Our Daily Bread – Going with God

 

Where you go I will go, and where you stay I will stay. Ruth 1:16

Today’s Scripture

Ruth 1:6-17

Listen to Today’s Devotional

Apple LinkSpotify Link

Today’s Insights

Throughout Scripture, we find statements declaring the necessity of commitment to God or Jesus (Deuteronomy 6:5; Mark 8:34). Ruth’s statement of commitment is remarkable, however, because in addition to a commitment to her mother-in-law Naomi, she includes a commitment to Israel’s God: “Your people will be my people and your God my God” (Ruth 1:16). This is surprising because she’s a Moabitess and a foreigner. Her declaration echoes that of Rahab (Joshua 2), the Roman centurion (Matthew 8:5-13), and the Canaanite woman (15:21-28). All these foreigners expressed confidence in or a commitment to God. Their acceptance shows hints of His love for the whole world.

Today’s Devotional

In The Courier, a film inspired by true events, the main character, Greville, is confronted with a difficult decision. He learns that a close friend is going to be arrested and will likely face a grueling imprisonment. Greville can save himself from the same fate if he flees the country immediately and denies association with his friend. Moved with compassion, Greville loyally refuses to leave and is imprisoned, suffering the same agony as his friend. Neither man betrays the other. In the end, Greville is released a broken, but true and faithful companion.

Naomi needed a friend like that. When her husband and sons died, Naomi faced destitution and a long journey to her homeland. Naomi told her widowed daughter-in-law Ruth to remain in Moab and find a new life for herself (Ruth 1:8-9). Ruth responded, “Don’t urge me to leave you or to turn back from you. Where you go I will go” (v. 16). Ruth loyally accompanied Naomi to a foreign land and helped provide for their family. Ruth’s faithfulness transformed their broken family into an incredible legacy. Much later, her great-grandson David would become king of Israel and was called a man after God’s own heart.

Facing suffering with others is daunting. But if we surrender our own will and seek God’s strength, He enables us to love people in extraordinary ways. In His power, we can choose to say, “Where you go, I will go.”

Reflect & Pray

Who around you is walking a difficult road? How can you choose to walk alongside that person?

 

Thank You, Jesus, for never abandoning me.

Learn more about Ruth’s connection to Jesus’ genealogy by reading Scandalous Details and an Unexpected Hope.

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – “Wellness rooms” and fireplaces that lead to escape tunnels

 

Holy Tuesday and my spiritual blindness

In these financially stressful times, if your home often doubles as an office, workout gym, movie theater, and restaurant, you’re not alone. Now let’s add another space you may not know you need: “wellness rooms.”

According to a Dallas designer, “Spaces for wellness, retreat, and recharging are all really popular right now.” You can create “soundbathing” spaces to immerse yourself in soothing instrumental and natural sounds. You can sleep on a bed that uses low-frequency sounds and vibrations. You can even shower using technology that customizes water, steam, lighting, and music options.

A New York designer says, “Having a private space is essential. A wellness room should be a space where the outside world dissolves; no background noise, no movement beyond your own. This is where you go to let go; to drop into something quieter, something deeper.”

Then there’s the other side of the spectrum: “panic” rooms are booming as well. One home near Dallas is being outfitted with an underground tunnel connecting a bunker to the client’s home. The trend is no longer just for the wealthy: one company makes $20,000 bunkers for people who “drive Chevy pickup trucks, not Ferraris.”

Storage buildings in South Dakota have been converted into leasable bunkers for the same purpose. People are installing secret gun closets, panic rooms, and moving fireplaces that lead to escape tunnels. In one home, the fireplace opens while the James Bond theme is played on a nearby piano.

According to a 2023 survey, one-third of American adults are preparing for a doomsday scenario, spending a collective $11 billion over twelve months to do so.

When “everything bitter is sweet”

We can make all the preparations we can make, but they may not be enough. As today’s anniversary of the Titanic disaster reminds us, the ship was “unsinkable” until it wasn’t. (For more, see my website article, New images show Titanic crew gave their lives to save others.)

Bunkers cannot protect us from pancreatic cancer or panic rooms from traffic accidents. In fact, placing our security in buildings built by humans can blind us to the most significant and urgent issues our souls face today.

On Tuesday of Holy Week, Jesus spent much of the day teaching the people in the temple precincts. When a group was “speaking of the temple, how it was adorned with noble stones and offerings” (Luke 21:5), he warned them: “The days will come when there will not be left here one stone upon another that will not be thrown down” (v. 6). In AD 70, the Romans fulfilled his prediction. I have stood many times beside the first-century pavement cratered by massive blocks from the temple “thrown down” by Titus and his soldiers.

A thousand years earlier, King Solomon warned the people, “Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring” (Proverbs 27:1). However, he also observed, “To one who is hungry everything bitter is sweet” (Proverbs 27:7).

The problem is, we don’t know it at the time.

I was so lost I had no idea I was lost

Imagine that you and everyone you know have been blind for your entire lives. You would not know what you do not know. You would assume that the world can be known only by touch, smell, taste, and sound. You wouldn’t ask someone to heal your blind eyes because you wouldn’t know that you need to be healed.

The Bible warns soberly, “The god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God” (2 Corinthians 4:4). I can testify personally to the effectiveness of Satan’s work. Growing up in Houston, Texas, I was so lost that I had no idea I was lost. I was not searching for the gospel because I did not know it existed to be sought.

I thought church was what church members chose to do with their Sunday mornings just like golf was what golfers did with their weekends, neither of which seemed relevant to me. If Christians had not left the church building to bring the church to me, I would never have come to them.

This is why God’s word commands us: “Rescue those who are being taken away to death; hold back those who are stumbling to the slaughter” (Proverbs 24:11). If you saw a child who was about to step in front of an oncoming car, would you do all you could to save them? If your doctor discovers that you have life-threatening cancer, do you want her to avoid telling you so as not to hurt your feelings, or do you want her to do all she can to save your life?

“His energy that he powerfully works within me”

Holy Week is a wonderful time for spiritual conversations with people who might not otherwise seem interested. According to researcher Dr. Thom Rainer, 82 percent of unchurched people are at least somewhat likely to attend church if invited; the number is even higher for significant holidays like Easter.

However, if offering such an invitation and sharing the gospel seems daunting, let’s close with this good news: the One who came to open blind eyes through his incarnate body now wants to do the same through ours.

Oswald Chambers explained: “Eternal life is not a gift from God. It is the gift of God—the gift God makes of himself to his children. This same life, not a copy of it, is manifested in us when we are born of God” (his emphasis).

Consequently, he added:

The weakest among us can experience the power of Jesus Christ if we are willing to let go. If instead we cling to our own power, we will blur the life of Jesus inside us. We have to keep letting go, keep identifying with him. Slowly and surely, the great full life of God will invade us in every part of our being, and those we meet will sense that we have been with Jesus.

“Christ in you” is “the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27). Jesus entered our broken world in his incarnate body and again in ours. Now we are called to “tell others about Christ, warning everyone and teaching everyone with all the wisdom God has given us. We want to present them to God, perfect in their relationship to Christ” (v. 28 NLT).

When this is our purpose, we can say with Paul,

“For this I toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within me” (v. 29).

For what purpose will you “toil” today?

Quote for the day:

“Our high and privileged calling is to do the will of God in the power of God for the glory of God.” —J. I. Packer

Our latest website resources:

 

Denison Forum

Days of Praise – The Light and the Sun

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“The day is thine, the night also is thine: thou hast prepared the light and the sun.” (Psalm 74:16)

One of the traditional “discrepancies” attributed by the skeptics to the Genesis account of creation is the fact that there was “light” (Hebrew or) on the first day of the creation week, but God did not create the “lights” (Hebrew ma-or) to rule the day and the night until the fourth day.

However, it is interesting that modern evolutionary cosmologists find no problem in having light before the sun. According to their speculative reconstruction of cosmic history, light energy was produced in the imaginary “Big Bang” 15 billion years ago, whereas the sun “evolved” only five billion years ago. Thus, even in their attempts to destroy the divine revelation of Genesis, they inadvertently find it necessary to return to its concepts. Light energy somehow had to be “prepared” before the sun and other stars could ever be set up to serve as future generators of light energy. The fact that light is an entity independent of the sun and other heavenly bodies is one of the remarkable scientific insights of the Bible. As the basic form of energy (even intrinsic in the very nature of matter, as expressed in the famous Einstein equation), it is significant that the first recorded word spoken by the Creator was “Let there be light” (Genesis 1:3).

In this chapter, the psalmist is entreating the Lord of light, the Creator of all things, to deliver His people from those who are seeking to destroy all genuine faith in the true God of heaven. “The tumult of those that rise up against thee increaseth continually” (Psalm 74:23). Nevertheless, “God is my King of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth” (v. 12). The mighty God of creation, who established and controls all the basic energies of the cosmos and their manifestation on the earth, is fully able to defeat His enemies and establish His people. We can be sure of that. HMM

 

 

https://www.icr.org/articles/type/6

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – Taking Down the High Places

 

Although he did not remove the high places from Israel, Asa’s heart was fully committed to the LORD all his life. — 2 Chronicles 15:17

Beware of the thing you shrug at and say Oh, that doesn’t matter very much.” The fact that is doesn’t matter to you may mean that it matters a great deal to God. Asa was mostly right with the Lord, but he was incomplete in his outward obedience. Although he loved God and was a good king in many respects, he didn’t rid Israel of the high places, the places where gods were worshipped.

Are there any “high places” in your life? Take an inventory. Look at the life of your body and the life of your mind. Is there something you should be concentrating on that you’ve let slid? Are there protesting that your heart is right with God, and yet there is something he has caused you to doubt? Whenever you begin to doubt that God would approve of what you are doing, quit it immediately. Nothing is a mere detail to a child of God. Nothing is a light matter. How long will you make God try to teach you the same lesson? God never loses patience; he will keep trying until you learn.

You no more need a holiday from spiritual concentration than your heart needs a holiday from beating. You can’t have a moral holiday and remain moral; you can’t have a spiritual holiday and remain spiritual. God wants you to be entirely his, and this means you have to keep yourself spiritually fit. It takes a tremendous amount of time to learn how to do this. Some of us expect to scale the mountain in two minutes flat.

1 Samuel 27-29; Luke 13:1-22

Wisdom from Oswald

Jesus Christ is always unyielding to my claim to my right to myself. The one essential element in all our Lord’s teaching about discipleship is abandon, no calculation, no trace of self-interest.Disciples Indeed, 395 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Evidence of Jesus

 

I am he that liveth, and was dead; and behold, I am alive for evermore . . .

—Revelation 1:18

Certain laws of evidence hold in the establishment of any historic event. Documentation of the event in question must be made by reliable contemporary witnesses. There is more evidence that Jesus rose from the dead than there is that Julius Caesar ever lived, or that Alexander the Great died at the age of 33. It is strange that historians will accept thousands of facts for which they can produce only shreds of evidence. But in the face of the overwhelming evidence of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, they cast a skeptical eye and hold intellectual doubts. The trouble with many people is that they do not want to believe. They are so completely prejudiced that they cannot accept the glorious fact of the resurrection of Christ on Bible testimony alone.

Prayer for the day

Lord Jesus, I know You are alive—for You live in the hearts of all those who love You!

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Seek God’s Wisdom

 

He came to Jesus at night and said, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not with him.”—John 3:2 (NIV)

Just like Nicodemus, who sought Jesus in the night, you too may have questions and doubts. But remember, seeking God’s wisdom is a journey, often filled with questions. Embrace these questions and seek His wisdom.

Lord, help me to embrace my questions and seek Your wisdom.

 

 

https://guideposts.org/daily-devotions/devotions-for-women/devotions-for-faith-prayer-devotions-for-women/