Thoughts on Persistence

Thoughts on Persistence
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Saturday, September 27, 2014

He Touches the Ugly Parts

The question of the day is this:  Got ugly parts?  Don’t we all? 

Even if you show me yours I’ll refuse to show you mine.  My ugly parts are … well, ugly.

But there is one who touches our ugly parts.  He is the God of the Universe.  He is the one who is in love with you, He knows all about you and He cares deeply about you and me and every area of our lives.

I love this insight from Max Lucado’s book Grace

“Jesus touched the stinky, ugly parts of his disciples.  Knowing He came from God, knowing He was going to God, knowing He could arch an eyebrow or clear His throat and every angel in the universe would snap to attention, knowing that all authority was His, He exchanged his robe for the servant’s wrap, lowered himself to knee level and began to rub away the grime, the grit and the grunge their feet had collected on the journey.” 
~Max Lucado, Grace

And He continues that today.  He does that for you and for me. 

He sees the dirt, the grime, the soars, the fungus and the ingrown toenails, and He loves us anyway.  He washes all the dirt and ugly away when we come to Him.

What is clinging to your life?  What habits have you picked up that cling to you like a bad smell? 

What is your greatest need?  What is your worst moment in life?  What is your greatest sin?

Come to the one who stands ready to wash it all away just for the asking. 

He makes the ugly parts beautiful once again.
He turns our dirt into dignity.

He touches our ugly parts and redeems those scars and mars.

Can you trust him?

You bet you can.

“All have sinned and fall short of God’s perfect plan.  But we find justification as a gift from God because of the redemptive work of The Christ, God’s one and only son.”
(Romans 3:23-24 Paraphrased by PMB)



P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time


Saturday, September 20, 2014

Seeing Through the Smoke

Brennan Manning, a favorite Christian author, tells an encouraging story that I would like to share with you. 

Once upon a time a two-story house caught fire.  The family – father, mother, several children – were on their way out when the smallest boy became terrified, tore away from his mother and ran back upstairs.  Suddenly he appeared at the smoke-filled window, crying like crazy.  His father, outside, shouted, “Jump, son, jump!  I’ll catch you.”

The boy cried, “But, daddy, I can’t see you.” 

“I know,” his father called, “I know.  But I can see you.”
~Brennan Manning.

And the moral of the story … God sees through the smoke.  He sees through the smoke-screen, through the burns and blurs and deceptions and through the hardships, the half-told truths and the obscuring stories we tell ourselves and others.

What?  You think I am less than honest?  You think I shade the truth on occasion?  Are you accusing me of fraud?

Maybe.  Perhaps.  And I am right there with you.  I have twisted a line or two to make myself look good.  I have fluffed a resume or two in my day.  And God still loves me, and you as well.

And if we do bend and twist our story a bit, and if we obscure the scene, then this article is not a condemnation but a reprieve.  This is not a deal breaker but a deal maker.  We have a God who sees us anyway.  He sees us at our best moments and our worst.  He sees the homerun hits and the strikeouts.  He sees us on top of the world and in our down-and-out moments of despair.

And He loves us still.  He loves us in the middle of our mundane living.  He loves us in our lies and in our laughter.

Isaiah 43:1 says this (loosely paraphrased by PMB): 

“I know you by name. I call to you.  When you pass through treacherous waters, and lies and deceit, I still see you and redeem you.”  Isaiah 43;1-2


God sees through the smoke.  He finds us when our own eyes obscure the scenery.  He sees us in every act of decency and disgust.

HE SEES US!  You and me.

Thank God for his ever watchful eye that is always upon us.

Thank God indeed.



P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time

Sunday, September 14, 2014

How Good Is Good

This great question rises to the top once again.  As Christian’s go, the quest for “good enough” is like running a race in a round building. 

If you don’t claim to wear the Christian label, perhaps you have thrown up your hands because you never felt the “standards” were reachable.

Let me help you with some of these quandaries. 

I started a new career path recently as a personal banker.  There are over thirty tutorials I’m required to take, and the passing score is 80.  What if, in the pursuit of God, we had to score an 80 or greater on the “good” meter?  What would happen if we score a 78, or even 58?  Maybe we’re so far from good we can only muster a 42.  What then?

Just how good is good?  What does God do with average Joe’s and Jackie’s?  What if, for whatever reasons, we feel we are below average in God’s scheme of things? 

Hang on.  There is some great news ahead.

The critical piece in this race for good and better is this:  GRACE!  The grace of God is available and abundant for the best of the best and the worst of the worst.  Just listen to this.

The wages of sin - death, but God’s gift is eternal life In Christ Jesus.
Romans 6:23

And another:

By grace you and I are saved through faith.  This is not because of anything we can do on our own.  This is a free gift from God.
Ephesians 2:8

And one final thought:
This is the testimony:  God gives us eternal life in His Son Jesus Christ.  If you have the Son, you have life.
I John 5:11

As I read these passages again, I see no mention of a price.  There is no laundry list of “things to do”.  We ACCEPT this free gift. 

Here is what is missing:
We don’t have to bow to the east.
We don’t have to wear sandals.
We don’t have to earn a bunch of merit badges.

Here is the only qualification:  have the Son – Jesus Christ.

And if you presently don’t have the Son, just ask.  ASK!  Ask him to come and be with you, abide in you. 

How good is good?

Good enough when you have the Son!


P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time


Sunday, September 7, 2014

What Is a Christian

There have been a few hundred descriptors used in describing exactly what a Christian is.  There is only one good answer to this question, however.

I think Maya Angelou pretty much nailed it with this thought.

“When I say “I am a Christian,” I’m not holier than thou; I’m just a simple sinner who received God’s good grace, somehow.”

Some would identify a Christian as one who goes to church.
Perhaps some may think that a Christian is one who reads his/her Bible every day.
Maybe a Christian is one who doesn’t drink, or smoke, or go to movies.

Maya nailed it.  She NAILED.  She received God’s good grace. 

We don’t earn the title “Christian.”
We don’t get a merit badge that says “Christian” on it.
We don’t get a plaque to place on our wall of fame that says “On this day in 2014 Michael Biggs was declared a Christian with all the rights and privileges thereof.”

It is a grace thing.  Remember, our working definition of grace is “an unmerited act.”

Are you trying to earn the title “Christian?”  Then you are working too hard. 

Are you trying for a marathon of prayers to finally get your “Christian” notch on your belt?  Good luck with that one.

Ephesians 2:8 puts it this way.
“For by grace a person is saved through faith.  This is not something you can do for yourself.  It is a gift from God.”

The great mystery is solved.  The great answer comes crashing through the barriers. 

You aren't required to be a member of the right club or right church.
You aren't required to wear a certain headband, a robe of the right color or learn some magic words to gain admittance. 

You are offered grace.  It is a FREE gift from God himself.

The faith part is simply acknowledging Jesus Christ as the Son of God. 

Then say whatever words you feel you want to add.

These are some pretty good one.

“Help me God.”


P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time


Sunday, August 31, 2014

Stone Throwers Have Lousy Aim

How is your aim?

In the Biblical story of the woman caught in adultery, the stone throwers only aim was to condemn the woman.  Note that they left the male partner of the woman alone. 

In my years of living, this one thing is sure.  Stone throwers have one aim and one aim only, to hurt, maim, and destroy.  They want someone punished and often they don’t really care to whom the punishment falls.  They want blood!  If you get caught in the wake of the fallout, too bad.  If a stone bounces off the wall and hits an innocent victim, well, that’s nothing more than collateral damage.

Balance that mental picture with God in heaven.  He is slow to anger, slow to balance the books.  His grace flows down in abundance.  He offers forgiveness time and again. 

As Philip Yancey writes:  “God is looking for more ways to bring you to His side than he is looking for ways to keep you away.”

You see, God has a good aim.  His aim is love, peace, and forgiveness.  He aims to show you His grace-filled side.  So, stone throwers, your game has been cancelled.  Go home.  Polish your rocks for another day. 

If I am to err, it will always be on the side of grace.  My heart beats with more latitude, less judgment. 

I see God offering that as well. 

What did he say to the woman caught in adultery?  “Neither do I condemn you.  Go and sin no more.”

What did he say to the one thief on the cross?  “Today, you shall be with me in paradise.”

There is a great verse in Isaiah 1:18 that caps our thought today.  God himself is speaking.

“Come now, let us reason together.  Even if your sins are scarlet, they shall be pure as snow; even if they are red like crimson, they shall appear as wool.”

I don’t hear any stones being tossed here.  I don’t hear any “you should have’s, if only you would have” or “why didn’t you do this first”.

I hear love, compassion, GRACE!

God’s aim …
     Restoration
          Redemption
               Reuniting



P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time


Saturday, August 23, 2014

Time to Come Home

“If only I could go home.” 

Have you ever found yourself forming those words?  I suppose many of us have at one time or another. 

The concept of coming home is like a warm blanket on a cold night.  Home can be any place or with any person where one feels comfortable, at peace and loved and cared for. 

That is the great call of God to you and me.  He wants us to come home to the one who loves us more than we can imagine.  There is that spot within all of us that seeks this union with God.  We seek relationship and acceptance with God himself and our lives are never complete without that God connection. 

The great thought that I want you to hold onto is this.  God issues invitation after invitation to us to come, abide, be with Him, draw near and many other mental images of this oneness with God.

The great verse found in Matthew 11:28 gives us come clues.

“Come to me all who are weary
and weighed down. 
I will give you rest.”

In other words God is saying “come on home.  I have food to eat, a nice comfortable bed, warm cloths, and plenty of room and plenty of love for you.”

You don’t need a membership card, a debit card or a magic key.  You don’t even need to know the secret password.

Make your approach.  Call out to God and say a simple “Help”!

Isaiah 58:9 reminds us of this:

“You will call out to me for help,
and I will answer you.  You will
cry out, and I will say, “Here I am.”

Maybe it is time to come on home.



P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time


Saturday, August 16, 2014

When We Don't Win

There is an interesting tidbit in the scriptures that I’ve run past a few times.  At the crucifixion of Christ, we learn of a thief hanging on one of the crosses who makes a bold request and it is granted.  He asks Christ to remember him when Christ comes into his kingdom. 

Christ’s response:  “Today you will be with me in paradise.”

This story is told in Luke 23: 32-43, and here is the point.  The thief in our story is in the last minute of his life.  The clock has just about run out and he is tied up.  He can’t go out and do an act of kindness to sort of make up for past sins.  He can’t do anything to redeem himself, except turn to the redeemer himself.  So that is what he does. 

Did you get all of that?
The man’s life would be over soon.
The final buzzer would sound.
He was out of options and out of time.
He was a thief, who had stolen and stolen a lot. 
And he probably lied about it too.
He was bad enough to be condemned to death.
He was not winning in this life and he knew it.

And yet, he is offered redemption. 

That is AMAZING GRACE.

Have you won every time in life?  Have you always acted right, spoken right, gone to the right places, lived right, told the truth 100% of the time, never cheated anyone, anytime in anyway? 

Me neither.

When we face those reminders of a failed life, along comes grace.  I love what Brennan Manning says about this.


“Grace means that God is on our side and thus we are victors regardless of how well we have played the game.”
~Brennan Manning

The point is this … you and I can’t earn our place in God’s kingdom.  We don’t have a sash with a bunch of merit badges sewed onto it like a Boy Scout.  We don’t get our card punched every time we say a good prayer, or help a little old lady cross a busy street. 

God knows our every weakness, sin, impulse, thought, inclination and proclivity, action and reaction. 

AND HE LOVES US ANYWAY!

Today I asked for and received my measure of grace.  And may you find your peace and forgiveness also.

God IS on our side.

Thanks be to God.


P Michael Biggs
Offering Hope
Encouragement Inspiration
One Word at a Time