what's with whit

what's on my mind

lilaeve:

fresh from a bath :)

aww, my precious neice

I am reading A Million Miles In A Thousand Years by Donald Miller currently, and whoa. It is making me look at my life really hard. How am I living my life? Am I making a difference? Am I changing life for others? What is my story? Am I writing a good story, bad story, or maybe, just maybe, could I write an epic story?

Change is the force that sets you on a new course to write your story. It is how you react to change that sets the tone for whether your story is going to be good or bad.

How do you react to change? At the end of your life is your story going to be of life change, a story well written, cut off too short? Or will it just be another story like so many others, where we did not grab hold of the story that God is writing for us and live it, but determined to write our own story, we just end up with one that is not very well written and certainly not life changing?

Listen to The One who is the author of your story, for He has plans that you have never dreamed.

Devotional Chapter today. Such a beautiful picture of how we are to live in Christ.

Galatians 2

Fourteen years after that first visit, Barnabas and I went up to Jerusalem and took Titus with us. I went to clarify with them what had been revealed to me. At that time I placed before them exactly what I was preaching to the non-Jews. I did this in private with the leaders, those held in esteem by the church, so that our concern would not become a controversial public issue, marred by ethnic tensions, exposing my years of work to denigration and endangering my present ministry. Significantly, Titus, non-Jewish though he was, was not required to be circumcised. While we were in conference we were infiltrated by spies pretending to be Christians, who slipped in to find out just how free true Christians are. Their ulterior motive was to reduce us to their brand of servitude. We didn’t give them the time of day. We were determined to preserve the truth of the Message for you.

As for those who were considered important in the church, their reputation doesn’t concern me. God isn’t impressed with mere appearances, and neither am I. And of course these leaders were able to add nothing to the message I had been preaching. It was soon evident that God had entrusted me with the same message to the non-Jews as Peter had been preaching to the Jews. Recognizing that my calling had been given by God, James, Peter, and John—the pillars of the church—shook hands with me and Barnabas, assigning us to a ministry to the non-Jews, while they continued to be responsible for reaching out to the Jews. The only additional thing they asked was that we remember the poor, and I was already eager to do that.

Later, when Peter came to Antioch, I had a face-to-face confrontation with him because he was clearly out of line. Here’s the situation. Earlier, before certain persons had come from James, Peter regularly ate with the non-Jews. But when that conservative group came from Jerusalem, he cautiously pulled back and put as much distance as he could manage between himself and his non-Jewish friends. That’s how fearful he was of the conservative Jewish clique that’s been pushing the old system of circumcision. Unfortunately, the rest of the Jews in the Antioch church joined in that hypocrisy so that even Barnabas was swept along in the charade.

But when I saw that they were not maintaining a steady, straight course according to the Message, I spoke up to Peter in front of them all: “If you, a Jew, live like a non-Jew when you’re not being observed by the watchdogs from Jerusalem, what right do you have to require non-Jews to conform to Jewish customs just to make a favorable impression on your old Jerusalem cronies?”

We Jews know that we have no advantage of birth over “non-Jewish sinners.” We know very well that we are not set right with God by rule-keeping but only through personal faith in Jesus Christ. How do we know? We tried it—and we had the best system of rules the world has ever seen! Convinced that no human being can please God by self-improvement, we believed in Jesus as the Messiah so that we might be set right before God by trusting in the Messiah, not by trying to be good.

Have some of you noticed that we are not yet perfect? (No great surprise, right?) And are you ready to make the accusation that since people like me, who go through Christ in order to get things right with God, aren’t perfectly virtuous, Christ must therefore be an accessory to sin? The accusation is frivolous. If I was “trying to be good,” I would be rebuilding the same old barn that I tore down. I would be acting as a charlatan.

What actually took place is this: I tried keeping rules and working my head off to please God, and it didn’t work. So I quit being a “law man” so that I could be God’s man. Christ’s life showed me how, and enabled me to do it. I identified myself completely with him. Indeed, I have been crucified with Christ. My ego is no longer central. It is no longer important that I appear righteous before you or have your good opinion, and I am no longer driven to impress God. Christ lives in me. The life you see me living is not “mine,” but it is lived by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. I am not going to go back on that.

Is it not clear to you that to go back to that old rule-keeping, peer-pleasing religion would be an abandonment of everything personal and free in my relationship with God? I refuse to do that, to repudiate God’s grace. If a living relationship with God could come by rule-keeping, then Christ died unnecessarily.

For if even Peter could be two faced, how much liable are we to being two faced ourselves? He who met Jesus in the flesh?!? If we are living as Christ-followers, it should be apparent. We should not put on a show for believers vs. non-believers. No, we should be the same all the time. Loving, full of kindness and glorifying Jesus. Not worried with laws and rules, nor in judging others. Do not conform to the world, stand up and live for what is right, Jesus.

From my devotion this morning…it resonated with me as a picture what Jesus did for us:

God rescued us from the dead-end alleys and dark dungeons. He’s set us up in the kingdom of the Son he loves so much, the Son who got us out of the pit we were in, got rid of the sins we were doomed to keep repeating.

Colossians 1:13-14 MSG
Speak up for the people who have no voice,
for the rights of all the down-and-outers.
Speak out for justice!
Stand up for the poor and destitute!
Awesomeness.

sarazucker:

two of the biggest retailers-that-start-with-the-letter-“g” have joined forces to help the clothesless! you don’t know what i’m talking about, do you? let me explain: from now until may 29th (11 more days!), if you bring your old clothes to any local gap, the store will donate them to goodwill. in exchange, you’ll receive 30% off your total purchase. 

Awesomeness.

sarazucker:

two of the biggest retailers-that-start-with-the-letter-“g” have joined forces to help the clothesless! you don’t know what i’m talking about, do you? let me explain: from now until may 29th (11 more days!), if you bring your old clothes to any local gap, the store will donate them to goodwill. in exchange, you’ll receive 30% off your total purchase. 

Lunch

Lunch

vogue:

NOSTALGIA (In Remembrance): Elizabeth Taylor Photographed for the Cover of Vogue in 1971 by Antony Armstrong-Jones

RIP