Our Daily Bread – Of Megalodons and Leviathan

 

Who has a claim against me that I must pay? Everything under heaven belongs to me. Job 41:11

Today’s Scripture

Job 41:1-5, 10-14

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Today’s Devotional

Years ago, a lumpy package arrived in my mailbox. I noticed my best friend’s return address on it and smiled. Joe sometimes sends me unexpected things. This package qualified: Inside was a dark brown shark’s tooth—five inches long.

Joe’s letter explained it was a fossilized tooth from a prehistoric shark, a megalodon, many times bigger than a great white shark. I tried to fathom how big a fish’s jaw would have to be to contain rows of such teeth. Scientists offer a speculative answer: nine by eleven feet. What a sight these creatures must have been!

Scripture doesn’t mention megalodons. But in the book of Job, God describes a sea beast called Leviathan. Job 41 details its impressive frame. “I will not fail to speak of Leviathan’s limbs, its strength and its graceful form,” God tells Job (v. 12). “Who dares open the doors of its mouth, ringed about with fearsome teeth?” (v. 14).

The answer? Only Leviathan’s creator. And here, God reminds Job that as great as this beast might be, it’s nothing compared to its Creator: “Everything under heaven belongs to me” (v. 11).

That meg tooth sits on my desk, a visual token of our Creator’s majesty and creativity. And that unlikely reminder of God’s character comforts me when it feels like the world might eat me up and spit me out.

Reflect & Pray

How do certain aspects of creation remind you of God’s powerful, creative nature? How does His work in creation encourage you?

 

Dear Father, Your creation speaks of Your splendor and power. Please help me trust You when life feels overwhelming.

Learn more about what we can learn from nature by reading What Leviathan Teaches Us About God.

Today’s Insights

Job 41 represents part of the lengthy discourse—which began in Job 40:6—between God and His struggling servant Job about His authority and power proven by the things He’s created. After many chapters of defending his innocence and righteousness, Job can’t maintain his own personal goodness when confronted by the greatness of God, and he responds to His speech with true brokenness and repentance (42:1-6). There can be no question that Job was a good man, but confronted by the God of the universe, Isaiah’s comparison is clear: “All of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags” (Isaiah 64:6). Creation reminds us of the greatness of God. It reveals our smallness before Him and our deep dependence on Him.

 

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Joyce Meyer – Plant Your Trust in God

 

[Most] blessed is the man who believes in, trusts in, and relies on the Lord, and whose hope and confidence the Lord is. For he shall be like a tree planted by the waters that spreads out its roots by the river…It shall not be anxious and full of care in the year of drought, nor shall it cease yielding fruit.

Jeremiah 17:7-8 (AMPC)

Trust is one of the most powerful facets of faith because it carries you through your problems. Faith asks for deliverance, but trust remains steadfast while we are in God’s waiting room.

We all have trust, and we choose where we place that trust. If you place your trust in others or in your own abilities and accomplishments, you will one day be disappointed. All of these things are subject to change. But God never changes.

So plant your trust in Him and be like the tree planted by the water—rooted and grounded and yielding good fruit no matter what comes.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, I choose to place my trust in You. Help me stay rooted in faith, even in the waiting times, knowing You never change and will always bring good fruit to harvest.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Denison Forum – The Fed rate cut and the “Charlie effect” on church attendance

 

After days filled with hard news, let’s take time today for some good news in the bad news.

  • The bad news is that the Federal Reserve is growing more concerned about the health of the nation’s labor market. The good news is that the Dow Jones rose 260 points yesterday after the central bank cut its key interest rate by a quarter-point and projected that it would cut rates twice more this year.
  • The bad news is that bad news is prompting “asteroid economics,” in which consumers spend with abandon because they sense destruction is coming. The good news is that consumer spending is keeping pace with inflation and driving the economy.
  • The horrible news of Charlie Kirk’s assassination last week brought good news last Sunday: his death reportedly brought thousands of people to church, a faith resurgence being called the “Charlie effect.”

Now let’s look for good news in bad news on a deeper cultural level, one that offers hope for our collective future and our individual souls.

What happens when nihilism reigns

In a brilliant analysis of our cultural moment, Clemson political science professor C. Bradley Thompson writes that “the moral culture of Western civilization is unraveling before our eyes.” He cites two tragedies in the news to make his point.

First, he explains the assassination of Charlie Kirk in light of the conservative activist’s debate slogan, “Prove Me Wrong!” According to Dr. Thompson,

It meant first that he appealed to reason, objectivity, and logic, and he encouraged his interlocutors to do the same. It also means that Charlie recognized right from wrong, truth and untruth, good and bad. He believed that honest men and women could reason their way to moral and political truths.

These are the core values and principles of Western civilization.

Next, he notes the murder a few weeks ago of Ukrainian immigrant Iryna Zarutska on a light rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina:

Three things stand out about this heinous murder: first was the utter savagery of the attack; second was the unbearable sadness of Iryna’s face as she realized what had just happened to her; and third was the fact that no fewer than five people sitting within sight of Iryna did nothing to help her. They just sat there and watched her die.

Iryna Zarutska died alone surrounded by people.

According to Dr. Thompson, these tragedies typify the nihilism of our day, the abandonment of objective meaning and morality. What is left is the will to personal power, a drive in which the end justifies the means.

Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin justified killing him by claiming that he “spreads too much hate.” The person who allegedly stabbed Iryna Zarutska to death was a Black man who said as he walked away, “I got that white girl. I got that white girl.”

When nihilism reigns, everyone can be its next victim.

Four things only Jesus can do

You’re probably wondering how to find the good news in this bad news. Here it is, courtesy of a Nigerian-English rapper/podcaster and Oxford graduate who is known by the stage name of Zuby. He posted perceptively to X: “Many people come to believe that God is real after realizing that Satan is real.”

When our enemy comes to “steal and kill and destroy” (John 10:10), evil becomes objectively real and objectively wrong. This proves that reality and morality are in fact objective. It makes the point that if Satan is real, God must be real.

And it shows us that we need the latter to defeat the former.

After Charlie Kirk’s murder, we’ve heard it said often that Jesus is our only hope. Is this true? Consider four things Jesus does that no other person in human history has ever done.

  • When we are tempted: “Because [Jesus] himself has suffered when tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted” (Hebrews 2:18; cf. 4:15). In his strength, we can defeat every temptation we face (1 Corinthians 10:13).
  • When we suffer: Nothing shall “separate us from the love of Christ” (Romans 8:35), for “in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us” (v. 37). As my friend Dr. Duane Brooks writes, “We are safe in the storm, even if we are not safe from the storm.”
  • When we lack purpose: Because we are the “body of Christ” in the world today (1 Corinthians 12:27), Jesus continues his earthly ministry through us and promised, “Whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do” (John 14:12).
  • When we face death: In that moment, Jesus promised, “I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also” (John 14:3). A church sign I saw this week says, “Death merely delivers a Christian to Jesus.”

Who else empowers us to defeat temptation, sustains us as we suffer, works through us in this world, and then transports us safely to the world to come?

“This is my strong tower, my immovable rock”

St. John Chrysostom (c. 347–407) testified:

The waters have risen and severe storms are upon us, but we do not fear drowning, for we stand firmly upon a rock. Let the sea rage, it cannot break the rock. Let the waves rise, they cannot sink the boat of Jesus. . . .

I have his promise; I am surely not going to rely on my own strength! I have what he has written; that is my staff, my security, my peaceful harbor. Let the world be in upheaval. I hold to his promise and read his message; that is my protecting wall and garrison. What message? “Know that I am with you always, until the end of the world!” . . .

Though the waves and the sea and the anger of princes are aroused against me, they are less to me than a spider’s web. . . . This is my strong tower, my immovable rock, my staff that never gives way. If God wants something, let it be done! If he wants me to stay here, I am grateful. But wherever he wants me to be, I am no less grateful.

He therefore asked, “If Christ is for me, whom shall I fear?”

The fact is, Christ is for you. Right now, this very moment.

Whom shall you fear today?

Quote for the day:

“The cross of Christ is the true ground and chief cause of Christian hope.” —Pope Leo I (c. 391–461)

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Denison Forum

My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers – His Temptation and Ours

 

For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way . . . yet he did not sin. — Hebrews 4:15

Until we are born again, the only temptation we understand is the kind mentioned in the book of James: “Each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed” (1:14). After we are born again and become Jesus’s brothers and sisters, we are lifted into a different realm, where we begin to face the kinds of temptation our Lord faced during his human lifetime. Before our spiritual rebirth, our Lord’s temptations and ours moved in different spheres. His were the temptations of God-as-man, while ours were merely the temptations of man.

Once the Son of God was formed inside us through the Holy Spirit, the Spirit began to detect certain of Satan’s temptations—temptations which we, on our own, could never recognize. Satan doesn’t tempt believers to sin; he tries to lure us away from what has been put into us by our spiritual rebirth, in the hopes that we’ll no longer be of value to God. He tempts us to change our point of view, so that we’ll no longer see things from Christ’s perspective. Only the Spirit of God can detect this as a temptation of the devil.

What happens in temptation is that an outside power comes to test the things we hold dear within us, the things that define our personality. This explains the way in which our Lord was tempted. Within his person, he held the fact that he was to be the king of humankind and the savior of the world, and these are precisely what Satan came to test him on. Jesus went through the temptation and “did not sin” (Hebrews 4:15), emerging from the battle with his personality intact. If we will commit ourselves to him, his Spirit will take us through every temptation in the same way, and we will emerge from the battle victorious.

Proverbs 30-31; 2 Corinthians 11:1-15

Wisdom from Oswald

We are only what we are in the dark; all the rest is reputation. What God looks at is what we are in the dark—the imaginations of our minds; the thoughts of our heart; the habits of our bodies; these are the things that mark us in God’s sight. The Love of God—The Ministry of the Unnoticed, 669 L

 

 

https://utmost.org/

Billy Graham – Infinite Desires

For here have we no continuing city, but we seek one to come.

—Hebrews 13:14

One of the basic desires of the soul is to live on and on. Self-preservation is the first law of nature. People may grow tired of aches and pains and the decrepitude of old age, but they do not grow tired of life itself. God has arranged to satisfy this yearning of the soul to live forever, and the desire to be free from pain and sickness and trouble. People are little creatures with big capacities, finite beings with infinite desires, deserving nothing but demanding all. God made people with this huge capacity and desire in order that He might come in and completely satisfy that desire. God made the human heart so big that only He can fill it. He made it demand so much that only He can supply that demand … Jesus Christ is the only one who holds the keys of death. In His death and resurrection He took the sting out of death, and now God offers eternal life to every person who puts his trust and faith in His Son Jesus Christ.

Prayer for the day

Lord Jesus, when I come to the end of this earthly life, You will be there to guide me to my heavenly home. Thank You, my loving Father.

 

 

https://billygraham.org/

Guideposts – Devotions for Women – Pursuing Peace

 

Let us therefore make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual edification.—Romans 14:19 (NIV)

God whispers a call for you to be a beacon of peace, to weave actions and nurture feelings that sow seeds of harmony and elevate those around you. This journey may not always be easy, but it’s one that reflects the gentle heart of Christ. When discord or arguments cloud the horizon, strive to respond with grace and understanding. Your devotion to peace can light a similar flame in others, shaping a space of unity and mutual respect.

Heavenly Guide, steer my steps as I strive to spread the wings of peace and lift others up.

 

 

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