Watch for Temptation

Prodigal: I am tempted to take a cookie when others backs are turned.

Me: Prodigal, I know what you are thinking. You should think twice about that action.

This is from the book The Imitation of Christ by Thomas Kempis

Fire proveth iron, and temptation a just man. We know not often times what we are able to do, but temptation sheweth us what we are.

Yet we must be watchful, especially in the beginning of the temptation; for the enemy is then more easily overcome, if he be not suffered in any wise to enter the door of our hearts, but he resisted without the gate at his first knock.

When we are in the battle the first step can be just to recognize the knock of satan. Sometimes we forget that he was an angel and was very beautiful. He knows how to make things beautiful. He knows how to make us think that this choice is not a bad choice. Be watchful and do not answer that knock today.

Psalm 90:1

Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Women Lovin’ Jesus

Me: I just read something. Jesus turns a test into a testimony.

Prodigal: Amen to that!

This is a short video testimony.

Click here to watch the video

Proverbs 8:27 When He prepared the heavens, I was there, When He drew a circle on the face of the deep. (NKJV)

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Muller’s Mustard Seed

Me: Well that is fine as a daisy.

Prodigal: Yes, I’m excited to find out all that is in this box.

Me: Remember to thank others.

Prodigal: I will.

This is from the book No Easy Road by Dick Eastman

One one occasion, Muller traveled to Canada for a speaking engagement. Dense fog settled upon the ocean and the uncertain vessel floated motionless on a silent sea. Soon Muller knocked anxiously on the captain’s door expressing, “I must be in Toronto by Sunday.” The captain quickly replied, “In no way can this vessel move without assuming great danger of colliding with another.”

“I understand,” said Mr. Muller, “but in forty years of Christian service I have not failed to keep an appointment. I must be in Toronto Sunday!” He then asked the captain to join in special prayer that the fog lift. Embarrassed, the captain agreed. They knelt and Muller calmly asked God to lift the hindering fog. Somewhat intimidated, the captain said a simple prayer to please his anxious passenger. He no sooner began when Muller stopped him. He gently touched the captain’s shoulder saying: “You need not pray. You do not believe.”

Startled, the seafarer rose to leave the cabin with this unusual passenger. Walking out on deck, a look of sheer astonishment spread over the captain’s face. The fog had completely lifted. George Muller silently stood by with a “just as I expected” look.

Behold, his soul which is lifted up is not upright in him: but the just shall live by his faith.

Habakkuk 2:4

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalipig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

To Pray is to Change

Prodigal: Nothing has changed with the plants yet.

Me: No, but the growth will happen, just wait and see.

This is from the book Celebration of Discipline by Richard J. Foster

To pray is to change. Prayer is the central avenue God uses to transform us. If we are unwilling to change, we will abandon prayer as a noticeable characteristic of our lives. The closer we come to the heartbeat of God the more we see our need and the more we desire to be conformed to Christ.

We also will seek prayer when we need to change. God called me to forgive. It really was not what I wanted to do. I wanted to ignore the conviction in my spirit. I wanted to pretend that I had forgiven. God does not want our spirit to dry up like the leaves in fall. No, He wants us to grow, become alive. He had given me several different verses on forgiveness. I finally stopped the running. I acknowledge the call. I dropped to my knees in prayer. In that instance, I pray. I pray because I cannot forgive alone. I pray because my spirit needs help to focus on the things of God at this time. I pray because God, I need to change.

LORD, thou art my God; I will exalt thee, I will praise thy name; for thou hast done wonderful things; thy counsels of old are faithfulness and truth.

Isaiah 25:1

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Women Lovin’ Jesus

Me: Wanted to share some good words today.

Prodigal: Let’s hear.

Me: Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.

This is a short video devotion.

click here to watch the video

Proverbs 8:26 Before he had made the earth with its fields, or the first of the dust of the world. (ESV)

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

He Accepted Us

Me: Y’all are an interesting bunch.

Prodigal: Don’t forget to look at the heart.

Me: That should be our focus.

This is from Pastor R. Kent Hughes

How did Christ accept you and me? He accepted us with our many sins, prejudices, and innumerable blind spots. He accepted us with our psychological shortcomings and cultural naivete. He accepted us with our provincialisms. He even accepted us with our stubbornness. This is how we are to accept one another.

There is someone who needs to feel accepted. They need to feel accepted by you and accepted by God. They need to feel the warmth of love from you. God will show you that person. Then take time to really pay attention. Take the time to make a difference in their lives.

Sing unto the LORD with the harp; with the harp, and the voice of a psalm.

PSALM 98 : 5

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Get Me Out Alive

Me:  Your friend is stuck!

Prodigal:  Yes, I know I need help.

Me:  I will help you.

Prodigal:  Thank you!

 

This is from the book  Sister Freaks:  Stories of Women Who Gave Up Everything for God by Rebecca St. James

 

Crystal Woodman’s biggest concern that Tuesday morning was her physics test.  She hadn’t studied, and she needed every free minute during the day to cram.  When lunch period started, she convinced her friends, Seth and Sara, to come with her to the library instead of going off campus as they usually did.

She had been actively involved in church and youth group as a child, but in high school Crystal had turned away from God to get involved in the party scene.  After a few years of trying to be “cool”  by experimenting with drugs, alcohol, and boys, Crystal began to see how empty her life was and went back to church.  Not entirely committed to either lifestyle, she swung back and forth between the party kids and the church kids, drawn to the deep relationships she saw in Christians like Seth and Sara but also craving the popularity of the “in” crowd.

The three friends pretended not to notice the librarian’s glare and chatted as they found an empty table.  Instead of studying, they joked around with a camera for a few minutes, enjoying each other’s company and the memories of prom the weekend before.

Slowly, they began to notice sounds and movements outside the library.  Seth looked out the window, but the stream of students leaving the school looked like the usual lunch crowd.  No one seemed to be paying much attention until a teacher ran into the library, screaming, “There are boys outside with guns and bombs.  They’re shooting students!”

Crystal searched for an explanation:  It was a senior prank.  It was a student’s video project.  Those were firecrackers exploding in the hallway.  After all, nothing bad could happen there.  They were in Littleton, Colorado, an upper-middle class suburb of housing developments, parks, and strip malls.  People didn’t get shot there.

But it was April 20, 1999, and people were being shot at Columbine High School.  As the sounds drew closer, Crystal watched a terrified classmate stumble into the library, clutching his bleeding shoulder. This was no prank.  There was no time to escape.  Crystal, Seth, and Sara took cover in the only place they could, under a library table.  Seth puled Crystal’s head to his chest to protect her and whispered, “Start praying.  I don’t know what’s happening.  God is the only one who can get us through.”

Two boys with guns entered the library.  Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, seniors at Columbine, began moving around the room, randomly shooting their classmates.

Crystal’s face was hidden in Seth’s shirt, but she remembers the sounds, smells, and feelings of the next few minutes.  Gunshots and pipe bombs exploded around her, shattering glass and mixing with student’s frightened cries and the angry voices of the killers.  She smelled the smoke from the pipe bombs and felt the floor shake with every explosion.

The voices drew nearer, and Crystal realized, It’s my turn to die.  She heard a gunshot just a few feet away–a boy under the next table was killed merely because he wore glasses.  For the first time, she thought she would not leave the Columbine library alive.

Crystal began to pray.  “Okay, God, if You’re real, get me out of here alive.  I will give You my life forever.  I’ll quit partying.  I will do anything.  Just get me out of here.  I didn’t understand then.  I do now.  It all makes sense now.”

One of the killers shoved in a library chair, and it hit Crystal’s arm.  They had reached her table.  But even as she thought about dying, a voice in Crystal’s mind told her, “God’s going to get you out.  You have a story to tell.  God’s going to get you out.”

The two shooters began talking to each other. They had run out of ammunition, and their extra bag of bombs and bullets was in the hallway.  Without even looking under Crystal’s table, they left the library.

As soon as Eric and Dylan left, the surviving students began to leave through a fire escape.  They knew the killers had just gone to reload; they would come back.  In the instant before she left the library, Crystal looked around.  “It was the first time I had seen the room.  Everything had been shot up–the computers, the windows, the books–and little fires had been started from the pipe bombs.  I saw the bodies of my classmates on the floor….and I knew that they were dead.”

Crystal and the other survivors in the library ran together out of the school.  Not sure how many shooters there were or whether they were watching, Crystal and the other kids took shelter behind a police car parked just outside.

Eventually, police officers took everyone farther away from the school.  Crystal was separated from Seth and Sara and started to weep uncontrollable.  “Everything I had known for sixteen years–my innocence, my security, my safety–was just stripped away from me.  I didn’t know what I had just seen;  I hadn’t processed it all.”

Crystal joined the chaos, throngs of students wandering through the nearby park and shopping center, looking for phones to call parents or friends.  It would take hours before everyone was reunited and the names of the dead were confirmed.  Crystal walked across a field with Craig Scott while he looked for his sister, Rachel.  They would later find out she was the first person murdered, shot just outside the building.  Crystal would hear students telling the story of a classmate killed in a different part of the library after she affirmed her faith in Christ, without knowing right away that it was Cassie Bernall, a member of Crystal’s youth group.

She eventually found a phone and called her father, who met her near the school.  She filled out police reports and eventually went home for a tearful reunion with her mother and brother.

Even in her pain, Crystal remembered her promise to God, and she stepped forward again and again to tell her story.  She quickly became the unofficial spokesperson for the Columbine students.  She was interviewed on Good Morning America.  The Today Show, CNN, and all of the Denver area news outlets.  Wracked with depression and plagued by nightmares, Crystal wouldn’t speak to anyone for weeks unless it was in an interview, but she found comfort in telling the world about how God saved her.

Over the coming weeks, as she worked through her own emotions, Crystal began speaking to groups–local churches at first, and then rallies, youth conferences, school assemblies, festivals, press conferences, and retreats.  She became a living testimony of God’s promise in 2 Corinthians 12:9:  “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”  God took Crystal’s damaged, wounded spirit–the one that had seen so much pain–and used it to help others heal.  Later, traveling to war-torn Kosovo with Operation Christmas Child (An outreach of Samaritan’s Purse), Crystal met children who live every day with violence like that at Columbine.  That event, coupled with others, led her to dedicate her life to speaking.

She often quotes Genesis 50:20 when she speaks, a verse that so accurately describes her life and ministry:  “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.”

Crystal knows there are cruel and scary things in this world.  But she knows also there is One who is stronger, and she is putting her faith in Him.

 

I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.

John 5:24

 

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Women Lovin’ Jesus

Prodigal: Look who is with me!

Me: Here is something to remind you of today. As long as you know that God is for you, it doesn’t matter who is against you.

This is a short video devotion

click here to watch

Proverbs 8:25 Before the mountains were settled, before the hills, I was brought forth; (KJV)

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodialpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

Out of the Night

Prodigal:  I almost lost you.

Me:  Yes, but I am here, I am with you.

Prodigal:  Let’s share with each other.

This is from the book Power of Love and this was written by Jack Haring

The Battle of the Bulge.  The final desperate attempt of the Germans to break through Allied lines in Belgium and dash to Antwerp and the sea.  For six days our 84th Infantry Division had been diverted from the Ninth Army in the north to the beleaguered First Army area in the Ardennes forest.  The fiercest fighting of the war, and I, a 19-year old private, was in the middle of it.

My letter home to Pennsylvania was written on a Christmas morning that was sunny and quiet–deceptively quiet.  “The barn I slept in last night,”  I wrote, “made me think of the place where Jesus came into the world.”  Then I began reminiscing to Mom about the good Christmases we’d had as I was growing up–always starting with the traditional dawn service at St. John’s Lutheran in Boyertown.  Church had always been an important part of my life.  I’d started college thinking I might go into the ministry.

The letter home was upbeat all the way.  I didn’t mention anything about the things that had been troubling me.  How I had become disillusioned with organized religion because I saw so few Christians either at home or in the combat zone–certainly not Christians trying to live the way Jesus had taught.  Or how the weather had been so miserable and the fighting so blazing that I feared I’d never live to see Pennsylvania again.

The last straw was being sent to these snow-covered hills and woods where we might be attacked at any moment from out there, some where I was beginning to think that God has forsaken me.

Still, even though we’d spent the last five days floundering around trying to stop the Germans, even though our supply trucks had been captured, at least we’d had a barn for shelter on Christmas Eve, and our cooks were promising us a hot meal for Christmas Day.

“Let’s go, ” Sergeant Presto, our squad leader, shouted.  “Collect your gear and fall out.  We’re going on a mission.”

I groaned.  We all groaned.  There went our first hot meal in a week!

We drove for about ten miles and then the trucks dropped us and sped away.  It was dusk.  Troops were strung out all along dirt road that circled through some hills.  When Presto came back from a meeting with the platoon leader, he gathered the ten of us–we were one man short in the squad– around him.

“Okay, men, here’s what we’re going to do.  This won’t take long and we’re going to travel light.  Leave your packs and entrenching tools here.”  He made it sound so simple.  Intelligence had said that some German infantry were dug into a nearby hill and were causing havoc by shooting down on the roads in the area.  Our battalion’s job was to go up and flush them out.

Single file on each side of the winding road, we moved up the hill.  We moved quietly warily.  At the top, we were surprised to find, not Germans, but an abandoned chateau in the middle of a clearing.  Our squad went into the building.  We found a billiard table and the tension broke as we played an imaginary game of pool using our rifles as cues.

Then Presto came stalking in.  The Germans, he said, were in the woods beyond the clearing.  Our orders were to chase them out into the waiting arms of another battalion positioned at the other end of the woods.

“There’ll be three companies in this deal,” Presto said.  “Two of us will stretch out along the edge of the forest while the other hangs back in reserve.  Now, as soon as we push into the woods, everybody fires, got it?”

We spread out, walked through the darkness to the forest’s edge, than, at a signal, we burst in, opening up with everything we had.  We kept up a brisk pace, keeping contact with our buddies along the moving line, walking and firing for about a mile.  But the forest was empty.  There was no movement…..

The trees in front of us exploded.  Suddenly, the night went bright with every kind of firing I’d even seen or heard of –rifles, rifle-launched grenades, mortars, machine guns, tracers over our heads, bullets at our thighs.  But worst of all, Tiger tanks.  At least six of them, opening up point-black with 88-millimeter cannons.  Their projectiles whined and crashed all up and down our line.

Our intelligence was wrong, I thought angrily, as I flung myself down on my stomach.  They told us there were no tanks up here.  Now we’re really in for it.

Within seconds men were screaming in pain all around me.  I saw a tree with a big trunk and made a sudden lunge to get behind it, but I wasn’t quick enough.  Something tore into my thigh.  There was hot, searing pain.

We were completely pinned down.  The Tiger tanks kept scanning their turrets and firing on every yard of our line.  The German ground troops sent their small arms fire into anything that moved.

The minutes went by.  Five.  Ten.  Fifteen.  Then came a lull in the barrage.  I called over to my best buddy, Kane.  We called him “Killer.”  He was the gentlest guy in our platoon, but we’d nicknamed him that after the popular comic strip character, “Killer Kane.”

“Are you hurt, Killer?”

“Naw.  But I think everybody else over here is.  Presto’s hit bad.”

I called to Cruz on my right.  He was our squad’s B.A.R. man.  There was no answer.  Then I barely heard him whispering, “I’m hurt.  Real bad.  Floyd’s dead.  Corporal John’s hit bad.”

Well, I thought, if Presto’s out and the Corporal, too, we don’t have a leader.

The pounding started again, this time with flares so they could spot us better.  We did some firing back and then the action subsided into another lull.

Down along the rear of our line came a figure crawling.  It was our platoon runner.  “Captain says we’re getting nowhere,” he whispered to Killer and me.  “We’re pulling back in five minutes.  Move out when you hear our covering fire.”

I crawled over to Killer.  “We’ve got to get our guys out of here,”  I said.  “You go up your side and I’ll go down mine, and we’ll drag as many as possible to that big tree back there.”

“How’re we going to get them out of here, though?”

“I don’t know,” I said.”But we can’t leave them lying here.”

We were trapped.  I lay there on the cold ground feeling helpless, that forsaken feeling again.  Where was the God that I had prayed to during all those years of church and Sunday school back home in Pennsylvania?”  And whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will I do,”  the Bible had said to me clearly.  Was it necessary, when I needed help so badly to ask?

“Oh, Lord,”  I mumbled, “help us.  We’re trying to get our wounded buddies out of here.  Show us the way.”

I had no sooner started dragging Corporal John toward our meeting tree when the firing started up in the center of our line.  There’s the signal for pulling back, I thought frantically, but we can’t do it. The Germans will sweep in on us; they’ll mop us up before we can pull back.

Just as I got to the tree, I saw that Killer had brought back three wounded squad members.  So we had six in all to get back.  I closed my eyes and in desperation said:  “In Your name, Lord, help us.”

I opened my eyes.  In the black of night, moving mysteriously among the shattered trees, a giant hulk came toward us.  The Germans, my heart thumped, they’ve broke out of the brush.  They’re bearing down on us.  No, it was something else, something unbelievable.  It now came into full view and stopped beside our tree.

A horse.

A big, docile, shaggy chestnut, standing there without a harness, as though awaiting our bidding.

Killer and I looked at each other in disbelief.  We didn’t question then where the horse came from, or how, or why; we just got to work.  Moving swiftly, we draped Cruz and the Corporal on the chestnut’s broad back, then Mike and Presto.  Then, with Killer carrying one of our buddies and me carrying the other, we led the horse out of the woods.  At the clearing the horse trotted on ahead of us, straight to the chateau, and by the time Killer and I got there, our wounded were already on medical stretchers.  The two men we carried in were cared for; the medics gave a quick look at my shrapnel wound; and then, as fast as we could, Killer and I went to find the horse.  We wanted to pat him, give him some sugar, anything to make him sense our gratitude.

But he wasn’t there.  We looked everywhere, asked everyone we saw, but no one could tell us anything about him.  He had simply vanished–gone from us as mysteriously as he had come.

The next morning at the aid station the shrapnel was removed from my leg, and at noon Killer and I lined up for our belated Christmas dinner.  The day before, 190 men in our company would have answered the chow call; today there were 35 of us.  All the wounded men in our squad had survived, however, though some were never to see action again.

I have always believed that Christmas night, God sent that horse to reassure a doubting soldier of His presence,even as He had sent His Son for that purpose on a Christmas night twenty centuries ago.

Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few.

Matthew 9:37

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org

The Greatest Thing to Do

Prodigal: That just frosted me.

Me: What?

Prodigal: What they said.

Me: Sometimes we just have to let it go.

This is from S.D. Gordon

The greatest thing anyone can do for God and man is pray. It is not the only thing; but it is the chief thing. The great people of the earth today are the people who pray. I do not mean those who talk about prayer; nor those who say they believe in prayer; nor yet those who can explain about prayer; but I mean those people who take time to pray.

James 1:12

Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him.

Jennifer Van Allen

www.theprodigalpig.com

www.faithincounseling.org