God Provides-God's Design for Hope
God's
Design for Hope
SERIES:God
Provides
|
PREACHER:LENIN
KUMAR
|
DATE:
November 9, 2010 |
SCRIPTURE
REFERENCE:
Jeremiah
29:1-14 |
INTRODUCTION
As
most of you know, in 1993,1994 and 1997 I enlisted in the Emmanuel
Bible Centre, Kodaikannal. Shortly after I received my admission, I
was given orders to go to Bibe school at Hotel Holiday Home,
Kodaikannal for six weeks. Once I arrived on SCHOOL I was surprised at
how nice my billeted room was. I would consider it equal to a 3-star
Hotel. It had two double beds, a color TV — with cable — a
private bathroom, fully stocked with name brand soap, shampoo, big
towels, etc. The room was beautifully decorated. There was even
coffee service provided. Every day a maid cleaned my room.
But
toward this 1997 school there was four weeks in which things were
much more difficult. I say this because all 40 of us pastors were
ordered to leave our cushy hotel and spend four weeks in the field to
fulfill the greed of the Diretor's son-in-law.
Well,
our four weeks “in the field” was the opposite of “cushy.”
For example: I slept in a CSI guest
house with no floor. And — understand, this was Kodaikannal in
September. I mean, to say it was cold would be an understatement.
Even with my little Styrofoam mat “insulating” me from the frozen
ground and my issue sleeping bag and two extra blankets, I would
just lay there in the dark every night shivering from head to toe.
The only good thing is we only laid there shivering about six hours
because they didn’t let us go to bed until midnight and they had us
up at 6 AM. Plus — there were no showers. That four weeks, we
just lived in the same clothes non-stop. Our meals were mostly
Iddlies — high in calorie but low in flavor with entre’s that
were more mystery than meat.
After
some very disappointing two Iddeli meals, I remember one day
choosing one that said it contained Dosai's. I thought: “This
has got to be at least tolerable. After all, Dosai's are good even
cold. I mean, how can you mess up Dosai's?” Well,
the greed can mess up anything. They packaged the dosa's
separate from the Potato's in their own amber-colored “gelatin.”
And the Dosas were mostly mush. The only “good” thing about that
meal was, I ate it right before they put us through the tear gas
chamber which meant I didn’t keep those “Dosa with Potatoes”
down very long.
Anyway
— after twenty five days of cold and rain and sleet and poor food
and no showers and being shot at on the obstacle course — I laid
there FREEZING in my Dormitory and
thought, “I’m
tired of this. I want to go home. I don’t want to be here
anymore.” And that thought occupied my mind for the
next five days. I counted the hours until we boarded the buses and
headed back to Bangalore.
Well,
have you ever felt like that? What I mean is this: have you ever been
in a “place” where you didn’t want to be?
Perhaps
you are in the military and you remember your boot — or you recall
a time when you got orders that sent you to some distant land far
from family and friends. Maybe you work for a company that sent you
somewhere you didn’t want to go — but every day you thought, “I
don’t like this place. It’s not familiar. I don’t want to be
here anymore.” There may have been a time when a
friend betrayed you and in the midst of your pain you thought, “I
don’t want to be here. I’m sick of this. I don’t want to be in
this ‘relationship place’ any longer.” You
could be someone who is wrestling with grief or financial hardship or
a difficult medical diagnosis and every day you think, “I’m
tired of this. I don’t want to go through this anymore.”
But
— do you know what I’m talking about? Can any of you relate? Has
there ever been a time when you were somewhere that you didn’t want
to be?
I
ask this question because today’s text from Jeremiah 29 tells us of
a time when the Hebrew people felt like that. It was 587 B.C. and
after years of ignoring warnings, God had judged the nation of Judah
for their unfaithfulness. Remember? The people of Judah had
repeatedly rebelled against the principles upon which their nation
had been founded. They had turned their backs on God… So, as
promised, God withdrew His protection. The Biblical record shows that
over and over and over again God had warned His people that if they
continued in their faithlessness He would use a pagan power to
conquer them and lead them back into captivity. But those warnings
had fallen on deaf ears. So, now because of their foolish infidelity
God had allowed the same chosen people He had led OUT
OF Egyptian bondage 800 years before — to RETURN
to bondage — this time in Babylon.
Well,
our text is a record of something that happened at the beginning of
those seven decades of captivity. It tells us about the first Jews
who had arrived in Babylon and who like me in those cold Kodaikananal
woods — wanted to go home. That's all they could think about. They
didn’t want to be where they were. Understand — these were sad
people who had lost everything: their homes, their freedom… and in
many cases they had even been separated from their families. They had
been brought to live in a strange land with a strange language and
unfamiliar customs.
Chapter
29 of Jeremiah includes a LETTER that
God inspired Jeremiah to write and send to them. It shows God’s
unending compassion because it includes instructions as to how they
were to deal with the captivity that was their fault. In His letter
God was telling them how they were to face being in a place they
didn’t want to be — even though they deserved to be there.
You
know, ANOTHER reason you and I can
relate to the Jews who heard this letter read is because in a very
real sense you and I are like them. You see, we are in an “exile”
of sorts. I mean, as Christians, this world is not our home. We are
just temporary residents. This is what Peter was getting at when he
wrote: “Conduct
yourselves in fear during the time of your stay on earth. Beloved, I
urge you as aliens and strangers to abstain from fleshly lusts, which
wage war upon the soul.” (1
Peter 1:17; 2:11) You and I live as Abraham did when he
confessed that, “he
was a stranger in exile on the earth…desiring a better country, a
heavenly one.” (Hebrews
11). We used to sing about this fact in the old Royal
Ambassador hymn. Do any of you remember these words?
“I
am a stranger here within a foreign land. My home is far away upon a
golden strand. Ambassador to be of realms beyond the sea. I’m here
on business for my King.”
Well,
our “alien status” is one reason we find ourselves in situations
where we would rather be somewhere else. It’s why we long for a
place where there is no heartbreak no loneliness of grief…no
fear…no betrayal… no sickness… a place where we feel truly
HOME. So, I think there is indeed a
great deal we can learn from this portion of Jeremiah. There are
principles here that will help us deal with those times when life’s
disappointments make us homesick for Heaven.
SCRIPTURE READING
Take
your Bibles and turn to Jeremiah 29
and keep it open. Our text is verses 1-14.
29 Now
these are the words of the letter that Jeremiah the prophet sent from
Jerusalem unto the residue of the elders which were carried away
captives, and to the priests, and to the prophets, and to all the
people whom Nebuchadnezzar had carried away captive from Jerusalem to
Babylon;
2 (After
that Jeconiah the king, and the queen, and the eunuchs, the princes
of Judah and Jerusalem, and the carpenters, and the smiths, were
departed from Jerusalem;)
3 By
the hand of Elasah the son of Shaphan, and Gemariah the son of
Hilkiah, (whom Zedekiah king of Judah sent unto Babylon to
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon) saying,
4 Thus
saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, unto all that
are carried away captives, whom I have caused to be carried away from
Jerusalem unto Babylon;
6 Take
ye wives, and beget sons and daughters; and take wives for your sons,
and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and
daughters; that ye may be increased there, and not diminished.
7 And
seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried
away captives, and pray unto the Lord for it: for in the
peace thereof shall ye have peace.
8 For
thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel; Let not
your prophets and your diviners, that be in the midst of you, deceive
you, neither hearken to your dreams which ye cause to be dreamed.
10 For
thus saith the Lord, That after seventy years be accomplished at
Babylon I will visit you, and perform my good word toward you, in
causing you to return to this place.
11 For
I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord,
thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.
14
And I will be found of you, saith the Lord: and I will turn away
your captivity, and I will gather you from all the nations, and from
all the places whither I have driven you, saith the Lord; and I will
bring you again into the place whence I caused you to be carried away
captive.
This
is the word of God.
Thanks
be to the LORD.
May
the sweet Holy Spirit add His manifold
blessings
to our text this morning.... Amen!
You
may be seated in God's Presence.
SERMON
The
first helpful principle we find there is in verses 5 and 6 where our
Heavenly Father says that…
(1) …we must learn to be CONTENT.
Follow
along as I read these verses to you. God says,“Build
houses and settle down; plant gardens and eat what they produce.
Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons…and
give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and
daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.” (vs.
5-6) In other words, our Heavenly Father
advises these displaced Jews to, “Bloom
where they were planted… learn to be content in this foreign land.”
This
is a very important principle for us to embrace because so many times
we think, “There
must be happiness somewhere else…. in ANOTHER place… ANOTHER
career… ANOTHER relationship… ANOTHER possession… ANOTHER
home…” In
short we think that MORE of something will make us happier. We seek
more status… more security… more health… more pleasure… more
thrills — more of so many things.
Michael
Drosnin wrote a book about a man whose name became
synonymous with this hunger for MORE.
I’m sure this man is familiar to you. Here are some hints. He
wanted more WEALTH, so he built one of
the greatest financial empires of his day. He wanted more PLEASURE,
so he seduced or paid for the most glamorous women money could buy.
He wanted more ADVENTURE, so he set
airspeed records and designed, built, and piloted the world’s most
unique aircraft. He wanted more POWER,
so he acquired political clout that was the envy of senators. He
wanted more GLAMOUR, so he bought
Hollywood, owned studios, courted the stars. Drosnin writes
about how this man’s life ended:
“He
was a figure of gothic horror, ready for the grave. Emaciated, only
120 pounds stretched out over his six-foot-four frame thin scraggly
beard that reached midway onto his sunken chest, hideously long nails
in grotesque yellowed corkscrews… Many of his teeth were black,
rotting stumps. A tumor was beginning to emerge from the side of his
head… innumerable needle marks… HOWARD HUGHES was an addict. A
billionaire junkie.”
Well,
I wonder — if Howard Hughs had pulled off ANOTHER
deal, made ANOTHER million,… tasted
ANOTHER thrill, romanced ANOTHER
girl, would it have been enough? Would he have been satisfied…happy
with MORE of any of these things? (From
John Ortberg’s It all Goes
Back in the Box)
Well,
of course not. His experience and that of so many fools like him show
that MORE is a MYTH.
MORE never brings us soul satisfaction.
As King Solomon put it, “Striving
for MORE is nothing but chasing the wind.” This
is because we were made for something earth does not have to offer,
so getting MORE of the kinds of things
this existence provides — always leaves us empty. Remember, like
the lyrics of my old Royal Ambassador hymn says, this world is not
our home. We’re just passing through. We must remember that as 1
Timothy 6:6-7 says,“Godliness
with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into the
world, and we can take nothing out of it.”
In
1980 Robert Hastings wrote a popular story about an imaginary
train ride. His story was called“The Station.” Here
is an excerpt:
“Tucked
away in the recesses of our mind is an idyllic vision. We see
ourselves on a long journey that crosses mountains and plains. We are
on a train, and out the widow is an endless procession of cars
motoring down nearby highways, children waving up at us from
crossings, cows grazing on distant hillsides, fields of corn and
wheat curtsying in the breeze, lakes and rivers, city skylines, and
village halls. But we don’t really notice. What we keep thinking
about is the final destination. We will arrive at the station to
marching bands and waving flags. Once we get there, our dreams will
be fulfilled.
The
jigsaw pieces of our lives will finally be assembled, the picture
will finally be complete. In the meantime, we restlessly roam the
aisles, checking our watches, ticking of the stops; always waiting,
waiting, waiting for THE STATION always wishing the train would go
faster. The name of the train is ‘MORE.’ The name of the station
is, ‘SATISFACTION.’ ‘When we reach the station, that will be
IT!’ we cry.
‘When
I’m eighteen!’
‘When I buy a new Mercedes!’
‘When
I get that next promotion!’
‘When I lose weight!’
‘When
I get married!’
‘When we have kids in the house!’
‘When
the kids grow up and get out of the house!’
‘When I have paid
off the DEBT!’
‘When we can afford a second house!’
‘When
we finally retire and all the pressure if off, then I will live
happily ever after.’
We
keep thinking that a train called more will get us to a station
called satisfaction. But the fact is trying to pursue satisfaction by
having more is like trying to run after the horizon.”
Hastings’
point is that the joy is in the journey as we learn to be CONTENT
by trusting God to provide for our needs day after day —
mindful of the fact that one day we will finally be home. He writes:
“‘Relish
the moment’ is a good motto, especially when coupled with Psalm
118:24, which says, ‘This is the day
which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it.’
So stop pacing the aisles and counting the miles. Instead, swim more
rivers, climb more mountains, kiss more babies, count more stars.
Laugh more and cry less. Go barefoot oftener. Eat more ice cream.
Ride more merry-go-rounds. Watch more sunsets. Life must be lived as
we go along. The Station will come soon enough.”
I
would add, join God in His work every day —wherever you are —
even if its in a place you don’t want to be. Focus on the needs of
the people around you instead of on yourself. Instead of striving for
MORE of this world’s stuff, content
yourself with investing in things of eternal significance. Do this
and you will experience a foretaste of the joy we will know when we
finally do get home.
Ortberg
writes about our arrival in Heaven and
says,
“On
that day we will see God face-to-face. Then our longings for glory,
beauty, love, and meaning will be fully realized. Then the restless
human race will finally cry out! ‘ENOUGH!’
And God will say, “MORE!”
So
— to deal with those times when we don’t like where we are — we
must learn to be CONTENT.
‘When I buy a new Mercedes!’
‘When I get that next promotion!’
‘When I lose weight!’
‘When I get married!’
‘When we have kids in the house!’
‘When the kids grow up and get out of the house!’
‘When I have paid off the DEBT!’
‘When we can afford a second house!’
‘When we finally retire and all the pressure if off, then I will live happily ever after.’
(2) Then, in verse 7 God gives us more wisdom for dealing with difficult days. He says, ‘Pray for your CAPTORS.
Listen
as I read.“Seek
the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into
exile. Pray to the LORD for it, because if it prospers, you too will
prosper.” When they heard this read I’m
sure the Jews would have been thinking, “You
want us to pray for the community that carried us into captivity?
Jeremiah, have you lost your mind? These people are the enemies of
God! These are the people who ransacked the city of Jerusalem! How
can you ask us to pray for these people?” Well,
God can ask us to pray for our captors— those people who’s
decisions and actions put us in places where we don’t want to be…
God can ask us to pray for them… because He is God — and He loves
ALL people — even the people who make it their life’s work to
make our lives miserable.
In
this and dozens of other texts like it, God calls us to follow His
example. He doesn’t want us to be bitter toward the people who hurt
us. He doesn’t want us to nurture hatred toward the non-Christian
world. He wants us to be a blessing to the non-Christian world. I
believe God HATES this “us – them”
mentality that we embrace so many times as evangelical Christians. He
wants us to pray for people even if they don’t always treat us the
way we deserve…. even if they ignore God’s loving laws and try to
make us do the same. As Jesus says in Matthew
5:44, we are to“Love
our enemies and pray for those who persecute us.” Listen.
Anyone can pray for their kids or for their friends or their pastor.
But praying for people we don’t get along with is what makes
Christian love different from all other kinds of love. So God
says—pray for your captors but He also says “If
they prosper—you will too.” And of course He is
right because no one ever benefited from hating another person.
Hatred destroys is from the inside out — it makes us hateful,
bitter people — so we really do prosper when we love our enemies
and pray for them.
When
I thought of this principle, God reminded me of Steve Saint, the
son of Nate Saint—one of the missionaries who was killed by the
Auca Indians of Ecuador in 1956. Listen as I share some of Steve
Saint’s testimony. He writes:
“We
lived on the edge of the Amazon jungle and my dad was my hero.
Instead of having a car in our garage, we had an airplane, which I
thought was normal. Everyday I would watch and try to help my dad get
ready for the flights he would take that day. Then, I would stand on
the bank by our house… and watch dad lift off in his little Piper
PA14 airplane and fly off into the jungle. In the afternoon, I would
return to that same bank and wait for my hero – my dad – to fly
back in from his missions. And I never knew what he would bring back
with him. Sometimes he would bring back other missionary kids so they
could go to school. At other times, he would bring back Indians who
were sick or who had been bitten by snakes and other animals. Every
afternoon was exciting as I waited for the plane to return because,
even if he came back empty-handed, it was still my dad returning.
Then one day, I watched my dad fly off into the jungle, and he didn’t
come back. After my dad was gone for several days, my mom took me
into her room, and said, ‘Stevie-boy, Daddy isn’t coming home.’
I was confused because I couldn’t imagine anything that would keep
my dad away. ‘Why isn’t he coming home?’ I asked. My mom
explained, ‘He went to live with Jesus.’”
Can
you imagine that little boy’s grief? I’m sure he didn’t want to
be in that place. He wanted his dad back. But he must have been
raised right. He must have been taught to love and pray for his
enemies because he goes on to say,
“A
couple of years later, our little home was filled with excitement
again. We learned that Dad’s sis-ter, my Aunt Rachel, along with
‘Aunt Betty’ and a Waodani woman named, Da-yume, were making
plans to move into the jungle. They were setting out to live with the
very people who had killed my dad as well as the four men I called
‘Uncle Jim,’ ‘Uncle Pete,’ ‘Uncle Ed,’ and ‘Uncle
Roger.’ They were hoping to establish a connection with the Waodani
so that they could tell them about Jesus’ love. One day we got word
that their ministry had progressed… progressed to the point that it
was safe for my family to join them in the jungle. We moved there and
slowly, these same people who had viciously attacked five men I loved
and thrown their bodies in the river to be eaten by the fish.
These
people took me into their lives. They became Christians. In fact,
Mincaye, the one who killed my dad, became like a father to me— and
a grandfather to my children. Then when my sister Kathy, and me
became Christians, two of the original killers baptized us at the
same spot where our father had been killed just a few years earlier.”
Reading
his testimony always moves me — because Steve Saint so obviously
lived by the principles found in this letter to the Jews in
captivity. He had learned to be content even in his grief. He had
learned to pray for his “captors.” And in answer to his prayers
those men did prosper by becoming Christ followers. Steve Saint would
say that he prospered as well. This is a picture of Steve and
Mincaye.
Let
me ask. Is there someone in your life who has put you in a place
where you don’t want to be? Is there someone you hate because of
the hateful way they have treated you? Pray for them.
(3) And then in verses 8-9 God says something else. He says don’t listen to bad COUNSEL.
Listen
to His Words: “Do
not let the prophets and diviners among you deceive you. Do not
listen to the dreams you encourage them to have. They are prophesying
lies to you in My name. I have not sent them,” declares the LORD.
There
were false prophets — Hebrews telling other Hebrews — that they
would be going home soon —that it wouldn’t take seventy years.
They were insisting that captivity would be over before they knew it
and there were probably many ears happy to hear the news. But it
wasn’t true! God had said it would be 70 years and that’s how
long it would be.
Today
we have the modern counterparts of these false prophets — people
whose promises seem — well SO PROMISING —
as we live in this fallen world that is not our true home. For
example:
-
Some
say if you follow God closely enough you’ll have big houses and
big cars and lots of money and perfect health. AND If you are a
beliver you should have all these things. (OFCOURSE
GOD WILL GIVE ACCORDING TO HIS RICHES IN GLORY)
-
Some
say when people hurt you — get even.
-
Some
say they know when Jesus will come back.
-
Some
say God does not exist and that there will never be a judgment, so
you can live however you want to without regret.
-
Some
say that all religions are the same — and that Jesus is not the
only way to Heaven.
-
Some
say human beings are simply uppity apes.
-
Some
say if you do not get your life right this time, you will come back
again reincarnated as another person.
I
could go on and on. Well, we must not allow ourselves to be drawn in
to this bad counsel. Following bad counsel may make you feel better
in your “captivity” for a while but in the end it will only bring
you more heart-ache. We must build our lives on the infallible truth
of the Word of God. This book must be our guide. It’s unchanging
truth will help us to stand firm so that, “we
won’t be tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and
there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of
men in their deceitful scheming.”(Ephesians
4:14)
And
then in verses 10-11 we find the most important thing to
remember as we go through those times in life where we find ourselves
in places we don’t want to be.
Some
say if you follow God closely enough you’ll have big houses and
big cars and lots of money and perfect health. AND If you are a
beliver you should have all these things. (OFCOURSE
GOD WILL GIVE ACCORDING TO HIS RICHES IN GLORY)
Some
say when people hurt you — get even.
Some
say they know when Jesus will come back.
Some
say God does not exist and that there will never be a judgment, so
you can live however you want to without regret.
Some
say that all religions are the same — and that Jesus is not the
only way to Heaven.
Some
say human beings are simply uppity apes.
Some
say if you do not get your life right this time, you will come back
again reincarnated as another person.
(4) No matter what happens — no matter how difficult life becomes — we must remember that God is in CONTROL.
Listen
as I read:“This
is what the LORD says: ‘When seventy years are completed for
Babylon, I will come to you and fulfill My gracious promise to bring
you back to this place. For I know the plans I have for you,’
declares the LORD, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans
to give you hope and a future.”
I’m
sure as the Jews heard that they were thinking, “You
mean we gotta live in this rotten country for the next 70 years? Most
of us are going to be dead by then! What kind of a plan is this,
God?” But if you look at the Old Testament,
you will see that God accomplished several great things in the lives
of His people during those seventy years. I’ll just quickly cite
four.
First,
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were three of the captives that were
taken to Babylon. And according to Daniel chapter one, they went on
to become three of the best administrators that the country ever had.
They became role models for young people all over the world. Second,
Daniel — another one of the captives — he was able to interpret
the dream of King Nebuchadnezzar and as a reward he was made ruler
over the entire province of Babylon. Remember
when we studied that text? With Daniel’s help,
Nebuchadnezzar became a believer in God. In Daniel
4:37, he says,“I,
Nebuchadnezzar, praise and exalt and glorify the King of heaven,
because everything He does is right and all his ways are just. And
those who walk in pride He is able to humble.” I
don’t think Nebuchadnezzar would have become a God-follower if it
weren’t for the presence of the Jewish people in the land of
Babylon. Third — because the Jewish people were able to live
in peace under the leadership of Daniel and Nebuchadnezzar, they had
time to write some of the greatest books of the Old Testament. 1
and 2 Kings, 1st and 2nd Chronicles, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel,
Daniel, and Psalm 137 — were all written during this
seventy year period. And then fourth — and most important of
all, during this 70 year “time out period,” the Jewish people
began to realize that they needed to get right with the Lord! Their
“time out punishment” worked because it gave them time to see
that they needed to apologize for the mistakes of the past. They
began to see that Jeremiah was right when he said, “Your
own conduct and actions have brought this upon you.” (Jer
4:18)
So
when you look at the big picture, you can see that God was working
behind the scenes in the hearts and in the lives of the Jewish people
— even though they couldn’t see it. He had a plan to prosper both
them and us — through their punishment! We should look at this and
realize that life isn’t always what it seems!
There
once was an old man who was very poor. In an attempt to take care of
his family, he pooled all of his money and bought a horse. The people
in town thought that this was a foolish thing to do because “things
happen to horses.” Sure enough, a few days later,
the horse was missing. The town’s people came to the poor old man
and said: “Oh what a tragedy!” But the old man
was very wise and replied, “We don’t know yet if this is
going to be a tragedy or a blessing.” A few days later,
the horse returned, and trailing behind him was a herd of 15 wild
mustangs. Again, the town’s people came back to the old man and
said, “You were right! This was a blessing and not a
tragedy.” But, again, the old man answered, “Well,
we really don’t know yet if this is a blessing or a tragedy.” A
few days later, his only son was breaking in one of the wild mustangs
when he was thrown. While lying on the ground, the horse trampled him
and shattered his leg. The town’s people returned, saying: “It’s
true, what a tragedy! Your only son is now crippled for life!” But
this happened right before the war started and all the other young
men from the town were called away to war and none returned. When the
people from the town came to speak to the old man, they said, “Now,
we understand.”
Do
you get the point of the story? You and I can’t judge the effects
of the good or bad of life. We don’t have the necessary perspective
to do so. Things that look bad — may actually be good in the long
run. And as Christians we can trust that this is ALWAYS
true…for we are children of the One who reigns. By reading this
book — by looking back on our lives we can see and know that our
sovereign God is always weaving the events of life into His grand
design for our lives and our world. We can know that a Proverbs
16:9 says,“The
mind of man plans his way, but the LORD directs his steps.”
My
friends, God’s plan isn’t always what we think it’s going
to be. But God’s plan is always best — even if we don’t
understand it at the time — even if we can’t see the light at the
end of the tunnel—even if we would never have chosen this path for
ourselves. Even then we need to trust, that, “…in
all things, God works together for the good of those who love
Him.” So — if you are in a place where you
don’t want to be — heed God’s loving instruction. With His
help, learn to be CONTENT. He will help
you find joy even in your difficulty. Pray for your CAPTORS
— pray for those people who make your life hard. Don’t trust bad
COUNSEL — build your life… make your
decisions based on the Bible and by hearing the Voice of the Holy
Spirit of God. And then, hold onto the fact that God is
always in CONTROL. He is working behind
the scenes to prosper you.
INVITATION AND THE FINAL CHALLENGE
God
says one more thing in His letter. In verses 12-13
He says,“You
will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will listen to you.
You will seek Me and find Me when you seek Me with all your heart.” I
love this promise because it reminds me that in the hard times of
life when I’ve cried out to God He has heard. He has listened —
and He has drawn near to me. I want us to all bow our heads. Right
now — pray — call on God. Ask for His help. Ask Him to help you
to trust in His providence and power. Ask Him to help you be content…
to pray for your captors…to trust His plan. And if you are not a
Christ follower then I encourage you to seek God. If you do — you
will find Him.
LET
US PRAY
--
The
Rev. Lenin Kumar
The Potter's Home International
Church
The Christian Living
Preparing
the Bride... For Christ's Coming!www.pottershomeinternational.org
The Potter's Home International Church
The Christian Living

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