Devotionals
 

Devotionals are short essays written by GSLC members and staff that explore the ways the Holy Spirit works within our every day lives.  There are several ways we invite you to use these devotionals:

  • Make them a part of a prayer practice - read a devotion and consider the ways that Christ has worked similarly in your life or works in unexpected ways.
  • Make them a part of a journaling practice - read a devotion and journal about what the Holy Spirit is stirring in you as you reflect on the essay.
  • Use them as a reminder that God works in all things, the bad and the good.

With over 400 available devotions, you can use these daily, weekly, or monthly.  It's up to you!  We just hope that by reading these inspiring stories provided by Good Shepherd's flock you are able to better see where Jesus is present in all things!  Thank you to all of our members that have provided devotionals throughout the past couple of years!

 
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church

Daily Devotion by Lillian Daniel

Field of Dreams

 

As we prepare to take a break from our Good Shepherd Daily Devotions until Advent, I hope you will continue your habit of sitting with God each day through inspirational reading.  One resource that you might enjoy is a daily devotion published by the United Church of Christ.   You can find the page here: https://www.ucc.org/daily-devotional/

 

Here is one example of the UCC devotion from last week.

Field of Dreams

by Lillian Daniel | published on Aug 24, 2021 

“Celebrate the Festival of Harvest with the first fruits of the crops you sow in your field.” – Exodus 23:16 (NIV)

When it comes to baseball, I am an agnostic. But when it comes to Iowa, I am a fan. 

So I was thrilled when the recent “Field of Dreams” game between the Yankees and the White Sox became the most-watched MLB game since 2005, with 6 million viewers. I don’t think Iowa’s received that much attention since we botched the caucuses last year, but let’s not dwell on all that. Back to our beautiful Field of Dreams!

I understand that one could be cynical about a nostalgia-driven media event based on a fictional book and made-up movie script, none of which ever actually happened. But why go there? Wasn’t it amazing to see the New York and Chicago players appear amidst the stalks of corn? 

Well, here’s a little Iowa backstory. The night before the big game, bad summer weather swept through the fields, as it does in Iowa. Storms crushed that carefully manicured corn. But it didn’t crush the spirits of the Iowa farmers and volunteers, who literally zip-tied those corn stalks to metal beams so they could stand up straight again. Some might call it fake, but I call it real. It was ordinary people wanting the world to see their home at its extraordinary best. 

In the movie’s final scene, when Ray Kinsella’s father appears on the ballfield, he asks in all sincerity, “Is this heaven?” And his son responds, “This is Iowa.” In this, the movie’s ending, Ray does not precede his answer with a “No” or a “Yes.”

Like Ray, I aspire to live in the liminal space between heaven and earth, where there is no such thing as a flyover state and where every field is full of dreams.

Prayer
Thank you, God, for the view from heaven, also known as Iowa. Amen.

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