Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Fear or Favor

 

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His heart is established; he will not be afraid.
Psalm 112:8

Recommended Reading: Psalm 112

Charlie Brown, the famous character in Charles M. Schultz’s Peanuts comic strip, is quoted as saying, “I think I’m afraid of being happy because whenever I get too happy something bad always happens.” Don’t we all feel that way—at least sometimes? Our happiness is often diminished because we’re so afraid of what might happen to ourselves or to our loved ones. We live in a dangerous world, and there’s no escaping that fact.

Yes, fear is an awful emotion to endure. But remember—we don’t have to endure it. The Bible says, “Blessed is the man who fears the Lord, who delights greatly in His commandments…. He will not be afraid of evil tidings; his heart is steadfast, trusting in the Lord” (Psalm 112:1, 7). The Bible tells us to fear God. Don’t fear life (see Ecclesiastes 3:14-15). The Lord has determined your path. Come before Him today and tell Him you are choosing to fear Him with godly reverence, to follow His plan, and to trust Him to care for you, come what may.

If the Lord be with us, we have no cause to fear. His eye is upon us, His arm over us, and His ear open to our prayer—His grace sufficient, His promise unchangeable.
John Newton

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Small Beginnings

 

Who dares despise the day of small things, since [God’s] eyes . . . will rejoice when they see the chosen capstone in the hand of Zerubbabel? Zechariah 4:10

Today’s Scripture

Zechariah 4:1-10

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Today’s Devotional

In 1848, engineer Charles Ellet Jr. puzzled over how to begin the process of constructing the first bridge over the Niagara Falls gorge. How would they get a cable across the river? Prompted by a dream, Charles decided to host a kite-flying contest. American teenager Homan Walsh won five dollars when his kite landed on the American side of the river. Homan’s kite string was secured to a tree and used to pull a light cord back across the river, then progressively heavier cords until heavy wire cable was in place. This was the small beginning of the construction of the Niagara Falls Suspension Bridge.

The bridge’s challenges and inauspicious beginnings mirror those faced by those working to rebuild God’s temple after returning from captivity in Babylon. An angel awakened the prophet Zechariah with a message that nothing would thwart God’s work—it would all be accomplished “by [his] Spirit” (Zechariah 4:6). Some of those who’d seen the temple in its previous glory were fearful that the rebuilt version would pale in comparison (Ezra 3:12). The angel encouraged Zechariah that they shouldn’t “despise the day of small things” because God would “rejoice” in seeing the work begun (Zechariah 4:10).

Even though the tasks God has appointed to us may seem insignificant, we can be encouraged knowing He uses small things—like kite strings—to accomplish His great works.

Reflect & Pray

How does it encourage you to know that God’s works often start small? How might you trust His faithfulness?

Dear Father, thank You for being faithful to Your plans.

Today’s Insights

God is in the business of using small things to accomplish His purposes. He used a shepherd boy and a stone to slay a giant (1 Samuel 17:49-50). He used a boy’s five small barley loaves and two small fish to feed five thousand men (John 6:9). Jesus was born as a helpless baby into a poor man’s family to save the world from sin (Luke 2:7; John 3:16). He said to Zechariah, “[Do not] despise the day of small things” (Zechariah 4:10). God delights in using ordinary people like us to do great things for Him even when our tasks may seem insignificant.

 

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – How to make a $1 million reservation for a hotel room on the moon

 

Let’s take a break from bad news around the planet by considering a way to escape the planet altogether.

A California-based startup plans to open a hotel on the moon by 2032. Galactic Resource Utilizations Space launched their booking website last month. Construction is expected to begin in 2029, pending regulatory approval. You can book your spot by putting down a deposit of a mere $1,000,000.

Why 2016 is making a comeback

If you’re looking for a less expensive way to manage the stress of our times, however, you can look to history rather than to the heavens. For example, the Wall Street Journal reports that “a severe bout of nostalgia is spreading in America” as “young adults are yearning for the simple days of 2016.”

In the first two weeks of January, the number of user-generated 2016 playlists on Spotify surged nearly 800 percent. A New York Times columnist points to the surge of people posting online content from ten years ago as well.

Some might blame the 2016 election of Donald Trump, but a history professor responded: “Part of it is that we have lost some hope of the future—that’s true of the right and the left. There’s some consolation in looking back.” According to the Journal article, “Some think the nostalgia stems from a shift in the past decade to a darker period of online life, and that celebrating 2016 brings people back to a less dystopian era of the internet.”

For a different way to escape the news, you can join the 213.1 million US adults who plan to watch the Super Bowl this Sunday. This year, 121.1 million intend to throw or attend a party, while another 18.2 million plan to watch the game at a bar or restaurant.

Of course, the “Sunday scaries” will be waiting for you when the game is over and you have to contemplate the week to come. You might even be experiencing lunaediesophobia: an intense fear or extreme anxiety regarding Mondays.

There’s a better way to redeem the stress of our days. In one sense it will cost you nothing, while in another it will cost you everything, but in the end it will bring you a peace and purpose you will find nowhere else.

“We are trying to fill an existential chasm”

Let’s begin with two book reviews.

First, the humanities professor Samuel Goldman reviews for the Wall Street Journal a book titled The Rise and Fall of Rational Control: The History of Modern Political Philosophy. Based on Harvard professor Harvey C. Mansfield’s signature course, it shows how ancient thinkers viewed reason as an end in itself. However, beginning with Machiavelli (1469–1527), modernity made understanding the world a means to changing it.

In Western context, this quest produced representational government, capitalistic commerce, and a secularized society, all intended to improve our lives by improving our world. But as the current epidemics of depressionloneliness, and “deaths of despair” illustrate, our efforts have been less than successful.

This leads us to our second review, this one in the Telegraph, where the author Stuart Jeffries appraises the latest book by psychoanalyst Adam Phillips. In The Life You Want, Phillips explains why our quest for happiness and fulfillment is so often unfulfilled: we are goaded by our materialistic society and the advertising that engulfs us to make our lives better with things. As Jeffries notes, “We are trying to fill an existential chasm inside ourselves with expensive nonsense.”

This is because, according to Phillips, we do not know what we truly want and thus cannot be truly satisfied. As a result, when we obtain something we think we want, it soon loses its luster. In fact, we often feel worse than before we obtained it.

“As labor pains upon a pregnant woman”

So, if the path to peace and purpose is not to be found within our society or ourselves, where are we to look? I’m sure you know what I’ll suggest, but I’d like to take us there through a route I had not considered before.

In my morning Bible study this week, I came upon 1 Thessalonians 5. Here Paul says of the return of Christ, “While people are saying, ‘There is peace and security,’ then sudden destruction will come upon them as labor pains upon a pregnant woman, and they will not escape” (v. 3). Let’s modify his metaphor for our conversation:

  1. We are all “pregnant” with regard to ideas, attitudes, character, and our interior lives: “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he” (Proverbs 23:7 KJV).
  2. Like a child in their mother’s womb, that which is within us must inevitably come to “birth” in the world: “Nothing is covered that will not be revealed, or hidden that will not be known” (Matthew 10:26).
  3. When it does, what we have been “growing” in the unseen dimensions of our lives will be obvious to ourselves and to others: “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34).
  4. We must therefore form our interior lives in ways that produce the exterior peace and purpose we were created to seek: “If there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. . . . and the God of peace will be with you” (Philippians 4:8–9).

Such formation in God’s plan costs us everything: We must be “crucified with Christ” (Galatians 2:20) as we give our entire selves to the Lord in a “living” and perpetual sacrifice (Romans 12:1) and take up our cross “daily” (Luke 9:23). In another sense, however, this costs us nothing: our holy Father can accept our surrender not because we are worthy but because his Son paid our debt and purchased our salvation (2 Corinthians 5:21).

We can even ask God to help us submit our lives to God, praying with the despairing father of a demon-possessed boy, “I believe; help my unbelief!” (Mark 9:24). We can pray for the faith to have faith, the strength to have the strength to yield our lives unconditionally to our Lord.

“The one thing that bears fruit in the life”

When we seek to “abide” in Christ in this holistic way, he assures us: “Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit” (John 15:5a). However, he also warns us, “Apart from me you can do nothing” (v. 5b).

Our lives can produce “much fruit” with Jesus, or we can produce “nothing” by ourselves. This is a binary choice with a binary result.

In yesterday’s My Utmost for His Highest reading, Oswald Chambers states:

“This abandon to the love of Christ is the one thing that bears fruit in the life, and it will always leave the impression of the holiness and of the power of God.”

Will you choose this “one thing” today?

Quote for the day:

“When I speak of a man ‘growing in grace’ I mean simply this—that his sense of sin is becoming deeper, his faith stronger, his hope brighter, his love more extensive, his spiritual mindedness more marked.” —J. C. Ryle

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Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – The Proof Is in the Love

 

 Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples. 

—John 13:35

Scripture:

John 13:35 

Before I became a believer, one of the things that attracted me to the Christian faith was the way Christians loved each other.

I was raised in the 1960s, when the hippie and drug culture was coming on strong. We wore peace symbols and used words like groovy. We talked incessantly about love and peace. But it was a sham. There was no love or peace—at least, not as we envisioned it. It didn’t take me long to recognize the hypocrisy at the heart of the counterculture.

Having been raised in a broken home, I wanted love and peace, and I thought maybe the movements of the 1960s were where I needed to look. I tried to buy into their philosophies for a time, not because I was looking for a buzz or excitement, but because I was looking for meaning in life.

But nothing really resonated with me until I started meeting Christians. They had the love and peace I was searching for. They would get together for Bible studies on my high school campus, and I would watch them hug each other and say, “God bless you.”

I thought, “This can’t be real. They can’t really care about each other. There’s no way.” But as I kept watching them, it started bugging me. And then I thought, “What if they’re right and I’m wrong? What if the love is real and not an act? What if God really is living inside them? What if they have the truth? If that’s true, then I don’t have it, and I don’t have the answers. That means I need to hear what they have to say.”

Jesus understood that need and longing for genuine love. That’s why He told His followers, “Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples” (John 13:35 NLT).

That love for one another doesn’t always come naturally. Nor should it. Nothing worthwhile is easy. They say politics makes strange bedfellows but so does the Christian faith. Jesus urged His followers to “go and make disciples of all the nations” (Matthew 28:19 NLT). That involves bringing people together from all walks of life—people who are culturally, politically, socioeconomically, and temperamentally different from one another. In other words, people with little in common.

The apostle Paul wrote, “There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28 NLT). Yet the prejudices and misunderstandings that exist between these disparate groups don’t magically disappear when people come to Christ. Believers must work to change their thinking, to reach out to people who are different from them, to tear down walls and build bridges. To show love.

Can people see that kind of love in your life? When people of different ages, backgrounds, and cultures set aside differences and come together to worship in the name of Jesus Christ, it serves as a powerful testimony to a world that is more divided than ever.

Reflection Question: What does love for other believers look like in your life? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – I Will Carry You

 

by Daryl W. Robbins

“Hearken unto me, O house of Jacob, and all the remnant of the house of Israel, which are borne by me from the belly, which are carried from the womb: and even to your old age I am he; and even to hoar hairs will I carry you: I have made, and I will bear; even I will carry, and will deliver you.” (Isaiah 46:3–4)

When we are young, concern for the future may be the furthest thing from our thoughts, but as we age we become more cognizant of our diminishing strength and declining health. While these changes become our new reality and may occupy our thoughts and discourage us, they come as no surprise to the God who made us and sustains us.

In Psalm 71, the author begins by proclaiming God as his “rock,” “hope,” and “refuge:” “For thou art my hope, O Lord God: thou art my trust from my youth” (v. 5). However, along with these declarations of trust, he then lifts prayers to the Lord expressing many of the same aging concerns we experience today: “Cast me not off in the time of old age; forsake me not when my strength faileth” (v. 9); “now also when I am old and grayheaded, O God, forsake me not” (v. 18).

These cares are nothing to be ashamed of but are just the kind of concerns that God wants us to lift up to Him: “Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you” (1 Peter 5:7); “cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee” (Psalm 55:22). If you find similar worries crowding your mind, hold fast to God’s assurance of His faithfulness to His beloved children (37:28). All the way from the womb to the tomb, He will carry you! DWR

 

 

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

Joyce Meyer – Fruitfulness Is Better Than Busy-Ness

 

I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing.

John 15:5 (NKJV)

Today people are very busy, but that doesn’t mean they are busy doing what will bear good fruit for God (meaning to make a positive difference in the world and to bring honor to Him, or to be productive) in their life. God has not called us to be busy, but He has called us to be fruitful (John 15:4–5).

Today’s scripture says that if we abide in Him, we will bear much fruit. To abide means to live, dwell, and remain in. Meditating on God’s Word is part of the abiding lifestyle. We cannot have only a one-hour visit with Jesus on Sunday morning during a church service, not think of Him until the next Sunday, and expect to live a fruitful life. The abiding lifestyle means that we include Him in everything we do and acknowledge Him in all things. We talk to Him, think about Him, and think about His Word throughout each day.

God’s Word rules. This means that when a decision needs to be made, we make the one that agrees with His Word. There are two words that can never go together in the life of a Christian: “No, Lord!” If He is our Lord, then our answer must always be yes.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me abide in You daily. Teach me to include You in every thought and decision, bearing lasting fruit as I align my life fully with Your Word, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – Fear of Insignificance 

 

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Do we matter? We fear we don’t. In Luke 12:6 Jesus says, “Are not five sparrows sold for two pennies? And not one of them is forgotten before God” (ESV). One penny would buy two sparrows. Two pennies, however, would buy five. The seller threw in the fifth for free. Society has its share of fifth sparrows: indistinct souls who feel dispensable, disposable, worth little.

It’s time to deal with the fear of not mattering, the fear of insignificance. Why does God love you so much? You are his idea. And God has only good ideas. “For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things he planned for us long ago” (Ephesians 2:10 NLT).

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – Romans: Salvation’s Weaving

 

Read Romans 1:1–17

Epic adventures often involve multiple story lines. While the main characters are consumed with the central conflict, along the way we see seemingly lesser characters face challenges and trials. Keeping track of multiple storylines can be difficult, but a master storyteller can keep a reader’s interest until the time is right, finally revealing how all these threads weave together into a dramatic conclusion.

As the Apostle Paul opens the book of Romans, he takes a moment to explain how God has woven the overarching story of salvation into a conclusion beyond comprehension.

The Apostle Paul begins by acknowledging the part he plays—as one “set apart for the gospel” (v. 1). But the message of the gospel did not originate with Paul. This gospel was promised long ago by God through the prophets (v. 2). The Scriptures were written “through his prophets” for later generations (including us) to read, pointing to Jesus, a descendant of David (vv. 2–3). Jesus was born a human but revealed to be the Son of God at the resurrection (v. 4). The story of salvation is an epic one that stretches from before God made the world to the moment we find ourselves in His presence forever. God has woven the thread of your life and countless others into something wonderful and powerful.

Paul explains how he was made an apostle for a specific purpose, to call Gentiles to obedience to the Lordship of Christ (v. 6). He is “eager to preach the gospel also to you who are in Rome” (v. 15). There is a sense of community in this calling; our stories are intertwined. Paul desires “that you and I may be mutually encouraged by each other’s faith” (v. 12). We are to declare the gospel, “the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes” (v. 16).

Go Deeper

What is your salvation story? Who was instrumental in leading you to Jesus? What role have you played in pointing others to salvation? Extended Reading:

Romans 1–2

Pray with Us

Lord, we are thankful for the example Paul gives us of how to preach the gospel with courage and conviction. May we with the same boldness point people to Jesus, to receive grace and freedom.

For I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes.Romans 1:16

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/