GENESIS 1
CREATION:
The Creator deserves
all praise from His creation. In the beginning God created the heavens and
the earth (Genesis 1:1).
By faith we know that the earth came into existence through the creative
power of God. Columnist Sydney J. Harris makes this observation: "Suppose,
in olden days, you said to a medieval monk, 'The universe is made up of
millions of galaxies of incredible size. Not only that, but each galaxy is
rushing away from all the others, faster and faster. And the farther they
get, the faster they go.' The monk would think you were mad." The point
Mr. Harris is making is that either viewpoint we take—the "traditional
religious viewpoint" or the "dominant scientific viewpoint"—involves
faith. He concludes that a person who can accept the idea of a "black
hole" in space, should have no difficulty believing in a "pearly
gate" in Heaven.
Some scientists may accuse us of being naive because we believe the
creation story as recorded in the book of Genesis. Yet they are
inconsistent in making such a charge because they also arrive at their
position by faith. But their faith is based on their own limited
observation and fallible interpretation. And that puts those who reject
God at a disadvantage. The basis of their confidence is faulty and
unreliable. As Christians, we have a distinct advantage: we accept what
the Creator Himself declares in the Bible. Our faith is based on what He
has proclaimed. We need never be ashamed to say that we accept His word by
faith. It gives us true understanding. —R W De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Creation is not only more complex than we think it is. It is more complex
than we can think.
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GENESIS 1
NOWHERE OR NOW HERE!
Genesis 1:1 In the beginning God
created the heavens and the earth.
An unbelieving lawyer had a plaque
on his office wall that read: GOD IS NOWHERE. His small daughter, while
waiting for him one day, passed the time by copying that motto over
and over on a piece of paper. Unintentionally she spaced the letters in a
way that completely changed their meaning. Adding a space between the
letters W and H, she wrote GOD IS NOW HERE.
The letters on the sign in the attorney's office may be read two different
ways, but only one meaning is true. Many people look at God's mighty
handiwork in the universe and think that it simply says "wild chance." But
others see it as saying "wise Creator." The Bible gives us the right
interpretation. Those who see God as NOW HERE instead of NOWHERE are the
ones who know how to read the sign.—R W De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Nature is but a name for an effect whose cause is God.—Cowper
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GENESIS 1
THE WATERMELON ILLUSTRATION
Ge 1:9ff Then God said, "Let the
waters below the heavens be gathered into one place, and let the dry land
appear"; and it was so
While eating a slice of watermelon, William Jennings Bryan thought of a
way to use it as an illustration in one of his speeches. After
estimating that the melon was about forty pounds, he collected a
number of seeds and weighed them. Applying a little mathematics, he was
amazed to find that it took nearly five thousand to make up a pound. Then
he sat down at his desk and wrote, "Recently someone planted just one of
those little seeds in the ground. Under the influence of sunshine and
shower, it took off its coat and went to work gathering about two hundred
thousand times its own weight. It forced all the material through a tiny
stem and built a watermelon. On the outside it had a covering of green;
within that, a rind of white; and within that, a core of red. Scattered on
the inside were more seeds—each capable of doing the same work all over
again. What architect drew the plan? Where did that little watermelon seed
get its tremendous strength? Where did it find its flavoring extract and
its coloring matter?" Bryan then pointed out that until we can explain a
watermelon, we dare not underestimate the power of the Almighty. In
supplying us with these wonders, which our finite minds cannot
understand, the Lord has shown us His infinite wisdom and power.
Viewing the wonders of God, as witnessed by even a single water-melon, we
are amazed at His marvelous handiwork. In humble adoration we exclaim
with the psalmist, "In wisdom You have made them all." —H G
Bosch (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
The signature of wisdom impressed on the works of God proclaims His glory.
—Newton
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GENESIS 3
SOUR NOTES
Genesis 3:15
"And I will put enmity
between you and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He shall
bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heel"
In his early years, Ansel Adams, the famous landscape photographer,
studied piano. Once, while playing Chopin for a friend, he could not
get his hands coordinated. The next day the friend gave him a backhanded
critique by telling him, "You never missed a wrong note." Although no one
knows exactly when or where Adam and Eve sounded the first sour note,
people have been playing wrong notes perfectly ever since. The tragic Eden
error called sin means missing the mark. The discord that started in
God's garden has been heard throughout history. As the New England Primer
put it, "In Adam's sin, we sinned all." As Adam and Eve experienced guilt,
loneliness, and estrangement, so have all of their offspring.
Without the Fall, death could never have sung the blues' dark song, and
lying, hatred, and pride would not have become the funeral march of the
masses. The mad sounds of sin would still be humanity's only tune had it
not been for God's note of grace—He followed Adam and Eve out of the gate.
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 3
DON'T BE DECEIVED
"ye shall be as God, knowing good
and evil. - Genesis 3:5
One of Satan’s most effective
tactics down through the ages has been deception. He is a master at making
things appear what they are not. A mixture of truth and error seems to
serve his purposes much better than total error.
Donald Grey Barnhouse illustrated
this forcefully with the following story: “Duveen, the famous English art
connoisseur, took his little daughter to the beach one day, but could not
get her to go into the chilly water. After persuasion failed, he borrowed
a teakettle, built a fire, and heated a little water until it steamed
beautifully. With much flourish, he poured it into the ocean. Greatly
impressed, his daughter went in without a murmur.” Barnhouse then made
this application: Satan “dilutes an ocean of unbelief with a steaming
teakettle of Christian ethics, and people go wading in, self-satisfied,
but unaware that they are bathing in unbelief.”
The adversary is delighted when a
person turns over a new leaf or engages in good works, just as long as he
continues to reject the provision of God’s grace in salvation. Somehow
the sinner completely ignores the fatal error or not trusting Christ
because his life as been tempered with a teakettle of wholesome resolves.
Our Lord’s words are very clear: “...he that believeth not is condemned
already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son
of God” (John 3:18). Don’t be deceived by Satan’s clever ploy. You
cannot dilute an ocean of cold unbelief with a little warm water of
religiosity or good human endeavor. P. R. V. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
The devil in his subtle way Will
chloroform your soul, If you don’t quickly turn to Christ, Whose blood
can make you whole.- Lyle
Satan will flood you with truth to
float one lie.
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GENESIS 3
LOVE THE FLOWERS, HATE THE WEEDS
"You who love the Lord,
hate evil (Psalm 97:10)
God hates sin. In Proverbs 6 , the author singled out seven specific
transgressions that are an abomination to the Lord. Sin is so horrible
that when the Lord Jesus, the perfect Son of God, bore our guilt on the
cross, the Father turned His back on His beloved Son. And Christ, in the
blackness of that dreadful hour, cried out, "My God, My God, why have You
forsaken Me?" (Matt. 27:46). If sin is so terrible in the sight of God,
then we must fear it, hate it, and avoid it.
Johann Peter Lange, the nineteenth century German theologian and author,
told a story about a religious leader who was viciously hated by the
emperor of his day. Some of the ruler's advisors said to the monarch,
"Burn him, confiscate his property, put him in irons, or have him killed."
But others disagreed. They said, "You will not gain anything by all this;
for in exile he would find a home with his God; . . . he kisses his
chains, death opens heaven to him. There is only one way to render him
unhappy; force him to sin. He fears nothing in the world but sin" (F. B.
Proctor, Treasury of Quotations).
How many people do we know who fear "nothing in the world but sin"?
Unfortunately, we often become so comfortable in sin's presence that we
practice it rather than fear it. But remember how God views it. May we
therefore, as lovers of Him, be haters of sin. —R. W. De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
It is not enough for gardeners to love flowers; they must also hate weeds.
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GENESIS 4
Sheep Thief or Saint?
And the Lord set a mark
upon Cain, lest any finding him should kill him. Gen. 4:15
The story is told of
two brothers, convicted of stealing sheep, who were branded on the
forehead with the letters ST, to indicate “sheep thief.” The one couldn’t
bear the stigma, became bitter, and moved away. Eventually he died and was
forgotten. The other brother chose a different course. He said, “I can’t
run from what I did, so I’ll stay here and win back the respect of my
neighbors and myself.” As the years passed, he built a solid reputation
for integrity. One day a stranger saw him, now an old man, with the
letters on his forehead. He asked a townsman what they signified. “It
happened a long time ago,” said the villager. “I’ve forgotten the
particulars, but I think the letters are an abbreviation for ‘saint’”.
Cain too was a marked
man who, like that first brother in the story, never thought beyond the
severity of his punishment to the severity of his sin. He didn’t realize
that his “brand” was a blessing as well as a curse. It held in check the
vengeance of his fellowmen so that he wouldn't be killed. God was
granting Cain an opportunity to acknowledge his wrong, to plead for mercy,
and to wipe out his reputation as a murderer. How tragic that he chose not
to!
A bad reputation doesn't
have to be permanent. Because Christ died for our sins, His forgiveness
wipes the slate clean, and His power enables us to live a new life. If
you’ve never done so, repent and trust Him as your Savior. If you have
received Jesus but have since made a mess of your life, return to Him.
He’ll give you grace and power to build a new reputation. -D. J. De
Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Once I was foolish, and
sin ruled my heart, Causing my footsteps from God to depart; Jesus has
found me, happy my case— I now am a sinner saved by grace!- Gray
You may have had a bad
start in life, but you need not have a bad ending.
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GENESIS 5
TWO BOOKS
"This is the book of...Adam. Genesis 5:1 [This is] the book
of...Jesus Christ. Matthew 1:1
The book of Adam’s family tree and the
book of the genealogy of Christ form a striking contrast. One is a record
of death, the other of life. Genesis 5 has been called the “obituary
chapter” of the Bible, for time after time we read the doleful
word,”...and he died.” On the other hand, Matthew, in giving the
genealogy of Jesus, constantly repeats the phrase, “...and [he] begot.”
Although the people in the line of Christ did eventually die, the word
“death” is never mentioned in Matthew, Chapter 1. That suggests to me
this application: By our sinful nature we are in Adam’s book on death,
but by our spiritual “new birth” we appear in Christ’s living register
of the redeemed.
You’ve
probably heard the familiar story of the man whose name was printed in the
obituary column of a daily paper by mistake. Greatly disturbed, he went to
the newspaper office and exclaimed, “This is terrible! Your error will
cause me no end of embarrassment and may even mean a loss of business. How
could you do such a thing?” The editor expressed regrets, but the man
remained angry and unreasonable. Finally the editor said in disgust,
“Cheer up, fellow, I’ll put your name in the birth column tomorrow and
give you a fresh start!” That’s what happens when we find new life in
Christ.
Are you still
registered in Adam’s obituary column, or is your name in the Lamb’s Book
of Life? There are only two books, and you are in one or the other! H. G. Bosch
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
No man can say he doesn’t need
Forgiveness from his sin, For all must come to Christ by faith To gain new
life within. - Branon
Salvation changes our heritage from a living death to a deathless life.
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GENESIS 6
DETHRONED BY THE PAST
The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, "And
behold, I Myself am bringing the flood of waters on the earth, to destroy
from
under heaven all flesh." Then God remembered Noah . . . And God
said
. . . "I set My rainbow in the cloud, and it shall be for the sign of the
covenant between Me and the earth" (Genesis 6:5, 17; 8:1; 9:12-13).
Vanessa Williams, the dethroned Miss America, explained on losing her
title,
"The past just came up and kicked me."
Like America's former beauty queen, most people understand that the past
can
kick us to death. In fact, death is God's ultimate judgment on the past.
Disobedience, irreverence, murder, and pride tarnished Adam, Cain, Lamech,
and
the Babel bunch. Genesis gives few specifics about what evils stained
Noah's
neighbors, but God chose to make an example of them.
As time melds into eternity, the Flood still stands as a startling symbol
of
sin's penalty. Except for the eight in Noah's family, God killed a whole
generation of people.
We don't like the idea of retribution; floods and crosses leave us in
despair.
But lest we be hopeless, God sent a rainbow and a resurrection. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 6
UNEXPECTED ERUPTION
Every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually...So
the
Lord said, I will destroy man (Genesis 6:5, 7).
It happened again. A mountain in Mexico that had lain dormant for a very
long
time suddenly came alive, erupting with so much power that it became the
world's
largest active volcano. The 7300-foot El Chichon giant had been quiet for
hundreds of years before its explosive re-awakening. Like the eruption of
Mount
St. Helens, which broke its long silence in 1980 and transformed its
majestic
snow-covered peak and placid Spirit Lake into dust and vapor, the
explosion was
unexpected. The people near the mountains lived in complacency, never
anticipating such drastic changes.
These events symbolize all the unexpected changes in history and nature
since
Noah's day, when God destroyed the wicked. Like the people living near El
Chichon and Mount St. Helens, Noah's neighbors lived in complacency. But
corruption made their complacency even more foolish—even more deadly.
Preoccupied with the pleasures of sin, they thought their evil ways would
never
catch up with them. But God stepped in unexpectedly.
Sometimes we act as if we believe God is inactive, and that our security
is
reinforced with concrete and steel. But that's only the way it seems. Time
always catches up with us, as it did in Noah's day. Every sinner will
someday
face a flood or an exploding mountain. Jesus has promised to come back
unexpectedly. We should all make sure we are not living in sin's danger
zone
when He returns. —M. R. De Haan II (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Judgment may be delayed, but it is sure.
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GENESIS 11
TOWER OF BABEL
Genesis 11:4
"Come, let us build ourselves a city, and a tower whose top is in the
heavens; let us make a name for ourselves"
Michelangelo once overheard some people talking about his sculpture Pieta
and mistakenly saying that fellow sculptor II Gobbo had created it. Deeply
hurt, he
returned after dark and carved his name on it for all generations.
We all want to make our mark, but the Babel ballyhoo was too much. The
Babylonians wanted a great city and name, but they also wanted a tower.
And not
just another Sears Tower; it was probably a temple for another religion.
Such
arrogance and defiance invited God's wrath.
Isaiah told the story of the earliest instance of pride (Isa. 14:12-14).
Instead
of a temple, Satan wanted to build a throne above the stars of God.
Satan's
scheme and the Babel bigheadedness were both godmaking games—an attempt to
make
the Creator in the creation's image.
The only cure for pride is to understand the Creator's motives; they are
not the
same as those of the throne-seekers and tower-builders. God wants all
glory, but
He deserves it because He always desires the best for us.
In sending His Son to walk among proud people, He knew some would not
glorify
Him. In giving up our life to Him, we find the true source of pride. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 11
DETERMINED TO MAKE A NAME
Genesis 11:4
"Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower…let us make a name for
ourselves"
A twenty-five-year-old acrobat gained widespread attention when he climbed
the
steel and glass surface of the world's tallest building. In seven and
one-half
hours he scaled Chicago's 1454-foot, 110-story Sears Tower. On the way up,
he
carried fifty pounds of climbing equipment and fought off
forty-mile-an-hour
winds. By the time he reached the top, he had made a name for himself—but
he was
also in trouble. Police greeted him and took him in handcuffs to the city
jail,
where he was charged with disorderly conduct, trespassing, and damage to
property.
That incident reminded me of the people who built the historic skyscraper
of
Babel mentioned in Genesis 11:1-9. The tower represented an undertaking
by a
community of citizens determined to make a name for themselves. They meant
it to
be a magnificent structure symbolizing their unity and opposition to God.
They
said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, and a tower whose top is in
the
heavens;... lest we be scattered abroad over the face of the whole earth."
But God was waiting at the top. He stopped their attempt to achieve
recognition
by breaking down their communication system and thwarting their
self-centered,
God-defying objectives.
Even though we are Christians, sometimes we get caught up in making a name
for
ourselves by climbing business, religious, or social towers that deny God
His
rightful place. If we do, we will eventually be brought down because God
is
still at the top. —M. R. De Haan II (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
If you would build high you must remain low.
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GENESIS 13
A Good Reason to Scream
".the men of Sodom were exceedingly
wicked and sinful against the Lord." Gen. 13:13
There’s an old story about a man who
tried to save the city of Sodom from destruction by warning the citizens.
But the people ignored him. One day someone asked, “Why bother everyone?
You can’t change them.” “Maybe I can’t,” the man replied, “but I
still shout and scream to prevent them from changing me!”
Lot was a righteous man (2 Peter 2:7) who should have done some
screaming. The record of his life reminds us of how our sense of moral
indignation can be dulled by the world. Lot chose to dwell in cities where
there was great wickedness (Gen. 13:12, 13). When Sodom was invaded by
hostile kings, he was captured. Even after Abraham rescued Lot, he was
still drawn back to that wicked city (Gen. 19:1). And the last chapter
of his story is an account of heartache and shame (Gen. 19). What a
contrast—this nephew and his uncle! Abraham trusted God, prayed for the
righteous, and lived a moral life. But Lot was “oppressed with the filthy
conduct of the wicked” (2 Peter 2:7). Although the sin of his day
bothered him, he apparently said little about it.
There’s much immorality in today’s
world—sex before marriage, homosexual behavior, taking the life of the
unborn, and pornography. Out of our love for people and a deep concern
about the influence of sin on society, we protest! Even if our screaming
does little to change society, we do it anyway because we don’t want
society to change us—and we just may help others.
If we would love what’s good and
right, We must be pure within; But if we compromise the truth, We lose our
sense of sin.- D. J. De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
The man
who cannot be angry at evil lacks enthusiasm for good.
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GENESIS 15
THE "PUMP" GOD DESIGNED
"Look now toward heaven, and count the stars" (Genesis 15:5).
Nature can nurture faith. God told Abraham to look at the heavens and
contemplate the infinite number of stars. Then He said, "So shall your
descendants be." God was saying to Abraham that if He could create and
maintain all those stars, He'd have no trouble keeping His promise that
Abraham
would have a son. The patriarch understood, for we read that "he believed
in the LORD " (Gen. 15:6).
An Our Daily Bread reader, Mr. T. C. Roddy, Jr., from Rusk, Texas, wrote,
"In my front yard are six huge oak trees that must be over 100 years old.
.
. . I ponder as I look at them and realize that the leaves must have
barrels of
fresh water each day to stay green. As a retired engineer, I know that no
pump
ever devised or designed by man could force that amount of water through
the
dense wooden trunk of these trees. Yet God causes their roots to gather
all the
water these trees need…To do this, these roots must exert a working
pressure of
more than 3,000 pounds per square foot just to move the water up to the
leaves—not considering the resistance of the wood in the tree trunk. That
is
just another of God's `miracles' that occur every day unnoticed."
When we have trouble believing God for the solution to some pressing
problem,
we can enter the classroom of creation and observe the wonders of nature.
Doing
so strengthens our faith in the promises found in our textbook, the Bible.
—D. J. De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen.
—Ralph
Waldo Emerson
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GENESIS 17
OLD PROMISES BECOME JOYFUL SURPRISES
Then Abraham fell on his face and laughed (Genesis 17:17).
Who wouldn't laugh—a century-old man being told he will become a father,
and
that his ninety-year-old wife will bear a child? The whole idea must have
seemed
ridiculous to Abraham. Yet he received the news with great delight. Bowing
before God, he expressed his surprise, wonder, and gladness—with no hint
of
unbelief. In Genesis 18, how-ever, Sarah laughed and God rebuked her.
Sarah
laughed in unbelief. Abraham laughed in faith.
In a lecture, C. H. Spurgeon said that many Scriptures remain clouded
until some
trying experience interprets them for us. He told of riding home after a
heavy
day's work feeling weary and down-hearted. Suddenly 2 Corinthians 12:9
came to
his mind, "My grace is sufficient for you." Spurgeon said, "I
reached home and looked it up in the original, and at last it came to me
in this
way. 'My grace is sufficient for YOU.' Said I, 'I should think it is,' and
I
burst out laughing. I never understood what the holy laughter of Abraham
was
until then. It seemed to make unbelief so absurd. . . . O brethren, be
great
believers! Little faith will bring your souls to heaven, but great faith
will
bring heaven to your souls."
Our faith grows as we grow in our awareness of God's faithfulness.
Old promises become joyful surprises with fresh meaning. We see that the
all-powerful, all-sufficient God keeps His Word. Then we, too, can laugh
the
holy laughter of a faith that considers unbelief absurd. —D. J. De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Faith expects from God what is beyond all human expectation.
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GENESIS 18
NO LAUGHING MATTER
"Is anything too hard for the
Lord?" Ge 18:14
The Lord is able to meet all our needs, whatever they may be. Nothing is
too
difficult for Him. Sarah needed to learn this truth. God's promise to
give
Abraham a son named Isaac is recorded in Genesis 17:21. In the next
chapter that
assurance was repeated to the patriarch as he talked outside his tent with
three
men sent from God. This time Sarah overheard the conversation. To her,
having a
child at her advanced age was an impossibility, so she "laughed within
herself" (v. 12). The Lord then said to Abraham, "Why did Sarah laugh,
saying, `Shall I surely bear a child, since I am old?' Is anything too
hard for
the LORD?" (vv. 13-14). God was asking Abraham a rhetorical question to
which the obvious answer was no.
As Christians, we have the same assurance. Abraham's God is our God, and
He is
omnipotent. He's the Creator of the universe. Nothing exceeds His power.
No
problem intimidates Him. No obstacle is too big for Him. Everything is
possible
with Him. Our heavenly Father is in control of every situation. What
comfort we
can find in this truth! What confidence it gives us!
The all-knowing, everywhere-present, all-powerful Creator and sovereign
God can
do anything. When we present our petitions to our heavenly Father in
prayer,
making sure we ask according to His will, He assures us that nothing is
too hard
for Him. —R W De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
We do not prove the resources of God until we trust Him for the
impossible.
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GENESIS 21
ISAAC'S BIRTH
Sarah conceived and bore Abraham a son in his old age (Genesis 21:2).
In John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, Giant Despair captured Christian and
Hopeful and held them as prisoners in Doubting Castle. They escaped when
Christian remembered he had the key called Promise.
Like Christian, we forget God's guarantees. We can't imagine a world
without
wordmongers who write worthless warranties and politicians who separate
promise
and performance.
God made promises in the garden and after the Flood, but his words to
senior
citizens Abraham and Sarah make up the opening chapter of God's promise
book to
Israel. God assured them that they would be proud parents and that from
their
lone child a great nation would be born.
Isaac and the nation of Israel escaped the womb a long time ago, and it
might be
easy to dismiss a God who announces his intentions only to those very old
and
hard of hearing. We might accuse Him of empty promises except for another
child
of promise—Jesus Christ.
The long-awaited Bethlehem Baby was the official heir to God's kingdom,
and He
unselfishly passed on the key called Promise. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 22
ABRAHAM OFFERS ISAAC
God tested Abraham, and said to him, ... "Take now your son, your only son
Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as
a
burnt offering" Genesis 22:1-2
In Charles Dickens's David Copperfield, the character Traddles lent his
good
name to Mr. Micawber's money-making scheme. After Copperfield expressed
concern,
Traddles reassured himself and Copperfield by saying, "He told me, only
the
other day, that it was provided for. That was Mr. Micawber's expression,
`Provided for.'
Like Traddles, we want assurance that we have been provided for. We even
rely on
slogans like "You're in good hands with Allstate." Somehow these
deceive us into believing that someone will provide for us. Our need for
reassurance reveals our uncertainty about whether God can truly meet all
our
needs.
By providing a ram for the sacrifice, God taught Abraham and future
generations
that he could provide when life itself was on the line. If God was
concerned
about one person's lifeblood, then He must take notice of all humanity's
lifebeat.
The people of Christ's day missed the point of Isaac on the altar; they
could
only strengthen their faith when their sacrifice preceded God's provision.
They
certainly were not going to offer themselves; they wanted the glory and
power of
an earthly kingdom, not an-other gruesome sacrifice. But God gave them
what they
needed, not what they wanted. He put an end to their kingmaking passions
by
sacrificing the King.
We can be certain that God will freely give His children all good
things—in His
unexplainable, unexpected, but all-wise way. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 22
GIVE OR TAKE?
"Abraham built an altar...and bound Isaac, his son, and laid him on the
altar." Genesis 22:9
What more poignant account can you find in all the Old Testament than the
dramatic scene described in today’s text? The heart of Abraham must have
nearly broken when God said, “Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac,
whom thou lovest,...and offer him there for a burnt offering” (Gen.
22:2). But notice Abraham’s response. He quickly arose and traveled 3
days with Isaac until they reached the place of sacrifice. I wonder what
thoughts crowded his mind during that long journey. Did he doubt God’s
wisdom? Surely this question must have raced through his mind: If Isaac,
who was born as the result of a miracle, is the son of promise, why is God
asking me to slay him? The patriarch, Abraham, however, did not retreat,
disobey, or turn aside to avoid making this ultimate sacrifice. Instead,
he gave his son back to God. His yieldedness was regarded with these words
of divine approval: “...now I know that thou fearest God, seeing thou
hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from Me” (Gen. 22:12).
Pastor William Sangster went into a
hospital room to visit a little girl who was losing her sight. Fear seemed
to grip the youngster as with nearly blind eyes she turned her face toward
the preacher. “Oh, Dr. Sangster, God is taking away my sight.” God’s
servant leaned over the trembling child and said tenderly, “Don’t let
Him take it; give it to Him.”
Dear friend, are you struggling with
God’s will? Is some cherished plan or possession or person being removed
from your life? Don’t let Him take it; give it to Him. - P. R. V.
Is your all on the altar of sacrifice
laid? Your heart does the Spirit control? You can only be blest and have
peace and sweet rest As you yield Him your body and soul. Hoffman
The Christian’s greatest joy and
usefulness is found in letting God fully possess His own property. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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GENESIS 22
JEHOVAH JIREH
And Abraham said, "My son, God will provide for Himself the lamb for a
burnt offering" (Genesis 22:8).
Imagine Abraham's feelings when the Lord told him to offer Isaac as a
sacrifice.
Think of what went through his mind when they climbed Mount Moriah and
Isaac
asked, "Where is the lamb?" Yet Abraham had faith that God would
provide, and he assured Isaac of his confidence. He was right. God pointed
out a
ram in the thicket. As a result, Abraham called the place Jehovah-Jireh,
which
means "the Lord will provide."
In the centuries that have followed, God has continued to demonstrate
that He
provides for His own. Dr. Robert Schindler and his wife, Marian, founded a
mission hospital associated with radio station ELWA in Monrovia, Liberia.
In
their book Mission Possible they wrote,
"For us, it was a continued
exercise of faith that we would have the right drugs and supplies at the
right
time. We recall how much we counted on our X-ray machine, something we
take for
granted [at home]. We even had the opportunity to get an extra one when a
friend
of ours, a doctor with the U.S. Embassy, asked if we could use a portable
X-ray
machine. . . . But then as the months dragged out, we knew it must be lost
at
sea. Then one day our big X-ray machine stopped working. We found it was a
major
problem which would take several months to fix. . . . But that very
afternoon,
the ELWA truck pulled up to the hospital with a huge crate from port. You
guessed it—it was the portable X-ray machine! We plugged it in, and it
worked!
We didn't lose a day for X-rays."
Lord, thank You for being our Provider. —D. C. Egner
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
God's provisions are always greater than our problems.
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He Will Provide
Genesis 22:1-14
Abraham said, "My son, God will provide for Himself the lamb.. --Genesis
22:8
Pastor Roy S. Nicholson told of a time when he had no money to buy food.
Determined to trust God for his needs and not tell anyone, he and his wife
presented their case to the Lord in prayer.
The next morning he set the table for breakfast, confident that the Lord
would provide something to eat. Just then a boy from their Sunday school
came to the house with a sack of flour and some milk. Tears welled up in
the pastor's eyes. No sooner had he left than "Granny" Turner appeared at
the door carrying a large serving tray loaded with Virginia ham, eggs,
grits and gravy, hot biscuits, butter, jelly, and coffee. Nicholson was
filled with praise to God.
Abraham faced an even more serious test of faith. God had told him he
would become the father of a great nation, but then God asked him to
sacrifice his promised son Isaac on the altar. How could Abraham do such a
thing? Many years of trusting God for his long-awaited son had taught him
that his confidence in God would be fully rewarded. "God will provide for
Himself the lamb," he told Isaac.
Faith like that is not born in a day. It's the result of years of seeing
God's faithfulness to His promises, and it grows as we daily choose to
believe what He says. --D J De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Man's poverty is never a strain on God's provision.
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Genesis 25:27-34
What's Worth Keeping
For one morsel of food [Esau] sold his birthright. - Hebrews 12:16
A story is told of a man who loved old books. He met an acquaintance who
had just thrown away a Bible that had been stored in the attic of his
ancestral home for generations. "I couldn't read it," the friend
explained. "Somebody named Guten- something had printed it." "Not
Gutenberg!" the book lover exclaimed in horror. "That Bible was one of the
first books ever printed. Why, a copy just sold for over two million
dollars!" His friend was unimpressed. "Mine wouldn't have brought a
dollar. Some fellow named Martin Luther had scribbled all over it in
German."
This man treated as worthless that which was valuable. So did Esau.
Although he was a nice fellow who enjoyed hunting and fishing and the
great outdoors, Esau was "profane" because he sold his spiritual
birthright "for one morsel of food" (Heb. 12:16). Only when it was too
late to undo his wretched bargain did Esau realize that he had sacrificed
the permanent on the altar of the immediate.
We had better be careful of the "bargains" we make in life.
Our culture places
a high price tag on what is worthless
and throws away as worthless what is of eternal value.
Ask the Lord to help you discern what's
worth keeping and what is best discarded. - H W Robinson (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
The little choices we must make
Will chart the course of life we take;
We either choose the path of light,
Or wander off in darkest night. - DJD
We pay a high price for cheap living.
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GENESIS 28
GOD IS IN THIS PLACE
"Surely the Lord is in this place; and I knew it not." Genesis 28:16
When I was overseas during World War II, a chaplain told me that some
officers
would use vile and profane language in his presence and then in a humorous
manner turn to him and say, "Excuse me, Chaplain!" The others would
usually laugh as if this were a wonderful joke. Some time later when this
happened again, the Chaplain decided it was time to express himself
concerning
their flippant attitude in regard to taking God's name in vain. Turning
upon the
offending one he said, "Do not ask me to excuse you! You are displeasing
Someone far higher and holier than I. You had better ask Him to forgive
you!" Absolute silence reigned in the officers' quarters for a few
moments, and from that day forward there was a marked decrease in profane
and
vulgar language when this Chaplain was near. They respected him and felt
it
would be wrong to offend this servant of God who took the things of the
Lord so
seriously.
On several occasions I have walked into a place of business where some men
were
engaged in conversation, and noticed a strange silence fall upon them.
Apparently what they were saying was of such a nature that they didn't
want a
minister to hear it. How foolish! What about the fact that God hears every
word?
Have men forgotten about Him?
Dear friend, if what you talk about isn't fit to be said in the presence
of a
minister, it certainly isn't right to say in God's hearing. Remember, the
Lord
sees every act, hears every word, and reads every thought that comes into
our
minds. When the realization of this truth came home to Jacob the morning
after
he had fled for fear of Esau, and after he had so brazenly and shamelessly
deceived his aged father, he felt a deep sense of awe. May the truth that
"God is here" also influence our every thought, word, and deed.
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Lord, put a seal upon my lips,
Help me to guard with care
The things I say, and swift repeat;
0 tongue of mine, beware! — G.W.
Live innocently; God is watching! —Linnaeus
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Genesis 32:1-8, 22-32
WRESTLING WITH GOD
Without Me you can do nothing.-John 15:5
When the board members of George Muller's orphanage told him it was
impossible to raise enough money to keep the operation going, Muller
rejoiced. He said their sense of helplessness would make
them rely more fully on the Lord. They did, and God met their need.
Complete dependence on God is an absolute necessity if we are to enjoy His
blessing and power. But we seldom learn this truth apart from bitter
experience.
Take Jacob, for example. For many years he had lived by his own schemes.
Even though distressed when he heard that his brother Esau, whom he had
wronged, was coming with 400 men, Jacob had a
plan. He tried to make sure that if he were attacked, half of his family
would survive. It was then that a "Man" (God in human form) wrestled with
Jacob. Just before dawn, the Man demonstrated His deity by putting Jacob's
hip out of joint by a mere touch. All Jacob could do was cling to the Man,
pleading for His blessing (Gen. 32:26; Hos. 12:4). This was a turning
point in Jacob's life, for he learned that blessing comes only from the
Lord.
We too must realize that the only way to experience God's favor and
provision is to depend on Him.- H V Lugt (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Once we stop our own devising,
Quit the schemes of our own choosing,
Cease from all our fruitless striving --
God steps in with grace and power!--DJD
If we depend wholly on God, we will find Him wholly dependable.
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Genesis 32:22-32
"BOXING OR WRESTLING"
Then Jacob was left alone; and a Man wrestled with him.- Genesis 32:24
The president of International Concerts of Prayer, David Bryant, told of
arriving in a major city to help conduct a time of prayer. As he entered
the building where the meeting was to take place, he noticed that the huge
hall was being shared by another event. In one room was the prayer
meeting; in the other room there was going to be a boxing match.
Two signs greeted visitors, each with arrows pointing the way. In bold
letters, one said BOXING; the other said PRAYER. Bryant said it occurred
to him that this was the first time he had ever been in a situation where
people had to choose between boxing and wresting.
Bryant was saying that prayer can be like wrestling, as we see in Genesis
32. When Jacob realized that the Man he was grappling with was God in
human form, he asked for a blessing and would not let go of Him until his
request was granted. God honored that perseverance. The Lord said to
Jacob, "You have struggled with God and with men, and have prevailed"
(v.28).
We can't twist God's arm or use Him for our own ends. But we can "wrestle"
with Him by persevering in prayer when what we ask for is in His will.
Perhaps it's time to do a little more wrestling. -J D Branon (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
You are coming to a King,
Large petitions therefore bring;
For His grace and power are such,
None can ever ask too much. - Newton
You do not have because you do not ask. James 4:2
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GENESIS 39
SAFE DEPOSIT
"And he left all that he had in Joseph's hand." Genesis 39:6
From the moment Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh, left all in Joseph's
care, a
blessing came upon everything he had. His home, his business, and even his
fields prospered! The Christian today also finds that spiritual prosperity
comes
when he leaves all in the hand of the "Greater Joseph," the Lord Jesus
Christ. As you were reading the Scripture (you didn't omit it, did you?),
I hope
you noticed the words in verse 4, "all that he had he put into his
hand." Potiphar made that decision. Attracted to Joseph and persuaded
that
he was worthy of his trust, he committed all his possessions, interests,
and
affairs to this faithful Hebrew. Have you definitely given your home, your
business, and all your concerns to Christ?
Having put all that he had into Joseph's keeping, he left it there. This
is
sometimes the most difficult thing to do. Potiphar had a nature similar to
ours,
and probably worried at times and removed some of his affairs from
Joseph's
supervision. Perhaps you have surrendered to the Lord some problem or
difficulty
that plagued you; but when worry again gripped you, you retrieved the
burden and
removed it from His care, only to be weighed down once more by the load of
anxiety. Now the Savior is saying again, "Leave the matter in My
hand!"
The Lord Jesus is adequate for every circumstance and problem. He wants
us to
put all that we have of pain or pleasure, profit or loss, into His
keeping. He
will forgive the sin, sanctify the life, remove the fear, direct the path,
and
give assurance. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
O wounded soul, there is heavenly balm,
Leaving it all with Jesus;
Then change thy moan to a joyous psalm,
By leaving it all with Jesus. —
Gray
Those who see God's hand in everything can best leave every-thing in God's
hand.
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GENESIS 41
REMEMBER TO FORGET
"And
Joseph called the name of the firstborn Manasseh: For God, said he, hath
made me forget. Genesis 41:51
Some things should be forgotten. Joseph
could have wasted his life dwelling on the injustices he suffered. As a
youth, his brothers sold him into slavery, and he was forced to live in a
hostile land. He had to spend his teenage and adult years away from his
beloved father. Joseph even spent time in prison. In spite of all he
endured, he harbored no resentment. In fact, he named his son Manasseh,
which means “forgetting.” He explained, “For God...hath made me
forget.”
The result of
“forgetting” past hurts is illustrated in the life of Pastor William
Sangster. A guest who had come to spend the Christmas holidays with
Sangster was watching him address the last of his greeting cards. One of
the names on the list startled the friend. “Surely you are not sending a
card to him,” he said. “Why not?” the preacher asked. “Don’t you
remember what he said about you just 18 months ago?” Sangster replied
that he only remembered a resolution he made at that time. He had
determined that with God’s help he would forget about the man’s cutting
remark. The card was sent as planned. Yes, some things need to be dropped
from the Christian’s memory. He shouldn’t harbor wrongs done to him. He
mustn’t let some unkind word keep him from maturing in Christ as he
should. And he should never use another’s insensitivity as his excuse for
not serving the Lord.
Are
there things in your past that you need to forgive and forget? -D. C. Egner
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Let me forget the hurt and pain
Found along life’s way;
Let me remember kindnesses
Given day by day. ---Berry
It
is far better to forgive and forget than to resent and remember.
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GENESIS 43
THE MARVEL OF DESIGN
"And they sat before him, the firstborn according to his birthright, and
the youngest according to his youth: and the men marveled one at another”
(Genesis 43:33).
When
creationists calculate the extremely low probability of the chance origin
of life, many evolutionists scoff at the calculation, alleging that any
one arrangement of the components of a simple living molecule is just as
likely as any other arrangement, so it is no great marvel that the
components fell into this particular arrangement. This is a puerile
argument, of course, quite unworthy of the intelligent scientists who use
it, since there is only one (or at best, only a few) arrangements that
will contain the organized information necessary for reproduction,
compared to “zillions” of arrangements with no information at all.
This fact is beautifully illustrated in
our text. Why should Joseph’s brothers “marvel” when they were seated
in chronological order of birth by a host who (presumably) was entirely
unaware of that order? The reason why they marveled was because there
could have been over 479 million different ways (calculated by multiplying
all the numbers, one through twelve, together) in which the twelve
brothers could have been seated! Maybe an evolutionist would not
“marvel” that this unique seating arrangement happened by chance, since
he somehow believes that far more intricately organized arrangements than
this happened by chance to produce our universe and its array of complex
systems. Anyone else, however, would immediately have realized this, and
so the brothers of Joseph marveled one at another. So also when we behold
the wonders of design in the creation, should we “lift up (our) eyes on
high, and behold who hath created these things” (Isaiah 40:26). H M M
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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Genesis
45:1-15
HOW CAN I FORGIVE?
Forgive, and you will be forgiven.--Luke 6:37
A seminary student earned his way through school driving a bus on
Chicago's south side. One day a gang of young thugs boarded the bus and
refused to pay the fare. The young man spotted a policeman, stopped the
bus, and reported them. The officer made them pay, but then left. After
the bus rounded a corner, the thugs beat the driver severely.
The gang members were rounded up, brought to trial, and found guilty. As
soon as their sentences were announced, however, the student asked the
judge if he could serve their jail terms for them. The judge and gang
members were astounded. "It's because I forgive you," he explained. The
request was denied, but in the months that followed, the student visited
the young men in jail and led several of them to faith in Jesus Christ.
When Joseph's brother stood before him in Egypt asking for food, Joseph
faced a great test. Years before, these men had planned to kill him, but
they changed their minds and sold him into slavery. Now Joseph was in a
position of power and could take revenge, but because he trusted God's
sovereignty he offered them forgiveness.
Have you been wronged? Just as you trusted Christ to forgive you, ask Him
for grace to forgive others. -H W Robinson (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Lord help me be kind and forgiving --
So oft Your forgiveness I've known
For sins I have daily committed;
Lord, grant me a love like Your own. --Anon.
Forgiveness is Christianity in action.
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GENESIS 50
GOD'S SOVEREIGNTY
Joseph said to them, "Do not be afraid, for am I in the place of God? But
as for you, you meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, in order
to
bring it about as it is this day, to save many people alive" Genesis
50:19-20
Writing of humanity's limited view of God's sovereignty, John Newton
jested:
"If you think you see the ark of the Lord falling, you can be sure it is
due to a swimming in your head."
In contrast to our finite focus, God sees and knows the when, why, and how
of
life. And sovereignty means that God controls it all. He certainly did for
Joseph. Thrown into a deep, dark pit and then sold to traders by his
jealous
brothers, Joseph may have questioned God's sovereign plan. But God saw
Joseph
even in the shadows. And when the camel caravan arrived in Egypt, God was
there
to meet him.
On the cross, Jesus cried out, "My God, why have You forsaken Me?" Yet
three days after Joseph of Arimathea sealed Jesus in a pitch black tomb,
God was
there to meet Him. The glorious ending of the Joseph story shed a small
shaft of
light on God's sovereignty, but a brighter and wider beam filled the
darkness
when an angel said of the seemingly forsaken Christ, "He is not here; for
He is risen."
If Jesus struggled with God's plan and then entrusted Himself to the
sovereign
Ruler of the universe, we can confidently follow Him out of the tomb into
the
sunshine. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
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Genesis 50:15-21
"ON PURPOSE"
All things work together for good... to those who are the called according
to His purpose. Romans 8:28
When a cowboy applied for an insurance policy, the agent asked, "Have you
ever had any accidents?" After a moment's reflection, the applicant
responded, "Nope, but a bronc did kick in two of my ribs last summer, and
a couple of years ago a rattlesnake bit me on the ankle."
"Wouldn't you call those accidents?" replied the puzzled agent. "Naw," the
cowboy said, "they did it on purpose!"
That story reminds me of the biblical truth that there are no accidents in
the lives of God's children. In today's Scripture, we read how Joseph
interpreted a difficult experience that had seemed like a great calamity.
He had been thrown into a pit and then sold as a slave. This was a great
test of his faith, and from the human standpoint it appeared to be a
tragic case of injustice, not a providential means of blessing. But Joseph
later learned that "God meant it for good" (Gen. 50:20).
Are you passing through the deep waters of trial and disappointment? Does
everything seem to be going against you? These apparent misfortunes are
not accidents. The Lord allows such things for a blessed purpose. So,
patiently trust Him. If you know the Lord, someday you will praise Him for
it all! - R W De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
What looks like just an accident
When viewed through human eyes,
Is really God at work in us -
His blessing in disguise. - Sper
God transforms trials into triumphs.
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GENESIS 50:20
SETBACKS
"You meant evil against me; but God meant it for good" Genesis
50:20
I am thankful and reassured that God is so wise and so powerful that
nothing,
absolutely nothing, can cause His purposes to fail. In fact, He is able to
take
even those things meant for evil and make them work for good.
Joseph's brothers hated him so much that they plotted his murder. Instead,
they
sold him as a slave to some Ishmaelite traders. In Egypt he gained the
favor of
Pharaoh, who gave him a position of responsibility second only to that of
the
king. During a famine, his brothers came to him for food, not realizing
who he
was. When Joseph finally identified himself, he spoke this assuring word
to
them: "Do not therefore be grieved or angry with yourselves because you
sold me here; for God sent me before you to preserve life" (Gen. 45:5).
Later he said to his brothers, "But as for you, you meant evil against me;
but God meant it for good, in order to bring it about, as it is this day,
to
save many people alive" (Gen. 50:20).
To me, that's both exciting and encouraging. I am reassured to realize
that no
matter what someone might do to harm me, the Lord is able to turn it into
my
benefit and His glory.
When we are discouraged because of distressing circumstances, we can
rejoice in
God's wisdom, power, and sovereignty. Romans 8:28 is still true. God is
working
all things for our good. —R W De Haan (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Setbacks pave the way for comebacks.