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6
Pentecost -
Sunday |
| first posted
06/25/05
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| 1 Samuel
4:12-22, The Death of Eli James 1:1-18, Trials are Blessings Matthew 19:23-30 Entering God’s Kingdom There had been a battle of the Philistines against When the man entered the city and told the news the people gave a loud cry, which Eli heard, and he asked the reason for the outcry. The Benjaminite came and told Eli that he had fled from the battle. The Philistines had defeated the Israelites, and a great many Israelites were slaughtered, including Eli’s two sons, and the Ark of the Covenant had been captured. When Eli heard the news he fell over backward from his seat, broke his neck and died. Eli had been a judge of Eli’s daughter-in-law, the wife of Phinehas, was pregnant and nearly ready to give birth. When she heard the news that her husband and her father-in-law were dead, she went into labor and died in childbirth. The women who attended the birth told her she had given birth to a son, but she was unresponsive. She had named the child Ichabod (meaning “no glory” or alas for the glory), saying that “the glory (of God) has departed from The identity of James is unknown, but he was a Christian writing to Christians as spiritual heirs of Believers should pray for and seek true wisdom from God, who gives generously and without reproach to those who ask. But in order to receive anything from God we must pray in faith without doubting; we must believe that God will hear and answer our prayer. Those who pray as a test to see if God will answer won’t receive anything from the Lord. Poor and humble Christians should rejoice and give thanks to God for their spiritual riches, and the rich should gladly learn humility (and generosity). Worldly status is fleeting and insignificant in comparison to eternal glory. Those who endure trials without yielding will be blessed and will receive the reward of eternal life which the Lord has promised to those who love (and obey) him (John 14:15-17). God doesn’t tempt anyone and he cannot be tempted by evil. When we are tempted it is by our own sinful desires. Desire allowed to “germinate” sprouts forth as sin, and when allowed to grow to maturity yields a harvest of eternal death. Let us not be deceived. The source of every good blessing and gift is God, the creator of the universe. He is eternal and unchanging. We have been created by his will and out of his creation we have become a kind of “first-fruits” offering devoted to him through the “word of truth” (the gospel of Jesus Christ). Jesus told his disciples that it is hard for a rich person to enter the kingdom of heaven. It is comparable to the impossibility of a camel going through the eye of a needle. His disciples were amazed and asked Jesus how anyone could hope to be saved. Jesus replied that it is impossible for humans, but not for God; nothing is impossible for God. Peter said that he and the rest of the Twelve (original disciples) had left everything to follow Jesus, and he wanted to know what they would receive. Jesus told him that in the new world (God’s eternal kingdom) Jesus would reign as king, and that the Twelve would be Judges of the twelve tribes of Eli had been a high priest and judge of The Lord said that the one who would survive would be spared to mourn. Ichabod, the grandson of Eli, was the survivor, orphaned on the day of his birth. (In a sense, the Benjaminite who survived the battle and gave Eli the news also qualifies.) The Lord allowed the Philistines to slaughter the Israelites and capture the The Church is the spiritual heir of Believers should be praying for and seeking divine wisdom which is revealed through the indwelling Holy Spirit, the Spirit of the Lord, who opens the minds of Jesus’ disciples to understand the scriptures (Luke 24:45) and gives them a voice and wisdom, as needed, that no one will be able to withstand or refute (Luke 21:14-15). Worldly wisdom is not true wisdom; it only appears to be wisdom (1 Corinthians 1:18-25; 2:6-7). Has the Spirit of the Lord (the Holy Spirit) departed from our congregations and our nation because of spiritual corruption of our leaders and disobedience and contempt for the Lord and his Word among our people? Do we think we can invoke God’s favor and be victorious over our enemies by religious rituals or token symbols? Worldly standards of judgment are contrary to God’s standards. Worldly judgment and status are fleeting but God’s judgment is eternal. Christians are to be an offering dedicated to God and his service. We are to live to please God, instead of seeking worldly recognition and approval. God is the only source of any and every good thing, through Jesus Christ. Seeking good anywhere else is bound to fail. Anything which seems good is not to be trusted, if leads us away from the Lord and his Word. Faith is not like wishing on a star or making a birthday wish. Faith is not getting whatever we believe if we “believe hard enough.” Faith is obedient trust in God’s Word through Jesus Christ by his indwelling Holy Spirit. If we want the Lord to answer our prayers we must believe that he hears and has the power and willingness to answer, if we ask according to his Word (see Conditions for Answered Prayer, sidebar, top right). Forgiveness and salvation from eternal condemnation and destruction are only possible through Jesus Christ (Acts 4:12; John 14:6) by the grace (free gift; unmerited favor) of God (Ephesians 2:8-9). Jesus has been God’s eternal plan from the beginning of creation, and has been “built into” creation (John 1:1-5, 14). God accomplishes through Jesus Christ what is impossible for mankind to accomplish on his own. It is impossible for humans to completely obey God’s Word apart from faith in Jesus, through whom we receive the gift of his indwelling Holy Spirit (Romans 8:1-11; see God’s Plan of Salvation, sidebar, top right). Christians will have to surrender our desires in order to follow and serve the Lord, but the rewards now and eternally will make that sacrifice worthwhile. Is Jesus your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |
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6
Pentecost -
Monday |
| first posted 06/26/05 |
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1 Samuel
5:1-12, Ark Captured by Philistines
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6
Pentecost -
Tuesday |
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1 Samuel
6:1-16, Return of the Ark
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6
Pentecost -
Wednesday |
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1 Samuel
7:2-17, Samuel’s Role as Judge
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6
Pentecost -
Thursday |
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1 Samuel
8:1-22,
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| 6
Pentecost - Friday |
| first posted 06/30/05 |
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1 Samuel
9:1-14, Saul Comes to Samuel
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6
Pentecost -
Saturday |
| first posted 07/01/05 |
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1 Samuel 9:15-10:1, Samuel Anoints Saul Acts 7:30-43, Stephen’s Sermon
Luke 22:39-51 Jesus’ Betrayal The day before Saul came, the Lord had revealed to Samuel that a man
from the tribe of Benjamin would come the next day. Samuel was to
anoint him to be “prince” of
Samuel took Saul up to
the sanctuary and gave him the seat at the head of the table of thirty
guests who had been invited. Samuel asked the cook to bring the portion
that had been set aside for Saul. That evening Saul came down from the
sanctuary with Samuel and slept on the upper floor of Samuel’s house.
At dawn Samuel woke Saul, and he and Saul walked toward the outskirts
of the city. Samuel sent Saul’s servant on ahead, and he and Saul
stopped so that Samuel could tell Saul God’s Word. Then Samuel took a
vial of (olive) oil and anointed Saul’s head and kissed him and told
him that the Lord had anointed Saul to be prince of Stephen, one of the Seven
deacons chosen to administer the programs of the church in
Moses, who had been
rejected as a leader by his people, had been designated ruler and
deliverer by the Lord through the angel that appeared to Moses in the
burning bush. Moses led After eating the Passover
feast with his disciples on the night of Jesus’ betrayal, they went out
to the While Jesus was saying
that, a crowd came, led by Judas Iscariot, one of the Twelve disciples.
Judas went to Jesus to kiss him, but Jesus rebuked him for intending to
betray Jesus with a kiss. The disciples saw what was going to happen
and they asked Jesus if they should fight in resistance. One of them
attacked with a sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s slave,
but Jesus told them to stop, and he healed the slave’s ear. Jesus said
to the Jewish religious leaders who had come to arrest him that they
had many opportunities arrest Jesus in public since he had been in the
temple every day, but they had chosen to do it in darkness and away
from public view, and they were able to only because it was their
“hour” and the power of darkness. Samuel is an example of a
“man (or woman) of God.” He trusted and obeyed God’s Word, and the Lord
revealed his will to Samuel. The Lord had told him that the person God
had chosen to be “prince” would come to Samuel the next day, and Samuel
had prepared for that fulfillment. Samuel was prepared to worship the
Lord with a sacrificial feast, and had set aside the choice portion for
the person God had designated to be king. Then Samuel fulfilled God’s
command to anoint Saul, “the Lord’s anointed.” Saul would rule as king,
but the Lord was the true King of Israel, in relation to whom Saul was
a prince. In a way, Samuel is a
forerunner of “born-again” (John 3:3, 5-8) Christian disciples. In the
days of Samuel the word of the Lord was rare and infrequent, but
through the gift of the Holy Spirit, Jesus’ disciples have the same
personal fellowship and guidance from the Lord which Samuel had.
Through the "anointing" of the indwelling Holy Spirit we become members
of the King's royal family. Stephen is another
illustration of a “born-again” Christian, proclaiming God’s Word by the
inspiration and empowerment of the Holy Spirit. Stephen is an example
of the fulfillment of Jesus’ prophecy that
his disciples would be arrested and tried before various worldly
authorities and who would be inspired by the Holy Spirit in that hour
(Mark 13:11-13; Luke 21:12-19). Saul is a forerunner of
the Messiah (or Christ, which means “anointed” in Hebrew and Greek,
respectively). Saul was the “Lord’s anointed,” and God raised him up to
save God’s people from the Philistines (1 Samuel 9:16). Moses is also a
forerunner of the Christ who would lead his people out of slavery to
sin and death in the “ Because they failed to
trust and obey God when he told them to enter and possess the Promised
Land the first time, they were condemned to wander for forty years in
the wilderness until all that disobedient generation had died in the
wilderness (Numbers 14:26-35). The Lord had promised
through Moses to raise up another prophet
like Moses (Acts 7:37), the Messiah, “the Lord’s anointed,” eternal
Savior and King of Israel. Jesus is the Messiah, the fulfillment of
that promise. But the religious leaders of Stephen was falsely
condemned (and killed) for blaspheming God and Moses, by the people who
had condemned and killed their Savior, Messiah and eternal King. They
had only been able to do it because it was their “hour” by God’s will,
to fulfill his ultimate purpose. They did it in the dark, because they
knew that what they were doing would not withstand public scrutiny.
Stephen’s sermon demonstrated that he was not blaspheming God or Moses,
but the religious leaders executed him anyway. The Lord has given us his
Word so that we can know his will and purpose, revealed in Jesus
Christ, so that we can have a reliable basis on which to make life
decisions. The hallmark of God’s Word is that it is always fulfilled.
We have been given a choice whether to accept God’s anointed Savior and
Lord as our king and our leader. We will either
trust and obey the Lord or we will die eternally in bondage to
sin and the spiritual wilderness of this world. God’s Word promises
that Jesus will return to judge the earth. Are you prepared for the
coming of the Lord’s anointed eternal King? Is Jesus your Lord? Are
you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus? Have you
received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed
(Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them
to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)?
Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |