Showing posts with label decorations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label decorations. Show all posts

Friday, December 10, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #10

Have you ever been spoken to by a bush? I know I sure haven't, but Moses had. And not just was he spoken to by a bush, but he was spoken to by GOD in a bush. That has definitely never happened to me before!

Symbol: Burning Bush
Scripture: Exodus 1:1-14; 3:1-12 (The Message)
Topic: Moses and the Burning Bush

1-5 These are the names of the Israelites who went to Egypt with Jacob, each bringing his family members: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah,

Issachar, Zebulun, and Benjamin,

Dan and Naphtali, Gad and Asher.

Seventy persons in all generated by Jacob's seed. Joseph was already in Egypt.

6-7 Then Joseph died, and all his brothers—that whole generation. But the children of Israel kept on reproducing. They were very prolific—a population explosion in their own right—and the land was filled with them.

"A New King . . . Who Didn't Know Joseph"
8-10 A new king came to power in Egypt who didn't know Joseph. He spoke to his people in alarm, "There are way too many of these Israelites for us to handle. We've got to do something: Let's devise a plan to contain them, lest if there's a war they should join our enemies, or just walk off and leave us."

11-14 So they organized them into work-gangs and put them to hard labor under gang-foremen. They built the storage cities Pithom and Rameses for Pharaoh. But the harder the Egyptians worked them the more children the Israelites had—children everywhere! The Egyptians got so they couldn't stand the Israelites and treated them worse than ever, crushing them with slave labor. They made them miserable with hard labor—making bricks and mortar and back-breaking work in the fields. They piled on the work, crushing them under the cruel workload.

Exodus 3

1-2 Moses was shepherding the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, the priest of Midian. He led the flock to the west end of the wilderness and came to the mountain of God, Horeb. The angel of Godappeared to him in flames of fire blazing out of the middle of a bush. He looked. The bush was blazing away but it didn't burn up.

3 Moses said, "What's going on here? I can't believe this! Amazing! Why doesn't the bush burn up?"

4 God saw that he had stopped to look. God called to him from out of the bush, "Moses! Moses!"

He said, "Yes? I'm right here!"

5 God said, "Don't come any closer. Remove your sandals from your feet. You're standing on holy ground."

6 Then he said, "I am the God of your father: The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob."

Moses hid his face, afraid to look at God.

7-8 God said, "I've taken a good, long look at the affliction of my people in Egypt. I've heard their cries for deliverance from their slave masters; I know all about their pain. And now I have come down to help them, pry them loose from the grip of Egypt, get them out of that country and bring them to a good land with wide-open spaces, a land lush with milk and honey, the land of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite.

9-10 "The Israelite cry for help has come to me, and I've seen for myself how cruelly they're being treated by the Egyptians. It's time for you to go back: I'm sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people, the People of Israel, out of Egypt."

11 Moses answered God, "But why me? What makes you think that I could ever go to Pharaoh and lead the children of Israel out of Egypt?"

12 "I'll be with you," God said. "And this will be the proof that I am the one who sent you: When you have brought my people out of Egypt, you will worship God right here at this very mountain."


Boy oh boy! If God even chooses to approach me this way I can only imagine how I will react. A lot of stammering, a lot of stuttering, and a lot of "huh?" Moses reacted in much the same way. He hid his face, afraid and ashamed that God had chosen to speak to him in such a bold manner. And then, once he knew what God wanted him to do, he was incredulous! What!? Me?! I can't even talk plain, how am I supposed to be able to talk to these people! There's no way! I think this is the same way we usually react when God tells us to do something. ME? Are you SERIOUS!? But here's the thing, God is always serious. He is never going to ask us to do something that he doesn't fully intend on us actually doing. Pray that God will give us obedience to do what he asks and the ability to say yes instead of standing there stuttering and acting like a goof ball. God has big plans for us, and HUGE things to tell us! Are we going to be willing to listen?

Thursday, December 09, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #9

The story of Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors has been told over and over and with many variations. What is it about this story that has kept audiences so interested for so many years? Is it the family betrayal? The common feeling of favoritism shared by so many people? Maybe it's the hope of the ultimate reward or the feeling of getting revenge. Either way, Joseph's story is one that can be related to by everyone.

Symbol: Colorful coat
Scripture: Genesis 37:3-36 (The Message)
Topic: Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors

-4 Israel loved Joseph more than any of his other sons because he was the child of his old age. And he made him an elaborately embroidered coat. When his brothers realized that their father loved him more than them, they grew to hate him—they wouldn't even speak to him.

5-7 Joseph had a dream. When he told it to his brothers, they hated him even more. He said, "Listen to this dream I had. We were all out in the field gathering bundles of wheat. All of a sudden my bundle stood straight up and your bundles circled around it and bowed down to mine."

8 His brothers said, "So! You're going to rule us? You're going to boss us around?" And they hated him more than ever because of his dreams and the way he talked.

9 He had another dream and told this one also to his brothers: "I dreamed another dream—the sun and moon and eleven stars bowed down to me!"

10-11 When he told it to his father and brothers, his father reprimanded him: "What's with all this dreaming? Am I and your mother and your brothers all supposed to bow down to you?" Now his brothers were really jealous; but his father brooded over the whole business.

12-13 His brothers had gone off to Shechem where they were pasturing their father's flocks. Israel said to Joseph, "Your brothers are with flocks in Shechem. Come, I want to send you to them."

Joseph said, "I'm ready."

14 He said, "Go and see how your brothers and the flocks are doing and bring me back a report." He sent him off from the valley of Hebron to Shechem.

15 A man met him as he was wandering through the fields and asked him, "What are you looking for?"

16 "I'm trying to find my brothers. Do you have any idea where they are grazing their flocks?"

17 The man said, "They've left here, but I overheard them say, 'Let's go to Dothan.'" So Joseph took off, tracked his brothers down, and found them in Dothan.

18-20 They spotted him off in the distance. By the time he got to them they had cooked up a plot to kill him. The brothers were saying, "Here comes that dreamer. Let's kill him and throw him into one of these old cisterns; we can say that a vicious animal ate him up. We'll see what his dreams amount to."

21-22 Reuben heard the brothers talking and intervened to save him, "We're not going to kill him. No murder. Go ahead and throw him in this cistern out here in the wild, but don't hurt him." Reuben planned to go back later and get him out and take him back to his father.

23-24 When Joseph reached his brothers, they ripped off the fancy coat he was wearing, grabbed him, and threw him into a cistern. The cistern was dry; there wasn't any water in it.

25-27 Then they sat down to eat their supper. Looking up, they saw a caravan of Ishmaelites on their way from Gilead, their camels loaded with spices, ointments, and perfumes to sell in Egypt. Judah said, "Brothers, what are we going to get out of killing our brother and concealing the evidence? Let's sell him to the Ishmaelites, but let's not kill him—he is, after all, our brother, our own flesh and blood." His brothers agreed.

28 By that time the Midianite traders were passing by. His brothers pulled Joseph out of the cistern and sold him for twenty pieces of silver to the Ishmaelites who took Joseph with them down to Egypt.

29-30 Later Reuben came back and went to the cistern—no Joseph! He ripped his clothes in despair. Beside himself, he went to his brothers. "The boy's gone! What am I going to do!"

31-32 They took Joseph's coat, butchered a goat, and dipped the coat in the blood. They took the fancy coat back to their father and said, "We found this. Look it over—do you think this is your son's coat?"

33 He recognized it at once. "My son's coat—a wild animal has eaten him. Joseph torn limb from limb!"

34-35 Jacob tore his clothes in grief, dressed in rough burlap, and mourned his son a long, long time. His sons and daughters tried to comfort him but he refused their comfort. "I'll go to the grave mourning my son." Oh, how his father wept for him.

36 In Egypt the Midianites sold Joseph to Potiphar, one of Pharaoh's officials, manager of his household affairs.


This is just the beginning of story. Not only does God's grace show through the protection of Joseph through his captivity and imprisonment but it is also never more visible than when Joseph's brothers return to him to ask for food during the famine. Joseph could have turned them down, had them imprisoned, or worse, even killed. He was now a pretty powerful man after all. He was right hand to the King. But what does he do? He feeds them, he provides for them, he forgives them! Pray that God can give us all a heart of forgiveness this Holiday season and all the days that follow. We never know what God has in store for us or how the end of the story might end. A simple "I forgive" might hold the key for all of God's blessings to rain down on us and knock us off our feet!





Jesse Tree Day #8

Every time I hear the words "Jacob's Ladder" a song always pops into my head. We've all heard it, but do we ever really grasp the meaning behind the biblical Jacob and his ladder?

Symbol: Ladder
Scripture: Genesis 28: 1-17 (The Message)
Topic: Jacob's Ladder

1-2 So Isaac called in Jacob and blessed him. Then he ordered him, "Don't take a Caananite wife. Leave at once. Go to Paddan Aram to the family of your mother's father, Bethuel. Get a wife for yourself from the daughters of your uncle Laban.

3-4 "And may The Strong God bless you and give you many, many children, a congregation of peoples; and pass on the blessing of Abraham to you and your descendants so that you will get this land in which you live, this land God gave Abraham."

5 So Isaac sent Jacob off. He went to Paddan Aram, to Laban son of Bethuel the Aramean, the brother of Rebekah who was the mother of Jacob and Esau.

6-9 Esau learned that Isaac had blessed Jacob and sent him to Paddan Aram to get a wife there, and while blessing him commanded, "Don't marry a Canaanite woman," and that Jacob had obeyed his parents and gone to Paddan Aram. When Esau realized how deeply his father Isaac disliked the Canaanite women, he went to Ishmael and married Mahalath the sister of Nebaioth and daughter of Ishmael, Abraham's son. This was in addition to the wives he already had.


10-12 Jacob left Beersheba and went to Haran. He came to a certain place and camped for the night since the sun had set. He took one of the stones there, set it under his head and lay down to sleep. And he dreamed: A stairway was set on the ground and it reached all the way to the sky; angels of God were going up and going down on it.

13-15 Then God was right before him, saying, "I am God, the God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac. I'm giving the ground on which you are sleeping to you and to your descendants. Your descendants will be as the dust of the Earth; they'll stretch from west to east and from north to south. All the families of the Earth will bless themselves in you and your descendants. Yes. I'll stay with you, I'll protect you wherever you go, and I'll bring you back to this very ground. I'll stick with you until I've done everything I promised you."

16-17 Jacob woke up from his sleep. He said, "God is in this place—truly. And I didn't even know it!" He was terrified. He whispered in awe, "Incredible. Wonderful. Holy. This is God's House. This is the Gate of Heaven."


Have you ever woke up from a dream praising God? I haven't, but I have also never had a dream as vivid as the one that Jacob had. I often think that it would be so much easier if we could have conversations with God in our dreams, but God is more mysterious than that. Yet here we see that exact thing taking place. God is revealing to Jacob bits and pieces of his future and Jacob is so overwhelmed that he wakes up worshipping God! Thank God today for taking the time to communicate with us in whatever way He chooses. Praise Him for being a reachable God, and not a distant one. Pray that we can learn to communicate with Him more and be more receptive to His voice.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #7


Here is that precious story of Abraham and Isaac that I mentioned here.

Symbol: Ram
Scripture: Genesis 22: 1-19 (The Message)
Topic: Abraham and Isaac

1 After all this, God tested Abraham. God said, "Abraham!"
"Yes?" answered Abraham. "I'm listening."

2 He said, "Take your dear son Isaac whom you love and go to the land of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains that I'll point out to you." 3-5 Abraham got up early in the morning and saddled his donkey. He took two of his young servants and his son Isaac. He had split wood for the burnt offering. He set out for the place God had directed him. On the third day he looked up and saw the place in the distance. Abraham told his two young servants, "Stay here with the donkey. The boy and I are going over there to worship; then we'll come back to you."

6 Abraham took the wood for the burnt offering and gave it to Isaac his son to carry. He carried the flint and the knife. The two of them went off together.

7 Isaac said to Abraham his father, "Father?"

"Yes, my son."

"We have flint and wood, but where's the sheep for the burnt offering?"

8 Abraham said, "Son, God will see to it that there's a sheep for the burnt offering." And they kept on walking together.

9-10 They arrived at the place to which God had directed him. Abraham built an altar. He laid out the wood. Then he tied up Isaac and laid him on the wood. Abraham reached out and took the knife to kill his son.

11 Just then an angel of God called to him out of Heaven, "Abraham! Abraham!"

"Yes, I'm listening."

12 "Don't lay a hand on that boy! Don't touch him! Now I know how fearlessly you fear God; you didn't hesitate to place your son, your dear son, on the altar for me."

13 Abraham looked up. He saw a ram caught by its horns in the thicket. Abraham took the ram and sacrificed it as a burnt offering instead of his son.

14 Abraham named that place God-Yireh (God-Sees-to-It). That's where we get the saying, "On the mountain of God, he sees to it."

15-18 The angel of God spoke from Heaven a second time to Abraham: "I swear—God's sure word!—because you have gone through with this, and have not refused to give me your son, your dear, dear son, I'll bless you—oh, how I'll bless you! And I'll make sure that your children flourish—like stars in the sky! like sand on the beaches! And your descendants will defeat their enemies. All nations on Earth will find themselves blessed through your descendants because you obeyed me."

19 Then Abraham went back to his young servants. They got things together and returned to Beersheba. Abraham settled down in Beersheba.


Abraham finally saw God's promise fulfilled. He had the son that he had waited for his entire life. What could be better. All of sudden he hears God's voice. What God? You couldn't possibly be asking me to do that? He's my only son! I'm too old to have another! Seriously God!

What would you do if God told you to take your only son and kill him. I can bet there would be only a handful at best that would even consider the idea. Yet here goes Abraham, up the mountain, building and altar, tying Isaac to the alter, raising the blade....WAIT! God steps in a does what He does best. Saves a life. Again we see where an obedient Christian is rewarded for doing what God asked him to do.
Sometimes we have trials put before us to test our own obedience to God. God doesn't intend to hurt us, He just wants to see how far we'll go so that we truly appreciate Him when He steps in and saves us from doing something horrible. Thank Him for these times in your life. Thank Him for trusting in us enough that we will be obedient to Him no matter what, and ask Him for the strength to do so.

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #6

Sodom and Gomorrah, two places wrecked by sin.

Symbol: A cloud of smoke
Scripture: Genesis 18 & 19 (The Message)
Topic: Sodom and Gomorrah

1-2 God appeared to Abraham at the Oaks of Mamre while he was sitting at the entrance of his tent. It was the hottest part of the day. He looked up and saw three men standing. He ran from his tent to greet them and bowed before them.

3-5 He said, "Master, if it please you, stop for a while with your servant. I'll get some water so you can wash your feet. Rest under this tree. I'll get some food to refresh you on your way, since your travels have brought you across my path."

They said, "Certainly. Go ahead."

6 Abraham hurried into the tent to Sarah. He said, "Hurry. Get three cups of our best flour; knead it and make bread."

7-8 Then Abraham ran to the cattle pen and picked out a nice plump calf and gave it to the servant who lost no time getting it ready. Then he got curds and milk, brought them with the calf that had been roasted, set the meal before the men, and stood there under the tree while they ate.

9 The men said to him, "Where is Sarah your wife?"

He said, "In the tent."

10 One of them said, "I'm coming back about this time next year. When I arrive, your wife Sarah will have a son." Sarah was listening at the tent opening, just behind the man.

11-12 Abraham and Sarah were old by this time, very old. Sarah was far past the age for having babies. Sarah laughed within herself, "An old woman like me? Get pregnant? With this old man of a husband?"

13-14 God said to Abraham, "Why did Sarah laugh saying, 'Me? Have a baby? An old woman like me?' Is anything too hard for God? I'll be back about this time next year and Sarah will have a baby."

15 Sarah lied. She said, "I didn't laugh," because she was afraid.

But he said, "Yes you did; you laughed."


16 When the men got up to leave, they set off for Sodom. Abraham walked with them to say good-bye.

17-19 Then God said, "Shall I keep back from Abraham what I'm about to do? Abraham is going to become a large and strong nation; all the nations of the world are going to find themselves blessed through him. Yes, I've settled on him as the one to train his children and future family to observe God's way of life, live kindly and generously and fairly, so that God can complete in Abraham what he promised him."

20-21 God continued, "The cries of the victims in Sodom and Gomorrah are deafening; the sin of those cities is immense. I'm going down to see for myself, see if what they're doing is as bad as it sounds. Then I'll know."

22 The men set out for Sodom, but Abraham stood in God's path, blocking his way.

23-25 Abraham confronted him, "Are you serious? Are you planning on getting rid of the good people right along with the bad? What if there are fifty decent people left in the city; will you lump the good with the bad and get rid of the lot? Wouldn't you spare the city for the sake of those fifty innocents? I can't believe you'd do that, kill off the good and the bad alike as if there were no difference between them. Doesn't the Judge of all the Earth judge with justice?"

26 God said, "If I find fifty decent people in the city of Sodom, I'll spare the place just for them."

27-28 Abraham came back, "Do I, a mere mortal made from a handful of dirt, dare open my mouth again to my Master? What if the fifty fall short by five—would you destroy the city because of those missing five?"

He said, "I won't destroy it if there are forty-five."

29 Abraham spoke up again, "What if you only find forty?"

"Neither will I destroy it if for forty."

30 He said, "Master, don't be irritated with me, but what if only thirty are found?"

"No, I won't do it if I find thirty."

31 He pushed on, "I know I'm trying your patience, Master, but how about for twenty?"

"I won't destroy it for twenty."

32 He wouldn't quit, "Don't get angry, Master—this is the last time. What if you only come up with ten?"

"For the sake of only ten, I won't destroy the city."

33 When God finished talking with Abraham, he left. And Abraham went home.

Chapter 19

1-2 The two angels arrived at Sodom in the evening. Lot was sitting at the city gate. He saw them and got up to welcome them, bowing before them and said, "Please, my friends, come to my house and stay the night. Wash up. You can rise early and be on your way refreshed."

They said, "No, we'll sleep in the street."

3 But he insisted, wouldn't take no for an answer; and they relented and went home with him. Lot fixed a hot meal for them and they ate.

4-5 Before they went to bed men from all over the city of Sodom, young and old, descended on the house from all sides and boxed them in. They yelled to Lot, "Where are the men who are staying with you for the night? Bring them out so we can have our sport with them!"

6-8 Lot went out, barring the door behind him, and said, "Brothers, please, don't be vile! Look, I have two daughters, virgins; let me bring them out; you can take your pleasure with them, but don't touch these men—they're my guests."

9 They said, "Get lost! You drop in from nowhere and now you're going to tell us how to run our lives. We'll treat you worse than them!" And they charged past Lot to break down the door.

10-11 But the two men reached out and pulled Lot inside the house, locking the door. Then they struck blind the men who were trying to break down the door, both leaders and followers, leaving them groping in the dark.

12-13 The two men said to Lot, "Do you have any other family here? Sons, daughters—anybody in the city? Get them out of here, and now! We're going to destroy this place. The outcries of victims here to God are deafening; we've been sent to blast this place into oblivion."

14 Lot went out and warned the fiancés of his daughters, "Evacuate this place; God is about to destroy this city!" But his daughters' would-be husbands treated it as a joke.

15 At break of day, the angels pushed Lot to get going, "Hurry. Get your wife and two daughters out of here before it's too late and you're caught in the punishment of the city."

16-17 Lot was dragging his feet. The men grabbed Lot's arm, and the arms of his wife and daughters—God was so merciful to them!—and dragged them to safety outside the city. When they had them outside, Lot was told, "Now run for your life! Don't look back! Don't stop anywhere on the plain—run for the hills or you'll be swept away."

18-20 But Lot protested, "No, masters, you can't mean it! I know that you've taken a liking to me and have done me an immense favor in saving my life, but I can't run for the mountains—who knows what terrible thing might happen to me in the mountains and leave me for dead. Look over there—that town is close enough to get to. It's a small town, hardly anything to it. Let me escape there and save my life—it's a mere wide place in the road."

21-22 "All right, Lot. If you insist. I'll let you have your way. And I won't stamp out the town you've spotted. But hurry up. Run for it! I can't do anything until you get there." That's why the town was called Zoar, that is, Smalltown.

23 The sun was high in the sky when Lot arrived at Zoar.

24-25 Then God rained brimstone and fire down on Sodom and Gomorrah— a river of lava from God out of the sky!—and destroyed these cities and the entire plain and everyone who lived in the cities and everything that grew from the ground.

26 But Lot's wife looked back and turned into a pillar of salt.

27-28 Abraham got up early the next morning and went to the place he had so recently stood with God. He looked out over Sodom and Gomorrah, surveying the whole plain. All he could see was smoke belching from the Earth, like smoke from a furnace.

29 And that's the story: When God destroyed the Cities of the Plain, he was mindful of Abraham and first got Lot out of there before he blasted those cities off the face of the Earth.

30 Lot left Zoar and went into the mountains to live with his two daughters; he was afraid to stay in Zoar. He lived in a cave with his daughters.

31-32 One day the older daughter said to the younger, "Our father is getting old and there's not a man left in the country by whom we can get pregnant. Let's get our father drunk with wine and lie with him. We'll get children through our father—it's our only chance to keep our family alive."

33-35 They got their father drunk with wine that very night. The older daughter went and lay with him. He was oblivious, knowing nothing of what she did. The next morning the older said to the younger, "Last night I slept with my father. Tonight, it's your turn. We'll get him drunk again and then you sleep with him. We'll both get a child through our father and keep our family alive." So that night they got their father drunk again and the younger went in and slept with him. Again he was oblivious, knowing nothing of what she did.

36-38 Both daughters became pregnant by their father, Lot. The older daughter had a son and named him Moab, the ancestor of the present-day Moabites. The younger daughter had a son and named him Ben-Ammi, the ancestor of the present-day Ammonites.


Sodom and Gomorrah sadly reminds me of the world we are living in today. We are so racked with sin and selfish behaviors that it's almost impossible to see God in anything we do. Pray that God sends someone to our country to warn us the way that Abraham tried to warn these two places. Pray that we will have the wisdom to turn back to God instead of continuing to run from Him.


Monday, December 06, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #5

One of the most precious stories in the Bible is the story of Abraham and Isaac up on the mount. Abraham is about to sacrifice this child that he prayed for so long and that God had promised to him. This is the topic for today's advent. God's promise to Abraham.

Symbol: Dark sky with stars
Scripture: Genesis 12: 1-7; 15:1-6 (The Message)
Topic: God's promise to Abraham

Abram and Sarai
1 God told Abram: "Leave your country, your family, and your father's home for a land that I will show you.

2-3 I'll make you a great nation
and bless you.
I'll make you famous;
you'll be a blessing.
I'll bless those who bless you;
those who curse you I'll curse.
All the families of the Earth
will be blessed through you."

4-6 So Abram left just as God said, and Lot left with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he left Haran. Abram took his wife Sarai and his nephew Lot with him, along with all the possessions and people they had gotten in Haran, and set out for the land of Canaan and arrived safe and sound.

Abram passed through the country as far as Shechem and the Oak of Moreh. At that time the Canaanites occupied the land.

7 God appeared to Abram and said, "I will give this land to your children." Abram built an altar at the place God had appeared to him.

1 After all these things, this word of God came to Abram in a vision: "Don't be afraid, Abram. I'm your shield. Your reward will be grand!"

2-3 Abram said, "God, Master, what use are your gifts as long as I'm childless and Eliezer of Damascus is going to inherit everything?" Abram continued, "See, you've given me no children, and now a mere house servant is going to get it all."

4 Then God's Message came: "Don't worry, he won't be your heir; a son from your body will be your heir."

5 Then he took him outside and said, "Look at the sky. Count the stars. Can you do it? Count your descendants! You're going to have a big family, Abram!"

6 And he believed! Believed God! God declared him "Set-Right-with-God."


After God promised to make Abraham famous and give him a great nation He promised Abraham what he really wanted...a son. All of Abrahams life he had longed for a child, and now in his old age he thought it would never be possible. But then God promised him that his descendants would be as vast as the stars in the sky. What a promise!

God can do huge things in our lives too! Thank God for what He has done, what He is doing, and what He is going to do!

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #4

The Tower of Babel. There's not a Bible story more interesting.

Symbol: Tall Tower
Scripture: Genesis 11:1-9
Topic: The Tower of Babel

"God Turned Their Language into 'Babble'"
1-2 At one time, the whole Earth spoke the same language. It so happened that as they moved out of the east, they came upon a plain in the land of Shinar and settled down.

3 They said to one another, "Come, let's make bricks and fire them well." They used brick for stone and tar for mortar.

4 Then they said, "Come, let's build ourselves a city and a tower that reaches Heaven. Let's make ourselves famous so we won't be scattered here and there across the Earth."

5 God came down to look over the city and the tower those people had built.

6-9 God took one look and said, "One people, one language; why, this is only a first step. No telling what they'll come up with next—they'll stop at nothing! Come, we'll go down and garble their speech so they won't understand each other." Then God scattered them from there all over the world. And they had to quit building the city. That's how it came to be called Babel, because there God turned their language into "babble." From there God scattered them all over the world.



We live in a world where we are surrounded by different cultures. At one time everyone spoke the same language. Everyone could communicate with each other. But then someone got the bright idea to try and outsmart God. The result is the chaotic world we live in today, full of mixed dialects, crazy languages, and lack of communication.

Thank God for giving us the gift of communication. Tell someone Merry Christmas or a simple hello. Never take for granted the gift we have to express ourselves to other people.

Saturday, December 04, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #3

This ranks up on the list as one of my favorite days in the Jesse Tree Advent. God's promises in our life and how we see them reflected through the flood!

Symbol: Rainbow
Scripture: Genesis 6:11-22; 7:8-17 (The Message)
Topic: The Flood

11-12 As far as God was concerned, the Earth had become a sewer; there was violence everywhere. God took one look and saw how bad it was, everyone corrupt and corrupting—life itself corrupt to the core.

13 God said to Noah, "It's all over. It's the end of the human race. The violence is everywhere; I'm making a clean sweep.

14-16 "Build yourself a ship from teakwood. Make rooms in it. Coat it with pitch inside and out. Make it 450 feet long, seventy-five feet wide, and forty-five feet high. Build a roof for it and put in a window eighteen inches from the top; put in a door on the side of the ship; and make three decks, lower, middle, and upper.

17 "I'm going to bring a flood on the Earth that will destroy everything alive under Heaven. Total destruction.

18-21 "But I'm going to establish a covenant with you: You'll board the ship, and your sons, your wife and your sons' wives will come on board with you. You are also to take two of each living creature, a male and a female, on board the ship, to preserve their lives with you: two of every species of bird, mammal, and reptile—two of everything so as to preserve their lives along with yours. Also get all the food you'll need and store it up for you and them."

22 Noah did everything God commanded him to do. (I love that verse!)

6-10 Noah was 600 years old when the floodwaters covered the Earth. Noah and his wife and sons and their wives boarded the ship to escape the flood. Clean and unclean animals, birds, and all the crawling creatures came in pairs to Noah and to the ship, male and female, just as God had commanded Noah. In seven days the floodwaters came.

11-12 It was the six-hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month that it happened: all the underground springs erupted and all the windows of Heaven were thrown open. Rain poured for forty days and forty nights.

13-16 That's the day Noah and his sons Shem, Ham, and Japheth, accompanied by his wife and his sons' wives, boarded the ship. And with them every kind of wild and domestic animal, right down to all the kinds of creatures that crawl and all kinds of birds and anything that flies. They came to Noah and to the ship in pairs—everything and anything that had the breath of life in it, male and female of every creature came just as God had commanded Noah. Then God shut the door behind him.

17-23 The flood continued forty days and the waters rose and lifted the ship high over the Earth. The waters kept rising, the flood deepened on the Earth, the ship floated on the surface. The flood got worse until all the highest mountains were covered—the high-water mark reached twenty feet above the crest of the mountains. Everything died. Anything that moved—dead. Birds, farm animals, wild animals, the entire teeming exuberance of life—dead. And all people—dead. Every living, breathing creature that lived on dry land died; he wiped out the whole works—people and animals, crawling creatures and flying birds, every last one of them, gone. Only Noah and his company on the ship lived.

A long time ago there lived a man named Noah. God told him to build an ark because He was going to flood the Earth. Noah thought He was crazy but he did as he was told and tried to convince everyone else to prepare for the flood. To make a long story short...Noah and his family lived and everyone else drowned. Can you imagine? Can you picture what is must have felt like to realize that you were the only living people left on the entire earth? It must have been horrible! But then came the day when the rain stopped, and a rainbow filled the sky. A sign of God's promise to never destroy the Earth with water again. A promise to Noah that He would be faithful to reward him for his obedience.

Today, thank God for all of the promises that He has placed in your life. Also, pray for strength that you might be able to do what God calls you to do. He might not be asking you to build an ark, but it might feel that big. Regardless of what it is, know that God promises great things to those who obey him. And His plans for you are always perfect!

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Jesse Tree Day #2

The second day of this Advent season focus on the fall of Adam and Eve

Symbol: Fruit Tree
Scripture: Genesis 2:4-13 (THE MESSAGE)
Topic: The Fall

2-4 By the seventh day
God had finished his work.
On the seventh day
he rested from all his work.
God blessed the seventh day.
He made it a Holy Day
Because on that day he rested from his work,
all the creating God had done.

This is the story of how it all started,
of Heaven and Earth when they were created.

Adam and Eve
5-7 At the time God made Earth and Heaven, before any grasses or shrubs had sprouted from the ground—God hadn't yet sent rain on Earth, nor was there anyone around to work the ground (the whole Earth was watered by underground springs)—God formed Man out of dirt from the ground and blew into his nostrils the breath of life. The Man came alive—a living soul!

8-9 Then God planted a garden in Eden, in the east. He put the Man he had just made in it. Godmade all kinds of trees grow from the ground, trees beautiful to look at and good to eat. The Tree-of-Life was in the middle of the garden, also the Tree-of-Knowledge-of-Good-and-Evil.

10-14 A river flows out of Eden to water the garden and from there divides into four rivers. The first is named Pishon; it flows through Havilah where there is gold. The gold of this land is good. The land is also known for a sweet-scented resin and the onyx stone. The second river is named Gihon; it flows through the land of Cush. The third river is named Hiddekel and flows east of Assyria. The fourth river is the Euphrates.


We all sin. That's one of the most incredible things about Salvation. We all fall short of the glory of God, but He still loves us and desire us to be His. Today, take time to thank God for forgiving you of your sins on a DAILY basis. Remember that just like Adam and Eve fell into temptation, so do we, and although there were consequences for their sin, God still loved them and forgave them. We can have that same forgiveness!

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

A Tree Named Jesse

Happy Holidays everyone!

It is the season of Advent, and I love all of the different advent calendars that I have seen around the blogosphere.

Here at the O'Banion house we have our own Advent tradition; a Jesse Tree.

You can read all about the origin of the Jesse tree here.

Even though we don't have any kids yet we still love taking a few minutes each evening to spend time in God's word and Praise Him for all of the blessings that He sends our way. It's a tradition that we look forward to carrying on when we do have kids some day.


My mom picked them up a few years ago at Cracker Barrel on sale. It works perfectly!


And these are the ornaments that I made. I picked and chose different scriptures until I found the ones I wanted to use and then I painted symbols representing those verses. I bought the wooden shapes at Hobby Lobby for just a couple of dollars and then drew on the pictures and painted them. I also got the elegant hooks at Hobby Lobby for just $1. I loved the way they turned out and they are really sturdy.




So every night during advent we do our nightly reading and hang the ornament on the tree. We have it in the kitchen/dining room area so we see it several times throughout the day. Throughout the season I will post our daily scripture references and devotion so that you can enjoy them yourselves. I am trying to create a pdf file that can be downloaded and printed off so you can use it if you like. You can read Jesse Tree Day #1 here.

Our first Advent Ornament for 2010!



Perhaps the biggest blessing of the season so far has been our new nephew Zalek Nyle! Isn't he a cutie! We are thanking God for such an incredibly cute blessing!



Here are a few of the sites that I have used the most when creating our Jesse Tree:

This website has FREE downloadable ornaments that you can print off and attach to hooks. They're super cute!

A cool website that includes the origin of the Jesse Tree and gives ideas on creating your own.

I will try to add more sights as I locate them!

If you decide to make your own Jesse Tree, PLEASE share them with me! I'd love to see how you incorporate this special tradition into your own traditions!

With Love!


Jesse Tree Day #1

Welcome to advent! We love this season at our house...warm blankets, a crackling fire in the fireplace, Christmas lights, and most importantly the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus! There is nothing like it. Even now, as I'm sitting here typing I am listening to my favorite Christmas Pandora station and singing along to Hark the Herald Angels Sing.

Each day during this advent season I am going to post that day's Jesse Tree Devotion and a picture of a the symbol that we use. If you are wondering "Just what is a Jesse Tree" check out my post here.

Day #1:
Symbol: The Earth
Scripture: Genesis 1:1-2 (The Message)
Topic of Devotion: Creation

1-2First this: God created the Heavens and Earth—all you see, all you don't see. Earth was a soup of nothingness, a bottomless emptiness, an inky blackness. God's Spirit brooded like a bird above the watery abyss.

God created everthing around us. Isn't it so amazing to look around and noticed all the tiny details that God perfected just for us to enjoy? Thank God today for taking the time to make us smile, and ask Him to give us the knowledge to take care of this great big planet that we call home!



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