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Showing posts with label Lynn Moser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lynn Moser. Show all posts

Sunday, March 27, 2016

The Scent of Wood

The Scent of the Wood



Learning a trade from a father was essential. A tradition of following in a father’s footsteps. And so this young man obeys by mimicking the work of his father’s hands.

In the humble beginning of his apprenticeship, he is learning from his father to carve out the design of the wood, to slide his hands across the wood and feel the grain, and to carry stacks of wood.

Still a young lad and learning his trade, he needs the direction of his father’s callused hands to guide his unskilled hands, which now need a little rest.

Stepping away from the carpenter’s bench, he walks outside the shop to take a break from his work and stretch his back.

Standing in the warm, noon sun, he picks at another of the daily splinters in his hands, as the rhythm of the hammer pounds in the background. Extending his arms toward the sky, he says a prayer of thanksgiving to God the Father.

He breathes in fresh air to rid his nostrils of sawdust. First shaking his head to dislodge more sawdust tangled in his hair, he then removes his sandals and shakes out the wood shavings.

As the sun’s warmth soothes his aching muscles, he wonders when he first loved the savory aroma of wood. From the stories his father has told him, he decides the first whiffs seeped into his memory from the wooden trough at his birth.

When that dreadful day of agony came, did it revive all those scented memories of His childhood? All harbingers of torment upon a wooden cross.

What did those harbingers herald? 
  • Stepping aside from His carpenter’s life meant stepping into His glorified life.
  • The sawdust that clung to His hair now exchanged for a crown of thorns encircling His head.
  • Stretching His sore back could never compare to the excruciating pain from the flesh-revealing stripes received from a scourging.
  • The removing of His sandals to rid them of sawdust; now removing them reveals His feet for nine inch nails.
  • The wood He once carried on His shoulders was exchanged for a cross-beam along the Via Dolorosa.
  • His hands, once suffering splinters from sliding them across the grain of the wood, now feeling the pain of puncture from the shards of the wooden cross-beam.
  • The hammer that pounded in the background now pounds in rhythmic timbre upon the nail heads, piercing His hands.
  • The memory-scent of the wood, embedded in His nostrils, infuses His soul as the punctured wood releases that familiar fragrance.
  • The fresh air He so easily breathed in, now barely makes it into His nostrils as He struggles to breathe.
  • His muscles that ached from work now throb from the pain of crucifixion, which no soothing sun can ever relieve.
  • His arms extended once again...in prayer to His Father.

Following His heavenly Father’s guidance, this young Man obeyed...unto death.

And the scent of the wood was released from obedience. A sweet aroma to the Father.

Easter blessings, Lynn


Lynn Mosher loves to dig into God’s Word and treasure hunts for golden nuggets along the road Home. Lynn lives with her hubby (since 1966) in their Kentucky nest, emptied now of three kidlets and embracing three giggly grand-chicklets. Her greatest passion is to share those nuggets in her devotionals and inspirational stories, fulfilling God’s call on her life to encourage others and glorify the Lord. Lynn writes monthly for several sites and bi-weekly at her online residence, Heading Home. 

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Is Your House Leaking?

Is Your House Leaking?

Ever had a leak in your house? We sure have! Numerous times. It can be quit
messy and expensive, can’t it? But more crucial than a leak in our physical house is a leak in our spiritual house.

There’s a commercial that gets my attention every time: it’s on flood insurance. It’s a cartoon. The voice-over is that of a young girl. Part of it goes something like this:

There was a nice house that lived with a family. One day, it started to rain and rain. Water got inside and ruined everybody’s everything. The house thought she let the family down. But the family just didn’t think a flood could ever happen.

The reality is, floods do happen.

Though God said He would not send a flood upon the whole earth again, we do need to be prepared for spiritual floods.

Solomon warned, “Through lowering of hands, the house leaks.” (Eccl. 10:18 Masoretic Text, emphasis mine) According to the definitions, if through inactivity, negligence, or idleness, we lower our hands from lack of prayer and praise, then the house begins to weep.

So, whose house is leaking? Whose house is weeping? Our house? Our child’s house? Our friend’s house? Our neighbor’s house? Our nation’s house? What about God’s House?

On the mount of victory with hands of surety uplifted into the air, Moses’ spoke prayers and praises as Israel prevailed against the enemy. When he lowered his hands, the enemy prevailed.

In the book of Acts, the disciples said, “We shall devote ourselves whole-heartedly to prayer and the ministry of the Word.” (Acts 6:4 Phillips)

In our prayer efforts, let not our knees go unbent nor our hands weaken in lifting praise to the Lord that the enemy not defeat us in our battles. Others need us to pray for them as well. As the Amplified says in Hebrews 12:12, “So then, brace up and reinvigorate and set right your slackened and weakened and drooping hands and strengthen your feeble and palsied and tottering knees.”

Over whose house is the enemy prevailing? Have you raised your hands in prayer to stop the leaking, to stop the weeping, to stop the enemy?

Raise your hands and stop the leaks!

From His feet, Lynn



Lynn Mosher loves to dig into God’s Word and treasure hunts for golden nuggets along the road Home. Lynn lives with her hubby (since 1966) in their Kentucky nest, emptied now of three kidlets and embracing three giggly grand-chicklets. Her greatest passion is to share those nuggets in her devotionals and inspirational stories, fulfilling God’s call on her life to encourage others and glorify the Lord. Lynn writes monthly for several sites and bi-weekly at her online residence, Heading Home. 

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Resolution or Solution 3 ~ by Lynn Moser

Resolution or Solution 3
Last year on Twitter, someone suggested that “rather than making New Year’s Resolutions, we can choose to create New Year’s Solutions.”

That made me stop and think. What is the difference between a resolution and a solution? So, I looked up the definitions.

The dictionaries say that resolution is a formal expression of opinion or intention made. It comes from the word resolute, which means to be resolved or determined on a course of action, set in purpose or opinion.

Solution, on the other hand, means the act of solving a problem or question, an answer.

Only a small percentage of New Year’s resolutions see fulfillment, a humorous dichotomy, given its definition. Initially, most of them are launched with great intentions but slowly, or sometimes quickly, run out of steam.

Determination slides by the wayside. With little acting upon the problem or circumstance, the intended outcome is not accomplished. This is why I’ve never really made any New Year’s resolutions. I knew I would never keep them.

While solution infers the act of doing something, most people just have the solution compartmentalized in their heads or written down on paper. Wanting to change a situation or something about oneself and coming up with a solution to solve or improve it is still not the answer. Just because I WANT something to change and may be determined for it to be so doesn’t mean it WILL change.

I need more than a resolution, more than a solution. While both executed together are preferable, they must be backed with something more…they need to be backed by actual action. Therefore, the meaning of this scripture takes on a new meaning, “A threefold cord is not quickly broken.” (Eccl. 4:12b NKJV)

I think I’ve come up with my action, which is my theme for this year. I’ve borrowed it from an old hymn…I Surrender All!

All to Jesus I surrender, All to Him I freely give;
I will ever love and trust Him, In His presence daily live.
I surrender all, I surrender all;
All to Thee, my blessed Saviour, I surrender all.

If I surrender all, then I cannot be a hindrance to the Lord’s plans and purposes for my life. If I do not surrender all, I allow my life to be filled with the same old things from the year now passing.

God said through Isaiah, “Behold, I will do a new thing, now it shall spring forth; Shall you not know it? I will even make a road in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.” (Is. 43:19 NKJV)

What exactly do I want in the New Year? Or more importantly, what does the Lord want for me and from me? How do I embark on an action if I have my fingers tightly clenched around all the events of the old year? Do I really want a new thing to happen in my life?

If I desire the best for my life, I must, as the saying goes, let go and let God! I must…surrender all!

Do you desire God to do a new thing in your life this year? Are you dragging all the hurts, sins, regrets, failures, disappointments, and unforgiveness of the old year behind you in a little red wagon or perhaps a U-haul?

Let this year be a year of release. Take action! Surrender it all!

New Year’s blessings,


Lynn Mosher loves to dig into God’s Word and treasure hunts for golden nuggets along the road Home. Lynn lives with her hubby (since 1966) in their Kentucky nest, emptied now of three kidlets and embracing three giggly grand-chicklets. Her greatest passion is to share those nuggets in her devotionals and inspirational stories, fulfilling God’s call on her life to encourage others and glorify the Lord. Lynn writes monthly for several sites and bi-weekly at her online residence, Heading Home. 

Sunday, January 10, 2016

A Stone of Remembrance ~ by Lynn Moser

A Stone of Remembrance

Ebenezer? Who is that? No, not Scrooge. This Ebenezer was a what, not a who. In the Bible, Ebenezer means stone of help. It’s purpose? Let’s see…

At one time in Israel’s history, when they faced the Philistines, Samuel and Israel fasted, prayed, repented, and offered a sacrifice. God answered their plea by confusing and defeating the enemy that pursued them. To commemorate the fact that Israel was victorious and recovered all the territory the enemy had taken, Samuel set up a stone as a marker of remembrance.

When he did this, he exclaimed, “Up to this point the Lord has helped us!” (1 Samuel 7:12 NLT) Samuel, whose name meant heard of God, knew the Lord would hear them and be on their side in the future.

The Lord’s hand remained against the Philistines and the enemy never came back into the territory of Israel. Peace reigned throughout the land all the days of Samuel.

Did the enemy pursue you this past year? Did you experience the Lord’s presence in your circumstances? Did He provide for you, even if in quantities less than desired? Did He bring you victories in certain areas of your life?

We all have reasons to set up an Ebenezer of the Lord, the Rock of our salvation, to mark the closing year. As we do, He will stand poised, firmly fixed between the years. His back will be against the year now gone, resolving its troubles, sorrows, and disappointments and transforming all the old…the old attitudes, the old habits, the old ways, and the old circumstances…into something new.

The light of His presence and guidance will beam across the New Year, illuminating the passage into the land of the unknown. His path will take us through each dry wilderness circumstance to streams of fresh, flowing water.

Therefore, on this virgin trek, let us not carry the baggage of leftover regrets, unforgiveness, resentments, failures, ungrateful hearts, or disappointments, all of which weigh down our usefulness. Let us make room in the New Year for the Lord to do that new thing in our lives.

I plan to ask myself these questions. Will you?

*Will I stand bravely at the New Year’s threshold, ready, willing, and obedient to follow the Lord, no matter where He may lead?
*Will I make room in the New Year for the Lord to do a new thing in my life, or will it be filled with more of the same from last year?
*Will my attitude be to enter His portal with thanksgiving, praise, and worship from a grateful heart, remembering His goodness and mercy over the past year, and asking His blessings over the coming year?
*Will I resolve to serve God greater than the year that has faded?

My prayer for you: May the Lord’s shadow of forgiveness conceal the disappointments and troubles of your year now past, while His light casts a beacon of guidance to His safe haven of the days yet to be explored. May His hand be against your enemy and His peace reign all your days.

May His servants Goodness and Mercy pursue you throughout the days to come.

Have a very blessed New Year!

New Year’s blessings,


Lynn Mosher loves to dig into God’s Word and treasure hunts for golden nuggets along the road Home. Lynn lives with her hubby (since 1966) in their Kentucky nest, emptied now of three kidlets and embracing three giggly grand-chicklets. Her greatest passion is to share those nuggets in her devotionals and inspirational stories, fulfilling God’s call on her life to encourage others and glorify the Lord. Lynn writes monthly for several sites and bi-weekly at her online residence, Heading Home.