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Saturday, January 25 2025
Zoom ONLY worship today! Congregational Meeting after worship next Sunday the 26th after worship before Brunch (Plenty of food and all welcome to brunch!)
Good Morning Radiating, Lighthouses of THE Light of the World! Amen! I being short as God (and the dogs) brought us rest and allowed us to sleep in until 6 this morning! PTL! The salutation flows for the devos below. I'll be preparing for Zoom worship at 10. God has a great word for us in this blog and through the message today. Prepare your hearts to worship, fill up and to go radiate His love and light. He has great plans for you that begin win His presence with prayer and preparing. See you all soon! God loves you and has great plans for you and us to go live and love like Jesus as we step more fully into our created purposes and come alive in '25! Shalom!
UR: Finding Rest

[The Lord] makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters. - Psalm 23:2 (NIV)

I was designing a major installation at work. As the deadline approached, I began working overtime. It started as one extra hour a day but soon went to two hours a day. The day before the deadline I worked from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. the next morning. A few days later, my boss asked me to work away from home for six months. I had had enough, and I decided to resign. When my boss asked me why, I explained it to him. He gave me an extra week of annual leave and told me to rest!

Psalm 23 describes God as a shepherd who “makes [us] lie down,” giving us rest so that we can enjoy God’s bountiful grace and mercy. God wants us to rest, to pause and focus on God. Even God paused to rest in the Creation story (see Gen. 2:2-3).

We need physical rest, and we need emotional rest. Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light” (Matt. 11:28-30). God, through Jesus, offers rest for our souls.

Today's Prayer
Dear Jesus, help us to find rest in you. Show us how and when to rest. Amen.
Sarah Young:
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TWFYT
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ODB

Still Fruitful for God

They will still bear fruit in old age. Psalm 92:14

READ Psalm 92:12-15

There’s an old folktale about a woman who carried water home every day from a river using two buckets at either end of a long pole—one bucket new and solid, the other much older and cracked. When the woman got home, the new bucket was still full, but the old bucket almost empty. The old bucket felt bad and apologized. The woman turned and pointed back down the road and asked the old bucket, “Do you see all those flowers, growing on your side of the road? Every day you water them, and my walk to and from the river is always filled with beauty.”

We live in a world that worships and rewards youth—the young and solid, unscarred and efficient. Yet the Bible clearly tells us of a righteous beauty that comes from the older and weaker, maybe even the cracked and leaky. “The righteous will flourish like a palm tree,” said the old songwriter, “they will grow like a cedar of Lebanon” (Psalm 92:12).

Granted, old is not always synonymous with wise, but the old contribute to our lives in ways the young can’t because they’ve lived a little longer, experienced a little more, and stand a little more rooted, flourishing in faith and trust in God. Such people “will still bear fruit in old age, they will stay fresh and green” (v. 14).

Older adults in our lives continue to bear beautiful fruit. Let’s take the time to see it and care for them.

By John Blase

REFLECT & PRAY

How can you serve the older adults on your path? What will you do today to see and appreciate them?

Father, please give me eyes to see those still bearing fruit in old age.

SCRIPTURE INSIGHT

January 19 - Still Fruitful: Ps. 92:12-15 (150/129)

The book of Psalms has been described as a “prayer book for God’s people as they wait for the arrival of the Messiah and the fulfillment of God's promises” (The Bible Project). The Psalms are divided into five books: Book One, Psalms 1-41; Book Two, Psalms 42-72; Book Three, Psalms 73-89; Book Four, Psalms 90-106; and Book Five, Psalms 107-150. Psalms 90-92 form the opening portion of Book Four.

Psalm 92 has a deep connection to the psalms that precede it. The Expositor’s Bible Commentary says: “Psalms 90-92 are united by development of concepts and repetition of vocabulary. These psalms lead the worshiper from a meditation on the transience of life (Psalm 90) and a call for wisdom (Psalm 91) to a climactic celebration of divine deliverance and protection (Psalm 92).”

Bill Crowder

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St. Matthew's EC Church

5th & Ridge Streets
P.O. Box 433
Emmaus, PA 18049
Telephone 610.965.5570
Email: stmattsecemmaus@gmail.com

ABOUT US

We are learning to live and love like Jesus. 

We are working on becoming who we were created to be and doing our custom made purposes well. 

We are part of the Evangelical Congregational Church http://www.eccenter.com/

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