30 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: 1 Samuel 5-7; Proverbs 9:10-18.
After the Philistines had captured the ark of God, they took it from Ebenezer to Ashdod. Then they carried the ark into Dagon's temple and set it beside Dagon. When the people of Ashdod rose early the next day, there was Dagon, fallen on his face on the ground before the ark of the LORD! They took Dagon and put him back in his place. But the following morning when they rose, there was Dagon, fallen on his face on the ground before the ark of the LORD! His head and hands had been broken off and were lying on the threshold; only his body remained. (1 Samuel 5:1-4)
The Bible is filled with stories of people who go to all kinds of trouble to create and care for gods that are worse than helpless—they’re needy! Dagon, the god of the Philistines, certainly fit the description.

But an idol is more than a carved or forged image. It's anything that takes the place of God. False gods fall over and have to be set upright. They have to be carried from place to place (or washed or cleaned or put away; or, in the case of opinions and preferences, defended). They are a burden. But people would rather cater to the gods they create than bow down to the One who created them. They work tirelessly to appease false gods but refuse to do the one thing that will make them acceptable to the one true God: bow down. (Adapted from Above All, Love: Reflections on the Greatest Commandment)

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29 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: 1 Samuel 1-4; Proverbs 9:1-9.

My Biggest Enemy

Sometimes I feel as if I’m in a bad relationship—with myself! Whenever Julie the writer starts a paragraph, Julie the editor interrupts. “No, no, no. Don’t say it that way. Why are you always so negative?” Or “You’re trying to say too many things. Why can’t you just stay focused for a change?” Or “What makes you think you have anything worthwhile to say?!”

Before I’ve completed a single thought, my alter ego has torn it to shreds. This ritual is very debilitating. It’s also common to the human condition.

Satan loves to distract us with criticism, and he uses our imperfections to convince us that we have no value. He interrupts us with accusations that cause us to doubt the work that God wants to accomplish in and through us. He also gets us to use this tactic on others by judging them prematurely and trying to correct them before we know what they’re trying to say.

That’s what Eli the priest did when Hannah was crying out to God. He interrupted her prayer and accused her of being drunk.

God, on the other hand, welcomes our cries for help. He wants us to pour out the contents of our hearts to him, and we can do it without fear of interruption (Psalm 62:8). We learn from reading the psalms that even as we are expressing our doubts and fears, God is at work resolving them. Many psalms that begin in despair end in praise.

If you have an internal battle raging, let the warring ideas have their time before God. He knows which side is right, and he has no interest in keeping the information a secret. He made each of us for a purpose, and he is eager to enable and empower us to complete it.

Adapted from Inner Turmoil.

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20 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: Judges 4-7; Proverbs 6:1-11.

Judges 5:3
“Hear this, you kings! Listen, you rulers!
 I will sing to the LORD, I will sing;
 I will make music to the LORD, the God of Israel. ”

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19 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: Psalms 45-47.

Psalm 45:1
My heart is stirred by a noble theme;
 as I recite my verses for the king;
 my tongue is the pen of a skillful writer.

Psalm 46:10
“Be still, and know that I am God;
 I will be exalted among the nations,
 I will be exalted in the earth.”

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18 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: John 3-5; Proverbs 5:15-23.

With God, being honest about who we are leads to a relationship, not rejection.

Jesus proved this in His encounter with a woman of not-so-noble character.

Tired from a long journey, Jesus sat down beside a well in a town that most self-respecting Jews would go the extra mile to avoid. Then He started a conversation with a woman no self-respecting Jew would speak to. Notice how He turned a daily chore into a spiritual lesson.

When Jesus asked the woman for a drink, she expressed surprise that He would speak to her (John 4:7–9). Jesus indicated that He wasn’t who she thought He was, and she expressed interest in knowing who He was (vv. 10–12). Instead of identifying Himself, however, Jesus told her what He had to offer: water that would satisfy her thirst (vv. 13–14).

In a surprising reversal, the woman then asked Jesus for a drink (v. 15). When Jesus asked her to go get her husband, she explained that she didn’t have one. Instead of attacking her for what He knew was an evasive answer, Jesus commended her for telling the truth. Then He told her something about herself that she wasn’t eager to have known: that she’d had five husbands and was living with a man to whom she was not married (v. 18).

The woman then recognized that Jesus was a prophet (not because of what He said about Himself but because of what He knew about her, v. 19) and steered the uncomfortable discussion away from herself by bringing up the impersonal subject of where to worship (v. 20).

Jesus changed the subject back to something personal—from “where” to worship to “who” to worship (vv. 21–24). The woman, trying again to make it impersonal, expressed faith that the Messiah would one day explain everything (v. 25).

Seizing the opportunity the woman opened up by mentioning the Messiah, Jesus told her who He was with a simple “I am” statement: “I am he,” He said (v. 26).

Note how Jesus kept the conversation going. He didn’t tell the woman how bad she was. He just kept increasing her thirst (like salt) for more knowledge about Himself. He didn’t condemn her for who she was or what she was doing wrong. He gently led her to discover who He was and what He could do for her.

When the disciples rejoined Jesus, the woman returned to her village. Later in the passage we learn that many in the town believed in Jesus because of the woman’s testimony (v. 39). However, it wasn’t what Jesus said about Himself that convinced them; it was the truth He spoke about the woman. She returned to her neighbors urging them, “Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did,” (v. 29). After meeting Jesus, she was no longer ashamed of who she was. She had met someone who knew her intimately but whose foremost desire was to redeem her, not condemn her.

Seeing ourselves as we are is the first step toward becoming all that God designed us to be.

Excerpt from Above All, Love: Reflections on the Greatest Commandment, pages 110-112.


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15 April 2009

Click here for today's Bible reading: Joshua 21-24; Proverbs 4:1-17.

Taxes due. Thank you, Lord, for ordaining governments to maintain justice on your behalf. May our government do that with the taxes we pay. Remove corrupt officials as soon as possible and replace them with those who refuse to show favoritism.

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