Showing posts with label Great minds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great minds. Show all posts

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Lesson from David

Man is impressed with the externals; he doesn’t
see the heart. God is different. He doesn’t judge
by appearance or intelligence. King Saul hadn’t
learned that, however, so he looked at David and
said, “You don’t have the size for it. You’re just a
kid. Look over there at that giant!” (See 1 Samuel
17:17-39 .)
As I picture it, David was blinking and thinking,
What giant? The only giant in my life is God.
That’s a dwarf over there, Saul. God is not
impressed with the externals; He looks on the
heart. God is omnipotent! And if He’s on my side,
omnipotence can’t lose.
So often, when facing our own giants, we forget
what we ought to remember, and we remember
what we ought to forget. We remember our
defeats, and we forget the victories. Most of us
can recite the failures of our lives in vivid detail,
but we’re hard-pressed to name the specific,
remarkable victories God has pulled off in our
past.
Not so with David! He says, “You know why I can
fight Goliath, Saul? Because the same God who
gave me power over a lion and a bear will give me
power over Goliath. It is God who will empower
me . . . so just let me at him.”
Well, that let Saul off the hook, so he says, “Go,
and may the Lord be with you.” Isn’t it
remarkable how people can use spiritual clich?s
to cover up their empty lives? They know all the
right words to use . . . all the pious-sounding
sayings. Saul sure did.
Then Saul said, “Now wait a minute, David. We
have to fix you up for battle.” Imagine it! You
can’t tell me the Bible doesn’t have humor,
because it says, “Saul clothed David with his
garments.” Here’s Saul, a 52 long, and David is a
36 regular.
What works for one person will not necessarily
work for someone else. We’re always trying to put
our armor on someone else or wear someone
else’s armor. But that’s not the way to do battle.
It was a great breakthrough in my own life when I
finally discovered that I could be me and God
would use me. I couldn’t operate well, wearing
another’s armor. God provides unique techniques
for unique people.
Adapted from Charles R. Swindoll, “Unique
Techniques,” in Great Days with the Great Lives
(Nashville: W Publishing, 2005), 115. Copyright ©
2005 by Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights
reserved. Used by permission.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

THE PROPHET ISAIAH'S VISION OF THE KING'S
HIGH WAY
Isaiah the Prophet was the son of Amoz and an
unnamed prophetess. His name means "Yahweh
is Salvation." He lived in Jerusalem (7:1-3, 37:2)
and was married to a prophetess, with whom he
had two sons, who were given prophetic names,
"Shear-Jashub, and Maher-shala-hash-baz." (7:3,
8:3,) He prophesied in Jerusalem during the reigns
of Kings Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah. He
was called to the prophetic ministry in 739 b.c.,
the year that King Uzziah died. The vision which
Isaiah saw when he was, as is said of Samuel,
established to be a prophet of the Lord (1 Sa.
3:20), was intended to confirm his faith, that he
might be abundantly satisfied of the truth of those
things, which should afterwards be made known
to him. It is noteworthy that Isaiah dates the
vision, as having taken place "in the year that
king Uzziah died," and not in the 16 year reign of
Jothan which was commencing. Uzziah's reign
brought peace, security and prosperity to Judah.
His rule which was lengthy, some 52 years, from
809-758, was the longest of any of the kings in
the Southern Kingdom. (2 Ki. 15:2, 2 Chron. 26:3)
Uzziah had been a popular young king, who
ascended the throne at age 16 in the place of
Amaziah his father. (2 Chr. 26:1). He did that
which was right in the sight of God, and as long
as he sought the Lord and obeyed Him, God
prospered him. Uzziah waged war against the
Philistines. He constructed strong fortifications
and dug many wells. He loved farming, and had
herds of cattle and grape fields. His well-
equipped army consisted of over 250,000 soldiers.
He built special machinery to launch arrows and
hurl stones at the enemy. (2 Chr. 26:15-16)
"When he was strong, his heart was lifted up to
his destruction…" King Uzziah went into the
temple of the Lord to burn incense on the golden
altar, a sacred place and duty reserved for only
the priests. This priestly duty took place twice a
day, but was a priviledge reserved only for the
sons of Levi. Burning incense by someone, even a
king, who was not of the descendants of Aaron,
was a breach of Levitical law punishable by
death. (Num. 3:38). When the priest rebuked the
king, Uzziah became very angry. Leprosy
immediately broke out on his forehead. The Lord
judged him for presumption. Uzziah remained a
leper to his death. The Prophet Zechariah states
that there was a great earthquake in the days of
King Uzziah. (Zech. 14:5)
"And ye shall flee to the valley of the
mountains; for the valley of the mountains
shall reach unto Azal: yea, ye shall flee, like
as ye fled from before the earthquake in the
days of Uzziah king of Judah: and the LORD
my God shall come, and all the saints with
thee."
1) Isaiah's Vision of the Lord (v. 1-4)
In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the
Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted
up; and his train filled the temple. Above
him stood the seraphim; each had six
wings; with two he covered his face, and
with two he covered his feet, and with two
he flew. And one called to another and said:
"Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the
whole earth is full of his glory." And the
foundations of the thresholds shook at the
voice of him who called, and the house was
filled with smoke. (Isa 6:1-4 RSV)
Isaiah the Prophet was given a prophetic vision of
Almighty God in His holy Temple, which exalts the
Lord as "The Holy One of Israel." He was seated
on His throne. The Lord's majestic robe flowed
down so that filled the inside of the Temple.
Isaiah saw the angels who are called "seraphs,"
or "burning ones," who appear to be associated
with divine judgment upon sin, which is one of the
aspects of God's holiness. The name is derived
from the Hebrew verb saraph ("to consume with
fire"), and this etymology is very probable
because of its accordance with Isa., vi, 6, where
one of the seraphim is represented as carrying
celestial fire from the altar to purify the Prophet's
lips. Many scholars prefer to derive it from the
Hebrew noun saraph, "a fiery and flying serpent",
spoken of in Num., xxi, 6; Isa., xiv, 29, and the
brazen image of which stood in the Temple in
Isaiah's time (IV Kings, xviii, 4); but it is plain
that no trace of such serpentine form appears in
Isaiah's description of the seraphim.
When the seraphs spoke to one another, crying
"Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh." Holy, Holy, Holy, the
posts of the door in he Temple moved, and smoke
filled the inside of the Temple. The word
translated as "Holy," is KADOSH in Hebrew. It
means, "set apart." One of the seraphs took a live
coal from the altar and touched Isaiah’s lips. In
doing this, God was showing Isaiah that there
was a need for purging in his own life. Then,
Isaiah would be ready to go out and tell others
about God. God asked Isaiah whom He could send
to tell them about Him. And Isaiah answered,
"Here am I. Lord send me!
a) The Lord's Position (v. 1)
1. Sitting on a throne, high and lifted up -
6:1b
2. The train of His robe filling the temple
(Solomon's temple.) (6:1c)
The particular scene here is that of God as
King of the Universe, surrounded by
attendants. He is represented as seated upon
his throne above the ark, in the most holy
place, where the glory appeared above the
cherubim, surrounded by his attendant
ministers. This is called by God himself "the
place of his throne." "A glorious high throne
from the beginning is the place of our
sanctuary," said the Prophet Jeremiah. (Jer.
17:12) And the place of the soles of his feet,"
Ezek. xliii. 7. 12. The very posture of sitting is
a mark of state and solemnity:
b) The Lord's Purity (v. 2-3)
The vision given Isaiah instills in the Prophet a
deeper revelation of the holiness of the
Almighty than ever before. Many things would
transpire in the lives of the people of Israel,
which would be authored by God because of
His holy nature. Things of which Israel would
be tempted to say: Why did God do this? Or
why has that befallen us? God's revelation to
Isaiah as the Kadosh or Holy One, residing in
spotless purity, is significant for this is tied to
the fact that He is the Perfect and the Just
One. The prophesies of Isaiah carry this stamp
of distinction, that God is "The Holy One." The
title "Holy One" occurs throughout the book of
Isaiah.
c) The Lord's Power (v. 4)
God has the unrestrained ability to accomplish
what he wills. (Job 12:13) The earth was
created by His power, (Jer. 10:12) and he
reigns forever by His power.
2) Isaiah's Vision of Himself (v. 5-8)
a) Isaiah's Confession (v. 5)
Isaiah 6:5 "Woe is me for I am undone,
because I am a man of unclean lips, and I
dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips;
for mine eyes have seen the king, the Lord of
hosts."
Here is the definition of "undone": undone,
damah, daw-maw', Hebrew 1820; a primitive
root; to be dumb or silent; hence to fail or
perish; trans. to destroy :- cease, be cut down
(off), destroy, be brought to silence, be
undone, × utterly.
b) Isaiah's Cleansing (v. 6-7)
God used a vision to communicate revelation
to the Prophet Isaiah's life. He administered
His divine will through the seraphim:
1. One of the seraphim flew to him - 6:6a
One of the heavenly beings which had been
hovering around the Lord, worshipping His
holiness. The creation of angels is found in
Psalm 148:2-5. When exactly the seraphim
were created, we do not know. The angels
were present at the creation of the world,
and shouted for joy! (Job 38:7) As to their
appearance, seraphim, like cherubim are
winged. (Dan. 9:21) Angels are described
in scripture as an order of supernatural or
heavenly being, whose business it is to act
as the messengers of God, and to carry
out His divine will. These are termed
kedhoshim, or "holy ones." (Psalm 89:5-7)
ir, irim, meaning "watchers." (Daniel 4:13,
17, 23) In the New Testament the only
possible equivalent of the seraphim is "the
living ones." ("beasts" of the King James
Version) in Revelation 4; 5, etc. Here, as in
Isaiah, they appear nearest Yahweh's
throne, supreme in praise of God's
holiness.
1. Their position (6:2a)
a. Standing above the throne - cf. NKJV,
KJV
What Isaiah meant by the seraphim
standing above the throne, is inferred
from the use of their wings. The angels
"as flames of fire."
b. Or above the Lord - cf. ASV, NASB,
NIV, NRSV
c. Or around Him - cf. the Septuagint
2. Their wings - 6:2b
a. Each had six wings
b. Two covered their faces, two covered
their feet, with two they flew.
Because of God's holiness and unveiled
glory, the wings covering their faces
signify humility.
c. Not to be confused with
"cherubim." (cf. Eze 10:1-22)
The scriptures differenciate between
seraphim and cherubim, although each
are mentioned in proximity to the throne
of God. A cherubim guarded the way to
the tree of life. They are represented in
the Tabernacle and Temple. The
cherubim in Ezekiel carry the chariot of
the divine throne, when we see God
moving from place to place. The
seraphim hover on both sides of the
throne, singing antiphonally of the Lord's
holiness. Seraphs belong to a catagory of
judging angels, sometimes called
destroying angels. When David numbered
Israel, an angel destroyed them by
pestilence. (2 Sam. 24:16) In 2 Kings
19:35, such an angel destroyed the
Assyrian army, killing 185,000.
1) Cherubim were below the throne;
seraphim were above it
2) Seraphim and cherubim both have six
wings. Both offer praise to God. However
the cherubim are depicted as full of eyes.
Full of eyes within. They were full of eyes
before and behind, and when the wings
were lifted John saw that they were full
of eyes within also. The eyes, sleepless,
possibly symbolize never resting, but
actively worshipping continuously, as well
as acting as guardian watchers over
mankind.
3) "The most that can be said with
certainty about the seraphim is that they
were a separate group of attendants who
praised God at His throne" - ISBE
(revised)
3. The Seraph's praises - 6:3
a. "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of Hosts;
the whole earth is full of His glory!"
b. "The threefold recital of "holy" is a
Hebraism indicating or placing emphasis
on the absolute holiness of Him who sits
on the throne.
2. In his (the seraph's) hand a live coal
taken with tongs from the altar - 6:6b
The seraph flew to the altar of burnt offerings
before the door of the Temple, on which the
fire that came down at first from heaven was
perpetually kept burning, and was never
extinguished. (Lev. 9:24, 2 Chron. 7:1,Lev.
7:12-13) And took from off the altar a ritzpah,
or red hot stone, or radafe, a red-hot coal .
Radafe meaning "to scatter sparks, sparkle, or
glow. This was removed with a pair of
tongues. He flew to Isaiah and touched his lips
with it, and immediately there was a response
on the part of the Prophet, of a sense of his
own uncleanness.
3. The altar of burnt offerings."
The "burnt offering" was a sacrifice required by
the Law in which an animal was consumed by
fire. It was not an offering for a specific sin,
but rather for the sinful heart or sin-nature
which required atonement for the worshipper to
have access to God. It symbolized total
commitment of the worshipper to the Lord.
B) Purged of His Sin
1. The seraphim touch Isaiah's mouth with
the coal - "Then flew one of the seraphims
unto me, having a live coal in his hand,
which he had taken with tongs from off the
altar." 6:7a
2. His iniquity is declared taken away and
his sin purged - "And he laid it upon my
mouth and said: Lo this hath touched thy
lips and thine iniquity is taken away and
thy sin is purged." 6:7b
Taken away -- purged. Iniquity is the sin
deep within that is at the very heart, and
is an essential part of our sinning and
stains us in God’s presence. This was
taken away, removed, got rid of. ‘Sin’ is
the actual outworking of iniquity in
wrongful action, and that too was purged,
covered, atoned for. There was now no
barrier between Isaiah and God. The result
was that from complete self-despair he
came to a place of being able to listen to
the voice of the Lord God. For us there is
"something better" than even this "live
coal," for we may see Yeshua/Jesus Who
was the one sacrifice for sin for all time,
and we may call on Him knowing that, if
we admit to Him our sin and look to Him,
the blood of Yeshua haMashiach/Jesus
Christ, God’s Son, cleanses us from all sin
(1 John 1.7).
3. Isaiah could now offer acceptable
service to the Lord. "Also I heard the voice
of the Lord, saying: "Whom shall I send
and who will go for us? Then said I, Here
am I, Lord send me." (Is. 6:8-9, Psa
51:12-15)
Through the vision from God, Isaiah was
given a revelation of the Lord which was
vitaly necessary for his own life as well as
his ministry as a Prophet of God. The
vision clarified some necessary things for
the prophet, concerning his own standing
before God in the office of a prophet, the
nature of the mission God was sending
him on, and the success of the mission.
The revelation given to him was the means
by which God purged his own life, prior to
service. The Lord reveals that there is a
need for a messenger to speak on God's
behalf to the people. The Prophet
volunteers to go. God send him on a
divinely appointed mission to the nation of
Israel.
c) Isaiah's Calling (v. 8)
6:8
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying,
Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?
Then said I, Here am I, Lord send Me."
6:9 And he said, "Yes, go and tell this people.
"You will hear my words, but you will not
understand. You will see what I do, but you
will not perceive its meaning."
"Go say unto this people, Hear on, but
do not discern. See on but do not
perceive. Stupify thou the heart of this
people, and their ears make thou heavy.
And their eyes overspread, lest they see
with their eyes, and with their ears
should hear, and with their heart should
discern and come back, and they be
healed." (Rotherham's Emphasized
Bible)
3) Isaiah's Vision of the Holy Remnant
"But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall
return and shall be eaten: as a teil tree and as
an oak, whose substance is in them, when they
cast their leaves: so the holy seed shall be the
substance thereof." (v. 13)
a) Their Rebellion (v. 9-10)
6:10 Harden the hearts of these people. Close
their ears, and shut their eyes. That way, they
will not see with their eyes, hear with their
ears, understand with their hearts, and turn to
me for healing."
The term for "Shut their eyes, is the Hebrew
"hasha," which means "shut or close up." It
speaks of a closing of the eyes so that they
cannot see, as if spreading matter upon the
eyes. The root word, shava signifies the
"plastering" of a house.
b) Their Removal (v. 11-12)
"Then I said, "Lord, how long must I do
this?"And he replied, "Until their cities are
destroyed, with no one left in them. Until their
houses are deserted and the whole country is
an utter wasteland. And the Lord have
removed men far away, and there be a great
forsaking in the midst of the land."
The Assyrians destroyed the Northern Kingdom
approximately 17 years later. The Southern
Kingdom fell to Babylon some 150 years later.
c) Their Remnant (v. 13)
And a tenth shall be left in it, and they shall be
burnt up again: like a terebinth and like an oak,
which appear to be dried up when their leaves
fall, though they still retain their moisture to
preserve a seed from them: so the exiles for
Israel shall be gathered together, and shall
return to their land; for a holy seed is their
plant. (Isaiah 6:13)
In his vision, the Prophet Isaiah sees that God
shall indeed bring forth a holy remnant. They
will be like a terebinth. As a teil-tree and as an
oak, whose substance is in them even when
they cast their leaves, so this remnant, though
they may be stripped of their outward
prosperity and share with others in common
calamities, shall yet be renewed as a tree in
the spring, and flourish again. Though they fall,
they shall not be utterly cast down, as
scripture states. "There is hope of a tree,
though it be cut down, that it will sprout
again." Job 14:7. (4.) This distinguished God's
remnant. Although through the dealings of
God, there would be these repeated
dispersions, (by the Chaldeans, Romans, &c.,)
yet a small remnant would be preserved as a
seed from which God will raise up a people to
exalt His holy name, and through whom He will
fulfilled all the Divine promises. The
incorruptible holy seed of God's word within
the soul is the substance of the man or
woman of God. It's that principle of grace
reigning in the heart which preserves life there.
"He that is born of God has his seed remaining
in him." (1 Jn. 3:9.) So the holy seed in the
land is the substance of the land, keeps it from
being utterly exterminated. This seed becomes
the supporting pillars of the new thig God
does. (Ps. 75:3, ch. 1:9)
Some read the preceeding verses: "As the
support at Shallecheth is in the elms and the
oaks, so the holy seed is the substance
thereof; as the trees that grow on either side
of the causeway (the raised way, or terrace-
walk, that leads from the king’s palace to the
temple. (1 Ki. 10:5) At the gate of Shallecheth,
(1 Chron, 26:16) These majestic oaks support
the highway leading to the palace of the king
by preserving the ground, which would
otherwise dissolve away. So the small residue
of God's holy praying people, are the salt of
the earth. To you I say by the word of the
Lord: "Go through, go through the gates;
prepare ye the way of the people; cast up, cast
up the highway; gather out the stones; lift up a
standard for the people." (Isaiah lxii. 10)
In a primary sense, the holy seed is Messiah,
in whom God robed Himself, or "prepared
Himself a body," so His own arm could bring
salvation. The Jewish nation was saved from
utter ruin because out of it, as concerning the
flesh, Christ came from the stump of it. (Rom.
9:5) Destroy it not, for that blessing is in it
(ch. 65:8); and when that blessing had come,
it was soon destroyed. Though the greater part
would perish as a result of their own unbelief,
yet to some, the word of the Lord in the mouth
of the Prophet would be a savour of life unto
life.
In I Chronicles 14:14, the Terebinth tree is
called "balsam" (NIV), and "mulberry." It is
perhaps better known to some as the Pistacia
tree, (Terebinthus Anacardiaceae) which
produces the pistachio nut, and is similar to
the familiar "pepper tree. "The terebinth of
Mamre, or its successor, remained from the
days of Abraham till the fourth century of the
Christian era. This tree "is seldom seen in
clumps or groves, never in forests, but stands
isolated in a bare ravine or on a hill-side where
nothing else towers above the low brushwood."
Gideon was standing by a large terebinth tree
when called by God. (Judges 6:11). David
faced Goliath in the Valley of Elah, or Valley of
the Terebinth. (I Samuel 17:2) These trees
symbolize abiding strength and longevity.
Some 2 dozen varieties of oaks are found in
Palestine. (Is. 2:13, Ams 2:9, Zech. 11:2.
Tom & Alana
Campbell -
Everett,
Washington

Friday, October 10, 2014

Lesson from Elijah life

of the most important things the Lord has
ever spoken to me is taken from a passage of
Scripture involving Elijah the prophet. Once I saw
what it was really saying, it linked many other
truths together and made a big impact on my life.
This is so simple that once you see it, you’re
going to wonder how you never saw it before.
Here’s what it says in 1 Kings 17:2-4:
And the word of the Lord came unto him, saying,
[3] Get thee hence, and turn thee eastward, and
hide thyself by the brook Cherith, that is before
Jordan. [4] And it shall be, that thou shalt drink
of the brook; and I have commanded the ravens
to feed thee there.
Elijah’s provision wasn’t where he was; it was
where God told him to go! This is profound!
Some of you have an impression from God to do
something. Maybe you’re supposed to start a
new business, make a job change, move to
another town, go to Bible college, speak to a
person, etc. You want to do it, but you’re holding
back because the provision isn’t there yet. You’re
saying, “God, I can’t do what You’re asking
without first seeing the provision. How do I know
all these things are going work out” This principle
in 1 Kings applies directly to your situation. God
is sending the provision for your needs not to
where you are but to where He told you to go!
The question is, “Are you all ‘there’” Some of you
aren’t experiencing supernatural provision
because you aren’t “there.” There is a place
called “there” for you.
In verse 4, God said, “I have commanded the
ravens,” (emphasis mine), meaning He had
already spoken to these ravens and they were on
their way to where Elijah was supposed to go.
First Kings 17:5 says,
So [Elijah] went and did according unto the word
of the Lord: for he went and dwelt by the brook
Cherith, that is before Jordan.
(Brackets mine)
In other words, if Elijah had stayed where he was,
he could have prayed and fasted, saying, “God,
why haven’t You supplied my needs” But he
wouldn’t have seen God’s provision if he hadn’t
gone where God instructed.
One of the reasons we aren’t seeing a greater
provision from God financially, emotionally, or in
our circumstances is because we aren’t doing
what God told us to do. We’ve got a word from
God that we haven’t acted on. We’re somewhere
other than where He told us to be.
Now, this is an important point because I preach
on the grace of God a lot. I talk about how God’s
grace is how He provides things and that it’s not
based on our obedience or holiness. God loves us
independent of our performance—that’s absolutely
true! But does this mean obeying Him is
unimportant Just the opposite. I believe God has
a plan for my life and that He chose me from my
mother’s womb and ordained me to be a prophet
and to minister. I believe He has great things
planned for me, things earmarked for me that
have my name on them. But if I hadn’t obeyed,
stepped out, and done what He told me to do,
God still would have provided, but I would have
missed out on it. I had to go “there.” I don’t
believe God just makes things come to pass; it
takes cooperation on our part.
This isn’t intended to hurt or condemn anyone,
because I know that some of you are thinking,
Maybe that’s why things aren’t working in my life
—I haven’t been obedient to what God told me to
do! Well…that’s absolutely correct! It’s not that
God won’t bless you because you haven’t obeyed
Him; it’s that His blessing is over “there”! If the
reason you won’t step out is because you’ve got
some form of “security” but you’re miserable and
things are just going wrong, I encourage you to
do what God told you to do.
I played football in high school, and what I’m
talking about is similar to how a quarterback
throws a football to a wide receiver. A
quarterback doesn’t throw the ball to where the
receiver is; he throws it to where the receiver
should be. If he doesn’t do that, he’ll miss the
receiver. Likewise, God is meeting all of your
needs—He’s sending His supply to where He told
you to be.
Another great example of this is with our
prospective Bible college students. The Lord gives
them a word and tells them to come to Bible
college, but they struggle with it because they’ve
got good paying jobs, nice houses, families, and
friends they don’t want to leave. The security of
those things keeps them from taking a step of
faith because they don’t see how God is going to
provide. But I’ve seen what I’m sharing inspire
hundreds of people. And when they get to their
place called “there,” they find themselves with
better jobs and better houses, and things work
out. Their entire lives change. And there would
have been no way to anticipate this before they
took that step of faith. I’m telling you, when you
get out of doubt and into your place called
“there,” when you start doing what God called you
to do, there is supernatural provision. This is one
of the great lessons from the life of Elijah.
Let’s look at 1 Kings 17:6:
And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in
the morning, and bread and flesh in the evening;
and he drank of the brook.
As I mentioned before, I believe that since God
had already commanded the ravens, if Elijah
hadn’t obeyed, God would still have been faithful
to send the provision where He told him to go. I
believe that these ravens would have brought
bread and meat every morning and evening but
that it all would have piled up beside the brook
and gone to waste. Elijah could have starved to
death even though God had been faithful to
provide for his needs.
Here’s something else to consider: How did Elijah
know which spot along the brook Cherith to go If
the brook was ten miles long, he could have been
five or ten miles away from where the ravens
were bringing him food. The ravens could fly
faster than Elijah could walk or run. I’m convinced
that one of the ways he knew he was at the right
spot was because the ravens were already “there”
with the bread and meat. When Elijah saw the
provision God had promised, that was one of the
signs that he was in the right place.
The same will be true of you when you step out.
You have to take a step of faith with no
guarantees that things are going to work. And
then you will start seeing the provision of the
Lord. It’ll be confirmation that you’re going in the
right direction and doing what He told you to do.
You’ll be able to say, “It was God who told me to
do this.”
This is how it’s worked in my life. I haven’t seen
God’s provision accidentally. I’ve applied what 1
Kings 17 is talking about and taken steps of faith
to get where I am. And I’m going to keep taking
steps of faith. All you have to do to get started is
take a step of faith. There is a place called
“there” for you. It’s not necessarily a location;
you may not have to change where you live. It
could just be an attitude change or decision you
need to make. But when you take a step of faith
and start following what God tells you to do,
there is a supernatural flow of provision—not only
of finances but also of peace, joy, blessing,
anointing, influence, power, and authority—that
you cannot duplicate with all your human effort.
All of these kinds of things follow obeying the
word of the Lord.
You can look at the life of Elijah; he was a
nobody before he had a word from God and acted
on it. But then—boom—after he stepped out in
faith, he became the dominant figure in the
nation. He was blessed, miracles began to
happen, a person was raised from the dead, and a
revival broke out. You’ve got to find your place
called “there” and then get there! It’s imperative.
I tell you, this could change your life if you would
act on it.

Thursday, October 09, 2014

LESSON FROM DANIEL LIFE

 June 1968
A Lesson From the Life of Daniel

THE sixth chapter of the Book of Daniel records how the prophet, because of his wisdom and prudence, was exalted to a position of great importance in the kingdom of the Medes and Persians. We read in the first few verses that King Darius set 120 princes over the kingdom. The Revised Version and Rotherham call them “Satraps,” which means a governor of a province. Over these 120 province governors were set three presidents, or confidential ministers, of whom Daniel was first. To these ministers the province governors were to render an account that the king “should have no damage” or should suffer no loss.
The king became so pleased with Daniel, “because an excellent spirit was in him,” uthat Daniel “was preferred above the presidents and princes, … and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.” (Dan. 6:3) We are not quite sure that the king acted upon this thought, but it is worthy of note that some of these ancient kings recognized character and merit. This good judgment was shown by Nebuchadnezzar when he recognized Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego as servants of the true God and gave them still higher positions in the empire.
Belshazzar also took no offense at Daniel’s interpretation of the writing on the wall but highly honored and rewarded him for his faithful, plain, and outspoken words. And when Darius of the Medes and Persians overcame Babylon, far from destroying all the rulers, including Daniel, he apparently spared all except the king, and gave Daniel a very high position in the empire. Doubtless, as Daniel was a prophet, the providence of God was also in this, but the king manifestly appreciated his good qualities.
Holding such an exalted office, as one of the three presidents of the empire, Daniel no doubt stood in the way of many who sought office; and, as a man of unimpeachable character, he would be in a position to defeat many schemes for personal enrichment and advancement, for those eastern countries were noted for plundering and dishonesty. Thus Daniel was sure to have made many secret enemies who would seek his downfall. From the narrative it appears that these enemies, many of whom were prominent in official life, had watched in vain to find some real cause of complaint; and that they finally concluded that if fault would be found at all, it must be because of his religion. The testimony of his enemies was, “We shall not find any occasion against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of his God.”—vs. 5
Righteous Persecuted
We are reminded here of the words of Jesus in John 3:19, “And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil,” and in John 15:19 he told his disciples, “If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you.” Paul gives a similar testimony in II Timothy 3:12: “Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”
It has been truly said, “Whosoever does well and is faithful and true, while others are dishonest and false, must expect to be opposed and hated; every effort will be made to injure his character and drag him into the mire, and to make it appear that he is no better than those who assail him.” This was certainly true in the case of Daniel. The enemies who sought his ruin were indeed filled with the spirit of Satan, whose schemes and plans seemed to come naturally to them.
Very cunningly they counseled the king that the people should recognize his exalted position. Relying on the law of the Medes and Persians, under which no decree that the king had established could be altered or set aside, these plotters succeeded in having the king appoint thirty days in which it would be considered a crime to offer a petition to any person or god other than Darius himself.
It is highly improbable that the king had so false an idea of his own personal importance, or that the officers believed him to be infallible; it was, rather, a matter which they suggested as a piece of statecraft, a fraud upon the people, justified, in their perverted judgment, on the grounds of national peace and security. In other words, it would help to impose a desirable restraint upon the masses. This has its counterpart in the principle behind the teaching of eternal torment. Many intelligent preachers disbelieve this teaching, but they do not discourage a belief in this false doctrine on the part of their hearers, on the principle that an evil or falsehood is justified if beneficial results are to be hoped from it.
Enemies Happy
Having obtained the king’s signature to the new law, the conspirators exulted in the thought that Daniel was at last in their grasp and already practically destroyed. They knew his character so well as to have no doubt that he would be faithful to his religious convictions, and thus furnish them with the opportunity to bring about his downfall. In this they were quite correct, for verse 10 says, “He went into his house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward Jerusalem, he kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God, as he did aforetime.” It was part of his habit of life to open the window towards Jerusalem and kneel before his God in prayer and thanksgiving.
There is a lesson we can draw from this for ourselves. Psalm 95:6 reads, “O come, let us worship and bow down: let us kneel before the Lord our maker.” A “manna” comment on this is, “It is impossible for any Christian to maintain a proper, consistent walk in life, and to build up such a character and faith structure as are represented by the apostle as composed of ‘gold, silver and precious stones’ without prayer; more than this, without regularity in prayer—we would almost be inclined to say, without kneeling in prayer.”
A proper reverential attitude toward our Heavenly Father prompts us in our private devotions to “bow down and kneel before the Lord our maker.” In the busy turmoil of life, to kneel is not always possible, and we must learn to pray even when we cannot kneel in prayer. It has been said that prayer is thinking toward God. Ephesians 5:19 speaks of “making melody in your heart to the Lord,” and this can be done in many everyday situations. When walking along the street we can think toward God, or when waiting for a bus we can think toward God. Prayer is doing everything as for him, and if our mental prayer covers all our daily activities we can indeed “pray without ceasing.”
We are not told why Daniel had adopted the habit of private worship in so public a manner as to be generally known to the people—a manner so different from that which the Lord has commended to his followers during this age. Matthew 6:6 (Weymouth) reads, “Whenever you pray, go into your own room and shut the door; then pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father, he who sees in secret, will recompense you.” Probably the custom of Babylon was such as to make Daniel’s more open course the reasonable and proper one.
The heathen worship was more or less public and visible, and Daniel was not ashamed to let it be known that he turned his face toward Jerusalem, the typical city of God. It illustrated his faithfulness to the true God and his separation from idolatry. He was not satisfied just to close his eyes in prayer after he had retired to rest; he realized that he had a great God who was worthy of reverence and worship and he was great enough to appreciate that it was a privilege to have communion and fellowship with his Creator.
We, too, recognize that it is a wonderful privilege to worship the God of heaven; and we have additionally been granted the wonderful favor of looking to him and addressing him as our Father. We are also encouraged to come to him in time of need.—Heb. 4:15,16
Jesus gave us the formula for successful prayer when he said, “If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” The Apostle John wrote, “And this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask anything according to his will, he heareth us.”—John 15:7; I John 5:14
According to a prearranged plan, the conspirators assembled at the proper time to witness Daniel’s devotion, and then proceeded to the king to announce that the first one to disobey his decree, and therefore to come under its punishment, was the honored and trusted first minister of the empire, Daniel. They reminded the king that he had said that any man who made a petition to any god or man other than himself should be cast into a den of lions. When the king realized that he had been flattered into making this decree for the very purpose of destroying his most valued counselor, he was “sore displeased with himself,” and he set his heart on Daniel to deliver him.—Dan. 6:14
The king sought every possible way to make void the decree or to excuse Daniel from its penalty, but the conspirators were close at hand with their arguments to prove that such a course was quite impossible. “Know, O king,” they said, “that the law of the Medes and Persians is, That no decree nor statute which the king establisheth may be changed.” (vs.15) Darius could find no way of escape; his decree must stand, so he commanded that Daniel be brought and cast into the den of lions. But Daniel’s conduct at all times had been noticed and had such an effect on the king that he could express the hope, May thy God, whom thou servest continually, deliver thee. (vs. 20) He knew that Daniel worshiped God sincerely and trusted him implicitly, and this so impressed him that he had some hope that the God whom Daniel served might somehow deliver him.
Daniel’s life testified, not only to his own faithfulness and character, but also to the faithfulness and character of the God he worshiped. We are instructed, “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” Our lives should be living epistles: many of our friends and neighbors know God only as they see and appreciate the Christian’s character and manner of life.
Daniel’s enemies were not content with having him cast into the den of lions. They were determined that nothing should thwart their evil designs, so a stone was laid at the mouth of the den, and this was sealed with the seals of the king and of his lords. These wicked men could net tolerate in their midst one whose life was above reproach, or who had, perhaps, on some occasions prevented them from carrying out other evil plans.
We are not told how Daniel passed the night, but we know in Whom he trusted, and we are sure that he could pray as fervently in the lions’ den as he could in his own chamber. The king was troubled in mind, and his sleep went from him. He passed the night in fasting, and it is evident that Daniel had a more peaceful night in the den than the king had in his bed. Very early in the morning Darius went in haste to the den and cried, “O Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God, whom thou servest continually, able to deliver thee from the lions?” The reply came, “My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions’ mouths, that they have not hurt me.”—vss. 20,22
A “Roaring Lion”
We are told in I Peter 5:8 of a peril that threatens Christians: “Your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.” Daniel had committed himself to the God whom he served, and this is exactly what we are instructed to do (I Pet. 5:7): “Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.” Psalm 34:7 assures us that “the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him, and delivereth them.”
God’s restraining power is over everything destructive and hurtful. As God’s providence over Daniel permitted him to come under the power of natural wild beasts, so he sometimes permits his faithful ones now to be exposed to hatred and misrepresentation. This was so in the case of Jesus, and he warned his disciples that they would share the same experiences, saying in Luke 21:12, “They shall lay their hands on you, and persecute you, delivering you up to the synagogues, and into prisons, being brought before kings and rulers for my name’s sake.”
To be near Christ was to be near the fire of persecution, and the Book of Acts tells us of James, Stephen, Peter, and Paul, and we know of many others at that time and since, who suffered and died because of their faith. Peter, writing at a time when much bitter persecution was raging, wrote, “Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you; but rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings.” (I Pet. 4:12-13) “For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow in his steps.”—I Pet. 2:21
God was able to, and did, deliver Daniel, and he is also able to send his “angel” to shut the mouths of “lions” who would injure his people now. As the hymn says, “The God who lived in Daniel’s time is just the same today.” In Romans 8:38,39 Paul testified to God’s great keeping power: “I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
All things are subject to the One whose service we have entered through vows of consecration. In some instances it may please the Lord to grant a wonderful deliverance, as in the case of Daniel, while in other cases his providential dealings may result otherwise. He allowed Stephen to be killed by stoning, and James to be beheaded by Herod; but when Peter was in prison awaiting the same fate, an angel was sent to deliver him.
It is God who decides when we shall be delivered, and when the enemy shall appear to triumph. We must accept by faith his providences in our lives, being assured that he will grant the necessary strength and grace for every time of need. In the midst of his persecution, Stephen had the peace of God ruling in his heart to such an extent that his face was as the face of an angel: calm, serene, and unperturbed, and “he, being full of the Holy Spirit, looked up steadfastly into heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God.”—Acts 7:55
We must learn that godliness, uprightness, and virtue do not exempt one from adversities and ills; indeed it is frequently the case that the deeper and more complete the devotion and fidelity to God, the greater the trials. All such suffering for righteousness’ sake is helpful in building up a character fitted for eternity, and all the saints used of the Lord to instruct us have stressed that “we must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.”—Acts 14:22
God’s Will
To what extent may we look for and expect divine inter-position when we are in trouble, trial, or danger? The Scriptures plainly declare that true children of God may confidently look to him for help in time of need. “The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord: and he delighteth in his way. Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down; for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand … for the Lord loveth judgment, and forsaketh not his saints.” (Ps. 37:23-24,28) “Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and he shall sustain thee; he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved.” (Ps. 55:22) Jesus said, “Consider the lilies of the field, … if God so clothe the grass of the field … shall he not much more clothe you?”
Your Heavenly Father knowcth your needs. “Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” (Matt. 6:28,30,33) He also said that God is mindful of the death of a sparrow, and continued, “Ye are of more value than many sparrows.” (Matt. 10:31) The Lord is overruling all the affairs of those who have truly committed themselves to him, and his promise is, “I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.”—Heb. 13:5
God’s Purpose Served
Whenever miracles have been wrought in the deliverance of God’s people, there has always been a divine purpose to be accomplished. That purpose has been the furtherance of his good cause in the world. Daniel was a representative of the true God and had made known both by his words and his life the greatness of the God he worshiped. It seemed best to the Lord at this particular time to preserve the life of his servant. His life work was not yet finished; visions and revelations were to be given him concerning the future of the chosen people. He was to be further used to encourage and stir up his own nation to go up to the land of their fathers, rebuild their city and temple, and resume again the worship of Jehovah in the place appointed. This miracle was God’s way of witnessing to them that he was their God.
After Daniel’s deliverance, the king caused all the conspirators to be cast into the den of lions, and they were destroyed. This illustrates a principle of divine justice that those who dig pits for others shall fall into them themselves. “He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. His mischief shall return upon his own head, and his violent dealing shall come down upon his own pate.”—Ps. 7:15-16
Although it is true that “now we call the proud happy; yea, they that work wickedness are set up; yea, they that tempt God are even delivered,” we are assured that in the next age it will be different. Concerning the kingdom age the Lord said, “Judgment also will I lay to the line, and righteousness to the plummet; and the hail shall sweep away the refuge of lies.”—Mal. 3:15, Isa. 28:17
God has caused the record of Daniel—his faithfulness and his deliverance when he was so beset by his enemies that there seemed no way of escape from a violent death—to be written, that we may learn valuable lessons respecting his care and protection of those who put their trust in him alone. “He delivereth and rescueth, and he worketh signs and wonders in heaven and in earth, who hath delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.”—Dan. 6:27

Dawn Bible Students Association

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