Showing posts with label Psalms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psalms. Show all posts

GOD IS MY LIGHT

Your word is a lamp to my feet And a light to my path.
Psalm 119:105
What does light do? Illuminate, of course. As we walk in faith, God illuminates our path: His light provides love, direction and protection. But He also illuminates our path so that we can see when we have veered off of it.

As Romans 3:23 informs us (if were were not already aware) we all sin and fall short of the glory of God. Indeed that statement  may seem obvious, but when we give conscious acknowledgement to that fact as individuals, we are more apt to do something about it. If we are going to occasionally sin and (let's be honest: almost consistently) fall short, we should know how to respond appropriately when we do. 

In scripture, even the most beloved of God and celebrated examples of faithfulness sinned and fell short. In 2 Samuel, that person was King David. It was the mistake of his life, an act of lust and cruelty: the murder of man for the possession of his wife. Premeditated murder might not be on conscience, but the emotions that led to it definitely are sometimes. We all have selfish moments, lustful moments, greedy moments and moments of vanity. We all act hastily at times, stubbornly, ignorantly, arrogantly. 

And so sometimes God's light is a revelation of an uglier part of ourselves, not to shame us, but to let us know, and to help us grow. David arranged for the death of a good man named Uriah, whose name means: "God is a light." When we look at the damage we have done with accountability we see ourselves in a different light; we perceive circumstances as they really are, objectively removed from the initial emotions that incited us to cause that damage.

  • (2 Samuel 11:2-6) DAVID SINS AND FALLS SHORT 
And it came to pass in an evening-tide, that David arose from off his bed, and walked upon the roof of the king's house: and from the roof he saw a woman washing herself; and the woman was very beautiful to look upon.
2 Samuel 11:2
He was King. She was beautiful. He wanted her... but she was not his. 

It is reasonable to assume that the sheer power David was blessed with inadvertently caused in him a sense of entitlement.  God had blessed David mightily; he was made the sole leader of a wealthy, powerful and protected kingdom. As the sun set over his kingdom, David stood on his roof and observed all that was, essentially, his. But the woman bathing across the way was, certainly, not. But he was king, and she was beautiful. He wanted her, and so he arranged to make her his.

David ordered his messengers to bring Bathsheba to him, and when she arrived he slept with her. Afterward, she went home and soon discovered that she was pregnant with David's child. She knew that the child could not be her husband Uriah's because he was a soldier and subsequently absent from home and wife. 

When Bathsheba returned to David to tell him of the pregnancy, David ordered his soldiers to bring Uriah to him. Uriah arrived under false-pretenses. David inquired about the current conditions of the war and then, in a deceptive act of charity sent Uriah home to his wife as a temporary reprieve from war. He sent Uriah home with food for a feast and told him to enjoy home, to rest. Undoubtedly, David hoped that Uriah would sleep with his wife and subsequently cover up his own sin: If Bathsheba had been with her husband, her pregnancy could be explained. 

Notice how that initial feeling of lust spiraled into an act of murder. Scripture wants us to understand that emotions are powerful, powerful enough to take control over an undisciplined person. Whether we are merely weak or, like David, feel entitled to certain things, emotions can cause us to make reckless and hasty decisions that result in damage. Since we know that we all sin and all fall short, we know that we will also feel depraved emotions like lust. We will feel greedy and jealous and angry and a whole host of ugly emotions. But our sin can end right there, at the feeling of them, before the acting on them.

Also like David, we are blessed by God. He wants us to have the desires of our hearts, Psalm 37:4. But we must be wise and righteous. If obtaining the desire of our heart directly opposes the word of God in nature, is it truly the desire of our heart or is it the desire of a greed within us? By choosing to take a woman who was not his, David chose to cheat and betray a good and honorable man. He chose to disrupt a marriage and tarnish his position as king. We must consider the ramifications of acting on emotions we have not fully processed and deemed honorable. For there is almost always something we would like to obtain, to be ours. If not a person, a job or a reputation or an opportunity. Therefore we need to be able to discern between when it is reasonable for us to pursue something and when it is not.

  • (2 Samuel 12:7-12) AN HONORABLE MAN 
But David's dishonest plan backfired. A servant informed David that Uriah chose not to go home, and slept at the door of the king's house instead. When David asked Uriah why he had not returned home, Uriah explained that he could not, in good-conscience, return home to comfort, rest, feast and wife while knowing that his comrades were still engaged in war. Uriah was an honorable man, he had been summoned out of the war by David, but did not forget that his fellow-soldiers were still there sleeping in uncomfortable tents and vulnerable on all sides to the threat of enemies. 

David attempted once more. He commanded Uriah to stay another night, to feast and drink. He hoped that Uriah would drink too much, forget his principles, and return home to Bathsheba... but Uriah did not. Again, he slept outside the king's door. Thus David scrambled for a backup plan, and decided on one that was even worse than the first. He arranged for Uriah to sent to the front-lines of the fiercest battle. Uriah was killed. 

David convinced himself that because Uriah died by the hand of an enemy, he could not be responsible for Uriah's death. It is that kind of behavior, cunning delusion, that God's light wakes us up from. David was wrong from the very beginning of this account, but he convinced himself otherwise. And when he realized he was in trouble, he tried to cover up rather than confess.

Maybe David's scramble for damage control is familiar. We cause a spill but instead of acknowledgement, we choose to try to paint over the splotch, place a rug over its mark. Sometimes we even do a good job of convincing ourselves that the spot is not there because then we do not have to admit that we caused it. 

But David had committed his life to God, and God ensured that this spot would not be so callously covered up. This is a somewhat less enjoyable (at least during the process) element of God's light. He helps us to see our whole selves, even the bits we would rather remain in the dark, unacknowledged. Uriah did not sleep with his wife because it would let David "off the hook". But being on the hook is an important part of being committed to God: accountability is required of the righteous. And it is only from that uncomfortable place, hanging from the hook of admitted guilt and regret, that we have any hope of getting off it.

  • (2 Samuel 11:27;12:1-12) THE PARABLE OF REPENTANCE
When David's denial went on too long, God sent Nathan the prophet to make David aware of the gravity of the situation. He did so with a parable. The most accurate way to judge a situation is to view it objectively, God provided a way for David to do so:
“There were two men in one city, one rich and the other poor. The rich man had exceedingly many flocks and herds. But the poor man had nothing, except one little ewe lamb which he had bought and nourished; and it grew up together with him and with his children. It ate of his own food and drank from his own cup and lay in his bosom; and it was like a daughter to him. And a traveler came to the rich man, who refused to take from his own flock and from his own herd to prepare one for the wayfaring man who had come to him; but he took the poor man’s lamb and prepared it for the man who had come to him.”
David was immediately angry... the injustice was clear to him, but the metaphor was not. David was the rich man. Uriah was the poor man. Bathsheba was the lamb. A traveler, a passing emotion of lust, came to David and persuaded him destroy a precious thing. A marriage, an honorable man.

Without prompting, David declared that the rich man deserved death as punishment. He declared that the man needed to repay fourfold for his lack of mercy. He did not yet realize that he was condemning himself, but Nathan made it known. He told David that he was the guilty man and continued with a message from God. God had given David an entire kingdom, right out of the hand of his enemy. He had given David power and prosperity, family and security and would have given even more if only David had asked.

God was angry. He put an end to David's game and put a spotlight on his actions. He called him out for every wrong doing, because even though David ignored them, they were glaringly apparent to God. Indeed under God's light, we cannot escape accountability. But there is mercy in such a situation because our God is merciful when we acknowledge our wrongdoing and repent. Repentance is an admission of guilt, and the admission of guilt causes us to feel shame, acknowledgement of poor behavior. Repentance then is a commitment to change and growth. To have God's mercy, we must repent. Until that point, David had not, and the outlook was bad.

  • (2 Samuel 12:13-25; Psalm 32) ACCOUNTABILITY
Finally David admitted it: I have sinned against the Lord. Immediately God promised to allow David to retain his life, but the child would die. The child would not die as punishment to David, but as a lesson for us. A deceptive lifestyle will not sustain or produce life. Sinful behavior is caustic and causes good and innocent people to suffer. Injustice restricts the righteous from opportunities they should have.

The child came to death and David lost himself. Finally reality shook him, and confronted him and finally David recommitted himself to prayer and worship. It is in that space that we are all able to take instruction from God and perceive ourselves as objectively as will ever be possible (through the eyes and law of God). We probably will not retain what we gained through malicious or selfish means, but we will regain ourselves. We will restore ourselves to righteousness in the light of God as our lamp.

David and Bathsheba conceived again and the baby lived; baby Solomon became another prominent figure in the faith and was living proof of God's mercy and faithfulness to David and to all who commit their lives to Him. What we seek and obtain righteously, we will retain. Justice and righteousness proliferates life, while injustice and unrighteousness cause death.

David was remorseful, though it is mostly absent from this chapter. In Psalm 32, David described the excruciating emotional pain of iniquity. He also describes the absolute joy of God's forgiveness. The Psalm also reminds us to be receptive to God's instruction in order to avoid creating a minefield of sin. 


  • (2 Samuel 12:8) "IF THAT HAD BEEN TOO LITTLE..."
"... and if that had been too little, I would moreover have given unto thee such and such things"
2 Samuel 12:8
Continually remember that as a child of God, you have access to your Father's storehouses of provision. If there is something you desire to have, let God arrange for that thing to come into your life. Deceptive-dealing is not necessary when you have a generous, faithful, capable, willing God. If there is something you want and it is something you should have, God will ensure that you do have it. Do not let base emotions convince you that you need to procure that thing by any means necessary.

If David had felt unfulfilled in any way, a simple conversation with God would have immediately begun to rectify it. The same is true for us. If we catch ourselves feeling ungenerous toward others or tempted to act on sinful emotions like lust, anger, greed or what ever else, we need to immediately bring that feeling to God. His light will help us to dissect it. He will help us to heal the harm we find when we do.



We will inevitably disappoint God at times in our life, accountability and repentance will make the difference in what happens next.

WHOM SAY YE?

When Jesus came into the region of Caesarea Philippi, He asked His disciples, saying, “Who do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?” So they said, “Some say John the Baptist, some Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.” He said to them, “But who do you say that I am?”
Matthew 16:13-15 
An instrumental element of the disciples' training was to witness Jesus encounter and respond to His adversaries. Two religious groups called the Pharisees and Sadducees challenged everything Jesus said and did. Some questions are conscientious in nature, and are welcomed by God. He does not want or expect blind faith; God wants us to choose Him based our understanding and agreement with the principles He stands for. Conscientious questions diligently seek truth. 

But other questions are contentious in nature, seek no truth, but endeavor instead to discredit any other principles than the ones that uphold the person's authority, status or wealth. Understand that the Pharisees and Sadducees hounded Jesus with their, oftentimes nonsensical, disapproval because His authority threatened their ability to retain their own (which was considerable). They had a lot of power and influence... and wealth, and the more people that joined Jesus' righteous  congregation, the more people left their corrupt one. 

It was after one such confrontation that Jesus asked His disciples: Who do men say that I am? Who do you say that I am? Jesus wanted them to be perceptive about the atmosphere around them while also able to discern their own thoughts. At worst Jesus' adversaries declared Him to be a blasphemous fraud (John 10:33-38). At best, they declared Him to be a prophet, rather than an authority made and established by God. And though some admitted that He was at least a prophet, we know from scripture that prophets were not highly regarded (after all, Elijah was sentenced to death, his fellow-prophets gathered and systematically killed, and Jeremiah was threatened, mocked, and imprisoned). 

The point is that there are a lot of opinions in the world about God's existence and character. People will have different motives, barriers and reasons for their beliefs or lack thereof.  Indeed you and the world will often have conflicting declarations about God; therefore Jesus wants you to be able to discern between the two voices: your own and the world's. Because the voice you listen to will propel you through life. He wants you to have your own, fully informed declaration because what you declare will matter and hinder or assist in the course of your life.

  • THE FOOL IN HIS HEART
The fool has said in his heart,
“There is no God.”
They are corrupt,
They have done abominable works,
There is none who does good.
Psalm 14:1 
A portion of the world is agnostic, undecided or unsure about the existence God. Another portion staunchly disbelieve and oppose the philosophy of God; Psalm 14 refers to this portion. Everyone has encountered such a person as described in the first verse of the Psalm: a person who, usually callously, denies the existence of God and uses that presumed-absence for their own corrupt lifestyle.

In fact, the denial of God can prove quite convenient to a selfish and/or deceptive person. For the denial of God is also the denial of an established system of justice and of repercussion as well. In such a world, a person would be free to pursue any desire by any means. There are no limits to their behavior, no need to modify of soften their words. They can ignore the conscious and also their responsibility to humanity. 

Even people who say or believe that they believe in God sometimes act in negligence of God's commandments. When Jesus asked his disciples: whom do you say that I am? He meant: whom do you declare that I am? Because a declaration has depth and commitment attached to it. "Believers" are just as surely breaking God's commandments when they neglect to follow them as non-believers are. So when Jesus says: who do you say that I am? It needs to be a question we can readily, confidently answer because otherwise, we are probably not adhering meticulously enough to what we say we subscribe to.

The Pharisees and Sadducees were supposed-believers in God, but corrupt motivations altered the purpose of their faith and therefore the quality and validity of it as well. Was each member of each group consciously aware of their deviation from pure and righteous faith? Probably not. If we are not careful, we can lose the objectivity, impartiality, humility, and selflessness God's word teaches us to have and retain. Our own motivations can cause us to steadily disengage from genuine, fastidious faith.

When we say that we believe in God, we need to know what precisely it is that we believe about Him. God has established commandments and made promises, He has explained truths and prophesied eventualities. He has made decisions, chosen paths and people, created, destroyed, esteemed, demeaned... He has done and declared so much and we need to know all about all of it in order to truly be able to say who He is. 

Without a comprehensive understanding of who God is, there is foolishness in the heart. For if God is not occupying every space in your heart, you are like this fool spoken of, as there are places in your heart where there is no God.

  • BECAUSE HE HAS HEARD
I love the Lord, because He has heard
My voice and my supplications.
Because He has inclined His ear to me,
Therefore I will call upon Him as long as I live.

The pains of death surrounded me,
And the pangs of Sheol laid hold of me;
I found trouble and sorrow.
Then I called upon the name of the Lord:
“O Lord, I implore You, deliver my soul!”

Gracious is the Lord, and righteous;
Yes, our God is merciful.
The Lord preserves the simple;
I was brought low, and He saved me.
Return to your rest, O my soul,
For the Lord has dealt bountifully with you.

For You have delivered my soul from death,
My eyes from tears,
And my feet from falling.
I will walk before the Lord
In the land of the living.
I believed, therefore I spoke, ...
Psalm 116:1-10 
Contrarily, a steadfast relationship with God results in a life comprised of the same informed faith expressed in Psalm 116. The Psalmist is able to declare their believe in God based on concrete experience with Him. This Psalmist's faith is quality because it is familiar with God who God is.

The Psalmist declared love of God because God listened to Him. In order for God to hear and listen to the Psalmist, the Psalmist must have first spoken and trusted that God would answer. The Psalmist declared trust in God because he was surrounded and captured then freed and delivered by God. In order to be freed and delivered, he must first have called on God and believed in His refuge. He was able to rest in the bounty of blessing... but could not have done so if His faith had not provided an avenue through which those blessings came! He was given life, dried of tears, and upheld in when walking and therefore He believed and spoke of God. What he believed and what he said were in alignment, and of quality, because he knew God, had developed a relationship with Him.

A personal relationship with God is different from the type of faith the Pharisees and Sadducees had. They understood God as the God of Moses, of Abraham and David. They understood Him as the God of commandments and religious traditions, rather the present, continuous spirit existing with us now, even in this exact moment. 

In scripture we have the books of various people: Samuel, Matthew, Timothy, etc. We do not see our own book, with our own name, written in ink within the Bibles pages but we have one. When we endeavor to know God, trust Him and follow Him, we have moments in our own story when He, essentially, enables us to walk on and through water. We have our own experiences of being delivered from fear and enemy. We have our own prayers heard and answered, our own tears dried and bodies upheld. How we live in faith determines what our story says: are we like the people who never called, who never asked, who never sought? Or are we like Abraham and Moses and David who were, like all people, flawed and sometimes fearful but who, like few people, knew Who to trust with those things?

You see, someone who knows God knows that Moses was not the only one whose sea was split. Joseph was not the only one freed from prison. Shadrach, Mehsach and Abednego were not the only ones to survive a fire. It was not only that one woman who met Jesus by the well. And therefore when that someone-who-truly-knows-God is asked by Jesus: whom do you say I am? They have a definite answer corroborated by actual, tangible experience.

  • KEYS OF THE KINGDOM
Simon Peter answered and said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” Jesus answered and said to him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father who is in heaven.
Matthew 16:16-17
Simon Peter answered and according to Jesus, correctly and authentically. Simon Peter did not just say the correct answer. His genuine, fastidious faith caused God to reveal that correct answer in his heart. He knew who God was not because it was taught but because it was earned, garnered steadily through a committed relationship with Him.
And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. And I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.”
Matthew 16:18-19 
When you know God you receive the keys to His kingdom... the refuge, the haven, the fortress, the storehouses of blessing. Because by endeavoring to know God, you have committed yourself to love and righteousness.
Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.
1 John 4:7-8 
If you know God, He knows it is because you tailored your lifestyle to His principles. If you tailored your life to His principles, you determined yourself to evermore become kind and generous, patient and merciful, observant and humble, just and compassionate, studious in His word and obedient to His will. And if you lived a life so closely connected with Him, He is pleased to know you as well and to give you the kingdom:
Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.
Luke 12:32


Jesus wanted to disciples to be aware of their own heart's voice so that they could disentangle it from the world. Amid the opinions, rumors, disagreements and declarations around you, endeavor to have and live your own. Jesus' asks, 'Whom do you say that I am?' we who know Him say, 'you're the One, Christ, the Son of God, who met me by the well.'

HONEY ISLAND

Ask yourself: In what way, today, have I invited God to speak to me? At what point have I not just said but behaved as though I am listening? A crucial element of our faith is to be receptive to God. If, like Paul, you found yourself shipwrecked on a small island in the middle of a stormy sea, would you have the faith to discover hope and purpose in the situation?

It is easy to answer yes in the metaphorical sense. But when life leaves us stranded in a situation we did not foresee and do not want to be in, hope and purpose are usually lost to us. The shipwrecked crew in Acts 28 had just personally experienced the grace and power of God that resulted in the retention of their lives. A little sea-beaten but alive in faith and fresh off of the rescue, God was able to exemplify why, out of any island, the one they had come to was honey island.

  • HONEY ISLAND
Paul and company discovered themselves to be preserved and on new land... albeit shipwrecked, on an island called Melita, "honey". So often is that the result of our fight in faith, feeling shipwrecked in a new place. We wrestle to subdue the parts within and around us that are not in alignment with God's word and find ourselves on new, unfamiliar ground. But the truth is: that ground is holy, that ground is honey.

In Psalm 119:30 God's word is described as sweet as honey; and throughout the Bible, honey is a representation of faith and health, and the wisdom and love of God. And so to arrive on honey island after a literal and spiritual battle is to arrive into blessing. Honey island is that haven faith brought you to just before you lost or gave up completely. Honey island is the place where God is most efficiently able to heal and restore you, because you have finally arrived in a place where you invite Him to do so. 

The men aboard the ship with Paul had just submitted themselves to God's will. Before God would restore them to voyage, they needed time with Him. To bask in His love and instruction, to become strong enough to retain their faith once restored to their original purposes. From this we can understand how important it is to have the special, isolated time with God. He won't simply send us back out into the world on flimsy faith. We need to build the relationship, experience life from His perspective and observe what is is to operate in accordance with His will. 

  • NO LITTLE KINDNESS 
Unforeseen arrivals in an unknown land, Paul and the crew could fully expect not to be welcomed by the island's inhabitants. The opposite happened: all surviving men of the shipwreck were met with extreme kindness and care. They were cold and wet and without bribe or even request were warmed with fire. 

The process of building strength, even spiritual strength, requires time. A new commitment, even a wholehearted one, is often weak and in need of coddling. We have to build our relationship with God. Trust is not an on/off switch. Love is not a well. We can't simply fall into it and remain. Each is a voyage, a process. And thus it is only through walking that we begin to build and grow those things.

What we can expect is that will provide the fire. Cold and wet or weak as we may be, God supports us in that time. New in faith (or in the renewing of faith or a new area of faith) we are seen by God as a fawn or hatching. A small thing in need of support and nourishment. That is the word and will of God. So dependent on it, we must ask ourselves if we have been receptive to it. God is providing, are we receiving? 

  • BECAUSE OF THE HEAT
Faith formed in our lives is a fire. Faith ignites inspiration and courage within it. It ignites our determination and passion and purpose. And when we are fired up in such things, it makes sense that the injustices we begin to contend with will bite. 

Paul did a good thing. No matter where he was: on the road; in a prison; or shipwrecked on a island, Paul brought people to God. It was the work and purpose of his life. As the fire grew hotter and began to warm the people around it, a venomous viper came out and bit Paul in the hand. The bite has spiritual implications. 

In the fight for justice we will meet resistance. In the preaching of scripture we will face rejection and even hostility. And that rejection and hostility will always intend to stop our work. To bite our hand, to ultimately thwart our purpose. And that viper, in whatever form it comes in, will  have the power to do so... if we have not been receptive to God. 

The inhabitants of the island were certain that Paul would die. A bite from such a danger could not be survived. And they were right. It could not be survived... without God. There is so much that we cannot do and cannot survive if we are not accessing, through faith, the power and strength of God. But Paul had been receptive to God; he was accessing those holy storehouses and therefore he was impervious to the bite.

God wants us to understand that when we are doing the work of the Kingdom of God we may be confronted by enemies but will never be subdued by them. When we are plugged into faith, we have the nourishment to persevere through derailment. God's protection over us will astound others: the islanders thought Paul a supernatural being because of he survived.

But as God's children, we know the truth. God has told us:Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you, James 4:7. As Paul did, shake the enemies off and continue to preserve in spiritual purpose: in loving others, in providing for family, in assisting strangers and supporting the weak. 

There is an insufficient number of people working such causes! Matthew 9:35-38 tells us so:
Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness. When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field.”
God will protect the laborers because they are few and desperately needed. Those who have welcomed the power and love of God into theirs lives are best able to project it into the lives of others. God's purpose has always been to perpetuate the kingdom, to gather its members and care for them. When we join in that work, our survival is not just crucial but also arranged by God. And when we do eventually come to an end here, as all on earth must do, we will have provided many others with their start. We need not fear the bite of the viper.

  • YE ARE GODS 
The islanders were so amazed by Paul's survival that they thought him a god. In John 10:34-35, Jesus referred to God's children as gods. Not because of any power we have of our own. Not because we are better or smarter or more valued but because we have welcomed the power of God into our lives, our hands, our efforts. Our impact on the world is godly because it is done by God through us. Without His wisdom, strength and courage we would fail. 

Paul, the other apostles and disciples were able to heal in immediate and visible ways. The way we heal now is a little different. The same God is able to conquer the same illnesses but spirituality has become more complex. We are stronger now, made able to thrive despite illness. The healing we receive now is of the spirit. We are revived, restored to life. Sometimes we heal in physical ways, like Paul healed the father of Publius in this chapter, and sometimes we do not. But either way, we are a message. A strength, meant to exemplify to others the power of the Spirit of God with us.

Honey island now, is a personal and spiritual experience. We are healed of everything we bring to God, and then are abundantly supplied for our journey back into the world to live, preach with our lives of the honey that is God's word and love.
  • BOUND FOR HOPE
The machinations of men, the enemies of Paul, would have made his journey to Rome entirely nonsensical. Paul was innocent and certainly not worthy of death. They had no truthful claims against him. But because Paul was an agent of God's will, there was purpose in the journey.

Paul explained "it is for the hope of Israel that I am bound with this chain, (Acts 28:20)" God will ensure there is purpose in every day that we live for Him. We need only to be receptive to what instructions He has for us each day. Broadly, we are meant to love others, uphold justice, and support the weak. What that looks like in detail is particular to the individual. 

Take heart that whatever chain you bear, God use it to benefit you and others and then will break it. 1 Peter 5:10 states:
But may the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish, strengthen, and settle you.
We must have and endure the journey of the struggle in order to build the spiritual muscle to come out of it stronger. Wiser. More perceptive and objective and just and compassionate. That time of suffering is packed with nutrients we need to grow in faith, and strength and character. It is packed with the seeds we need to grow great things. That time prepares us to move the mountains God has said we would move.




Although they feel real, the chains in our lives are like play handcuffs. They are temporary, removable and God has the key. To unlock them, we need only to listen to and trust and follow Him to where the key is kept. And in the meantime we must live as Paul lived:
Then Paul dwelt two whole years in his own rented house, and received all who came to him, preaching the kingdom of God and teaching the things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ with all confidence, no one forbidding him.
We must live quite undeterred in our mission to perpetuate God's love and receive it also for ourselves. The journey for Paul could  have been ridiculous and a waste of time. It could have been a depressant and an end. Instead Paul kept His eyes on God, his life on track, and his faith forward. His life resulted in blessing.

HE IS THE HOUSE

This is a sermon about David, but this story really begins much before David's birth. Even before his parent's or grandparent's births. God called forth a family out of the earth, out of slavery, and then out of the wilderness in order to lead them and their posterity, steadily, into His kingdom. That journey takes place throughout the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Numbers, Judges and Joshua. All before David existed, but crucial to his story; because David would represent the pinnacle of all of it. 

The tribes of Israel, (that is, the people who had made a commitment to be God's people in life and law), finally arrived in a land they could call their own. Blood, sea water and prayers had brought them to a home. What made their place a home was the King that precipitated it and presided over it: God. Yet the people did not so attribute their new place to their God. They wanted a king, lowercase. They wanted a man to preside over their territory, despite dire and specific warnings against it (1 Samuel 8:10-18).

Thus began the reign of a man named Saul. Saul's reign began well enough, but very quickly, he began to descend into corruption and paranoia, to injustice and outright lawlessness. God's solution to the problem was David. A young boy, the youngest son of a man named Jesse. David, a little shepherd with a big heart for God. A humble human with a courageous spirit. 

God chose David as Saul's predecessor. David quickly evidenced why: deep faith in God allowed him to slay his peoples' fiercest enemy against all odds. David then grew into a successful soldier; so successful that he garnered the attention of all the people. They loved David so much that Saul begin to hate him. 

Saul clung greedily to the throne. He desperately endeavored to kill David. But Saul's position on the throne was only precarious because he had made it so. It was his own unrighteous action that caused God to seek another, someone who would not simply obey God's instruction, but someone who would enjoy God's instruction. It was a requirement for the position. For God's people could only be properly led if led in accordance with God's will. And someone who did not love God's will, would not choose it as their path. Saul did not love it, but David did. Saul noticed that and caused David's life to spiral down into a frenzy. 

David's life became tumultuous: called forth from his childhood home, David went from battlefield, to battlefield; to the king's house. From the king's house, David went from hiding place to hiding place; to enemy territory. He had no obviously linear path. He lived in a constant state of fear and flight. Except for his faith, he had no security; but his faith, his God was the one constant. God was the core of security beneath all of the tumult surrounding David. 


  • PLEA FROM THE WILDERNESS 
Some of the best Psalms were written by David during this time of extreme duress. Each verse narrates David's emotional journey from fear, to trust, to reassurance. In essence: I am scared, but I trust you, and have good reason to, as you have saved me before. Psalm 53 is an example of a Psalm written by David while he feared for his life, homeless from the wilderness. Let's break it down with that sentence:

I am scared . . .
Save me, O God, by Your name,
And vindicate me by Your strength.
Hear my prayer, O God;
Give ear to the words of my mouth.
For strangers have risen up against me,
And oppressors have sought after my life;
They have not set God before them. 
. . . but I trust you,
Behold, God is my helper;
The Lord is with those who uphold my life.
He will repay my enemies for their evil.
Cut them off in Your truth. 
. . . and have good reason to,
I will freely sacrifice to You;
I will praise Your name, O Lord, for it is good.
 . . . as you have saved me before.
For He has delivered me out of all trouble;
And my eye has seen its desire upon my enemies.
David began the Psalm with fear. He communicated to God his desperate situation and the character of his enemies. Likely, none of us are praying to God from a cave over fear of our enemies. But, metaphorically, we have caves and enemies of our own. We too life in fear and flight and homelessness. From David, with scripture, we know how to pray such situations into hopeful coherency. We  take inventory of our fears and enemies and we pray them into God's hands. Finally we trust, because God has proven trustworthy; moreover, God has proven capable. Such a prayer reminds us of the times we have been in similar, seemingly-impossible situations and simultaneously reminds us that we are no longer in them. God moved us from the previous seemingly immovable state and can do so again.


The ability to trust is not something that can be learned then mastered. Trust is a constant effort that, at best, is more and more easily applied when it is needed. David moved from place to place with no assurance except for the same promises, on the same pages, from God that we are reading now. And though his situation seemed uncertain and his circumstances volatile, God kept David safe and fed and positioned precisely. God ensured that David always had the upper hand; despite Saul's organized pursuit of David, David was the one with the opportunity every time Saul was near.

The reason was because David clung to his faith, communicated through prayed and committed to God. Three actions often rejected and even sneered at by much of the world, rescue God's children every day. 



  • WHO AM I AND WHAT IS MY HOUSE?

Eventually, Saul died and David became king. And he was a king, a man, after God's own heart. David remained aware and grateful for God's presence and action in his life. His busy life as a soldier past, David committed his life to honoring God. He wanted to build a house for God.

But God explained that a house was not necessary for him. He was, and is, always, where His faithful children are. God never needed a house. He never needed to be settled. For God has been and is The House. We are the settlers, and He is the land. Indeed, God reiterated, he did not need a house and did not ask for one. Instead, God committed to building a house for them. For us

David was stunned with amazed humility. God, who had already given so much, vowed to give more rather than receive. The news was delivered through the prophet Nathan, from God to David: the Lord tells you that He will make you a house. God vowed to give His people a place, to plant them in it and to secure them in it. To grow, to thrive, to last. To rest. And that place is His kingdom. He is The House. No matter where we are, or what circumstances befall our lives, He will make us a house. 

As the Lord did for David, so will he do for all of His children who love Him; for all of His children who make their own variations of the same prayer David prayed in Psalm 53: I am scared, but I trust you, and have good reason to, as you have saved me before. The same fulfillment of promise is promised and fulfilled by God to us right now. He will make us a house. 

God's goodness is so absolute that each time we receive it, we are stunned by the magnitude of His generosity. He gives so much; He fills our cup, and as it spills over we wonder how He could love us so much. That love, that relationship is built over time spent with him, praying to him, trusting in him, from the wildernesses, from caves, in the trust and hope that He will make us a house.


  • ABIDE IN ME 
And while that house is being made, we have been given Jesus, who has invited us to abide in Him. Because it is not always easy to wait with trust. God has given us, through Jesus and the Holy Spirit, a space to abide in peace. The assurances of Jesus are alive and proffered, we need only to remember to claim them.

God is not looking for monarchs anymore, Jesus has been established in that position now and forevermore. But God is still in the business of establishing His children. He is still a protector. He is still constructing safe places for His children to grow, thrive, last and rest. During the development, He has provided shelter, direction and instruction:

Shelter, John 15:7
If you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you.



Direction, Matthew 6:33-34
But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you. 

 Instruction, Matthew 6:34 
Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble.

And He also provided reassurance, for the times when we are feeling homeless, hopeless, or fearful.

Reassurance, Matthew 28:20
"... and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” 



Everything David lost or lacked was given back or created by God. David's life, once devoid of so much was filled to bursting by God with shelter safety, rest, redemption, establishment, purpose, family, love... and so much more. Abide in God, for He is The House. He knows what you need (Matthew 6:8) and it is His great pleasure to give it (Luke 12:32).

END OF THE EARTH

Psalm 61
Hear my cry, O God;
Attend to my prayer.
From the end of the earth I will cry to You,
When my heart is overwhelmed;
Lead me to the rock that is higher than I.
Every person reaches a point in life, in relationship or in situation where they feel overwhelmed. Whatever it is that leads us to that emotional place, described by David as the end of the earth, we have all seen the view from that edge. We have all surveyed from that place, the landscape that led us there. 

In that place, there are two things we need first and foremost: love and hope. But that place is a barren land, and even the whole rest of the earth can seem unable to provide what we need. Like David, in that place we have a desperate cry and an overwhelmed heart. Yet like David, we must also have a prayer. Because like David, we have a God who will hear the cry and will attend to the heart.

Father lead us to You, the rock that is higher than the place that feels to us like end of the earth. For we need His stability and His perspective in order to persevere. We need His love to lead us and to restore hope in the empty place.

For You have been a shelter for me,
A strong tower from the enemy.
God has drawn us into His shelter before, and He will always do so. He is a strong tower from which we escape and view the battle field. With Him we strategize a plan of action from a safe place. In His fortress, we have access to His weapons-room and we arm ourselves with the whole arsenal, the entire spiritual armor.
Ephesians 6:14-17
Stand therefore, having girded your waist with truth, having put on the breastplate of righteousness, and having shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all, taking the shield of faith with which you will be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one. And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God;
Essentially, Ephesians 6 explains further what Matthew 6:33 teaches: to seek the kingdom above all things and to let God take care of the the rest. The kingdom of God is our shelter and strong tower. 

I will abide in Your tabernacle forever;
I will trust in the shelter of Your wings.
 David pledged to remain in that place... not the barren land, not the end of the earth but in the kingdom. In the tabernacle, the place of God forever. We must make a steadfast commitment, a dogged commitment to remaining in the house of the Lord. Fear will call to us from the base of the tower but will we descend? Like David, we find ourselves walking down the steps as it calls our name but even as we descend we must call out to God to redirect our steps. We constantly need Him to turn us around, to help us climb back into His haven.

Because as we step down it gets darker and we become more overwhelmed... but every place our cry is heard by God. His light penetrates every darkness. We were meant to see the dawn, each day, from the top of the tower and so it is to that place He always leads. Symbolized by the word "wings," we know that God uses His own body to protect us; we are that important to Him.

For You, O God, have heard my vows;
You have given me the heritage of those who fear Your name.
David built a relationship founded on truth with God. No matter where we are in that constructive process, we will continually learn that God is faithful. To those who make a commitment to God, there is a grand covenant to inherit. A holy home and the deepest love. The most abundant provision and spiritual sustenance.

You will prolong the king’s life,
His years as many generations.
He shall abide before God forever.
Oh, prepare mercy and truth, which may preserve him!
Our relationship with God reminds us, while we stand on that emotional end of the earth, that this life, juxtaposed our eternal life, is able to be persevered. The perspective reminds us that if God can wield the universe, an eternity, He certainly has power and plan for this life. The undercurrent of His every plan is love and provision for His children. That knowledge helps us to see our temporary lack as space He has already planned to fill. Weight He has already reached out to carry. Fear He has already abated. 

Pray for preservation. Latch onto God's mercy and truth, they will pull us through any muck; they will clean us off every time.

So I will sing praise to Your name forever,
That I may daily perform my vows.
Our praise of God is fulfilling in a way nothing else ever could be. From the standpoint of worship, we diminish fear and anxiety. We mute the voice of our enemy, within or without, and we void the burden of present moment. Worship brings us to the doorstep of the kingdom, and our voice rings its bell. With our worship we pray to be let inside and the door is always opened.

Because in worship we are heart to heart with God. When we worship from a broken place, especially, something miraculous happens: as we observe God's strength, God absorbs our weakness. 

FITTING OUT THE SHIP

"Fitting out" a ship means putting in everything a ship needs, both to carry passengers and to power the vessel." Stephanie Sabol  
The phrase "fitting out the ship" has a spiritual application. All of the work God does for and within you, is meant to provide you with everything you need, both to carry others and to power you, a vessel for the Holy Spirit. For waters of the world are turbulent, and only a skilled navigator and fitted ship can chart them.

The process through which God prepares, stocks, and powers you is less affectionately known as discipline. Discipline is something we naturally resist. Discipline forces us to bend against our will, decide against our preferences, and push beyond our limits. During its process, discipline feels more like punishment than benefit. Yet discipline, strenuous and unpleasant though it is, is a process for which we should be grateful; Hebrews 12:5-6Proverbs 3:11-12 explain:
"... do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when reproved by Him. For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every child whom he receives."
If we are to be "fitted out" or, disciplined, by God, we should understand how, why and the way to endure (perhaps even appreciate) the process. 


THE SHIP
Every person is a vessel; mind and limbs and entire body work to exert an individual's will in the world. The same is true for a child of God, but there is an emphatic tweak: our mind and limbs and entire body work to exert God's will in the world. We abandon our own, or at least, we try to as, throughout our lives, we submit further to His will. We do so because we trust His above our own. We trust His foresight, we have confidence in His power, and we believe in His purposes over anyone else's. 

But if we are truly going to be vessels of the Holy spirit, ships navigating the waters of the world according to His purposes, we need to be built spiritually robust. Just as it would be unpleasant to be hammered, carved and sanded, so can it be unpleasant to be lectured, thwarted, or made to fail.

If God did not love us, He would leave us to our own devices. The end of humanity would be a quick and cruel process done to itself. But He does love us, very much, and if He is to yield the "peaceful fruit of righteousness (Hebrews 11:11)" within us we have to be disciplined. You will recognize discipline by this taste: humble pie. You will recognize discipline by this emotion: shame. You will recognize discipline by this outcome: failure.

None of us like to relive the moments when we were humbled, ashamed, or defeated. But God exploits those moments. He makes full use of them, using our pain and frustration as a site to be surveyed, analyzed, dug into. In such emotionally intense, raw states it is easiest to see the connections between cause and effect, action and reaction and most of all: the futility of living for selfish purposes. 

Once we learn how the wrong motivations lead to the wrong decisions and how the wrong decisions lead to the wrong outcomes, it is easier to release our selfish purposes. And sometimes, when we actually do receive the outcome we thought we wanted, we realize it is not what we should have wanted at all. We realize that it does not provide the joy or even contentedness we thought it would. When that happens, it's easier to grab onto the truth that "your Father knows what you need" (Matthew 6:8)" and that maybe you really don't.

That release (of selfish purposes) and that grab (onto truth) are crucial to the ships form, to your form. They are the difference between sinking and staying afloat. 

THE WATERS
In scripture, tribulation is often symbolized by water:
  • Psalm 69:1-2 Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck. I sink in the miry depths, where there is no foothold. I have come into the deep waters; the floods engulf me.
  • Isaiah 43:2 When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you.
  • Lamentations 3:54 the waters closed over my head, and I thought I was about to perish.
  • Psalm 18:16-17 He reached down from on high and took hold of me; he drew me out of deep waters. He rescued me from my powerful enemy, from my foes, who were too strong for me.

Your relationship with God, your willingness to submit to His discipline, prepares you for the plight of those deep and turbulent waters. If we are to be vessels of the Holy spirit, it simply will not due for us to give up, give in, get angry, or go astray. But without practice, we will give up. Without the process of building strength, you will give in. Without being singed by the flames of anger, we will burn from anger. Without the proper mooring to the philosophy of God, we will go astray.

We have to experience those things in order to extract their essential oils, the elements of them that make us strong and wise in faith, selfless in body and soul. But it requires discipline to utilize those moments; because when you are broken or ashamed, you are reluctant to submit yourself to constructive criticism or to consider consequence a valuable lesson. Because although water gives us life, we are not exactly cognizant or grateful for that as it rushes toward us or threatens to rise above our heads.

You are a ship because you are in the waters; and if you are a ship in the waters, you need to be fitted out. Otherwise, your tribulation will sink you. In character. In spirit. In life. No matter who you are, more than once in your life a wave will go over your head and send you crashing down. That moment will either be an end or a beginning: your demise, or your first day of training.

THE CARGO
It is through our trials that we become stocked with the cargo we need in order to be properly fitted out. Through trials, God provides opportunity to build spiritual muscle, the true strength that is: patience and endurance, courage, character and hope. The most important cargo a ship could carry; the products that persevere us through the waters.

Trials: some are different, many are the same, though caused by different circumstances for each individual. Our trials are the things we have to either cope with or surrender to, the happen within us: our insecurities, our losses, loneliness, sadness and fear. Our temper our greed, our temptation, pride and anxiety. But the weariness, the fainthearted-ness they birth within us, are conquerable.

The loneliness and loss teach us to value people not things, to nourish them and host them well when they come; to build attentive and empathetic relationships. The fear gives us opportunity to learn what we care about enough to choose courage. The sadness encourages us to explore for reprieve from sorrow. The anxiety causes us to inquire of peace and its attainability. The temptation teaches us that we are leashed until we deny it enough to set ourselves free. The insecurity causes us to question the context of our culture and to make corrections. All of those things could snuff us out, but instead let them light a fire. Disciplining ourselves to re-purpose our trial's power in our lives helps us to build the cargo we need to survive any storm that brews in the waters. 

We conquer those sea beasts by remembering that as a child of God, there is hope. There is breakthrough. There is purpose. We conquer our trials by remembering that endings are beginnings, if we pray them to be. And that is the most precious cargo of all: faith. 




We are ships in the sea, in the world, but in heaven we are God's cargo and He protects us with His life. He prepares us with every skill and piece of wisdom He has. We are made able navigate the choppy waters because we have been supplied with the necessary elements to do so.

Romans 3:3-4 tells us to "glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope." Paul told us to, as children of God, notice a storm brewing on the sea and glory in it. He told us to strengthen our legs, lift up our hands, and to walk straightforward. He wanted us to realize that the love and strength of God within us is more than enough to see a storm and strengthen, as spiritual discipline taught us to do. To be ready, to be brave. Every storm is a chance to be charted; and as a fitted out ship, you can chart it. Trust the process of discipline because each stage produces a new product, a more refined you.



Someone else might see a storm on the horizon and fall. Someone else might find themselves in the midst of a storm and fail. But as a child of God, see a storm and resolve to fight. You've been fitted for the fight.

FOR COMFORT

In life, fear will work to invade atmospheres of peace. Anticipate its attempted intrusion and let it at the door meet full force conviction. The following are a selection of verses in scripture that help us to do just that: to dismantle fear's power and dissipate fear's presence with the conviction that our God is stronger, wiser, and more able than any foreboding thing, person or situation. 

While each of the following help us to restore peace, their greatest impact is made when they are deeply founded in faith. The more time we spend deep in scripture, in prayer and communication with God, the more powerfully we are able to dispel fear. The more faith we give God to work with, the more readily and systematically do we disassemble the machination of fear. 

If read chronologically, the Bible is essentially a tracking of mess to order. Through the lives of Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, Jesus and so many others, we can see God working arduously, skillfully within details to ensure a specific outcome. Revelation 21, all things made new; no fear, no tear, no death, no sorrow, no pain. Scripture is an example of how our God is able to work all things for good despite close and persistent threat. From an eternal perspective, lifelong perspective and day-to-day perspective God rescues us and solves our problems. Fight the panic and hopelessness of fear with the love letter God wrote specifically for you. 


  • Matthew 6:33 But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.
God understands that our responsibilities accumulate here; there is so much we have to do and be to have a full life. In response to that, He teaches us to swap the burden of those responsibilities for this one opportunity: seek God. The sixth chapter of Matthew encourages us to pursue our relationship with God, for while we do, He will take care of everything else. 

God is able to wield and forge and arrange the details of our lives to culminate in the growth and betterment of our life and character. The more pieces we put into His hands with faith in His skill, the more comprehensively He is able to sculpt our lives.

  • 2 Corinthians 5:7 For we walk by faith, not by sight.
Fear will fight faith: can God handle it? Will God handle it? And if so, how? Fear is concerned about the journey but faith is secure in God's path. Faith is stalwart in the belief that He can and He will so efficiently that the how is irrelevant. God calls us to seek Him with our whole heart and whole soul; He understands that if we do give our entire attention to Him, we will need Him to take care of what is  unseen in our periphery and ahead in our path. 

  • Acts 2:21 And it shall come to pass that whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.
Quite simply, we do not need to fear because when we vocalize our distress, He rescues. In the Old Testament, Jehoshaphat is seconds and dozen spears away from death but because he used his last seconds to call to God, he was saved. The situation was literal for Jehoshaphat (see 2 Chronicles 17), but for us it is often metaphorical. Fear is oppresses, stifles, and pervades but use those last seconds before it closes in completely to call to God. It has been declared that He will answer and that He will save. 

  • Ephesians 2:10 For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
Find a haven in the fact that God has purpose for you, purpose He established in advance. He is intentional with your life when you allow Him to position His will within it. God has plans for you to do good work, not to sink or fail. Would God prepare failure or destitution for you in advance? No, that would not require planning. If that were His plan, He never would have even introduced Himself to us. He would have just let us flail about. Remember that God has made plans to craft your life for good


  • Romans 8:28 And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.
God is really talented. He is the original abstract-artist. He compiles unlikely materials and welds them into a masterpiece. From our perspective, our life might look like a pile of unusable, non-valuable junk. But from God's perspective, our life is a challenge He has already artistically mastered; to Him, our life is a pile of materials that only He can see the connections in. In desperate situations, when the outcome looks bleak, trust that God's artistry is more advanced than our limited view. 

  • Matthew 6:8 Therefore do not be like them. For your Father knows the things you have need of before you ask Him.
Speaking of our limited view, Jesus stated frankly that God knows what we need better than we do, before we do. It's like driving only to suddenly find that the bridge is closed! We panic for an alternate route! But God knew that bridge was closed before we even buckled our seat-belt and planned accordingly, which is why it is so imperative that we have submitted ourselves to His plan! 

Jesus did not want us to be like the rest of the panicked world because as children of God, we have already been provided for. God has planned our course and therefore He has already accounted for it's turns and divots and barriers. Before we realize them and before we ask for help through them, He already has a plan through them. He will lead you forward, usually incrementally, at a pace that requires faith. He will deliver you directly into the provision you require. 

God knows what we need; He is an informed and attentive Father. He is fully prepared to fill our biological, emotional, and spiritual needs. He is fully prepared to compensate for our inadequacy, and supplement our deficiency, in friendship, relationship, profession and whatever else. If with live our lives with righteous intent, God will provide.

  • Romans 8:26 Likewise the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
God knows what we need... and better than we do. Moreover, He emphatically pursues and creates and intercedes to ensure that we get it! God's wisdom is able to discern between what we think we want and what we actually need. In moments of fear, trust that God is interceding on your behalf. He knows what prayer will rescue you from your fear and utters it on your behalf. He speaks your rescue into the universe and into existence. 

We might think a certain circumstance would rescue us from a fearsome outcome; it would cause us to pray for the wrong thing. How blessed is it for us that God bats those nonconstructive thoughts away and replaces them with constructive action?

  • Isaiah 43:1-3
But now, thus says the Lord, who created you, O Jacob,
And He who formed you, O Israel:
“Fear not, for I have redeemed you;
I have called you by your name;
You are Mine. 
When you pass through the waters, I will be with you;
And through the rivers, they shall not overflow you.
When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned,
Nor shall the flame scorch you. 
For I am the Lord your God,
The Holy One of Israel, your Savior;

We have been claimed by God. God will take care of what belongs to Him; He has promised to accompany us through our journey, its difficulty and its joy. He has declared Himself our savior. He chose the word savior because of our tendency to need saving! 

Sometimes humans adopt animals without understanding (or committing to) the responsibility of pet ownership. But God knew what the adoption of humanity would require and He committed to it. We are an accident-prone bunch. We need constant saving and so God became our savior. We have been adopted by God, He is going to take care of His family. 

But, Father cannot help us if we have run away from home. In time of fear (and also joy) return home to be provided for, to be saved.

  • Jeremiah 29:11-12 For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon Me and go and pray to Me, and I will listen to you.
God's intentions for our lives are pure. He designs a future we can look forward to. He takes our prayer into account; His blessings are tailored specifically to who we are as individuals. 

  • Luke 12:32 Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.
God delights in witnessing our joy. He delights in providing our joy. The life He plans for us is filled with people and circumstances that were planned by Him to make us feel safe and happy. In this verse, God affectionately soothes our fear. Take a deep breathe of hope and love, little flock, it gives your Father joy to shower you and protect you with the power and provision of His kingdom. 

The term of endearment is not random: God is our shepherd. We are His little flock of sheep. We are inherently naive and vulnerable (as well as beautiful and kind) and He loves us for our delicacy. He protects it at all costs. 


  • Matthew 10:29-31 Are not two sparrows sold for a copper coin? And not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Do not fear therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows.
We can only truly bask in the promise of God's provision and protection if we feel eligible for it. Good news! Jesus told us how precious we are to God, how precisely we are loved. We are valuable to Him, worth the effort we require. He knows every minute and intricate detail about us not because He has to but because we wants to. 

God loves all of His creations, for example: the tiny sparrows in the trees. God has designed a planet to sustain them, too, has He not? The environment He created supports their provision and protection. God wants us to know that if He did it for the sparrows, He will certainly do it for us. 

  • Psalm 116:1-11
I love the Lord, because He has heard
My voice and my supplications.
Because He has inclined His ear to me,
Therefore I will call upon Him as long as I live.

The pains of death surrounded me,
And the pangs of Sheol laid hold of me;
I found trouble and sorrow.
Then I called upon the name of the Lord:
“O Lord, I implore You, deliver my soul!”

Gracious is the Lord, and righteous;
Yes, our God is merciful.
The Lord preserves the simple;
I was brought low, and He saved me.
Return to your rest, O my soul,
For the Lord has dealt bountifully with you.

For You have delivered my soul from death,
My eyes from tears,
And my feet from falling.
I will walk before the Lord
In the land of the living.
I believed, therefore I spoke,
“I am greatly afflicted.”
I said in my haste, “All men are liars.”
Take courage from this psalmists relationship with God. From a hopeless situation, God restored. A desperate cry, God heard and answered. From trouble and sorrow God saved. From the lowest point, God raised. The psalmist had no one in the world to trust but had God and He was more than enough. 

God dealt bountifully with the psalmist's soul. God does not flippantly toss scraps. He blesses abundantly, intentionally. He rescues triumphantly. He loves emphatically. With conviction dismiss fear and allow yourself to be embraced by the perfect love of God.

  • 2 Chronicles 20:12 For we have no power against this great multitude that is coming against us; nor do we know what to do, but our eyes are upon You.”
Jehoshaphat was surrounded. Out-manned. Over powered. Out-witted. In that moment of complete fear, he fixed his eyes on God. Though the moment sounds panicked, Jehoshaphat solemnly relied solely on his faith. When we lose our chance, our weapon, our hope and even the will to fight, we must finally fix our eyes on God. 

Sometimes it is only when we realize and accept our inability that we see the benefit of trusting God. God's strength and ability begins working for us the exact moment it is activated by our faith. Jehoshaphat knew that from God's perspective a way could be made. Surrender, never to your enemies but always to God. Put your weapons down and allow Him to become your defense. 

  • 2 Chronicles 16:9 For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is loyal to Him.
God wants us to feel secure in His qualifications for our rescue and defense:

His omnipresence is vigilant, fastidious and alert.
    • Nothing escapes His notice. His children are so valuable to Him that is present everywhere to support them.
His omnipotence is powerful, unmatched and undeterred.
    • No force is able to contend with Him; He wins with ease. 
His omniscience is complete.
    • He owns all wisdom, all knowledge, all reason, all logic, all science, all sides, all forms; whatever it is, He has both created and mastered it.
God wants us to have conviction in His ability to render the fear in our life mute, powerless and irrelevant.

  • Luke 11:11-13 "If a son asks for bread from any father among you, will he give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will he give him a serpent instead of a fish? Or if he asks for an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!”
When we adopt the Christian lifestyle, we are adopted by God. We were always His creation, but we become reclaimed. As claimed children, we have ownership within our Father's kingdom. We become possessors of His love and kindness, God's mercy and protection. We can expect our lives to unfold in accordance with His will. And God's will for us is good.

Jesus more than gave us permission to ask, Jesus encouraged us to ask God for our myriad of needs. He told us that we would receive. From Jesus we learned that we cannot expect that God will hear and respond with action and deliverance. For God's children know what to ask for; we ask for God. We ask for His will over our life. We ask for the peace and protection and provision He has promised. And Jesus assured us that God is fully aware of a good gift.

God has offered peace and protection and provision because He knows that ultimately, every need we have is stemmed from a need for those three things. When we ask God for those things, why would we ever expect or fear that He would answer with their opposites?