Daily Thoughts about God Posts

by John Grant

Again Peter denied it, and at that moment a rooster began to crow.”
John 18:27

When I first began to use e-mail and was learning what all the buttons were for, I saw one to click that said “Recall Message.” I thought how convenient that if I sent the wrong message or sent to the wrong person, I could simply click on this link and like a giant cyber vacuum cleaner it would suck everything back in my computer. Wrong!

What it really does is send a new message to the recipient telling them that they should ignore your first text, as it was send in error and then they look real carefully to see what was wrong with it to begin with. The consequences can be disastrous. It’s not as easy as going to the mail room and removing an envelope from the out box before the mailman arrives.

Recently a friend sent me a text message saying that he loved me. Realizing that his wife’s first name and mine are only a letter different, I quickly figured out his mistake, but not before texting back that I loved him too!

When you hit the send button you have said what you said to the people who receive it and there’s no way to get it back. Have you ever seen a glaring error in an e-mail just as it flies from your screen? Sure you have and I have too.

But, this is nothing new. We have experienced the same problem with verbal communication since language began. When we say the wrong thing, not matter how much we ask for forgiveness, what has been said has been said, and words, said or written, can cut like a sharp knife.

I think of Peter, Jesus’ closest, when he denied his Master. For the rest of his life he must have thought many times how much he wished he had never said those words. I look back at things I have said and written that I wish I could take back but can’t. My thoughtless communications have damaged relationships and cost friendships.

It is a good practice to pray and consult God’s Word before we communicate with others. Ask what would Jesus do. I once had a logic professor in college who advised us that whenever we wrote a letter, especially one that was emotional, we should lay it aside overnights and then re-read it the next day to see if that’s really what we wanted to say. I have used that advice and torn up many a letter, but I have also ignored it at times and created problems I didn’t need to have.

So, remember to take your communications with others seriously and be careful what you say to others, as it can have a lasting effect on them and on you, and ask how God’s Word would have you say it.
( a thought on life from John Grant )
John Grant is a former Florida State Senator and is a practicing attorney

You can comment on this devotional online at:
https://thoughts-about-god.com/blog/2010/05/08/jg_recall/

Thoughts by All thoughts by John Grant Thoughts by Men

by Marilyn Ehle

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness for they will be filled.” Matthew 5:6

I’m hungry. Not for a boiled egg at breakfast, soup and sandwich for lunch, or meat and rice for supper. This is a hunger that cannot be satisfied by the finest of gourmet foods. It is a hunger that insistently creeps into the soul in the dark night hours when sleep has slipped from my grasp. I feel its pangs at a party when laughter and conversation flow like silk. This hunger sneaks in when I sit in my quiet corner or when surrounded by hundreds in a shopping mall or beautiful church.

Here in the 21st century – especially in the Western world – we consider hunger our adversary. We conscientiously work hard and spend much to stamp out this enemy that robs so many of health. Our hearts break and we open our purses to feed the starving children in response to the commands of both law and grace.

Suddenly Jesus’ words break in: “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.”  While the word blessed has frequently been translated happy, in the Aramaic language Jesus spoke, it is better defined as being on the right road. Could this mean my unrelenting soul hunger, my deep wanting of a spiritual “more” is a sign that I am on the right road? Could this be God saying,
Yes, I want you to be always hungry for more of Me. My deepest desire is that you always sink deeper into my nature as you ask your questions, weep your tears, probe my book. You are on the right road. And I promise that you will always be filled and filled and filled.”

Father, so often I want all my hunger satisfied right now. But then I would never know the satisfaction of your continual feeding. Thank you for this paradox of hungering for more yet somehow knowing full satisfaction in you.

You can comment on this devotional online at:
https://thoughts-about-god.com/blog/2010/05/04/me_hungry/

Thoughts by All thoughts by Marilyn Ehle Thoughts by Women