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Dear Ones,
Happy weekend to you! Another sunny day and not so hot. The house is full of wonderful aroma as I was busy in the kitchen this morning and then cleaned the apartment. We are packing up to leave tomorrow morning for Mora MN where we will be meeting with our former Board for Canaan’s Rest and having a time of fellowship. We will stay overnight and then Al preaches at True Vine on Sunday. We look forward to seeing friends from our days in Brunswick.
Devotions from Judy’s heart
Water is needed and so important and we are now reading now about water wars. In the U.S. the southwestern states are especially suffering with a water shortage. Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in our country is only at 40% of its capacity and being part of the Colorado river system, it has ramifications for many states. Farmers will have to cut back and changes will have to be made for many.
My cousin’s daughter and son-in-law are especially aware of the need for water for they are now in the desert as they continue their walk across America. Water was their big concern and much to their wonderful surprise, concerned friends left water and food at certain points along the way for them. What a relief!
We have only to think of our spiritual thirst and how much we need the water of life. Jesus offered the Samaritan woman at the well living water and He said in John 4:13-14 (The Message), “Everyone who drinks this water will get thirsty again and again. Anyone who drinks the water that I give him will never thirst—not ever. The water that I give will be an artesian spring within, gushing fountains of endless life.” Jesus offers us living water to quench our thirsty souls. So many try to satisfy their spiritual thirst with other means but that will never work.The Lord told Jeremiah in Jeremiah 17 that if we trust in man, we are like a shrub in the desert that dwells in parched places. Such a person is like a tumbleweed, rootless and aimless in the desert. But the Lord says if we trust in Him, we are like a tree planted by water; our leaves remain green even in the heat and we have no cause to fear the drought. Living water is always available to us and we don’t need to become anxious but rather let our roots go down deep into the Lord. Let us receive the living water and drink deeply each day that we may flourish.
Challenge for today: Spend some time in the Word and drink deeply of the living water.
Blessings on your weekend and prayers and love, Judy
P.S. Since I wrote this there was rain in the desert for the first time in a year and a half for the walkers across America. PTL!.
Habakkuk proclaims at the end of his prophecy, “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior” (Hab. 3:18). He had seen God at work in some difficult times. In the beginning, however, he had cried out impatiently, “How long, O Lord” (1:2) lamenting, “Destruction and violence are before me; there is strife, and conflict abounds. Therefore, the law is paralyzed, and justice is perverted” (1:3). What happened?
In this brief book, we see that the prophet – like us – was learning to wait – “I will wait patiently” (1:16 BST – Bible Speaks Today). He was learning to live by faith, being “transformed from an impatient prophet into a calm and expectant one” (2:4 BST). With so much that did not make sense, he declared, “I will stand at my watch and station myself on the ramparts; I will look to see what he will say to me and what answer I am to give to this complaint” (2:1).
Now at the end of his prophecy, he responds with, “yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior” (3:18 BST). Habakkuk was able to rejoice even though he was living through a time of devastation. “It is one thing to rejoice in our blessings; it is quite another to rejoice when blessings have been removed” (BST).
Habakkuk’s prayer could be a model for us in the days to come. Much of what we take for granted will be removed. Even the church will suffer. There will be some difficult times ahead. Could Habakkuk be expressing what we might experience in the days to come? “I trembled inside when I heard this; my lips quivered with fear. My legs gave way beneath me, and I shook in terror. I will wait quietly for the coming day when disaster will strike the people who invade us” (3:16 NLT). We may very well have to wait quietly, knowing there is little else we can do.
Habakkuk was prepared to rejoice in God no matter what happened around him. “Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the live crop fails, and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the sheepfold and no cattle in the stalls,” he was learning rejoice, even in the midst of starvation and loss (3:17 BST).
Habakkuk concludes by declaring, “The Sovereign Lord is my strength (3:19). The prophet’s secret to enduring devastation was the strength he found in the Lord. He declares that the Lord “makes my feet like the feet of a deer, he enables me to tread on the height” (3:19). David also bore witness to the ability to move nimbly as a deer in the midst of danger (Ps. 18:33), “but whereas David composed his psalm at a time of victory, Habakkuk uses the words to express a faith which trusts God while it is still very dark” (BST).
Like us, Habakkuk was learning to live by faith and not be sight (2:4). This is the kind of “see through” faith that will be needed in the days to come. I encourage every man reading this blog, to recommit today to trust Jesus more and more. Take Paul’s words to heart: “I know how to live on almost nothing or with everything. I have learned the secret of living in every situation, whether it is with a full stomach or empty, with plenty or little. For I can do everything through Christ, who gives me strength.” (Phil 4:12-13 NLT).
Devotions from Judy’s heart
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