Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Stay Strong

 

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And not only that, but we also glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope.
Romans 5:3-4

Recommended Reading: Hebrews 12:1-3

The story is told of a young, aspiring musician visiting New York City who wanted to see Carnegie Hall. She stopped a stranger on the street and asked, “How do I get to Carnegie Hall?” The stranger, also a musician, replied, “Practice, practice, practice!”

While that wasn’t the answer the young musician was looking for, it was probably the answer she needed. Enduring thousands of hours of painful practice is the only path. The apostle Paul said something similar about suffering: “We also glory [rejoice] in tribulations.” Why? Because just as the toil of practice leads to Carnegie Hall, so the “toil” of hard times leads to perseverance, which leads to character, which leads to hope. And hope “does not disappoint” because it leads to the realization of God’s love for us (Romans 5:5). As the writer of Hebrews wrote, “Let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus” (Hebrews 12:1-2). We keep our eyes on the One who endured as our example.

Remain strong in your troubles, knowing that they have a purpose: perseverance, character, and hope.

Perseverance is the rope that ties the soul to the door post of heaven.
Frances J. Roberts

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – Prayer in Disguise

 

God has wronged me and drawn his net around me. Job 19:6

Today’s Scripture

Job 19:5-12

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Today’s Devotion

After the horrors of Auschwitz, Elie Wiesel lost his faith. “Where were you, God of kindness?” he asked, recalling the evil he and others suffered. “In my childhood I did not expect much from human beings. But I expected everything from you.”

And yet, Wiesel realized later that his faith had never really left him. “It is because I believed in God that I was angry at God,” he told a journalist, “and still am.” You don’t get angry at someone you don’t believe exists.

We might feel uncomfortable expressing anger at God, but biblical characters did. “You deceived me, Lord,” the prophet Jeremiah cried (20:7). “Will you forget me forever?” David wrote (Psalm 13:1). “God has wronged me,” Job said (19:6). Unaware of Satan’s role in his misfortune, Job accused God of being cruel (10:3) and even subpoenaed Him to court (31:35)! While Job later discovered that his understanding was limited (42:3), it’s important to note God never rebukes his feelings.

Despite his questions, Elie Wiesel prayed, “Let us make up. It is unbearable to be divorced from you so long.” We too might be angry at God for not limiting the suffering in our world, but our expressing it to Him can become prayer in disguise—keeping us close to the God who wants us to bring not just our praise but our anger to Him too.

Reflect & Pray

When have you felt angry at God? How can Job’s story help us express and keep a clear perspective?

Dear God, I’m angry at the suffering in this world, but choose to trust You.

For further study, read Job and the God Who Would Not Be Chained at odbm.org.

Today’s Insights

In Job 19:5-12, Job speaks with striking candor, not only hurling accusations at his friends but also at God. He says that God has “walled up” (v. 8 esv) his path, a translation of the Hebrew word that conveys building a barrier or enclosing something so it can’t escape. Job also claims God has “set darkness upon [his] paths” (v. 8 esv), suggesting not mere inconvenience but the removal of light itself, a symbol of life and order. He describes himself as a besieged city: God’s “troops” advance together, building “a siege ramp” against him (v. 12), implying a military approach.

Job refuses to sanitize his language. He dares to depict God as his attacker, one who “tears [him] down” and “uproots [his] hope like a tree” (v. 10). This isn’t blasphemy but rather the brutal honesty of a sufferer. His speech can remind us today that we can bring both our praise and our honest anger to God in prayer.

 

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – King Charles III tells Congress his faith is a “firm anchor”

 

King Charles III addressed a joint session of Congress on Monday afternoon. Watching on television as he entered the chamber to a standing ovation, I wondered what our Founders would have thought as the British monarch was welcomed into our highest cathedral of independent governance.

The king expressed solidarity with our nation, bringing “the highest regard and friendship of the British people to the people of the United States.” As he noted, our “democratic, legal, and social traditions” stretch back to Magna Carta, showing that “time and again, our two countries have always found ways to come together.” He added that our defense and military alliance is “measured not in years but in decades.”

The king also stated that “for many here—and for myself—the Christian faith is a firm anchor and daily inspiration that guides us not only personally, but together as members of our community.” He then spoke to our shared duty to “value all people, of all faiths, and of none.”

His remarks illustrated the balancing act a British monarch must perform daily. On one hand, he is the sovereign of the United Kingdom, the leader in whose name the government is formed and acts. On the other hand, he is constitutionally bound to remain above politics. His role is to represent the UK rather than to speak for its government. The monarch often gives political and practical advice to prime ministers and other leaders, but always in private.

As the English poet Tennyson once noted, Britain is a “crowned Republic,” one in which the monarch reigns but does not rule.

“America’s greatest secular saint”

By contrast, the American president embodies both the performative and the practical. He is head of state as well as commander in chief. He engages with the British monarch and other visiting dignitaries in symbolic and ceremonial ways, but he also leads an administration responsible for enforcing the nation’s laws, among other executive functions.

The president and vice president are the only political leaders elected by the entire country. As a result, the Founders were especially concerned to strike a balance that empowered the nation’s leader without giving him unaccountable authority. Accordingly, he can veto legislation but he cannot write it. He can nominate justices to the courts, but he cannot confirm them. He is elected by the people, but he can be impeached by their elected representatives.

As Joseph Ellis writes in His Excellency: George Washington, our first president remains “America’s greatest secular saint.” But the “father of our country” took great pains to ensure that the precedents he set would reinforce his role as the servant of the republic rather than its monarch. If he surrendered his military authority after winning the Revolutionary War, King George III said he would be “the greatest man in the world.” And that is just what Gen. Washington did, resigning his commission and returning to private life.

When he was unanimously chosen by the Electoral College to be our first president, he visited every state in the infant nation, including sixty towns and hamlets. He consistently refused all trappings of monarchy, dressing and comporting himself as an ordinary citizen.

The true power of the country, he insisted, lay in its people. And their power, he asserted, is derived not from government but from the “indispensable supports” of “religion and morality.” What’s more, he noted, is that morality cannot be maintained “without religion.”

As my friend, the retired Congressman Frank Wolf, has observed, politics are downstream from culture, which is downstream from religion.

“Ill-equipped to govern and convert”

In a brilliant and complex article for American Reformer titled “Whither the Reformation in America?”, the political theorist Joshua Mitchell surveys the religious worldviews that are especially dominant in American history and culture. He then asks which, if any, can guide us into a perilous future.

In his view, Catholicism is too hierarchical, in ways akin to Europe and the Old World, to capture the heart of American individualism. Progressive Christianity calls for national repentance and redemption from white supremacy, racism, and other historic oppressions, but without a consequent call to transformation through personal faith in Christ. As New York Times columnist Ross Douthat writes in his reflection on Mitchell’s article, this version of Christianity “believes in sin but not God.”

According to both Mitchell and Douthat, evangelicals are unable to shape the future because we are fundamentally anti-worldly: “strong enough only to fortify the walls” against a “hostile external world” (according to Mitchell) and “ill-equipped to govern and convert beyond [our] bastions” (according to Douthat).

But this is a misreading of evangelicalism at its biblical best.

We proclaim a gospel of personal salvation because only persons can be saved. Nations have no souls for which Jesus could die, no existential reality that can live eternally in paradise. But we also proclaim a gospel that transforms persons so they can be catalysts for further transformation.

The moment Andrew met Jesus, he had to tell Peter (John 1:40–42). The moment the early Christians were “filled with the Spirit,” they had to witness to the crowds at Pentecost (Acts 2:1–41). Before long, they were building a culture centered on biblical morality and compassion (Acts 2:42–474:32–375:12–16). Everywhere they went, they became change agents for society as well as souls (cf. Acts 17:619:18–2027).

The problem with “Friend Sunday”

But there’s more. Neither Mitchell nor Douthat discuss the eschatological impulse of evangelicalism by which all we do in this world prepares us for all we will experience in the next. We are not merely waiting for Jesus to return and make things better: we are preparing for his return (Matthew 24:14) by meeting needs in his name and advancing his kingdom through our glad obedience (Matthew 6:33).

This is truly a rising tide that raises all boats.

Or it should be.

The problem comes when we settle for the evangelicalism Mitchell and Douthat describe, content to know that our souls are saved and busy inside the “bastions” of our counter-cultural social monasticism.

As a young pastor many years ago, I wanted our church to conduct a “Friend Sunday.” The idea is simple: each church member invites a non-churched friend to church. I preach the gospel as simply as I can, and we follow up with our guests as effectively as we can.

When I introduced the concept to our deacons, they seemed to be in favor, though a bit reluctant. Then one of them spoke for the rest: “But pastor, we don’t know any non-Christians to invite.”

If I were your pastor, how would you respond to my idea today?

Quote for the day:

“A sign of a culture that has lost its faith: moral collapse follows upon spiritual collapse.” —C. S. Lewis

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Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – The Safety Net

 

 If we claim we have no sin, we are only fooling ourselves and not living in the truth. 

—1 John 1:8

Scripture:

1 John 1:8 

Visitors to San Francisco can’t help but be amazed at the architectural marvel that is the Golden Gate Bridge. But its beauty and innovation came at a tremendous cost. During the initial phases of construction, several workers lost their balance and plunged to their deaths in the San Francisco Bay.

The builders were concerned about the human tragedy, of course. But they were also concerned about the delays in the schedule because of the deaths. They needed to find a way to keep their workers safe under the most dangerous conditions. The solution they arrived at was something that had never been done before.

The builders installed a giant safety net under the construction area. The workers knew that if they fell, the net would catch them. The experience wouldn’t necessarily be pleasant for the unfortunate worker, but at least he would live to tell about it. Thanks to the net, workers could go about their business without the fear of dying. With the threat removed, they were able to move quickly and finish the project.

Did you know that God has put a safety net under you? By that I mean, when you slip, when you fall, when you make a mistake, you don’t have to worry that your name will be blotted out of the Book of Life. You don’t have to face the prospect of becoming persona non grata with God.

The apostle Paul wrote, “For everyone has sinned; we all fall short of God’s glorious standard. Yet God, in his grace, freely makes us right in his sight. He did this through Christ Jesus when he freed us from the penalty for our sins. For God presented Jesus as the sacrifice for sin. People are made right with God when they believe that Jesus sacrificed his life, shedding his blood” (Romans 3:23–25 NLT).

If you believe in Christ, you have a spiritual safety net. You have a barrier against spiritual death. Because Jesus came into your heart, forgave you, and committed Himself to you, He now protects you, seals you, and justifies you because of that commitment.

The fact is that we as Christians will sin and fall short. The Scriptures, as well as our own experiences in life, tell us this is true. According to 1 John 1:8, “If we claim we have no sin, we are only fooling ourselves and not living in the truth” (NLT). This isn’t an excuse for ungodly living. Nor is it a license for sin. It’s a simple acknowledgment of reality.

Yet Paul wrote, “I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow—not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love” (Romans 8:38 NLT).

Nothing can dismantle our safety net.

Reflection Question: What does your spiritual safety net mean to you? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – God Is Omniscient

 

by Henry M. Morris III, D.Min.

“Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world.” (Acts 15:18)

Although the concept of absolute knowledge is general to almost all ideas of God, it is perhaps the most difficult for any human being to understand. Most of us work very hard to obtain knowledge and, in most cases, even harder to retain it. The practical issue with this teaching is we forget that God does not forget!

“The LORD looketh from heaven; he beholdeth all the sons of men. From the place of his habitation he looketh upon all the inhabitants of the earth. He fashioneth their hearts alike; he considereth all their works” (Psalm 33:13–15). Deep in the heart of every man is the fear that God’s omniscience is very real, but we spend much of our waking hours attempting to override that concern.

Yet, the Scriptures are absolutely clear. “And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: . . . and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works” (Revelation 20:12). “But I say unto you, that every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment” (Matthew 12:36).

Ah, but the wonderful and encouraging side of God’s omniscience is that He does know. “O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar off. Thou compassest my path and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways. For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O LORD, thou knowest it altogether” (Psalm 139:1–4).

With that kind of knowledge, it is no wonder that “my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19). HMM III

 

 

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

Joyce Meyer – Lift Your Eyes Higher

 

The Lord said to Abram after Lot had left him, Lift up now your eyes and look from the place where you are, northward and southward and eastward and westward.

Genesis 13:14 (AMPC)

In Genesis 13, we see that Abram (whom God later renamed Abraham) had a good attitude—a generous and giving attitude—toward his nephew, Lot. Abram had a right to the land, but he told Lot to choose his portion, and Lot chose the best land for himself. God then told Abram to look from the place where he was. God didn’t say to look at where he was; He said to look from it—beyond it—to all God had in store for him. God had a plan for Abram, even though he had just experienced great loss.

Anytime you need encouragement, you can turn to Jeremiah 29:11 and get it: “‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the LORD, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future’” (NIV). God wants you to have hope. He’s got a good plan for your life.

Prayer of the Day: Lord, help me trust Your plan even when I experience loss. Give me a generous heart, lift my eyes beyond today, and fill me with hope for the future You promised, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado –  Confession Offers Freedom 

 

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Confession! It’s a word that conjures up many images—some not so positive!  Confession isn’t telling God what he doesn’t know.  That’s impossible. It’s not pointing fingers at others without pointing any at me. That may feel good, but it doesn’t promote healing.

Confession is a radical reliance on grace—a trust in God’s goodness. The truth is, confessors find a freedom that deniers don’t! Scripture says “If we say we have no sin, we are fooling ourselves, and the truth is not in us.  But if we confess our sins, he will forgive our sins, because we can trust God to do what is right.  He will cleanse us from all the wrongs we have done” (1 John 1:8-9 NCV).

Tell God what you did.  Again, it’s not that he doesn’t already know, but the two of you need to agree! Then let the pure water of grace flow over your mistakes!

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – For Generations

 

Read Ruth 4:18–22

One day, author Kathy Howard discovered a yellowed letter, written by her great-great-grandmother to her son Howell in 1914. One paragraph brought Kathy to tears: “Oh, how much I do pray for you every single morning and night. I pray mightily to the Lord that you Howell and your children may be convicted and converted and sanctified. Never a day do I miss. May God hear and answer my prayers.” This letter inspired Kathy to write her own devotional book, Heirloom: Living and Leaving a Legacy of Faith.

The conclusion to the book of Ruth conveys a similar sentiment. In its simple genealogical form, it zooms out to provide context for the personal narrative of Naomi, Ruth, and Boaz. It reveals who came before and who would follow. This genealogy begins with Perez. In 4:12, the legal assembly prayed that the Lord would bless Boaz with a family line as significant as Perez. Naming him at the beginning demonstrates how that prayer was answered, and the providence of God displayed. The genealogy names ten men in the family line, moving from Perez to Boaz and ending with David.

This genealogy, along with the more abbreviated one in verse 17, elevates this family’s story to a national level. The significance of the birth of Obed is magnified, and the hesed shown by Ruth and Boaz and Naomi is multiplied. Their love and loyalty to one another had ramifications not only for them but also for generations to come.

Similarly, God’s hesed love was providentially extended beyond their family, to the entire nation ruled by King David, and ultimately to the entire world with the birth of God’s own Son. Even in the dark days of the judges (1:1), a line was preserved that would produce the Savior and Redeemer of a lost humanity.

Go Deeper

Consider your own family, your parents, grandparents, great- grandparents. How have you seen God at work through the generations?

Pray with Us

Father God, thank You for revealing to us the genealogy of Jesus, which shows He didn’t come out of nowhere. As a true man, He had relatives and ancestors, like we do. Thank You that You are faithful to all generations.

He is the faithful God, keeping his covenant of love to a thousand generations of those who love him and keep his commandments.Deuteronomy 7:9

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/