More than You Think

“What do you have I can use?” “Nothing,” replied the woman. But then added, “Except, I do have a little flask of oil.” The recently widowed woman, facing the debt left by her husband, had sold everything in her house struggling to hold off the creditor. The small container of oil, not the finest oil for cooking, was common as a body lotion after bathing and for anointing the dead. Some suggest she kept this small jar for her own burial. From her perspective, she regarded it as ‘nothing’ with no value towards her situation. Elisha the prophet saw it from the Lord’s perspective. He instructed her to borrow all the empty vessels she could from her neighbors. Then she was to go into her house, close the door, and pour the contents of the small flask into them. She started pouring, and kept pouring, and pouring, and pouring from the small container until all the larger vessels were full. Elisha told her to sell the oil, pay her creditor, and she and her sons could live off the remaining profit. (2 Kg 4:1-7)

How often do we look at our situation or a challenge we face and think “I have nothing”, or “I don’t have enough”, or “I don’t have the ability?” My Bible College taught that we must conquer all our weaknesses before we could effectively use our strengths. In my striving to become good enough, the Holy Spirit spoke to my heart, “stop worrying about what you can’t do and focus on the Spiritual Gift of teaching the Lord has given you.” That became the turning point in my ministry. I thought I had nothing, except the gift of teaching, which I saw as not enough. Relentless attention on what we don’t have can blind us to what we do have.

Jesus knowingly challenged His disciples with a dilemma beyond their natural ability to demonstrate that what they had was enough. Five thousand men, not including the women and children, had followed Him to a remote area. At the end of the day, He told the disciples to give them something to eat. “But we don’t have enough money and have no food except five loaves and two fishes from a little boy.” Jesus took the loaves and fishes, gave thanks, and showed this was more than enough. Everyone ate leaving enough that the disciples filled twelve baskets with what remained. The Lord may ask us to do something we feel is beyond our ability or what we have, because we think it isn’t enough we dismiss the little we do have. But it is enough when we give it to Him.

We could label Moses a defeated man when he fled from Egypt. He grew up in the royal court raised by the Pharaoh’s daughter as if he were an Egyptian prince. Getting ahead of God he killed an Egyptian for abusing a Hebrew—one of his people. He escaped to Midian living in the wilderness as a shepherd. The Egyptians considered shepherds detestable. After forty years it was God’s time to deliver His people from their oppression. Appearing in a burning bush the Lord called Moses, “So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt” (Ex 3:10 NIV). Immediately came Moses first “but”. Who am I (v11)? After a dialogue offering excuses, Moses essentially told God, “I am nobody; I don’t speak well; I have nothing.” The Lord said to him, “What is that in your hand” (4:2)? “A shepherd’s staff,” Moses replied. We can only imagine the thoughts racing through Moses’ mind. “It’s just an ordinary shepherd’s staff. That’s not enough. Certainly nothing that can accomplish what God’s asking me to do.”

The Lord showed Moses what He could do with a common shepherd’s staff. “Throw it on the ground.” So he threw it on the ground, and it became a serpent (4:3). Then using only Moses’ hand with nothing in it, God then said, “Put your hand inside your shirt.” He slipped his hand under his shirt, then took it out. His hand had turned leprous, like snow. He said, “Put your hand back under your shirt.” He did it, then took it back out-as healthy as before (Exo 4:6, 7 MSG). When he obeyed and returned to Egypt, God performed many miracles through this nobody who had claimed he had nothing. Moses led his people, the Hebrews, out of their slavery to the Promised Land.

Note a few others God used who felt they had nothing or not enough. When the Lord called Gideon to deliver Israel from the power of the Midianites, Gideon said to him, “Me, my master? How and with what could I ever save Israel? Look at me. My clan’s the weakest in Manasseh and I’m the runt of the litter” (Judges 6:14 MSG). David killed Goliath having only five stones. A few fishermen turned the world upside down through the Gospel (Act 17:6).

Stop worrying about what you don’t have and look at what you do have. It is enough if you give it to God. Let Him take care of your weakness.

Sustaining Word for the Week: You have more than you think. It is more than enough. What’s in your hand?  

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The Only Way to Fail God Is Quit

It was Saturday afternoon and all the petrol stations were closed. Yet, we felt confident we could make it 30 miles to the motel where we normally stayed. Our fuel gauge registered just above the empty mark when we left Harare the capital of Zimbabwe. Within 15 miles the gauge dropped below empty, but with no other choice I continued driving. Arriving just after dark, we were praising the Lord as we pulled up to the motel, but then startled to discover the motel had shut down. “What now?” we pondered. Too far to turn around! Sleep in the truck? I remembered another small town with a motel and fuel about 20 miles further—or so I thought.  We kept going.

Believing we were nearing our destination we encountered a military checkpoint. The officer wanted to know what we were doing traveling in the bush at 1:00 AM on Sunday morning. I explained our dilemma. His response was anything but comforting. “The next village with a motel is 20 miles ahead. Only bush until then.” I found it strange he said 20 miles instead of 35 kilometers as I stared at the fuel gauge. Miles or kilometers didn’t really matter, we’d been driving below empty for the last 50 miles. Down the road I told my wife. “We’re probably spending the night in the bush with the baboons, elephants, and lions” With far more faith than me she replied “No, I’ll pray the Lord will multiply our fuel as He did the five loaves and two fishes.” The logical part of me thought, “Multiply what fuel, we don’t have any.” I don’t know what God did, but the next morning after a good night’s rest at the Orange Blossom Motel, I went to fill up. My truck held 25 liters of fuel. I put in 26 liters.

To paraphrase a quote from Winston Churchill, ‘when you’re going through troubled times, keep going’. We had several opportunities to give up and quit. I’m thankful we didn’t give up, turn around, or stop. We just kept going. Through the years, I emphasized to students “the only way you can fail God is to quit”. It’s not important to finish the race first. What matters is that we finish. We have probably all felt like quitting sometimes when troubles and stress overwhelm us. Woodrow Kroll, Bible teacher and author said, “Our quitting point is God’s beginning point.” I won’t say you can’t quit, but I can say with confidence God is going to do everything possible to keep you from quitting.

Three times the Apostle Paul became overwhelmed with fear to the point God intervened. In Corinth the Lord came and told him to stop being afraid; again, after his arrest in Jerusalem the Lord stood near Paul and told him to take courage; and on his journey to Rome a storm battered their ship for days. Luke, who was with him and wrote they gave up all hope of being saved—this included Paul. Once again, God sent an angel to tell Paul to stop being afraid. Often, we overlook these verses. We tend to see Paul as the great invincible Apostle. Not so, his circumstances beat him down more than once. The context and grammar of these verses indicate he was afraid, discouraged, and wanted to quit.

I have reached the point of quitting many times. Once exhausted and tired of being told I needed to revise certain portions, I threw my doctoral dissertation in the trash. My faith filled wife retrieved it telling me she had too much invested in my education for me to quit. She put it back on my desk and told me to get to work. I guess she was my angel.

Probably the best example of God’s reaction to someone trying to quit was Elijah. After a stressful and grueling confrontation with the prophets of Baal, plus a threat from Queen Jezebel, he went into the wilderness, sat under a tree, and asked God to take is life. Note God’s response—the Angel of the Lord came, fed him, and gave him a jar of water. Again, he came a second time, “Arise, eat”. The Angel told him why, “Because the journey is too great for you.” The journey of life can also be too great for us. I wasn’t sure we would make it with an empty tank but kept going. So, keep going through your troubled times. However, if you’re overwhelmed and try to quit, the Lord will be there helping you get up and back on your journey. Paul assured us, He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus (Phil 1:6 NIV).

Sustaining Word for the Week:

If you’re going through troubled times, just keep going. And be assured if you become exhausted and overwhelmed, the Holy Spirit is with you to provide what you need to get up and to go again.

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In the Mist of Violence

Glance at the local and national headlines on any given day over the past year, and you might wonder if someone mistakenly printed news from the old wild west instead of 2019—murders, stabbings, fights, robberies, domestic violence, etc., every single day. Yet, if you research violence in that time period, you realize Hollywood has grossly exaggerated history. Any avid fan of Gunsmoke saw Marshal Dillon kill 407 people over 20 years. However, the five major ‘wild’ Kansas cattle towns, including Dodge, recorded only 45 total homicides, between 1870 to 1885. That’s 1 murder per 100,000 people per year. St. Louis led the nation in 2017 with 66.1 murders per 100,000. You would have been far safer walking down the street in the wild west than you would today. Violence has increased at an alarming rate. Headlines in 2019 read, 515 People Killed Last Year in Chicago, 494 Murders in New York, 5 Homicides in the First Hours of 2020 in St. Louis.

Scriptures caution us an increasing range of violence would take place the nearer we get to Jesus’ return. Paul refers to the season of the last days as terrible. The word means violent and dangerous. There will be terrible [violent, dangerous] times in the last days (2 Tim 3:1 NIV). The first recorded violence was Cain attacking and killing Abel. As human population expanded so did violence. The Lord approves of the godly, but he hates the wicked and those who love to do violence (Psalms 11:5 NET). By the time of Noah, God’s long suffering had reached its limit. Now the earth was corrupt in the sight of God, and the earth was filled with violence (Gen 6:11). Note it wasn’t random violence, but the earth was filled or full of it. Noah was a righteous man, blameless in his time; Noah walked with God (Gen 6:9). He told Noah, for the earth is filled with violence because of them. I have decided that all living creatures must die, for the earth is filled with violence because of them. Now I am about to destroy them and the earth (v13).

The Lord is long suffering in His loving kindness however, a point arrives when sin, evil, and suffering reach beyond His tolerance. He says, “Enough is enough!” The flip side of loving kindness is justice. The Lord displayed His long suffering with the Canaanites for hundreds of years and wasn’t being unjust toward these nations when He told Israel He was giving them the land. He was enacting justice because of the wickedness of these nations that the Lord your God is driving them out before you . . . (Deut. 9:5). Ask yourself, “Is God about to say to our world, ‘enough is enough?’” He brought judgment to the earth through the flood, because the earth was filled [full of] with violence. He rained down brimstone and fire on Sodom and Gomorrah because sin and immorality filled the cities. Today, both reasons for His former judgment—violence and immorality—fill the earth.

Through Isaiah the Lord promised, Violence will not be heard again in your land, Nor devastation or destruction within your borders (Isa 60:18). But you say, “that’s in the future after Jesus returns, what about now?” Jesus taught, For the coming of the Son of Man will be just like the days of Noah (Matt 24:37). We can draw several lessons from Noah. Violence and wickedness existed everywhere. The wickedness of man was great on the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually (Gen 6:5). Noah and his family were the only believers not conformed to the patterns of this world; the rest of the people went about the normal routines of life eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage—but without the Lord. The first lesson is that Noah walked in close fellowship with God (v9 NLT). Second, he heard and obeyed—being warned by God concerning events as yet unseen, in reverent fear constructed an ark. Third, by faith Noah . . . concerning events as yet unseen, in reverent fear constructed an ark (Heb 11:17). Note, this would be the first time it had rained on earth. From a human perspective, Noah could not envision why he even needed the ark, but he walked by faith and built a boat. 

One important lesson for us today, in the mist of the violence and wickedness, fear never paralyzed Noah as only one of eight believers. He reverenced and feared God, not men. Peter referred to him as a preacher of righteousness (2 Pet 2:5). He shared what he believed. Most encouraging to me is the fact Noah and his family were the only believers on earth. God planned to destroy the world of violent and wicked people, but He didn’t overlook Noah. He provided a way for them to be safe during the flood. Neither does He overlook you. He cares for you (1Pet 5:7). The main lesson we all need to remember; Noah didn’t focus on the surrounding troubles. He focused on God and walked with Him. Sustaining Word for the Week: Don’t allow violence and wickedness to drag you down. Focus on Jesus and His Word, not the world around you.

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What Are You Taking with You?

A car towing a trailer drove up to the border post. When the customs agent inspected the contents of the trailer, he found stacks of notebooks—spiral, loose-leaf, and even scraps of paper bound together. “What are these?” he demanded. “Oh, they are just records”, the driver replied. “Records of what?” the agent inquired. “These are the records of all the wrongs people have done against me.” This puzzled the official who was a Christian. “Why are you taking them with you? You realize they are illegal? They will only weight you down and infect you with bitterness. You, need to leave them behind.” Visibly upset the driver asked, “Are you going to confiscate them?” “No, I don’t have the authority. Only you can make that choice.” The driver now confronted with a decision recollected every painful experience recorded in the notebooks. Glancing at the border crossing sign, Welcome to the New Year created a crisis moment, “Will leaving them behind make for a better future?”

Everybody will pass through this border in a few hours. What will you take with you? Paul writing from his Roman prison to the Philippian church, tells them he approached the future by following three basic guidelines. First, forgetting what lies behind (3:13) or better translated, Let go those things which are past (BBE). Even if you can’t erase an offense from your memory, you can let it go. In order words, leave the trailer behind; don’t allow past hurts to continue weighing you down. Paul could have filled a tractor trailer with records. Instead, he practiced what he preached. He let go of the conflict with John Mark who failed him by abruptly abandoning the first mission’s journey. Paul wrote in the next chapter, Get Mark and bring him with you, for he is very useful to me for ministry (2 Tim 4:11 ESV). He instructs the Ephesian church, get rid of [let go of] all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice (Eph 4:31-32 NIV). Paul even let go of lawful things that were not profitable and did not edify (1Co 10:23).

Paul’s second guideline after letting go of the past was reaching forward to what lies ahead (v13). He often used the analogy of a race in his epistles. In one reference, he says to run in such a way that you may win (1 Corin 9:24). You’ve never seen an Olympic track meet with someone running backward focused on the starting line or going around the course dragging a cart full of notebooks. I’ll agreed that sounds absurd but actually that pictures the way some try to run the spiritual race. No, those desiring to win have laid aside every encumbrance (Heb 12:1) and run concentrating on the goal and the prize set before them.

His third guideline states he focuses on the prize, Christ Jesus. I press on towards the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenwards in Christ Jesus (v14 NIV). Nothing in his past would stop him from moving forward. He emphasizes how important the prize is. Whatever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ (v7 NIV), then with vivid language he writes, indeed, I regard them as dung! — that I may gain Christ (v8 NET). We can also translate the word press on (v14) to put in rapid motion, follow eagerly, or endeavor. Other versions read, I pursue (HOL) and I strive toward (NET). We can’t just let go of the past and think about the goal. We must press on, pursue, or strive toward the prize, a progressive action.

Paul gives an essential element preceding his three guidelines. I do not regard myself (v13). A simple statement, but a truth easily missed without looking at the word’s definition and the grammar. It means to take inventory and to put together with one’s mind. The verb tense indicates something he had done in the past that produced results which were still in effect. Paul had examined his life before writing this letter. This inventory created actions out of which came his guidelines.

You are approaching the border. It is time to take inventory. For believers, Jesus said, My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you (Jn 15:12 NIV). Paul explains, Love . . . it keeps no record of wrongs (1 Cor 13: 5). What will you take—lessons, good memories, positive relationships? But, the big question, are you planning to take your trailer filled with notebooks?

Sadly, we probably all know someone who drags the same trailer year after year filled with moldy and rotting records. Increasingly that person is infected with more and more bitterness. They have been angry with someone since first grade; they hang on the hurt from their spouse, a family member, or a friend; they still want to take revenge on their first employer; etc. ad infinitum.  Examine your trailer.

Sustaining Word for the Week: Take inventory, let go those things which are past, reach forward to what lies ahead, press on towards the goal, the prize—Jesus Christ.

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