My Hope is in the Lord

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“And now, Lord, what wait I for? My hope is in thee.”  Psalm 39:7

This verse was written in a time in David’s life when he was facing something few of us will ever face – a son who was out to kill him. Absalom was bitter because his father failed to take action against the crime Amnon committed against his sister Tamar. Certainly, David should have stood up and taken charge in his family dealing with this horrible sin. Like us though, David had his failures. Maybe he had hoped time would heal the situation or that by ignoring it everything would go back to normal. The opposite happened and this problem continued to fester.  What is so encouraging to me is that as David was going through these consequential circumstances he places his hope in God. He realizes his desperate need for God. He sees ever so clearly that he cannot look to himself to resolve his problems. David not only places his hope in God but goes on to acknowledge his sin and to seek deliverance from God.

“Deliver me from all my transgressions: Make me not the reproach of the foolish.” Psalm 39:8 

There is a lesson here for us all! From time to time we find ourselves in situation because of our own failures. We agonize and look for resolutions but come up empty. We must learn to do as David did and to acknowledge that God is our only hope, confess our sin and seek His deliverance. God is always there willing and ready to help the believer who acknowledges his need.

“Hear my prayer, O LORD, And give ear unto my cry; Hold not thy peace at my tears.” Psalm 39:12 

“God is our refuge and strength, A very present help in trouble.” Psalm 46:1

No matter the situation you can always put your hope in God. He will be right there for you!

 

God Gave the Little Boy a Toolbox | by Sheila Kagin

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Like most 2 year olds, Jack can be frustrating at times. He is constantly destroying something or yelling or making messes or hurting his sister. Well, Saturday, after he destroyed a figurine that he was not even supposed to be able to reach in the first place, I began to do some serious thinking. He’s been watching Daddy work on projects lately, and he loves working with tools. He grabs any tool he can get his hands on and tries to use it (including a saw -Yikes!) As I was thinking through his recent behavior I thought, “Maybe he is just bored with what he has and needs more things to challenge his mind. This little boy needs his own toolbox.”

 

So I decided that Monday (yesterday) we would go to the thrift stores. I specifically prayed for a plastic tool set, a wooden tool set, a workbench, and a memory game. I also needed these things to be cheap. I had seen all these these things at Christmas for $20,00, $13.00 and $40.00, but they seemed overpriced and he already had a lot of presents, so I waited. I prayed about it Saturday, Sunday and Monday morning, but in the back of my mind I had this little bit of doubt. I mean, what are the odds of finding all those things at once?

 

As we were getting ready to leave Monday morning we realized, “Today is Martin Luther King Day, so Valley Thrift will be 50% off!!!” It’s crazy shopping, but you can get some great prices. We went to Village discount first, and I found a battery operated toy saw for $.60. We looked around some more, and I found a memory game for $.90. I was about to end my search when an employee came by putting out new items. I looked down on the bottom shelf of her cart and there was a bag of plastic tools! I waited until she came back and asked her if I could have them. She said sure. The bag included 4 screwdrivers, a hammer, a clamp, miscellaneous bolts, nuts and plastic “wood” pieces to screw them into, and a drill press. Cost: $0.90 (store price $15-$20). 

 

Then we went to Valley Thrift. I looked up on the shelf and there was a Bob the Builder workbench! I had Joe find someone to get it down and I looked through the toys. There on the shelf was the exact wooden toolbox I was thinking of for only $1.00 -with a hammer, screwdrivers, nuts, bolts, etc. Joe had gotten the workbench down and it was only $1.00! I even found a hard hat for $.05! The Lord gave me the four exact items I had prayed for at extremely cheap prices! We also found a few other items we needed for less than a dollar a piece, including a Little People car for Sabrina to ride around the house for only $.50!

 

As we were checking out, Joe went up front to look at the big items. There was a double stroller. I’ve been looking for a cheap-but-in-good-shape double stroller since I found out I was pregnant with Sabrina. They are not easy to find! This stroller is a jogger’s stroller (3 wheels), easy to get up and down, easy to maneuver, and looks like it was barely used. I looked it up online when we got home and it costs $169.00. We paid $35.00 for it!!!

 

I was humbled. The Lord said, “O ye of little faith. I gave you the plastic tool set, the wooden tool set, the workbench, and the memory game, and because you doubted me I’m going to through in the stroller just to prove how great I am.” Once again He proved that He supplies all our needs (and wants) according to His riches. I am humbled that even when I’m in doubt, He is faithful and provides what we need and even what we want. At Christmas, He told me to wait, and in His time, He provided the things I specifically asked for, He provided other things we needed, and He provided the stroller which I’ve prayed for off and on for 1 1/2 years. Our Father cares if the sparrow falls, and He cares enough to give a little boy a toolbox. 

Mercy and Truth

I don’t believe that in all of the Bible there are two words that jump out at me more than mercy and truth. They are a wonderful couple. It seems that when you see one you always see the other. Most recently I saw this dynamic duo in Genesis 24:27 where  Abraham’s servant praises God, “Blessed be the Lord God of my Master Abraham, who hath not left me destitute of His mercy and truth: I being in the way the Lord led me to the house of my master’s brethren.” Here are a couple general thoughts about mercy and truth in relation to God’s dealings with us.

  1. If God dealt with us according to truth alone, He could not tolerate us. We do not deserve His favor!
  2. If God dealt with us according to mercy alone, it seems that He would tolerate our sin. He cannot do this.

Praise the Lord that “Mercy and truth are met together…” (Psalm 85:10) and He deals with us accordingly. This is classically exemplified in Romans 6:23. Truth says, “For the wages of sin is death…” Mercy says, “…but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” I encourage you to take a moment today and thank God for His Mercy and Truth in your life.

Complete Satisfaction

What Does This Baby Mean For You?

He should mean complete satisfaction. In order for this to be true for you, Jesus must first mean three things for you.

Deliverance (Matthew 1:21)

Direction (2 Corinthians 5:15) 

Destination (John 14:3)

Click here to listen to the sermon

 

Devotional

Christian Intoxication

I Corinthians 15:34

“Awake to righteousness, and sin not; for some have not the knowledge of God:

I speak this to your shame.”

I remember on evening, while on family vacation, my father took us to see a well known Christian  camp and conference center. We were driving on the roads running through the complex, and it seemed to be a ghost town. We saw no one! When we got back to the entrance, the exit gate was shut and locked. Evidently we were in there too late. This was quite a problem because no one was around. We could not drive around the gate because there was a hill on either side (that did not stop my dad from trying), so as a last ditch effort my dad walked into town and used the pay phone to call the center to have someone come and let us out. Fortunately, he got a hold of someone, and they sent the gatekeeper. While at the pay phone, my dad met a couple in a pickup truck and told them what had happened. They offered to give him a ride back to us. When they returned the woman gave me and all of my brothers hugs and told us that she had missed us and was acting very strangely, like she was our long lost grandmother. Being a child, I didn’t understand why she was acting so strangely. My mom told us after they left that the woman was a bit intoxicated. I will never forget it!

We are all familiar with the effects of alcohol on an individual. Alcohol causes people to not walk, talk and think straight. It is easy to look at a life that is under the control of alcohol and shake your head. It is easy to see the sinfulness of that kind of lifestyle. Yet Christians can become intoxicated spiritually. You say. “What?” Here in our text verse Paul  told the Corinthian believers to “Awake to righteousness…” The word “Awake” means to return from a drunken stupor— a drunken stupor to what? To righteousness. Christians can become intoxicated by carnality. In other words, they can come under the influence and control of carnal things which will cause them to walk, talk and think wrong. God commands us to return to righteousness from a drunken stupor brought on by “drinking” carnality. He further commands us to “…sin not….” The idea is that we are to completely abstain from that which carnally intoxicates us. We allow ourselves to come under the influence of many fleshly pleasures that cause us to be in a spiritual “drunken stupor”. The reason Paul gives for why we must return from this stupor is found in the phrase “…for some have not the knowledge of God…”. There are those who do not know God and the power of the resurrection whom we pass by in our daily life and do not notice because we are under the control of carnality.  We are powerless to share with them the knowledge of God. Paul spoke this to the Corinthian’s shame and to ours as well. What carnal thing “intoxicates” you so that you do not see the need of those around you without the knowledge of God? You do not have to continue on that way. In the words of the hymn writer:

Turn your eyes upon Jesus

Look full in his wonderful face

And the things of earth will grow strangely dim

In the light of His glory and grace.