjamin continues, “It was as if some cosmic force had come down…it was not so much the profoundness of the content.   It was the way he delivered it with such extraordinary passion.”   Passion.  It reached into the souls of the crowd that day, ignited a dream and changed a nation.   Passion and dreams often walk hand in hand.  Every great dream begins with a dreamer.   Are you still dreaming?  As a missionary, how is your life’s passion quota?   Passionate or passive?   “I now remind you to stir up that inner fire which God gave you at your ordination.” Timothy 1:6 J.B. Phillips.   God has big dreams yet to be fulfilled.   Stay broken in His Presence and He will increased your passion quota.