If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
And Moses said to the Lord, “Why are you treating me, your servant, so harshly? Have mercy on me! What did I do to deserve the burden of all these people? Numbers 11:11 NLT
Wondering why
often leaves us wondering why we wonder why.
I sat in the car
with two of my grandsons, waiting for my wife to complete a physical test. One
of them—three at the time—sat in the front seat with me, biding his time and
asking three-year-old questions.
“Pop, what is
this?” he asked, pointing to one knob on the radio.
“It turns the
radio on and makes it louder,” I said, trying to focus on what I was doing.
“Why,” was the
next question.
“I don’t know.
It just does.”
“What about this
button?” he continued, pointing to a button beside the first knob.
I finally told
him that all the buttons in that general area worked the radio. My answer still
didn’t satisfy him.
“Why?” he asked.
After playing
this why game for every piece associated with the dashboard and exterior
mirrors, I finally said, “Pop’s tired of answering questions. I need to work.”
I was glad he
had entered the inquisitive stage and eager to learn. But he would soon discover
that I didn’t have an answer to everything he asked. And I often eventually
tire of answering “why” inquiries.
Moses wondered
why in the world God had saddled him with the task of caring for more than a
million people. People who complained most of the time, couldn’t get along, tended
to rebel against God, and on occasion threatened to kill him. God answered his
why question by giving him some help. God wanted those people in the Promised
Land, and Moses was the person he chose to lead them there. He didn’t need to
know why; he just needed to obey. As when God didn’t tell Job why he allowed him
to suffer all his misfortune.
God’s ways and
will are often a mystery he chooses not to solve in our presence. Perhaps in
heaven, he’ll answer some of our “why” questions; perhaps he won’t, and it won’t
matter. There is nothing wrong with asking God why, but we must be prepared to
experience silence. While God never tires of our asking why, he doesn’t want our
whys to come from disbelief or discouragement but from a desire for more
understanding—like Moses.
Don’t be afraid
to ask God why, but be prepared to be kept in suspense. Following his will is a
faith journey with many unanswered whys.
Father, when you
choose not to answer my why questions, give me the faith and courage to keep
following you.
If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
Don’t forget to show hospitality to strangers, for some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it! Hebrews 13:2 NLT
He stood on a
busy intersection, holding a sign we couldn’t read. To help or not to help,
that was the question. Although the town where we lived wasn’t large, we had
begun to see more homeless and indigent people standing on corners near our
local restaurants and retailers.
As we pulled out
of one parking lot after our meal, my wife and I strained our necks but
couldn’t read his sign. After visiting the pharmacy to pick up medicine, we
passed the man again on our way home.
“I’m going to
circle around to see what the sign says,” my wife remarked.
I was glad. Lately,
we had been paying it forward. Perhaps this was another opportunity. As we
neared the gentleman, we noticed he didn’t look like the others we’d seen
requesting help.
The man’s sign
read, “Trying desperately to help my family. Waiting on my disability check.”
He didn’t appear disabled, but then again, many who are don’t. We pulled to the
stop sign next to him. My wife said nothing.
“What do you
think?” I finally asked.
“I don’t feel
the tug,” she said. And we drove on.
God regularly places
opportunities in our path. More if we ask Him too. But I can’t take advantage
of every good opportunity, nor does God expect me to. I’m not a wealthy man.
Even Jesus, with all of heaven’s riches at his disposal, didn’t heal every
sickness or meet the needs of every person who wanted his help. There were
times when he left the crowds to pray to his heavenly Father or to move to
another region.
Knowing which
helping opportunity God wants us to seize takes much prayer. This helps us look
and listen with spiritual eyes and ears. We must ask God to send the
opportunities, but we must also ask him to let us see them. Busyness and
selfishness will often cause us to miss out.
The tug my wife
mentioned is what we call God’s Spirit. We both feel it when it’s an
opportunity God wants us to take. It’s an overwhelming pressure to intervene—a
feeling of guilt when we let the opportunity slip by.
Ask God to show
you the situations where he wants you to intervene. You can’t do it all, but
you can do something.
Father, guide me
to those people and situations where you want me to intervene.
If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
The Lord is my light and my salvation—so why should I be afraid? The Lord is my fortress, protecting me from danger, so why should I tremble? Psalm 27:1 NLT
I dropped the pans on the floor. A loud scream followed.
When my son was an infant, my wife and I worried that ear
infections had affected his hearing. Rather than take him to the pediatrician, we
decided to perform a home test. As my wife sat at the kitchen table with him
cuddled in her arms, I dropped a heavy pan. His screams reassured us that his
hearing was okay.
Humans are born
with two innate fears: falling and loud noises. I saw the second in my son; I
witnessed the first in one of my grandsons. After he started walking, I noticed
he hesitated when approaching a ledge or when he got too close to the edge of a
chair or the couch. I didn’t have to say, “Watch out. You’ll fall.” He
naturally knew something was different.
I’m sure David
was frightened by many things, but he had the sense to know he shouldn’t be.
God saved him from lions, bears, enemies, and a jealous king. He lit his path
and provided a protective wall.
I may have been
born with only two fears, but I’ve accumulated many more: fear of those who can
harm me physically, fear of financial failure, fear of relationship demise,
fear of not being loved, fear of emotional abuse, fear of unemployment, fear of
depleted retirement savings. Yet I’m reminded of what Paul told Timothy: “For
God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound
mind” (2 Timothy 1:7 NKJV).
Fears seem to
come naturally in our human experience, but if we’re only created with two,
they shouldn’t. As with David, experience should teach us to depend on God for
salvation and protection. He has saved us from the greatest fear we could ever
have: eternity apart from him in payment for our sins. But even if our lives
are taken by others, our souls are secure.
We can also
depend on God to guard our daily steps. We may incur sicknesses—even
life-threatening diseases—but He provides ultimate protection. Since the
imperishable part of us is safe in his arms, we can live without fearing the
other things that assault us during our life’s journey.
Don’t live with
a spirit of fear when God says, “Fear not.”
Father, I thank
you for allowing me to live life free of fear.
If you seek hope and healing because of hurts you have faced, then Hurt, Hope, and Healing is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
I invite you to try my book Hurt, Hope, and Healing in eBook or paperback. If you seek hope and healing because of the hurts you have faced, this book is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
No, it’s because of your wickedness! There’s no limit to your sins. Job 22:5 NLT
“Have you anointed her and prayed for her healing?”
My wife suffers from various physical ailments—too many, in
fact, for her years. She has undergone numerous surgeries to remove tumors that
could have turned malignant. Then came surgeries to repair hernias, remove a
gall bladder, remove plantar warts, and repair carpal tunnel. She still suffers
from herniated disks in her back and neck. To top off these issues, she suffers
with fibromyalgia, degenerative arthritis, and neuropathy. Every trip to the
doctor seems to entail another medicine or a further diagnosis.
Had my wife lived in Job’s time, she would certainly have been
classified as a notorious sinner by any number of pious church folks. Although
a righteous man—declared so by God and himself—Job faced real accusations, not
hypothetical ones. Several fair-weather friends accused him of sinning against
God. Why else would he be afflicted by boils and have lost most of his family
and possessions? Even his wife told him to curse God so he could die and get
his miserable life over with.
Job, however, maintained his innocence, and at the end of the
story God corroborated his testimony. Sickness is the bane of living in a world
tainted by sin. The world God originally created was free from sickness—and all
the other results of sin—and the new world he will create at the end of time
will be identical.
While sickness came when sin entered the world, all sickness
is not the result of individual sins. If this were true, my wife would be one
of the greatest sinners in the world—when, in fact, she is quite saintly. God
can and does use sickness as a means of disciplining or punishing those who
revel in willful sin, but having a cold, flu, COVID, or some other illness or
disease doesn’t necessarily mean we’ve committed a particular sin.
When my friend asked whether I had anointed and prayed for my
wife, I answered, “Yes.” But she hasn’t been healed. Just as sickness is not
always the result of sin, so God doesn’t always choose to heal our sicknesses
when we ask. He is sovereign. We must trust his plan.
If you’re sick, examine your spiritual life. If it’s in
order, pray for healing, but leave the results to an all-wise God.
Father, we entrust our health-related matters to you. If sin
is the cause, convict us. If it’s not, then give us the courage to trust you
and endure.
I invite you to try my book Hurt, Hope, and Healing in eBook or paperback. If you seek hope and healing because of the hurts you have faced, this book is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.
Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened. Matthew 7:7-8 NIV
Easter morning is always an exciting and bustling time within our household as my granddaughters search for Easter eggs. These goodies have been cleverly hidden by their parents, and the girls must search diligently to find them. What happiness ensues when all have been discovered, and their Easter baskets are overflowing with yummy treats. But the hunt for truth should bring even more excitement.
Searching for Easter eggs brought to mind the treats of truth and wisdom God has hidden for us within his Word. The Scriptures hold the secrets of life. They reveal who God is and how we may come into a relationship with him through faith in His Son, Jesus Christ. They teach us how to deal with any situation life can throw at us. We learn how to praise God and the best way to treat our enemies.
God’s Word has the power to correct our behavior
and convict us of wrong thoughts and actions. It can restore us spiritually and emotionally. The Scripture makes the simple wise and promotes hope
and joy. It prepares us for the future
and relieves us of the burdens of our past. Indeed, within God’s Word are found
treasures beyond compare.
Like hunting for
hidden Easter eggs, however, we too must be prepared to hunt for these gems of
truth within the Scriptures. We must be
willing to ask God for a hunger in our hearts for his Word as well as guidance
as we read it. We must be
persistent in searching the Word for new truths that we may have missed. Some, we may not have been mature enough to see or understand at a previous
time. We must also be tenacious in seeking enlightenment regarding how to apply these precious truths
to our everyday lives.
When the girls hunt
for their eggs, they are rewarded for finding them. They gather them and eventually
pop them into their mouths to enjoy the tasty morsels. Likewise, when we seek, ask, and knock to discover the truths in God’s Word, we too are blessed as we
discover, embrace, and taste their goodness by putting them into practice and seeing that they are good.
Make sure your hunt for truth takes you to God’s Word daily.
Father God, thank you for your precious Word. Encourage and motivate me to hunger for its truths.
Strengthen me to be tenacious when asking, seeking, and
knocking. Grant me enlightenment, wisdom, correction, and teaching through them, so that I might live a good and productive life. Help my life to be a witness of your lovingkindness and mercy to all those
around me. In Christ’s name I pray, amen.
Lynne Phipps and her family live on a small hobby farm in the heart of Alberta, Canada’s farming country. She has been writing devotions for forty years and never tires of the spiritual correlation the Holy Spirit blesses her with. He uses normal everyday events and the behaviors of the multitude of glorious creatures He has brought across her path to point her to the truths of God. Lynne is a devotion writer for VineWords: Devotions and More, Christian Devotions, and Love Lines from God.
I invite you to try my book Hurt, Hope, and Healing in eBook or paperback. If you seek hope and healing because of the hurts you have faced, this book is for you. Click on the title above to order your copy. And thanks to all our faithful followers who share our posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Linkedin.