Sunday, October 26, 2025

The Anxiety of God

Can you imagine being the God of the Universe and knowing you can only save humanity from sin’s blight if your plans go right? Revelation 5 reveals the moment.

God sat on His throne, holding a scroll with the deed for the Earth written inside. Long ago, God had given it to Adam and Eve when He created Earth as their home. “Love it and care for it!” God has said as he deeded Earth’s stewardship to Adam. But, in the very next chapter of Earth’s story, Adam chose to give the deed to Satan on a whimsical hope for personal greatness. How the scroll returned, unopened to God’s hand, we are not told. But, opening it is the one thing God cannot do.

The only way to open the scroll and return ownership of Earth to its Creator is to fulfil the requirements written on the outside of the scroll underneath the seven wax seals keeping it closed. The 24 elders and myriad of angels surrounding God cannot help. They are not Worthy. Only one is worthy. The Lion who became a Lamb to save us all!

It’s a prophecy, not reality. There is no scroll. But, in the way of prophecy and parable, the underlying story is true.

Jesus, the Lion of Judah, became the perfect lamb who took away the sins of the world. By his death on the cross, the gates of the Kingdom of God swung open wide!



Wednesday, October 22, 2025

The Wedding Florist

My daughter is a wedding florist. When she puts flowers together in a bouquet, they are a work of art. You only get one wedding, right? So, the flowers, like everything else, need to be the most glorious you’ve ever seen.

We live in Melbourne, Australia. It is cold right now. Nobody wants a cold wedding. Because, just like the flowers, you want the best weather you can get, and that’s not going to happen in August in Melbourne.

Click the image to read it at the Adventist Record

With no work for the month, my daughter decided to try a pop-up flower stand in a local shopping centre. So, the wedding florist showed up with flowers and started making bouquets. Wedding bouquets. Because that’s what she does. And wow, the comments!

I sat in the flower stand for a few hours each afternoon that I could. “Are these flowers real?” was the most common question I got asked.

I would smile and say, “Yes! They are beautiful, aren’t they?” Then I would tell them about my daughter, the wedding florist, and why these flowers looked so much better than the flowers they were used to seeing. “A wedding florist shapes each flower,” I said, more than once.

One young couple walked by holding hands. She whispered to him, “You should buy me flowers!”

I wasn’t meant to hear it, but being single-sided deaf, I read lips very well. I said, “Yeah, he should!” They both turned around and burst out laughing.

An elderly lady walked up and said, “I need some flowers for my neighbour’s daughter. But, I’m not sure if she will come past the house, now that her mum has died.”

“When did your neighbour die?” I asked.

“Yesterday.”

“I’m sorry to hear that.” I said, “Did you know your neighbour well?”

She smiled warmly. “Oh yes, she moved in six years ago and we talked nearly every day!”

I paused and then said, “Your friend passed away yesterday. Are you okay?”

She looked up at me with a teary smile, “What a lovely question,” she said, “Yes, I’m okay. She’s been unwell for some time.”

I had so many great conversations during those afternoon shifts in the flower stand. Ladies, young and old, wanted to tell me about their weddings. Men wanted me to know they used to be florists, deliver flowers, or be married. And lots of people just wanted to be heard. Flowers slow people down. All beautiful things do.

One particular conversation with a man stands out. He was chatty but clearly uncomfortable. I was trying to read him, but getting odd signals. It’s like he had something to say but wasn’t sure he could. Finally, he blurted, “I don’t usually say this, and I’m not sure how you’ll take it, but Jesus loves you.”

“I know!” I said and smiled. “Thanks for reminding me. Do you go to church nearby?”

Clearly relieved, he said, “Yes, I go to the church at the end of Hull Road. It’s called The Sanctuary.”

I laughed. “I go to the same church!” I said, “I just go on the day before you.”

He looked confused and then said, “Oh! Are you a Seventh-day Adventist?”

I nodded and said, “I am, and there’s something I want you to know. Jesus loves you, too!”

I shared the story of this conversation during chapel at the Seventh-day Adventist School, located up the road from the church. When I said the line, “I go to the same church. I just go on the day before you.” I met eyes with one of the teachers who also goes to church with me on Saturdays. She had the same confused look on her face as the man did. What was I missing?

It wasn’t until a few days later, when I was reading a book, that I realised how I was confusing people. In Reggie McNeal’s “A Work of Heart”, he describes a new mindset that is emerging in Christianity — actually a very old mindset — in which followers of Jesus see only two cultures: The Kingdom of God and the pre-Christian world. In a world where Jesus is largely unknown, there are only two kinds of people: those who know Jesus and those who do not. For the past 200 years, during the Christian and post-Christian era, the many denominations of Christianity have been in competition with each other, stealing sheep as often as they could. Many people who grew up in pre-millennial churches still have this mindset. But those of us Jesus people who see the apostolic pre-Christian world around us work together. And, as much as the world needs Jesus, we Jesus followers need each other!

On my final day manning the flower stall, I watched as a stooped elderly lady and her carer walked ever-so-slowly toward one side of the flower display. Finally, they reached the right front corner. Her eyes were downcast, fixed firmly on the seat of her walker as she pushed it along, shuffled step by shuffled step. I waited until she was directly in front of me, flowers all around her. “Hello!” I said cheerfully. She looked up slowly until our eyes met. “How are you today?” I asked.

“Not good at all.” She said.

“It’s been one of those days, has it?” I asked.

She nodded.

Then, with a joyful voice, I chirped, “But look! Flowers!” And I gestured as if doing a magic trick. She smiled and looked at the flowers, perhaps seeing them for the first time. Then I said, “We all have tough days, but flowers help.”

“True. They do,” she said. I looked up at her carer, perhaps her daughter, and she smiled back from behind watery eyes.

“They are free to look at.” I said, quietly, “Spend as long as you like.” She did. And then she looked back at the seat of her walker and continued shuffling through her day, hopefully a little happier having been with a Jesus follower and His flowers.

Today, I’m thinking about my daughter, the wedding florist, and how she shapes each flower. And, I can’t help but think, isn’t this the work of every Jesus follower? We meet people every day, and in conversation, with time and care, we shape them lovingly in the beautiful image of their Maker.

Thursday, October 02, 2025

There is Only One Way to Fix Your Dead Church!

I am experiencing a personal resurrection in my daily walk with Jesus! I haven't even finished reading the book where I learned the idea. It's such a simple concept that it can be learned in moments. Because of the impact it is having on my life, I have decided to teach it to others as often as I am given the opportunity.

There is only one way to fix your dead church. And it is a joy! Let me tell you all about it. Then you can go do it. It's easy!

This past weekend, I taught the SOAP Bible Study method for the first time. Surrounded by the natural beauty of Halls Gap, Victoria, while watching the occasional Kangaroo mob hop past, I joined the Western Family Fellowship Camp for a weekend on the theme “Seeking the Lost.” We had one journaling time each day and two sermons on Sabbath.

During our three Bible journaling times, we explored the three stories in Luke 15. (I bet some of you guessed that already based on the theme!) The Lost Sheep, The Lost Coin and The Lost Son. Caz Hunger organised a welcome pack that included a beautiful journal, a pen, and a bar of soap to serve as a reminder! 

Each time we journaled, I introduced the SOAP concept (less each time) and told them where to find the Bible online and more about SOAP Studies. We then followed this pattern:

  1. Read the entire passage (aloud from the front as they read along silently)

  2. 15 minutes of SOAP Journalling time

  3. Panel discussion 

  4. Closing prayer


For the panel discussion, I set up three chairs with three mics. I then sat on one of the chairs and said something like this:


“Personal Bible study is God’s favourite way to speak to us. I know the Holy Spirit has been teaching you while you were journaling. Some of you have just learned or experienced something you want to share. Please come join me, and let’s share what we’ve written in our journals.”


All three times, the two chairs were filled, and wonderful conversations ensued. My wife said the primary reason this worked is that I affirmed what each person said, asked good questions and followed their lead with more depth. The panel discussion took about 10 minutes, and then we closed with a prayer. 


It was amazing to see what happened after we finished. All three times, people turned to each other and continued sharing their journals. There was a sense of transparency and honesty in the room, and people wanted to talk about their faith. It was beautiful!


During the weekend, numerous people talked to me privately about their spiritual journey and what the Holy Spirit showed them in their journaling time. Many people thanked me for teaching them the SOAP model. Through prayer and Bible study, people were joyfully revitalising their relationship with Jesus. I listened to many life stories and shared heartfelt tears with numerous people. Never has this happened when I just preach.


Since discovering SOAP Bible Journalling, I’ve started saying, “Don’t do Bible Studies. Study the Bible!” When we “do Bible Studies”, we usually follow a script of some sort. It leads us to prepared conclusions. When we study the Bible and allow the Holy Spirit to lead us, we discover wonderful things that are new and meaningful right now!


On the drive home from camp, I received a call from my Pastor. She said, due to the end-of-week Kids Club celebration, all the adult classes are combining this Sabbath, and she was hoping I could take a combined adult lesson. In a big church, this usually means a boring jug-to-mug sermonesque presentation. Not tomorrow! 


A new quarter starts this week. New Topic: Joshua. I have just begun SOAP Journalling my way through Joshua in my personal daily devotions, so I am ready! Feel free to read my daily SOAP studies, receive them via email daily by subscribing here.  


Tomorrow, I am going to teach all the adults at Lilydale church (usually 7 or 8 small groups) how to do SOAP Bible Studies while introducing the book of Joshua to them. If you live nearby, come join us! In Sabbath School, we will be following the same pattern I used at camp. Both the journaling and the panel discussion are very valuable. I’m not sure which I like better. Bible study and Testimony are both great for spiritual growth. I look forward to experiencing the blessing of the Holy Spirit as people search the scriptures together! Do come join us!


I have prepared a lesson guide for this week as a pamphlet to teach SOAP Bible study and to use for journaling. Feel free to use it. Fold it in half with the journaling in the middle.

Prayerful daily Bible study is the only way to fix your dead church. And it starts with you!

If your church would like to invite me to run a “Seeking the Lost” weekend to get you started with SOAP journaling, please contact me. I’m extremely available!

Dave Edgren ~ Story: Teller, Author, Trainer ~

BOOK DAVE NOW! Dave Edgren is passionate about creating a values-based storytelling culture. In his engaging and often hilarious way,...