Why You Should Plan a Spiritual Retreat

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In order to understand the world, one has to turn away from it on occasion.” – Albert Camus

I sat in the quiet of a simple room in the Madonna House in Washington, D.C. looking out the window with Bible and journal in hand, pen poised and ready.

I was alone. As a mother of three children 5 and under, it is hard to get alone time. At all. Even when you go to the bathroom. So the fact that I was here – that I actually made it – was a small miracle.

My original intention for this time was to plan – to put together a daily homeschooling schedule and read through all the curricula that I had so dutifully researched and purchased for the school year.

But God had other plans.

Pray Before You Plan

A few days before my “planning retreat” a friend told me she would like to come with me. “We could go to the Madonna House,” she said. I had never heard of it, but the more she shared the more I felt my soul sigh with relief.

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A spiritual oasis on Capitol Hill, this humble row house is run by two nuns who have come here with no other agenda than to pray for the people in our city and open up the home to those who desire spiritual retreat.

The night before going, as I packed up curriculum and notebooks, The Lord arrested me with these words, “Put those away – just go there and pray.”

Whenever God shifts my plans like this, I get excited. I know He is going to speak or move in my life in a way that I hadn’t expected. I lay in bed that night smiling like a child on Christmas Eve.

The next day, my husband dropped me off at the Madonna House. Even as I stood on the steps, I felt the weight of the burdens I had carried there fall off my shoulders. I was going to meet with God.

My friend and I exchanged greetings and were directed to small separate rooms – rooms that held nothing but a bed, a desk with a Bible on it, and a dresser in the corner.

The simplicity of the place alone made me breathe easier. No scattered toys or piles of laundry. My soul began to breathe, too.

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A Three Hour Retreat

I didn’t have 24 hours. I had a morning – three hours to be precise. But in those three little hours God met me in a deeply personal way, enlarging my perspective and graciously granting me the spiritual framework for our entire year of school.

I prayed over all three of my daughters and lingered long over each one, asking Christ for wisdom in how to teach and guide them.

He responded. Not with flames of fire but with soft, gentle whispers from His Word and Spirit that I would not have heard if I had not allowed my soul to get quiet enough to hear them.

I walked away entirely confident that God was with me and that He had given me His plan for our school year. I opened the curricula later with new perspective and purpose.

We often think we should plan and then pray about our plans, but we have it mixed up. Proverbs 16:3 says, “Commit your work to The Lord, and your plans will be established.

Why Should You Go on A Spiritual Retreat?

You should go because every soul needs moments of quiet and spaces to breathe, rest, recover from the scrapes and dents of daily life.

You should go when you have a big task, trip, move, step, leap, or transition ahead and you need to gain God’s wisdom.

You should go to simply refresh your soul with vision for the task and the call He has currently given to you.

You don’t need long – even a few hours will suffice. But just go – to a retreat center, a park, a beach, a lake, anywhere you know you can truly relax and focus. Your body, soul, and family will be glad that you did.

How to Memorize Scripture the Easy Way

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I grew up in the 80’s and 90’s and I will never forget the weekend nights that my brother and I listened to every single song in “Casey’s Top 40” – songs we mostly knew by heart.

Most of us know hundreds of songs by heart and can belt out every last lyric with only the first few measures of the song played. Songs committed to memory – for fun.

I began to think about how this could apply to Scripture memorization when a Jewish believer in Christ opened up the Torah for the first time before my eager eyes. I stood in awe as he sung – yes SUNG the words of the law according to Jewish tradition.

I was even more amazed when I learned that included in this process of cantillation there were trope marks – the equivalent of musical notes assigned to each Hebrew word – thus making the Torah a song in the heart of Jews worldwide.

I would like to propose that Scripture memorization doesn’t have to be a tedious, frustrating task. One way this is possible is to make it a song in our hearts.

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Memorizing Scripture can become a fun and relatively easy part of your daily routine. Chuck Swindoll wrote, “I know of no other single practice in the Christian life more rewarding, practically speaking, than memorizing Scripture. . . . No other single exercise pays greater spiritual dividends! Your prayer life will be strengthened. Your witnessing will be sharper and much more effective. Your attitudes and outlook will begin to change. Your mind will become alert and observant. Your confidence and assurance will be enhanced. Your faith will be solidified.

The Bible is replete with passages that instruct us to commit God’s words to heart. Here are just a few:

Psalm 119:11 “I have stored up your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you.”

Deuteronomy 6:6-8 “these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.”

Joshua 1:8 “This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success.”

Where to start? I’m so glad you asked! Our family has been creating our own little Scripture Songs for the last year and we would like to begin to share them with you all.

If you would like to receive a passage of Scripture put to song each week for the next 12 weeks, simply sign up here.

Children of God from 3-100 can memorize God’s Word easily. Let’s start singing!

 

When You Feel Like You’ve Got Nothing to Give God

image Have you ever had a day or a season when you feel at the end of your rope? You’ve worked, you’ve tried, you’ve given your all – and you just keep coming up short? Perhaps you are just tired…weary…exhausted from daily life.

You want to be strong, full of life, whole and healthy, a conduit of God’s Presence – but you feel empty, dry, spiritually poor – you pull out your pockets and find you have nothing to give. Would you believe me if I told you that you do?

That the one thing you have is the only thing you need to bring to God? In fact, the only thing that He wants from you?

Blessed Are The Poor in Spirit

My pastor preached at church on Sunday about the Church of Laeodocia. This church might have been materially rich, but they were spiritually poor.

The problem was – they didn’t know it. God counseled them in this way: “You say, ‘I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.’ But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see.” — Revelation 3:17-18

If they were truly spiritually bankrupt, with what could they “buy from him” the true riches of Heaven? As my pastor pointed out so thoughtfully – their currency was their need.

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Nothing in My Hand I Bring

The one thing God wants us to bring Him is our need. It’s true! In fact, He says, “But this is the one to whom I will look: he who is humble and contrite in spirit and trembles at my word.” – Isaiah 66:2

Your weakness unlocks God’s strength. Your emptiness invites God’s fullness. Your brokenness invites God’s healing.

Sometimes I think we want to bring ourselves to God already perfected – you know, like a pretty package with a neatly tied bow. But we can’t… We’re a mess. We know it and He knows it.

Good News for the Poor

When we feel we can’t even pray, when we can’t seem to lift our gaze His way, that is the very moment we need Him most. If you are empty, dry, broken, and spiritually poor today -you are in the perfect place to meet with God.

Bring your heart and all its empty, broken places before God. As the Psalm says so beautifully,”Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us.” – Psalm 62:8

Here’s some very good news for us poor souls: Jesus is here and He wants “to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair. They will be called oaks of righteousness, a planting of the Lord for the display of his splendor.” — Isaiah 61:3

So if you feel you’ve got nothing to give God today, don’t let that hold you back. It’s the broken He accepts. It’s the humble He hears. It’s the wounded He can heal.

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