Tuesday, April 23, 2024

The Construction Principles of the Carpenter

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

“The bathtub has arrived!”

A huge man waddles in carrying a heavy bathtub.

It’s a new house.  The walls are up.  The smell of sawdust is in the air.  And it’s time to install the bathtub.

The man sets it down in the only place it can go, touching the walls on three sides.  Then he looks down the drain and says, “Uh oh.”

Uh oh.  That is something you never want to hear.  You don’t want to hear it from your dentist.  You don’t want to hear it from your potty-training toddler.  And you sure don’t want to hear it from your plumber.

What happened was, he set the bathtub down, looked down the drain hole, and what did he see?  He should have seen nothing but a black hole, but instead he saw the floor.  No hole.  No drain.

What he didn’t know was that a few weeks earlier, when his assistant was installing the tub drain pipe, he didn’t follow the blueprint.  He installed the drain where he THOUGHT it should go.  He followed his gut, not the blueprint.

That’s a disaster, right?

But we do that daily with the blueprint of life.

What is the blueprint of life?

Jesus talks about the blueprint of life at the end of the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew chapter seven.  He actually gives us a construction analogy.

He said, “Whoever hears these sayings of mine and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who builds his house…”

There’s your construction analogy.  He compares building our life to building a house.  And he compares His teachings to the house’s blueprint.  A blueprint tells you how to build a house, and God’s word tells you how to build your life.

A blueprint is drawn up by an architect.  The architect is the designer.  

In life we have an architect with a capital A.  It’s the Lord God Almighty, creator of heaven and earth.  And we have a blueprint with a capital B.  It’s the Word of God, the Scriptures, the Bible.

But we often don’t treat the Bible like a blueprint.  We treat it like an optional book of wisdom that we don’t really have to pay all that much attention to.

And we pay a price for it.

To the degree that we follow God’s blueprint is the degree to which we build our life well.  And to the degree that we don’t follow God’s blueprint is the degree to which we build our life poorly.

A good architect thinks of all the details ahead of time.  He fits everything together perfectly, but the builder has to follow the blueprint or things WON’T fit together perfectly.  In fact, if the builder messes up just a few things, that building project will become a royal disaster very quickly.

The same is true for our life.  If we follow God’s Word fairly well, but we decide that we know better in just a few things, it’s not going to work.  

Some people say, “Oh, I don’t want to be all LEGALISTIC.”  But imagine this.  You’re spending a half a million dollars to build your new dream home, and your architect has cooked up a beautiful blueprint.  Do you want the builder to be legalistic about following your blueprint?  Of course you do!  This is your home and you want it done right.

And when it comes to our life, don’t we want to build well?  Don’t we want a good life that is solid and holds up under the pressure of the elements?

Jesus told us how to do that.  “Whoever hears these sayings of mine and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house on the rock: and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it did not fall, for it was founded on the rock.”

We can build our life well if we build according to the Blueprint with a capital B, drawn up by the Architect with a capital A.

And this is what I call The Construction Principles of the Carpenter.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Monday, April 22, 2024

Take Heed How You Hear

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Jesus said something that sounds almost cruel.

He said, “Whoever has, to him more will be given, and whoever does not have, even what he seems to have will be taken from him.”

That sounds like the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer.

So let’s look at this verse more closely.  It’s Luke 8:18 and it says, “Therefore take heed how you hear. For whoever has, to him more will be given; and whoever does not have, even what he seems to have will be taken from him.”

This can be a hard verse to understand, but the key is in the beginning when Jesus said, “Take heed how you hear.”

The words “take heed” are a warning.  It’s saying watch out, be careful how you listen.

Are you being careful how you listen?  

You can’t just open up your brain and dump everything in!  You have to listen with an ear toward wisdom.

Proverbs 2:2 says, “incline your ear to wisdom.”

The NIV says:  tune your ear to wisdom.

On your radio you “tune in” to a radio station.  When listening we need to tune in for wisdom and truth.

Be careful how you listen.

Take heed how you hear.

So what did Jesus mean when He said, “For whoever has, to him more will be given, and whoever does not have, even what he seems to have will be taken from him”?

It all starts with this tiny bit of wisdom to listen carefully.  You have to be smart enough to know that not everything is true.  Not everything is wise.  Not everything is godly.  Not everything is helpful.

You have to be smart enough to know that some things you shouldn’t listen to at all.  There is poison.  There are lies.  There is foolishness.  There is evil.  You have to be careful how you hear.

If you start there, then when you listen you will be tuning in for wisdom and truth.  And when you tune in to hear wisdom and truth specifically, you will hear it!  

This is what Jesus meant when He said, “To him who has, more will be given.”  

When you listen for wisdom and truth, you will hear it, and you will learn, and you will grow.  More will be given to you.  And the wiser you grow, the more wise you will be in discerning what you hear.  It has an exponential effect.

But what about the poor guy who apparently doesn’t have anything, and even what he seems to have is taken away from him?

That’s the guy who DOESN’T take heed how he hears.  He isn’t careful about what he listens to.  He listens to any old thing and lets it take root in his brain.  

It can SEEM like he has wisdom and truth because he has a lot of DATA.  But if he isn’t careful about it, he is letting in a host of foolishness and ignorance and even lies.  Steve Taylor wrote a song that said, “He’s so open minded that his brains leaked out.”  If he keeps letting all this in, eventually even what wisdom he SEEMED to have will be gone.  Any wisdom he seemed to have will be washed away in a flood of information.

Proverbs 1:5 says a wise man will hear and increase learning.  The only way that happens is if you listen with a discerning ear.

If you are careful about what you listen to.

If you take heed how you hear.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Monday, March 25, 2024

Food Glorious Food

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

I was talking to an evolutionist, the kind that believes that everything evolved from nothing after a big bang.

I said, “Just look at food, for example.  You think it just evolved on this big rock hurtling through space after a big bang?”

“Well, it took billions of years,” he said.

“Always with the billions of years,” I said.  “Incredible complexity rising from simplicity after starting with nothing, just given enough zeros on the calendar.”

I said, “Look at this banana.”

“I’m looking,” he said.

“Look at this astounding bright yellow color.  It’s magnificent!  It’s beautiful to the eyes!  I’m so glad it evolved into something beautiful.”

But wait. There’s more!

When you pick up a banana, it’s smooth to the touch.

When you peel a banana, it’s ready to eat!  No special preparations needed.

And when you eat a banana, it tastes good!  You’re saying that by some miracle of evolution a banana evolved so that when we eat it, it tastes good?

Okay, not everyone likes bananas, but get this.  Bananas are the biggest selling item at Walmart.  Let that sink in.  

So they taste good, but here’s where it really gets deep.  Bananas are good for you!  I’ve read that bananas have actually helped keep much of the world alive.

To say something is “good for you” sounds trite, but look at what it takes for something to be good for you.  It takes a miracle!

You can eat this thing, your body receives it gladly, it goes into your stomach, your stomach perfectly knows how to handle it, and your body turns it into all the vital things that bananas provide for us.

So you would have to say that the human body evolved perfectly to have eyes to see an attractive banana, have hands to get that banana, have taste buds to enjoy that banana, a stomach to digest that banana, and then at the micro level all the things the body does after that at an increasingly smaller level to keep us alive and well.

And that’s just the banana.  We could talk about apples and oranges (by the way, Americans eat more bananas than apples and oranges combined, just sayin’).  We could talk about potatoes and peanuts and on and on and on.  We live in a world exploding with food glorious food!  If you don’t like this or that, there’s plenty more!

All this bounty and no one to thank…except the processes of evolution times billions of years.

I don’t think so.  I want to give credit where credit is due.  I thank our Creator God for His abundant creation, so astounding in every little detail: food that looks good and tastes good and is good for us.  And our bodies that know what to do with it.

So yes, I bow my head to pray before a meal.  I do it at home, and I do it in public.  I’m just so thankful, and so impressed and amazed at how it all works together, and God did it!  Isn’t He wonderful?

He gave us food glorious food!

Thank You, Heavenly Father, for Your wonderful work in creating food for us to enjoy.

Amen.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Friday, March 15, 2024

The Highway of Holiness

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

A highway is a road built up to make travel easier.

That’s what the footnote in my Bible says under Isaiah chapter 35 verse 8.

That verse is talking about a highway, so the footnote tells us what a highway is.  It’s a road built up to make travel easier.

You aren’t going through the mud on a highway.

You aren’t going through the briars and the thorns.  My grandma called it “the thicket.”

A highway makes travel easy.  It’s a piece of cake traveling on a highway, so smooth and level and wide.  It’s a pleasure.  It’s a joy!

On the other hand, traveling OFF the highway is NOT smooth.  It IS muddy.  There ARE thorns and thickets.  You have to slow down and stop and keep getting your bearings.  “Where am I now?”  You ask that question a lot when you get off the “hard road” as Grandma called it.  “Where am I?”

So a highway is a road built up to make travel easier, and Isaiah 35:8 is talking about a highway.  This highway has a name.  It’s called The Way of Holiness.

Sometimes we get weird with this word “holy” and “holiness,” but it’s not weird at all.  It’s a road built up to make travel easier.

What???  That doesn’t sound very doctrinal and theological.

Well what is holiness?  It’s a purity, a moral purity in the presence of God.

We get weird about the word purity, too, but put it in the highway context.

Do you want your highway to be pure, to be as free as possible from bumps and cracks and potholes?  We want the highway department to make the highway as smooth as possible.

Well on the highway of life, it is holiness, it is purity that makes the road as smooth as possible.  If you want to travel fast and light, the Highway of Holiness is the way to go.

Isaiah 35:8 says that the unclean, the evil-minded will not travel on the way of holiness.  Of course they won’t, and they suffer for it.

To the degree that you are not living a holy life, that is the degree to which you are driving off the road.  No wonder it’s bumpy and scratchy and leaves you wondering, “Where am I?”  You’re off the road.

Traveling on the Highway of Holiness means living within God’s parameters.  Highways have boundaries.  When you drive within the boundaries, it’s a smooth ride.  When you think, “I’ll be free!  I’ll drive wherever I please!” you’re asking for a really bad ride.

And if you’re paying attention, you see that it’s true.  Sin brings bumps in the road.  Big sins bring big bumps in the road.  Living a life of sin is just full of obstacles.  It’s not a highway at all, or even a road.  It’s like driving into a thicket and thinking you’re going somewhere.  You aren’t.  My grandma is looking at your car in the thicket and asking, “What are you doing?”

The highway is a road built up to make travel easier.  Isaiah 35:8 talks about the Highway of Holiness, and when we steer our life within God’s holy boundaries, wonderful things happen.  

Isaiah says there are no lions or ravenous beasts on that highway.  It’s a smooth and clear path for the redeemed.

On the Highway of Holiness there is singing and everlasting joy!  Sorrow and mourning will flee away, and the people will be filled with joy and gladness.

How can that be?  Because the Creator, God the Father Himself, is ever present on the Highway of Holiness!  He is there, full of life and love and joy and peace.  His mercy is forever.  He loves us and has created a highway for us to live on, a highway that’s built up to make travel easier.

It’s the Highway of Holiness, and when we live within its boundaries, we will find that traveling through this life has never been better.

Amen.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Saturday, March 09, 2024

Why Is Home Depot on Lockdown?

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Why is Home Depot on lockdown?

I just wanted to run in, buy a new weed eater, and go home.

But that’s not how it works these days.  Why?  Because Home Depot is on lockdown.

What I mean is, some of their stuff is now literally chained up behind bars right there on the shelf.  

Am I in one of those big cities with looters and riots?  Hardly.  I’m in sleepy Tallahassee, Florida.  And yet here I am, looking at weed eaters, not Rolex watches, chained behind bars.  I will have to wander around the store and find an employee to unchain it for me.

Now why would they do this?  Because of theft, of course.  They didn’t want to do it.  It’s a pain for them, and a pain for their customers.  They wouldn’t have done it if they didn’t have to.

That means the theft was getting so bad that they had to invest in anti-theft measures, and that makes me sad.

Now let’s talk about our local Walmart.  When was the last time you went in to buy shaving cream?  Guess what.  It’s locked up, too.  Shaving cream!

Walmart didn’t want to do that.  How many customers just said, “Forget it.  I’ll order it from Amazon before I’ll track down an employee to unlock the shaving cream.”  

And don’t think you are going to walk down the makeup aisle at Walmart without being recorded on high definition security cameras.  Why would they invest so much money to record you in the makeup aisle?  They didn’t want to.  They had to because so much of it was being stolen.

Last Christmas I talked to a security guard at Walmart who was standing near a back door, an emergency door.  He didn’t really look at me while we talked, because his eyes were scanning the people around me.  I asked him how it was going and he vented a little.  He said, “You know we have about 3,000 people in the store right now.”  No, I hadn’t even thought about it, but wow, that’s a small town.

He said, “And these people don’t realize how much theft hurts everything.  Everyone has to pay more because a few people just won’t be honest.”

I said, “Why are you standing back here where there aren’t as many people?”

He said, “Because believe it or not, people will grab items and run out this back door.  They’ll even try to run right past me just to steal something.  I have to chase them down.”

This was a big man.  I would not have wanted to test him, but apparently others were willing to.

Now let’s look at one thing he said.  “These people don’t realize how much theft hurts everything.”

Of course, when people steal, they aren’t thinking about its impact on everyone else.  They just want to have something without paying for it.  And there’s a certain thrill about getting away with the big heist.  Yes, your big shaving cream heist.

Why is this happening?  Because more and more people are willing to steal.

Why would that be?  Let’s look at the big picture.

Almost everyone in the history of the world knows that stealing is wrong.  It’s a universal concept.  No one wants their stuff stolen from them, and everyone whose stuff is stolen cries “foul!”  

Many people believe that God created the world, and that He created it to work in a certain way, AND, important for this discussion, God is the policeman and judge of His creation.

The God of the Bible says that we will reap what we sow.  What we do to others will be done to us.  Some call that karma, what comes around goes around.  And we who believe in God believe that God Himself enforces these rules.  He makes sure that they work just as He says.

With that in mind, you don’t want to steal because if you do, God is going to make sure it goes badly for you.  And that’s true whether you get caught by the human authorities or not.  If you dart out of Walmart with your stolen shaving cream, and the big security guard doesn’t catch you, it doesn’t matter.  You are already caught by the God of the universe and He is going to make sure that you reap what you sow.

If you are paying attention, you see that it really does work that way. 

But again, why is theft increasing, even if the thief reaps what he sows?

I think it is because more people don’t believe in God, don’t believe He is watching, don’t believe it will come back to bite them, and think if they don’t get caught, they are actually ahead in the game.

If you take Creator God out of the equation, and you think our life here is a random chance, then just living for today, grabbing what you can and making a run for it might make sense.

But of course stealing still doesn’t make sense.  Look at all the stores that are closing entirely in certain cities because of theft.  The idiot thieves can’t even go in and steal anymore because their idiocy killed the whole store.  And all the honest shoppers lost a good store, too.  And the business is hurt by having fewer stores to sell their wares.  And there are fewer jobs in those neighborhoods, meaning more poverty.  

Stealing literally hurts everyone, and most especially the thief.

Because God IS real.  He really IS watching.  And He really IS enforcing the laws of the universe He created.  The thief really WILL reap he sows.  It really WILL come around to bite him in the end.  And that’s bad for him, and it’s bad for all of us because we need every person doing their best to make this society the best it can be for all of us.

I’ll close with these powerful words from Ephesians 4:28, “Let him who stole steal no longer, but rather let him labor, working with his hands what is good, that he may have something to give him who has need.”

Amen.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.

 

Monday, February 19, 2024

The Mission of Mary Magdalene

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

A man makes his plans, but the Lord directs his steps.

That’s what it says in Proverbs 16:9.

We see a great example of this when looking at Mary Magdalene at the tomb of Jesus.

Jesus was crucified.  He declared, “It is finished.”  And Mary Magdalene was part of the crowd who watched.

Joseph of Arimathea took His body down, and he and Nicodemus prepared it for burial and placed it in a tomb that had been hewn out of the rock.  And they rolled a large stone against the door of the tomb.

Then Matthew 27 verse 61 adds this interesting part of the story:  “And Mary Magdalene was there, and the other Mary, sitting opposite the tomb.”

The crowds were gone.  The sun was setting.  The great Jesus was in the tomb.  And there was Mary Magdalene, sitting opposite the tomb, watching.  Observing.  Thinking.  Feeling.

Fast forward and we find Mary Magdalene and other women returning to the tomb with spices to anoint the body of Jesus.

They had plans.  They thought it through, made preparations. set the time, got together, and went to the tomb.

But when they got there, Jesus was gone!

Mark 16 says that inside the tomb there was a young man in a long white robe who said, “Do not be alarmed.  You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified.  He is risen!  He is not here.  See the place where they laid Him.  But go, tell His disciples – and Peter – that He is going before you into Galilee; there you will see Him, as He said to you.”

Mary Magdalene had a very clear idea of what she was going to do that Sunday morning, but God had other ideas.  She had her plans, but what she didn’t know is that God had a mission for her.

And I believe God has a mission for each of us.  Yes, we are to do good.  We make plans and organize our days, that’s all good.

But watch for it.  Watch for God to intervene and give you a mission.  

Maybe you have a dream of what you want to do with your life.  Maybe you are making a list of pros and cons.  You’re making plans.

But watch for it.  Watch for God to intervene, to interrupt your plans and in their place give you a mission.    

Because a man makes his plans, but the Lord directs his steps.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, February 01, 2024

Seasoned With Salt

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Colossians 4:6 says, “Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt…”

Speaking with grace might seem obvious, but what does it mean “seasoned with salt”?

Here’s one way to look at it.  Seasoned with salt makes it delicious and people want more of it!

How do most people feel about potato chips without salt?  Yuck…that’s how they feel about it.

How about peanuts without salt?  Or meat without salt?  Or maybe worst of all…popcorn without salt!  On and on it goes.

But put a little salt on those chips and look out…you can’t stop with just one.  You want more and more.  Why?  It’s the salt, man!

So the question is…is our speech like that?

Colossians 4:6 says, “Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt…”

Ephesians 4:29 says that our speech should “impart grace.”  Does our speech impart grace?  Does the other person feel the grace when we speak?  Are we imparting grace if they don’t feel any grace?

Here’s one way we can know if we are speaking with grace and imparting grace.  People will want more!

True grace is a balm to our soul.  When we get it, we love it, and we want more.  Just like a person wants more of those chips seasoned with salt, they want more of those words seasoned with grace.

Sometimes in the church we lean on harsh words and judgment and criticism.  We think people are going to get better when we lay down the law, and yet Romans 2:4 says that God’s KINDNESS leads us to repentance.  It’s God’s grace toward us, giving us what we don’t deserve, and NOT giving us what we DO deserve.  That’s grace.

So let’s do better.  Let’s fill our speech with grace that it may impart grace to the hearers.  And instead of pushing people away, they will be drawn in and want to hear more, because speaking with grace is like adding a hint of salt.  It tastes so you good you just want more and more and more.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, November 30, 2023

The Class Action Lawsuit

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Have you ever heard of mesothelioma?

Most likely you’ve heard of it from the class action lawsuit ads on television.

The ads are run by lawyers who want you to sign up for the class action lawsuit, IF you are one of the people negatively affected by the defendant.

If you answer the ad, sign onto the lawsuit and join the “class,” then you are in line for any benefits that come from winning the lawsuit.

But what happens if you don’t answer the ads?  You don’t sign onto the lawsuit.  You never join the class.  No one even knows that you, too, were a victim of the defendant.  What will you get if they win the lawsuit?

Nothing.  You didn’t join the class, so you don’t get the benefits of being in the class.

Sometimes I think of salvation this way.  It’s like Jesus has already won the case and is paying out benefits to anyone who joins the class.

He has put out the call far and wide, all over the world, come and join the class!  The price has been paid, the case has been won, benefits are already being paid out by the truckload, just come and join the class!

And millions of us have already done it.  We were damaged by sin.  We got the raw deal.  It was a rip off.  Then we heard about this offer from Jesus.  “Come to Me,” He said.  “I will take care of that sin problem.  I will forgive you.  I will wash you clean and make you whole.  I will restore your soul, and your relationship with the Heavenly Father.  Then I will give you My Spirit to fill you and walk with you for the rest of your life here.  And then I will take you home to heaven to be with Me forever.”

Those are the benefits of this class action!  All we have to do is sign on.

How do you sign on?  Tell God you want to.  Say, “God, I’m in.  I want in on this deal.  Please forgive my sins and wash me clean.  Make me new and whole.  Make me that new creation You talk about.  I’m sorry.  I repent.  I’m ready to leave sin behind and come to You. Sign me up for this class!”

Then you’re in!

But what if you don’t?  What if you never do?  What if you never turn to God like that?  

Then you’re not in.  You’re not in the class.  You can’t get the benefits of the case if you don’t sign onto the class.  

There’s almost nothing sadder than finding out there was a huge payout in a class action lawsuit that you should have been a part of, but you weren’t, simply because you didn’t make the effort to sign on.

So…sign on today!  Turn to God and say, “Here I am!  I want in!”  Like the old song says, “Just as I am, without one plea, but that Thy blood was shed for me…O Lamb of God I come.”

But keep this in mind: like all class actions…this is a limited time offer.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Friday, November 17, 2023

What Is Sin?

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

What is sin?

The Greek word for sin in the Bible is ἁμαρτία which is pronounced ham-ar-TEE-ah.  It’s literal meaning is “to miss the mark.”

Sometimes we whitewash sin.  We give it different names, like adultery becomes “having an affair.”  We try to minimize the impact by acting like it’s not so bad, if it’s even bad at all.

So let’s look at it from a different angle.  Let’s look at it through Jesus’ construction analogy at the end of the Sermon on the Mount.

In Matthew 7 Jesus said, “Whoever hears these sayings of mine and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house…”

That’s a construction analogy.  He “builds his house.”

When you build a house or some other large structure, you build it using a blueprint.

The expert creates the blueprint, then the builders build what they see designed on the blueprint.

So when the wise man builds his house, as Jesus said, what is his blueprint?

Jesus said, “Whoever hears these sayings of mine…”  That’s the blueprint.  The Word of God is the blueprint.  It’s the blueprint for building our life well.

When we follow the blueprint closely, we build well.  When we stray from the blueprint, we build poorly.

So back to this definition of sin as missing the mark.  If you are spending your hard-earned money to build your dream house, how many times do you want the builder to miss the mark on the blueprint?  None!  You want him to NEVER miss the mark.  You want him to follow the blueprint precisely.

So when it comes to building our lives, why would we ever want to miss the mark, if missing the mark means building poorly?

Sin often happens after some alluring temptation.  We fall for the lie that “it’s going to be so good and fun.”  But if sin is missing the mark and building poorly, it should be easier to avoid, because who wants to build poorly?  It’s a waste of time and resources.  It ruins your reputation.  Poor buildings even hurt people, and sometimes people even die due to poor building practices.

There is much more to this topic, but today let’s stick to this one slice of it.  What is sin?  It is missing the mark.  God has a blueprint for building our lives well, and whenever we sin, we are disobeying the blueprint and building our life poorly.  

As for me and my house, I want to be the wise man who built his house well; and the rain descended, the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house; and it did not fall, for it was built precisely according to God’s blueprint.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, October 05, 2023

Now Let Me Show You a Better Way

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

“The other driver got aggressive, so I got aggressive, too.”

That’s what my friend said. 

He continued, “But I don’t do that anymore.  The Bible says, ‘Don’t return evil for evil,” so when another driver gets aggressive, I just let him go his merry way…even if I feel like speeding up and tracking him down!”

Have you ever been there?  You felt like letting someone have it, but because you know God doesn’t really want you to go around letting people have it, you back off and let it slide.

That’s a great first step!  But now let me show you a better way.

The better way is love.

In Matthew 5 Jesus said, “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’  But I say to you, love your enemies…”

The better way is love.

That aggressive driver?  Yes, it is better to let him go and not follow your impulse to get aggressive back.  But the better way is to love him!  It is better to love all of your fellow drivers on the road today.  

First Corinthians 12:31 literally says now let me show you a better way, a more excellent way.  One translation says, “Now let me show you a way of life that is best of all.”

And what, pray tell, is best of all?  First Corinthians 12:31 leads right into First Corinthians 13 which is also known as the love chapter.  That is the best way of all, the way of love.

We should be able to look at every person around us and say, “I love this one and this one and that one and him and her and all of them.”  That is the better way.

We really can’t do that on our own, but this is where the fruit of the Spirit of love comes in.  As born again believers with God’s Holy Spirit inside of us, HE will bear the fruit of love in our life.  And He will do that to the degree that we let Him.  Our part is to humbly submit to Him, as sheep to a shepherd, and follow as He leads.

And this is where He is leading.  He is leading us to a better way of living.  It’s the way of life that is best of all.  The NIV says it is “the most excellent way”!  

It’s the way of First Corinthians 13.

It’s the way of Jesus.

It’s the way of love.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Wednesday, August 02, 2023

God Please Just Do What You Do

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

The laundry basket crashed at my feet.

I looked up the stairs and saw my mother-in-law at the top.

She had literally thrown her laundry basket down the steps because it was too hard for her to carry it down.

That was a clue that it was time for us to move to a house without stairs.

But as you know if you’ve done it, finding a new place to live is a huge and important decision.

I wanted to come up with a prayer my wife and I could agree on.  I had recently memorized Matthew 18:19 where Jesus said, “If two of you agree on earth concerning anything they ask, it will be done for them by My Father in heaven.”

What’s the weak link in that prayer formula?  It’s getting two people on earth to actually agree on something!

So I wanted to come up with a precise prayer for our housing that my wife and I could agree on, but what would it be?

I was thinking of all the things we could ask for in a new house, but I was also thinking, “What do I know?”  I don’t know the future or what we will need and how life will play out.  But God does.  Matthew 6:8 says that God knows our needs before we even ask!

Then I got to thinking about a basketball game.  What if I was the coach, and time was running out, and the game was on the line.  And oh yeah, Michael Jordan is on the team!  Would I try to draw up some elaborate play out of my own thinking and tell them what to do?  Or would I simply hand the ball to Michael Jordan and say, “Here you go.  Just do what you do.”

God is far more capable than Michael Jordan, so why would I come up with an elaborate prayer to tell God what to do?  

So this became our prayer for a new house, “God, please, just do what You do regarding our housing.”

No, we didn’t sit back and do nothing.  My wife was on the hunt, diligently looking at what was on the market.  And I think she just liked looking at all the houses, which is something I don’t really care about.

Then one day she took me to see a house, and when I saw it from a distance, something “pinged” inside of me and I thought, “This is good.  This could be the place!”

And it was!  It turned out to be the perfect place for us and our needs and even what was coming in the future that we had no idea about.

Proverbs 3:5-6 says:  Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths.

Jeremiah 17:7 says, “Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord…”

Yes, many times I pray very specific prayers, “letting my requests be made known unto God.”  But other times, like in this housing situation, I just trust the Lord, put the ball completely in His hands and say, “Here you go.  Here’s the ball, Lord.  Please, just do what You do, and I know it’s going to be wonderful.  It’s going to be the best it can be!”

So if you need a short prayer of faith today, and one we can easily agree on, here you go.  Just pray this prayer with me.

“God, please, just do what You do.”

Amen.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.

 

Friday, July 07, 2023

Every Time She Doubted

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

What do you do when you doubt?

Did God ever do anything for you?

Did He save you?  Did He spare you from the net of the fowler?

Did He forgive you and shine His grace upon you?

Did He give you wisdom when you lacked it?

Did He ever bring conviction on you that led to repentance?

Did you ever read the Bible and feel like God was speaking directly to you?

Did one of God’s people ever minister to you at just the right time, like they were on a mission from God Himself?

This is what you do when you doubt.  You go back and remember what God did in the past.

Maybe you aren’t feeling His presence right now.  Maybe He seems far away.  Maybe He let you down.  He didn’t do what you thought He should.  Maybe you are starting to believe those who say there is no God at all.  What should you do?

Go back and remember what God did in the past.  Or as one old Gospel song says, go back to the old landmarks.

There’s another old Gospel song called Jesus Gave Me Water.

The chorus says, “Jesus gave me water and it was not from the well.”

It’s based on the story from John chapter four about the woman at the well.

Jesus and His disciples went to a city of Samaria called Sychar.  Outside the city was Jacob’s well.  Jesus sat by the well while His disciples went into Sychar to buy food.

Then a woman came out to draw water from the well.  Jesus asked her for a drink, and ended up talking to her about “living water.”  

Jesus told her that whoever drinks the water from the well will get thirsty again, but whoever drinks God’s living water will never thirst because it will “become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.”

That goes along with what Jesus said in John chapter seven.  “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.  He who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.”  Then verse 39 explains that when Jesus said living water He was talking about the Holy Spirit, “whom those believing in Him would receive.”

The woman at the well believed in Him.  And she brought a bunch of people from Sychar and they believed in Him as well.

And those who believe in Him would receive the Holy Spirit, which is the living water.

Did you ever have the living water of the Holy Spirit flowing like a spring of water within you?  Maybe it is hard to remember, so go back to the old landmarks.  Think back to what God has done for you in the past.

What do you do when you doubt?

Think back!

Back to the song Jesus Gave Me Water.  Later in the song there is a line about doubt.  It says, “every time she doubted.”

Now you’d think the woman at the well would never doubt, right?  I mean, she talked in person to Jesus and He read her mail.  He prophesied to her.  What’s to doubt?

Or maybe she never did doubt.  It’s just a song, right?  But doubt has a way of creeping into everyone’s life at one time or another.  Even John the Baptist in prison sent a message to Jesus saying, “Are you the Coming One or do we look for another?”  And that’s the same John the Baptist who announced, “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!”

So back to the song.  What did she do every time she doubted?  It says…

“Every time she doubted, she’d start to think about Him,

The Man that gave her water, and it was not from the well.”

When you begin to doubt, go back to the old landmarks.  Think about what God has done for you.

For the woman at the well, at least according to the song, she would remember when the Lord had her shoutin’ and there was no room for doubtin’, that Jesus gave her water and it was not from the well!

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.

 

Wednesday, July 05, 2023

What Does Ananias Have to Do With It?

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Why doesn’t God just do everything?

Why does He leave anything up to human beings?

I don’t know, but He does, and one great example of that is the story of Paul and Ananias.

We can read the story of Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus in Acts chapter 9, chapter 22 and again in chapter 26.

He was called Saul at the time, and he was on his way to Damascus to persecute Christians.  

Suddenly Jesus Himself spoke to him from heaven!

I know that is strange by itself, but something even stranger happened.  

Jesus Himself spoke to Saul, but He didn’t give him the whole message.

God didn’t just do everything.  He got other people involved, including a Christian named Ananias.

In Acts 9 verse 6 Jesus said to Saul, “Arise and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.”

Jesus could have just handled everything Himself, right there on the spot, but no.  He sent Saul into Damascus with only a vague notion of what was going to happen next.

Meanwhile, in Acts 9 verse 11 the Lord appeared to Ananias in a vision, called him by name, and told him to go see Saul.

And oh yeah, God gave Saul a vision of someone named Ananias coming to minister to him!

God could have just taken care of everything Himself, right?  But He didn’t.  He got Ananias involved in His work.  

What does that have to do with you and me?  All Christian believers are members of the Body of Christ, and when God wants to do a work on earth, He uses the Body of Christ, His people, to carry out His plans!

You’ve heard the old saying, “We are His hands and His feet.”  That’s what this is, the Christians, the Body of Christ, His church, doing His work as He leads us.

And listen – each believer has an EQUALLY VITAL PART in the Body of Christ.  Sure, we have different gifts and callings, different backgrounds and different experiences.  But each one of us is important to God’s work.

There’s Saul, who would become Paul, and reach the Gentile world for Jesus and write a good portion of the Bible, and yet God chose to include little old Ananias in His grand master plan.  

I have no idea why God uses people because we are generally an unreliable lot.  Nevertheless, here we are, God’s people, His vessels…and His vassals!  He has work He wants done in the earth, and He’s not going to do it all by Himself.  He’s going to use people, and you and I are one of them.

And listen:  it’s about to get exciting!

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.

 

Monday, June 26, 2023

To Obey Is Better Than Sacrifice

(Click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

To obey is better than sacrifice.  What on earth does that mean?

We find this phrase in First Samuel 15:22.  It’s the prophet Samuel talking to King Saul, the first king of Israel.  Samuel said, “Has the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice…”

Saul insisted that he HAD obeyed, he just hadn’t TOTALLY obeyed.  What was the big deal?

Apparently it was a HUGE deal.  The very next verse, First Samuel 15:23 has some of the most sobering words in the whole Bible.  Samuel said to King Saul, “For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry.  Because you have rejected the word of the Lord, He also has rejected you from being king.”

So back to this phrase “to obey is better than sacrifice.”  There is something inside of us that glorifies sacrifice.  We give up something.  We lay down something.  We sacrifice something, and it’s a noble thing to do.

We often think of our veterans and how they sacrificed their lives, many of them to the point of death…a noble sacrifice for the rest of us in the country.

Now think of this in military terms.  Which is better:  sacrifice or obedience?

What do we want our soldiers to do:  to wake up each morning and decide what they are going to sacrifice for their country, or to wake up each morning and do what they are told?

Do we want a national defense plan where everyone does what they think is best, or where there is a unified plan with commands from the top that the soldiers carry out?

Imagine a soldier is told to stand guard and watch the horizon for planes coming from the west.  But instead of just standing there, watching the sky, he decides to really sacrifice himself and go clean the latrine, a disgusting job that no one wants to do.  What a noble sacrifice, right?

But wait.  What if it’s December 7th, 1941, and no one is watching for planes and we end up with the disaster of Pearl Harbor?  Sure, it was a sacrifice to clean the bathrooms, but it would have been far better for him to obey his commands and stand watch.

This is why it is better to obey than to sacrifice.  We’re not saying sacrifice is bad.  In fact, you have to sacrifice in order to obey.  The key here is that obedience is BETTER than sacrifice.  We don’t just make up what we want to sacrifice and then tell God, “Oh, I’m sacrificing for you.”  That’s what King Saul did.  He was preparing a wonderful sacrifice for God, but he did not OBEY God.

So yes, as Christians we need to be prepared to lay down our lives as a living sacrifice, as it says in Romans 12:1.  But we do that, not by coming up with something to sacrifice, but by obeying God.

Even Jesus, the ultimate sacrifice, didn’t just decide one day to do something sacrificial and give up His life for the sins of the world.  Philippians 2:8 says that Jesus became “obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross.”  Romans 5:19 says, “For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so also by one Man’s obedience many will be made righteous.”

Yes, Jesus was sacrificial, but more importantly, Jesus was obedient…obedient to the Father’s will.  “Not my will, but THY will be done,” Jesus said.

So as we go about our day, we don’t say, “Gee, I’m going to do something great for God.  I’m going to sacrifice and give up something just for Him.”

Instead we say, “God, what do You want me to do?  I want to obey You.  I want to follow You.  Not my will but Your will be done.  Lord, help me not do MY thing, but help me be obedient.  I want to fulfill my part in the body of Christ and carry out Your perfect plans.  Not my plans, but Your plans.”

It’s not about sacrificing something for God.  It’s about obeying Him…because to obey is better than sacrifice.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, June 01, 2023

I Was a Hyper-Competitive Child

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

I was sitting in the garage, crying my eyes out.

I wasn’t crying because I was sad.  I was crying because I wanted to kill someone, but since that was not an option, all that was left was crying.

I was playing an older boy in basketball, and he beat me mercilessly, and it was so frustrating.  I grew angrier and angrier, and if there is such a thing as murdering someone in your heart, I did it repeatedly that day.

My mom finally came out to help me settle down, but that day was the apex of my hyper-competitive childhood.  I wanted to win, to always win, and I hated losing.

One time I was wrestling a friend, which was fine, it was competitive, but then his brother jumped in and the two of them pinned me to the ground.  I was spitting mad…and this was my best friend!  

Why was I hyper-competitive?  I have no idea.  I guess I could say I was born that way.

After that tearful, angry basketball game I started to get better control of my competitive nature.  I realized it’s just a fact of life, you can’t win every time.  But it was definitely still there, under the surface, a beast waiting to rise up.

It really wasn’t until God came in and began changing me that I was able to shift away from wanting to win at everything, all the time, and be able to just enjoy a game and enjoy the friendship and camaraderie of spending time with others.

For example, if you and I went and played a game of tennis today, and you played great and beat me every time, I could still enjoy the game, and even be excited for you and your skill and the great shots you made.  But there was a time when I would have been tempted to smash my racket to smithereens…though rackets cost money and I’m very frugal, so I would never actually do that.

I bring this up to say that, just because we might say we are born a certain way, with certain desires, doesn’t mean that is actually who we are.  Those feelings are not our identity.

There is a movement in our culture today that says if you have certain feelings, then that is who you are, period.  If you don’t roll with those feelings, then you are not being your authentic self, and you are even going to end up a psychological mess, if not downright suicidal.

Have you ever gotten lost?  Have you ever felt like you were going north but you were actually going south?  Have you ever felt like eating a cookie was exactly what your body needed?  Have you ever felt like life would hardly be worth living if you couldn’t live it with that one certain person?

Have you ever felt like, “If I don’t win this game, someone is going to have to die”?

Feelings are great, but they’re a terrible compass.  They can just as easily lead you in the wrong direction as they can lead you in the right direction.

What we need is an actual compass.  When it comes to life, I have found an effective compass in God’s Word in the Bible, and in listening to the still, small voice of His Holy Spirit.

Being hyper-competitive, even though it was a dominant feeling, and even though, as far as I can tell, I was born that way, according to the Bible it wasn’t leading me in the right direction.

Galatians 5:22-23 talks about love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.  When I was being hyper-competitive, I had none of those.  So which was right, the feelings I was born with, or the Bible?  Which was better?  

I can tell you that being hyper-competitive was vastly worse than having those qualities that God brought into my life, as I listened and received from Him.

Thank God I didn’t believe the lie that my feelings, even if I had felt them from as far back as I can remember, were my identity.  God had far better plans.  

In Isaiah 55:8-9, God says, “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways.  As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.”

God knows best!  He made us, and He knows what’s best for us.  

So listen.  You are not your feelings, even if you’ve had those feelings for a long time.  If your feelings don’t line up with God’s Word, then it’s time to go to God and ask Him to help you go from living by your feelings to living by His eternal truth and according to His plans, which are much better.

Sure, you don’t have to take my word for it.  All I can say is that I was born a certain way, with certain feelings and certain desires that didn’t line up with God’s Word, and when I decided to come to God, surrender my feelings to Him and do things His way…THAT’S when it finally started getting good, and I started seeing God’s great benefits in my life, including a boat load of:  love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Monday, May 08, 2023

Fasting All Beverages Except Water

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

“As the deer pants for the water, so my soul longs after Thee.”

That is my daily prayer, based on Psalm 42:1.

I just want more of God and His wisdom and goodness and guidance in my life, don’t you?

But how to get it?  How to get “me” out of the way to create more room for Him?

Jesus gave us some powerful insight when He said in Luke 9:23 that if we want to follow Him, we must first deny ourselves.

So, what are we denying ourselves?  It almost seems un-American to deny ourselves anything, and yet there it is in black and white, or in this case, there it is in the red letters, “Deny yourself.”

One way people denied themselves throughout the Bible and throughout history is by fasting.  It has been a simple formula throughout the ages.  You want to get closer to God?  You fast.

Fast what?  That’s a little open ended.  Yes, you can fast all food, but only for so long.  What I like to do is choose things I can fast - and keep on fasting - perpetually.  Right now I’m fasting 16 things, and number one on my list is this.

I’m fasting all beverages except water.

I started that in December, 2022 when I woke up in the middle of the night and felt like God was downloading a new plan for me, and that new plan included fasting all beverages except water…which I started doing immediately.

And what a blessing it has been!

How so?  Well first of all, it felt like a gift from God, and it felt like freedom!  Yes, there was the usual withdrawal from caffeine for a couple days, and the much longer withdrawal that comes when changing daily habits, but once I started to break free from those, it has been nothing but good.

Yes, it means denying myself all the other beverages, but once you break free and get used to drinking only water, it’s no big deal, and your body loves it!  Your body loves working with water and not having to filter through all the garbage we typically drink.  It also means you aren’t drinking any calories, which is great for losing weight.

Drinking only water will also save you lots of money.  No more expensive drinks in restaurants.  No more high dollar coffees.  No more stocking up on drinks at home.  You just made your shopping trips easier and less painful because hey, you’re only drinking water!

Does anything you’re drinking have a hold on you?  Are your beverages the boss of you more than you are the boss of the beverages?

First Corinthians 6:12 says, “I will not be mastered by anything.”  Are your beverages mastering you, in any way?  If so, consider fasting all beverages except water.

Your beverages might be mastering you if…

--if you drive way out of your way for a certain beverage,

--if you are spending more money than you wish you were spending on beverages,

--if you have shirts or hats or other products to connect your identity with that beverage,

--if you are waiting in the drive through right now just to buy that special beverage,

--and here’s a huge one, listen…if your body goes into withdrawal without that beverage, then your beverage is mastering you, and you are not mastering it.

First Corinthians 13:11 says, “When I became a man, I put away childish things.”  Are you making your beverage decisions with childish reasoning?  “Hey, it’s what I feel like drinking.”  If you’re ready to take it up a notch, consider fasting all beverages except water.

God is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him, and fasting is one way we diligently seek Him.

Jesus said in Matthew chapter six that when we fast our Father will reward us.

What are you fasting?  If you’re looking for something to fast, something you can keep on fasting perpetually, something that is helpful and beneficial in every way, physically, financially, spiritually, mentally…then prayerfully consider this.

Consider fasting all beverages except water.

I’ve been doing it for quite a while now, and I highly recommend it.  It has changed my life for the better in many ways, and I think it will do the same for you.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.

 

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Yes James 1:5, but in the Meantime Proverbs 4:5

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

You can’t just sit on your rear end and do nothing.

“But Doug, James 1:5 says, ‘If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him.’”

Yes it does.  I’m a huge fan of James 1:5, and I’m asking God for wisdom daily.  

But I’m also a big fan of Proverbs 4:5.  Do you know what that one says?

It says, “Get wisdom!”  In some translations that comes with an exclamation point.  Get it!

So yes, James 1:5, but in the meantime Proverbs 4:5.  In other words, yes, ASK for wisdom.  Then don’t just sit there.  Rise up and go get wisdom!

Proverbs 4:7 says, “Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom.”

One way to get wisdom is to find someone who already has some and ask them to share it with you.

Of course, reading the Bible is going to give you a lifetime of wisdom.  Psalm 19:7 tells us that the Word of God can make even foolish people wise.

Daily I’m asking God for wisdom in every area of life, but then I don’t just sit back and wait for wisdom to come slap me upside the face.  I take Proverbs 4:5 seriously when it says to “get wisdom.”

So yes, James 1:5.  James 1:5 all day long!  But in the meantime, Proverbs 4:5…rise up, take the initiative, and go get it!

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, April 20, 2023

A Tale of Two Broken Windows

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

It was like a shotgun of glass in my eyes.  Would it ruin my vision?

It all started on a typical Wednesday when I packed our baby in the car seat and went to pick up a little old lady for church.  It was a winter evening in Illinois and already dark.

As I was driving down the highway, suddenly there was a blast of glass as my driver’s side window exploded.  I don’t recall much about what happened after that.

It turned out that a deer had been streaking across the highway and slammed his head right into my window.  It was like a shotgun of glass to my face and eyes, and the baby was covered in glass but uninjured, thank God.

Someone rushed me to the hospital, and they spent a good amount of time getting the glass out of my eyes.  Just blinking felt like my eyes were full of gravel.

Finally, they sent me home with an appointment to come back in the morning.  My wife was driving me home, and I just sat there in the passenger seat with my head leaning on the window, drained.

And God met me there.

I just felt His grace and presence so sweetly.  I was thinking, “God, I don’t know what’s going to happen, but it doesn’t matter.  Even if I go blind, I’m going to follow You and do whatever You want me to do.”

God’s grace and peace and presence were so powerful in that moment, it was truly like the Bible says in Philippians 4:6, a peace that passes understanding.

Thankfully my eyes healed, and everything turned out fine, but at the moment BEFORE I knew how it would turn out…God met me there, and it was beautiful.

I’m calling this message A Tale of Two Broken Windows, so what’s the other one?

It’s the story of a much cooler car than my little Toyota Tercel.  It’s about a 1966 Chevy Chevelle which my friend Rodney Rowland completely restored.

I mean, that car is a thing of beauty!  He fixed it ALL up.  It was perfect.  And he was taking it to the 2023 Barrett-Jackson auction in Palm Beach, Florida, which if you know anything about car auctions, the vehicles at this event are incredible, I mean millions of dollars of amazing vehicles, all in perfect condition…and very shiny.

They don’t get that way by accident of course.  Rodney had spent countless hours bringing that car from basically a crusty shell to perfection.

April 2023 rolled around and he loaded it up on his trailer and hit the road for Palm Beach.  He submitted this super cool Chevelle to the auction inspectors, and uh-oh.  What did they just say?  The windshield…is broken?  What???

It was perfect when it left Tallahassee, but now it was cracked at exactly the worst moment, right before going on the auction block at this huge, worldwide sale.

Does that mean all that time, all that investment was going down the drain?  Did it mean pulling out of the auction altogether?  What should he do?

This is where the grace of God settled on Rodney in a powerful way.  He felt the peace to just go ahead and put it into the auction, even with the cracked windshield.  He said, “God, I’m going to praise You no matter what happens.  If it sells for a lower dollar amount than I need, so be it.  God, You are my provider and I will praise You either way.”

No, it’s not natural to say such things.  It’s not natural to face maybe losing your vision and saying, “God, it doesn’t matter, I’m following You.”  It’s not natural to face potential financial disappointment and say, “God, it doesn’t matter, I’m praising You.”

It’s not natural.  It is supernatural!  It’s what happens when the Spirit of God gives you His grace and peace and presence.  All the usual values and concerns fade in the presence of God!

I was raised in the Lutheran church, and at the end of every service the pastor would quote the benediction in Numbers 6:24-26, “The Lord bless you and keep you.  The Lord make His face shine upon you and be gracious unto you.  The Lord lift up His countenance upon you, and give you His peace.”

That is exactly what happened in this Tale of Two Broken Windows, for both Rodney and me.  We lived it.  We experienced it.  In a time of stress and potential loss, we felt the Lord’s presence, His grace, and His peace.

And God can do this for you, whatever you are facing today.  How?

I like what it says in Isaiah 26:3, and I like the majesty of the old King James, “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee: because he trusteth in Thee.”

As we keep our heart and mind turned towards God and His Word, trusting in Him, then He blesses us with His peace and grace and presence, even in the middle of our trials.

ESPECIALLY in the middle of our trials.

And that is how we can have peace, even when the glass is breaking, and say, “God, I’m going to follow You and praise You, no matter what.”

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Give the Gap

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

“I will NOT be taken advantage of.”

That’s what we say.

“I will not be made to look like a fool.  If someone’s going to get the short end of the stick, it’s not going to be me.”

No one wants to get the short end of the stick, but in almost every human interaction you could easily say, “Wait a second.  I’m giving more than they are, and I’m getting less.”

The short end of the stick.

It’s hard to imagine Jesus complaining about getting the short end of the stick, which He certainly did when He died for me.  So the example of our Lord is to give, to go the extra mile, and to even find joy in it. 

But how can we do that?  No one wants to feel ripped off or taken advantage of.  It’s demeaning, even humiliating if you think about it too much.

Well I have a plan, a new way to look at it that really flips it on its head.  I call it Give the Gap.  What does that mean?

I’m holding my hand up here in front of my chin.  This is how much I think I am getting.  Now I’m holding my other hand up to my forehead.  This is how much I’m giving, so as you can see, there is a gap between how much I’m giving and how much I’m getting.  

The gap is the problem.  Marriages have been ruined over the gap.  Families have been wrecked; whole wars have been started over that gap.

So what can we do when there’s a gap between how much we are giving versus how much we are getting?

Give the gap.  And here’s an example.

A friend of mine wanted to sell his truck.  A friend of his wanted to buy it.  He told his friend the price, and his friend tried to bargain him down.  That made the first man angry because he told his friend the price and his friend didn’t take his price seriously but wanted a lower price.  There was a gap between their prices.  

I watched as their relationship became seriously damaged over that gap, but it could have been solved if either one of them would have been willing to give the gap.

Both of those men were good Christian men and members of the same church.  They both gave a lot of money to their church and other good causes.  They were givers!  But for whatever reason they didn’t extend their giving ways to this truck deal.  Neither one of them wanted to be taken advantage of, and it damaged their friendship.

It could have been avoided if one of them would have been willing to give the gap, and here’s how it works.

You say you want $5,000 for that old truck, and I only think it is worth $4,000.  Instead of wrecking the friendship, I can go ahead and pay your full price, and that one-thousand-dollar difference?  Instead of feeling cheated, I’m going to GIVE it to you!  I’m going to Give the Gap.

Let’s say you are at work and the boss asks you to do something and you don’t think it is your job.  Yes, you could start a big brouhaha, or instead you could give the gap…the gap between what you think you should give and what they think you should give.  Now instead of it being part of your job, you are giving it as a gift!

The Bible has much to say about giving, like it is better to give than to receive, and “give and it will be given unto you,” God loves a cheerful giver, and even, “go the extra mile.”

Hebrews 13:16 says to do good and share, “for with such sacrifices God is well pleased.”

Philippians 2 says we are to have the same attitude of Jesus who, though He was God, humbled Himself to becoming a human, a servant, even dying as a criminal on a cross.  

So when we see a gap between what we are giving and what we are getting, we can simply convert that gap into a gift!  Our attitude switches from, “I’m getting cheated,” to, “I freely give this as a gift, knowing that God wants me to give, and that when I do give, I will receive back and even more, as Jesus said in Luke 6:38, “pressed down, shaken together, and running over.”

No one wants to be taken advantage of, but everyone is called to give, so when you start to see a gap between what you are getting and what you are giving, instead of getting mad…Give the Gap.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.


Thursday, April 13, 2023

The Bathtub Drain

(click to listen)

I’m Doug Apple...and my heart is on fire.  (Luke 24:32)

Have you looked down your bathtub drain lately?

It’s probably just a black hole, and as long as the water drains you don’t even think about it.

But you know what?  A lot of things had to be done just right for that drain to work.

Think of a typical ranch house here in Florida built on a concrete slab.  An architect designs the house and creates a blueprint.  Then every person that works on the house works off the blueprint.

One thing on the blueprint is the plumbing.  Before they pour the concrete slab, a plumber has to install all the pipes in the exact right places, including that bathtub drain.

That drain has to be in the perfect spot.  He can’t just eyeball it.  He can’t just say, “This feels right.”  He has to put the drainpipe EXACTLY where the blueprint says to put it.

Why?  Because they are going to pour concrete around it.  It will literally be set in stone.  Yes, it can be moved.  I was part of a drain moving operation at a church one time, and it involved jackhammers and sweat and grumbling.  No one in their right mind would choose to put the drain in the wrong place so that they could move it later.  It would be what we call in the south “ig-nernt.”

That bathtub drainpipe has to be in the exact right spot because one day a guy is going to walk in carrying a bathtub.  He’s going to set it down, look down that drain hole, and he’d better see nothing but a black hole, perfectly lined up.  

Can you imagine how well the plumber has to do his job for the bathtub drain to be perfectly lined up?  It’s a marvel!  But that’s what the blueprint is for.

The plumber doesn’t go in and try to figure it out on his own.  He doesn’t ask his buddy, “Hey, does this look good?”  He has to follow the blueprint. 

And now listen.  We have a blueprint for life.  Life on this planet was created by the Architect, with a capital A, and He has a blueprint for how everything goes together.  If we follow the blueprint, our life works properly, and if we ignore the blueprint, it doesn’t work right.

Jesus used a construction analogy at the end of the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew chapter seven.  He basically said that if we follow His blueprint, His teachings, then we are like a wise man who builds his house well.  But if we don’t follow God’s blueprint, we are like a man who builds his house foolishly.

For example, in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said to forgive.  Our blueprint for life is to “forgive men their trespasses.”  Forgiveness works!  It’s in the blueprint!  But what if we don’t feel like forgiving?  What if we have a hundred reasons to not forgive?

The plumber might have a hundred reasons to put the bathtub drainpipe somewhere else, but he MUST put it where the blueprint says to put it or it won’t work.  He will have missed the mark.

What is another word for “missing the mark?”  Sin.  

In the original language, the word sin comes from the Greek and Hebrew words which mean “to miss the mark.”  To sin is literally to miss the mark.  It’s putting the pipe anywhere but where the blueprint says to put it.

If we don’t forgive, we are missing the mark, ignoring the blueprint, and building our life poorly.  This applies to everything God told us to do.  His words are the blueprint.

What if you don’t like words like sin and obedience.  Well, think of it in terms of Jesus’s construction analogy.  Sin is missing the mark, which is not following the blueprint, which is putting the pipes wherever you feel like. 

Obedience is hitting the mark, following the blueprint, putting the pipes right where the blueprint says to put them.

For some reason we think of obedience to God as optional, but we sure don’t want the plumber thinking of the blueprint as optional when he’s building our house.

Why not?  Because we want it built well, not poorly.

And the same is true for our life.  We want it built well not poorly, and for that, we have to follow the blueprint of the architect, with a capital A.

May God bless you today.

I’m Doug Apple.