Monday, June 15, 2026

Restricted Use - Martin Wiles

restricted use
If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me. Jeremiah 29:13 NLT

If I didn’t pay, I couldn’t talk. I remember the days of restricted use. 

As my wife and I sat on the front porch of the one-hundred-year-old home we rented, we often heard it ring. A pay phone situated next to an old country store across the road. Each night around the same time, the ringing began. No one ever showed up to answer, and by the time we would have gotten up from our seats, crossed the road, and walked to the phone, it would undoubtedly have stopped ringing before we reached the receiver. 

Listening to the phone, however, took us back to a time when pay phones were everywhere. If I was away from home and needed to make a call, I either stopped by someone’s house or a business—or found a pay phone. But pay phones needed . . . pay—not only to start the conversation but also to continue it. Operators interrupted conversations with, “Please deposit _____ cents if you wish to continue your call.” If I didn’t, she ended the conversation. Money restricted use, unless I made a collect call and the person on the other end agreed to pay the charges.

God once restricted access to himself as well. He appointed priests to intercede for the people. They made the sacrifices, approached God’s throne, and heard the people’s confessions. Only the high priest could enter the Most Holy Place once a year, where he made a sacrifice for himself and then the people before confessing a year’s worth of sins. 

But after Jesus died on the cross, things changed. The curtain that kept people out of the Holy of Holies was torn in two, symbolizing unrestricted access to God for all who chose to approach him through confession and repentance. 

I’m glad the old way of doing things is gone—approaching God and making calls. A few hours without my smartphone and I experience nomophobia. We should feel the same about interaction with God. 

God is continually with us by the presence of his Spirit, and we need recurrent communion with him—and can have it. Talking with him doesn’t cost a dime, nor does he establish a time limit. We can come as often as we want and with as much stuff as we need to unload. 

What’s more, God wants us to come. After all, he’s the One who cleared up the old restricted-use policy. He wants us to share the details of our lives and ask for his guidance. He wants to share in our joys and our sorrows. 

Don’t let anything keep you from enjoying your unrestricted access to God.

Father, my praises rise to you for opening the way for me to come to you. 





If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Squash Casserole

Squash Casserole


INGREDIENTS 

2 CUPS SQUASH (YELLOW)

2 CUPS CRUMBLED CORNBREAD

1 STICK MARGARINE (MELTED)

2 TABLESPOONS SAGE

1 CAN CREAM OF MUSHROOM SOUP

1 EGG (SLIGHTLY BEATEN)

I ONION (CHOPPED)

1 TABLESPOON SUGAR

SALT/PEPPER

1/4 CUP MILK


DIRECTIONS

MIX THE SQUASH, ONION, SALT/PEPPER, AND SUGAR.

 COOK UNTIL TENDER.

IN A BOWL, MIX THE COOKED SQUASH AND ALL OTHER INGREDIENTS.

PLACE IN A CASSEROLE DISH AND BAKE AT 350 FOR 30 MINUTES.




If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.

Friday, June 12, 2026

Life Cycles - Martin Wiles

life cycles
For we know that when this earthly tent we live in is taken down (that is, when we die and leave this earthly body), we will have a house in heaven, an eternal body made for us by God himself and not by human hands. 2 Corinthians 5:1 NLT

The days of getting up and being ready in fifteen minutes have vanished.

Although I’m in relatively good health, my life cycle has changed. This fact dawned on me one morning when it seemed I simply could not get ready. 

A diagnosis of glaucoma and dry eye disease means I must use three types of drops daily. One twice a day, another once a day, and still another several times a day. Keeping up with the schedule taxes my brain. 

Patches of extremely dry skin also resulted in a prescription cream that must be applied twice daily for two weeks, with two weeks off before repeating the treatment. 

And then there are the pills I swallow. One to control my acid reflux. A daily aspirin because I’m over fifty, along with the daily vitamin to make sure I get what I might not through food. Add a beta blocker to regulate my Tachycardia. Finishing off the list is another over-the-counter acid reducer to help the prescription-strength one. Of course, there are more for other age-related issues, but you get the picture.  

I shouldn’t complain—and usually don’t. Others are worse off than me. My wife has a pouch full of medicine she must take daily to deal with health issues far more severe than mine. And those with rare diseases or other life-altering medical issues can top her—such as my brother who has Parkinson’s. 

Reading what Paul says is comforting—and should be for all who have reached the later life cycle or are suffering with life-altering medical challenges. I may not spend as much time as some do dolling up certain parts of my body or toning my muscles, but I don’t neglect it through unhealthy habits either. Regardless, my body will do what bodies do: age, change, and eventually die. 

We can’t keep these bodies alive, but God can—and will. Just not in their present form. When we die, or when Christ returns, our bodies will be transformed and fitted for our eternal home. A home where no pain, sickness, disease, medicine, or death will inhabit. Nor will there be any more life cycles.

Enjoy the life cycles—despite the changes they bring. They mean you are one step closer to eternity. 

Father, give me grace to endure the changes I must face as I gracefully age




If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.



Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Keep Your Lamp Burning – Kristen Whiteley

Keep Your Lamp Burning
Be dressed ready for service and keep your lamps burning. Luke 12:35 NIV

The words haunted my soul in a deep-down, glorious way. Who shall abide the day of his coming? As I listened to this particular aria from Handel’s Messiah, the operatic refrain echoed through my mind and heart. I suddenly wondered, as I folded laundry, if I was ready for the Lord’s coming? If he sundered the sky right now with otherworldly light, would I be overjoyed? Frightened? Heavy-hearted or grieved at all about how I have spent my time?

The words of Luke sprang into my epochal thoughts: “Be dressed ready for service and keep your lamps burning.” I think of an Old Testament Israelite priest dressed in fine linen and bearing the costly stones representing the twelve tribes of Israel on his breastplate, continually interceding for the people, bearing up the ones whom he wore over his heart. He dressed for service. He also had to keep the lamp in the Tent of Meeting always burning. The sign of God’s presence in the fire would never be distinguished as long as the priest fulfilled his service. 

Eschatology has a time and place, but the simple command of the Lord tugs more persuasively at my heart. As an ambassador of Christ, how am I serving the Lord and his people? Is my lamp ever-burning for Jesus? Are my words a sign that his Presence indwells me? Are my actions proof? 

I think those who shall abide his coming are the ones who remain faithful to the end, dressed for service, ready for action, watchful, hearts aflame. 

When we get up in the morning, even as we dress for the day, let us dress ourselves for service, ready for whatever God might have us do. 

Lord God, may we who proclaim your name keep our lamps burning, that we may be ready for your coming. In the name of Jesus, amen.



Kristen Whiteley agrees with her father that poetry is a way of seeing the world. In between discipling three young children and home-keeping, she leads worship and writes as a way to process her ponderings. Kristen is passionate about creation, the cross, community, classic literature, and homesteading.



If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.





Monday, June 8, 2026

Investments with Guaranteed Returns - Martin Wiles

Investments with Guaranteed Returns
Don’t store up treasures here on earth, where moths eat them and rust destroys them, and where thieves break in and steal. Matthew 6:19 NLT

He thought I earned big bucks, but his smile turned to confusion when I told him I made nothing. 

Prior to our Sunday evening service, I talked with one of our sound technicians who had recently returned to college. Knowing I had taught grammar, he wanted to share a website he had discovered that improved his writing. 

In our conversation, I mentioned I was the Managing Editor for a popular devotional website. As I described my responsibilities, he said, “That must pay pretty well.”

I returned his smile and said, “Here’s how much it pays,” and formed a zero with my fingers. 

His confused look told me he didn’t understand. So, I explained. I love editing and grammar. I also love investing in the lives of other authors, sharing the benefit of my knowledge and training with them. As many editors have helped me, so I want to assist others. Their work—which will be posted on websites and in journals, books, and newspapers—will outlast me.  

Jesus doesn’t say having possessions is wrong, but he warns they can steal our focus from more important things. Things don’t last, and things can turn our focus from spiritual pursuits. We live in a throwaway age where stuff lasts less time than it once did. Rather than focusing on holding on to earthly playthings, Jesus says we need to store our belongings in heaven. But how?

As I post my own devotions online and assist other authors in doing the same, I’m making an eternal investment that will outlive me. Long after I’m dead, my words for the Lord will circulate and continue to influence people’s lives. 

I store treasures in heaven through spiritual disciplines. As I pray, read God’s Word, fellowship with other believers, share my faith, and use my spiritual gifts, I send rewards ahead to my eternal home. 

Storing treasure in heaven also takes place every time I do anything that will outlast me. When I invest my spiritual heritage in my children and grandchildren, I store treasure in heaven. Hopefully, they will follow my example long after I’m gone. When I mentor a younger person in their spiritual journey, I send treasures to heaven. They too will outlive me and carry on the faith. 

Heavenly investments won’t rust, break down, or be stolen. Invest in eternity, not earth. 

Father, guide me to those pursuits that will send treasures to my heavenly home with you. 




If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.




Saturday, June 6, 2026

Taco Salad

 


Ingredients
1 POUND GROUND BEEF

1 HEAD LETTUCE

2 CUPS SHREDDED CHEESE

2 TOMATOES (DICED)

1 SMALL BOTTLE CATALINA DRESSING
     
1 LARGE BAG DORITOS

1 ENVELOPE TACO SEASONING

Directions
COOK GROUND BEEF AND DRAIN.

ADD TACO SEASONING AND COOK AS DIRECTED. SET ASIDE.

CHOP LETTUCE AND PLACE IN A LARGE BOWL.

ADD TOMATOES, CHEESE, AND MEAT. MIX TOGETHER.

ADD CATALINA DRESSING AND COVER THOROUGHLY.

WHEN READY TO SERVE, CRUSH LARGE BAG OF DORITOS AND MIX IN THE SALAD.


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Friday, June 5, 2026

What a Walk - Martin Wiles

What a Walk
And Enoch walked with God; and he was not, for God took him. Genesis 5:24 NKJV

He was the first to do what I longed to do . . . but probably never would. And what a walk it was. 

In his book, Walking with Spring, Earl Shaffer details his account of being the first person to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail—a footpath extending more than 2,000 miles from Springer Mountain, Georgia, to Mount Katahdin, Maine. The new trail was a mess and not as well attended as it is today. Nor did he have the modern equipment available presently. 

I once dreamed of taking a walk like Earl. Taking six months off from work and living in the wilderness, enjoying God’s creation. Although I’ve hiked numerous sections of the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Virginia, I’ve never hiked the entire trail. Now, age and health concerns would prevent me from doing so. 

Enoch took a walk of a different variety. A walk with God. And when his time came to leave this earth, God just took him. He didn’t have to pass through the scary experience of death. He merely disappeared into God’s hands and entered heaven. 

To take a walk with God means going in the same direction as he does. God is characterized by holiness and righteousness. Walking with him means we must pursue the same traits. While we can’t be purely holy and righteous in practice as he is, we can be in position by accepting what he allowed his Son to do on Calvary’s cross: pay for our sins. When we accept that act, Jesus’ righteousness—which was as pure as God the Father’s—is applied to our lives.  

Walking with God is often taxing, as it was for Earl Schaffer as he maneuvered a rough and unkempt trail. But God promises to walk with us and give us the power to make it through the rough spots. 

Taking a walk with God requires obedience. Jesus says if we love him, we will obey his commands. Doing so isn’t always easy, but he will give us strength to do that as well. 

When we walk with God, we can also expect rewards. God gives us the desire to serve him, the power to obey his commands, and then rewards us for his accomplishments through us. The assurance of his presence and love now and throughout eternity keeps us taking another step. 

Walking is good exercise. Take a daily walk with God and reap the benefits.

Father, thank you for the privilege of walking with you. 



If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.