Which Gate to Choose?

    “Enter through the narrow gate, because the gate is wide and the way is spacious that leads to destruction, and there are many who enter through it. But the gate is narrow and the way is difficult that leads to life, and there are few who find it.”

As I read these verses from Matthew 7:13-14, it made me realise that every person is confronted with the gates of choices in their life. One gate is wide and the way looks easy with crowds of people going along in a downward direction, while the other gate is small, with a narrow path beyond leading upwards and not many people going that way. But what a difference the end result is! One leads to destruction and the other one leads to life.

Our Lord tells people to seek to enter the narrow gate leading to life but this gate is too narrow to allow any baggage through. There is no room for the suitcase of possessions or the bag of good works. There is not even space to squeeze through with the backpack of pride, to say nothing of towing in the trolley of sinful ways and habits! All these have to be left on the outside of the narrow gate….there is only room for the under clothing of contrition and a broken spirit with confession of our need. All our good deeds and self righteousnesses are nothing more than filthy rags in God’s sight!

Once through the gate, the Lord provides clothes of righteousness and a robe of salvation. He gives us new songs to sing, and peace of mind with a light and joyful heart to travel up the path of life. When trials and difficulties come (and they will) He is there to help and to take us by the hand, telling us that His grace is more than enough to see us through. There really is no option as to which choice is the better one of the two….let’s make sure we all find this way that leads to unending life and peace with the Maker of the Universe.

Audrey’s Story

This story shows how God works in different ways to bring people to Him.  Audrey’s story shows a different angle of God’s workings in a human heart to what we might be used to.

Audrey was a  middle aged home help and addicted to smoking, coffee and T.V. when she wasn’t working.   She never gave God  a thought.  She began  working for an elderly God-fearing  lady. This lady never spoke to Audrey about her faith, but Audrey saw the Bible beside her bed, and noticed  her gentle loving manner.

One day she gave Audrey a CD  of  testimony to take home and listen to. As usual that evening, Audrey immediately turned the T.V. on, made her coffee and lit a cigarette. Before going to bed, she decided to listen to the CD, and heard the speaker tell how God had given him the strength to give up smoking.

She thought, “If God did that for him, perhaps He could do it for me too!”

Waking up the next morning, she didn’t think of her cigarettes once. After a while, she thought in wonderment, “I haven’t had a smoke yet!” and stretched her hand out for the packet.

While taking the first breath of smoke, she found it was utterly horrid to her, and she  threw it down. Twice more she tried to smoke with the same result.  After this, she never smoked another cigarette. She took the CD  back, not telling the lady of her experience.

Shortly afterwards, her daughter arrived back from Australia and stayed with her. Usually they wouldn’t be together  for five minutes without verbally sparring with each other. But this time, Audrey held her tongue when her daughter baited her.

“What’s happened to you Mum?” she asked “You’re different!”

Without even stopping to think, Audrey replied, “It’s the love of Jesus”.

With that confession of the name of Jesus, the light dawned on her soul, and Audrey was never the same again.  She found she had a totally different outlook on life. Now she wanted to be with other Christians, and to go to church services….something she had never done before. She wanted to learn what was in the Bible, and found it was a really interesting book to read….she just couldn’t put it down.

Audrey had heard vaguely about Moses….after all they had made a film about the story of crossing the Red Sea, but she had no idea what led up to it. Of course she had heard something about a boy called David killing a giant, but she didn’t have a clue exactly what happened. Then there was the story of the whale swallowing Jonah, but she had thought that no-one with any sense would take any notice of a story like that! But now she read in the New Testament that Jesus had said it really had happened.

Every page she read opened her understanding further. She couldn’t get enough of it. As she read the book of Psalms, she found to her amazement that David was just like we are because sometimes he was terribly happy and other times he was right down in the dumps.

She found that Peter was always opening his mouth and putting his foot in it. He never knew when to shut up! Then there was that young man called Saul who hated the early Christians so much that he was dragging them off to prison and if he could,  he would have their heads chopped off.

Yet one day God called out to him from the sky, and he fell to the ground. When he got up he found he  was blind. He knew that it was Jesus Himself who had called out to him. Then there was the man who went to him and touched his eyes, making him see again. What a difference it made to  him once  he believed in Jesus and began to preach about him!

Audrey knew that she was like each of those people she was reading about, and she knew that what God had done for them, He would do for her. As time went by, she realised that her old life held no more appeal for her…her new life gave her all she had been looking for. She now had new ideals and aims, new friends and new attitudes. Her old life had gone now that she knew Jesus Christ as her own personal friend and Saviour. She found she could talk to Him each day and tell Him all her problems, and He gave her the strength to do the right thing.

“What are you Going to do About It?”

                        And the LORD said, My spirit shall not always strive with man.   (Genesis 6:3a)

The men were working together sweating in the hot summer sun. They were carefully edging the small cottage that was on the trailer into the position where it was to be unloaded. Peter was helping the other two (Keith and Des) to move this cottage onto Des’ property up the gully. They had left early that morning and had towed the trailer with the tractor several miles from where they had picked it up.

Des and Keith had known Peter for quite some time now, and had struck up a friendship with him and his family. As time went by they asked him if he would like to go to the little church services where they were both going. He was happy to do this, and their families all had a good interaction with each other. There would be shared meals together and BBQs at one or the other’s homes.

The children went to Bible camps together, and Peter’s wife went too as a kitchen helper. There seemed to be complete harmony between Peter and the other Christians he was fellowshipping with as they all got on so well together. Anyone looking on would have thought that Peter was indeed one of the group.

Des continued to take the family to the Gospel messages Sunday by Sunday, but Peter never made any commitment verbally.  Keith and one or two others met with Des regularly together on a Monday night for prayer for different matters they were concerned about, and Peter was high on their list at these times.

This particular weekend, there had been a preacher who had given a strong Gospel sermon, and Keith and Des were talking it over as they worked.

“What did you think of the message last night Peter?” Des asked.

“Pretty hard hitting wasn’t it?” was his non-committal reply.

“Did you understand it all?” Keith asked.

Peter straightened up from his job, “Yes, I understood it alright, I could see what he was getting at quite plainly”.

“Well, what are you going to do about it?” Keith persisted.

There silence for a moment, and then Peter said flatly, “Nothing!”

To say that Des and Keith were flabbergasted would be an understatement. What more could they say? Here was a man who had heard and clearly understood the call of God on his life and was refusing it point-blank.

They got on with their job in near silence now, and finished getting the cottage into place before leaving the site.

The next time Keith saw Des, he asked if he had seen Peter lately.

“Yes, I have”, said Des flatly, “and his language was shocking!”

“What do you mean?” asked Keith.

“Well, he was swearing terribly, and even using the Lord’s name in vain”, said Des sadly, “And he’s never done that since he started coming to the Sunday services over twelve months ago. It almost seems that the Lord hasn’t answered our prayers for him”.

“Oh, yes He has”, said Keith definitely, “Our prayer was the Lord would speak to him and bring him to the point of salvation, and that was the point he had reached last time I saw him. But the choice was his, and he has made the wrong one! God never forces anyone to do the right thing. You must remember that everyone has free choice in these things.”

“Yes, I guess you’re right”, said Des, “But it’s sad to see it happen right under your nose, and to such a nice guy as Peter too. I had such high hopes for him!”

From that time on, Peter never went near a church again. God had indeed spoken to him for the last time that Sunday evening, and he had refused once too often. Be sure that you don’t make this same mistake, as the results will last with you throughout eternity, and eternity is a long, long time to be full of regrets and memories of what might have been.

“I Wish I Hadn’t!”

The old lady and her daughter sat in my study looking a little uncertain.

“What can you tell me about my mother’s family?” the older lady asked, “I know a bit but not back to my grandparents or where they came from”.

It seemed a strange request, but as it happened, I had done quite a bit of research on the background of this family as we shared a common ancestor, and had written a book on the early beginnings of this district in northern New Zealand. We’ll call this lady Ellie for the sake of this story, and her birth mother Essie.

Ellie had been adopted by her parents  from birth, but never knew this until she was an adult. As it happened, her adoptive father was actually her birth father…his wife had never been able to have children. When he heard that the girl he had been seeing had become pregnant, he was convinced the child was his. Knowing how much his wife longed for a baby, he told her what had happened and put the proposition of adopting this baby to her. She was happy to do this….she said the baby was half theirs anyway!

So Ellie was adopted by this couple and brought up as their own child. Living as they did in a small country district where everyone knew everyone else, it was inevitable that the other children at school knew that she was different. Ellie wasn’t even sure what being adopted meant, all she knew was that she was different to the other children, and she had to endure many taunts in the playground because of it. Not only that, she was an only child in a day where large families were the norm, and this too made her stand out as “different” to the  other children at school.

When Ellie grew up, she left the district to get work in the same city she had been born in, and here she met and married her husband. They eventually had five daughters and one son. As a young mother, she missed her real mother so much that she made up her mind to find her. She eventually tracked Essie down. She too, had married and had other children, but had never told any of them about her “disgraceful” youth. Neither her husband, nor her other children knew of the existence of Ellie.

So when she knocked on their door and Essie opened it, Ellie told her who she was, and that Essie was her birth mother. Essie was so horrified at the ramifications of this spectre from the past, that she slammed the door shut in Ellie’s face, and refused to acknowledge her. All Ellie’s dreams of a tender reunion with her real mother dissolved in a moment, and the realisation that she was nothing more than an unwelcome embarrassment to her overcame her as she stumbled away down the path and back to her home. When she got there, she tore the only photo she had of Essie into small pieces, and threw them into the rubbish bin.  She felt that life indeed had dealt her a raw deal, and the seeds of bitterness and resentment grew and festered in her mind.

Many years passed by, and Ellie’s daughters grew up and married themselves. Her youngest daughter married and went off to the States to live, and her brother followed her over there and never came back to New Zealand. Ellie felt as though they had deserted her, and it was just one more nail in her coffin of resentment and feeling of rejection.

Her eldest daughter married and moved right away from the city, and then one of the other two remaining girls was diagnosed as having cancer. She didn’t survive this, and once more Ellie felt bereft. Then to her horror, she heard that her eldest daughter who lived many miles away up north and who was expecting her first baby, had also been diagnosed with cancer. So Ellie lost this daughter as well  and although the baby survived and was brought up by his father and new wife, Ellie never saw anything of him. She often thought sadly of how he was her last link with her eldest daughter.

More years passed by. One day there was a knock at Ellie’s door. She opened it to see an old lady standing there (it was Essie).

“I’ve come to see you before I die”, she quavered.

Ellie was so angry…who does she think she is, after the way she  treated me? she thought. She never said a word, but turned on her heel slamming the door in her mother’s face,  and then watched her go down the path.

She heard a short while later that her mother had died, and there had never been any reconciliation between them.

Now here she was sitting before me wanting to know more about her real family. I was able to fill her in on her real mother’s side, who they were and where they fitted into the jigsaw of genealogy.

I had seen this lady periodically coming to the ladies outreach meetings at our church without knowing anything of her background. She had always looked so sad and miserable. Although there were many times when the topic of God’s love and forgiveness were spoken of, she never approached anyone to ask how this might help her even though the invitation to do so was frequently given.

As she told her sad story, it impressed itself on me what a difference it would have made to her if she had only done this! As far as I knew, she never did forgive her mother, and died still in her sadness and regrets of what might have been.

I include this story here as a warning of what bitterness and resentment can do to a person when it is not dealt with promptly. It is only natural to feel these things in the face of disappointments and hurts, but never let it stay and fester. The Bible tells us that these things have roots, and we are to get rid of them before they grow…

         Watch carefully in case any person fails to show the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springs up and troubles you.    (Hebrews 12:15)

My Own Testimony…How I became a Christian….

GJ

         I was brought up in a devout, very strict Christian  home, where the Bible was read aloud twice every day to us children. I was brought up knowing that there was a certain life after death in either of two places….heaven or hell! I also knew that I was a wicked little sinner, because I knew what a scheming, disobedient  and stubborn little rascal I was in my soul. I was eight years old when I was convicted about doing something about my sin.

When I look at my eight year old great-grandchildren, I wonder just how much a small child is capable of understanding such great matters of eternal life and death. I have to remind myself that I was only eight when these things became a great burden to me.

I  knew  that I  had  to confess my sin  if  I wanted to go to  heaven. But  I  had  the greatest  struggle  to  do  this. This conviction  was clear and  plain to me, and I would argue with the voice of God speaking to me mostly after I went to bed. It was a continual battle.

I would hear the voice of God saying “You HAVE to do something about it!”

I would answer, “But I don’t WANT to!”

I might silence the voices for that night, but they would start up again after a few nights. This kept going on for so long, that one night, I gave in and slipped out of bed, and kneeling there I told God that I was sorry for my sin and asked Him to take it away. Oh, the relief !!

I didn’t become a Christian because my parents were….I have known many people who were brought up in equally devout Christian homes, and they have decided against it for themselves, and have never turned to the Lord.

I didn’t become a Christian because of any good things I might have done….I hadn’t lived long enough to do any good deeds with that thought in my mind.

I didn’t even become a Christian because I went to church regularly (which I did).

I became a Christian because I knew deep down that I was a sinner, child that I was, and I knew I had to listen to God for myself, and ask forgiveness for my stubbornness and rebellion against what I knew God wanted me to do.

I knew I was a sinner because I was born that way….I wasn’t a sinner because I had sinned; I sinned because I was a sinner!

I can honestly say I have never had any doubts that my sins are forgiven and that I have my ticket to heaven.

But it has not been a story of happy ever after…..I haven’t always been what I should have been, and then the contact between me and my Lord has been broken. But He has patiently waited for me to turn back to Him, and then has graciously taken me up again.

He will do the same for all those come to Him…there is a verse in the Bible that says….”A broken and a contrite heart, O Lord, You will not despise”.    (Psalm 51:17)

Testimonies.

A testimony is something that a person can testify to, of something that they have seen or experienced. It is usually a very personal thing that has affected them deeply. These testimonies that I’m including are those of other people that I have either heard about or known, as well as my own, mostly of a spiritual nature.

A testimony is not always a positive thing, sometimes it has a negative side which can be used as a warning to us. When we see how a person has reacted against God and what the end results are, we are to take heed that we don’t do the same thing with disastrous results.

Some of these stories are from a child’s perspective while others are from an adult’s, so lets read about them and see what we can learn…..

Going too Fast!

    It was a lovely sunny morning after a few showers during the night. I was heading off to a ladies’ meeting at our church that weekday  morning and  set off gaily down the hill in our faithful little red Toyota. I enjoyed driving and the feeling of having everything under control.

I had been in the habit of taking the hill fairly fast, and this time was no exception. At the bottom corner, I noticed a vehicle coming towards me and realised I was cutting the corner more than I should have been.  I swerved back onto my side of the road properly and as I did, the car got out of control. It swung violently this way and that before doing a complete turn around  and shot across a wide ditch coming to rest against two large trees. All I was conscious of was a gentle thud as the car landed.

I was a bit dazed for a moment, trying to take in what had happened. The car was facing the wrong way!  I didn’t feel hurt anywhere, and there didn’t seem to be anything wrong with the part of the car that I could see. There were no broken windows and the air bags hadn’t gone off.  I gingerly tried the door which opened normally and I got out. I  looked around at the car and there were no marks on it anywhere until I looked at the wheels. Then I could see that  two tyres had been torn off by the impact.  It was incredible!

As I looked around, and saw the deep ditch I had  gone over, I could only be convinced that the angels must have picked the car up and set it down carefully for there to have been so little damage done! The vehicle that had passed me, backed up to see the result. I asked him if he could take me back up the road to our house where I had to confess my sins to my husband.. He took it very well (after all what else was there to do?) and I phoned one of the ladies  to tell her that there would be no meeting for me that day!

We got into our other vehicle and went  down the road where hubby surveyed the position. His idea was that he could drive it out, but I was afraid the car would slide into the ditch (which was quite deep) and do far more damage. He tried, but the  front wheel had completely lost its tyre and had no traction. So he went back home and phoned a friend to see if he was around and  able to come with his 4WD to help.

After trying to tow it out, they came to the conclusion that it wasn’t going to work without some real damage being done to the car. So they went back to the house and got the endless chain (what a wonderful bit of gear that is!). They fastened one end to the fence post and the other to the car. Now  they were slowly able to pull the car out by hand.

Once it was safely out, hubby took the two stripped wheels to the nearest tyre place where they refitted new tyres on them. Our friend  stayed with the car on the side of the road until it was mobile again.

About ninety minutes after me leaving home the first time, the  small  red car came back into the garage little the worse for its adventures! There was just a tiny dent on the front mudguard to show it had had a hard time!

But later when I thought about what could have happened, I had cold shivers up my back.  I realised how fortunate we all were! And how gracious the Lord was to me in circumstances that were caused by my own fault! One thing I learned though, was to take that corner much more slowly after that!

I Wish I Hadn’t!

The old lady and her daughter sat in my study looking a little uncertain.

“What can you tell me about my mother’s family?” the older lady asked, “I know a bit but not back to my grandparents or where they came from”.

It seemed a strange request, but as it happened, I had done quite a bit of research on the background of this family as we shared a common ancestor, and had written a book on the early beginnings of this district in northern New Zealand. We’ll call this lady Ellie for the sake of this story, and her birth mother Essie.

Ellie had been adopted by her parents  from birth, but never knew this until she was an adult. As it happened, her adoptive father was actually her birth father…his wife had never been able to have children. When he heard that the girl he had been seeing had become pregnant, he was convinced the child was his. Knowing how much his wife longed for a baby, he told her what had happened and put the proposition of adopting this baby to her. She was happy to do this….she said the baby was half theirs anyway!

So Ellie was adopted by this couple and brought up as their own child. Living as they did in a small country district where everyone knew everyone else, it was inevitable that the other children at school knew that she was different. Ellie wasn’t even sure what being adopted meant, all she knew was that she was different to the other children, and she had to endure many taunts in the playground because of it. Not only that, she was an only child in a day where large families were the norm, and this too made her stand out as “different” to the  other children at school.

When Ellie grew up, she left the district to get work in the same city she had been born in, and here she met and married her husband. They eventually had five daughters and one son. As a young mother, she missed her real mother so much that she made up her mind to find her. She eventually tracked Essie down. She too, had married and had other children, but had never told any of them about her “disgraceful” youth. Neither her husband, nor her other children knew of the existence of Ellie.

So when she knocked on their door and Essie opened it, Ellie told her who she was, and that Essie was her birth mother. Essie was so horrified at the ramifications of this spectre from the past, that she slammed the door shut in Ellie’s face, and refused to acknowledge her. All Ellie’s dreams of a tender reunion with her real mother dissolved in a moment, and the realisation that she was nothing more than an unwelcome embarrassment to her overcame her as she stumbled away down the path and back to her home. When she got there, she tore the only photo she had of Essie into small pieces, and threw them into the rubbish bin.  She felt that life indeed had dealt her a raw deal, and the seeds of bitterness and resentment grew and festered in her mind.

Many years passed by, and Ellie’s daughters grew up and married themselves. Her youngest daughter married and went off to the States to live, and her brother followed her over there and never came back to New Zealand. Ellie felt as though they had deserted her, and it was just one more nail in her coffin of resentment and feeling of rejection.

Her eldest daughter married and moved right away from the city, and then one of the other two remaining girls was diagnosed as having cancer. She didn’t survive this, and once more Ellie felt bereft. Then to her horror, she heard that her eldest daughter who lived many miles away up north and who was expecting her first baby, had also been diagnosed with cancer. So Ellie lost this daughter as well  and although the baby survived and was brought up by his father and new wife, Ellie never saw anything of him. She often thought sadly of how he was her last link with her eldest daughter.

More years passed by. One day there was a knock at Ellie’s door. She opened it to see an old lady standing there (it was Essie).

“I’ve come to see you before I die”, she quavered.

Ellie was so angry…who does she think she is, after the way she  treated me? she thought. She never said a word, but turned on her heel slamming the door in her mother’s face,  and then watched her go down the path.

She heard a short while later that her mother had died, and there had never been any reconciliation between them.

Now here she was sitting before me wanting to know more about her real family. I was able to fill her in on her real mother’s side, who they were and where they fitted into the jigsaw of genealogy.

I had seen this lady periodically coming to the ladies outreach meetings at our church without knowing anything of her background. She had always looked so sad and miserable. Although there were many times when the topic of God’s love and forgiveness were spoken of, she never approached anyone to ask how this might help her even though the invitation to do so was frequently given.

As she told her sad story, it impressed itself on me what a difference it would have made to her if she had only done this! As far as I knew, she never did forgive her mother, and died still in her sadness and regrets of what might have been.

I include this story here as a warning of what bitterness and resentment can do to a person when it is not dealt with promptly. It is only natural to feel these things in the face of disappointments and hurts, but never let it stay and fester. The Bible tells us that these things have roots, and we are to get rid of them before they grow…

         Watch carefully in case any person fails to show the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springs up and troubles you.    (Hebrews 12:15)