Tag Archives: Words of Hope

Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Do Miracles Still Happen?

Read: Acts 5:12-16

Now many signs and wonders were regularly done among the people by the hands of the apostles (v. 12)

Do miracles still happen? One school of thought is that even if miracles happened in Bible times, they don’t happen anymore. But if miracles cannot happen now, how is it they happened then? Has the fundamental reality of the universe somehow changed? What power today prevents God from intervening in human affairs in amazing, extraordinary ways?

Another line of thought is that miracles ceased when Jesus left the earth. But that’s not true. Long after Jesus left, “many signs and wonders were regularly done among the people by the hands of the apostles” (Acts 5:12). Paul healed a man crippled from birth. Peter raised Dorcas from the dead. Jesus had assured the disciples that “whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these will he do” (John 14:12).

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – No More of This!

Read: Luke 22:47-53

Lord, shall we strike with the sword? (v. 49)

Why is it that the worst things always happen at night? The worst phone calls always seem to come when it is dark. Our biggest fears and worries always seem to come calling when we are lying in bed, in the darkness. Even when bad things happen during the day, in our memory of them there is no light.

We remember the Garden of Gethsemane as the place where, in the darkness, Jesus was betrayed and arrested. We forget that the Lord also performed there a fascinating miracle. It is the only recorded instance in which Jesus healed someone who had been hurt in an act of violence. Mark says an unnamed disciple cut off the ear of an unnamed slave of the high priest. Matthew adds that Jesus rebuked the disciple. In John the disciple becomes Simon Peter, the slave Malchus, and the severed ear is the right one. But only Dr. Luke tells us that Jesus touched the ear and healed the man. Imagine Jesus looking in the grass for that missing ear and then putting it back where it belonged.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – No More of This!

Read: Luke 22:47-53

Lord, shall we strike with the sword? (v. 49)

Why is it that the worst things always happen at night? The worst phone calls always seem to come when it is dark. Our biggest fears and worries always seem to come calling when we are lying in bed, in the darkness. Even when bad things happen during the day, in our memory of them there is no light.

We remember the Garden of Gethsemane as the place where, in the darkness, Jesus was betrayed and arrested. We forget that the Lord also performed there a fascinating miracle. It is the only recorded instance in which Jesus healed someone who had been hurt in an act of violence. Mark says an unnamed disciple cut off the ear of an unnamed slave of the high priest. Matthew adds that Jesus rebuked the disciple. In John the disciple becomes Simon Peter, the slave Malchus, and the severed ear is the right one. But only Dr. Luke tells us that Jesus touched the ear and healed the man. Imagine Jesus looking in the grass for that missing ear and then putting it back where it belonged.

“No more of this!” Jesus says. In Matthew, Jesus adds: “Put your sword back into its place. For all who take the sword will perish by the sword” (26:52).

Some measure of defense is necessary in a fallen world. But Jesus died for the sins of the world, which includes the sins of our enemies, and we betray him when we try to defend him with violence. “No more of this!”

Prayer:

Lord, fill me with your peace.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – The Raising Of Lazarus

Read: John 11:38-46

He cried out with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out.” (v. 43)

The raising of Lazarus is the masterpiece of Jesus’ miracles, and by far the most expensive—it cost him his life. At the outset of his ministry Jesus made wine flow from water, and now he makes blood run warm again in a man dead in a tomb. Death had met its match, and that was the last straw for some of the mourners as they left to tattle to the authorities. “So from that day on they made plans to put him to death” (John 11:53).

Many New Testament miracles show people cooperating with Jesus, so to speak. That is, they have faith, they trust, they take up their mat and walk, they go show themselves to the priests, they fish from the other side of the boat. But Lazarus does nothing to cooperate. He is inert, a corpse. So much for God needing our cooperation. On that day in Bethany God acts alone, intervening in human affairs, doing what only God can do—raise the dead.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Get Out Of the Boat

Read: Matthew 14:22-33

So Peter got out of the boat and walked on the water and came to Jesus. (v. 29)

Ask yourself this question: “Where do I find myself in this sacred story?” Are you sitting in the boat, a place of safety and security? Are you striding boldly across the sea? Or maybe you’ve begun to sink, crying out, “Lord, save me!”

The most decisive moments of life happen when, trusting in Jesus, we step out of the boat. Perhaps you’ve been unhappy in your job for too long, and the time has come to step out of the security it offers and pursue the work you sense you were created to do. Perhaps you’ve avoided speaking up, afraid you might be rejected, or afraid to disagree with a powerful person, and the time has come to tell it like it is. Perhaps your church keeps declining, getting older, getting smaller, afraid to adapt, afraid to step out into the community, and you are beginning to realize that unless you change, you have no future.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – A Second Touch

Read: Mark 8:22-26

Then Jesus laid his hands on his eyes again; and he opened his eyes, and his sight was restored, and he saw everything clearly. (v. 25)

How observant are you? On a stoplight, which color is on top—red or green? When water in your sink goes down the drain, does it swirl clockwise or counter clockwise? How many matches are there in a standard pack? Sometimes the things with which we are most familiar are the very things we have most difficulty seeing.

Despite decades of reading and studying the Bible, I keep discovering things that I hadn’t noticed before. Only recently did it occur to me that to heal the blind man of Bethsaida, Jesus had to touch him twice. The Gospels record over 30 healing miracles Jesus performed, and in all those miracles one touch was enough. But in this instance healing requires a second touch. This is a two-stage miracle, and Mark doesn’t give us any clue as to why.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Try the Other Side of the Boat

Read: John 21:1-14

Children, do you have any fish? (v. 5)

“Children, do you have any fish?” I think a lot of us, like the disciples, would answer: “No. I’ve been fishing all night, but I don’t have anything to show for it.” Some of us have been plodding along in our jobs, year after year, with no sense of reward, and no feeling that we are getting anywhere, or getting anything, except a paycheck. Some of us have been coming up with empty nets in our personal relationships, or in our spiritual efforts. “Children, do you have any fish?” No.

“Cast your net on the right side of the boat, and you will find some.” Whatever side we’ve been fishing on, Jesus invites us to try the other side. Which is what the disciples do, and they are swamped with fish. It’s a miracle!

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Who Is to Blame?

Read: Mark 5:1-20

. . . there met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit. (v. 2)

Who is to blame for this poor man’s problems? When you are possessed, and you keep hurting yourself and hurting others, whose fault is that? Is the Gerasene demoniac himself to blame, or is he at the mercy of external forces that make him do hurtful things that he doesn’t want to do?

A young boy watches, daily, as his mother is abused by his drunken father. The boy grows up, becomes a man, begins to drink, and now he abuses his wife. Whose fault is that? Whose sin is to blame?

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Do You Want To Be Healed?

Read: John 5:1-9

He said to him, “Do you want to be healed?” (v. 6)

She never knew it, but behind her back people called her Boo-Hoo, because she was always talking about how badly she’d been treated in life. She’d been cheated, mistreated, shortchanged, passed by, unfairly dealt with. Other people always got the big break she deserved. Nobody gave her a chance. Nobody understood her. Nobody appreciated her. It’s like she had a tape player in her head, and whenever she opened her mouth out came this sad song. Boo-Hoo.

“Do you want to be healed?” Jesus asks. And immediately, out comes the tale of woe: “I have no one to put me in the pool when the water is stirred up . . . while I am going another steps down before me.” Jesus doesn’t offer sympathy. He doesn’t commiserate. All Jesus wants to know is: “Do you want to be healed?”

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand

Read: John 6:1-15

There is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish, but what are they for so many? (v. 9)

When I was a child I had a Bible coloring book. One picture showed a boy with a wicker lunch basket, his eyes bulging with wonder as a grinning Jesus gestures to a pile of loaves and flopping fishes. The caption read, “Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand.”

Today’s children may learn a somewhat different lesson. One contemporary explanation is that the boy’s generosity inspired the crowd to share food they’d had all along, but were selfishly hiding from one another. This was no miracle; Jesus merely guilt-tripped the crowd into sharing with one another.

Jesus performs a miracle, and we are embarrassed, some of us. Too many believers, nowadays, feel they must explain away anything in the Bible that smacks of the supernatural, lest our culture think we are foolish and naive.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Faithful Friends

Read: Mark 2:1-12

And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “Son, your sins are forgiven.” (v. 5)

There are two ways to get to the top of a tall oak tree—you can roll up your sleeves and start climbing, or you can sit on an acorn. The four friends in the Gospel of Mark, these guys don’t sit on acorns. Unable to get near Jesus on account of the crowd, the four friends scramble up onto the roof and tear open a hole so that they can lower their paralyzed buddy down into the room where the Lord is teaching. Faith always finds the opening that doubt doesn’t think is there.

Surely there is a link between miracles and faith. “All things are possible for one who believes,” said Jesus (Mark 9:23). Again and again in Scripture we hear Jesus say to the person who has been healed, “Your faith has made you well.” But in this miracle it’s also the faith of the friends, apparently, and not just the faith of the paralytic, that moves Jesus to action. The Lord looks up and sees the four hopeful faces looking down, and he looks down and sees the hopeful face looking up, and “. . . when he saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, ‘Son, your sins are forgiven.’” When he saw their faith.

Heaven hears the prayers of the supplicant, but the faith of one’s friends is also involved. How many miracles are waiting to happen, waiting for faithful friends to bring the needy to the feet of Christ?

Prayer:

Lord, increase my faith.

Author: Lou Lotz

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – What Happened In Church

Read: Mark 1:21-28

And the unclean spirit, convulsing him and crying out with a loud voice, came out of him. (v. 26)

Ever think about why people come to church? Believe me, your pastor thinks about it all the time. Some people come to worship. Some come out of habit. Some come to keep peace in the family. Some probably don’t know why they come—they just come. There are a lot of reasons, but surely one reason is that life is confusing and chaotic, and we are all groping for something, someone with authority, to set us straight, and help us find our peace, our poise, our purpose.

Look around on Sunday at the people sitting with you in church. Can you even begin to appreciate the turmoil in their lives—the upsetting phone calls in the previous week, the hurtful words heard and spoken, the strife in relationships, concerns about health and finances, bad memories of things that happened long ago. Can other people appreciate the turmoil in your life? Life can be painful and chaotic. Like the poor, tormented soul in the synagogue, we’re all yearning for someone with authority who can calm the chaos and set us straight.

Out in the world it may appear that money reigns supreme, or political power, or cancer. But when we come to church we are reminded of the truth that sets things straight, and calms the chaos, and makes the demons quake—Jesus is Lord. Ask for his help. You will not be disappointed.

Prayer:

Lord, let me find in you my peace, my poise, and my purpose.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – The Best Is Yet to Be

Read: John 2:1-11

This, the first of his signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested his glory. And his disciples believed in him. (v. 11)

What is a miracle? The Greek word for miracle is semaios, which means sign. Like all signs, miracles point to something beyond themselves. They point to God. A miracle is not a magic trick; it is a sign that God is at work in human affairs.

The Lord’s first sign took place at a wedding, when the mother of Jesus—John never calls her Mary—informs her son that, “They have no wine.” Initially, Jesus refuses to get involved. But what son can hold out for long against his mother’s wishes? The six stone jars are filled to the brim with water, and the water becomes wine. And not the cheap, inferior wine that was usually served later on. No, this was the good stuff.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – The Final Word

Read: Judges 21:25

Everyone did what was right in his own eyes. (v. 25)

I would define the prevailing moral ethos of our current cultural moment as: “No one else can decide right and wrong for you.” How different is that from “Everyone did what was right in his own eyes”? In reality, Judges 21:25 is the best one-sentence definition of sin ever written.

Israel lost its way. The nation’s unity was tenuous, especially without a king or central government. Kings would come later, but Old Testament history shows that they didn’t solve Israel’s problems, either. A new covenant with God was needed, made through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Sin and Evil and the Levite’s Concubine

Read: Judges 19:1-30

Such a thing has never happened. (v. 30)

Sin and evil are not the same thing. “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:23), but not all sinners practice evil. The world is full of good and decent people, sinners one and all. Sin is directed at God. It is being out of right relationship with God and violating his law. Evil is directed at God’s creation, harming or destroying what God has made.

The story of the Levite’s concubine is pure evil. It is an illustration of how low Israel has sunk. There are parallels in the story of Sodom, found in Genesis 19. But Sodom was not Israel. This is. The exodus and giving of the law have happened, but Israel has no moral compass.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Samson and Delilah

Read: Judges 16:1-31

If my head is shaved, then my strength will leave me. (v. 17)

The names “Samson and Delilah” live in popular imagination as a romantic ideal. One only needs to read the Bible to learn that’s not true. Samson did love Delilah (love is not used to describe his other sexual pursuits), but it’s hard to say exactly what Delilah felt. She played Samson for a fool—repeatedly—with tragic consequences.

In his commentary on the Book of Judges, Australian scholar Barry Webb suggests the story of Israel is mirrored in Samson. Israel was set apart from other nations by God’s election, Samson was set apart from other people by his Nazirite vow. Israel went after foreign gods, Samson went after foreign women. Samson wound up blind, which is a fitting description of Israel as Judges winds down.

Deuteronomy 7:3-4 prohibited intermarrying because the future of the nation was at stake. Samson knew this, but he couldn’t help himself. Delilah was his undoing, or, more accurately, the shaving of his hair which canceled his Nazirite vow was his undoing. Although he was supposed to deliver Israel from the Philistines, he mixed with them constantly. He never acted like he wanted to be set apart. The result is that unlike the other judges, there is no rest for the land under Samson. He failed to deliver Israel, and all he really accomplished was to kill a bunch of Philistines. After Samson’s death Israel’s downward spiral will continue—and get worse.

Prayer:

Lord, help us resist temptation and stay true to you.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – The Riddler

Read: Judges 13:3-5, 14:1-19

Let me now put a riddle to you. (14:12)

The story of Samson not only contains riddles, it is a riddle. Although some think of him as a Hebrew folk hero, I prefer the words of one commentator who called Samson “an oversexed buffoon.” His story is the longest in the Book of Judges, and he is the final judge mentioned in the book. Rather than being the wonderful culmination of the story, he is more of a puzzling disappointment. Samson’s life was chaotic, and chaos follows for Israel throughout the rest of Judges.

Samson was consecrated by his mother to be a Nazirite, someone set apart to serve God. The rules for Nazirites are spelled out in Numbers 6, all of which have to do with ceremonial cleanliness. Usually someone kept a Nazirite vow for a short period of time. Samson was supposed to be a Nazirite for life.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Jephthah’s Tragic Vow

Read: Judges 11:29-40

Jephthah made a vow to the Lord. (v. 30)

This is disturbing. I wonder if Jesus had this story in mind when he said what he did about making vows in Matthew 5:33-37. “All you need to say is simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’; anything beyond this comes from the evil one” (Matt. 5:37 NIV). The results of Jephthah’s tragic vow certainly look like the work of the evil one. The downward spiral of the judges continues.

Jephthah’s name in Hebrew means “he opens,” (there is a linguistic relationship to the Aramaic word “ephphatha” Jesus uses in Mark 7:34 to open the ears of a deaf man) and both Jephthah and his daughter agree he had to keep his vow after opening his mouth to the Lord. Besides the sad result for his daughter, the problem for Jephthah came from the way he made the vow in the first place. He was trying to control God through making a promise. People do this all the time—I wonder how many “if you get me out of this I will serve you forever” prayers God hears in a day. But God does not respond to human attempts to bribe or cajole him.

Although there are parallels to the story of Abraham’s near sacrifice of Isaac in Genesis 22, what stands out are the differences between the two stories. God commanded Abraham and provided a substitute offering. God did not command Jephthah. The vow was Jephthah’s misguided attempt to control God, who stayed terribly silent through the whole ordeal.

Prayer:

Help us have a right relationship with you.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – A Downward Spiral

Read: Judges 8:4-28

It became a snare to Gideon. (v. 27)

The pattern of Judges is disobedience, followed by punishment, followed by a cry for mercy, followed by deliverance through a judge, followed by peace, followed by the pattern starting all over again. But another pattern is made clear beginning when Gideon crossed the Jordan in verse 4: Israel wasn’t simply going around in circles; they actually were in a downward spiral.

The story of Gideon starts with humility and obedience and ends with unnecessary violence and idolatry. In chapters 6 and 7 Gideon is called by God and then wins an amazing victory over a much stronger foe. (There are many parallels to the stories of Moses found in Exodus.) But in our text today Gideon is more like Aaron, taking gold from those he conquered and shaping an idol from it. To his credit, he refused to accept the people’s desire to make him king, but, as we shall see, one of his sons does assert his right to rule Israel.

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Words of Hope – Daily Devotional – Never Accept Milk from a Stranger

Read: Judges 4:1-24

“Please give me a little water to drink, for I am thirsty.” So she opened a skin of milk and gave him a drink. (v. 19)

This is another wild and woolly story! Deborah (“Honeybee” in Hebrew) was judge of Israel, and not a word is mentioned about it being unusual that a woman occupied that position of power. The army was led by Barak (“Lightning” in Hebrew), but when it came to war, Lightning acted like a Honeybee and the Honeybee acted like Lightning. Not only does Barak need Deborah to tell him when to strike, he won’t even go to war unless Deborah comes along.

The word “hand” is the great thread that holds the story together. Israel suffered under the hand of Jabin (v. 2), Barak was told twice the army of Sisera would come into his hand (vv. 7, 14), Sisera fell under the hand of the deceitful Jael (vv. 9, 21), and the relentless hand of Israel brought Jabin into submission (v. 24).

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