Donna B. Comeaux

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A Broken Marriage

A Devotional¹

II Kings 22:14-20; 23:4-15, 19-20
II Chronicles 34:3-7, 22-28
(400 Years of History)
NIV Version of the Bible

JOSIAH
Introduction

Within the pages of II Kings and II Chronicles is a story of a rich child-king raised in an ungodly home.  He is not only an eyewitness to sin, he is also surrounded by an idolatrous nation.

When faced with becoming king at the tender age of eight years old, he had every right to suck his thumb, squat in a corner, and hide from those much older than he.  With his childish mind, he could have beheaded any number of servants who disagreed with his whimsical ideas.

Yet, in the eighth year of his reign, he sought God Almighty and discovered that he and his people had not been living according to God’s commands.  In his twelfth year, he began to make a change.  (II Chronicles 34:1-3)

It not only disturbed Josiah to discover he and Israel waddled in sin, he ripped his clothes when he heard that his people would be taken captive because of their adulterous behavior toward the Holy One.

When was the last time you considered the consequences of your sin?  It takes a humble person to admit wrong.  To spend time examining how far-reaching your sin can be is mind-boggling and may leave you in despair.

There are so many lessons embedded in the story of Josiah, that the only way I know how to tackle each one is to go through the story in chronological order as it is written.

In each line of this series, we will discover how closely related Josiah’s life is to our own.  We will make note of the many lessons learned from his life and from the life of his forefathers.  Together, we will discover that our past should not keep us from a better future.  Matter of fact, because of our past we should indeed become better people—a holy people; a people as intimately connected to God as a marriage.

This study, however, won’t mean much to you if you don’t read the scriptures noted above.  But if you’ll indulge in the reading, God will change how you look at His relationship with you.  For he is indeed a God who . . .

“. . . plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”  (Jeremiah 29:11)

 

Lesson One
JOSIAH

A Child Who Would Be King
II Kings 22:1-2

Reflection

As you go through your daily life, who have you influenced?

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I don’t know about you, but I’d be offended if my son recognized his grandmother as mother.  To me that would be a blantant disregard of my existence and I’d have a few harsh words to express my disdain for his lack of respect.  After all, I brought him into the world.  How dare he ignore me and regard my mother as his mother.  Humph!

That’s exactly how God described Josiah’s faithfulness.  Josiah was like his father, David.  Not like his father, Amon.  If you’ve read the books of II Kings and II Chronicles, you understand why.

King Amon, like many kings before and after him, infested the nation with evil.  There were signs of their sin everywhere.  Asherah poles.  Idol worshippers.  Human sacrifices.  You name it.  Israel wreaked with sin.  So much so that God promised to send them into captivity.

King Amon failed to see how his self-centeredness not only pulled him away from God, but it also destroyed his people.

Left unchecked, sin breeds sin.  If you’re not accountable to anyone, chances are you’re headed for disaster.  And what’s amazing about the disaster about to befall you is that it doesn’t feel disasterous at first.  You ease into it.  It feels comfortable for a time.  Along the way, you persuade others to follow you.  And if you didn’t persuade them verbally, then you’ve convinced them by your example.  If left alone too long, you can’t or won’t turn back.  And not only are you in danger of destruction, but those who follow you are also close to death.

Discovery

Our sin carries far more weight than we expect.

Coming from an ungodly home explains your past, but it doesn’t control your future.  Your past has taught you the wrongs of this life and what to avoid.  But more importantly, you have the freedom to make different choices.  No matter what your circumstances.

Inspiration

All of us want to impact the world in some profound way.  Maybe you want to write an inspirational book that turns the world on its heels.  Maybe you want to put an end to hunger.  Or maybe you want to become President of the United States and return governing to the people.  Whatever you set out to do, your impact will be felt along the way.  Perhaps your impact won’t be on the scale of a presidential candidate, or that of a pop rock star.  Your influence might come in small doses.  Like the time you spent two hours on the phone talking a stranger out of killing himself.  Or by bringing a woman who has come to church for the first time in months a bouquet of roses.  Or inviting a struggling mother of three to your home for dinner.  Or doling out food from your freezer to a family in need.  No matter how large or how small your impact, you will indeed leave behind a trail to be followed by others.

The question is this:  Will it be a godly trail?  Or will it be a trail of destruction?

Response

Make a list of ways you have influenced others today.

Prayer

Holy Father, please correct me and hold me accountable for all I do and say.  Please forgive me.  Wash me clean.  Dwell in me and use me as an instrument to spread your word.  Help me to recommit my life to you . . . to put no other gods before you.  That I remain one with you in body and in spirit.

PostScript:  We are the body of Christ.

“. . . The body is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body.  By his power God raised the Lord from the dead, and he will raise us from the dead also.  Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ himself?  Shall I then take the members of Christ and unite them with a prostitute?  Never!  Do you not know that he who unites himself with a prostitute is one with her in body?  For it is said, ‘The two will become one flesh.’ But he who unites himself with the Lord is one with him in spirit.  Flee from sexual immorality.  All other sins a man commits are outside his body, but he who sins sexually sins against his own body.  Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God?  You are not your own; you were bought at a price.  Therefore, honor God with your body.”  (I Corinthians 6:13-20)

—————

1Portions of this lesson come from my inspirational series entitled “Impact – A Series That Explores How We Affect Each Other.”  This series is expected to be published in 2016.  This, however, will be the only posting from my book.  Lesson 2 will not be posted here as suggested by the text.

December Devotional – The Good Shepherd

The Good Shepherd
The nocturnal evening was clear, cold, and quiet.  Except for tiny specks of twinkling light, nothing else disturbed the patent leathered sky.  Bleats filled the air as shepherds made their way to hillsides to begin their watch.  Just before darkness consumed the earth, shepherds inspected the herds one last time then resumed their position.  With a staff firmly placed in one hand, each shepherd wore a turban and a long robe, along with a scarf tucked close to their neck to shield from the cold.

Their only job:  guard and protect the sheep.

The life of a shepherd isn’t easy.  He must be alert, ready at all times to ward off the enemy.  And with certainty, he must place the sheep above himself.

Long before his birth, the Good Shepherd made careful preparation to protect his flock.  Through Abraham he promised a nation, not of Israelites, but of aliens, the children of promise(1).  As he carefully laid out his plan, he gave us a set of rules to live by so we would neither die before our appointed time, or give into temptation.  He warned us to worship him in spirit and in truth, not with the aid of objects we can see and touch.

If you’re not in the habit of studying biblical history, it may seem as though some events happened by chance, or that others had complete control.  But upon further examination and meditation on the scriptures, we find that the seemingly meaningless rule to impose a census by Caesar Augustus was all orchestrated by God to move Joseph and Mary from Nazareth in Galiee to Bethlehem where our savior was born.

For centuries, God had his people kill a sacrificial lamb, knowing full well that it was a foreshadow of what was to come.  When the true lamb arrived through the womb of a virgin, who were the first to hear of it?  The shepherds.  God didn’t choose the religious (Sadducees or Pharisees), or kings and statesmen.  He chose men who worked for a minimum wage.

From the beginning, God planned for Jesus to live so he might die.  Instead of sending him as an angel or as a full grown human being, he reduced Jesus Christ to that of a baby.  This lamb had to drink milk first before allowed to eat meat.  He lived among us and had his patience tested.  He endured ridicule, bullying, and slander.  He was called an imposter.  They talked behind his back and said he performed miracles because he was of Satan(2).  For forty days and nights, he wandered the wilderness hungry, listening to the evil one tempt him in every way.

Like the shepherds, Jesus Christ had options.  To stand ready to fight the enemy in order to protect his sheep, or cry out and be rescued by God, leaving his flock to fend for themselves.

Jesus Christ chose to live among a chaotic people.  Then he drank the bitter cup of death.

The closest I can come to that kind of love is the love I have for my children.  I’d do anything for them.  But can I?  I can’t rescue them from sin, though I want to.  I can’t forgive their sins and wash them clean, though I want to.  I can hold them.  Rock them. Sing them a song.  Read scriptures with them.  Pray endlessly for them.  But I can’t save them.

I’m not the Good Shepherd.

Sometimes when I reflect on the birth of Jesus Christ, I find that I get so caught up in the manger that I don’t see the tortuous ordeal our Lord and Savior lived through.  I’d be angry if someone tried to bait me into an argument like the Pharisees and Saducees did Jesus.  I’d definitely not spare my wrath when the disciples wanted to know who was going to be the greatest in the kingdom.  And to have fed the five thousand and the disciples turn around and not be able to heal the sick boy(3) after witnessing such a miracle, I’d be furious.

He specifically chose the twelve.  Lived with them day and night until he was arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane.  He revealed himself to them in ways he never shared with the world.  Such faithlessness had to weigh on him.  To come down to earth and show himself in the form of a man and witness such humanity had to cause him concern.

Then again, hadn’t Jesus witnessed such weakness since man’s fall from grace in the Garden of Eden?

We greive our Holy Father today with the same worldly way of thinking.  I, for one, constantly beat myself up for not reaching my goals, or consume myself with my inabilities rather than devoting myself to prayer for all that I need.

Many of us have the tendency to separate his birth from his death, compartmentalizing Jesus Christ in tiny Christmas wrappings and silly Easter bunnies then have the audacity to call it a Passover celebration.

God Almighty is Holy!  We can in no way contain him in pretty wrappings than we can restrain him to particular times of year.  God is forever.  God is here and now.  He’s not someone to be worshipped only on a festive holiday.  He’s not someone to be worshipped only when we decide we need him.  He’s not an insurance policy to be pulled out only in disastrous times.  HE IS forever.  Amen!

We don’t have the right to live frightened, doubtful lives.  Jesus Christ freed us with his death.  No matter how much I love my children, or my family, I could never give them that kind of freedom.

After examining the story of baby Jesus, I find that I can no longer look at Christmas as a day to celebrate the birth of our Lord.  I’m drawn to the life in his death.  Hidden beneath the downpour of blood and water is my life.  I’ve been made clean by his death and given hope through his resurrection.  The manger isn’t the beginning of Jesus Christ.  He has and always will be the Alpha and Omega.  Time can’t contain him.  Death can’t hold him.  Holidays can’t resurrect him.

I see how Jesus Christ puts up with my foolishness every single day.  How he endures my doubts, my fears, my carelessness, my struggles to worship him in spirit and in truth.  Every day I’m repenting.  And every moment of the day he is forgiving.

When you serve a God who loves you as deeply as he does, is it really possible to wait for a festive time of year to fall on your knees and worship him?  I can’t contain myself that long.  His love is too overwhelming.

How about you?  Can you wait?

Donna B. Comeaux
Freelance Writer, Poet, Novelist
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1 Romans 8:9-18 – “(8)That is, it is not the children of the flesh who are children of God, but the children of the promise are regarded as descendants. (9)For this is the word of promise: ‘AT THIS TIME I WILL COME, AND SARAH SHALL HAVE A SON.’ (10)And not only this, but there was Rebekah also, when she had conceived twins by one man, our father Isaac; (11)for though the twins were not yet born and had not done anything good or bad, so that God’s purpose according to His choice would stand, not because of works but because of Him who calls, (12)it was said to her, ‘THE OLDER WILL SERVE THE YOUNGER.’ (13)Just as it is written, ‘JACOB I LOVED, BUT ESAU I HATED.’ (14)What shall we say then? There is no injustice with God, is there? May it never be! (15)For He says to Moses, ‘I WILL HAVE MERCY ON WHOM I HAVE MERCY, AND I WILL HAVE COMPASSION ON WHOM I HAVE COMPASSION.’ (16)So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God who has mercy. (17)For the Scripture says to Pharaoh, ‘FOR THIS VERY PURPOSE I RAISED YOU UP, TO DEMONSTRATE MY POWER IN YOU, AND THAT MY NAME MIGHT BE PROCLAIMED THROUGHOUT THE WHOLE EARTH.’ (18)So then He has mercy on whom He desires, and He hardens whom He desires.”

2 Matthew 12:22-28 – Jesus and Beelzebub – The Pharisees Rebuked – “(22)Then a demon-possessed man who was blind and mute was brought to Jesus, and He healed him, so that the mute man spoke and saw. (23)All the crowds were amazed, and were saying, ‘This man cannot be the Son of David, can he?’ (24)But when the Pharisees heard this, they said, ‘This man casts out demons only by Beelzebul the ruler of the demons.’ (25)And knowing their thoughts Jesus said to them, ‘Any kingdom divided against itself is laid waste; and any city or house divided against itself will not stand.’ (26)’If Satan casts out Satan, he is divided against himself; how then will his kingdom stand?’ (27)’If I by Beelzebul cast out demons, by whom do your sons cast them out? For this reason they will be your judges.’ (28)’But if I cast out demons by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God has come upon you.’ (29)’Or how can anyone enter the strong man’s house and carry off his property, unless he first binds the strong man? And then he will plunder his house.'”

3 Matthew 17:18-21 – Healing of Boy with a demon – “(18)And Jesus rebuked him, and the demon came out of him, and the boy was cured at once. (19)Then the disciples came to Jesus privately and said, ‘Why could we not drive it out?’ (20)And He said to them, ‘Because of the littleness of your faith; for truly I say to you, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move; and nothing will be impossible to you.’ (21)[‘But this kind does not go out except by prayer and fasting.’]”

October Devotional – Home

I never visited often and if it hadn’t been for my grandmother’s funeral, I’m not sure I’d go back.

I remember the rush to buy something special.  I hadn’t bought new shoes or shopped for a new dress in years.  What would I pack?  Could I pack everything I needed in two small bags.  Maybe I just needed one.

Once inside the department stores, the adrenaline rush I experienced took me by surprise.  I’d entered the store thinking my emotions were intact.  I’d picked that particular day with care.  But no matter how much care I exercised, it didn’t do a bit of good.  It was hard to make decisions.  Should I buy a jacket and match it with a skirt I had in my closet?  Or should I buy a suit?  The shoes cost $89.99.  Should I buy them?  Do I leave in the morning?  In the afternoon?  Maybe mid-day.

Three-thirty on a late Thursday afternoon, my tires rolled along asphalt down Highway 75.  Hours later I merged onto I-10 and drove to Houston as if I’d done it a thousand times.  Littered all along the highway from Ennis, Texas to the Gulf of Mexico was one oil refinery after another.  Sulphur filled the air.  The refineries lit up the dark sky and guided me to my hometown like a beacon in the night.  The giant Sam Houston stature always served as my landmark.  It signified I was close to a place I’d spent years trying to forget.

Little did I know I’d never forget the places I ate, the schools I attended, the bullying I experienced, or the love of my grandparents.

When the time came, I picked up my two sons from the Houston airport the day before the funeral.  Our hearts leaped for joy when we saw each other.  We held each other tight, as though we hadn’t seen each other in years.  The circumstances which brought us together created an unbreakable bond, a soothing peace, an undisturbed oneness.

My sons’ support at a time like this was irreplaceable.  They understood everything I didn’t say.  They never offered empty words, or pressed me to feel differently about the magnitude of my loss.  We comforted each other with love and patience and constant prayers.

I felt enormous relief when my children took over the driving duties.  They drove to the coastline as if they had done it a thousand times, as if they had grown up in this part of the country.  In fact, they’d only visited my hometown a couple of times.  But they remembered every story about every empty block now filled with tall grass, broken cement, and rutted tire marks.

As always, we visited their ninety-year-old great-aunt on their father’s side, grabbed a quick bite to eat, and headed to my grandparents’ house.

The family sold the house five or six years ago, but it always stood quietly in its proper place.  It’s a long narrow house painted white with medium gray trim with a silver-painted chainlink fence surrounding it.  One side of the double-gate sagged.  The front gate squealed.  The grass had perfectly straight edges and an evenly cut lawn, ankle-deep.

My grandparents sometimes sat on the front porch after a long day of yard work.  Their kids and grandkids, including me, ran around the house playing and yelling and teasing one another into submission.  The porch was a place where you watched all the comings and goings of neighbors, strangers, and the “strangest.”  Some folks waved, keeping their stride in the direction of wherever they were headed.  Others stopped, leaned on the fence, and talk endlessly, spilling a tidbit of gossip here and there.  Some entered the squeaky gate and sat awhile, laughing over all their “remember whens,” before finally drinking the last of their lemonade or iced tea or koolaid and moving on.

It’s my recollection Granddaddy took that old porch out twice and built it up again, painting it in that same medium, steel Army-gray color.  I meticulously watched him each time he sprayed his peach trees, always warning us to stay away so we wouldn’t have an allergic reaction to the pesticide.

I never could figure out how Granddaddy cut his hedges so straight.  The tool he used looked like giant scissors to my young eyes.  He’d snip and cut and pull and tug on those hedges until every leaf and branch was in its proper place.  He even manicured the ditch to perfection. All my life I never saw a house on the block that was as well manicured as my grandparents’ house.

On previous visits, long after Granddaddy passed away, we’d stand on the sidewalk and I’d point to various windows and tell my children what we did in each room.  To the far left was my grandparents’ bedroom.  The front door opened to a combined living room and bedroom where we slept as children.  To the right of the combined living room and bedroom was the kitchen.  Farther right of it were rooms my grandmother sometimes rented to young famililes.  These rooms included a living room, a second bedroom, along with a small kitchen and shared bath.

Trying to come to peace with my grandmother’s death, I couldn’t wait to see the house.  After our late lunch, an hour before the viewing, we headed for my grandparents’ house so we’d go through the rituals of reliving my childhood.  In my mind, I smelled the moth balls Grandmother used in her closets.  I saw a back room filled with clothes she refused to give away.

Though I knew it wasn’t possible, I wanted to go inside and experience that dip in the floor right before you entered the kitchen.  I also wanted to make a beeline for a second back room so I’d dig through thousands of black and white photographs and, in my mind, plead with Grandmother to let me take some of them home with me.  Or perhaps I’d gawk at the whatnots on walls, or relieve my grandmother of the many antiques she had in the house.

Of course, none of that was possible.  Someone else owned the house now.

When we finally rounded the corner, we sat unmoved, the car motor still running. No one exhaled.  No one said a word.  We dare not look at each other.  It was as if someone had reached deep inside our souls and sucked the air right out of us.  I wanted to cry, but couldn’t.  I wanted to express how I felt, but no words, no descriptions, no language adequately expressed my devastation.

The house was gone!

Our silence continued for what seemed like an eternity.  I finally heard the car doors open and I watched as my two sons got out.  As they approached the house, I surprisingly noticed the only thing left was the fence.  It surrounded the lot in its truest form.  The double-gate still sagged; its paint barely chipped.  The front gate squealed, as it had done many years before, as my children opened and went through it. For the longest time, I couldn’t move.  I dare not think.  My hands shook.  My insides hopped around like mosquitoes looking for that perfect spot to bite and suck my blood.

When I finally spoke, all I kept asking was, “What happened?” I’d grown up in that house.  Love poured from our grandparents in that house.  I learned how to sew in one of its rooms; learned to cook; played 45s in the living room and panomized the latest love songs until I hit every single note flawlessly.

When we mustered enough courage, we asked my grandmother’s best friend what happened.

“The house burned,” her son said.  “Owner set it afire on purpose because he couldn’t get his asking price for it.”

I was sick.  I couldn’t stand.  The man who bought my grandparents’ house had no idea what he had done.  He destroyed the last connection to my past.  I remember thinking, “How could he?”

Needless to say, this made my grief all the more unbearable.

Long after my grandmother’s funeral, the house became the central theme of my existence.  I thought about it all the time.  Then one day God helped me surrender.  He took me on a journey and helped me recall Solomon’s wisdom.

“The words of the Teacher, son of David, king in Jerusalem: 2 “Meaningless! Meaningless!” says the Teacher. “Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless.” 3 What does man gain from all his labor at which he toils under the sun? 4 Generations come and generations go, but the earth remains forever. 5 The sun rises and the sun sets, and hurries back to where it rises. 6 The wind blows to the south and turns to the north; round and round it goes, 7 All streams flow into the sea, yet the sea is never full. To the place the streams come from, there they return again. 8 All things are wearisome, more than one can say. The eye never has enough of seeing, nor the ear its fill of hearing. 9 What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun. 10 Is there anything of which one can say, “Look! This is something new”? It was here already, long ago; it was here before our time. 11 There is no remembrance of men of old, and even those who are yet to come will not be remembered by those who follow.”  (Ecclesiates 1:1-11)

For many weeks, I cried as I thought about that vacant lot.  I felt as though someone had taken a hammer and cracked my foundation.  My grandmother was the last one in the family to go.  No elders are left.  She validated me.  Whenever I’d talked to her, she took me back in time and rekindled my past, gave me hope for the future.

The lot upon which that narrow white house stood is empty now.  Nothing is left.  Creaks and noises and smells can’t be replicated, except in my mind.  My point of reference has gone up in smoke.  Why?  Because of someone else’s greed.

But there’s another reason my grandparents’ house is gone.  God shook my earthly tabernacle so I’d be reminded that above me is my permanent dwelling place.  Heaven has more colors than the rainbow.  Its floors, and God’s throne, are made of sapphire.  (Exodus 24:10; Ezekiel 1:26)  Every precious stone created by God will surround his kingdom.  (Revelations 21:19)  It has countless rooms.  We won’t concern ourselves with walls, tight spaces, or if we left our real estate in proper hands.

God reminded me that the only thing that matters in this life is my service to him.  Take Ecclesiates 1:1-11 to heart.  People come and go.  Houses are bought and sold.  No matter how much care you give to your earthly real estate, it will eventually be resold and have new owners.  After we die, we’ll only be remembered by the present generation, if at all.  People will go about their lives as they have since the beginning of time.

But God’s word lives forever!  Amen!

My children took it upon themselves to shovel dirt in a box so I’d plant a flower or shrub as a keepsake.  No one prodded them to do this.  My heart screamed for joy over their compassion.  In my mind, I can still see the two of them conspiring meticulously, dropping me off, then head to my grandparents’ vacant lot to dig up a small portion of the land.

It’s a sobering thought to know all that time spent clinging to my grandparents’ house was meaningless.  My times there were wonderful.  I’ll forever cherish the memories, forever remember their love.  But I have come to understand that as precious as that house was and is to me, it’s just not my . . .

Home.

Donna B. Comeaux
Freelance Writer, Poet, Novelist

[Please visit http://www.rubyforwomen.com to read Donna’s latest short story entitled “Selfish Ambition.” A new chapter is posted every Thursday.]

You’ll Get Through This by Max Lucado

God is amazing! I read an article by Max Lucado the last week of August and had no earthly idea how it would help me through what hit me barely two weeks later. If you’ve experienced losing someone, please go to this website and listen to how eloquent and practical Max Lucado lays out how we should handle death. What an encourager Max Lucado is and has been over the years. Thanks, Max!

I’m still hurting, but only God can ease my pain.  At the end of the day, God knows what he is doing. He has everything under control. Amazing how he works: taking life, giving life, sustaining life. To God be the glory! Amen!

The article was orginally published in the Summer 2014 Issue of Just Between Us Magazine. It can be found here: http://www.issuu.com/shelly50/docs/jbusummer14 and is entitled “You’ll Get Through This.”

God bless!