Feast upon the Word!

Enrich Your Time With the Lord

Weekend Wisdom

February 18– February 19, 2023

Reality Check

For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.

But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.

1 Thessalonians 5:3–4

 

How many individual words do you think are being spoken all around the face of the globe in this precise moment?

Based on a current world population of 7.5 billion people, multiplied by an average of 16,000 words spoken per day, divided by waking hours and other basic standards of time measurement . . . the estimated total is somewhere around 2.1 billion words per second.

That’s what being spoken, right this second.

Billions of words.

But this number is about much more than math. It’s actually of substantial importance. Because if you could drain away the small talk from each of those conversations, boiling them down to their basic messages, here’s what nearly all those words are communicating: “There is peace and security.” The cacophony of ceaseless human chatter is collectively saying what the Bible summarized years ago as the hypnotic drumbeat of earthly life. As far as the future goes, as far as any need for God is concerned, people whose understanding is darkened are saying, I’m just fine. I’m good. I’ll be safe. Nothing to worry about--I’ve got this.

In other words, “peace and security.”

Yet a day is coming--“the day of the Lord” (1 Thessalonians 5:2) --when those who are not in Christ will realize the falsity of the comfort they’ve been banking on. This first judgment the lost will experience consists of the shock of instantly awaking to the stark totality of their error. All opinions to the contrary will suddenly be rendered inaccurate in the fearful realization that (1) there is a God, (2) it’s not me, (3) a record of my rebellion exists, (4) I pay the penalty for it, and (5) God’s wrath is falling--now.

In that moment, “peace and security” will prove to have been a traitorous mantra.

But this does not have to be your future. “You are not in darkness, brothers, for that day to surprise you like a thief.” We know full well--from Scripture as well as personal experience--that Christians are certainly not exempt from suffering in this life. But there is zero chance--absolutely zero--that God will leave His children on earth to experience what the day of the Lord will be like. Those who turn from their sin and embrace Jesus Christ by faith will not be standing under the deluge when God’s wrath toward human evil starts raining down.

So don’t fall for the easygoing nonchalance of a “peace and security” posture toward life. Don’t be tempted to find your peace and security in anything or anyone other than Jesus Christ. If the apostle Paul could say things like, “Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling” (Philippians 2:12b), and, “Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith” (2 Corinthians 13:5), and, “I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified” (1 Corinthians 9:27), then each of us should assume a need for reflecting often and honestly on the condition of our souls.

“Therefore, brothers, be all the more diligent to confirm your calling and election, for if you practice these qualities you will never fall” (2 Peter 1:10). Wake up from whatever spiritual slumber may be tugging you down toward laxity, and face reality while there’s still time to embrace Jesus Christ--the only source of peace and security that won’t ever disappoint, from now into eternity.

 

Points to ponder…

  • Under what conditions do you most often recognize a tendency toward spiritual apathy and casualness?
  • How would you share this message with someone who seems unruffled about their spiritual danger without Christ?

Saturday’s Reading

Numbers 16-17

Sunday’s Reading

 Numbers 18-20

 I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 17, 2023

Friday

Wait With Certainty

Isaiah 40:31

14 Wait on the Lord: be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart: wait, I say, on the Lord.”

Psalm 27:14

 

We wait a year for a birthday or an anniversary. We wait nine months for babies to be born. We wait days to attend a sporting event. We wait minutes for a taxi to arrive. In all that waiting, we rarely wait anxiously because we are usually confident in the outcome. The baby will be born, the game will begin, the taxi will arrive, the celebration will be held. Certainty of outcome can make the difference in how we wait.

In life, sometimes we are anxious about the future because we aren’t certain of what it holds. And we too often wait anxiously; our heart grows weak with uncertainty and fear. But God knows the future; indeed, His knowledge is unlimited. We may not know the future, but we know Who does. Therefore, we have every reason to wait with courage, certainty, and confidence. God promises to give courage and strength to those who wait upon Him.

Are you looking to the future, unsure of what it holds? Trust in the Lord (Proverbs 3:5-6). Receive His strength for your heart as you wait upon Him.

 

A point to ponder…

The great secret of a right waiting upon God is to be brought down to utter impotence. 
Andrew Murray

Read the Bible through in a year

Numbers 14-15

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 16, 2023

Thursday

All You Need Is Love: Compassion

John 3:16

36 But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd.”

Matthew 9:36

 

The northwest part of England—the so-called “hill country”—is sheep country. A stranger traveling in those parts might wonder at the large number of sheep grazing seemingly unattended, on the rugged fells (hills). But a closer look will reveal miles of dry-stone walls that provide boundaries to their grazing, and color markings that indicate their owner. Hill-country sheep do not lack for a shepherd; they are far too valuable.

And so are the people of God whom the Bible calls sheep. As Jesus moved throughout the towns of Israel, preaching and ministering, He saw people who seemed to be wandering through life without a divine Shepherd. And “He was moved with compassion for them, because they were weary and scattered” (Matthew 9:36). These were the very people He came into the world to save, people who were disconnected from the love of God. And Jesus’ compassion prompted Him to action—He raised up workers to take His reconciling Gospel into the world.

Let your love manifest itself in compassion and let compassion result in action on behalf of those in need.

 

A point to ponder…

Biblical orthodoxy without compassion is surely the ugliest thing in the world.
Francis Schaeffer

Read the Bible through in a year

Numbers 11-13

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 15, 2023

Wednesday

In Quietness and Confidence

Isaiah 30: 1-15

15 For thus saith the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel; In returning and rest shall ye be saved; in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength: and ye would not.”

Isaiah 30:15

 

Isaiah was dismayed when he saw the royal delegation leaving Jerusalem for Egypt. King Hezekiah was sending envoys to form a military alliance instead of trusting God’s protection. Hezekiah hadn’t asked Isaiah’s advice, nor had he sought God’s counsel (Isaiah 30:2). Instead, the king’s diplomats treaded through the desert (verse 6) on a mission doomed to failure (verse 7). Isaiah advised the caravan to turn back, saying: “In returning and rest you shall be saved.” He told them to turn around and return home, to rest in God’s protection, to quiet themselves, and to trust God’s promises. That, he said, would be their strength (verse 15).

That’s our strength too.

We can’t solve all the problems facing us; and sometimes the more we try, the deeper the mess. We find little help in “Egypt.” But in returning to the Lord and resting in Him, we find deliverance. And in quietness and confidence we find strength.

 

A point to ponder…

This quietness and confidence is… an abiding frame of mind, an all-enduring and an all-pervading spirit…. Indeed it’s priceless value lies in the fact that it pervades the anxious activities of life.

George Wilson, Edinburgh preacher of an earlier era

Read the Bible through in a year

Numbers 8-10

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 14, 2023

Tuesday

The Blacksmith’s Advice

Colossians 1:24-29

27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory:”

Colossians 1:27

 

One of Finland’s most unusual preachers was Paavo Ruotsalainen, who was born into a poor family in 1777 and became a farmer. As a young man, he sought a deeper Christian life. Hearing about a distant blacksmith known for his godliness, Ruotsalainen traveled many miles to meet him, begging for food and lodging along the way. As they conversed, the blacksmith, Jacob Hogman, told the lad he lacked an inner awareness of Christ. From that point, Ruotsalainen focused on the truth of Christ within him—the hope of glory. In the years that followed, he traveled incessantly throughout Finland, sparking revival in many areas. It’s said he traveled more miles in Finland than the apostle Paul covered in all his missionary journeys.1

 

Take it from the blacksmith. To have peace and power in our lives, we must focus our minds on Christ and saturate them with His Word. Colossians 3:1-2 says, “If then you were raised with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is, sitting at the right hand of God. Set your mind on things above.”

Christ in you—the hope of glory!

 

A point to ponder…

One thing you lack and therewith you lack all else: the inner awareness of Christ.

Jacob Hogman

Read the Bible through in a year

Numbers 7

I love you!!!

1Siglind Bruhn, Saints in the Limelight (Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press, 2003), 305-307.

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 13, 2023

Monday

Good Thoughts

Philippians 4: 8-9

Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee.”

Isaiah 26:3

 

When you are pouring a gallon jug of water into a larger container, you get that “glug glug glug” effect as the water leaves the narrow neck of the gallon jug. That happens because water and air are colliding in the neck of the jug. Water is leaving and air is rushing in to fill the empty space.

Our minds are like that gallon jug; they have to be filled with something. The more we fill our mind with godly thoughts, the less room there will be for ungodly thoughts. As the prophet Isaiah wrote, when our minds are focused on God we will be at peace (Isaiah 26:3). There will be no room for its opposite—worry and anxiety. The apostle Paul went further with a list of things to meditate on: things that are true, noble, just, pure, lovely, of good report, virtuous, and worthy of praise (Philippians 4:8-9). That’s an expansive list—lots of things to choose from; lots of ways to remain free of worry.

Empty your mind of negative, ungodly thinking and let the good and godly thoughts rush in. There is no better source for good thoughts than the Word of God.

 

A point to ponder…

When anger enters the mind, wisdom departs.

Thomas à Kempis

Read the Bible through in a year

Numbers 5-6

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

Weekend Wisdom

February 11– February 12, 2023

Outrageous Counting

My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations;

James 1:2

 

I’d like to nominate James 1:2 as one of the most outrageous statements in the Bible: “Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds.” Count it all . . . joy?! Those are the words James wrote, through the inspiration of God’s Spirit, but from our perspective, it doesn’t add up.

Perhaps that’s because we tend to confuse joy with happiness, and this verse does not say, “Be happy about your trials.” Happiness is a fleeting, circumstantial, in-the-moment, excited feeling--an emotional high.

Joy is very different. You can’t make yourself joyful. Joy comes only from God. Joy is a supernatural delight in the Person, purposes, and people of God.

Have you ever sensed God at work in you or seen His obvious hand in a situation and knew in your heart that God did that? Have you ever stared up into starry space and sensed your soul being eclipsed by the God who made it all? What you felt in that moment was joy in who God is.

Joy is also something we exchange as brothers and sisters in Christ, a oneness of heart. We all belong to the same Master, follow the same Book, are filled with the same Spirit. We can experience a moving, connected, wonderful resonance with people we don’t even know; that too is joy.

A supernatural delight in the purposes of God means you know there’s something bigger going on here, something so far beyond the temporal that’s unfolding according to God’s plan. And you can take joy in God’s purposes.

Only Christ-followers would ever consider trials joy. If life is only about here, now, and your happiness, then trials would make zero sense and be worthless. If all you are living for is the next fifteen minutes, then unfortunately those fifteen minutes of happiness are almost over, and you would have good reason to resent a fly in that ointment. But those of us who are committed to a higher purpose and see this short life in its eternal perspective can get our thinking to a place of joy--no matter what.

 

Points to ponder…

Let’s get very practical with this. If you want to quit the pity party and get back on the joy train, then try this method. On four notecards, write the following:

What happened to me? On the first card, write the details of your trial.

Why am I here on earth? On the second card, write the purpose of your life, according to God’s Word.

How can this trial advance that purpose? On the third card, write what you can do today to advance the purpose of displaying the superiority of a life lived in God.

What resources can I access this moment to help me? On the fourth card, inventory all that’s available to you as a follower of Christ: the strength and comfort of the Holy Spirit; the Word of God giving you wisdom to direct your path; supportive Christian relationships; the grace of God, which allows you to begin again when you fail. Think through how you can draw down upon those resources as you plow through this trial.

Then keep going over these cards so that God’s purpose in your life will not be lost. This is a practical exercise to help you consider your trials joy.

Pray

Saturday’s Reading

Numbers 1-2

Sunday’s Reading

 Numbers 3-4

 I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 10, 2023

Friday

Stress and Thanks

Philippians 4:4

16 Rejoice evermore.

17 Pray without ceasing.

18 In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18

 

It’s not a law of physics, but it is a law of common sense: No two objects can occupy the same space at the same time. (There are some exceptions in the realm of molecular matter, but let’s stick to everyday “stuff.”) That makes perfect sense to us and we have no reason to try to prove that idea wrong. We move one thing if we want to set another thing in its place.

Strangely, we are not as convinced when it comes to spiritual things. For example, we are willing to worry about a problem and proclaim our faith in God at the same time. We don’t have a spiritual law that invalidates our effort, but our experience says it’s contradictory to worry and to praise God simultaneously. In 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18, the apostle Paul says there are three things we can do simultaneously since they support one another—rejoice, pray, and give thanks. The prayerful practice of joy and thanksgiving leaves no room for stress or worry.

At the first sign of stress, pray and give thanks to God for the joy that comes from trusting Him in all things. Not for all things, but in all things.

 

A point to ponder…

The measure of our spirituality is the amount of praise and thanksgiving in our prayer. 
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

 

Read the Bible through in a year

Leviticus 26-27

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 9, 2023

Thursday

All You Need Is Love: Sacrifice

Romans 12:1

13 Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”

John 15:13

When Christians consider the word sacrifice, we often think of the animal sacrifices in the Old Testament. And we think of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross for the sins of the world. Christ Himself said that sacrificing one’s life for friends is the greatest demonstration of love.

Most of us will never be called upon to sacrifice our entire life to the point of death. But there are many other ways that we can love sacrificially besides dying. It was the apostle Paul who wrote that Christians are called by God to be living sacrifices. That is, we are to be living examples of the greatest act of love by giving up ourselves for the well-being of another whether in life or in death. We are given countless opportunities to show love through sacrifice every day. We can sacrifice ungodly thoughts and actions for the glory of God. Or sacrifice self-centered time, talent, and treasure for the good of others.

Look today for a way to demonstrate sacrificial love for the sake of God’s glory or the good of another.

 

A point to ponder…

If Jesus Christ be God and died for me, then no sacrifice can be too great for me to make for Him.
C. T. Studd

 

Read the Bible through in a year

Leviticus 24-25

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

February 8, 2023

Wednesday

Without Wavering

Hebrews 6: 9-12

12 That ye be not slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises.”

Hebrews 6:12

 

The book of Hebrews was especially written to veteran Christians who were battling new threats and troubles (see Hebrews 10:32-36). The writer kept pointing his readers to God’s powerful promises, which we can claim for ourselves just as personally as the original readers. Here are three of them:

  • The Promise of His Care: He is also able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them.(Hebrews 7:25)
  • The Promise of His Coming: For yet a little while, and He who is coming will come and will not tarry. (Hebrews 10:37)
  • The Promise of His Company: I will never leave you nor forsake you.(Hebrews 13:5)

Hebrews 10:23 says, “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful.” Hebrews is also the book that reminds us the just will live by faith (Hebrews 10:38). Every book of the Bible contains great and mighty promises—especially Hebrews—and we need every promise God has given us so we can stand and look up without wavering.

 

A point to ponder…

Stand fast, without wishing for another trust, and without wavering in the trust you have.

Charles Spurgeon

Read the Bible through in a year

Leviticus 22-23

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich