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Monday, June 29, 2015

Egyptian Moon: Novel Introduction - Buy it on Amazon today for free!

I'm excited to say that I've published my first novel, and I would like to share an excerpt with you all. Before sharing, I would like to say that this novel was four years in the making and is the first installment in a three part series. I would like to thank God and my family who have always encouraged me to write and helped me along in this endeavor. I hope you all enjoy!



Prologue
Palace, Thebes, Egypt
33 AD


The sun stretched its rays over the glorious city of Thebes, striking the face of the Nile River. As the peasants retired for the day, trudging home from the surrounding fields, the pyramids stabbed the sky in the distance, and the obelisks stood in their stark preeminence. 
Within the upper balcony of the palace stood a young man, clad in a kilt. He stared at the setting sun as it spread its bronze back over the horizon. He could see the Nile River glistening from his room. A breeze blew in the balcony, slightly raising the wig off his shoulders.  He suddenly jumped when he felt a hand on his shoulder. He turned to see a beautiful young woman.  
“Come, my prince, don’t be afraid of me.”
“How did you enter?”
“Your servant let me in.”
“Come, have a seat,” he said taking her hands and leading her to his chair. She sat down as he kneeled before her.
“Now rise from your knees Akhom. I will be bowing before you in the future when you are the Pharaoh of Egypt.”
“No, as long as I’m in your presence I will kneel before you,” he said.
“Eternity is a long time to stay on your knees.”
“What is it you mean?” He asked.
“Will you take my hand in marriage?”
Akhom suddenly rose, pacing the floor in front of him.
“I’ve surprised you. Is it too soon?” She asked.
“No, but you know I’ve been betrothed to another since the age of eleven. If I don’t marry her I will forever be shamed in my father’s sight, and he will most likely give the throne to another. 
“You can’t predict the future. You don’t know what your father will think until it is done. So let’s leave this place and marry.  Let’s leave what may happen in the future behind.”
Suddenly seized by her gaze he came towards her and stopped in front of her. He looked back at his room longingly and the Nile river before him.
“Yes, let us marry,” Akhom said. His eyes glittered with apprehension as he followed her into the unknown.

                                                             Chapter One
Upper Nile, Courtyard, Kerma, Nubia
43 AD


The city of Kerma stood quietly. The wind carried dust from the surrounding desert and swirled up and about. It whistled ever so softly around Hotep’s sword. Hotep aimed the sword at his brother Caleb who was penned to the ground under his knee. Caleb squirmed but couldn’t move. 
“Yes brother, I surrender. Now let me up,” Caleb hissed.
Hotep put his sword in his sheath, rising to his full six foot two inches, and held his hand out to Caleb. Caleb grabbed it and rose to his feet.
“Now can you see why I want to fight?” Hotep queried.
“No, ruling over the whole of Nubia, once our father is dead seems to be a much better deal,” Caleb said scrunching up his nose.
“I don’t quite understand why you want me to be King when the position would be given to you if I stepped down.”
“I want you to be King because I see qualities in you that I can only dream of possessing,” Caleb admitted.
“Name one quality that I possess.”
“Well for one you’re very decisive; when you set your mind to do something you do it. We need men like you who will fulfill their promises to the people. Also you’re well loved by the people. People flock to you like herd, and they eat every word you say. I don’t understand why you haven’t used this to your advantage with the willing girls by now, but that’s another debate.”
“You seem to be forgetting something,” Hotep said.
“What?”
“I’m skillful with the sword.”
“Yes that too, but the qualities I mentioned before are more important. When you are King you can send others to fight your battles.  You are running away from your destiny, and for what? To be a common foot soldier?” Caleb asked.
“Yes. To be a soldier in our great army. I’d be serving the people and Apedemak the god of war in a different way. Why can’t I fight for the safety of the people on the battlefield instead of on the throne?”
“When you are King, you can do both. Fight for the people and rule,” Caleb said.
“Why should I wait to fight when I am King, when I can fight right now?”



Summary: 
Hotep, a Nubian Prince, travels to Egypt in hopes of gaining military success, a luxury his father withholds from him. When his friend meets with disaster, he loses hope and is enslaved in Egypt. 

Mandisa, an awkward 16 year old, becomes intrigued by a stranger who presents her with a truth that could shake her foundations. When her father grows deathly ill, will she trust the stranger or rely on the old ways? 

When there two worlds collide, will Hotep lay aside his pain and chase his dreams? Or will Mandisa accept the truth and trust in someone she cannot see?


Will The Real _________ ___________ Stand Up?

Will The Real _________ ___________ Stand Up?



Do you ever feel like you wear a mask in church and in the workplace or at school? Do you take off your mask when you're at home? Are you afraid to get close to people because you feel like they might see the real you? This is something known in the bible as hypocrisy. Hypocrisy means "the practice of claiming to have moral standards or beliefs to which one's own behavior does not conform." Many people probably wouldn't think of themselves as a hypocrite, but if we uphold biblical standards of how a christian should act in the workplace, etc, but we're a different person at home, then we're being a hypocrite. Are we supposed to feel justified in letting out all the stress from our day on our family or roommate? Certainly no. In 1 Peter 1:22 it reads, "Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently." Unfeigned means genuine and fervent means enthusiastically. Why do we withhold this from our family sometimes? Are they not worthy of our genuine love as well?

Now will the real ____________ ____________ stand up? This should be the one who has a genuine love for the brethren and someone who does not love in just word, but in action, as well in the workplace, at school, at home, yes, at home. May the real you be striving to love and actively searching for ways to meet the needs of others no matter where you're at.



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Monday, June 1, 2015

A Birthday Wish

A Solitary Birthday Wish

After seeing Do You Believe for the second time on my 32nd Birthday, I feel a stirring in my heart. And on the day that I celebrate that God gave me life, I have the perfect birthday wish, and that is that God will help me to become more like Him in reaching out to others more often and sharing the gospel of grace.



~And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.~
Matthew 24:14

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Turbulence: An Analogy

Turbulence: An Analogy



She dozed off to sleep sitting on the plane, the sounds of Grace Williams playing in her ears. She was awakened by a jolt that felt like they were hitting road bumps in the air. She heard the flight attendant's voice over the monitor. 
"Fasten your seatbelts, as we see turbulence ahead."
She didn't have to because she was already in her seat belt. She became more alert for a few moments but then she drifted back off to sleep.

After riding a plane for the first time, I came to understand the word turbulence in a new way. I had heard the word many times before the trip, but when I experienced it on the plane I understood what it meant from firsthand experience. The word turbulence means violent or unsteady movement of air or water, or of some other fluid. Now I would like to compare it to the christian walk. When we accept Christ into our lives, our spirit takes flight as we pass from death to life. We begin to fly high so to speak. But along the way we can meet turbulence or violent movement. This can come in the form of trials or tests. How should we respond to such turbulence in our lives. Should we get frantic and begin to worry if we will make it out alive? No, Jesus was asleep on the boat during the storm (Mark 4:37-38). Should we get on guard and become paranoid of culminating doom. No, we should already be on guard. (1 Peter 5:8) Or should we sit back and let God take us through, as we soar on wings like eagles (Isaiah 40:31)? Yes,we should rest in God and allow Him to bring us through. We should ask Him to give us the grace to carry us through.


 "But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint." Isaiah 40:31

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Under His Wings

Under His Wings


When I was on my mission trip to Togo, Africa, I noticed a recurring theme. On each flight, my seat was either on the wing of the plane or close to it. When I looked out of the window could see the wing of the plane. At one point, I stopped and asked God was there something he was trying to show me. As I read the following verse in Psalm 91:4 which reads, "He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings shalt thou trust..." on the plane, I felt like God was trying to tell me that I was well protected under his wings, and that I could completely trust and rely on Him.We can see this phenomena when we look at God's creation to get a better idea of this concept. Mama Birds carry their babies under their wings in order to protect them from harm or to carry them around daily as a mother does. God protects us under his wings and carries us on a daily basis through our lives. When I accepted this truth, the sense of uneasiness left on the remaining flights and my doubts were constantly cast down. When I looked out of the window and I saw the wing of His plane, I knew that I was safe under His wings.

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Desert Seasons of Life: Discontentment

Desert Seasons of Life: Discontentment
Desert Series




Are you in a desert season of your life? Do you feel like you're a target of the enemy? Do you feel like your cup is half empty? God wants us to be joyful during every season of our life and in this post I will present ways to keep the right perspective during a desert season and not allow discontent to sweep in.

I'd like to start by saying don't be shocked when God leads you into a desert season. I was lead to the job that I'm currently working at and sometimes I wonder why God led me here because of various hardships, but over this past week I've been reminded that God led many people into a desert season in the bible. He led the children of Israel and Jesus into the desert literally. God has a purpose and a reason of leading us into the desert. In some cases He is preparing us, testing us, strengthening us, or causing us to completely rely on Him. Whatever the reason, we can completely trust that we are in this desert season for a reason. But if we don't see the purpose of our desert, if we're not careful we can question if we're supposed to be here, seek to escape before the right time, or grow discontent and allow ourselves to murmur and complain or try to obtain desires before the right time. 

In Numbers chapter 11, the children of Israel started desiring to return to Egypt for verses 4-6 says, "And the mixed multitude that was among them fell a lusting; and the children of Israel also wept again, and said, Who shall give us flesh to eat? We remember the fish, which we did eat in Egypt freely; the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlick: But now our soul is dried way; there is nothing at all, beside this manna, before our eyes." Here the Israelites started wondering why they left Egypt. Sometimes when we are in a desert season we become nostalgic about our past and want to relive a time, which we consider to be the glory days, but God wants us to live for the here and now and desires for us to continue to grow and forget those things that are behind and move forward (Phil 3:12). In the past, we are not who we are today. In the past, we didn't know what we know today in God.  We can't grow in the grace of God if we don't move forward. God seeks to do a new thing in you now! If you want to continue to grow in the grace of God, then you can't live in the past, you must live in the here and now. You can't be effective for God in the here and now if you live in the past or the future. Verse 6 of Numbers 11 says that they fell a lusting while they were in the desert. In your desert season have you began to desire a change? Have you desired to leave a job when it wasn't time to leave? I have to admit that I've desired things that are good. But if you desire a good thing before the right time then you've become discontent with your current lot in life. You've taken your eyes off of your current state in life and placed them on something that you've yet to attain or something that you want to relive in the past. This can create a sense of discontent which can lead to murmuring and complaining. 

In verse 5 they became discontent with manna (from heaven) and started thinking about cucumbers, melons, leeks, onions and garlick. God wanted to bless them with milk and honey and many other delicacies in the promised land but they desired a good thing before the time. They desired things from Egypt so much that they begin to despise the manna that came from the very heavens. In a desert season of our life we can sometimes ignore the things that God has blessed us with. We can overlook the special people in our life, the favor we have with God and man, and the fact that all of our needs are met. Discontent can cause us to overlook all the good in our lives and focus on the one thing that we don't have. In Phillipians 4:11-12 it reads, "Not that I speak in respect of want; for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need." In this christian walk, we must learn to be content during times of plenty and in times of drought. We ought to be content when our desires are fulfilled and also when our desires haven't been fulfilled and when we are hungry for them to become a reality in our life. We will experience times of abundance and times of need but we are instructed to always be content by being content with what we DO have and getting our joy and fulfillment in Christ. 

Furthermore, in verse 6 of Numbers 11 it says "But now our soul is dried away; there is nothing at all, beside this manna, before our eyes." When it seems like we are in a dry place, that is when we experience the most fulfillment because sometimes it is during these times that we realize that our complete fulfillment comes from Christ. We lean on God like no one else. We realize that true, abiding joy comes from God and God alone. In 1 Corinthians 10 Paul provides admonishment for verse 1-7a reads "Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea; And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; And did all eat the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink; for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them; and that Rock was Christ. But with many of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were our examples, to the intent that we should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted. Neither be ye idolaters as were some of them." 

As the body of Christ, we have all been baptized and accepted Jesus Christ into our hearts, but is God well pleased with us? Verse 6 denotes that we should use the children of Israel in the desert as our example so that we will not lust after evil things. And verse 7 commands us not to be idolaters. If we feel like we have to have something outside of God's timing, then we may be idolizing that desire in our life. But if we keep the right perspective and find our fulfillment in Christ alone then we won't idolize our desires. Verse 10 of 1 Corinthians reads, " Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer." They murmured because they were discontent. 

A few days ago, I realized that I had grown discontent and had taken my eyes off God's blessings in my life, and had taken the devil's bait, and focused on only the things that I didn't have. And as I looked back over my life I've realized how in each season I've looked ahead at what I didn't have and wasn't always completely thankful for the current season in my life. And I asked God to forgive me. May we all focus on God's blessing in our lives and constantly thank Him regardless of the season of life we are currently experiencing.

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Photography by: Dennis Behm
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Friday, May 22, 2015

Women in The Spotlight Coming Soon!

 Women in the Spotlight Series
Coming Soon....................
Please stayed tuned for great testimonies of faith,hope and power!
















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