Regular nibbles from the Bible. . .come for a bite, leave with an appetite



May these words of my mouth and this meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight. (Psalm 19:14, MSG)

Saturday, April 6, 2013

ONE THING I CAN’T GO WITHOUT (1Samuel 4-6 )

 Today's devotional brought to you courtesy of Ada Brownell @2013



GPS
If you were in a crisis, such as being marooned on an island, what is the one thing you couldn’t do without?

I’m pretty sure I’d think having God with me would be the one thing I would desperately need. But would I later think I’d prefer something else?

I thought about this when I read about the Israelites, while losing a war with the Philistines, taking the precious Ark of the Covenant into the battlefield.

I’ve read the stories from Joshua’s day about the wonders surrounding the Ark of the Covenant, such as the time the priests’ feet approached the Jordan River carrying the gold box and the waters rolled back so the massive group of Israelites could cross.

How did it work for Israel to pull out the “God thing” in time of crisis?

Well, there was a problem. They had been worshiping foreign gods and Ashtaroth idols. Perhaps as I sometimes do, thinking it doesn’t matter that the meditations of my heart and the words of my mouth don’t honor the Lord, they thought idols were a permissible way to soothe a sinful conscience.

The prophet Eli’s wicked sons, Hophni and Phinehas seemed to be the ringleaders. But wasn’t it a good thing to turn to the true God now? If I sin, couldn’t I connect with the Heavenly Father again and have His blessing?

Well, the shout of the joyful Israeli solidiers greeted the ark echoing to the Philistines’ lines.

Philistine commanders issued an alarm. “God has come into their camp! Fight as you never have.”

 The Philistines captured the ark. Thirty-thousand Israeli men died that day and the rest ran to their tents. Phinehas and Hophni took mortal wounds. The shock caused Eli’s and his pregnant daughter-in-law’s deaths, and as she drew her last breath she whispered, “Name my son ‘Ichabod.’”

 Ichabod means “the glory is departed.”

After weeks of God’s judgment among them with the ark in their camp, the Philistines sent the ark back to Israel with cows that had calves in the barn. If the cows took the ark back to Israel, they would know it was a miracle.

 Their full udders swinging, the cows pulled the ark straight home.

With Eli dead, Samuel the prophet became the leading spiritual authority in Israel (See 1 Samuel 7), called the nation to repentance and to destroy their idols. God saw the tears and heard, and in love forgave. The Philistines didn’t invade Israel again through Samuel’s lifetime.
Lord, may I remember this lesson and not easily walk away from your presence. Help me remember, too, that if I sin, I have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ, and sin can be forgiven (1 John 2:1-11).

  Yet, I shouldn’t go anywhere without your presence.

Ada Brownell, a retired newspaper reporter and free-lance inspirational writer, is the author of Swallowed by Life: Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal http://buff.ly/TLkr0a; Joe the Dreamer: The Castle and the Catapult http://buff.ly/XeqTvH

      Her blog: http://www.inkfromanearthenvessel.blogspot.com

Friday, April 5, 2013

Speak Up, Lord! (1 Samuel 3)

p.s. To my readers: I've been sick and hospitalized for about two weeks. Sorry to have missed you, but He is Risen!  Amen and amen and hallelujah!


I want you to read the following sentence.  It's a very familiar verse from a very familiar story, one that I learned as a child and have taught many times since. I'll even quote it from the King James, since that's probably most familiar to us as a group.

Then Samuel answered, Speak; for thy servant heareth. (1 Samuel 3:10)

It feels like there is something missing. Go ahead. Try it. Close your eyes and say the verse and read it again.

Did you, like me, like any students I've taught, say . . . .

Speak, Lord,
for thy servant heareth

That's what Eli told Samuel to say.

But it's not what he said. 

So many the boy Samuel had feet of clay after all. Here I was thinking of the contrast between Eli and his sons and their rich spiritual heritage compared to Elkanah, an ordinary Ephraimite. But Elkanah's family knew 
in a way Eli did not. 

When Samuel lay on his bed and speak into the night, what did he expect to happen? 

Did he think a monster might climb appear? Did he expect to see anything at all? I expect that disembodied voices were the stuff of ghost stories then as well as now. 

Was he scared? Or did he think talking with God was, well, normal? He was young enough to hear and respond and not put up barriers.

My daughter-in-law lost her grandmother this past week. Samuel makes me think of my granddaughter, who alone of her relatives says that Mimi is with God. (not heaven).  Her house to God's house. Her presence to God's presence. As simple as that.

Regardless of what or whom Samuel expected to hear when he answered the voice, he grew into a mighty man of God.  

The first time I taught this story, one of my students (the pastor's son) paraphrased the verse this way: 

Speak up, Lord!

I expect God did, loud and clear enough for Samuel to understand. 


L  O  R  D

Sunday, March 31, 2013

THE OUTCAST, THE REJECTED (Judges 11)

Hi there, faithful followers! I have opened up my devotional blog one or two days a week, to keep me fresh. We begin today, with Christina Rich's take on the judge Jephthah. We will keep going through the Old Testament, chapter by chapter, book by book, as we have been. 
I would love comments to encourage my guests and to tell me what you think of this new twist.
Our first guest is Christina Rich.

Christina here. I have to tell you I was a bit nervous when I volunteered to write a devotional for Darlene. One, I’ve only written one other, and with no feedback it kind of makes a person wonder, you know? And two, what if I do it wrong and I become the great outcast among the Secret Society of Devotional Writers? Alright, so the only place that particular society exists is in my mind, but the thought of being an outcast is a bit nauseating.
So, how ironic is it that the day I chose to once again try my hand at writing a devotional happens to be the day Judges 11-12 makes an appearance?
“Jephthah the Gildeadite was a mighty warrior. His father was Gilead; his mother was a prostitute. Gilead’s wife also bore him sons, and when they were grown up, they drove Jephthah away. ‘You are not going to get any inheritance in our family,’ they said, ‘because you are the son of another woman.’” (NIV)
Ouch! I can totally relate to this sort of rejection, as I think most of us can in one way or another.
Scripture goes on to tell us that Jephthah fled to another land and gained a following. After all he was a mighty warrior, which was saying something given that Joshua 17 tells us Jephthah’s ancestors were ‘great soldiers’. For scripture to point out that he was a mighty warrior and he came from a line of great soldiers meant he was probably something of an extraordinary soldier. So much so, that those brothers who cast him from his home sought him out when the big, bad Ammonites started pestering them.
A bit ironic, huh?
Well, how about this? Remember what his brothers said? “You are not going to get any inheritance in our family.” Yeah, well guess what? They agreed to make Jephthah the head of all who lived in Gilead if only he’d help them.
Can you think of another man cast from his home by his brothers only for him to rescue them later? That’s right, Joseph.  You want to see something interesting?
Joseph was the father of Manasseh.
Manasseh the father of Makir (the great soldiers)
Makir the father of Gilead
Gilead the father of Jephthah.
Now, I’m going to be honest here. A week ago I had never heard of Jephthah. I dug through a few commentaries, some from Rabbis. Most agreed that Jephthah was insignificant and ignorant of God’s ways. That may have been the case in some instances, which I don’t have enough time to get into here. However, God chose to use Jephthah to deliver the Israelites. God chose to use a man rejected by his family.
“He was despised and rejected by men” Isaiah 53:3
“The stone the builders rejected has become the capstone; the Lord has done this, and it is marvelous in our eyes?”
Through the eyes of Jephthah’s brothers he was nothing more than a prostitute’s son. Through the hardened hearts of the Pharisees Jesus was nothing more than a carpenter.
As we reflect on the death and celebrate the resurrection of Christ this Easter Sunday, let us remember that God’s ways are not always our own. His ways are much higher. He may choose to use, and has in fact chosen as testified to in scripture, the outcast, the rejected to bring salvation to another.

About Christina: Christina Rich is a full-time home schooling, domestic engineer who occasionally helps her husband with their upholstery business, which she likens to finding buried treasure when they get to work with antique pieces.
She resides in Northeast Kansas with her husband and four children. She loves Jesus, history, researching her ancestry, fishing, reading, and of course, writing Biblical and Western inspirational romances.
Her debut book, a Biblical romance (title yet to be determined), will be released March 2014 with Love Inspired Historicals.
You can find more about her at http://christinarich.wordpress.com/