Spiritual Nuggets 4/07/2023

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A Time For Everything

“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven” (Ecclesiastes 3:1).

The Bible’s most famous poem has inspired writers for generations, yet has not been improved upon. In a few short, simple lines, the Preacher ponders the whole of life: birth, death, weeping, laughing, mourning, dancing, breaking down, and building up. The buoyancy and familiarity of the text could cause us to gloss over the poetic brilliance of “the matter[s] under heaven.” But when we get to “a time to hate” and “a time to kill,” the romance is—well, killed. Are all these emotions and events really ordained by God? The strength of the poem is in contrast and repetition. By laying the seasons side by side, the Preacher effectively captures the span and cycle of human life. He isn’t providing a list of experiences that we should check off our holistic life to-do list. Rather, he is emphasizing an absolute need for reliance on God.

Although evil seems to wield power in our lives and in the lives of those around us, God is present. He is there when we experience delights, and He is present when tragedy and sin overwhelm us. When we experience the death of those we love, send a soldier off to war, or experience hate, we can know that God is still making Himself known to fallen people in a fallen world.

We must pray for the Spirit to help us judge the seasons and respond appropriately to Him—with wisdom, like the Preacher advocates. We can live confidently, because “He has put eternity into man’s heart” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). Nothing assures us more of this than His provision of a way out of life’s seasons through His Son.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Food For Thought 4/07/2023

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“What Hath God Wrought!”

In conversation with Professor S. F. B. Morse, the inventor of the telegraph, the Rev. George W. Hervey asked this question:

“Professor Morse, when you were making your experiments yonder in your room in the university, did you ever come to a stand, not knowing what to do next?”

“Oh, yes, more than once.”

“And at such times what did you do next?”

“I may answer you in confidence, sir,” said the professor, “but it is a matter of which the public knows nothing. I prayed for more light.”

“And the light generally came?”

“Yes, and may I tell you that when flattering honors come to me from America and Europe on account of the invention which bears my name, I never felt I deserved them. I had made a valuable application of electricity, not because I was superior to other men, but solely because God, who meant it for mankind, must reveal it to someone, and was pleased to reveal it to me.”

In view of these facts, it is not surprising that the inventor’s first message was, “What hath God wrought!”

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Psalm 51:10

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Friday April 7, 2023

Psalm 51:10
Create in me a clean heart, O God, And renew a steadfast spirit within me.

The psalmist speaks here of renewal. And in so doing touches upon an important thing in our lives.

All life has this in common: it continues only as long as it is renewed and dies as soon as renewal ceases. Daily renewal is vital to our Christian life in more ways than one.

In the first place, our life would cease growing if it were not renewed.

In the second place, we should be rendered incapable of doing Christian work.

We see this very clearly in the case of sick people. As their power of physical renewal diminishes, because of illness, their strength wanes until they at last can do no work at all. They must sit down. Finally they must go to bed.

There are many Christians who, because their spiritual selves have not been renewed, have become so weak that they cannot do anything for the Lord.

This shows, in the third place, how important daily renewal is in connection with our eternal salvation. Life that is not renewed dies. It is no doubt a question whether most of the people who have fallen away from the Lord have not died from lack of nutrition. Their falling away may have manifested itself in various ways outwardly, but fundamentally their backsliding was due to neglect of daily renewal. By that we mean a neglect of the means of grace: the Word, prayer, the Lord’s Supper, and the communion of saints.

There is no little difficulty connected with daily renewal. Everything pertaining to our daily life is on the whole difficult. Repetition has a dulling effect.

Therefore it is necessary for us to pray as the psalmist did: “Renew a right spirit within me.” We must receive new and fresh grace and not live on old experiences of God’s mercy. There is nothing the Lord would rather do for us. He says: “I came that they might have life, and might have it abundantly.”

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O. Hallesby, God’s Word for Today: A Daily Devotional for the Whole Year, translator Clarence J. Carlsen (Augsburg, 1994)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 4/07/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Friday Reflecting

Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is man’s all. – Ecclesiastes 12:13.

Duties are ours, events are God’s. This removes an infinite burden from the shoulders of a miserable, tempted, dying creature. On this consideration only, can he securely lay down his head, and close his eyes.
~ CECIL

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 4/07/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, our Father, we praise you for reaching out for us and welcoming us home and for making us your sons and daughters; for the rest, refreshment and hope with which you promise to fill our lives; for the assurance that we will share in the joyful celebration of your creative love and fill the universe with your glory. We praise you here; we praise you now; we will praise you everywhere we go, as long as we live. We will praise you eternally in ever increasing joy and worship with Jesus Christ our Lord and King.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Obedience, Trials and Tribulations – 3

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Scripture References – Isaiah 50:4-9; Luke 19:28-40

It is clear that there is one reason for the Servant’s suffering—because he is an obedient servant of God. That’s also the only reason Jesus suffered, isn’t it? In our Old Testament lesson, in the testimony of the Suffering Servant, there are a number of truths through confession which tell us a good deal about the suffering of God’s people—even this select one among all God’s children.

The Suffering Servant does not look for suffering, but he does not run from it as if suffering is beneath him or not his lot. He is brave enough to face it. There are reasons for his bravery. In the midst of the suffering, he does not make the most common mistake of all, which is turning away from God in trying times. By continuing to cling to God in his trials, in his suffering, the Servant of the Lord has strength because of God’s nearness and also because of the understanding that comes in spite of crisis. This is not to suggest that there are good reasons for the suffering of God’s people. Understanding does not imply this. There are reasons that God’s people suffer, but they are not usually good reasons. This realization is itself a part of the understanding which comes to suffering people like you and me who decide to continue clinging to God in spite of the pain which we are certain we don’t deserve.

The basis of suffering is action. Living as a child of God is a life chock-full of challenging tasks and risks. It is anything but a life of genteel passivity. Yes, to be God’s people we have to act. Being Christian means involvement in causes and lives not at the top of the preferred list. What kind of motley crew would Jesus die for? Being Christian means doing. There is suffering for God’s obedient children because we are willing to act and try to do the right thing, according to God’s will in a world that, to say the least, isn’t particularly attune to God’s concerns.

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There is suffering for God’s obedient children because serving God is a matter of faith, and faith means that there are moments when we must act and launch out to try to do good without all the information we might have desired. Indeed, faith is a particular kind of risk. On the paths of faith, there is suffering for God’s obedient children because God’s people finally become committed to serving God above all else; consequences become secondary considerations. It had to be that way for Jesus. He could not have focused on the likelihood of His death, or He would never have entered Jerusalem when He did. However, the timing was right; he went at Passover when many of the Israelites were gathered together to think about the great God of deliverance and liberation. This was the best opportunity to tell—in a way that only He had or could ever tell—of the extravagance of God’s love. Instead, Jesus focused on His task, His opportunity to be the Servant of God. He did not go into Jerusalem like an abused pup expecting every move to be a beating; He rode into Jerusalem like a King! And without saying a word, people knew it. They threw their coats on the ground to make a path for someone with the bearings of royalty, and without prompting they began to yell out: “ ‘Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the LORD!’ Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!” – Luke 19:38.

The Pharisees were repulsed, and they insisted that He rebuke those who went so far as to associate Him with the Lord God, but Jesus said: “I tell you that if these should keep silent, the stones would immediately cry out.” – Luke 19:40. The one who had suffered for God and the one who was going to suffer more than He may have known, still could hold His head high in obedience—not in pride, but in obedience. People knew that He was God’s Son. Everything about Him proclaimed it.

So, my dearest sisters and brothers, in this community of suffering, fight on in your obedience to God—not fighting to destroy your enemies, fighting only for the privilege of obedience and honor of being called God’s servant; whatever the consequences may be.

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Spiritual Nuggets 4/06/2023

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I Did It My Way

Frank Sinatra was wrong to do things “his way.” In Genesis 11, we see people uniting in building what seems like a great triumph of humanity—until we realize what their work is all about. They’re tired of being distant from God, so they build a structure that will reach the heavens.

“Surely the gods will know and find us now. . . . Let’s meet our maker,” you can almost hear them say. But the true God, Yahweh, knows their plan and says: “Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another’s speech” (Genesis 11:7). Because all the people spoke one language, they were dangerous to themselves. In the unity of one world, there is disunity: we choose to assault the God we should serve.

There is an alternative—a unity that God desires: where we serve Him by serving others. Jesus describes how we should act towards one another and towards Him, even teaching us how to pray. With Christ, God has resolved the reason the tower was attempted. Since the Holy Spirit came and brought us comfort (John 16:4–15), the very presence of God is always with us.

Sinatra also said that if a man doesn’t have himself, “then he has naught.” But God wants us to stop focusing on ourselves, building towers, and trying to do things our own way. He wants us to seek Him, and to treat others with the love, respect, and self-sacrifice that Christ gave us. He wants us to do things His way.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Food For Thought 4/06/2023

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New Voices At Madison Square Garden

Gil Dodds is the minister’s boy who came out of Nebraska to step off the fastest mile ever run on an indoor track. Time 4.10.6. At the end of a race the crowd wondered when he picked up a microphone to acknowledge their applause and said: “I thank the Lord for guiding me through the race, and seeing fit to let me win. I thank Him always for His guiding presence.” The rafters of Madison Square Garden must have trembled; these were new words there. “I don’t win those races. God wins them. You see, God has given me all I have. I have one great lack. I didn’t have the one thing the coaches say a long-distance runner simply must have. I couldn’t sprint at the end of the mile. But God took care of that. In place of the sprint he gave me stamina.” And that is correct. Dodds sprints the whole distance. He sets a killing pace all the way.
~ Christian Herald

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The Collision of God and Sin

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Thursday April 6, 2023

1 Peter 2:24
Who Himself bore our sins in His own body on the tree.

The Cross of Jesus is the revelation of God’s judgment on sin. Never tolerate the idea of martyrdom about the Cross of Jesus Christ. The Cross was a superb triumph in which the foundations of hell were shaken. There is nothing more certain in Time or Eternity than what Jesus Christ did on the Cross: He switched the whole of the human race back into a right relationship with God. He made Redemption the basis of human life, that is, He made a way for every son of man to get into communion with God.

The Cross did not happen to Jesus: He came on purpose for it. He is “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.” The whole meaning of the Incarnation is the Cross. Beware of separating God manifest in the flesh from the Son becoming sin. The Incarnation was for the purpose of Redemption. God became incarnate for the purpose of putting away sin; not for the purpose of Self-realization. The Cross is the centre of Time and of Eternity, the answer to the enigmas of both.

The Cross is not the cross of a man but the Cross of God, and the Cross of God can never be realized in human experience. The Cross is the exhibition of the nature of God, the gateway whereby any individual of the human race can enter into union with God. When we get to the Cross, we do not go through it; we abide in the life to which the Cross is the gateway.

The centre of salvation is the Cross of Jesus, and the reason it is so easy to obtain salvation is because it cost God so much. The Cross is the point where God and sinful man merge with a crash and the way to life is opened—but the crash is on the heart of God.

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Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest: Selections for the Year (Oswald Chambers Publications; Marshall Pickering, 1986)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 4/06/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Thursday Reflecting

Remember now your Creator in the days of your youth. – Ecclesiastes 12:1.

I saw once, lying side by side in a great workshop, two heads made of metal. The one was perfect; all the features of a noble, manly face came out clear and distinct in their lines of strength and beauty; in the other, scarcely a single feature could be recognized; it was all marred and spoiled. “The metal had been let grow a little too cool, sir,” said the man who was showing it to me. I could not help thinking how true that was of many a form more precious than metal. Many a young soul that might be stamped with the image and superscription of the King, while it is warm with the love and glow of early youth, is allowed to grow too cold, and the writing is blurred and the image is marred.
~ CANON TEIGNMOUTH SHORE

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 4/06/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, we come with Jesus whose love, compassion and understanding give us hope and assurance of your acceptance. We come with our sin and our shame; we come bringing the things that continually defeat us and we come with the broken hopes and dreams that still bring us down. We come to you, we come as we are, but we have come with Jesus who is our friend, and we come to worship in the name of Christ Jesus.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Praise The Lord 4/05/2023

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The faithful love of the LORD never ends!
     His mercies never cease.
Great is his faithfulness;
     his mercies begin afresh each morning.
I say to myself, “The LORD is my inheritance;
     therefore, I will hope in him!”

The LORD is good to those who depend on him,
     to those who search for him.
So it is good to wait quietly
     for salvation from the LORD.

Lamentations 3:22-26

Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation®, NLT © 2015 by Tyndale House.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Obedience, Trials and Tribulations – 2

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Scripture References – Isaiah 50:4-9; Luke 19:28-40

Suffering is no confirmation of obedience to God. A human being with a conscience and a normal range of emotion is equipped to suffer. There is suffering that comes to us precisely because we are God’s people trying to do good in God’s world. We can rail and rebel against it, but it is part and parcel of life. So do not let suffering lead us to some false and proud sense of martyrdom. Most of us cringe at the thought of suffering. We may not run from it, but we won’t beg for it either. We are surprised, then, when we come upon a person who actually enjoys suffering, tries for it, and interprets much of life from that perspective. This person uses the unfortunate as some kind of a reminder or badge which signifies “hurting for God.” No one has yet asked that suffering be enjoyed.

Listen, children, adolescents, and adults: Living the good life is no guarantee that your way will be free of encounter with pain and difficulty. Being a devout Christian will not always bring enough good to outweigh the bad for you. Rather, through a careful study of the foundations of Christianity and—more powerfully—through the consistent living out of a relationship with God, we will find more often than not a correlation between obedience to God and suffering than we will find between obedience to God and success.

When Jesus proceeded into Jerusalem a few days before His death, He believed that He was placing His life at risk because He was being obedient to God, not something new for this young man, but a way He had lived consistently. And yet, what awaited Him there in Jerusalem? What was in store for this man who honestly only did good deeds for God’s sake? Nothing but suffering. Nothing, but suffering! Some reward, huh?

In the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth we see the epitome of the connection between obedience to God and suffering. We have taught, and we have desperately wanted to believe that these were mutually exclusive; at times, we have even needed to believe it. But it isn’t true. Obedience and suffering are wed in lives like Jesus’ life. And as He is our Lord and our example, our obedience to God will in some way be wed to suffering too.

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I’m not suggesting that if you are God’s person you should be prepared in case suffering should come your way; I’m not suggesting that you brace yourself to prevent a possible brush with the unexpected. What I’m saying for all of us to hear is that obedience to God means suffering. Count on it. It may be that those who oppose God will actually turn on us, bringing us that kind of suffering; I’d say this is likely if we ever roam out of protected Christian environments. Or, the suffering we can expect may mean that as obedient children of God our hearts grow tender like God’s heart and thus connect us to those who struggle and lose so much and hurt so often that we suffer with them. Walt Whitman, again, without any intention of describing this kind of Christian suffering did a powerful job of it anyway when he said:

“I do not ask the wounded person how he feels. I become the wounded person.”

Jesus in His obedience to God knew those kinds of suffering: the pain of direct attack and the pain of identification. Jesus, no doubt, experienced all kinds of suffering.

When the prophet Isaiah wrote about the seemingly anonymous Servant of the Lord with whom Jesus would later be identified, Isaiah didn’t overlook the suffering in the life of this person whose experience either foreshadowed or hauntingly foretold the plight of the one we name as our Lord. Isaiah, speaking for this Suffering Servant, said: “I offered my back to those who beat me and my cheeks to those who pulled out my beard. I did not hide my face from mockery and spitting.” – Isaiah 50:6 (NLT). As Jesus rode the donkey into Jerusalem, this was precisely the fate that awaited Him; taunting, beating, being spit upon, and more. Yes, much more. The prophet set this account of suffering in a longer monologue which gave some explanation for why and how the Servant of the Lord endured such suffering. He explained in the Servant’s words:

The Sovereign LORD has spoken to me, and I have listened. I have not rebelled or turned away. . . . Because the Sovereign LORD helps me, I will not be disgraced. Therefore, I have set my face like a stone, determined to do his will. And I know that I will not be put to shame. He who gives me justice is near. – Isaiah 50:5, 7-8 (NLT).

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Where noted, Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation®, NLT © 2015 by Tyndale House.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Spiritual Nuggets 4/05/2023

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There’s An Answer

Finding the right path to take in life is an ongoing challenge. It’s easy to flail in the realm of possibility rather than face the realities in front of us. Waiting upon the Lord is no easy virtue.

Jesus tells us, “Enter through the narrow gate, because broad is the gate and spacious is the road that leads to destruction . . . narrow is the gate and constricted is the road that leads to life” (Matthew 7:13–14).

Although these lines are a proclamation of how we enter God’s kingdom—how we choose salvation back—they’re also a proclamation of how we continue to live for God’s kingdom. Whatever decision we face, and whatever odds that are against us, there is only one solution: following God’s narrow path. He has a providential way, a primary way for us, and we are asked to follow it. When we do, we’re gifted with the understanding that God is using us in the way He saw most fitting to make the most difference for others.

In Genesis 8:1–9:17, we’re shown how God honored Noah, because of Noah’s decision to follow God’s plans for his and his family’s lives. If we’re willing to follow God’s calling, He will work in the same way in our lives. He has a plan for each of us and although the blessings may come after great trial, like far too long on a boat with smelly animals, they will come—in this life or the next.

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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Food For Thought 4/05/2023

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Faraday’s Adoration

Michael Faraday, who died in 1867, was one of the most brilliant scientists of modern times. He was a pioneer in electrical discoveries.

Faraday received practically no education, but in the bookbindery where he found work, he also found a few volumes of science. He read and studied these, and then embarked on the experiments that were to become his religious convictions, so that we are not surprised at these words he uttered with his dying breath:

“I bow before Him who is the Lord of all.”

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Daniel 12:10

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Wednesday April 5, 2023

Daniel 12:10
“Many shall be purified, made white, and refined.”

This is the promise for the Lord’s coming. It is more than purity. It is to be made white, lustrous, or bright. To be purified is to have the sin burned out; to be made white is to have the glory of the Lord burned in. The one is cleansing, the other is illumination and glorification. The Lord has both for us, but in order for us to have both, we must be put into the fire to be tried, and to be led into difficult and peculiar places where Christ shall be more to us because of the very extremity of the situation. We are approaching these days. Indeed, they are already around us, and they are the precursors of the Lord’s coming.

Blessed is he that keepeth his garments lest he walk naked.

There are voices in the air, filling men with hope and fear;
There are signals everywhere that the end is drawing near,
There are warnings to prepare, for the King will soon be here;
             O it must be the coming of the Lord!

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A. B. Simpson, Days of Heaven upon Earth: A Year Book of Scripture Texts and Living Truths (Christian Alliance Pub. Co., 1897)
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Reflecting With God 4/05/2023

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Thinking, praying, reading, studying the Bible – when we do these things, we are reflecting on the Word of God. To reflect is to contemplate and/or consider, and God wants us to deeply reflect on His Word so that we can better understand Him.

Wednesday Reflecting

Cast your bread upon the waters. – Ecclesiastes 11:1.

Sometimes the Nile overflows its banks, and the people throw the seed upon the water. As the water subsides, the seed strikes into the ground and comes up. Hence the allusion, “Cast thy bread upon the waters, and it will come back after many days.” What you sow you will reap.
~ TALMAGE

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Daily Prayer & Praise 4/05/2023

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Lord, hear our prayer:

Lord, you overwhelm us. Your might and majesty are beyond anything we can imagine or create. Your glory is so great it simply cannot be contained. Not even the vast expanse of time and space is sufficient to encompass your glory. And yet – more wonderful still – you are here and you have come to receive our worship. You have come to make your home even in our poor lives. We have come to receive all that you are and all that you will give. We have come in Jesus’ most precious and holy name.

Amen.

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Some minor adaptation on some prayers.
David Clowes, 500 Prayers For All Occasions © 2003 by David C Cook Publishing
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Obedience, Trials and Tribulations – 1

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Scripture References – Isaiah 50:4-9; Luke 19:28-40

One of the lies we tell children in our culture is that if they are “good” and do what is “right” then they will not be hurt. This principle is true at first, when stated as a way to get them to keep hands off hot stoves, but we never get around to tell them that the application is limited. No, we let them go on thinking that the same principle applies in broader relational and spiritual spheres as well. We let them believe that if they are honest and tell the truth, good will always come to them. When they become older, we lead them to believe that if they speak out and stand up for what is morally acceptable, both heaven and earth will smile on them. We tell them that if they will take our advice about which good paths to follow, they will be able to move through life virtually unscathed by forces of evil and persons who see life differently than they do; even by their enemies. We tell them in the church that if they will always do what God wants them to do, they will be shielded by God’s protective care.

So in essence, we lie to our children, and one of the reasons we lie to them about this matter in particular is that, though we know better, we don’t want to believe differently ourselves. We keep wanting to believe that if we simply do the right thing and act in a Christian manner, everything will be all right. Whatever would hurt or frighten us will go away. While our reluctance to deal squarely with the facts is understandable, we are not doing ourselves or our children any favors with our coverups.

Because we lie to them, children become adolescents and then they progress to adults who are naive enough to believe in this kind of fairy-tale world. Many of us were those children who became adults still trying to live in make-believe. Somebody told us—somebody we trusted—that if we would be careful to do the right things, we’d be happy, be safe, prosper, and not get hurt. When the negative, unfortunate, painful, and tragic invaded our lives, the only conclusion we could draw was that we had done something wrong, but for the life of us we didn’t know what it was. We all know that lonely feeling, don’t we?

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“What is it? What did I do to deserve what is happening to me?” After the exhausting inventory of personal performance is taken time after agonizing time, and we find no great lapses of moral degradation or sinful rebellion, we are left with no recourse but to turn on ourselves as inherently evil, those who have told us the lies, or even God for not delivering what we mistakenly believe has been promised. By this point in our lives, we are rarely capable of questioning the formula we have memorized: “Good deeds keep bad things away from us and bring only good to us.” Isn’t that it? Isn’t that the “truth” we deliver? “Good deeds keep bad things away from us and bring only good to us.”

For those who mature emotionally and spiritually without that kind of catastrophe, a kind of crisis of suffering which blows away our formula leaving nothing in its place, there is still a painful process of observing that “being good” and “doing good” will not always bring us good. There is no honest argument for pursuing a moral way of living, yes a Christlike way of living based on some presumption that good living wards off bad. Life just doesn’t work that way. We may be meticulous in doing what is ethically appropriate and Christlike in most every situation that confronts us only to be overtaken by events and circumstances that are anything but good. Some reward, huh?

At some point we have to come to the vital realization that suffering is not given out by the supernatural forces in the universe which have chosen us as unsuspecting and unfortunate victims. Suffering is common to humanity, and a good deal of suffering which we must endure has nothing to do with our religious commitments or the lack of them. As Walt Whitman worded it in his poem of universal human experience, Song of Myself:

“Agonies are one of my changes of garments.”

Being good people, being God’s obedient people, does not remove us from the plight of being human—with all its joys and all its pitfalls.

To Be Continued

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Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the New King James Version®, NKJV © 1982 by Thomas Nelson.
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Spiritual Nuggets 4/04/2023

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Listen, Build and Listen Again

More often than not, what we want is not what God wants. We desire wealth, notoriety, or influence. In our ambition, we can lose sight of the very God who created us.

In the story of Noah and the flood, we see the same dichotomy: the world wants one thing and God desires another. The two aren’t congruent. In this case, selfishness has led to catastrophic levels of evil: “Now the earth was corrupt in God’s sight, and the earth was filled with violence . . . all flesh had corrupted their way on earth” (Genesis 6:11–12). So God tells Noah that He is through—He’s going to end it all. But Noah and his family will be spared if they’re obedient to God’s will.

Noah listens; he builds the ark. And God honors His work by closing the door (Genesis 7:16). He’s there at the end, sealing the deal. Being faithful means getting an opportunity to witness the power of God.

When our ambitions aren’t guided by God’s will and His goals, the result can mean corruption or corrupting others. We might wonder how we got there, but in reality, we know how it happened: selfishness is to blame.

Instead of doing things our way, we must listen, build what God wants, and then listen again. We have a choice: we can seek our own ambitions—like wisdom or knowledge—or we can choose Christ’s way, realizing that “in much wisdom is much vexation, and [that the one] who increases knowledge increases sorrow” (Ecclesiastes 1:18).

Ambition alone does not offer a happy ending. The only ending that results in joy is the one that focuses on God’s kingdom and His desires. Rather than justify our current desires, we should acknowledge the dichotomy and the problem. Individual ambition may result in selfish desires, but a focus on Christ will result in blessings: “Blessed are the peacemakers for they will be called sons of God” (Matthew 5:9).

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Adapted and modified excerpts from Connect the Testaments
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture taken from the Lexham English Bible, LEB © 2012 by Logos Bible Software.
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Links open in new window and are in the Lexham English Bible, LEB, unless otherwise noted.
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