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Wednesday 27 July 2011

27th july 2011


THAT’S GOD

 Have you ever been just sitting there and all of a sudden you feel like  doing something nice for someone you care for?

THAT’S GOD! He speaks to you through the Holy Spirit

 Have you ever been down and out and nobody seems to be around for you to  Talk to?

 THAT’S GOD! He wants you to speak to Him.

 Have you ever been thinking about somebody that you haven’t seen in a long  time and then next thing you know you see them or receive a phone call from  them?

 THAT’S GOD!  There’s no such thing as coincidence.

 Have you ever received something wonderful that you didn’t even ask for,  like money in the mail, a debt that had mysteriously been cleared, or a  coupon to a department store where you had just seen something you wanted,  but couldn’t afford.

 THAT’S GOD. He knows the desires of your heart.

 Have you ever been in a situation and you had no clue how it is going to  get better, but now you look back on it?

 THAT’S GOD! He passes us through tribulation to see a brighter day.

 Don’t tell GOD how Big your storm is.
 Tell the storm how Big your GOD is!

HAVE A BLESSED DAY
GOD LOVES YOU







A Dad’s Story


On July 22, I was in route to Washington, D.C. for a business trip. It was all so very ordinary, until we landed in Denver for a plane change. As I collected my belongings from the overhead bin, an announcement was made for Mr. Lloyd Glenn to see the United customer service representative immediately. I thought nothing of it until I reached the door to leave the plane and I heard a gentleman asking every male if he were Mr. Glenn. At this point I knew something was wrong and my heart sank.

When I got off the plane, a solemn-faced young man came toward me and said, ”Mr. Glenn, there is an emergency at your home. I do not know what the emergency is, or who is involved, but I will take you to the phone so you can call the hospital.”

My heart was now pounding, but the will to be calm took over. Woodenly, I followed this stranger to the distant telephone where I called the number he gave me for the Mission Hospital. My call was put through to the trauma center, where I learned that my three-year-old son had been trapped underneath the automatic garage door for several minutes, and that when my wife had found him he was dead. C.P.R. had been performed by a neighbor, who is a doctor, and the paramedics had continued the treatment as Brian was transported to the hospital.

By the time of my call, Brian was revived, and they believed he would live, but they did not know how much damage had been done to his brain nor to his heart. They explained that the door had completely closed on his little sternum right over his heart. He had been severely crushed. After speaking with the medical staff, my wife sounded worried but not hysterical, and I took comfort in her calmness.

The return flight seemed to last forever, but finally I arrived at the hospital six hours after the garage door had come down. When I walked into the intensive care unit, nothing could have prepared me to see my little son lying so still on a great big bed with tubes and monitors everywhere. He was on a respirator.

I glanced at my wife, who stood and tried to give me a reassuring smile. It all seemed like a terrible dream. I was filled-in with the details and given a guarded prognosis. Brian was going to live, and the preliminary tests indicated that his heart was okay-. But only time would tell if his brain had received any damage.

Throughout the seemingly endless hours, my wife was calm. She felt that Brian would eventually be all right. I hung onto her words and faith like a lifeline. All that night and the next day Brian remained unconscious. It seemed like forever since I had left for my business trip the day before.

Finally, at two o’clock that afternoon, our son regained consciousness and sat up uttering the most beautiful words I have ever heard spoken. He said, ”Daddy hold me,” and he reached for me with his little arms. 

By the next day he was pronounced as having no neurological or physical deficits, and the story of his miraculous survival spread throughout the hospital. You cannot imagine-we took Brian home-we felt a unique reverence for the life and love of our Heavenly Father that comes to those who brush death so closely.

In the days that followed there was a special spirit about our home. Our two older children were much closer to their little brother. My wife and I were much closer to each other, and all of us were very close as a whole family. Life took on a less stressful pace. Perspective seemed to be more focused and balanced, much easier to gain and maintain. We felt deeply blessed. Our gratitude was truly profound.

The story is not over!

Almost a month later to the day of the accident, Brian awoke from his afternoon nap and said, ”Sit down Mommy . . . I have something to tell you.” At this time in his life, Brian usually spoke in small phrases, so to say a large sentence surprised my wife. She sat down with him on his bed, and he began his sacred and remarkable story.

”Do you remember when I got stuck under the garage door? Well, it was so heavy and it hurt really bad. I called to you, but you couldn’t hear me. I started to cry, but then it hurt too bad. And then the ’birdies’ came.”

”The birdies?” my wife asked puzzled.

”Yes,” he replied. ”The birdies made a whooshing sound and flew into the garage. They took care of me.”

”They did?”

”Yes,” he said, ”One of the birdies came and got you. She came to tell you ’I got stuck under the door.’ A sweet reverent feeling filled the room. The spirit was so strong and yet lighter than air.”

My wife realized that a three-year-old had no concept of death and spirits, so he was referring to the beings who came to him from beyond as ”birdies,” because they were up in the air like birds that fly. ”What did the birdies look like?” she asked.

Brian answered, ”They were so beautiful. They were dressed in white, all white. Some of them had green and white. But some of them had on just white.”

”Did they say anything?”

”Yes,” he answered. ”They told me the baby would be all right.”

”The baby?” my wife asked, confused.

Brian answered, ”The baby laying on the garage floor.” He went on, ”You came out and opened the garage door and ran to the baby. You told the baby to stay and not leave.”

My wife nearly collapsed upon hearing this, for she had indeed gone and knelt beside Brian’s body and seeing his crushed chest, whispered, ”Don’t leave us Brian, please stay if you can.” As she listened to Brian telling her the words she had spoken, she realized that the spirit had left His body and was looking down from above on this little lifeless form. ”Then what happened?” she asked.

”We went on a trip,” he said, ”far, far away.” He grew agitated trying to say the things he didn’t seem to have the words for. My wife tried to calm and comfort him, and let him know it would be okay. He struggled with wanting to tell something that obviously was very important to him, but finding the words was difficult.

”We flew so fast up in the air. They’re so pretty Mommy,” he added.

”And there are lots and lots of birdies.” My wife was stunned. Into her mind the sweet comforting spirit enveloped her more soundly, but with an urgency she had never before known. Brian went on to tell her that the ”birdies” had told him that he had to come back and tell everyone about the ”birdies.” He said they brought him back to the house and that a big fire truck and an ambulance were there. A man was bringing the baby out on a white bed, and he tried to tell the man that the baby would be okay. The story went on for an hour.

He taught us that ”birdies” were always with us, but we don’t see them, because we look with our eyes, and we don’t hear them because we listen with our ears. But they are always there. ”You can only see them in here (he put his hand over his heart). They whisper the things to help us to do what is right because they love us so much.”

Brian continued, stating, ”I have a plan, Mommy. You have a plan. Daddy has a plan. Everyone has a plan. We must all live our plan and keep our promises. The birdies help us to do that cause they love us so much.”

In the weeks that followed, he often came to us and told all, or part of it, again and again. Always the story remained the same. The details were never changed or out of order. A few times he added further bits of information and clarified the message he had already delivered. It never ceased to amaze us how he could tell such detail and speak beyond his ability when he talked about his birdies.

Everywhere he went, he told strangers about the ”birdies.” Surprisingly, no one ever looked at him strangely when he did this. Rather, they always got a softened look on their faces and smiled. Needless to say, we have not been the same ever since that day, and I pray we never will be. 


 The Tea Cup

There was a couple who used to go to England to shop in the beautiful stores.

They both liked antiques and pottery and especially teacups.

This was their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary.

One day in this beautiful shop they saw a beautiful teacup. They said, ”May we see that? We’ve never seen one quite so beautiful.” As the lady handed it to them, suddenly the teacup spoke.

”You don’t understand,” it said. ”I haven’t always been a teacup. There was a time when I was red and I was clay. My master took me and rolled me and patted
me over and over and I yelled out, ’Let me alone’, but he only smiled, ’Not yet.’

”Then I was placed on a spinning wheel,” the teacup said, ”and suddenly I was spun around and around and around. Stop it! I’m getting dizzy! I screamed.
But the master only nodded and said, ’Not yet.’

Then he put me in the oven. I never felt such heat. I wondered why he wanted to burn me, and I yelled  and knocked at the door. I could see him through the  opening and I could read his lips as he shook his head, ’Not yet.’

Finally the door opened, he put me on the shelf, and I began to cool. ’There, that’s better’, I said. And he brushed and painted me all over. The fumes were horrible. I thought I would gag. ’Stop it, stop it!’ I cried. He only nodded, ’Not  yet.’

Then suddenly he put me back into the oven, not like the first one. This was twice as hot and I knew I would suffocate. I begged. I pleaded. I screamed. I cried. All the time I could see him through the opening nodding his head  saying, ’Not yet.’

Then I knew there wasn’t any hope. I would never make it.

I was ready to give up. But the door opened and  he took me out and placed me on the shelf.

One hour later he handed me a mirror and  I couldn’t believe it was me. It’s beautiful. I’m beautiful.’

’I want you to remember, then,’ he said, ’I know it hurts to be rolled and  patted, but if I had left you alone, you would have dried up. I know it made you dizzy to spin around on the wheel, but if I had stopped, you would have crumbled. I knew it hurt and was hot and disagreeable in the oven, but if I hadn’t put you there, you would have cracked. I know the fumes were bad when I brushed and painted you all over, but if I hadn’t done that, you never  would have hardened; you would not have had any color in your life. And if I hadn’t put you back in that second oven, you wouldn’t survive for very long because the hardness would not have held. Now you are a finished product. You are what I had in mind when I first began with you’.

MORAL: ”GOD” knows what He’s doing for all of us. He is the potter, and we are His clay. He will mold us and make us, so that we may be made into a flawless piece of work to fulfill His good, pleasing, and perfect will, which we can never escape.




 LIFE’S STORMS

A pastor had been on a long flight between church conferences. The first warning of the approaching problems came when the sign on the airplane flashed on: Fasten Your Seat Belts. Then, after a while, a calm voice said, ”We shall not be serving the beverages at this time as we are expecting a little turbulence. Please be sure your seat belt is fastened.” 

As the pastor looked around the aircraft, it became obvious that many of the passengers were becoming apprehensive. 

Later, the voice on the intercom said, ”We are so sorry that we are unable to serve the meal at this time. The turbulence is still ahead of us.” 

And then the storm broke .. 

The ominous cracks of thunder could be heard even above the roar of the engines. Lightning lit up the darkening skies, and within moments that great plane was like a cork tossed around on a celestial ocean. One moment the airplane was lifted on terrific currents of air; the next, it dropped as if it were about to crash. 

The pastor confessed that he shared the discomfort and fear of those around him. He said, ”As I looked around the plane, I could see that nearly all the passengers were upset and alarmed. Some were praying. The future seemed ominous and many were wondering if they would make it through the storm. 

”Then, I suddenly saw a little girl. Apparently the storm meant nothing to her. She had tucked her feet beneath her as she sat on her seat; she was reading a book and every- thing within her small world was calm and orderly.

”Sometimes she closed her eyes, then she would read again; then she would straighten her legs, but worry and fear were not in her world. When the plane was being buffeted by the terrible storm when it lurched this way and that, as it rose and fell with frightening severity, when all the adults were scared half to death, that marvelous child was completely composed and unafraid.” The minister could hardly believe his eyes. 

It was not surprising therefore, that when the plane finally reached its destination and all the passengers were hurrying to disembark, our pastor lingered to speak to the girl whom he had watched for such a long time. 

Having commented about the storm and the behavior of the plane, he asked why she had not been afraid. 

The child replied, ”Cause my Daddy’s the pilot, and he’s taking me home.” 

There are many kinds of storms that buffet us. Physical, mental, financial, domestic, and many other storms can easily and quickly darken our skies and throw our plane into apparently uncontrollable movement. We have all known such times, and let us be honest and confess, it is much easier to be at rest when our feet are on the ground than when we are being tossed about a darkened sky. 

Let us remember: Our Father is the Pilot. He is in control and taking us home. Don’t worry! 




Yesterday’s Food

Once there was a very rich merchant, doing well in business. His wife died long ago. He had one married son. His daughter-in-law was very wise and expert in house hold works. He was very much proud of her.

Once he was having lunch at his verandah when a monk came to his door asking for some food. The merchant didn’t pay attention as he never used to give anything to such kind of people. The monk asked again and didn’t get any reply. As he was asking third time, the daughter-in-law replied politely - ”Dear babaji, go to next door. My father-in-law is himself having yesterday’s food. He will not be able to give you anything.”
The monk understood and went ahead. But as the merchant heard these words spoken by the girl, he became very much angry with her. He was the richest person in the village. Why would he eat yesterday’s food? The girl must have become insane - he thought. As he was very much proud of her wise ness, so his anger was even greater. How did it come he didn’t realize this girl’s insanity? He summoned panchaayat (village court) and girl’s father that the girl was out of her mind and his son would break this marriage tie.
As people gathered in panchaayat, he told the event and asked for justice which was to untie the marriage in his point of view. The girl’s father was also present. He said-” I know my daughter is wise enough not to speak any meaningless words. But I am unable to understand its meaning. So I would request her to come and explain why she said so. It is not wise to give a decision without hearing her.”

The panchaayat agreed on it and the girl came to panchaayat. She said -” I know my father-in-law is the richest and most respected person in this village. What I wanted to say that he has done much good deeds in his previous lives that is why he got these wonderful blessings from GOD which he is enjoying now. In this way it is his yesterday’s earned food. But he is not doing any good deeds in this life, but only earning money for himself. I love him very much and want him to enjoy these blessings forever. I wanted to tell him this truth that is why I said so. I knew he would be angry and would like to get an explanation, and then maybe I will be able to tell him.”

The merchant understood the real meaning of the words and felt very much ashamed to bring his wise daughter-in-law in court. He apologized and started doing some actual good deeds for others.

It is general practice that people either enjoy their present blessings or they feel inferior while seeing others having more possessions in life. People always think why other has more wealth, why they are more intelligent. They forget that each and everything is our own earning. Whatever we earned, we are eating now. And whatever we are doing will come to us in future, be it material treasures or spiritual.

In the same way people enjoy their current position. They laugh at others who don’t have intellect, money and other thing. They enjoy even their spiritual status, but they forget that if they will not work at present, their current treasure would be slowly spent.
We should work for tomorrow while we are enjoying present.




 WHAT IS LOVE

In a classroom there were several kids, when one of them asked the teacher:

- Teacher, what is LOVE ?

The teacher felt the kid deserved the best answer she could give to that intelligent question. Since it was almost time for a break, she asked every student to go around the school and come back with something that would bring the feeling of love.

The kids rushed out the classroom, and when they came back the teacher said: - So, I want everybody to show what you brought to the whole class.

The first kid said: - I brought this FLOWER, isn’t it beautiful ?

The second kid said: - I brought this BUTTERFLY. Look at these colorful wings, I am gonna put it in my collection !

The third kid said: - I brought this YOUNG BIRD. It had fallen with another one from the nest. Isn’t it cute ?

And the kids were showing what they brought.

After almost everybody had showed their discoveries, the teacher noticed that there was a kid who had been quiet all the time. She was ashamed because she had not brought anything. The teacher went to her and asked: - My dear, why haven’t you brought anything ?

She then answered in an innocent voice:
- I am sorry teacher. I saw the FLOWER, and felt its perfume. I was going to take it, but I preffered to leave it, so its perfume would last longer and others could feel it.
I also saw the BUTTERFLY, soft, colourful..she seemed so happy that I did not want to disturb it.
I also saw the YOUNG BIRD that had fallen between the leafs, but as I climbed the tree, I noticed the sad look of it’s mother, so I decided to return it to the nest. Therefore, I only bring with me: the perfume of the flower, the feeling of liberty of the butterfly and the gratefulness of the look of the little bird’s mother. How can I show you what I brought?

The teacher thanked the young kid and gave her an A, because she was the only one that realized that we can only bring LOVE in our hearts.




Good Things Come In Large Packages

Jacob was a stoutly boy, with round features through and through, including his eyes  which glowed almost neon blue from round granite spheres. He accepted his roundness,  for after all, good things come in large packages, or so his mother always told him, with  a funny grin on her lips. He never understood the grin, but took it to mean it was their  little secret, that the world had yet to learn this, and Jacob was the one to teach them.

On this warm Sunday morning, he sits in the coffee shop awaiting his food. His platter,  really, for Jacob was a boy with a ferocious appetite and he fed this appetite lovingly.

”SEVEN egg omelet with half a pound of cheese.” said the waitress as she dropped the  plate to the table, rolling her eyes in amazement at this boys order. ’This poor boy,’ she  thought to herself, ’what have his parents done to cause such low self esteem.’ Jacob  dug into his food immediately and rather seriously, as if feeding a hunger that never  rested.

Jacob watched silently out of the window after he finished his feast, lost in thoughts of his  future, of becoming something special and showing the world what love really is. He  didn’t know how he was going to do this, but he knew, from the depths of his soul, that  this was his mission in life, and he looked forward to it with an excitement that made  any Christmas morning celebration look like a Sunday at church.

But this morning, however, something was different. Jacob thought about his future with  a new sense of melancholy that he could not explain. He felt as if something was going  to happen very soon that would catapult him into his purpose, and he wasn’t sure he was  ready. He was processing his thoughts, analyzing his feelings when a sudden bang  brought him back to his seat at the booth, once again aware of his surroundings.

He looked around for the source of the interruption to his thoughts, and saw people  gathered around something on the floor. At closer examination he saw it was a body,  very pale and thin and had sores on his face. You could see his skeletal structure he was  so thin. People were frantic, but no one wanted to assist the man lying on the floor. ”He  has AIDS!” someone yelled, ”don’t touch him! You’ll surely catch it!”

Jacob got up and walked over to the man, knelt down and felt for a pulse. An older  woman tried to stop him but he paid no attention. ”He’s got a pulse!” he said, ”He’s still  alive. Call 9-1-1, NOW! Hurry!” he screamed as he began to perform CPR. People  gasped in horror as they watched this large boy press his mouth against this sick man.  He continued the CPR until the ambulance arrived, and he kept him alive.

As Jacob started his walk home, he heard whispers fading behind him as folks continued  to talk about him with disbelief at what he’d done. ”That wasn’t brave!” said one man,  ”it was purely idiotic!” Jacob just shook his head as he walked away, lost in his own  thoughts of what had just occurred. He was a hero, regardless of what that man was ill  from, but that didn’t matter. Jacob didn’t care about that. His melancholy had grown still  without recognition as to its source, and this is what Jacob was deeply contemplating  when the truck hit him. He never heard it coming. Total blackness ensued. and very  soon after, death.

By this time news had gone around about what Jacob had done at the diner. The news  reporters were at the diner the moment Jacob was hit a few miles down the road. The  story of the year for this small town. The headlines the next morning read,

”TWISTED FATE: Cancer patient collapses at Mel’s Diner, and a young boy saves his  life, only to die moments later”. The story ended noting that the cancer patient was in  remission, and collapsed due to food lodged in his throat and no one noticed his  struggles for breath. This man was a father of three young babies.

Three young babies, who will grow up with their father; their father, who will live to see  his babies grow up. All because of the selfless love of a young boy. A young boy in a  large package, with a heart bigger than life could contain.




A Picture In The Wallet

 A ticket collector in a train found an old worn out wallet  in a compartment full of many people. He looked inside to  find the name of its owner. There was no clue. All that  there was in it, was some money and a picture of Jesus  Christ.  He held it up and asked, ’Who does this wallet  belong to?’   
 
 An old man said, ’That’s my wallet, please give it  to me.’ The ticket collector said, ’You’ll have  to prove that it is yours. Only then I can hand it over to  you.’ The old man smiled a toothless smile and said.  ’It has a picture of Jesus Christ in it.’ The ticket  collector said, ’That is no proof; anyone can have a  picture of Jesus Christ in his wallet. What is special about  that? Why is your picture not there in it?’ 
 
 The old man took a deep breath and said, ’Let me tell  you why my picture is not there in it. My father gave this  wallet to me when I was in school.  I used to get a small  sum as pocket money then. I had kept a picture of my parents  in it.  


 When I was a teenager I was greatly enamoured by my good  looks. I removed my parent’s picture and put in, one of  my own. I loved to see my own face and my thick black hair.

 Some years later, I got married. My wife was very beautiful  and I loved her a lot. I replaced my own picture in this  wallet with a picture of her. I spent hours gazing at her  pretty face. 
 
 When my first child was born, my life started a new  chapter. I shortened my working hours, to play with my baby.  I went late to work and returned home early too. Obviously,  my baby’s picture occupied the prized position in my  wallet.’  

 The old man’s eyes brimmed with tears as he went on.
 ’My parents passed away many years ago. Last year my  wife too left her mortal coil. My son; my only son is too  busy with his family. He has no time to look after me. All  that I had ever held close to my heart is far, far away from  my reach now. Now I have put this picture of Jesus Christ in  my wallet. It is only now that I have realized that He is  the eternal companion. He will never leave me. Alas! If only  I had realized this before. If only I had loved the Lord all  these years, with the same intensity as I loved my family, I  would not have been so lonely today!’ 
 
 The collector quietly gave the wallet to the old man. When  the train stopped at the next station, the ticket collector  went to the book stall at the platform and asked the  salesman, ’Please give me a small pictures of Jesus  Christ. I need a one to put in my wallet!’



 I’ll Carry The Load!

Brenda was almost halfway to the  Top of the tremendous granite cliff. She was standing on a ledge where she was taking a breather during this, her first rock climb. As she rested there, the safety rope snapped against her eye and knocked out her contact lens. ’Great’, she thought. ’Here I am on a rock ledge, hundreds of feet from the bottom and hundreds of feet to the top of this cliff, and now my sight is blurry.’
She looked and looked, hoping that somehow it had landed on the ledge. But it just wasn’t there.

She felt the panic rising in her, so she began praying. She prayed for calm, and she prayed that she may find her contact lens.

When she got to the top, a friend examined her eye and her clothing for the lens, but it was not to be found. Although she was calm now that she was at the top, she was saddened because she could not clearly see across the range of mountains. She thought of the bible verse ’The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth.’

She thought, ’Lord, You can see all these mountains. You know every stone and leaf, and You know exactly where my contact lens is. Please help me.’     

Later, when they had hiked down the trail to the bottom of the cliff they met another party of climbers just starting up the face of the cliff. One of them shouted out, ’Hey, you guys! Anybody lost a contact lens?’

Well, that would be startling enough, but you know why the climber saw it? An ant was moving slowly across a twig on the face of the rock, carrying it!

The story doesn’t end there. Brenda’s father is a cartoonist. When she told him the incredible story of the ant, the prayer, and the contact lens, he drew a cartoon of an ant lugging that contact lens with the caption,
 ’Lord, I don’t know why You want me to carry this thing. I can’t eat it, and it’s awfully heavy. But if this is what You want me to do, I’ll carry it for You.’

I think it would do all of us some good to say, ’God, I don’t know why You want me to carry this load. I can see no good in it and it’s awfully heavy. But, if You want me to carry it, I will.’

God doesn’t call the qualified, He qualifies the called.

Yes, I do  love GOD. He is my source of existence and my Savior. He keeps me functioning each and every day. Without Him, I am nothing, but with Him....I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. (Phil. 4:13)



Jenny And Her Beautiful Pearls

 Jenny was a bright-eyed, pretty five-year-old girl.

One day when she and her mother were checking out at the grocery store, Jenny saw a plastic pearl necklace priced at $2.50. How she wanted that necklace and when she asked her mother if she would buy it for her, her mother said, ”Well, it is a pretty necklace, but it costs an awful lot of money. I’ll tell you what. I’ll buy you the necklace, and when we get home we can make up a list of chores that you can do to pay for the necklace. And don’t forget that for your birthday Grandma just might give you a whole dollar bill, too. Okay?”

Jenny agreed, and her mother bought the pearl necklace for her. Jenny worked on her chores very hard every day, and sure enough, her Grandma gave her a brand new dollar bill for her birthday. Soon Jenny had paid off the pearls.

How Jenny loved those pearls. She wore them everywhere to kindergarten, bed, and when she went out with her mother to run errands. The only time she didn’t wear them was in the shower - her mother had told her that they would turn her neck green. Now Jenny had a very loving daddy. When Jenny went to bed, he would get up from his favorite chair every night and read Jenny her favorite story. One night when he finished the story, he said, ”Jenny, do you love me?”

”Oh yes, Daddy, you know I love you,” the little girl said.

”Well, then, give me your pearls.”

”Oh! Daddy, not my pearls!” Jenny said. ”But you can have Rosie, my favorite doll. Remember her? You gave her to me last year for my birthday. And you can have her tea party outfit, too. Okay?”

”Oh no, darling, that’s okay.” Her father brushed her cheek with a kiss. ”Good night, little one.”

A week later, her father once again asked Jenny after her story, ”Do you love me?”

”Oh yes, Daddy, you know I love you.”

”Well, then, give me your pearls.”

”Oh, Daddy, not my pearls! But you can have Ribbons, my toy horse. Do you remember her? She’s my favorite. Her hair is so soft, and you can play with it and braid it and everything. You can have Ribbons if you want her, Daddy,” the little girl said to her father.

”No, that’s okay,” her father said and brushed her cheek again with a kiss. ”God bless you, little one. Sweet dreams.”

Several days later, when Jenny’s father came in to read her a story, Jenny was sitting on her bed and her lip was trembling. ”Here, Daddy,” she said, and held out her hand. She opened it and her beloved pearl necklace was inside. She let it slip into her father’s hand. With one hand her father held the plastic pearls and with the other he pulled out of his pocket a blue velvet box.

Inside of the box were real, genuine, beautiful pearls.

He had them all along. He was waiting for Jenny to give up the cheap stuff so he could give her the real thing.
 So it is with our Heavenly Father. He is waiting for us to give up the cheap things in our lives so that he can give us beautiful treasure. Isn’t God good?

Are you holding onto things which God wants you to let go of?

Are you holding onto harmful or unnecessary partners, relationships, habits and activities which you have become so attached to that it seems impossible to let go?

Sometimes it is so hard to see what is in the other hand but do believe this one thing.................

God will never take away something without giving you something better in its place.