Our Daily Bread #11
Edification in righteousness
FOR HER Read: Ephesians 5:22-33 Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her. - Ephesians 5:25 When my wife had dental surgery, she was out of commission for the weekend. While she was recuperating, I had the daunting task of taking care of her and the kids. I cooked, washed dishes, made special trips to the store for her, and bathed the kids. hen I saw all I had done, I thought to myself, I deserve extra credit and reciprocal service when she gets better. Before I gave myself too many pats on the back, however, the Holy Spirit reminded me that what I was doing was my privilege and duty as a Christian husband. In Paul's time, many believed the husband's needs dominated the household, and the wife existed to fulfil his needs and to serve him. The Christian view was quite different, however. Women were seen as persons of equal worth. The wife was transformed from an accessory to a person of intrinsic value, becoming the focus of her husband's concern. Instead of demanding that she live for him, he was to serve her! Ephesians 5:25 portrays Christ as loving the church and giving Himself for her. And verse 29 indicates that Jesus nourishes and cares for her. As husbands pursue Christlikeness, they have the privilege and duty to sacrifice, nurture, and care for their wives. - Marvin Williams Despite the faults that spouses have, Their marriage still can thrive; But both must look to God for help - He'll keep their love alive. - Branton IF YOU THINK IT'S POSSIBLE TO LOVE YOUR WIFE TOO MUCH, YOU PROBABLY HAVEN'T LOVED HER ENOUGH. UNLIKELY HEROES Read: Judges 2:7-19 The Lord raised up judges who delivered them out of the hands of those who plundered them. - Judges 2:16 The book of Judges is an account of God's people descending into spiritual indifference and rebellion. After the death of Joshua and his peers, the next generation "forsook the Lord God of their fathers, ... and they followed other gods from among the gods of the people who were all around them" (Judges 2;12). This dismal record of wavering allegiance hardly seems the place to find spiritual heroes, yet four people from Judges - Gideon, Barak, Samson. and Jephthah (chs.4-16)--are named in the New Testament book of Hebrews (11:32). Along with Noah, Abraham, Moses, and other notables, they are commended for their faith. Judges, however, presents these men as flawed people who nevertheless responded to God's call during a time of spiritual darkness in their culture. The Bible honors them for their faith, not for their perfection. They were recipients of God's grace as surely as we are. In every generation, God raises up people who are true to Him and to His Word. The measure of their lives and of ours is not the absence of failure but the presence of God's gracious forgiveness and the faith to obey His call. All of God's champions are unlikely heroes. - David MaCasland Heaven's heroes never curve their name On marbled columns built for earthly fame; They build instead a legacy that springs Out of a life lived for the King of kings. - Gustafson FAITH IN CHRIST CAN MAKE EXTRAORDINARY HEROES OUT OF ORDINARY PEOPLE. MORNING Read: Lamentations 3:19-32 His compassions fail not. They are new every morning, great is Your faithfulness. - Lamentations 3:22-23 On a teaching trip to the Bible lands, our study group had just spent a restful night at our Tiberias hotel. When I awoke, I went to my window and gazed at the beauty of the sunrise on the Sea of Galilee. As I thought ahead to the places we would be visiting that day - the same places where Jesus had walked 2,000 years before---I was excited about the opportunities of the day that had begun with the splendor of the sunrise. We don't need to be in Israel, however, to be amazed at what God gives us each day. Every morning of life offers us new challenges and rich blessings as we walk with Christ. Despite mistakes we may have made yesterday, choices we regret, and heartache we have endured, God is merciful to us. The sunrise reminds us of His faithfulness and of the new start each day brings. Perhaps it was the simple joy of a beautiful sunrise that prompted Jeremiah to write, "through the Lord's mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness" (Lam.3;22-23). Each new day the Lord gives to us - whether in the Bible lands or at home - is an expression of His faithfulness and provides opportunities to live for Him. - Bill Crowder Lord, in the hush of early dawn, When all the world lies sleeping, I place my life and all I love Into Thy gracious keeping. - White THE BEST REASON FOR HOPE IS GOD'S FAITHFULNESS. NOON Read: Psalm 23 He makes me to lie down in green pastures; He feeds me beside still waters. - Psalm 23:2 Our office is a busy puce where things sometimes feel like they are moving at breakneck speed. This often involves meeting after meeting, hallway conferences, and an avalanche of e-mail. In the midst of this extreme busyness, I sometimes feel the need to escape, to decompress. My response? To create a quiet place. On those days [when I have no lunch meeting, I retreat to the quiet of my car. I gab some lunch and sit in my car, where I can read, listen to music, think, pray and be refreshed. I think this is the essence of what the shepherd-psalmist points to in Psalm 23:2. He sees the Good Shepherd bringing him to "still waters" - that is, waters to rest by. It pictures a quiet place, a retreat from the pressures of life, where you can rest in the presence of the Shepherd of your heart and be strengthened for what lies ahead. Even Jesus withdrew to a solitary place to pray and commune with the Father (Mark 1:35). We all creed retreats in our lives, not only because of the overwhelming nature of life, but because of our dependence on the resources of the Master. In our fast-paced days, it is essential to find a place of solitude, "a place of quiet rest, near to the heart of God." Where's yours? - Bill Crowder There is a place of quiet rest, Near to the heart of God,. A place where sin cannot molest, Near to the heart of God. - MaAfee WHEN WE DRAW NEAR TO GOD OUR MINDS ARE REFRESHED AND OUR STRENGTH IS RENEWED. EVENING Read: Ephesians 5:6-17 When He had sent the multitudes away, He went up on the mountain by Himself to pray. Now when evening came, He was alone there. - Matthew 14:23 The evening is one of my favorite times of day. It's a time to look back, take stock, and reflect on the events of the day - whether good or bad. When weather permits, my wife and I walk, or sometimes we'll just fix a pot of coffee and talk with each other about our day and what we've accomplished. It's a time for careful thought and evaluation, for thanksgiving, and for prayer. Our Lord had a similar practice during His earthly ministry. At the end of a wearying and demanding day, He went up on a mountain by Himself for a few moments of reflection and prayer in the presence of His Father (Matt.14:23). The value of the quiet presence of our heavenly Father and the careful examination of how we have engaged life on a given day has great significance. Perhaps this was the goal of the apostle Paul's challenge for us to redeem the time (Eph.5:16); that is, to make sure we are making the best use of the time God gives us for living and serving. As the day winds to a close, take some time for quiet reflection. In the serenity of the evening, we can, in God's presence, get a more accurate perspective on life and how we are living it. - Bill Crowder I come aside from the world of strife, With its burdens, trials, and the cares of life, To a beautiful, quiet, restful place, Where I commune with my Jesus face to face. - Brandt THERE WILL BE MORE REFLECTION OF JESUS WHEN THERE IS MORE REFLECTION ON HIM. WHICH WAY AM I GROWING Read: Galatians 6:7-10 Whatever a man sows, that he will reap. - Galatians 6:7 Some folks grow old gracefully, while others become grouchy and ill-tempered. It's important to know which way we're growing, because we're all growing older. People don't get irritable and shorttempered merely because they're getting older. Aging doesn't have to make us hypercritical and cranky. No, it's more likely that we've become what we've been becoming all along. Paul wrote: "He who sows to his flesh will ... reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will ... reap everlasting life" (Gal 6:8). Those who pander to self-interest and think only of themselves are sowing seeds that will produce a harvest of misery in themselves and in others. On the other hand, those who love God and care for others are sowing seeds that, in time, will yield a harvest of joy. C.S.Lewis put it this way: "Every time you make a choice you are turning the central part of you, the part of you that chooses, into something a little different from what it was before." We can choose to submit our wills to God each day, asking Him to give us strength to live for Him and for others. As He works in us, we will grow in grace and in kindness. So the question we need to ask ourselves is: Which way am I growing? - David Roper Surer than autumn's harvests, Are harvests of thought and deed; Like those that our hands have planted, The yield will be like the seed. - Harris THE SEEDS WE SOW TODAY DETERMINE THE KIND OF FRUITS WE'LL REAP TOMORROW. LIVING EVERY DAY Read: Proverbs 15:15 All the days of the afflicted are evil, but he who is of a merry heart has a continual feast. - Proverbs 15:15 When Tama Lee Owens celebrated her 104th birthday, she credited "laughter, the Lord, and the little things" for keeping her going. She still finds enjoyment each day in talking with people, taking a walk, and reading the Bible as she has done since childhood. "I don't know how long He'll let me stay here," she said. "I just thank the Lord for what He's given me already." Most of us won't live 104 years, but we can learn from Tamer Lee how to enjoy each day that we are given. Laughter - "A merry heart makes a cheerful countenance, but by sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken" (Prov.15:13). True happiness begins deep inside and emerges on our faces. The Lord - "The fear of the LORD is the instruction of wisdom, and before honor is humility" (v.33). When God is central in our hearts, He can teach us His way through every experience of life. The Little Things - "Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a fatted calf with hatred" (v.17). Maintaining loving relationships and enjoying the basic things of life are more important than wealth and success. Not all of us will live a long time, but we can all live well each day - with laughter, the Lord, and the little things in life. - David McCasland The world is filled with so much good, Little things that bring us pleasure - But Christ can fill our lives with joy, Beyond all earthly treasure. - Sper HAPPINESS IS NOT A DESTINATION BUT A DAY-BY-DAY JOURNEY |
No comments:
Post a Comment