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Enrich Your Time With the Lord

August 1, 2023

Tuesday

Joy in Prayer

Philippians 4:6-7

Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, Rejoice.”

Philippians 4:4

A common mistake some new Christians make is to assume that people like Jesus and Paul never had burdens or concerns. Surely, we aren’t like them; we have anxieties and struggles. But so did Jesus and Paul!

On the night of His arrest, Jesus was tremendously burdened by the experience of suffering, which He knew lay ahead. So He learned to take those struggles to God (Hebrews 5:7-8). And He did that through prayer (Matthew 26:36-44). And what about Paul, who wrote “the epistle of joy” (Philippians) while in jail? Was he naturally joyful all the time, and are we expected to be? Paul learned—and we must learn—what Jesus knew: The secret to maintaining joy in this world is prayer to the Father. Paul wrote, “Rejoice in the Lord” and then wrote, “Be anxious for nothing,” turning over every anxious thought to God in prayer (Philippians 4:6-7). We can’t be joyful and anxious at the same time. Committing our anxieties to God makes way for the fruit of joy in our life (Galatians 5:22).

If you have anxious thoughts today, commit them to God in prayer so that you can enjoy His joy and peace.

 

A point to ponder…

Only to sit and think of God—oh what a joy it is! 
Frederick W. Faber

Read the Bible through in a year

Isaiah 18-22

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 31, 2023

Monday

A Merry Heart

Proverbs 15:13-15

22 A merry heart doeth good like a medicine: but a broken spirit drieth the bones.”

Proverbs 17:22

A lot of books have been written for high school students preparing them for the ups and downs of living with college roommates. One is called 52 Ways to Get Along With Your College Roommate. Other titles: The Roommate Book; The College Roommate From Hell: Skills and Strategies for Surviving With a Problem Roommate; and My Roommate Is Driving Me Crazy!

 

It isn’t easy to live with another person. Whether in a dormitory, in barracks, or in a home, it takes God’s grace to live happily and harmoniously. How vital to stay positive and cultivate a merry heart! The Bible says:

  • “A merry heart makes a cheerful countenance” (Proverbs 15:13).
  • “A merry heart has a continual feast” (Proverbs 15:15).
  • “Go, eat your bread with joy, and drink your wine with a merry heart; for God has already accepted your works” (Ecclesiastes 9:7).

May God give us all a merry heart that will be like an elixir for those with whom we live!

 

A point to ponder…

A merry heart, a merry heart, it shines upon the face, / and insures you a welcome at every time and place.
Mrs. A. Jones, a nineteenth-century poet

Read the Bible through in a year

Isaiah 13-17

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© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

Weekend Wisdom

July 29– July 30, 2023

Survival

No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.

1 Corinthians 10:13

When you’re overwhelmed by a problem that isn’t going to get better in a couple days or even weeks, you might begin to falter. The pressure to falter is great—to slip down, go under, give in, lose the battle—and at times we would falter without an exceedingly great and precious promise from God. You need something larger and stronger than your problems. Serious days call for a serious promise: God is always watching; I will not falter.

God is watching and He wants you to succeed at the Christian life. Considering His great love for you, do you honestly think He would let you go through more than you can handle? No. He won’t let the waters drown you. He will keep the fires from burning you (Isaiah 43:1–2). He won’t allow the temptation to become so strong it knocks you off your feet.

In 1 Corinthians 10:13, both meanings are in view. God won’t allow a temptation or a trial into your life that you won’t be able to handle. Neither one will overtake your life or last forever. “God is faithful.”

Every trial and temptation you face is “common to man.” You might feel as if nobody has ever gone through what you’re going through, but that’s false. The enemy tries to paint your difficulties as unique in order to make you falter. Don’t fall for that! In the past, many people have gone through a trial just like yours, and more will in the future. You don’t get singled out for a customized set of temptations. You’re probably getting about average. God will not allow you to be tried beyond your ability to withstand.

He’s watching closely. God actively controls the severity of everything we face. He says, “This far—no further. That’s all. That’s My daughter; I know what she can handle.” God protects His own. He will not allow you to be tested beyond what you are able to handle.

You might argue, “I’m already being tried beyond what I can bear!” But the truth is that God knows you better than you know yourself. You’re not going to lose it. You will survive. You don’t know what you are capable of in God’s strength. You will get through this. The trial won’t last forever.

When the time comes that you really can’t take it anymore, 1 Corinthians 10:13 promises, “He will also provide the way of escape.” With practice you can learn to recognize exit ramps when you see them. “The way of escape” might look like . . .

  • An instant end to the trial.When God moves, the mountains get leveled, the floods get lowered, and the sun suddenly breaks through. In my experience, trials end as quickly as they start.
  • Encouragement to endure. Out of the blue, God may send another Christian to encourage you and remind you that you’re not alone.
  • Wisdom and direction. God may show you a new angle on the problem. So many trials in life hinge for the good on one, simple, God-given piece of wisdom.
  • Strength to persevere. There may be days when you don’t think you can face that difficult circumstance or person one more time. God may energize you for a new season of faithfulness.
  • A friend to share the burden. Sometimes God dispels the darkness through the comforting assurance of friendship. The way of escape may be someone who has walked the same road before.
  • A few days of relief. Sometimes God gives an oasis in the middle of the desert to replenish your reserves. Perhaps those tough circumstances will return for a season, but that temporary relief enables you to endure.

Of course, the variety of exit ramps is as endless as God’s creativity, but you can be confident He won’t let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. He doesn’t promise you eight options, or six, or even three—but you will find at least one exit ramp. When you see it, take it. Sometimes He gives us extra strength to endure our trials, but whether you’re enduring or exiting, you will not falter; God is always watching.

 

Points to ponder…

  • The enemy paints our problems as unique, but God describes them as common and average. How does that truth inspire you to endure?
  • What are some exit ramps God has provided in your life?

Saturday’s Reading

Isaiah 5-8

Sunday’s Reading

Isaiah 9-12

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 28, 2023

Friday

Any Fool Can Do This

Romans 12:9-21

16 Be of the same mind one toward another. Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low estate. Be not wise in your own conceits.”

Romans 12:16

Do you ever quarrel with someone you love? Nothing good comes from it, and that’s why Proverbs 17:14 says, “The beginning of strife is like releasing water; therefore stop contention before a quarrel starts.” More to the point, Proverbs 20:3 says, “It is honorable for a man to stop striving, since any fool can start a quarrel.”

Who wants to hear a concert when the instruments are out of tune? Discordant notes make us wince. But when the instruments are playing in harmony—trumpets, drums, violins, and all the rest—the music is a pleasure to hear.

Yes, we sometimes have honest disagreements and must work through them. But there’s really no place for us to be childish and quarrelsome. The Bible says, “And a servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient” (2 Timothy 2:24).

If you’re quarreling with someone you love, make it a matter of prayer and ask God to give you a harmonious attitude—one of humility, gentleness, and patience.

 

A point to ponder…

When we’re in tune with God, we’ll be in harmony with each other.
Anonymous

Read the Bible through in a year

Isaiah 1-4

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 27, 2023

Thursday

Special Delivery: Broadcasting

Matthew 4:18-22

Then the Lord said unto me, Proclaim all these words in the cities of Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem, saying, Hear ye the words of this covenant, and do them.”

Jeremiah 11:6

In 1922, Pastor William Ward Ayer of Valparaiso, Indiana, was visiting the home of one of the members of his church when he was introduced to a new apparatus—a crystal radio. After a lot of squeals and screeches, Ayer, to his utter amazement, heard a man speaking from Chicago, fifty miles away. Years later as the pastor of a New York church, Ayer preached to a quarter-million listeners every week.

Nearly a hundred years later, Turning Point and many other Bible-based ministries reach millions of people every day with the Gospel. And there are many opportunities for us all to be involved. For example, a woman in Virginia works for a national rental car agency, prepping the cars for the next customer. She always makes sure to tune the radio to a nearby Christian station so the renter will have the opportunity to hear the Gospel, if only for a moment.

Whenever we find a way to share the Truth, however small the effort may seem, it’s a special delivery because our message is so special and it’s our privilege to deliver it.

 

A point to ponder…

God wants to use you to bring other people to Himself.
Greg Laurie

Read the Bible through in a year

Song of Solomon

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 26, 2023

Wednesday

A Sign of Maturity

Titus 2:13

20 For our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ:”

Philippians 3:20

Many Christians rarely hear a sermon concerning biblical prophecy. Some pastors and teachers consider prophecy to be a controversial topic, with the potential to cause disagreement and division. But the return of Christ is mentioned, directly or indirectly, in all but four books of the New Testament (Galatians, 2 and 3 John, and Philemon).

The apostle Paul connects an understanding of the return of Christ to spiritual maturity. In Philippians 3, he describes his own desire to press on to his reunion with Christ as the culmination of his life of service on earth (verses 12-14). Then he says that all who are spiritually mature should think the same way (verse 15); we should understand that our citizenship is in heaven, not on earth, and live in expectation of meeting the Savior we followed on earth. So, contrary to what many believe, pursuing Christ now in anticipation of meeting Him then, is a sign of spiritual maturity according to the apostle Paul.

If you aren’t already, begin today “looking for the blessed hope and glorious appearing of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:13).

 

A point to ponder…

A continual looking forward to the eternal world is not a form of escapism or wishful thinking, but one of the things a Christian is meant to do.
C. S. Lewis

Read the Bible through in a year

Ecclesiastes 9-12

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 25, 2023

Tuesday

Christ With Us

Mark 16:20

14 I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.”

Philippians 3:14

The Age of Enlightenment saw the rise of Deism—the view that describes God as the Creator but not the maintainer of earth. Theism believes in a personal, involved God; Deism believes in an impersonal, detached God.

The rise of Deism was consistent with the Enlightenment’s growing disregard for the Bible—a book whose God is anything but impersonal and detached. When Jesus sent the apostles out to evangelize the world, He didn’t say, “I’m leaving! It’s all up to you now!” Instead, He promised to be with them “to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20), “working with them” in their apostolic tasks (Mark 16:20). He even sent His Spirit to “guide [them] into all truth” (John 16:13). We are not called and commissioned to grow into maturity on our own. Jesus, by His Spirit, enables us in all He asks us to do for Him.

Whatever God calls you to do in ministry, family, or vocation, you are not alone. Jesus, by His Spirit, is with you to conform you to His image (Romans 8:29).

 

A point to ponder…

Talk with us, Lord, Thyself reveal, while here o’er earth we rove; speak to our hearts, and let us feel the kindling of Thy love. 
Charles Wesley

Read the Bible through in a year

Ecclesiastes 5-8

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 24, 2023

Monday

Glory for Me!

John 16:16-22

22 And ye now therefore have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you.”

John 16:22

In February 2019, Cydney Cooper gave birth to twins while her husband, Skyler, was deployed in Kuwait with the U.S. Army. The babies were premature and spent twelve days in the NICU. One day as Cydney cradled one of the newborns in the hospital room, a nurse entered. Behind her came another pair of footsteps—Skyler’s. The video of the surprise reunion went viral, being viewed more than 2.1 million times.

Think of how wonderful we’ll feel when our footsteps tread heaven’s streets. Whether by death or by the Lord’s sudden return, there’s a great reunion ahead of us. Christ’s victory over sin and death gives us an eternal home, and what a celebration awaits us. Charles Gabriel envisioned this reunion when he wrote the hymn, “O That Will Be Glory”—one of the most popular in its day—that said:

When all my labors and trials are o’er,
And I am safe on that beautiful shore,
         Just to be near the dear Lord I adore
Will through the ages be glory for me.

 

A point to ponder…

Friends will be there I have loved long ago; joy like a river around me will flow.
Charles Gabriel, hymnist

Read the Bible through in a year

Ecclesiastes 1-4

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

Weekend Wisdom

July 22– July 23, 2023

Do You Still Want It?

When Jesus saw him lying there and knew he had already been there a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be healed” 

John 5:6

Far be it from me to find fault with Jesus’ bedside manner, but . . .

“Do you want to be healed?” doesn’t seem the most pastoral or sensitive question to ask someone who’d been “lying there” on his bed of pain for “a long time.” Nor would even a regular person feel the need to ask it, seeing the answer is so positively obvious. You’d hardly need to be all-knowing to figure that out.

Yet we can trust that what Jesus knows—not only about a crippled man in the first century but about us, in ours—is always something we could stand to learn.

The setting for Jesus’ question in John 5 was a pool of some sort, most likely known for its therapeutic qualities. Best guess is that it was a hot springs which from time to time was “stirred up” (John 5:7), creating a massaging effect that felt good on stiff, unhealthy bodies. But the man that Jesus addressed in verse 6 was an invalid who, try as he might, was never able to work his way fast enough toward the waters when they began to bubble. “I have no one to put me into the pool when the waters are stirred up, and while I am going another steps down before me” (John 5:7).

Perhaps when this man first found himself at that pool, he had high hopes it would help him. Even by year five, maybe after a few close calls at beating the crowd into the water before it fell calm again, he was confident he’d figured out a better plan. Maybe next time. There was always a chance.

But by year twenty-five, whenever word began rippling back that said the waters were stirring, do you think he even sat up on his elbows? Did he make the futile effort of rolling himself upright? I mean, why? What was the use? At what point do you think he finally said, You know what? I’m just not hoping anymore. I’m done.

Which is what makes Jesus’ question so awesome.

“Do you want to be healed?” Do you still want this?

I want to learn from His all-wise example. I want to be the person coming around the corner, catching you in the middle of an ordeal that’s been going on for a long time, and asking: Have you stopped praying? Are you just managing now? Are there things you’ve allowed into your life at this point—making exceptions, cutting corners—that you would never have tolerated in yourself, back when you were still sure of being used by God? Do you still care? Do you still love? Do you still long to see God move? Do you still hope?

Satan is trying to convince you that anything good or better in your life is already in your rearview mirror; that nothing ahead can be anything more than a scaled-back version of Christian living. But your and my hope is in the revealing of Jesus Christ. One way or another, in this world or the next, we are headed toward an incredible future with Him. And because we’ve been promised such an amazing ending, how can we not remain in a perpetual state of expectation?

As His people, we are those who’ve put our hope in the Lord, even when it’s hard, even when it hurts. We still get up, we still go on, and we never stop wanting what He alone can give us.

 

Points to ponder…

  • What are the most noticeable circumstances that war against your hope?
  • Why is the hope of heaven so much more than an optimistic cop-out for disappointment?

Saturday’s Reading

Proverbs 27-29

Sunday’s Reading

Proverbs 30-31

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich

July 21, 2023

Friday

Pray First

Proverbs 16:1-9

Commit thy works unto the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established.”

Proverbs 16:3

Daniel Webster, the great statesman of other years, was once asked, “Mr. Webster, what is the most sobering, searching thought that ever entered your mind?” Without hesitancy, the staunch statesman replied, “My personal accountability to God.”

As we go through our daily lives we will inevitably make mistakes, but we can reduce them by taking a moment to pray about every decision, large and small. The Lord’s presence is near us, and we should ask Him for wisdom before sending that letter, posting that message, taking that job, having that conversation.

We certainly need His help with the big decisions in life, but the Lord also longs to bless the small ones too. When we commit whatever we do to the Lord, He will establish our plans. If we depend on ourselves with our faulty reasoning, our plans may falter. Take the time to pray first—make Him your accountability partner!

 

A point to ponder…

Trusting in the Lord, delighting in the Lord, committing my way unto the Lord, let me now just “rest.” Don’t worry. Whatever happens, just refer it to the Lord!
John Henry Jowett

Read the Bible through in a year

Proverbs 24-26

I love you!!!

© 2000-2023 B. Michael Goerlich