Friday - February 3, 2023

Charlie C. Rose

SCRIPTURE


1 Corinthians 12. 4-11

There are different kinds of gifts. But it is the same Holy Spirit Who gives them. There are different kinds of work to be done for God...There are different ways of doing God’s work… The Holy Spirit works in each person in one way or another for the good of all. One person is given the gift of teaching words of wisdom. Another person is given the gift of teaching… These gifts are by the same Holy Spirit. One person receives the gift of faith. Another person receives the gifts of healing…One person is given the gift of doing powerful works. Another person is given the gift of speaking God’s Word. Another person is given the gift of telling the difference between the Holy Spirit and false spirits. Another person is given the gift of speaking in special sounds. Another person is given the gift of telling what these special sounds mean. But it is the same Holy Spirit, the Spirit of God, who does all these things. He gives to each person as He wants to give.


WORDS OF HOPE


Did you know there might be a gift in you that you don’t know you are giving? Today’s Scripture passage lets us know that there are no limits to what God has empowered us to do. This list of Gifts of the Spirit is both unique to its era and universal to ours. The original readers would have thought, “well, that about covers it.” The inclusion of saying and interpreting special sounds may sound foreign to us, because they are, but they were parts of the worship tradition of their century. In my belief system, the Gifts of the Spirit are not limited to just formal religious practices. The Gifts are inclusive of our whole lives, and we should be grateful God is using them every day in the ongoing process of creating who we are.


I have always been blessed to do the things in life that I want to do. My first job was at Six Flags Over Texas. I had been there the first time at age 9 and saw the Sid & Marty Krofft puppet show. I knew in a moment I wanted to do that, but I didn’t know how or if it would ever

happen. If that wasn’t enough inspiration within that little theme park, working there might be just as exciting. Sure enough, when I was in my teens, I did work there. This was like a gift from God to me. I worked in rides, shows, and costume characters. Years later, I became a co-owner in an art company that still produces videos, books, live productions, and just about every form of children’s edutainment imaginable.


A few years ago, our company was contracted to produce puppet shows both in the park and, even better, in the same theater that formerly housed Sid & Marty Krofft’s puppet shows. It was a full circle moment. However, it didn’t start there. I had always had a gift for creativity, art, and storytelling. I completely missed the boat in the music department. But you can’t have everything. The Holy Spirit does departmentalize what we can do best. So, grateful every day, I will continue designing with color; I draw and paint. I still enjoy puppetry and performing, thanks be to God.


What do you enjoy doing the most? Whatever it is, pursue it! The Holy Spirit has plans for you!


PRAYER


Spirit of God, thank you for the unique you have given each of us. May we use those gifts to honor your plans and your Divine assignments.


DEVOTION AUTHOR



Charlie C. Rose

Order of St. Francis and Saint Clare



Need More Inspiration? Read our Daily Devotions

By Weber Baker April 29, 2025
SACRED READING Lord, make me an instrument of your peace; Where there is hatred, let me sow love; Where there is injury, pardon; Where there is doubt, faith; Where there is despair, hope; Where there is darkness, light; And where there is sadness, joy. O Divine Master, Grant that I may not so much seek To be consoled, as to console; To be understood, as to understand; To be loved, as to love; For it is in giving that we receive, It is in pardoning that we are pardoned, And it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life. Amen. —Saint Francis of Assisi WORDS OF HOPE Recently I was given a card with this prayer on one side and a painting of St Francis on the other. I was already well aware of it, but the new card is a nice gift. Of all non-biblical verses this may be one of the most famous. It is read at 12 step programs; has been set to music as a church hymn, has been sung on Christian and secular albums, and even has been to Broadway in “Come from Away”. I noticed today is World Wish Day. It celebrates the first wish ever fulfilled by the Make a Wish Foundation. A young man with leukemia, who wished to be a police officer was granted that opportunity. But while looking at my prayer card gift, I realized that it is in fact a wish list. Look at the first line, “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace”; and from that point on there is a litany of the things that one would wish to be able to do. We often say that we “wish” we could be more like Jesus. We sometimes say we “wish“ we knew what to do to live a more Christ-like life. Saint Francis has given us the answer. But he knows that we need to do this with God‘s help. And so he begins by expressing the simple wish to become an instrument of God‘s peace. That is how one lives a more Christ-like life. PRAYER  Great Creator, echoing Saint Francis, make me an instrument of your peace. Set my mind such that I do not need to recall all of the things that Francis asked to be allowed; but install them in my heart so that they can become as natural as breathing. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Weber Baker Order of Saint Francis and Saint Clare
By Jonathon McClellan April 28, 2025
SCRIPTURE John 14. 27 Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. WORDS OF HOPE Ripples in a Small Pond Consider peace. Lao Tzu gave the formula for peace when he said, “If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in the cities, there must be peace between neighbors. If there is to be peace between neighbors, there must be peace in the home. If there is to be peace in the home, there must be peace in the heart.” The individual directly affects the world. When there is war in the heart, there is war in the world. Each individual has the power to affect this world positively or negatively, and either way, we have to live with the consequences. When a person has no values, the world will have less values, and in the end, our world will have no value. We are plagued with corrupt world leaders because it is us who are creating them. Unless we realize that we are all living in a world made smaller by our connectedness and that one pebble causes ripples in the whole of a small pond, then the world will never be at peace and the surface of the water will never be still. When you do not value life, all life, everything alive will be in danger from you. The gravity cannot be underestimated because your life and what you choose to do with it, matters. Believe that you can affect this world, change this world, and better this world. We are contagious creatures. Our love is just as contagious as our hate. The common denominator behind Lao Tzu’s formula was you and me. PRAYER Divine Spirit, As the world suffers from one plague after another, we realize that we are all connected. Help us to live with love towards all that You made. Give us the grace to love ourselves and be at peace. Bless You Great Spirit. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR  Jonathon McClellan Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Donald ( Luke) Day April 25, 2025
SCRIPTURE  Luke 24:13-34 That night at supper table the stranger took the loaf of bread, and he blessed it, broke it and gave it to each of them. Immediately, their eyes were opened to recognize him as their beloved Master Jesus! With that recognition, Jesus disappeared from in front of them. WORDS OF HOPE People celebrate Eastertide for many reasons. The ancient pagans celebrated this time of new birth for earth’s plants and animals. It marked a new beginning and refreshment for their lives after a long cold winter. Early Christians added to this tradition their remembrance of Jesus' resurrection and their promise of new and eternal life with him in heaven. That hope broke loose the chains of the old and opened new prospects for growth in their spiritual lives. In the little town where I grew up, Easter Sunday was such a time. Added to those thoughts of celebration was the possibility of a new suit and shoes to wear to church for my brother and me. For our mom it was a new hat and for our dad, it probably meant a leaner wallet to pay for all of it. The family would assemble at someone's house and a dinner with far too much food was always gorged down by happy celebrants. Easter Sunday was anticipated and celebrated with great joy. No one wanted to miss Easter. We are still in the Season of Eastertide. What does the Easter Season mean to you ? That's a really important question to ask oneself and get a good solid answer. Does its meaning seem to be a superficial celebration, or is it an opportunity to reflect on the hope and joy of relationship with God now and forever? Does it encourage you to plunge deeper into a spiritual journey with guidance of the Holy Spirit? Does it confirm and strengthen your desire to live a more vibrant life following the teachings of Jesus? Meditate about this for a few minutes before you begin today's activities. How will it change what you do and say around others? Will these thoughts improve your Christian witness to the world? PRAYER My God, I come before you in this moment of quiet. I want to be fully present to you so that you can speak to my soul and enlighten my mind. Motivate my hands and feet into ministry which honors you, and in all things that I do and all that I am, may you be glorified and manifested into this world. May your presence which is expressed through my life become a blessing to others. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Donald (Luke) Day Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Dr. Pat Saxon April 24, 2025
READING  “Betrayal by strangers is hard enough, but betrayal by those closest to you is a killer. It destroys trust, it robs the past, it deadens the heart.” Barbara Brown Taylor WORDS OF HOPE He’d been with Jesus for the long haul—for the healing of the blind and the feeding of the multitude. He saw him turn water into wine at the marriage at Cana, witnessed Lazarus wakened from the tomb, walked hundreds of dusty miles talking of the kindom. He was not a fringe member of the followers, but a trusted disciple, the manager of the money, the one who kept food on the table and provided for the poor (Taylor). And when the disciples gather for the Passover meal, Judas sits in the inner circle, his feet freshly washed by his servant-Lord. Jesus calls him out—though not by name: “One of you will betray me,” “one whom I have given this bread when I have dipped it in the dish” (John 13: 21, 25). As betrayal pierces his heart, Jesus stays at the table. He feeds Judas and stays at the table rather than casting him out from the fellowship. And even after Judas’ dark purpose sends him into the night to collude with those who would crucify Jesus, his Lord offers a new commandment: “Love one another as I have loved you.” And, oh, what an extraordinary love it proves to be. Taylor continues: “Judas is indispensable to our understanding of holy communion….His presence is our lasting reminder that this is a meal not only for the good, the right, the faithful among us, but also for the crooks and double-crossers, the spies and imposters. It will reveal us for who we are…and that knowledge may send us into the dark, dark night. But it may also allow us to stay put, clinging to the edge of the table for dear life if need be, or better yet, clinging to the presence of the Lord at the head of the table, whose faithfulness does not depend on ours and whose death-defying love knows no end.” PRAYER For all the times we betray others and ourselves, we thank you, O Christ, for your redemptive love. For all the times we cling to you for dear life, we thank you, O Christ, for your wondrous love. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Dr. Pat Saxon
By Kris Baker April 23, 2025
SCRIPTURE Luke 2:13-17 Now that same day two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem. They were talking with each other about everything that had happened. As they talked and discussed these things with each other, Jesus himself came up and walked along with them; but they were kept from recognizing him. He asked them, “What are you discussing together as you walk along?” WORDS OF HOPE In the last few days, we have experienced the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Christ. If we have been fully present to these days of Holy Week and Easter, we have encountered many emotions, with the faith that now we are each filled with resurrection joy and hope. Like those on the road to Emmaus we too are thinking and talking about everything that has just happened. I often wonder exactly what words the disciples used to talk about their firsthand experiences with the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus. Though I like to think that I have the words to express what is in my thoughts and on my heart, as I bask in the resurrection light, I find my own words inadequate to describe the journey I have just made—a journey from darkness to light, doubt to faith, despair to hope, and sadness to joy. As today marks both the birth and death dates of William Shakespeare (April 23, 1564-1616), it seems fitting to turn to poetry as a way to help digest and “discuss” what many of us may be feeling as we make our way through Easter Week. These are the words of Brazilian theologian Rubern Alves (1933-2014). What is Hope? What is hope? It is a presentiment that imagination is more real and reality less real than it looks. It is a hunch that the overwhelming brutality of facts that oppress and repress is not the last word. It is a suspicion that reality is more complex than realism wants us to believe and that the frontiers of the possible are not determined by the limits of the actual and that in a miraculous and unexpected way life is preparing the creative events which will open the way to freedom and resurrection.... The two, suffering and hope, live from each other. Suffering without hope produces resentment and despair, hope without suffering creates illusions, naiveté, and drunkenness.... Let us plant dates even though those who plant them will never eat them. We must live by the love of what we will never see. This is the secret discipline. It is a refusal to let the creative act be dissolved in immediate sense experience and a stubborn commitment to the future of our grandchildren. Such disciplined love is what has given prophets, revolutionaries and saints the courage to die for the future they envisaged. They make their own bodies the seed of their highest hope. Source: Hijos de Maoana (Tomorrow’s Children), Rubem Alves, Salamanca, Spain: Ediciones Sigueme, 1976. We each have a unique story of our journey with Christ. Each of our stories demands unique words. And, those words may change each time we experience the the Resurrection story. My hope for myself and for each of you is that during this Eastertide, we each take time in prayer and meditation to find our words, to write our stories on our hearts, and speak them out into the world as seeds of love. PRAYER Creator God, you are the author of my story. As I journey through these days, help me to discover the depths of your love and grace. Teach me to walk humbly in your footsteps, to live with purpose, and to carry your light and love into the world. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Kris Baker Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Charlie Rose April 23, 2025
SCRIPTURE  John 18. 20-21 “I have spoken openly to the world,” Jesus replied. “I always taught in synagogues or at the temple, where all the Jews come together. I said nothing in secret. Why question me? Ask those who heard me. Surely they know what I said.” ​WORDS OF HOPE ​Have you ever tried to force someone to tell you something before they were ready? On this First Tuesday of Eastertide, I think about the many questions various people would ask Jesus without understanding that his complete answer may have been so complex​,​ the meaning would be lost in translation. Jesus kept things simple​ in his confused and frightening world​. He instinctively knew what they would understand or not. ​It reminds me of the Jack Nicholson line from A Few Good Men in which he played a military Colonel confronting Lieutenant Tom Cruz, "You can't handle the truth!" ​ Jesus was ​the master of his own ​instinctive ​timing​; he knew what was appropriate; Do t​his today, Do that tomorrow.​ The bottom line ​​was for him to fulfill the promises of the bigger picture while creating a sense of freedom and understanding of their world, as he had come to see it.​ For those who manage groups of people or delegate information, ​with any luck, ​we follow a certain criterion for communication; from what is not enough information to too much information. ​Today's news is the prime example of how we must not be inundated with things that don't matter in the moment, but focus on the hope of tomorrow; the very essence of our faith. Things may look darkest before the dawn, but the sun is always shining, even on the cloudiest of days. As you think about our world in its darker days, remember we have faced greater challenges and bigger dangers. During the months of the Pandemic, we knew that the world would never be the same. This sounded bleak, yet we had been given an opportunity to tell the future story in its brightest outlook. We knew there would be loss and sacrifice, but together we forged a better future. Now, during Eastertide, we remember Jesus’ greatest Sacrifice, but we don’t have to wonder about the outcome. We can now handle the truth because we have been gifted with all the facts. The questions have been answered. Eastertide is here. PRAYER God of Resurrections, help us to be lovers of your truth and ambassadors of your hope. Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Charlie C. Rose Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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