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Daily Devotions & Prayers
Today's Devotion

» A different perspective - September 6, 2010

One Sabbath, when Jesus went to eat in the house of a prominent Pharisee, he was being carefully watched.

Luke 14:1


What would Jesus do? The dinner guests carefully watched his every move. But they were not the only ones doing the watching. Jesus also observed their actions (Luke 14:7). What he saw offered him an opportunity to teach a different perspective.

The guests were literally falling over themselves to have the best seat at the dinner. Pride was their motivation, as was the desire to be recognized as being just a little better than everyone else. Jesus offered a different perspective, and it is one to which I need to pay attention.

It is natural for me to want recognition. I desire to have people take notice of me and what I have done. It makes me feel valuable. This is why humiliation is such a bitter pill to swallow, and why Jesus' perspective is so different. He says, "Be humble."

Being humble, truly humble, is difficult. As someone who craves attention, being overlooked is hard to accept. Still, Jesus' lesson strikes home. My pride and my self-promotion cannot stand up in front of God who is judge over all. I may try to offer all the good I have done. I may claim to be better than other people. I may even demand that God has to accept me for who I am. Unfortunately, God looks at me from a different perspective. He says, "Be perfect" (Matthew 5:48). He adds that all have sinned and fall short of his glory (Romans 3:23). He further adds, "Away from me, you evildoers" (Matthew 7:23).

In humility, I realize I cannot stand in front of God nor take pride in anything I have done. This is why Jesus' perspective is so important. He teaches me to look past my works and look to him. He provides me the perfection I can not attain. He offers me the forgiveness I need. He gives me the ability to stand before his Father completely acceptable.

In humility, I need to look away from myself and look to Jesus alone in order to be exalted in the presence of God. Yes, it is a different perspective, yet it is one through which I receive life and lasting glory in heaven.

 

Prayer: 

Dearest Jesus, you alone are my pride and glory. Give me the faith I need to depend on your work for my rescue, my ability to stand before your Father, and my certainty of heaven. Amen!

Today's Devotion is brought to you by WELS and www.WhatAboutJesus.com

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--Daily Devotion


» God loves underdogs - September 3, 2010

The LORD said to Gideon, "With the three hundred men that lapped I will save you and give the Midianites into your hands. Let all the other men go, each to his own place." So Gideon sent the rest of the Israelites to their tents but kept the three hundred, who took over the provisions and trumpets of the others. Now the camp of Midian lay below him in the valley.

Judges 7:7-8


Most people like to cheer for the underdog. We like to see someone prevail against overwhelming odds and adversity. However, it's usually a lot more fun to cheer for the underdog than to be the underdog. This is especially true when it comes to life and death matters, like fighting cancer, or going into war.

The Israelite army was the underdog to begin with, outnumbered 135,000 to 32,000. Then after the Lord told Gideon to send home those who trembled with fear and to keep only those who lapped water with their hands, it was 135,000 to 300. That's 450 Midianite soldiers to each Israelite! Impossible odds in an era of hand-to-hand combat. But the Lord gave his people the victory!

So why did God make it seem so impossible? He was making sure that the Israelites would not boast in their own strength or think that the victory came by their own planning or power. When it comes to our salvation, God wants us to recognize the same thing. He has done it all. We can do nothing!
 
Spiritually, each one of us was the most unlikely underdog imaginable. Not only were we separated from God at birth, but we were also blinded by unbelief. On our own we could not even begin to make the first move toward God, nor did we want to. But God did the impossible by sending his Spirit through his Word to lead us to love and trust in his Son as our Savior from sin.

The victory is the Lord's! Therefore, instead of boasting of our own strength or righteousness, we rely on God our Savior and praise him for his gift of righteousness.

Prayer: 

Dear Heavenly Father, you have done everything for our salvation. We have done nothing. Give us such a faith that humbly approaches you and praises you continually for your great goodness. Amen.

Today's Devotion is brought to you by WELS and www.WhatAboutJesus.com

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--Daily Devotion


» Ruth 2:17-20 - September 2, 2010

So Ruth gleaned in the field until evening. Then she threshed the barley she had gathered, and it amounted to about an ephah. She carried it back to town, and her mother-in-law saw how much she had gathered. Ruth also brought out and gave her what she had left over after she had eaten enough. Her mother-in-law asked her, "Where did you glean today? Where did you work? Blessed be the man who took notice of you!" Then Ruth told her mother-in-law about the one at whose place she had been working. "The name of the man I worked with today is Boaz," she said. "The LORD bless him!" Naomi said to her daughter-in-law. "He has not stopped showing his kindness to the living and the dead." She added, "That man is our close relative; he is one of our kinsman-redeemers."

Ruth 2:17-20

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Ruth put in quite a day. She gleaned until the sun went down, and then she threshed what she had gathered. Threshing in Old Testament times meant beating the heads of the grain to separate the kernel and then throwing everything into the air with something like a pitchfork. The light, inedible husks and other chaff would blow away and the heavier grain would fall back onto the ground or stone threshing floor. What Ruth took home that day was out of the ordinary. An ephah was three-fifths of a bushel, enough to bake about 20 loaves of bread.

When Naomi asked her daughter-in-law where she gleaned to get so much barley, Ruth said she worked in the field of Boaz. Naomi revealed that this man was her relative, and she praised God for his kindness and generosity.

This scene in God's Word reminds us that our acts of kindness done out of love for the Lord affect more than just the immediate person whom we are helping. Others also reap the benefits of our kind acts, though we may never know how the kind things we do for people end up helping others. May God continue to give us loving and generous hearts, and may he use our acts of kindness to lead to opportunities to verbally share his great act of kindness—sending his Son to redeem us.

"Redeem" is an important word in the Scriptures. That teaching is introduced here in our study of the book of Ruth. The "kinsman-redeemer" was a man who was responsible for protecting his close relatives. He was supposed to provide heirs for a brother or other relative who had died. He was also to redeem (literally "buy back") land that a poor relative had sold outside the family. He was also to redeem (again, "buy back") a relative sold into slavery. (Sometimes people were forced to sell themselves into servitude in order to pay off a debt, and sometimes prisoners of war became slaves.)

In a much greater way, all people were held in slavery. The Bible tells us, "Everyone who sins is a slave to sin" (John 8:34). But Jesus Christ came to be our Redeemer. He bought us back from sin's curse. The price he paid was his holy, precious blood and his innocent sufferings and death. "We have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins" (Ephesians 1:7). Jesus bought us back; we are his, to love and to serve him and others in his name.

 

Prayer: 

Forgive my selfishness, Lord, and make me willing to befriend those who need a friend. I thank you for the kindness you have shown me in Christ, my Redeemer. I also thank you for the kindness you have shown me through the kind acts of others. Amen.

Today's Devotion is brought to you by WELS and www.WhatAboutJesus.com

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

--Daily Devotion


» A different kind of mountain - September 1, 2010

You have come to Mount Zion, to the heavenly Jerusalem, the city of the living God.

Hebrews 12:22


No doubt you've seen pictures or video of Mount Everest. Its beauty is stunning. And its height—nearly 6 miles above sea level—makes it the highest mountain in the world. It's the stuff of legend.

That much you know. What you may not know is that Mount Everest is littered with bodies.

Over the years, you see, about 4,000 people have tried to climb Mount Everest. Almost 200 of them have died in the attempt. So extreme, however, is the terrain near the summit that it's simply impossible to recover many of the bodies. And so they remain on the mountain to this day.

It's a sobering thought: A mountain littered with scores of people who gave their lives for a fleeting moment of glory.

The Lord introduces us to a different kind of mountain—"Mount Zion," he calls it. The heavenly Jerusalem. The city of the living God.  Here there is only one person who gave his life. It's the Son of God himself. Only he didn't do it for a moment of glory. He did it to wash us clean of our every sin. He did it to give us eternal life.

And now he lives. And because he does, Mount Zion is ours. And not just for a moment. Because Jesus lives, Mount Zion—heaven—is ours forever.

 

Prayer: 

Dearest Jesus, you died to wash me clean. And now you live again. Because you do, Mount Zion is mine. Empower me never to forget what I have through you. Amen.

Today's Devotion is brought to you by WELS and www.WhatAboutJesus.com

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

--Daily Devotion




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