Friday, May 8, 2026

Being Clueless Could Be A Good Thing

“O our God, wilt thou not judge them? for we have no might against this great company that cometh against us; neither know we what to do: but our eyes [are] upon thee.” (2Ch 20:12 AV)

Jehoshaphat is an eternal optimist.  He thinks only positive thoughts.  He tried to assist Ahab on several occasions even though the LORD was against it.  This above passage regards the second time Jehoshaphat attempted to assist Ahab and Jezebel.  Through His prophet, God rebuked Jehoshaphat.  The king was not to assist the God-haters anymore.  To ensure that didn’t happen, God sent Gentile enemies against Judah to keep this good-hearted king occupied with his own problems.  The extent of the challenge was so overwhelming that the Bible tells us the king didn’t know what to do.  He speaks this prayer in the presence of his nation.  He lays at the feet of the LORD the situation and asks for guidance from Him.  This is where Jehoshaphat should have been regarding helping Ahab.  It took an overwhelming situation to drive the king to his knees. Being helpless and clueless can be a good thing.  God becomes very real in times like these.

Having been raised in Scouting, there are certain skills one learns.  Some of those skills concern wilderness survival.  In fact, there is a merit badge one could earn with that name: Wilderness Survival.  Earning this badge required that we learn of different edible and naturally occurring vegetation.  We learned how to make a dandelion salad and sumac tea.  The badge required that we learn how to make shelters and build fires in both good and inclement weather.  We had to learn how to triage and treat emergency medical situations.  Reading a compass was an absolute must.  But one area that was most important was being lost without the immediate means to find one’s way.  The first thing the instructors teach the students is to stop.  Rather than rush off in a panic where injury or further confusion can ensue, the stranded soul is to stop.  He or she is to sit and relax.  Assessment is to be made.  Can I realistically get out before nightfall?  If not, at what time am I going to stop trying and prepare for a night in the woods?  What naturally occurring resources are there to help me find my way out?  Where is the sun?  How is it moving?  Do I need to erect a stationary sundial to discern time of day and direction of movement?  Not knowing what to do causes us to stop and evaluate.  It causes us to inventory only that which can help.  It does not prioritize cause, but rather, focuses on solutions.

Jehoshaphat didn’t know what to do.  This was new for him.  When he sided with Ahab, he had a plan.  When he assisted those whom he was supposed to avoid, there were not too many questions.  Now, the LORD sent him circumstances where he would not survive if he ignored the LORD.  Not knowing what to do is scary.  No doubt!  Not knowing which direction to go home is not comfortable.  I’ve been there once or twice.  Having to ponder the possibilities is frightful.  Will I make it through ok?  Will I make it out alive?  What pain or danger lies ahead?  Will I make it worse or better?  The questions posed while ignorant of solutions can border on the paranoid.  But not knowing what to do is exactly where we need to be sometimes.  When we do not know what to do, we are forced into doing something.  That ‘something’ which we should do first is confess our sin of self-reliance to a God who can do all things.  It was rude not to consult Him in the first place.  Next, we are to relax and involve God in our situation.  It is astounding the change of demeanor that follows this prayer.  Before the victory is even given, Judah is going onto the battlefield with an air of celebration.  They are singing and praising God before God delivers.  The funny thing about being lost.  Once the hiker realizes the plan is working and will eventually deliver him, his spirit revives as he works it out.  Jehoshaphat didn’t have the complete answer.  But he did have the God who had the complete answer.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Character Beats Might

“And the fear of the LORD fell upon all the kingdoms of the lands that [were] round about Judah, so that they made no war against Jehoshaphat.” (2Ch 17:10 AV)

One would think that Jehoshaphat was a man of war.  If all they had to go on was the above verse, they would assume Jehoshaphat was a mighty man who commanded a great and fierce army.  Even if he did, that was not the cause of fear.  There is no record of Jehoshaphat waging any war.  To this point, there is no indication he had gained a great victory of any temporal nature.  Rather, what Jehoshaphat did was to revive Judah and Benjamin back to their one true God.  His father had begun the process.  Jehoshaphat finished it.  A man of character will be feared more than an man of mere might.  A man of mere might with no character can be defeated.  His wickedness will do half the work.  But a man of consistent and resolute character is not easily broken.  This is what the nations around Judah understood.  They knew that Jehovah fought for the people of God.  Especially when they walked with Him.  There was no messing with a king who walked with his God.

There are no guarantees that a world at odds with God would respect and fear a saint who is completely right with God.  In fact, Peter tells us that if we live godly, then persecution is to be expected.  Persecution is the payment for holy living.  Few are willing to pay that price.  The observation above must be understood in the context of national governments and not individual applications.  In other words, we cannot expect the world to leave us alone if we live holy and separated.  Jehoshaphat was a king of a godly nation.  They feared him because he has an army to back him up.  He has God who would defend them to all extents.  So, we cannot expect the same results.  However, there is one area in which this perfectly applies.  “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” (Jas 4:7 AV) The devil has only as much power over us as we allow him to have.  No more.  No less.  Peter does not say that God will cause him to flee.  The power resides with us.  Resist is an instruction to us.  Not to the LORD.

As of late, I have been reminded how true this can be.  The devil is out to discourage and to destroy.  He, or his minions, are extremely active in the lives of the saints.  They want us defeated.  They want us to give up.  They want us to tarnish the good name of our great God in the presence of those who do not know Jehovah as yet.  They want God’s influence neutralized so that none can testify to His greatness.  Whether they are successful or not depends on the saints.  If the saints will walk with God in character and faith, the forces of hell have no option but the flee.  There is no foothold the forces of evil have in the heart that loves God.  None.  It is time we resist!  It is time we show the evil forces of Lucifer that we may not be perfect as yet, but we are forgiven.  We may have made our mistakes and fallen from time to time, but none of that can separate us from the love of God.  We are victors through the blood of Christ, and because we are, we can live for His glory.  We won’t make every righteous decision we should make.  Until we die, sin will always be a battle.  But because we have the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and are sealed unto the day of redemption, Satan has no claim!  None!  No power!  He is to fear the testimony of God that resides within us.  Resist!

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

A special kind of rejection

“And, behold, God himself [is] with us for [our] captain, and his priests with sounding trumpets to cry alarm against you. O children of Israel, fight ye not against the LORD God of your fathers; for ye shall not prosper.” (2Ch 13:12 AV)

These words are spoken by Abijah, king of Judah upon the siege laid against Jerusalem by the ten northern tribes of Israel.  Abijah, although severely outnumbered, reminds Israel that God is with those who are with Him.  Jeroboam, the king of Israel, led his nation down the path of idolatry.  They turned their backs on God.  The priests of Jehovah fled the north and came to Judah.  Jeroboam rejected the temple Solomon built for all Hebrew people and built two temples to golden calves.  The last severe reaction of rebellion against Jehovah God was to invade Jerusalem and destroy the temple.  As long as the temple stood, it would be a draw from those in the north who wished to follow Jehovah.  As stated before, Israel severely outnumbered Judah.  They had completely surrounded the city, and there was no expectation of a positive outcome for Judah.  Unless God fought for them, that is.  And that He did.  The Bible isn’t specific because the initial attack is not declared.  What we do know is that after the first attack, Judah could kill 500,000 northern Israelis and Abijah could capture several border cities.  What strikes me is how far from God the people of God can become.

It is one thing to leave off one’s relationship with the LORD.  It is quite another to fight against those who have a relationship with the LORD.  I haven’t seen this much over the years.  But it does happen.  Nothing can explain this.  Someone who has grown up with the LORD as central to his or her identity has seen much.  He or she has seen God do some spectacular things.  Unfortunately, the people of God become a disappointment.  They fall from the pedestal upon which the rebel has placed them.  They make mistakes, sometimes serious ones, that are unforgivable.  Those who taught them absolutes are suddenly abandoning them for pragmatic reasons.  There is truth without adequate defense.  Pastors, teachers, and parents do not know their Bibles well enough to give a reason for what they say is true.  Disillusionment sets in.  Then comes scoffing.  What might be a minor flaw becomes a major one.  Questions without complete answers give cause to throw out all revealed truth.  Abandonment is understandable.  Destruction is something on a whole different level.

In the book of Revelation, Satan is given two names.  Both of which means destroyer.  It is the endgame of his existence.  He cannot win.  He does not have the illusion of beating God.  That was defeated when the LORD kicked him out of heaven.  He knows he cannot cause the saint to lose his or her salvation.  He knows the bible well enough to know that the gates of hell will not prevail against the church.  He cannot destroy the church.  So, what is his endgame?  What is his objective?  It is to do as much destruction against that which God loves as he can.  This includes mankind, the church, and the individual saints.  Jeroboam had no chance.  Judah loved Jehovah, and God would defend them.  His rebellion, jealousy, and anger against the LORD drove him to his satanic destructive impulse.  There is no other explanation.  To desire the collapse and destruction of all that God loves is not a neutral or natural impulse.  It is satanic at its core.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Coming Out to Stay In

“And after them out of all the tribes of Israel such as set their hearts to seek the LORD God of Israel came to Jerusalem, to sacrifice unto the LORD God of their fathers.” (2Ch 11:16 AV)

After the death of Solomon, his son Rehoboam assumed the throne.  Because of his idolatry, the LORD informed Solomon that the twelve tribes of Israel would be divided into two nations.  Ten tribes coalesced around a man named Jeroboam, a servant of Solomon.  As more of a statement of being different, and the fear the ten northern tribes would reunite because of shared worship in Jerusalem, Jeroboam went all in with idol worship and the worship of devils.  As Israel (the ten northern tribes) committed to devil worship, the priests of Jehovah found no use.  Their ministry was lost among wicked worship, so they left and came to Jerusalem.  It was a pragmatic decision.  If Israel were going to abandon Jehovah, they were not going to support His priests.  They had to leave in order to live.  What might be interesting here is that the bible stipulates who it was that left.  “Such as set their hearts to seek the LORD” suggests some did not.  There may have been priests who had such a situation that returning the Jerusalem was not necessary or desirable.  Perhaps their situation was settled and ministry did not matter.  How sad.  What we do know is that those who desired to follow the LORD and serve Him went to where the LORD would be worshiped!

Someone might think this as a reverse missions devotion.  Are not the people of God supposed to go out into a lost world as share the gospel to the lost?  Yes.  But this is different.  Israel had the word of God.  They had a relationship with Jehovah.  God would send many prophets into Israel.  Isaiah, Jonah, Elijah, and Elisha to name a few.  When the priests left, this did not create a silent vacuum from God’s truth.  God still sent messengers.  Rather, when the priests left, they left because there was no ministry for them.  The people of God did not want the hear the word of God taught.  It was too bad for them that they didn’t want to hear it at all.  The prophets of God made sure that they did.  The priests of God had to leave.  They lost their purpose.  They lost any hope of a purpose.  They could always return.  If Israel would have gotten right and desired the LORD Jehovah, the priests could have returned.  What is worth noting is that those from Israel who desired to remain faithful to Jehovah either made the trip to Jerusalem or relocated there.  The congregation to whom the northern priests were sent came to them.  In relocating, they condensed their ministry and continued.

We don’t want to consider logistics as much as we want to note the character of these priests.  They had a heart for God.  They wanted to live for God and serve God.  They wanted to be among people who desired the same.  I imagine it took a lot for them to uproot and relocate.  They left their homes.  They left their friends.  I also imagine the hardest thing to do was to leave people with whom they had ministry, knowing they would never respond to God.  In a way, this was a mercy.  It is difficult to see a group of people turn their backs on God and want nothing to do with Him or His word.  Especially after they had invested their whole lives with them.  It took character to walk away from a failing ministry because God was more important than anything else in life.  They had the courage to come apart.  They had the faith to trust the LORD in spite of what it might cost them.  They loved God, and of that there was no doubt.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Shade For Refreshing

“The LORD [is] thy keeper: the LORD [is] thy shade upon thy right hand.” (Ps 121:5 AV)

It is interesting that the writer equates God’s keeping to shade.  This is illuminating.  Shade does not protect against all discomfort.  Shade protects from that which is immediately hazardous.  If the sun, heat, or adverse weather was the problem, then a building would address more of it.  Rather, shade will keep us from exposure to direct threats without completely removing the threat.  God can and does deliver completely from that which can cause harm.  But not always.  There are lessons to learn that can only be learned through adversity.  Shade means brings strength to endure.  It does not bring complete absence of adverse conditions.

For whatever reason, I do not like direct sunlight.  I prefer rainy days over bright skies.  I like cooler weather more than hot summers.  Whenever I am outside, I look for shade.  We grew up with neighborhood parks as a common thing.  Each neighborhood had its own little park.  They usually offered a softball field or two, a tennis court, a wading pool, and on occasion, an outdoor ice rink.  Of course, there was playground equipment like swings, slides, and a merry-go-round.  Our park did not have picnic offerings to speak of.  A couple of grills and picnic tables were about it.  The park was more for the children’s benefit than it was for socializing.  I remember our park because the trees were few and far between.  The most common tree was a locust tree.  There were three very large ones near the slide.  They were between the slide and the basketball court.  I remember them because they were huge and offered plenty of shade.  As we played, we sought out this shade as a respite from our activities.  That is where we sat and drank water.  That is where we sat when we were too hot or tired to continue our play.  The shade did not make the sun go down.  The temperature never decreased.  But as the breeze blew across the open ball fields onto our faces, being in the shade felt refreshing.

It is important to remember that God does not promise a trouble-free life.  He cannot.  It wouldn’t be good for us.  Just as we do with our parents, we allow our children to be placed in difficult situations so they might learn and mature.  God is no different.  He would be a horrible God if He removed all adversity from us, as we remained immature, faithless, and accomplishing little for His glory.  It is said of Jesus that he “grew in favour both with God and man”.  The Son of God went through difficult times to experience what it was like to be human.  He learned those things that could only be learned by living through them.  Did that make Him more divine?  No.  He is, was, and always will be infinitely God.  What Jesus did learn was that human experience comes with certain things that can only be known be going through them.  Jesus Christ suffered the worst of all.  God did not remove the cup from which Jesus preferred not to drink.  Jesus drank of the cup of the wrath of God to satisfy the requirement for sin under the law.  God asked His only begotten Son to go through the heat, but the shade would be there.  God will not always deliver completely from adversity.  What He does promise to do is to make it survivable.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

To Know And To Hear

“[Then] what prayer [or] what supplication soever shall be made of any man, or of all thy people Israel, when every one shall know his own sore and his own grief, and shall spread forth his hands in this house: Then hear thou from heaven thy dwelling place, and forgive, and render unto every man according unto all his ways, whose heart thou knowest; (for thou only knowest the hearts of the children of men:)” (2Ch 6:29-30 AV)

Solomon is not so naïve as to think a building is a magical place wherein God dwells and the only place from which the voice of God can come.  Solomon is speaking to the nation of Israel upon dedicating the temple to the service of the LORD.  The entry above is part of a prayer Solomon made to God, seeking His blessing on the building.  But again, he is not so naïve as to think that God answered only from the temple.  In fact, this prayer is offered at a high place and not at the finished temple.  What struck me this morning is that every person will know his or her own sore and grief.  This is part of our human existence.  God has graciously provided prayer, and answers to prayer, as the means to navigate through it.  Don’t let the end of the passage above mislead.  The heart that God knows and the ways which He observes are the heart and ways of repentance.  There are consequences for choices.  That cannot be avoided.  But God is not going to answer prayers for mercy and forgiveness with vindictiveness.  There is mercy to be had.  There is grace to experience.  Our God knows our sores and our griefs, and He is not going to answer by kicking us when we are down!

It is surprising just how weak we can become.  We don’t know our limits until we are pressed to the end of them.  Every now and again, this happens.  I remember one of the first times this happened to me.  I remember getting to a point that I could no longer continue.  I remember sitting down and not caring what the future held.  The earliest memory was while working a paper route.  Wintertime is impossible.  For a ten-year-old boy, hauling newspapers in the snow is near to impossible.  Especially the Sunday paper.  Each weighed about three to four pounds.  We had thirty to fifty of them to carry.  Most of the time it was by wagon or sled.  The blizzard of ’77 was a particularly bad one for the entire northern half of our country.  Where I lived, snowdrifts were fifteen to twenty feet high.  In the height of that storm, I was delivering newspapers.  I had gotten about two-thirds of the way through and could not go another step.  I sat down on my sled and didn’t care if I froze there.  I figured someone would do something.  Then my mom rolled up in our station wagon.  We loaded up the papers, finished, and went home.  Another time was a hunting trip.  I had to drag two deer five miles through dense woods and snow.

There are also times when sin is so pervasive that it controls us and our circumstances and we no longer control it.  It takes everything from us.  There is nothing left.  We have yielded time and again to the flesh, the world, and Satan.  Like the children of Israel in the book of Judges, we do not seem to learn our lesson.  We hope that one day we will.  We are sick of the outcome.  We are overwhelmed with sores and grief.  The saint does not expect God to fix everything.  We need to suffer for our choices.  If we did not, we would never learn.  What we can do is ask for relief of soul.  Whether we are suffering from trial or transgression, God is there to pick us up, clean us off, strengthen us once again, and put our feet on solid ground.  This was the promise of Solomon’s prayer.  God knows our works and our hearts.  He knows whether we are sincere.  He knows if we are honest with Him and with ourselves.  If we are, He will answer!

Saturday, May 2, 2026

He's Not Going Anywhere

“Thou [art] near, O LORD; and all thy commandments [are] truth.” (Ps 119:151 AV)

It is easy to forget that God is near.  For whatever reason, we forget that God is omnipresent and active.  Whether we forget for nefarious reasons or simple human limitation, we forget.  God has made promises to His children.  “[Let your] conversation [be] without covetousness; [and be] content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” (Heb 13:5 AV)  “For the LORD loveth judgment, and forsaketh not his saints; they are preserved for ever: but the seed of the wicked shall be cut off.” (Ps 37:28 AV)  “Fear thou not; for I [am] with thee: be not dismayed; for I [am] thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.” (Isa 41:10 AV) There is ample encouragement in the word of God that we should never doubt God’s presence.  But we do.

Satan has a way of convincing us that God is just like any other relationship.  Temporary.  He would love to convince us that just as in temporal life, relationships change and end.  He would love for us to believe that as the LORD was with the children of Israel in the Old Testament, so too is He to the saint in the New Testament.  He would like us to give up hope on the presence of God because our senses are dulled by trial, trouble, tiresome activity, or transgression.  Our adversary wants us to feel as far from God as we think we can get.  When adversity comes, the Devil would want us to assume God sent it to drive us away.  When sin occurs, he wants us to believe it to be too egregious that God refuses to keep company with the likes of us any longer.  Our enemy wants us as discouraged and despondent as we can get.  Convincing us that God refuses to be near goes a long way to that goal.

Faith requires that we accept things which we cannot understand nor sense as real.  This does not mean we abandon all reason or observation.  If we do not feel God is real, perhaps there is a reason.  Perhaps there is sin at the door.  Maybe we have not drawn to Him as we should.  But if all the boxes are checked, then whether we can sense His presence or not, He is near.  We must accept that as true.  Remember when you dropped your newborn off at the nursery for the very first time?  You retired to a place unseen by your toddler, but you were only a few steps away.  He screamed for you.  He pitched a fit.  Why?  Was it because you abandoned him?  Or was it his perception that failed him?  That is what we must understand regarding the presence of God.  It is not a reality problem.  It is a perception problem.  If the word of God promises the everlasting presence of God, then we need to learn to trust it regardless of our perceptions!  He is near.  You couldn’t chase Him away.  He loves you more than you can ever comprehend.  He isn’t going anywhere.