I’M IN GOOD HANDS…Psalm 69

Being away from home for over three months leaves us feeling overwhelmed when we return.   You can imagine.   There is a price for being away.  And prices keep rising!  One time we awoke the next morning to a leaky toilet requiring a costly plumber visit.  In our pile of mail were two identical cable television kits, prompting a visit downtown so we weren’t charged twice.  While trimming an overgrown hedge, I discovered to my unwelcome surprise a hive of yellow jackets, causing me to run like I was in the Olympics!

What should I do?  Stay in bed all day?  Draw the curtains and let the world take care of itself?  Withdraw from this cold, cruel world?!  Then I read Psalm 69, especially verses 13 and 14.

King David says, ‘…in the time of your favor…’  There’s a phrase to mull over for awhile.  We who believe in Jesus Christ are ‘in the time of God’s favor’.  The word ‘favor’ in the original Hebrew is ‘rawtsone’.  It means delight and goodwill.  We are God’s good pleasure.  He accepts us who worship Him.  We are pleasing to Him.  He approves of us.  Treats us favorably.  As in Psalm 147:11–‘the Lord delights in those who fear Him, who put their hope in His unfailing love.’

He loves us so much.  He’s crazy about us!  This very moment we are ‘in the time of God’s favor’.  That means that I’m in good hands.  So are you as you trust in Jesus.  Good hands.  I can trust Him no matter what.  With those little things like leaky toilets and stinging bees.  I’m still in good hands.

Today keep repeating that you are in good hands.  When something upsetting comes your way, remind yourself whose hands you’re in.  In His strong and loving arms and hands.  I’m in good hands!

Prayer:  To be in your hands gives me such confidence and hope, dear Lord.  I love you for all you do for all of us.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

 

SILENCE!…Psalm 62

My tongue should be covered with scars.  From all the times I bit it, keeping quiet.  Now you know why it’s scar-free!  Wish I knew better how to keep silence!  David pens in Psalm 62–‘For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence, for my hope is from Him'(v.5).

Haven’t you wondered how Jesus kept His silence at trials before His crucifixion?  Sometimes, not a word.  Why?  What’s going on?  Something for me to learn?

When I think of silence, I think of how we may treat other people.  The silent treatment, it’s called.  A form of punishment.  Or someone may keep quiet because they didn’t hear you, possibly ignoring what you’re saying.  A neglectful punishment.  Not what’s mentioned here in Psalm 62.

David faces many challenges.  Enemies.  Attacks.  He seeks to remain silent so he can lean hard on God.  Like a ‘tottering fence’, he says(v.3).  By shutting his mouth, his mind can open to the strength he knows is in God alone.  His rock, his salvation, ‘my fortress'(v.2).  Keeping quiet focuses our hearts on trusting the power and love, a perfect union,  found in God(vs.11-12).

Here’s a challenge for today.  For you…and me.  Be quiet.  Calm down.  Lower the volume on the noise level of your life.  As best you can.  I know how difficult this can be.  It must be possible.  The psalmist says so.  It’s in the Bible.  Jesus practiced it.  If I can, you can.  We’ll find strength and trust.  A place to stand… next to the Lord.  Where better?  None that I know of.  Silence is golden, it’s said.  Let’s mine some today!

Prayer:  Thank you, Lord, that in the most noisy times we can experience your peace and quiet.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

SUCH A BIG DEAL!…Psalm 50

Do you think that God expects too much of you?  All those commandments.  Do this…don’t do that.  Watch your step.  Easy to fall through the cracks.  I become discouraged when I realize all the godly expectations that I fall short of.  Not even close.  Have to be honest in saying how little of the Lord I see in myself even after being a Christian for a long time.  No, I am not Methusaleh!

Reading Psalm 50, two verses tug at my heart.  Encouraging words…about a simple life of faith.  Life that’s more about a relationship with the Lord than measuring how we’re doing on the performance scale.  Verse 14–‘Sacrifice thank offerings to God…’  Saying ‘thank you’.  Too much to ask of us?  Not such a big deal!

Being grateful to God.  Being content with what we have and where we are in life.  Not passive or lazy, but mature and secure in contentment.  Ambitious without being narcissistically aggressive.  Thanksgiving Day… every day.  Doing all we say we’re going to do–‘…fulfilling your vows to the Most High'(v. 14).

How many times do we thank the Lord for this-or-that during our day?   I lag behind, not being grateful enough.  Should come natural.  Almost without effort.  I eat three meals a day.  Breathe all the time without even thinking about it.  My heart has beat for decades now and can go on for up to three more, if I’m like my Uncle Harold or Aunt Margaret.

So much to be thankful for.  Such a big deal?  Don’t think so.  You might wonder if you but count how many times in our day we pause to say ‘thank you, Lord’.  Should we start thanking Him right now?  Let’s do it!  You and me, together.  What a good idea–thanks!

Prayer:  We bring the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving to you, our Lord.  For all you are and all you do for us.  Most of all, we thank you for your Son, our Savior Jesus Christ.  In His name.  Amen.

SOMETHING I NEVER NOTICED BEFORE…Mark 10: 17-27

Every night my wife and I read from a devotional magazine.  Yesterday’s lesson was from Mark’s Gospel.  I’ve read it many times before.  Haven’t you?  The rich man who asks Jesus about inheriting eternal life.  Good question?

We know that only Jesus can give us salvation.  Look no further.  You can’t ‘inherit’ what only God can give us.  I can’t.  Neither can you!  Comes only as received by faith in Jesus alone.  Good answer!

Take a gander at verse 21.  As I was reading it, I was stopped in my tracks.  Grabbed me by the collar.  This rich man has told Jesus that in fact he has been faithful in obeying God’s laws.  All his life.  Wish I could say that.  Missed the mark by a long shot.  All my life.

Verse 21–‘Jesus looked at him and loved him’.  Matthew and Luke also record this encounter.  Neither add this sentence.  Mark notes that Jesus studies this young man, examines him.  More than that, much more,  he records that Jesus loves him.  The word ‘love’ used here is ‘agape’, God’s love.  As clutching as he is with his money, yet the Lord loves him through and through.  Similar to what Paul writes in Romans 5:8–‘…God shows His love for us in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us’.  God’s love precedes our faith in Him.  His love releases the grip of sin in our lives.

I have the feeling that this young man later came to believe in Jesus.  That mammon’s filthy-lucre grip was loosened by the love of the Nazarene.  And somehow that word got around.  Mark heard of it.  He had to make mention.  That Jesus’ loving gaze lowered the boom on this man’s clenched fists.  No competition with the Lord’s love.

We know we’ll leave everything behind.  Nothing of this earth we’ll need in the presence of God’s love.   Imagine Jesus looking at us, knowing everything about us, from head to toe.  Not coming at us with jealousy or criticism…but with love, the unconditional type.  Who’s needs an inheritance when His love is already ours?!

Prayer:  Thank you, Lord, for giving us your salvation.  We love you.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

WHO CAN YOU TRUST?…1 Samuel 3

Who can you trust?  Years ago, it was no one over the age of thirty.  Now, it’s no one!  Politicians, judges, teachers, police… and devotional writers!  As a youngster, I don’t remember it being that way.  Do you?  All my teachers were respected.  Pastors?  In a league all their own.  Police?  We called them police officers, not cops or worse.  I got all excited when my father got the autograph of the vice-president.  Okay, not of the USA, but the New Jersey chapter of the Kiwanis Clubs.  So, I was desperate!  Have pity, already!

Today, suspicions run deep for all of the above.  Trust, a rare commodity in our day and age.  We’ve lost so much…decency, the Bible as moral compass, tolerance(only if you agree with me, which is no tolerance at all).

1 Samuel 3 exists in a period where everyone does whatever they want.  No restraints.  Feels right, do it.  Doesn’t feel right, do it anyway.  That’s where the book of Judges ends and 1 Samuel begins.  Starting with the story of Eli, a godly man.  A judge in Israel.  He has two sons, both out-of-control–with their father and with God.  They could care less.  Eli kept his mouth shut.

Big problems lurk in the shadows.  Mainly this–‘In those days the word of the Lord was rare…’  Nobody was listening to the Lord and He Himself complied by being quiet.  Self moved to the head-of-the-class while God’s Word was relegated to a darkened corner wearing a dunce cap.  The moral barometer, broken.  The compass, ignored.  All hell had broken loose.

But there’s hope!  Along comes a young boy named Samuel, of godly parents.  Samuel serves alongside Eli in the Temple.  Verse 7 says that ‘…Samuel did not yet know the Lord.  The Word of the Lord had not yet been revealed to him.’  Samuel didn’t know the Lord or His Word.  He had an excuse.  We don’t.

The Bible, for most, is readily available.  Can buy one for a dollar.  Look carefully in the parking lot of the mall and you’ll find enough change on the ground to replenish that dollar spent!  Open your Bible, dive right in.  The water’s fine!  Don’t allow the Bible to be ‘rare’ in your life.  Hear from the Lord.  You’ll discover your trust-thermometer beginning to rise.  Trusting the One who will never let us down, never lie to us, who keeps His every promise.  As the Bible says…

Verse 19–‘The Lord was with Samuel as he grew up, and he(Samuel) let none of His Words fall to the ground’.  He held on to each one.  When you need it most, how handy to have your Bible close at hand, in your heart and mind.  Rare…no more!  Well done!

Prayer:  Lord, thank you for the Bible.  We cherish it as your Word to us.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

THAT FORK IN THE ROAD…Psalm 52

Psalm 52 offers a contrast of godly living with one quite the contrary.  King David paints a vivid picture of two different lives.  Verse one describes the ungodly as a ‘mighty man’.  Mighty…but all for himself.  A boaster, braggart, image-maker, and spin doctor with all his might geared to coming out on top, regardless of the cost. His tongue will cut you to shreds.  His deceit knows no bounds.  Saying and doing whatever he can to lower you only to puff himself up, the winner who takes all.

Psalm 52 says that taking the wrong fork in the road is a huge mistake.  Don’t take it.  It leads to ruin and destruction.  Judged by God Almighty, torn from home and security, uprooted and lost.  A fatal mistake–not making God his stronghold and foundation.

He trusted in his wealth.  He would stop at nothing to get what he wanted.  Step over his own mother if need be.  If he has to destroy others in the process, so be it.

Psalm 52 spends seven of its nine verses describing the ungodly, but only two with its contrast, the godly person.  Maybe that’s because the ungodly lead complicated, twisted and messed-up lives.  Those of us who seek to follow the Lord, as imperfectly as we do, find life a bit more straightforward, hopeful and helped!

David says that the godly are like olive trees, useful and productive.  Flourishing…in God’s house, a safe place where the oil of His gladness never dries up.  A place of praise… for all the Lord has done.  Nothing of the ungodly or their ways in God’s house.

I like that last phrase of Psalm 52.  Not lonely anymore, but ‘in the presence of your saints’!  With His people, we sing beautiful harmony to our God.  To the Father, the Son Jesus and the Holy Spirit.  No debates or arguments, false promises or divisions anymore.  Not for those who have asked Jesus into their hearts, repenting of sin and wanting to take the right path in life.

This is the ultimate fork in the road.  Don’t get lost.  Follow the signs leading to the Jesus Road!

Prayer:  Thank you, Lord, for making the way clear to salvation through your Son Jesus.  In His name.  Amen.

BEING FULL…Psalm 57: 1-3

In Psalm 57, David finds himself hiding in a cave, seeking safety from the deadly threats of King Saul.  David pleads for God’s protection.  Prays to take cover in the shadow of God’s wings.  His shadow alone would be enough.  Knowing God’s promises is reassurance enough.  Not seeing Him directly or having all the answers, but satisfied with trusting Him.

David writes in verse two that ‘I cry out to God Most High, to God, who fulfills His purpose for me.’  My translation(NIV) has brackets around the words ‘His purpose’.  Why?  This is how translators tell us that the words inside the brackets are not in the original language, but are words added that the translators feel will make more sense of the original to us reading today.  Whenever I see those bracketed words, I remove them in my mind and read the verse without them.  Sometimes, a fresh insight comes my way.

David says.  ‘I cry out to God…to God who fulfills(…) for me’.   Did you catch it?  Even in a cave, far from home, far from certain safety, surrounded by darkness and hemmed-in, even there we can be fulfilled by God Himself.  All the props gone.  The goodies of life?  Without them, God can be enough.

Surrounded by a cornucopia of material things, we have no idea what David is talking about.  Too much stuff.  Not only when He blesses us, but even when life seems to shrink and blow away.  Even then, He wants to fill us… with Himself.

Full in Him!  Faith that rides above any storms that come our way.  ‘I cry out to God…to God, who fulfills(…) me’!

Prayer:  Dear God, be my all in all.  No matter what may come, help me to be satisfied to know you.  To love you, to obey and submit to you.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

 

COULD I HAVE?…Psalm 57

For those who know me well, please do not answer this question.  I had to ask myself–could I have eaten too much?  Remember, I asked you kindly to keep your answer to yourself!  While driving through Kentucky we stopped at the town of Corbin.  The home of the very first restaurant owned and operated by Harlan Sanders.  Colonel Sanders!  A fun place to visit but the portions of fried chicken were way over-the-top!  And I ate them all!  Could I have?  I did!  Fully!  There’s your answer!

Psalm 57 has young David, fleeing from King Saul, pleading for God’s help, crying out for His mercy and a place of refuge.  He fully needs God to save his life.   He prays, ‘I will take refuge in the shadow of your wings until the disaster has passed'(Psalm 57: 1).  He doesn’t ask to see the Lord fully, face-to-face.  Only His shadow.   God’s help–like being under the ‘shadow of His wings’.  His shadow alone will give all the help that’s needed.  His shadow.  Fully.

Much of life is hard to understand, difficult to comprehend this side of heaven.  As if we’re wearing sunglasses in a darkened basement.  We can only make out passing shadows.  We grope and carefully maneuver around the room, hoping not to trip or make too many messes in the process.

We can’t see the Lord fully.  Not face-to-face.  But He does give us His shadow, reminding us of His care and presence.  Can you sense Him?  Like the wind you can’t see but can feel.  His shadow is all we need in this life.  A smidgeon of faith.  A tiny mustard seed.  A small amount of yeast.

His shadow is all we need.  Can you sense Him?  In the shadows…

Prayer:  Thank you, Lord, for being with us.  We can’t see you directly but know you are there.  Your shadow is enough.  Your promises fulfilled for all of us who believe in you.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

EVERYTHING IS… Psalm 47

A favorite song from Robin Williams’ movie ‘Popeye’ is entitled,  ‘Everything is Food, Food, Food!’  We can’t stop singing it!  And we’re starting to bug each other!  Psalm 47 emphasizes a life that’s more than food.  Time to think of something else, even though lunch is not far off.  And it’s pizza, too!  See what I mean?  I’m food helpless!

Back to Psalm 47.  Everything is praise…praise…praise!  Five times in verses 5 and 6 we’re told to praise the Lord.  Sing praises to our God!  Here’s a challenge for you–praise Him all day long.  Today!  Don’t go shouting it in the middle of the night, disturbing family and neighbors!  No, say it quietly to the One who deserves it most of all.  Focus on praising God.  Everything is Praise…Praise…Praise!

But you know what my problem is? Can you anticipate what I’m going to say?  I’m so distracted in prayer.  Praise the Lord for whatever and my mind starts scampering down some unrelated ‘rabbit trail’.  I thank the Lord for a beautiful day, all the time wondering how the weather will be next week when we take a road trip to the mountains.  Or rehashing something from our European river cruise.  Or when will the accountant get our taxes done, hoping for a refund while preparing to pay more if need be?  Praise to the Lord?  Out the window.  Lost… and not found!

Often praise deteriorates into heightened anxieties.  Thanking Him for our kids and grandchildren only to trudge down the most perilous worry-roads our imaginations can take us on.  Fears stacked high upon each other.  ‘What if this happens?  What about that’?  See what I mean?  Start with praise…end in panic!

So, let’s ask the Lord to help us focus on praise to Him.  We’ll need His help to stay on course.  Jesus knows how weak we are.  He understands and stands ready to help.  When we mean it, He makes it happen.   Are you with me?  Ready, get set…praise!

Prayer:  Lord, thank you.  We praise you all day long.  In Jesus’ name.  Amen.

THE ULTIMATE CONTRAST… Psalm 46 and Judges 21

These chapters present quite the contrast.  Reading both, I couldn’t help but think of those polar opposites– heaven and hell.  Psalm 46– so reassuring.  Judges 21– as if all hell breaks loose.

In Psalm 46, God is our refuge and strength, assuaging fears even when everything seems to be falling apart.  He’s like the river that Jerusalem never had.  Yes, a major spring courses through the city even today, but unlike most ancient cities, there was no river.  There’s something better.  The Lord Himself!

If you’ve been to Jerusalem, you know how steep the streets are and how slippery they become when wet.  We saw many tourists in wheelchairs, wearing slings around their arms!  Had to really watch our step.  So easy to lose our balance, falling down on the hard stone surface.

Not in heaven!  Not with God!  No falling there.  Psalm 46: 10 says this–‘Be still and know that I am God’.  ‘Be still…’ in the original Hebrew means to put your hands at your side.  A defenseless posture.  With nothing to fear, raising our arms to protect ourselves becomes unnecessary.  God will be our ‘refuge and strength’…’our fortress’.  That will be heaven!

Now the contrast with Judges 21 and a few chapters before.  Filled with murder, rape, kidnapping, inhospitality of the worst kind.  Coveting and craving reach epidemic proportions.  Foolish vow-making, promises carelessly broken, everyone doing whatever they want.  To top it all off, they blame God for the mess they’re in!  ‘…the Lord has made a gap in the tribes of Israel'(Judges 21:15).  Easy to blame the Lord when we’re so bloomin’ innocent!  Refusing to look in the mirror of our own sinful lives.

Scripture says that these people ‘had no king’.  No one in authority, especially Yahweh God.  For living in such a hot climate, they were certainly skating on thin ice!  Chaos reigned.  Self was on the throne.  ‘Do Your Own Thing’ bumper stickers behind every oxcart.  If it feels good, do it.  If it doesn’t, do it anyway.  Caution… cast to the wind.

What a contrast with Psalm 46.  Aren’t you glad you’re heaven bound?  I am!  Wish others were as well.   Keep praying for family and friends to come to know Jesus.  For people around the world to be welcomed into His family!

Prayer:  Thank you,  Lord, for the best future anyone could ever have.  All because of Jesus.  Amen.