GOD'S WORD IS TRUE

GOD'S WORD IS TRUE

Sunday, July 28, 2019

DOTS AND DOUGHNUT HOLES

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

DOTS AND DOUGHNUT HOLES

READ:  Psalm 104:1-15

Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not
all His benefits.  Psalm 103:2

As a minister was addressing a group of men, he took a large piece of paper and made a black dot in the center of it.  Then he held up the paper and asked them what they saw.

One person replied, “I see a black mark.”  “Right,” the preacher said.  “What else?”  Complete silence prevailed.  “I’m really surprised,” the speaker commented. “You have completely overlooked the most important thing of all- the sheet of paper.”

We are often distracted by small, dot-like disappointments, and we are prone to forget the innumerable blessings we receive from the Lord.  But like the sheet of paper, the good things are far more important than the adversities that monopolize our attention.

This reminds me of a whimsical bit of verse that expresses good practical advice.  “As you travel down life’s pathway, may this ever be your goal:  Keep your eye upon the doughnut, and not upon the hole!”

Yes, rather than concentrating on the trials of life, we should fix our attention on its blessings.  Let’s say with the psalmist, “Blessed be the Lord, who daily loads us with benefits” (Psalm 68:19).

Let’s keep praising Him so we won’t be distracted by dots and doughnut holes.   RDH    


Spend your time counting your blessings-
not airing your complaints.



PLODDING FOR GOD

Plodding for God

We want each of you to show this same diligence to the very end.
Hebrews 6:11


Those raised in the English village with William Carey (1761-1834) probably thought he wouldn’t accomplish much, but today he’s known as the father of modern missions. Born to parents who were weavers, he became a not-too-successful teacher and cobbler while teaching himself Greek, Hebrew, and Latin. After many years, he realized his dream of becoming a missionary to India. But he faced hardship, including his child’s death, his wife’s mental-health problems, and for many years the lack of response from those he served.

What kept him serving amid difficulties as he translated the entire Bible into six languages and parts of it into twenty-nine others? “I can plod,” he said. “I can persevere in any definite pursuit.” He committed to serving God no matter what trials he encountered.

This continued devotion to Christ is what the writer to the Hebrews counseled. He called for those reading his letter to not “become lazy” (Hebrews 6:12), but to “show this same diligence to the very end” (v. 11) as they sought to honor God. He reassured them that God “will not forget your work and the love you have shown” (v. 10).

During William Carey’s later years, he reflected on how God consistently supplied his needs. “He has never failed in His promise, so I cannot fail in my service to Him.” May God also empower us to serve Him day by day.
By Amy Boucher Pye

REFLECT & PRAY
Lord God, help me to follow You—when I face challenges and enjoy good times. May I know the assurance that You are always with me.

How has God helped you to keep on going in your service for Him? In what way can you help someone else in their struggles?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
The author of Hebrews is widely debated. Among those proposed are Barnabas and Paul. Our anonymous author often encourages his readers (most likely Jewish Christians) to endure and remain faithful. Today’s passage from Hebrews exhorts readers not to be “lazy” but to diligently work (6:11-12). The English Standard Version renders the word lazy as “sluggish” or “dull,” which seems to better fit the passage’s theme: to encourage perseverance, despite persecution, until “the very end.” In order to persevere, Christians cannot afford to grow “sluggish” in their faith. They need to diligently stand strong and keep serving others (vv. 10-11). In order to help them along in their pursuit, they’re encouraged to “imitate those who through faith and patience inherit what has been promised” (v. 12). Alyson Kieda


IN-SERVICE TRAINING

In-Service Training

On this rock I will build my church.
Matthew 16:18


A manager at a company in Brazil requested a written report from the custodians in her building. Each day she wanted to know who cleaned each room, which rooms were left untouched, and how much time employees spent in each room. The first “daily” report arrived a week later, partially completed.

When the manager looked into the matter, she discovered most of the cleaning employees couldn’t read. She could have fired them, but instead she arranged for them to have literacy lessons. Within five months, everyone was reading at a basic level and continued in their jobs.

God often uses our struggles as opportunities to equip us to continue working for Him. Peter’s life was marked by inexperience and mistakes. His faith faltered as he tried to walk on water. He wasn’t sure if Jesus should pay the temple tax (Matthew 17:24-27). He even rejected Christ’s prophecy about the crucifixion and resurrection (16:21-23). Through each issue Jesus taught Peter more about who He was—the promised Messiah (v. 16). Peter listened and learned what he needed to know to help found the early church (v. 18).

If you’re discouraged by some failure today, remember that Jesus may use it to teach you and lead you forward in your service for Him. He continued to work with Peter despite his shortcomings, and He can use us to continue to build His kingdom until He returns.
By Jennifer Benson Schuldt

REFLECT & PRAY
Lord, I believe You can use any experience to teach me more about who You are. Take my failures and use them for Your glory.

How has God used challenges in your life to lead and equip you to serve Him? What past failure do you need to release to Him today?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


SCRIPTURE INSIGHT

Peter’s confession that Jesus is “the Messiah, the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16) is a critical turning point in Christ’s life, for “from that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things” and “be killed and on the third day be raised to life” (v. 21). Before this, Jesus spoke cryptically of His death and resurrection (12:40; John 2:19; 3:14; 6:51), but afterward He “spoke plainly” about it (Mark 8:32). Jesus referred to Himself as “the Son of Man” (Matthew 16:27-28), a Messianic title used often in connection with His humiliation and suffering (Daniel 7:13-14; Matthew 20:18; 26:2, 64). K. T. Sim

WERE MOSES' FIVE BOOKS WRITTEN BY MOSES?

WERE MOSES’ FIVE BOOKS WRITTEN BY MOSES?

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


Without any hard evidence, Bible critics maintain that Moses didn’t write any of the “Five Books of Moses” - Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Instead, they claim that these books were written 800 years later, despite the fact that there exists an elaborate paper trial starting from Moses and the “Book of Joshua” through the Prophets claiming that the Law and the Mosaic Covenant were given through Moses, who also wrote them down:

       Then Moses wrote this law and gave it to the priests, the sons of Levi, who carried the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and to all the elders of Israel. And Moses commanded them, "At the end of every seven years, at the set time in the year of release, at the Feast of Booths, when all Israel comes to appear before the Lord your God at the place that he will choose, you shall read this law before all Israel in their hearing. Assemble the people, men, women, and little ones, and the sojourner within your towns, that they may hear and learn to fear the Lord your God, and be careful to do all the words of this law.” (Deuteronomy 31:9-12 ESV)

The Law, The Books of Moses, claim their author to be Moses, and this is the consistent testimony of the entire Bible. In addition to this, the Law was committed into the keeping of the priests would periodically read, copy, and instruct from the Law. Therefore, along with the written Law, Israel passed on the consistent oral tradition that they had witnessed the Law being given to Moses and would regularly be instructed from the Law. To suddenly be presented five allegedly foundational and nationally defining books, claiming to have been written by Moses, with which they had had absolutely no experience, would not have been credible to the Israelites.

Instead, this Law, the Word of God, had already become central to Israel’s identity, history, and their welfare. They learned that when they followed the Law, they were blessed; when they violated the Law, they were punished. Every message of Israel’s Prophet had been predicated on the fact that Israel had in its possession the written Law and the supporting oral traditions of their historical engagement with these books. Besides, the books of the Hebrew Bible give ample testimony to the fact that Israel continually suffered because of their disobedience to the Law, the Mosaic Covenant:

       The Lord, the God of their fathers, sent persistently to them by his messengers, because he had compassion on his people and on his dwelling place. But they kept mocking the messengers of God, despising his words and scoffing at his prophets, until the wrath of the Lord rose against his people, until there was no remedy. (2 Chronicles 36:15-16)


Therefore, to claim that Israel had been without the Five Books of Moses is to suddenly remake Israel’s entire history and traditions.

While Israel had made many charges against their God, they never once charged that the Law hadn’t come from God through Moses, even though such a charge would have provided them with a convenient justification for their refusal to follow the Law of Moses, which they habitually violated.


Nevertheless, the critics continue to claim that the Books of Moses weren’t written until Israel’s exile to Babylon or even afterwards. However, everything in the Hebrew Scriptures is predicated on the fact the Israel had these books and were regularly nourished by them, even as the Psalms reflect. Even when the Israelites were charged with doing “whatever was right in their own eyes,” as indicated throughout the Book of Judges, this too implies that the Mosaic Covenant was being violated. Israel’s repeated descent into debauchery, followed by periods of great suffering, demonstrate the promised consequences of Israel’s unfaithfulness to God by breaking the Mosaic Covenant. All this is evidence that the Books of Moses had been in their possession. If these books of the Hebrew Scriptures had been introduced to Israel long after the fact, Israel would never have received them as their Scriptures.

To illustrate this, let’s imagine that scholars presented a nation with several books for which they had no record, claiming that what you thought had been your history was not really your history but rather what the scholars had just unearthed. Besides these problems, these books claimed to have always been in your possession, whereas there had never been even an oral tradition that acknowledged these recently found books. Would you receive such books as your defining history, especially in light of the fact that they are consistently critical of your people, even to the point of promising them doom?

Why then would the Israelites have received the Books of Moses 800 years later, which claimed to have been written by Moses, if they had had no prior knowledge of them?

The critics present the Israelites as gullible idiots. Instead, the Bible presents us with a coherent and consistent history of a people without any reasons to believe that it had been artificially hacked together and foisted upon ignorant Israelites.

EXTERNAL EVIDENCE OF MOSAIC AUTHORSHIP
Deuteronomy is written in a covenantal form reflecting the form of Hittite suzerainty treaties of the 14th-13th centuries.

       “Nearly all the known treaties of the 13th /14th centuries B.C. follow this pattern closely.” (Josh McDowell)

       This type of treaty form “cannot be proven to have survived the downfall of the great empires of the last 2nd millennium B.C. When empires rose again…the structure of the covenant…was entirely different.” (G. Mendenhall)

       Kenneth Kitchen writes that there is no “legitimate way to escape from the crystal-clear evidence of the correspondence of Deuteronomy with the remarkably stable treaty or covenant form of the 14th-13th centuries BC.”

EGYPTIAN SETTING
       “A greater percentage of Egyptian words than elsewhere in the OT” (Gleason Archer).  

       Egyptian Idioms and terminology: “This conformity to eighteenth dynasty Egyptian usage turns out to be strong evidence of a Mosaic date of composition.” (Gleason Archer)

       “Thus we can not but admit that the writer…was thoroughly well acquainted with the Egyptian language customs, belief, court life, etiquette and officialdom; not only so, but the readers must have been familiar with things Egyptian.” (Garrow Duncan concerning the Joseph and Exodus narratives)

CUSTOMS AND GEOGRAPHY:
       “The price of 20 shekels paid for Joseph in Gen. 37:28 is the correct average price for a slave in about the 18th Century BC: earlier than this, slaves were cheaper (average, 10-15 shekels).” (K.A. Kitchen)

       “When Pharaoh appointed Joseph prime minister, Joseph was given a ring and a gold chain or collar which is normal procedure for Egyptian office promotions.” (Josh McDowell, A Ready Defense)

       “The author of the Torah shows a consistently foreign or extra-Palestinian viewpoint.” (Gleason Archer)

       “The Shittim or Accacia tree is indigenous to Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula, but not to Palestine.” (G. Archer)

       “The lists of clean and unclean birds of Lev 11 and Deut. 14 include some which are peculiar to Sinai.” (G. Archer)

The nature of the Torah suggests that at the time of writing the people were nomadic (not settled in their nation as they were after Joshua.)

1.    Portable Tabernacle: instructions to create and carry.
2.    Encampment Instructions (Num.  2:1-31)
3.    Marching Instructions (Num. 10:14-20)
4.    Sanitary Instructions For Desert Life (Deut. 23:12-13)
5.    Sending Of Scapegoat Into Desert (Lev. 16:10)

“For centuries there was a tomb in Shechem reverenced as the tomb of Joseph (Josh 24:32). A few years ago the tomb was opened. It was found to contain a body mummified according to the Egyptian custom, and in the tomb, among other things, was a sword of the kind worn by Egyptian officials” [paralleling the Scriptural account]. (John Elder, Prophets, Idols, and Diggers)

CONCLUSIONS:
       “No evidence has come to light contradicting any item in the [Mosaic] tradition.” (J. Bright)

       “It is …sheer hypercriticism to deny the substantial Mosaic character of the Pentateuchal tradition.” (Albright)

       “It is worth emphasizing that in all this work no archeological discovery has ever controverted a single, properly understood biblical (OT) statement.” (Nelson Glueck—a Reformed Jewish scholar.)


If the critics had presented hard evidence that the Books of Moses had been written 800 years after the fact, we might have to pay greater attention to their claims. However, such evidence is lacking.

Friday, July 26, 2019

STARS AND SAND

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

STARS AND SAND

READ:  PSALM 147:1-11

He counts the number of the stars; He calls
them all by name.  Psalm 147:4

A team led by an Australian astronomer calculated the number of stars in the known universe to be seventy sextillion-seven followed by twenty-two zeros.  That unfathomable number is said to be more than the grains of sand in every beach and every desert on earth.  The calculation was the by-product of research on the development of galaxies.  One team member said, “Finding the number of stars is not really the research we were doing, but it was a nice result to play around with.”

Having an estimate of the number of stars can help us praise God with greater awe and wonder.  Psalm 147 says:  “It is good to sing praises to our God; for it is pleasant, and praise is beautiful…He counts the number of the stars; He calls them all by name.  Great is our Lord, and might in power; His understanding is infinite” (vv.1, 4-5).

This psalm not only presents God’s majesty, but it also affirms His personal concern for each of us.  He “heals the brokenhearted: (v.3), “Lifts up the humble” (v.6), and “takes pleasure in those who fear Him, in those who hope in His mercy” (v.11).

Let’s praise the great God of stars and sand who knows and cares for each one of us.   DCM

The God who made the firmament,
Who made the deepest sea,
The God who put the stars in place
Is the God who cares for me. -Berg

All creation points to the almighty Creator.



MAKING THINGS WHOLE

Making Things Whole

Blessed are the peacemakers.
Matthew 5:9



In the documentary Look & See: A Portrait of Wendell Berry, author Berry spoke of how divorce describes the state of our world. We’re divorced from one another, from our history, from the land. Things that should be whole are split apart. When asked what we should do about this sad fact, Berry said, “We can’t put everything back together. We just take two things and put them together.” We take two things broken apart and make them one again.

“Blessed are the peacemakers,” Jesus tells us (Matthew 5:9). To make peace is to bring shalom. And shalom refers to the world being set right. One theologian describes shalom as “universal flourishing, wholeness and delight. . . . [It’s] the way things ought to be.” Shalom is taking what’s broken and making it whole. As Jesus guides, may we strive to make things right. He calls us to be peacemakers, to be the “salt of the earth” and the “light of the world” (vv. 13-14)

There are many ways to be peacemakers in the world, but with each may we engage brokenness rather than surrendering to it. In God’s power, let’s choose to not allow a friendship to die or let a struggling neighborhood languish or yield to apathy and isolation. Let’s look for the broken places, trusting God to give us the wisdom and skill to participate in making them whole again.
By Winn Collier

REFLECT & PRAY
There are many broken things around me, God. I don’t know where to begin. Will You show me where to start?

What are two things you’re aware of that need to be brought back together? How might God be calling you to participate in making them whole?

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SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
The context of Christ’s words here is critical. He has just given “the Beatitudes”—the series of declarations in which He unveils the values of His kingdom. His radical credo turns the world’s values upside down. Jesus pronounces as “blessed” all who are “poor in spirit” (Matthew 5:3), “those who mourn” (v. 4), “the meek” (v. 5), “those who hunger and thirst for righteousness” (v. 6), “the merciful” (v. 7), “the pure in heart” (v. 8), “the peacemakers” (v. 9), and those persecuted for the sake of righteousness (v. 10).

Living by His values puts us in sharp contrast to the world. When we’re peacemakers, we permit a ray of light to dispel the darkness that threatens our world. When we suffer, those who see our response will notice the difference Jesus makes. Tim Gustafson


BORING?

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

BORING?

READ:  Numbers 11:1-9

Our whole being dried up; there is nothing at all except
this manna before our eyes!  Numbers 11:6

Many of our recurring complaints focus not on what we don’t have, but on what we do have and find uninteresting.  Whether it’s our work, our church, our house, or our spouse boredom grumbles that it’s not what we want or need.  This frustration with sameness has been true of the human spirit since the beginning.

Notice the protest of God’s people about their menu in the wilderness.  Recalling the variety of food they ate as salves in Egypt, they despised the monotony of God’s current provision:  “Our whole being is dried up; there is nothing at all except this manna before our eyes!” (Numbers 11:6).

God provided exactly what they needed each day, but they wanted something more exciting.  Are we tempted to do the same?  Oswald Chambers said:  “Drudgery is the touchstone of character.  There are times when there is no illumination and no thrill, but just the daily round, the common task.  Routine is God’s way of saving us between our times of inspiration. Do not expect God always to give you His thrilling minutes, but learn to live in the domain of drudgery by the power of God.”

During the boring times of life, God is working to instill His character in us.  Drudgery is our opportunity to experience the presence of the Lord.

Steadfast, then, in our endeavor,
Heavenly Father, may we be;
And forever, and forever,
We will give the praise to Thee. -MacKellar

Blessing is found along the pathway of duty.



BUT A BREATH

But a Breath

My hope is in you.
Psalm 39:7


Bobby’s sudden death brought home to me the stark reality of death and the brevity of life. My childhood friend was only twenty-four when a tragic accident on an icy road claimed her life. Growing up in a dysfunctional family, she had recently seemed to be moving forward. Just a new believer in Jesus, how could her life end so soon?

Sometimes life seems far too short and full of sorrow. In Psalm 39 the psalmist David bemoans his own suffering and exclaims: “Show me, Lord, my life’s end and the number of my days; let me know how fleeting my life is. You have made my days a mere handbreadth; the span of my years is as nothing before you. Everyone is but a breath, even those who seem secure” (vv. 4-5). Life is short. Even if we live to see a century, our earthly life is but a drop in all of time.

And yet, with David, we can say, “My hope is in [the Lord]” (v. 7). We can trust that our lives do have meaning. Though our bodies waste away, as believers we have confidence that “inwardly we are being renewed day by day”—and one day we’ll enjoy eternal life with Him (2 Corinthians 4:16-5:1). We know this because God “has given us the Spirit . . . guaranteeing what is to come”! (5:5).
By Alyson Kieda

REFLECT & PRAY
Thank You, Lord, that this life is not all there is! You have eternity in store for all who believe in You. Help us to spend our numbered days here in service to You.

How is it comforting to know that God has made it possible for you to share in His eternal life? How can the gift of each moment encourage you to make the most of your time?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.

SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
Psalm 38 ends with a call for help and Psalm 39 ends with a plea to be left alone. The poetry in these two songs show that David is confused. He doesn’t know that God isn’t striking him (39:10). He’s being true to his feelings in a way that allows his heart to come clean in the presence of a Father who is teaching him to trust Him in circumstances he doesn’t understand. Mart DeHaan




SAY "MERCY!"

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

SAY “MERCY!”

READ:  Philippians 4:1-7

Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer…let
your requests be made known to God.  Philippians 4:6

You may have played the game when you were a child.  You interlace your fingers with someone else’s and try to bend the other’s hands back until one or the other cries “Mercy!”  The winner is the one who gets the other person to surrender.

Sometimes we try to play “Mercy” with God when we pray.  We have a request that we desperately want answered in a certain way, so we try to “bend His fingers back” and get Him to give in.  When it seems we aren’t winning, we try a little harder to convince Him by begging or bargaining.  We may even give up grudgingly and say, “Lord, You always win!  That’s not fair!”

God does want honesty of heart.  But occasionally in our honesty a demanding spirit comes out.  Deep down we know that prayer is not meant to be a contest with God that we try to win.  In our wiser moments, we make our requests known to our Lord, surrender them to Him, rely on His grace, and wait for His answers (Philippians 4:6-7).  Author Hannah Whitall Smith said, “Be glad and eager to throw yourself unreservedly into His loving arms, and to hand over the reins of government to Him.”

Instead of praying with grudging resignation, “Lord, You always win,” surrender to Him.  Say “Mercy!”   AC

In Jesus’ name we voice our prayers-
The Bible tells us to;
But may we never use that name
To tell God what to do.  -DJD

Prayer isn’t a time to give orders but to report for duty!




SOMETHING TO BRAG ABOUT

Something to Brag About

Let not the wise boast of their wisdom or the strong boast of their strength or the rich boast of their riches.
Jeremiah 9:23


What does it mean to be real? That’s the very big question answered in the small children’s book The Velveteen Rabbit. It’s the story of toys in a nursery and the velveteen rabbit’s journey to become real by allowing himself to be loved by a child. One of the other toys is the old and wise Skin Horse. He “had seen a long succession of mechanical toys arrive to boast and swagger, and by and by break . . . and pass away.” They looked and sounded impressive, but their bragging eventually amounted to nothing when it came to love.

Boasting starts out strong; but in the end, it always fades away. Jeremiah lists three areas where this is evident: “wisdom . . . strength . . . riches” (Jeremiah 9:23). The wise old prophet had been around long enough to know a thing or two, and he countered such boasting with the Lord’s truth: “But let the one who boasts boast about this: that they have the understanding to know me, that I am the Lord” (v. 24).

Let us, the children, brag about God, our good Father. In the unfolding story of His great love, it’s the wonderful way you and I grow to become more and more real.
By John Blase

REFLECT & PRAY
Father, help me to remember Jeremiah’s words. May my only boasting be in the knowledge of You and Your great love which endures forever.

Think of a person you know who embodies the ability to “boast in the Lord.” What is one way this week you can follow their example?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.


SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
Circumcision was not exclusive to the Israelites, for it was widely practiced in the ancient world, including among the Egyptians and the Canaanite peoples (Edomites, Moabites, and Ammonites) mentioned in Jeremiah 9:26. When God made a covenant with Abraham, He made circumcision the confirming sign that the Jews were God’s covenantal people (Genesis 17:10-14). For the Israelites, circumcision was the symbol of separation, purity, and loyalty to the covenant. This physical cutting of the body was to be a symbol of a more important spiritual transformation of the heart (Deuteronomy 10:16). Moses explained that “The Lord your God will circumcise your hearts . . . so that you may love him with all your heart and with all your soul, and live” (30:6). Circumcision was the outward reminder that God’s people were to have hearts that know, love, honor, and submit to Him (Jeremiah 9:24). K. T. Sim


WHERE TO LOOK

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

WHERE TO LOOK

READ:  ROMANS 8:35-39

Let us run…, looking unto Jesus.  Hebrews 12:1-2

Let’s see.  What is the crisis of the day?  It could be terrorism and its random threat.  Or the economy and the fear that we will run out of money before we run out of time.  Maybe it’s a personal crisis with no foreseeable solution-a tragedy or a failure too great to bear.

Before we fall under the weight of our accumulated fears, we would do well to look back to a twentieth-century woman who bore sadness, pain, and heartache with grace.

Corrie ten Boom lived through the hellish life of Nazi concentration camps-a place where hope was lost for most people.  She survived to tell her story of unfaltering faith and tight-fisted hope in God.

She saw the face of evil up close and personal.  She saw some of the most inhumane acts man can do to man.  And when she came out of it all, she said this:  “If you look at the world, you’ll be distressed.  If you look within, you’ll be depressed.  But if you look at Christ, you’ll be at rest.”

Where are you looking?  Are you focusing on the world and its dangers?  Are you gazing at yourself, hoping to find your own answers?  Or are you looking to Jesus, the author and finisher of your faith? (Hebrews 12:1-2).  In an uncertain world, we must keep looking to Him.   DB

When your world is falling apart,
trust Jesus to hold it together.



EYES IN THE BACK OF MY HEAD

Eyes in the Back of My Head

From his dwelling place [God] watches all who live on earth.
Psalm 33:14



I was as mischievous as any other child in my early years and tried to hide my bad behavior to avoid getting into trouble. Yet my mother usually found out what I had done. I recall being amazed at how quickly and accurately she knew about my antics. When I marveled and asked how she knew, she always replied, “I have eyes in the back of my head.” This, of course, led me to study her head whenever she’d turn her back—were the eyes invisible or merely cloaked by her red hair? As I grew, I gave up looking for evidence of her extra pair of eyes and realized I just wasn’t quite as sneaky as I had supposed. Her watchful gaze was evidence of her loving concern for her children.

As grateful as I am for my mother’s attentive care (despite being occasionally disappointed I hadn’t gotten away with something!), I’m even more grateful that God “sees all mankind” as He looks upon us from heaven (Psalm 33:13). He sees so much more than what we do; He sees our sadness, our delights, and our love for one another.

God sees our true character and always knows exactly what we need. With perfect vision, which even sees the inner workings of our hearts, He watches over those who love Him and put their hope in Him (v. 18). He’s our attentive, loving Father.
By Kirsten Holmberg

REFLECT & PRAY
Dear Father, thank You for watching over all people and for seeing what happens in our world and in my life.

How does it comfort you to know that God sees everything and is watching over you? What has He been doing recently to sharpen your character?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.

SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
Parallelism is a literary tool that helps writers to creatively emphasize and clarify ideas and concepts by repeating a similar or opposite idea. In Psalm 33, the writer uses this feature of Hebrew poetry superbly to emphasize the Lord’s power and care for His people. In verse 6, God’s Word as the agent of creation is highlighted by the similar terms “word of the Lord” and “breath of his mouth.” “Heavens” and “starry host” are also synonymous terms. Parallelism also helps in defining terms: “Let all the earth fear the Lord; let all the people of the world revere him” (v. 8). No guesswork here about what it means to fear the Lord. It means to “revere him”; to “stand in awe” of him (esv). Arthur Jackson