GOD'S WORD IS TRUE

GOD'S WORD IS TRUE

Monday, February 29, 2016

LIFEBLOOD

LIFEBLOOD

READ:  Hebrews 9:19-28

Without the shedding of blood
there is not forgiveness.
Hebrews 9:22

Mary Ann Believed in God and His Son Jesus, but she struggled with why Jesus had to shed His blood to bring salvation.  Who would think of cleansing something with blood?  Yet the Bible says, “The law requires that nearly everything be cleansed with blood”  (Hebrews 9:22).  That, in Mary Ann’s opinion, was disgusting!

Then one day she had to go to a hospital.  A genetic condition had altered her immune system, and doctors became alarmed when the illness started attacking her blood.  As she was in the emergency room she thought, If I lose my blood, I will die.  But Jesus shed His blood so I can live!

Suddenly everything made sense.  In the midst of her pain, Mary Ann felt joy and peace.  She understood that blood is life, and a holy life was needed to make peace with God for us.  Today she is alive and well, thanking God for her health and for Jesus’ sacrifice on her behalf.

Hebrews 9 explains the meaning of the Old Testament blood ritual (vv.16-22) and the once and for all offering of Jesus that brought animal sacrifice to an end (vv.23-26).  Bearing our sin, He willingly died and shed His blood to become our sacrifice.  We now have confidence to enter God’s presence.  How could we ever thank Jesus enough for making His sacrifice our sacrifice, His life our life, and His Father our Father? 
 KEILA OCHOA

Lord, I thank You for  Jesus and for the shedding of His blood for me.  I want to live my life in gratitude to you.

The blood of Christ washes away our sins.

INSIGHT
The writer of Hebrews compares the old covenant initiated by Moses (9:1-23) with the new covenant initiated by Jesus (9:24-10:18).  As High Priest and “mediator of a new covenant” (9:15), Christ did not offer the blood of animals (v.19) that could not take away sins; He sacrificed Himself “once for all..to do away with sin” (v.26).           SIM KAY TEE

Have a blessed evening.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.
Unity & Peace


LECTIO DIVINA, CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER, AND HEARING FROM THE SPIRIT

LECTIO DIVINA, CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER, AND HEARING FROM THE SPIRIT

For more great blogs as this one go to Daniel’s blog site at:  www.Mannsword.blogspot.com

A Bible-study leader had been concerned about one of her group who was reluctant to study Scripture but instead was determined experience it. She had been practicing a technique called Lectio Divina (LD) and wrote me for whatever insight I might have to offer.

I consulted Wikipedia and found that:

In Christianity, Lectio Divina (Latin for divine reading) is a traditional Benedictine practice of scriptural reading, meditation and prayer intended to promote communion with God and to increase the knowledge of God's Word. It does not treat Scripture as texts to be studied, but as the Living Word.

Traditionally Lectio Divina has 4 separate steps: read, meditate, pray and contemplate. First a passage of Scripture is read, then its meaning is reflected upon. This is followed by prayer and contemplation on the Word of God.

The focus of Lectio Divina is not a theological analysis of biblical passages but viewing them with Christ as the key to their meaning. For example, given Jesus' statement in John 14:27: "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give unto you" an analytical approach would focus on the reason for the statement during the Last Supper, the biblical context, etc. But in Lectio Divina rather than "dissecting peace", the practitioner "enters peace" and shares in the peace of Christ.

We all have our own ways of approaching Scripture and prayer. We find that certain ways work better for us than others. I have my own methods. I like to pray as I am walking. Praying on my knees is a sure prescription for discomfort, while praying in bed guarantees sleep. Walking helps me focus on my Savior.

However, I would never suggest that you have to pray as I do in order to receive prayer answers from God or to experience Him. However, this tends to be what a wide variety of mystics claim – that if you don’t use their techniques, you will miss out on the blessings of God.

Implicit in this insistence is the denial of the sufficiency of Scripture:

All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. (2 Tim. 3:16-17)

In many ways, Scripture informs us that God has given us all of the counsel we need to be “thoroughly equipped for every good work.” However, the mystics, in claiming that we require their techniques, deny this truth.

However, the LD practitioner would object:

This isn’t a matter of promoting our techniques but rather the teachings of Scripture.

Perhaps I’m being a bit picky here. While Scripture does require meditation on Scripture (Psalm 1), it does not seem that Scripture requires LD meditation. In this regard Wikipedia claims:

When the passage is read, it is generally advised not to try to assign a meaning to it at first, but to wait for the action of the Holy Spirit to illuminate the mind, as the passage is pondered upon.

Although traditional Christians all acknowledge the vital role of the Spirit in illuminating Scripture (1 John 2:19-20, 23-27; 1 Cor. 2:14; 2 Cor. 3:14-18), non-mystics trust in this illumination and guidance apart from any practice of waiting, listening, sensing or silence.

However, this not what should cause any alarm or division. Rather, it’s LD’s insistence upon approaching Scripture apart from mental understanding. Can Scripture benefit apart from understanding? Not according to Paul! Even speaking in unknown supernatural tongues, if not accompanied by understanding, was useless for spiritual growth:

Now, brothers, if I come to you speaking in tongues, how will I benefit you unless I bring you some revelation or knowledge or prophecy or teaching? (1 Corinthians 14:6)

Can the Spirit illuminate while the mind is trying grasp the meaning of a passage? There is a mistaken assumption that the Spirit cannot illuminate our minds while our minds are actively engaged in thought and prayer. However, in many ways, Scripture shows us that the Spirit is not sidelined by our thinking. Rather, He works in conjunction with our mental activity:
Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. (Romans 12:2)

Knowing God’s will or leading is not a matter of turning our minds off but of transforming them. We therefore cannot separate the serious study of the Scriptures from the Spirit illuminating Scripture. They go together.


New York School of the Bible: http://www.nysb.nyc/



GROWING UP

GROWING UP

READ:  Ephesians 4:1-16

From him the whole body…
grows and builds itself up 
in love.  Ephesians 4:16

Watching my young grandson and his friends play T-Ball is entertaining.  In this version of baseball young players often run to the wrong base or don’t know what to do with the ball if they happen to catch it.  If we were watching a professional baseball game, these mistakes would ot be so funny.

It’s all a matter of maturity.
It’s okay for young athletes to struggle-not knowing what to do or not getting everything exactly right.  They are trying and learning.  So we coach them and patiently guide them toward maturity.  Then we celebrate their success as later they play with skill as a team.

Something similar happens in the life of those who follow Jesus.  Paul pointed out that the church needs people who will “be patient, bearing with one another in love” (Ephesians 4:2).  And we need a variety of “coaches” (pastors, teachers, spiritual mentors) to help us all move toward “unity in the faith” as we strive to “become mature” (v.13).

The goal as we listen to preaching and teaching and enjoy life together in the church is to grow up to maturity in Christ (v.15).  Each of us is on this journey, and we can encourage each other on the road to maturity in Jesus.  DAVE BRANON

Lord,help me to strive for maturity.  Thank You for equipping the church with men and women who can help me grow in my faith.  Show me who I can encourage today.

There’s joy in the journey as we walk alongside each other.

Have a blessed evening.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.
Unity & Peace


TAKING NOTICE

TAKING NOTICE

READ:  ob 40:1-14

“Where were you when I
laid the earth’s foundation?”
Job 38:4

When I clean my house for a special event, I become discouraged because I think that guests won’t notice what I clean, only what I don’t clean.  This brings to mind a larger philosophical and spiritual question:  Why do humans more quickly see what’s wrong than what’s right?  We are more likely to remember rudeness than kindness.  Crimes seem to receive more attention than acts of generosity.  And disasters grab our attention more quickly than the profound beauty all around us.

But then I realize I am the same way with God.  I tend to focus on what He hasn’t done rather than on what He has, on what I don’t have rather than on what I have, on the situations that He has not yet resolved rather than on the many He has.

When I read the book of Job, I am reminded that the Lord doesn’t like this any more than I do.  After years of experiencing prosperity, Job suffered a series of disasters.  Suddenly those became the focus of his life and conversations.  Finally, God intervened and asked job some hard questions, reminding him of His sovereignty and or everything Job didn’t know and hadn’t seen (Job 38-40).

Whenever I start focusing on the negative, I hope I remember to stop, consider the life of Job, and take notice of all the wonders God has done and continues to do.  JULIE ACKERMAN LINK

What has the Lord done for you this week?
Share if with us at facebook.com/ourdailybread

When You think of all that’s good, give thanks to God.

INSIGHT
When confronted with God’s power, Job said, “I am unworthy-how can I reply to you?  I put my hand over my mouth” (Job 40:4) His reaction is consistent with the reaction of others in the Bible.  After seeing a vision of heaven’s throne room, Isaiah declared, “Woe to me!…I am ruined!  For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips” (Isaiah 6:5).  After Jesus provided a miraculous catch of fish, Peter cried out, “Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!” (Luke 5:8).  When we see God’s power, we can begin to grasp that our sin is no match for His great love.        DENNIS MOLES

Have a blessed evening.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.
Unity &  Peace


Friday, February 26, 2016

HOW TO GROW OLD

HOW TO GROW OLD

READ:  Isaiah 46:4-13

I will sustain you and I will
rescue you.  - Isaiah 46:4

“How are you today, Mama?”  I asked casually.  My 84-year-old friend, pointing to aches and pains in her joints, whispered, “Old age is tough!”  Then she added earnestly, “But God has been good to me.”  

“Growing old has been the greatest surprise of my life,” says Billy Graham in his book Nearing Home“I am an old man now, and believe me, it’s not easy.”  However, Graham notes, “While the Bible doesn’t gloss over the problems we face as we grow older, neither does it paint  old age as a time to be despised or a burden to be endured with gritted teeth.”  He then mentions some of the questions he has been forced to deal with as he has aged, such as, “How can we not only learn to cope with the fears and struggles and growing limitations we face but also actually grow stronger inwardly in the midst of these difficulties?”

In Isaiah 46 we have God’s assurance:  “Even to your old age and gray hairs…I am he who will sustain you.  I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you” (v.4).

We don’t know how many years we will live on this earth or what we might face as we age.  But one thing is certain:  God will care for us throughout our life. 
 LAWRENCE DARMANI

Lord, please teach us to number our days so that we may gain a heart of wisdom.  (see Psalm 90:12)

Don’t be afraid to grow old; God goes with you!

INSIGHT
Isaiah presents a start contrast between the chief gods of Babylon-Bel (or Baal) and Nebo-and the God of Israel.  The Babylonian gods needed their worshipers to care for and protect them (Isaiah 46:1-2).  But the God of Israel would care for, carry, sustain, and rescue His worshipers even when they were old and gray (v.4)  DENNIS MOLES

Have a blessed night.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.
Unity & Peace


THE PLAGUE OF LONELINESS



The Plague of Loneliness

For more great blogs as this one go to Daniel’s blog site at:  www.Mannsword.blogspot.com

Today’s bubonic plague is not caused by an invading pathogen. Instead, it is caused by the absence of an “invader.” However, loneliness can be every bit as destructive as the plague, and it has become as epidemic. Theologian Jerram Barrs writes:

In the polls taken of our contemporaries, people say over and over again that their primary personal difficulty is personal loneliness. That is extraordinary. You think of all the contact we have with people in this culture, but people’s number one identified problem is personal loneliness. People simply do not know how to make close relationships.

Indeed, this growing social isolation is even more remarkable in view of the many new ways that we now have to connect – Facebook, Skype, cell phones, meet-ups, dating services…

These findings tally with a survey that came out three years ago, indicating that 25% of respondents indicated that they lacked a personal confidante. The same survey had been conducted 15 years earlier, but found that only 10% lacked a confidante.

This parallels the findings of Harvard Sociologist Robert Putnam who observed:

A broad and continuing erosion of civic engagement…began a quarter-century ago.

Voting, political knowledge, political trust, and grassroots political activism are all down. Americans sign 30 per cent fewer petitions and are 40 per cent less likely to join a consumer boycott, as compared to just a decade or two ago. The declines are equally visible in non-political community life: membership and activity in all sorts of local clubs and civic and religious organizations have been falling at an accelerating pace. In the mid-1970s the average American attended some club meeting every month, by 1998 that rate of attendance had been cut by nearly 60 per cent.

In 1975 the average American entertained friends at home 15 times per year; the equivalent figure (1998) is now barely half that. Virtually all leisure activities that involve doing something with someone else, from playing volleyball to playing chamber music, are declining.

Many cite greater tolerance as a positive relational development of our increasingly secular society. However, Putnam found that, meanwhile, the trust level was taking a hit:   

Although Americans are more tolerant of one another than were previous generations, they trust one another less. Survey data provide one measure of the growth of dishonesty and distrust, but there are other indicators. For example, employment opportunities for police, lawyers, and security personnel were stagnant for most of this…In the last quarter century these occupations boomed, as people have increasingly turned to the courts and the police.

As Putnam suggests, social isolation or loneliness might have multiple causes. I would like to focus on one thing that has made relationships more difficult – the growing failure to accept ourselves as we truly are!

Without self-acceptance, we distance ourselves from others. The self that we are unwilling to accept is the same self that we want to hide from others. Rather than showing this self, we cloth ourselves with a fa̤ade Рa front or a covering. This requires a lot of psychic energy and internal struggle. We engage in habitual, self-obsessed image-management, refusing to let the other into our world Рthe world we cannot accept.

Why is it difficult to accept this world? We feel ashamed of it and feel certain that if others saw us as we are, they would reject us. Consequently, we condemn ourselves to an endless quest to prove ourselves through accomplishments, carefully manicured appearances, money, power, whatever! However, this just pushes others further away. They feel a pressure to match the image that we put forth.

Besides, when we can’t be real with ourselves, we can’t be real with others. This makes any connection difficult and uncomfortable. To connect, two people need to share a common reality, at least to some extent. However, if we are consumed by managing our image, we do not put forth a true picture of ourselves. What we offer is something that doesn’t line up with what others see about us. This dissonance tends to push us apart. This problem is maximized by our secular culture, which tells us to build our self-trust and self-esteem at the expense of truth - who we truly are - further alienating us from ourselves!

I know a little about this because I had experienced intense isolation. I too had felt ashamed of myself, and no amount of accomplishments, positive affirmations, or psychotherapists were able to make dent into my shame. I was convinced that in order to be loved, I had to become someone else, and for many years, this is exactly what I tried to do. However, nothing would ease my social discomfort.

So what made the difference? Knowing Christ and His love and acceptance of me! As I grew in the certainty that He accepted me thoroughly, I found that I could begin to accept myself, even laugh at myself, and admit my personal failures. Before, I was unable to confront them. They threatened the little sense of personhood and value that I had managed to retain.

Christ has been liberating (John 8:31-32)! He is also an ongoing comfort to me. Prior to this, I was unable to face my faults and guilt and could not resolve interpersonal conflict. I always had to be right. To be wrong was just too deflating and humiliating – something I couldn’t endure. I had been psychologically trapped and lacked the flexibility to relate to others.

Why didn’t anything else work for me? I certainly wanted my psychotherapists and my various lifestyle changes to work, but they couldn’t deliver. Only my Savior could!



THE NEED FOR APOLOGETICS: THE DEFENSE OF THE FAITH

THE NEED FOR APOLOGETICS: THE DEFENSE OF THE FAITH

Please leave comments on my blog:

       www.Mannsword.blogspot.com or my
       Facebook page: “Apologetics for Today.”

By His Mercies Alone, Daniel
For more great blogs go to Daniel’s blog site above.

The Need for Apologetics: The Defense of the Faith

Sometimes we expect that a few good arguments will unlock salvation’s door. When we find that they don’t and that we are met with a glaring sneer instead of a grateful embrace, we are hurt and conclude that “apologetics doesn’t work.” We then swing to the opposite – “I’m going to simply let my good works speak for the Gospel.”

Admittedly, in our post-Christian society where people have been warned and inoculated against the Gospel, it might be better to lead with good works in most cases. However, we are instructed to “Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that [we] have” (1 Peter 3:15). Therefore, I want to present a rationale for this.

Apologetics - reasons to believe in the Christian faith – is primarily for us. We have to know why we believe and how to defend ourselves against the many challenges to the faith.

Moses knew that the children of Israel needed reasons to believe – evidences – in order to follow him out of Egypt. In the midst of a burning bush, God had instructed him to return to Egypt to lead His people out of captivity, but Moses was reluctant:

"What if they do not believe me or listen to me and say, 'The Lord did not appear to you'?" (Exodus 4:1).

Instead, of commanding Moses to tell the people “Just believe,” God  equipped Moses with a quiver of miraculous evidences – a rod turning into a snake, a leprous hand, and water turning into blood – to prove that He had sent Moses.

Jesus also understood that His disciples needed evidences to support their faith. He therefore prophesied to them what would happen to Him so that they would believe once these prophecies were fulfilled:

I have told you now before it happens, so that when it does happen you will believe. (John 14:29)

We also need supportive evidences to help in sustaining our faith. After the crucifixion, Jesus’ disciples fled, convinced that everything that they had believed in had been for naught. In order to bring them back, they required the proof of His resurrection appearances:

After his suffering, he showed himself to these men and gave many convincing proofs that he was alive. He appeared to them over a period of forty days and spoke about the kingdom of God. (Acts 1:3)

John the Baptist also had his struggles with his faith in Jesus after he was jailed, prior to his execution. He therefore sent his disciples to Jesus to ascertain whether He was truly the Messiah. Instead of Jesus telling them to tell John, “Just believe,” he told them to relate the various confirmatory miracles they had seen Him perform (Mat. 11).

We need to know why we believe. Doubts are birthed like tsunami waves in our post-Christian world. The highly touted Jesus Seminar proclaimed that only 18% of what Jesus is purported to have said in the Gospels is authentic. In the wake of this pronouncement, the faith of many had been severely shaken.

Dan Brown’s DaVinci Code rattled thousands of others with his claims that the selection of the Bible’s Gospel accounts was merely the product of political in-fighting and church counsels. He claimed that there had been 70 other gospels vying for inclusion.

As a result, one woman wrote that she could never again be able to trust the Gospels as she had. How tragic! Fortunately, there were many able apologists who have exposed the fallacies of both Brown and the Seminar. However, those who don’t believe that apologetics is necessary will neglect such works.

How can we face the world with the confidence and the boldness we need if we can’t be confident about the basis of our faith – the Bible! We can’t! Before I went to seminary, I subscribed to Biblical Archeology Review. Many of the authors wrote approvingly of the Wellhausen Hypothesis – a radical theory of how the Hebrew Scriptures were humanly assembled by cutting-and-pasting from pre-existing manuscripts. They were so confident of this skeptical theory that they didn’t even provide any evidence for it.

I was troubled but decided that I would lock my doubts away, pushing them back into a crevice of my mind until, perhaps, I might have the tools to critically examine them. However, this strategy didn’t work. The doubts that this theory had provoked interfered with both my reading of Scripture and my faith. Consequently, I read the Bible less and with less excitement. The doubt that the Bible might merely be a human creation festered in the back of my mind.

Fortunately, I was struck down with a bad back for several months. Someone had given me a copy of Gleason Archer’s Survey of Old Testament Introductions. Although it was one of the driest texts I’ve ever read, I cried my way through it. Archer dealt conclusively with the Wellhausen Hypothesis, and restored my Bible back to me as if Jesus Himself had returned to me.

I think it inevitable that without understanding the rational foundations of the faith and without knowing how to critique the challenges, our faith and life will suffer.

Apologetics is also necessary for the health of the church. Jude counseled the church to oppose false teachings and not neglect them:

Dear friends, although I was very eager to write to you about the salvation we share, I felt I had to write and urge you to contend for the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints. For certain men whose condemnation was written about long ago have secretly slipped in among you. (Jude 1:3-4)

Elders, therefore, had to have the ability to defend the faith against false teaching:


He [the elder] must hold firmly to the trustworthy message as it has been taught, so that he can encourage others by sound doctrine and refute those who oppose it…They must be silenced, because they are ruining whole households by teaching things they ought not to teach. (Titus 1:7-11)

The possibility that the faith of the church might suffer damage must be a central concern. Many studies have shown that 80-90 percent of regular church-going youth completely leave the church by the end of their forth year in college. Even many of those who remain do so with a faith severely compromised by their involvement with the surrounding culture.

Clearly, the churches are failing to prepare their youth for the challenges of this world – sexual permissiveness, theistic evolution, multiculturalism, religious pluralism, moral relativism… We are neglecting the life of the mind, the port-of-call where destructive teachings are entering. Arrogantly, some are neglectful of apologetics, claiming, “I know what I believe and what I have experienced, and no one will take that away from me.” They are confident that they can “stand” (1 Cor. 10:12-13) even though they are neglectful of the Biblical instruction to also love God with our minds.

While it is probably true that the Spirit begins His work in our heart, we are nevertheless commanded to "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37).

We are also instructed to subject all thoughts and worldviews under the scrutiny of the Gospel (2 Cor. 10:4-5). If we neglect the mind, the world will not. It will co-opt our minds at great cost to the church.

Think of the mind as a protective shield. If it is not fully operational, attacks will penetrate freely to our heart of faith, undermining the peace, joy and confidence of the church. We will stumble around in a schizophrenic haze – our minds in conflict with what we believe in our heart.

Apologetics is also required for the seeker. In fact, we are commanded to have in hand the rationale for our beliefs (1 Peter 3:15). I wouldn’t even begin to consider the Biblical faith as long as I believed that evolution was a fact. I was convinced that if Darwin was right, Genesis had to be wrong. However, a Jehovah’s Witness gave me a book critiquing evolution, the theory I had once thought to be unassailable. This made me more receptive to the Bible.

Similarly, in Search for the Truth, Bruce Malone wrote:

Prior to graduation from college, I had not once been shown any of the scientific evidence for creation either in school or in church. Little wonder, that by the time I started my career [as a chemist], God had little relevance in my life. It wasn’t as though I had any animosity toward God or religion. It simply held no relevance to the world around me. This should be no surprise when the subject never came up in school and everything seemed to be explained without reference to a Creator.

Apologetics is also helpful for cultural interaction. My apologetics professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, William Lane Craig, stated that people will not believe what they find unbelievable. Today, many deem the Christian faith “unbelievable.” I think that part of the reason for this is that the church has become intellectually lazy and compromised. We have lost the ability to show forth the wisdom of God in the public marketplace of ideas. We are no longer culturally proactive as we must be:

The teaching of the wise is a fountain of life, turning a man from the snares of death. (Proverbs 13:14)

Wisdom is part of our inheritance. We have wisdom regarding so many areas of life – forgiveness, morality, justice, child rearing, and marriage. However, we have hid our light under a bushel basket. Why? For one thing, we have failed to develop the ability to understand and critique the ideas of the world (2 Cor. 10:4-5). Consequently, we don’t know how to speak to the world, and we know it. Therefore, we fear the world and interaction with it. Instead, we need to understand the poverty of their thinking so that we will not be driven to take cover.

What happens when we neglect the life of the mind and apologetics? We will keep our light hidden. However, many are now saying, “Well, my good works are the light.”

However, even though there is some truth in this, it is not adequate. It is like flying a airplane with one wing. It just won’t fly! Instead, Paul claimed that we are “the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved” as we speak “the word of God” (2 Cor. 2:15-17). This is not to leave out good works. Rather, it is an acknowledgement that we need both!

When Paul visited the synagogues around the Mediterranean, he didn’t go there to perform good works alone. He went there to preach the Gospel and also to reason with the Jews according to the Scriptural evidence:

As his custom was, Paul went into the synagogue, and on three Sabbath days he reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and proving that the Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead. "This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Christ," he said. Some of the Jews were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas, as did a large number of God-fearing Greeks and not a few prominent women. (Acts 17:2-4; 18:4)

God’s arm has not withered away. He can still save through the Gospel, even in our post-Christian world.



GO FEVER

GO FEVER

READ:  Numbers 14:39-45

Be still before the LORD and wait
patiently for HIM.  - Psalm 37:7

On January 28, 1986, after five weather-related delays, the space shuttle Challenger lumbered heavenward amid a thunderous overture of noise and flame.  A mere 73 second later, system failure tore the shuttle apart, and all seven crew members perished.

The disaster was attributed to an O-ring seal known to have vulnerabilities.  Insiders referred to the fatal mistake as “go fever” -the tendency to ignore vital precautions in the rush to a grand goal.

Our ambitious human nature relentlessly tempts us to make ill-advised choices.  Yet we are also prone to a fear that can make us overly cautious.  The ancient Israelites demonstrated both traits.  When the 12 scouts returned from spying out the Promised Land, 10 of the 12 saw only the obstacles (Numbers 13:26-33).  “We can’t attack those people; they are stronger than we are,” they said (v.31).  After a fearful rebellion against the Lord that led to the death of the 10 spies, the people suddenly developed a case of “go fever.”  They said, “Now we are ready to go up to the land the LORD promised” (14:40).  Without God, the ill-times invasion failed miserably (vv.41-45).

When we take our eyes off the Lord, we’ll slide into one of two extremes.  We’ll impatiently rush ahead without Him, or we’ll cower and complain in fear.  Focusing on Him brings courage tempered with His wisdom.  TIM GUSTAFSON

Before making a quick decision, consider why you want to make it quickly.  Consider if it will honor God and what it might cost others.  If you are afraid to make a decision, think about why that might be.  Most of all, pray!

A moment of patience can prevent a great disaster.

INSIGHT

In today’s reading the Israelites seem to have a change of heart after God pronounces judgment on them for their grumbling and unwillingness to trust Him (Numbers 14:26-38; SEE Deuteronomy 1:19-40) After being told that no one over the age of twenty-except for Joshua and Caleb-will be permitted to enter the Promised Land, the people cry out, “Now we are ready to go up to the land the LORD promised.  Surely we have sinned!” (Numbers 14:40; SEE Deuteronomy 1:41).  But they failed to recognize that the Lord’s promise was that He would go before them and deliver them from their enemies.  They were now trying to go in their own strength, and they were defeated (Numbers 14:41-45).         DENNIS MOLES

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

THE FORWARD LOOK

THE FORWARD LOOK

READ:  Luke 2:21-35

Simeon…was righteous and 
devout…and the Holy Spirit
was on him.  -Luke 2:25

When the great Dutch painter Rembrandt died unexpectedly at age 63, an unfinished painting was found on his ease.  If focuses on Simeon’s emotion in holding the baby Jesus when He was brought to the temple in Jerusalem, 40 days after His birth.  Yet the background and normal detail remain unfinished.  Some art experts believe that Rembrandt knew the end of his life was near and-like Simeon-was ready to “be dismissed” (Luke 2:29)



The Holy Spirit was upon Simeon (v. 25), so it was no coincidence that he was in the temple when Mary and Joseph presented their firstborn son to God.  Simeon, who had been looking for the promised Messiah, took the baby in his arms and praised God, saying:  “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace.  For my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all nations:  a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel” (vv. 29-32).

Simeon was not longing for the glory days of Israel’s history, but was looking ahead for the promised Messiah, who would come to redeem all nations.

Like Simeon, we can have an expectant, forward look in life because we know that one day we will see the Lord. 
 DAVID MCCASLAND

Father, may we, like Simeon, be always looking ahead 
            for the appearing of Jesus our Lord.

Even so, come, Lord Jesus!  Revelation 22:20

INSIGHT
In this passage the Jewishness of Jesus takes center stage.  But the encounter with Simeon at the temple was marked by an announcement that would make circumcision, ritual cleansing, and animal sacrifices obsolete (Exodus 13:2, 12; Leviticus 12:8).  The Messiah has come (Luke 2:29-32).  DENNIS MOLES

Have a blessed night.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.

Unity & Peace

A BETTER VIEW

A BETTER VIEW

READ:  Luke 19:1-10

Because he was short he could not
see over the crowd.  - Luke 19:3

As a child, I loved to climb trees.  The higher I climbed, the more I could see.  Occasionally, in search of a better view, I might inch out along a branch until I felt it bend under my weight.  Not surprisingly, my tree-climbing days are over.  I suppose it isn’t very safe-or dignified.

Zacchaeus, a wealthy man, set aside his dignity (and perhaps ignored his safety) when he climbed a tree one day in Jericho.  Jesus was traveling through the city, and Zacchaeus wanted to get a look at Him.  However, “because he was short he could not see over the crowd” (Luke 19:3).  Fortunately, those things did not stop him from seeing and even talking with Christ.  Zacchaeus’s plan worked!  And when he met Jesus, his life was changed forever.  “Salvation has come to this house,” Jesus said (v.9).

We too can be prevented from seeing Jesus.  Pride can blind us from seeing Him as the Wonderful Counselor.  Anxiety keeps us from knowing Him as the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6).  Hunger for status and stuff can prevent us from seeing Him as the true source of satisfaction-the Bread of Life (John 6:48).

What are you willing to do to get a better view of Jesus?  Any sincere effort to get closer to Him will have a good result.  God rewards people who earnestly seek Him (Hebrew 11:6).
JENNIFER BENSON SCHULDT

Thank You Jesus for all that You are.  Show me more of Yourself as I read the Bible and pray.  Help me to pursue You with all of my heart and mind.

To strengthen your faith in God, seek the face of God.

INSIGHT
Luke 19:1-3 tells us five things about a man named Zacchaeus.  He lived in Jericho, he was a chief tax collector, he was wealthy, he was short, and he wanted to see Jesus.  Most people know he was short, but that may be the least important fact of the five.  Zacchaeus was likely the superintendent of customs for Jericho-an important and lucrative post.  Jericho exported a great deal of balsam wood and was situated on a major trade route connecting Jerusalem to the East.  Both of these facts-Zacchaeus’s residence in Jericho and his vocation -would account for his wealth.  But ultimately wealth cannot provide the salvation and satisfaction that only Jesus can give.    DENNIS MOLES

Have a blessed night.
God Our Creator’s Love Always.
Unity & Peace