The Greatest GiftsExemplo
THE GIFT OF ENCOURAGEMENT
When you feel a need for encouragement, what do you do? Do you call someone special? Do you exercise, paint, or play games with your son or daughter? How about singing or dancing or just watching a play or a movie? Or maybe it’s just connecting with a good friend over coffee or tossing a ball to your dog. We all need encouragement from time to time, don’t we?
Today’s gift is what I see to be the gift of encouragement. It’s probably just the way I’m wired, but I see encouragement all through the paragraph that begins with Verse 18 of Chapter 5:
Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. (Ephesians 5:18-20, NIV).
A while back, I took a spiritual connection assessment. It asked a series of questions about how one connects with God. Some people connect with God best by being outside in nature, some in quiet solitude. For me, my strongest connection with God is in worship. I love to worship and sing my heart out, and I love those musicians who lead worship and so skillfully take us to a place of complete adoration of God. Truly, when one is fully immersed in worship, I can understand how Paul connects it with being drunk. And I see this as a gift of encouragement in that he says “to speak to one another with psalms ...”
The Psalms are a fabulous source of Spirit-filled encouragement. Many are David’s journal entries. I can so relate to David. Often he begins a Psalm with a cry:
“Save me, O God, for the waters have threatened my life! I have sunk in deep mire, and there is no foothold ... I am weary with my crying ... I wait for my God ...” (Psalm 69:1, 3 NASB).
And then, as he journals and writes and ponders the greatness of God’s blessings through several verses, more than likely in song, the Holy Spirit takes him to a place of adoration at the conclusion.
“Let heaven and earth praise Him!” (Psalm 69:34, NASB).
May I encourage you to encourage one another through the words of the Psalms or other places of Scripture? Write them out as prayers, give them to one another, and encourage one another. That is the true Gift of Encouragement! God gave us His word, filled with songs of blessings. Yes, you can read them yourself. However, isn’t it great when God gives you a word of Scripture that He wants you to share with someone else? Or He directs someone to a specific passage, and they write it down and give it to you? This is how we build up the body of Christ.
Mary, the mother of Jesus, answered the call of her destiny with a song and a word of encouragement. Following her encounter with the angel Gabriel, and as she met with her cousin Elizabeth -- who was also supernaturally pregnant, carrying her son, John the Baptizer -- Mary quotes the Old Testament song of Hannah from 1 Samuel 2.
“I’m bursting with God-news! I’m walking on air. I’m laughing at my rivals. I’m dancing my salvation. Nothing and no one is holy like God ...” (1 Samuel 2: 1-2 and Luke 1:46, MSG).
The words of both Mary and Hannah! That is sheer joy and encouragement all in one!
May you receive this Gift of Spirit-filled encouragement and be available to give this gift to others during this Advent season.
PRAYER
Father God, thank you for those who encourage me when I need to be encouraged. Thank you for blessing me with every spiritual blessing. May I be both a giver and a receiver this Advent season. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
Sobre este plano
No trips on donkeys. No angels singing. Not even a baby in a manger. Yet, there are still 25 gifts God wants to give you for Christmas. We can find them in a little, six-chapter book halfway through the New Testament. These are The Greatest Gifts, as revealed in Ephesians. Along the way, you'll find the gift of love, the gift of salvation, the gift of unity, and many more. Prepare your heart in a special way this Christmas season by receiving, and giving, God's greatest gifts.
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