Thursday, May 27, 2021

 


After Bible Study this past Sunday as I walked in the hall toward our church sanctuary for worship, I overheard a child ask his parent, "Why Memorial Day?" 

This prompted me to wonder how many children ponder the same question. 




The Civil War, which ended in the spring of 1865, at that time claimed more lives than any conflict in U.S. history and required the founding of our country’s first national cemeteries.

 

By the late 1860s, Americans in various towns and cities had begun holding springtime tributes to these countless fallen soldiers, decorating their graves with flowers, and reciting prayers. Historical records establish one of the earliest Memorial Day tributes were organized by a group of formerly enslaved people in Charleston, South Carolina less than a month after General Robert E. Lee surrenders his 28,000 Confederate troops to Union General Ulysses S. Grant in Appomattox Court House in 1865. United by love and respect these freed African Americans chose love not hate, and country not color.

 

Decoration Day, as Memorial Day gradually came to be known, originally honored only those lost while fighting in the Civil War. But during World War I the United States found itself embroiled in another major conflict, and the holiday evolved to commemorate American military personnel who died in all wars, including World War II, The Vietnam War, The Korean War and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.




I have served with, loved, and lost many comrades in arms. For those who never served, they may ask 

“Why Serve?”


Our Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, Airman, and Coast Guard serve for sundry reasons. Some serve out of a sense of duty and honor, some for the challenge, some for an opportunity to gain life skills and education.

Celebrating Memorial Day unites and connects the hearts of today’s military with the hearts of those who have served, with the hearts of those who will serve our great country, with the heart of each citizen, and memories with our fallen comrades who paid the ultimate sacrifice.


It has been a few years since I recalled the following prayer, and I admit it had slipped into the repository of my memory. Shortly after the attacks of 9/11, I was asked to write a prayer for our military and their families. Please continue to pray for our military as we remember, and celebrate love not hate, and country not color. Let us celebrate the three colors which never run composed in our Star-Spangled Banner Red, White, and Blue. 

 

Military Prayer

 

Father, it takes a brave heart to     

 take a stand and fight for Freedom.

 Lord guard and guide the men         

and woman who march, sail, fight

 and fly upholding them by    

thy Saving Grace.

                It is our prayer you bring each              

of them home safe and sound

to their families, loved ones,

           and if providentially you carry       

                   them home providing a place               

 of rest and refuge;

                        we pray you to protect                         

 and shelter their families

with Thy Tender Mercies 

until we see them again

Amen

 

Soli Deo Gloria

 

Jay Adam Pearson









Tuesday, May 11, 2021

 

Laudable Lemonade



 

The recipe I love for lemonade

 has four simple steps:

 

1.    Make a simple syrup. 

Add sugar and 2 cups of water to a saucepan. Bring to a simmer and stir until sugar is dissolved.  Remove from heat and cool to room temperature.

 

2.   Juice your lemons. 

Strain the lemon juice through a fine-mesh sieve into a pitcher.

 

3.   Combine syrup with a dash of lemon juice. 

Add more water, to taste, until you reach your desired lemonade sweetness.

 

4.   Chill & Enjoy. 


I was contacted by a dear friend this week who has seen life give them some pretty significant blows. They asked me how do I continue in life when at each turn there is another blow? I shared that as a child if you would have told me the pains, struggles, and trials in my future would be needed most in my life to remind me to trust the LORD and believe, I would have said“No way!”


Now, I recognize it was these very trials in my past which drove me to my knees, which finally got my attention teaching me I am not in control of my life. Yes, it was the pains, struggles, and trials which enable me to give praise to GOD in all things and to proclaim with all my heart LORD, I need you!



Often GOD has a way of interrupting us in the most unusual places. Delays, diversions, distractions, and interruptions can be seen as divine appointments. But boy is this difficult when we are the ones facing the interruption. For the Christian, we will all get to Heaven when we get there, and until then there will be interruptions, challenges, sickness, disease, shattered dreams, and ultimately death which shall arrive as the hardest and best gift. Just like interruptions, miracles are everywhere. Miracles of goodness amid depraved humanity. This got me thinking about how this relates to our very lives, so when life gives you lemons, make:


Laudable Lemonade


GOD’s recipe has four simple steps

 

1.    Make a simple prayer. Add trust and 2 cups of hope to a saucepan of prayer. Bring to a simmer and stir until fear is dissolved.

2.   Juice your lemons. Claim the promises of our Father and believe HE will strain the bitterness of life into a pitcher embodied in a bright future.

3.   Combine your prayers with a dash of peace. Add more hope, to taste, until you reach your testimony of Faith.

4.   Chill & Trust.



      I hope, indeed I pray if life has presented you significant blows lately that each of you realizes these interruptions will too pass. 

 Soli Deo Gloria

 

Jay Adam Pearson












  Redeemed to Serve   Let’s do a brief overview. Jonah is called by GOD to go to Nineveh (modern-day Mosul, Iraq) the capital of the Assyria...

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