Our Father

At my first time in church after accepting Jesus as my Savior and Lord, I heard someone starting their prayer saying, “Lord Jesus.” I fell into the habit of praying that way. Eventually, I shortened it to “Lord” while praying directly to Jesus. There is nothing wrong with doing that. In fact, Jesus said we could ask him anything. My relationship with God was primarily with Jesus.

Over the years, I began to see in scripture that Jesus was here to take us to his Father. When he taught the disciples to pray, he taught them to start, “Our Father, who art in heaven.” Since then, my relationship with the Father has grown. It isn’t at all what I expected.

When I was about four years old, we lived in an apartment, and across the street was an undeveloped swampy area. My brothers and I liked to play in a stream between the swamp and the road. The stream was small enough for my three older brothers to jump across. Usually, when I was outside, one of my brothers would be with me to keep me out of trouble. None of them were around one day, and I decided to go to one of our favorite spots, about a block from our apartment, and play near the little stream. It was very muddy that day, and I was sitting in the mud, digging in the dirt to make new little streams. My brothers had told me some snakes lived in that area, but I had never seen one.

Suddenly, my mother appeared. She rarely came looking for me, as she would send one of my brothers to get me if she wanted me for something. I didn’t know that she even knew where this play spot was. She was upset. When my mother took me back up on the road, she took all my clothes off except my underwear. She said there was sewage in that stream. She was so upset I didn’t dare ask what sewage was. I remember being very embarrassed to walk home with her holding my hand and being dressed only in my underwear. When we got home, she took me straight to the bathroom and gave me a bath. I assumed that she was upset because I got dirty.

My mother wanted me to be clean, but she saw something in me that was more valuable than my cleanliness. She saw it even when I was dirty. Once I was clean, it no longer mattered that I was once dirty. As my relationship with my heavenly Father grew, I realized he saw me like that. The Father saw value in me that I didn’t know I had. As I got to know the Father, he was much more than I ever realized. Jesus and the Holy Spirit continuously clean me up for the Father.

I tried to understand the Father using what I had learned of him in the context of scripture. Both the scripture and my own experience showed me the incredible kindness and love of the Father. I also began to see that Jesus was more like him than I previously understood. When he was contained within the human body on the earth, only a tiny portion of what he was like could be seen.

Being clean is an essential part of life. But there is a lot more to life than just being clean. Each day brings a new adventure. I am trying to be sensitive to the Lord’s leading so that I can walk with him as if this is my last day.

42 responses to “Our Father”

  1. I love this–beautiful thoughts!

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Beautifully put. And so good to see in this season of the year. Thank you

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Beautiful! Thank you!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Oh this is such a wonderful post !! I think our Father also sometimes doesn’t pay attention to our embarrassment as He pulls us out of the sewage of life and proceeds to drag us back home in our underwear. He knows what is most important and can fix any attitudes/thoughts we may have at any given time, later, if we let Him.

    Would have loved being there the moment your mother realized she had to go get you. Such love and exasperation – lol.

    This post actually is along the same lines as a post I have been planning on writing, or maybe I have mentioned it in a comment on someone’s site recently, I can’t keep track of all that – lol. How some of us are stinky and dirty because we live in the sewer of life. But some of us are stinky and dirty because we are swimming in the sewer to go try and rescue those that are living in the sewer and pull them out. Its a dirty job, but someone needs to do it. And things are not always as they seem, right, when we accuse someone of smelling dirty and “being a backslider”? Food for thought.

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  5. I agree with Belinda, beautiful thoughts. Thanks, Don.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Praise God for His gre

    Liked by 1 person

  7. I will remember this post! 😊🙏🏻

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Beautiful! You had a good number of faith-affirming experiences while growing up. Thanks for sharing them. May many young families of our day be drawn too into the good journey of walking under God’s amazing grace.

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  9. Wonderful post, Don! Thanks for sharing your story and thoughts!

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Thank you for sharing a heartwarming story and a lovely family picture. I’m guessing that since you were the youngest, you’re sitting on your dear mother’s lap getting an embrace much like I imagine Jesus would do for a child of God. 🙂

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    1. Yes, that’s me on my mother’s lap. I have a younger brother born eight years after me, but he wasn’t born when the picture was taken.

      Liked by 1 person

  11. This is such a beautiful post Thank you sharing Don.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Oh, Don, your story—the stream and sewage, your reference to whom you pray to, your mother’s love and care, your journey to the Father, the Holy Spirit, your friend, Jesus, the wonderful analogy, for all this, thank you. It reads like a film. So tender and beautiful.

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    1. Thank you, Deb. I’m sure you know how encouraging it is when someone feels what you are trying to express.

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  13. I think little boys are drawn to water and mud, Don. I grew up on a farm in eastern New Mexico. We had an irrigation pond that covered about an acre. I was constantly wet and muddy.

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    1. I think you are right, Jon.

      Liked by 1 person

  14. I love how your childhood memory still speaks to you of God’s love!

    Liked by 1 person

  15. This is heartwarming, Don. I always start my prayer with Dear Lord or Dear Jesus.

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      1. You are most welcome, Don.

        Liked by 1 person

  16. Love this post! Excellent picture to help us remember a spiritual truth. I completely agree with you. I love how much our Heavenly Father and Jesus love us and see value in each one of us.

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  17. you will find a kindred soul in Brian Pennington who comments on my posts. Visit my most recent, find his name, click on it and decide —

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  18. Such a beautiful share & I absolutely love and cherish the old photos!

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  19. You know,

    Christian baptism is a symbol of spiritual hygiene.

    Liked by 2 people

  20. I’m thankful to have found your blog. Reading through your posts, your words are always meaningful and your personal stories point to the Lord. Thank you for sharing so much of your life here. Your experiences in the light of God’s love are a blessing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much. You encourage me.

      Liked by 1 person

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