Today's Reading: Job 5-6 and Luke 15
In today's reading Job is asking lots of questions... and who wouldn't having experienced what he has... When trouble and tragedy strike sometimes those questions turn inward. "Is it me God? Have I done something wrong? Is it because of my sin that I'm experiencing this?" I know I have asked those questions over the years sometimes when things haven't gone as I hoped... but it's all part of God's plan.... We must trust Him in the dark as well as the light! (As I'm learning afresh even now!)
I really do love the story of the Prodigal son in Luke 15. I love the part where "he began to be in want." (vs. 14) In other words, he recognized his NEED! When we recognize our need is the point we begin to go home to our Savior. The remaining space here this morning, I'm going to share a series of quotes on this story from Christ Object Lessons as they reflect our own journey of repentance.
[Greetings from Lumby British Columbia where I've come to visit a dear friend from high school days. Also speaking here in the local church! Next week I drive back to WA to speak for Northeastern WA Campmeeting at Sheridan Meadows!]
Tomorrow's Reading: Job 7-8 and Ps. 81-82
In today's reading Job is asking lots of questions... and who wouldn't having experienced what he has... When trouble and tragedy strike sometimes those questions turn inward. "Is it me God? Have I done something wrong? Is it because of my sin that I'm experiencing this?" I know I have asked those questions over the years sometimes when things haven't gone as I hoped... but it's all part of God's plan.... We must trust Him in the dark as well as the light! (As I'm learning afresh even now!)
I really do love the story of the Prodigal son in Luke 15. I love the part where "he began to be in want." (vs. 14) In other words, he recognized his NEED! When we recognize our need is the point we begin to go home to our Savior. The remaining space here this morning, I'm going to share a series of quotes on this story from Christ Object Lessons as they reflect our own journey of repentance.
What a picture here of the sinner’s state! Although surrounded with the blessings of His love, there is nothing that the sinner, bent on self-indulgence and sinful pleasure, desires so much as separation from God... Whatever the appearance may be, every life centered in self is squandered. Whoever attempts to live apart from God is wasting his substance...
The love of God still yearns over the one who has chosen to separate from Him, and He sets in operation influences to bring him back to the Father’s house. The prodigal son in his wretchedness “came to himself.” The deceptive power that Satan had exercised over him was broken... The young man turns from the swine herds and the husks, and sets his face toward home. Trembling with weakness and faint from hunger, he presses eagerly on his way. He has no covering to conceal his rags; but his misery has conquered pride, and he hurries on to beg a servant’s place where he was once a child...
But while he is yet “a great way off” the father discerns his form. Love is of quick sight. Not even the degradation of the years of sin can conceal the son from the father’s eyes. He “had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck” in a long, clinging, tender embrace...
In his restless youth the prodigal looked upon his father as stern and severe. How different his conception of him now! So those who are deceived by Satan look upon God as hard and exacting. They regard Him as watching to denounce and condemn, as unwilling to receive the sinner so long as there is a legal excuse for not helping him. His law they regard as a restriction upon men’s happiness, a burdensome yoke from which they are glad to escape. But he whose eyes have been opened by the love of Christ will behold God as full of compassion. He does not appear as a tyrannical, relentless being, but as a father longing to embrace his repenting son. The sinner will exclaim with the Psalmist, “Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him.” Psalm 103:13.
In the parable there is no taunting, no casting up to the prodigal of his evil course. The son feels that the past is forgiven and forgotten, blotted out forever. And so God says to the sinner, “I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins,” Isaiah 44:22. “I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.” Jeremiah 31:34. “Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.” Isaiah 55:7. “In those days, and in that time, saith the Lord, the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for, and there shall be none; and the sins of Judah, and they shall not be found.” Jeremiah 50:20.
Do not listen to the enemy’s suggestion to stay away from Christ until you have made yourself better; until you are good enough to come to God. If you wait until then, you will never come. When Satan points to your filthy garments, repeat the promise of Jesus, “Him that cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out.” John 6:37. Tell the enemy that the blood of Jesus Christ cleanses from all sin. Make the prayer of David your own, “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” Psalm 51:7.
Arise and go to your Father. He will meet you a great way off. If you take even one step toward Him in repentance, He will hasten to enfold you in His arms of infinite love. His ear is open to the cry of the contrite soul. The very first reaching out of the heart after God is known to Him. Never a prayer is offered, however faltering, never a tear is shed, however secret, never a sincere desire after God is cherished, however feeble, but the Spirit of God goes forth to meet it. Even before the prayer is uttered or the yearning of the heart made known, grace from Christ goes forth to meet the grace that is working upon the human soul. (Christ Object Lessons, p. 203-206)Such a beautiful passage with such hope for each one of us, for we've all been prodigals in some way or another.
[Greetings from Lumby British Columbia where I've come to visit a dear friend from high school days. Also speaking here in the local church! Next week I drive back to WA to speak for Northeastern WA Campmeeting at Sheridan Meadows!]
Tomorrow's Reading: Job 7-8 and Ps. 81-82
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