Showing posts with label hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hope. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

A Stroke of Faith by Mark Moore

Guest Blogger Mark Moore
I had always believed that I was in charge of my life, and I had been doing a heck of a good job of it. I was a successful businessman, loving husband and involved father, dedicated amateur athlete, and active member of my local church. However, everything changed on a beautiful Sunday morning in May 2007, when I was hit in quick succession by two nearly fatal strokes at the age of 46. Suddenly, I was no longer in control of anything.

After spending nearly a month in a medically-induced coma, I awoke to find myself a helpless invalid lying in a hospital bed, unable to lift my head, pierced by IVs, tubes, and monitoring devices, and suffering from a hole in my skull from what turned out to be life-saving surgery.

I wondered if I would ever be able to live a life like the one before my strokes and questioned whether I’d ever be able to walk, speak, or tie my shoes again. At first, I was devastated that this had happened to me, but I eventually realized that this was an opportunity to rearrange my priorities and focus on the things that were important to me. From then on, I vowed to never take my family, friends, health, or faith for granted ever again.

Now, 10 years later, I have made an almost-near recovery due to the expertise of medical professionals, extensive rehabilitation, and what I call the 3 F’s (family, faith, and friends)—even having completed a 5k race one year after my strokes. While my life will never fully return to pre-stroke normality, I have chosen to dedicate my life to philanthropy, my family, my renewed relationship with God and his plan, educating others about stroke awareness and prevention, and inspiring those who have suffered similar events. I am proud to be a regional ambassador for the American Stroke Association and the American Heart Association, through which I have been blessed to be able to share my story and educate people about strokes.

The 10th anniversary of my stroke is this month, coincidently falling during American Stroke Month. My new book, A Stroke of Faith: A Stroke Survivor’s Story of a Second Chance at Living a Life of Significance, published this month, and tells the story of my strokes and recovery journey. I hope that it will inspire others who have suffered similar afflictions and empower them to fully commit to their journey of recovery, even if it seems impossible at the time.



Mark Moore is a philanthropist and successful businessman. Along with his wife Brenda, a former nurse, Mark has established the Mark and Brenda Moore and Family Foundation, through which he supports advances in healthcare, education, culture and the arts, and Christian evangelism. Prior to engaging full time in his philanthropic work, Mark was Chief Operating Officer and co-owner of Segovia, Inc., a leading provider of global internet protocol services to the US Defense Department. Mark is also the Mid-Atlantic Ambassador for the American Stroke Association and the author of the memoir A Stroke of Faith, which is now on sale.

Now retired, Mark spends his days educating people about stroke prevention and awareness, sharing his inspirational story with those who have suffered strokes and other traumatic ailments, and giving back to his community.

In A Stroke of Faith, you’ll read about:
•       The moving story of the COO and co-founder of a multi-billion dollar company who stared down fear as he had to learn to write a check again, tie his shoes, and even walk.
•       How Mark turned to God for a deeper understanding of his hardships.
•       Mark’s Stroke Recovery Guide, where Mark shares key insights that helped him through his recovery.
•       How Mark’s stroke affected his wife and two children, and while there were many challenges along the way, it ultimately brought them closer together as a family.
•       How to be loving friends, care-takers and encouragers to those who are recovering from a stroke, or serious medical condition.
•       The story of how one man accepted that through this test of his very life, he was given a second chance to give back to his family, his friends, his community in ways he never dreamed possible.
More about Mark and A Stroke of Faith can be found at www.astrokeoffaith.com and on Facebook and Twitter @AuthorMarkMoore. @AuthorMarkMoore.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Genesis 15:1 Do not be afraid, I am your shield



Walking in fear
Leaves me trembling
In the bitter and the cold.

Stripped of even false bravado
I find myself frozen
Unable to retreat or advance.

In my own power
There is no safeguard;
Only exposure to my enemies.

I buckle, uncovered and empty.
Even if I win, I lose.
Despair my only companion.

I am empty,
Nothing left to give or keep.
Then I hear a whispered shout.

"Do not be afraid.
Be calm, Be fearless.
Have no regrets. Stop trembling.

"I am your shield."\
I will protect you.
I will cover and defend you.

"In this place, learn to kneel
And bow your head.
No sword can touch you.

"Accept whatever comes
I am your sure guardian
Your champion and holy hedge."

Herein is all the assurance,
The salvation, which allows me to
Accept whatever comes.



Friday, September 23, 2016

Baby Step 18: Silence


Some days, no matter how bright the sun, or cheerful the breeze, I feel weighed down by a darkness within. There is no escape, no place of refuge, only a deep, hopeless chasm in which I cannot even rest. The pain seems more than I can bear. The joy stripped from within. Paralyzed, I cannot move. Blind, I cannot see. Deaf, I cannot hear. I find only the silence.



Domine Jesu Christe, you knew the darkness, the chaos before there was time. You breathed a Word, and there was light and calm. You move gently into my emptiness and lift me above the pain. In you, I live and move and have my being. You find me in the silence. You give voice to my grief. In the depths of despair, you breathe hope.



“But the LORD is in his holy temple; let all the earth be silent before him.” (Habakkuk 2:20)
“In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength.” (Isaiah 30:15)
“Be still and know that I am God.” (Psalm 46:10)




Monday, September 12, 2016

Baby Step 17 - Watch for the heroes

Psalm 56:3 Whenever I am afraid I will put my trust in thee.

Mister Rogers’ mother told him: "Whenever you see something bad is happening watch for the helpers."




On March 30, 2002, a firefighter searching for victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, discovered a burnt Bible fused to a piece of steel. The barely legible top page is open to the Sermon on the Mount from Matthew 5, where Jesus speaks of “an eye for an eye” followed by “resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other."

In your life make this your goal: focus on the donut and not the hole. 
God doesn't walk away. We often do in our helplessness and hopelessness not realizing famine will pass - feasting will follow.
Hope is embedded in our laments.
- Rev. Susan Landry


Monday, January 7, 2013

PRAISE


Daily Reading Revised Common Lectionary
Epiphany and Ordinary Time until Lent
Monday, January 7, 2012
These readings are adapted from The Book of Common Prayer, Daily Readings for Year One

Psalm 103: Praise for God’s mighty acts of love throughout the ages. The psalmist exhorts his entire being to praise God for forgiveness, healing, redemption, glorification, sustenance and renewal. The unending love of God extends to generations of faithful mortals.

Psalm 114: A Hallel (praise) psalm celebrating the Exodus from Egypt and entry into Canaan

Psalm 115: A call and response Hallel psalm celebrating God’s lordship and blessing on Israel. According to John Wesley, “an idol is a spiritual phenomenon. One gives oneself to a substitute for God – it, him, or her – to find happiness, contentment, rest. But one finds peace and liberation only in adoration of the Father, Son and Spirit…. All is to be loved gratefully as a gift to be offered back to God who in Christ loves us to holy excess.”

Isaiah 52:3-6:  One of four oracles of hope addressed specifically to Zion/Jerusalem. “For thus says the Lord: You were sold for nothing, and you shall be redeemed without money. Because those who oppress Zion howl my name,… Therefore my people shall know that it is I who speak; here am I.”

Revelation 2:1-7: “The prophetic word of Jesus to the church at Ephesus indicates that those in Ephesus have allowed their love of Jesus to diminish in the midst of their labors, from which they must repent or Jesus himself will come in judgment to remove the Sprit from the Church.”

John 2:1-11:  The first sign. Jesus is the bringer of God’s overflowing grace and end-time salvation, which the prophets depicted as a wedding feast and a time of abundant life are present now; indeed wine symbolizes the very presence of God.
The Wesley Study Bible NRSV, Abingdon Press, 2009.

                 PRAISE

Place me, Lord, in the heart of your blessing,
Raise in me a song of joy and hope.
Awake in me the awareness of your Holy name:
I yearn for your happiness, contentment and rest.
Speak forgiveness, healing, and restoration
Exhort my entire being to praise your name.

Provide peace and liberation;
Redemption and renewal.
Allow me to adore only you.
I need to love you to holy excess,
So I might be redeemed by your overflowing grace
Extended by your unending love as I live faithfully.

Presently living in your over-flowing grace
Resting in your end-time salvation
Adoring  Father, Son and Spirit
I hear your voice, I know you are here
Sustaining, liberating, blessing,
Even as I empty myself to be refilled.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Be Strong and Courageous


Sat
Jan 5
am: 2, 110
pm: 29, 98
am: Joshua 1:1-9
pm: Isa 66:18-23
am: Heb 11:32-12:2
pm: Rom 15:7-13
John 15:1-6

John Wesley in his sermon "The Scripture Way of Salvation" (#43) Reminds us that wen we receive Christ, we receive him in all his offices:
  • Prophet - differing from the earlier prophets of the Hebrews in being revealer in both word and deed, the Incarnate Word
  • Priest - mediator who enters the holy of holies, intercedes for us, and becomes for us sin
  • King - ruler, the King of the Jews from birth to crucifixion in earthly form, and according to the Revelation will come again as King of Kings and Lord of Lord
In the Creation, God's Voice calls order out of chaos. His power over the cosmos gives encouragement and hope for peace.

Each time I leave our room, I am reminded by the words on the door. Placed there on vinyl strips by my grandchildren who have the same words over their front door. "I hereby command you: Be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened or dismayed for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go." Joshua 1:9

Under the words are two lions: the ones that lie in my den. Each lion carries one statement. The first is "write" - I am now doing that every day - one lion at bay. The other carries a number 135. A long ways from the 215-222 where my weight balances from month to month. Yesterday, we put the "Lose It" app on my phone. Oops, missed my calorie goal yesterday. Today I face the lion again.

Not only God speaking to Joshua and Daniel in the lion's den, but "so great a cloud of witnesses" set forth by Paul to remind us that others have fought the lions and won. "Let us run with perseverance the race set before us."

Encouragement. Hope. Hope that brings joy and peace in the present and expectation of the fully realized kingdom of God in the future.

Prayer is the gymnasium of the soul.

Lord, I write everyday, help me learn to eat only enough to sustain. Help me tame the lion of food for comfort. And please, could we talk about the gym with the heated pool we pay for every month another day?






Bessie Jones & The Georgia Sea Island Singers - Daniel in the Lion's Den



Uploaded on Apr 11, 2011
Recorded by Alan Lomax on May 5, 1960 on St. Simons Island, GA
as part of his Southern Journeys recordings of native folk music.
Backing singers include: Joe Armstrong, Jerome Davis, John Davis, Peter Davis, Henry Morrison, Willis Proctor, and Ben Ramsay.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired




Wed
Jan 2
Psalms
am: 34
pm: 33
Gen 12:1-7
Heb 11:1-12
John 6:35-42, 48-51


Lord, this morning I am sick and tired of being sick and tired. I know, I know – the Trouble is when I get this way I tend to over-do and then over-pay.  So today, may I just say I am sick and tired of being sick and tired - and praise you for deliverance from the Trouble – trusting I can just be sick and tired of being sick and tired?


I am sick and tired of being sick and tired

Always a day late and a dollar short
Making do with what I do not have

Some days all I can do is ask others to magnify the Lord for me
I do not have the strength to do it myself
Can I, like David, find You near when I am broken-hearted and crushed in spirit?
Keep my bones, Lord, and rescue me from my afflictions

Allow me to give you
New songs, new melodies, new understanding because

I know Your character
Demands an internal disposition of praise because You are Worthy

Tell me again how You fashion a garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness
I wait to be passed over and to
Reach out to touch Your robe as you pass by
Ever thankful that I
Do not have to be whole to be whole-hearted and whole-ly Yours

Only
Faithful

Believing and trusting, faithfully moving
Existing and looking more deeply
Inward beyond my pain
Noting it as I pass it by reaching for
God-emancipation, God-expansion, God-exculpation, God-exoneration

Step by step
Instead of by leaps and bounds
Crawling forward
Knowing the disillusionment of moving back

Assuage my thirst for wellness, Lord
Nearer
Draw me to Living Water

Trusting the unseen to be more real
I need to know that unlike other life-giving gifts
Resting in the great I AM refreshes
Eternal life is not only future but now
Dying You give me the hope and grace, faith and joy, strength and illumination

And that IS the disposition and magnification which creates joy and new songs
The Soli Deo Gloria which has nothing to do with being SICK AND TIRED OF BEING SICK AND TIRED

So be it. Amen
Soli Deo Gloria