Tuesday, 12 May 2026

THE LIVING CUP

 




When all hope flees and darkness comes,

I find You deep within my heart.

You cradle me in Your loving arms

And offer me Your godly cup.

With eager haste I drink my fill,

New hope is born, I continue to live. 

- Cathryne Allen
(Art: Fill My Cup Lord by Danny Hahlbohm)



ALIGNMENT WITH GOD

 


Jesus Christ’s primary purpose is to bring us to the Father. This achievement comes in two parts: His Atonement and His advocacy that would eventually, through our repentance and acceptance of His sacrifice, align us again with the Father, to last for eternity.

For many years after my baptism, I could only see the Saviour. I prayed to the Father but the Saviour was the one I saw in the scriptures and the one I got to know through my personal understanding of the living word and my revelations from the Holy Ghost. Then, after many years, all of a sudden the Father came into my life so clearly and the Saviour took the back seat. Ever since then, the Father became more real to my mind than ever before. I gained an incredible desire to return to His presence and to bring Him joy through the life that I live.

Since this has happened, I have been given the privilege of having a few ‘discussions’ with Him, mind to mind, spirit to spirit. I wrote about my latest one in a recent blog. It helped me understand His power of discernment and intuition to such a degree that I understood perfectly there is nothing He does not know about His children. It’s almost like we are transparent and He can see into our very souls. I was amazed by this. When I shared this experience on social media, one of my readers asked me if I felt love in His presence.

This made me reflect on the other occasions I was privileged to hear Him speak to me. I realized that I did not feel the love…..not because He doesn’t love me or I was preventing the feeling of it, but because of something very logical that I believe to be true.

It’s a matter of something inherent in us that this story is a good example of. Some years ago, my then bishop in his talk told us how his young son came to him with skinned knees. He assessed the damage, told his son it wasn’t that bad and that he’ll be ok. The son went on his way. A few minutes later, the bishop’s wife appeared with their son in tow alarmed demanding that they take him to the hospital because he had skinned both his knees. We all laughed because we could see the difference in the gender response.

Women are by nature emotional and subjective and men are pragmatic and objective. Because of their inherent nature, men’s judgment is not clouded by emotion. God the Father is a man, He assesses the skinned knees and can cope with our sorrow and this is why….. He is a God whose primary objective is eternal salvation of His children. He is not interested in rescuing us from life’s difficulties at the cost of our eternal progression. He instructs, He disciplines and He chastens those He loves to bring them to higher ground. He wants us to learn from our falls and to get tough enough to soldier on. In every instance I heard Him, I was corrected, I was instructed and He kept me in line. This is love, perhaps the best love there is.

I learnt how important this is when I was a single mother raising my two daughters. I am an emotional female and a self-sacrificing one at that. I did everything I could to protect my children from any pain or discomfort. I realized later they were ill equipped to handle the harsh realities of life because they had no father’s influence in the home to toughen them up. From this experience I also understood why Heavenly Mother is not in charge of our earthly probation. I am convinced she would sabotage our growth left, right, and center. I know I would, because I am a woman and a mother who cannot bear the suffering of my children.

God the Father looks at the overall picture….from a different vantage point than we do. He looks ahead to see how we will ‘grow up’. This is love. And it might not be felt until Judgment Day when our Advocate will step forward and reveal our difficulties that need mercy applied to. This is the partnership: the Father is justice and the Son is mercy.



- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: Father and Son by Danny Hahlbohm)

Monday, 11 May 2026

HIS WILLING ARMS

 


Your arms, so willing and so strong,

Dived into the deep and shattered my sorrow;

The depth was no match for the strength

You gained at Calvary so long ago.


Your saving grace

Has lifted me to Your cross

Becoming my mortal weakness’ greatest foe.


I now walk with You

In paths I dare not walk alone;

In the valley of shadow of death,

I rejoice to be Your own. 


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: God of Wonder by Yongsung Kim)

THE LAW OF CONSEQUENCE

 



 The greatest lesson we can learn from ancient Israel is the law of consequence. I see this in their 40 years of wanderings.

After arriving at Mt Sinai in the third month following their departure from Egypt (Exodus 19:1-2), they remained there for a year where they received the Ten Commandments, made a covenant with Jehovah and built the tabernacle. It took just eleven days following their departure from Mt Sinai to arrive to Kadesh-barnea where they were on the verge of the promised land (Deuteronomy 1:2). It was within their grasp but their failure to have faith in obtaining the land (Numbers 13:26-33) resulted in one serious consequence…..so near, yet so far.

After Moses pleaded with Jehovah to spare the congregation from destruction due to their murmuring against Him, the Lord showed mercy and decreed that all men 20 years of age and older, men of war who wouldn’t take possession of the land due to lack of faith, will never enter the promised land but He would allow the next generation to possess it (Numbers 14:26-35). It makes for heart wrenching reading.

 It cost ancient Israel an additional 38 years of wandering to suffer the consequence of disobedience. They did not arrive at the promised land again until all the men 20 years and over who had come out of Egypt had died in the wilderness (Deuteronomy 2:14). One might ask, surely in 38 years the Israelites would have become repentant enough for Jehovah to show mercy…..but the consequences of sin cannot be removed even when forgiveness is granted……primarily for our subsequent learning and growth. Where a consequence has to be suffered, it is unlikely the sin will be repeated. In Israel’s instance, the mercy was given the Israelites when their destruction was averted and another promise made….the mercy was the second chance.

This is the greatest lesson that can be gleaned from this. The Saviour will never go back on His word. When Moses, after 38 years of wanderings, stood on the east of river Jordan and viewed the promised land of Canaan from Pisgah with longing,  he beseeched the Lord to allow him to enter the promised land despite being told he will never get there because of the incident of ‘the rock of Meribah’ (Numbers 20:2-13). The Lord refused and told him to ‘speak no more to Him of this matter’ (Deuteronomy 3:23-26). Once again, consequences have to be suffered, especially for Israelites who had to become a peculiar people.

This, however, is the greatest lesson….the Lord will not go back on His word and this is why. The God of Israel is a God of integrity who does not bend with the wind, is not wishy washy and is not changeable. If He was, we would not know where we stood from one moment to the next. We can therefore be assured that He will never go back on what He has decreed and this is why it is important for us to know this, so that we know with utmost surety that He will never break His covenant with us  (Leviticus 26:44,45; Deuteronomy 4:31).

This is a God we can trust and depend on for the salvation of our souls. A God who is the same yesterday, today and forever. This is a God who will never forsake us, a God of commitment who endured the cross to the end and given us this assurance:  “Behold I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands….”  (Isaiah 49:15,16)

 

- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: My Judgments are Just by B. Laura Wilson)

Sunday, 10 May 2026

THE EVERLASTING SHEPHERD

 


“By day and by night the shepherd is always with his sheep…..This was necessary on account of the exposed nature of the land, and the presence of danger from wild animals and robbers. One of the most familiar and beautiful sights of the East is that o f the shepherd leading his sheep to the pasture…..He depends upon the sheep to follow, and they in turn expect him never to leave them…..As he is always with them, and so deeply interested in them, the shepherd comes to know his sheep very intimately….

“One day a missionary, meeting a shepherd on one of the wildest parts of Lebanon, asked him various questions about his sheep, and among others if he counted them every night. On answering that he did not, he was asked how he knew if they were all there or not. His reply was: ‘Master, if you were to put a cloth over my eyes, and bring me any sheep and only let me put my hands on its face, I could tell you in a moment if it was mine or not.’” (George M. Mackie, “Bible Manners and Customs” p 33,35)

When the apostles returned from their first mission, they presented themselves to Jesus to account for all their labours (Mark 6:30). Mark notes that the crowds thronged them so much that they could not find time or place to eat (v31). For this reason Jesus invited them to retreat with Him by ship to a solitary place. When they arrived and Jesus came out of the ship he saw a multitude of people who had run on foot out of all the cities to see Him (v33).

Mark records that Jesus was moved with compassion when He saw them ‘because they were as sheep not having a shepherd and He began to teach them…’ (v34). And when the day was far spent He would not send them away hungry but fed 5,000 men plus women and children with five loaves of bread and two fishes (Matthew 14:21). As with the first, so the second occasion of feeding 4,000 men beside women and children, who were with Him for three days, with seven loaves and a few little fishes, all because: “I have compassion on the multitude….” (Matthew 15:30-38)

In my favourite chapter of Ezekiel, Jehovah speaks extensively about the shepherds of Israel who had scattered His sheep through neglect and then promises He would find them and feed them upon the high mountains of Israel (Ezekiel 34:2,4,11-16,25,31). Was He cognisant of the promise He made through Ezekiel when the physically and spiritually lame flocked to Him, like sheep seeking their Shepherd, feeding upon the compassion spilling from His soul and turning the high mountains of Israel into pasture hereto before unknown??

Compassion rent His godly heart

When He saw His scattered sheep,

Upon the high mountains of Israel

Running to His shelter,

His promise for Him to keep.

 

A promise He would honour

That His lost sheep He would find,

Upon the high mountains of Israel

That heartless shepherds left behind.

 

So His promise He valiantly fulfilled

As His sheep sat hungry on Bethsaida’s hill,

And fed upon the loaves and fishes

That multiplied upon His will. 


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: Shepherd of My Soul by Gabriel Heaton)

Saturday, 9 May 2026

KNOWING YOU


You met me at dawn

With my memories so vast;

I remembered coming to You

Long ago through the water’s gate,

So wide open for my soul to embrace.

 

You flowed through my heart since that day

Showing me the wonder of You;

I have seen Your agonising sacrifice,

Never to be erased.

I hear You, I am Your sheep,

I know You and Your sacrificial pains,

For the believing blood of Israel

Runs through my veins.


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: Solitary View by Greg Collins)






 

ODE TO GRANDMOTHERS

 


You followed your mother into my heart

Carefully tracing her footprints that led to mine,

Knowing I was waiting for your loving arms.

You are the offspring of my body and my heart;

The proof of God’s mercy,

The proof of His love divine.


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: Angels Round About Thee by Annie Henrie Nader)