Friday, January 21, 2011

Psalm 18 - Encouragement for the Downcast

Fellow Brother or Sister in Christ,

Are you downcast or disheartened. Has your hope been deferred for so long that you are heart sick (Prov. 13:12)? Listen to the following verses from Psalm 18, and be encouraged!


"In my distress I called to the Lord; I cried to my God for help. From His temple He heard my voice; my cry came before Him, into His ears." (vs. 6)

"He reached down from on high and took hold of me; He drew me out of deep waters." (vs. 16)

"He brought me out into a spacious place; He rescued me because He delighted in me." (vs. 19)

"You, O Lord, keep my lamp burning; my God turns my darkness into light." (vs. 28)

"As for God, His way is perfect; the word of the Lord is flawless." (vs. 30)

"He makes my feet like the feet of a deer; He enables me to stand on the heights." (vs. 33)

"You broaden the path beneath me, so that my ankles do not turn." (vs. 36)

"Therefore, I will praise you among the nations, O Lord; I will sing praises to your name." (vs. 49)

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Hope in Times of Despair

"And I - in righteousness I will see your face; when I awake, I will be satisfied with seeing your likeness." Psalm 17:15 (NIV)

Do you ever wonder why there can be hope in times of despair? Why do so many facing immense struggles carry on and not give up? If you have ever been through a period in your life that caused you immense heartache, you can certainly identify with this question. Why did you carry on? What was it that told you not to despair and to keep pressing on?

No matter the cause, struggles cause all of us to reflect on life and its purpose. We all wish for our heart pains to cease. We all long for unbreakable joy and peace in our lives. How quickly it seems to vanish so soon after we think we have attained it!

Through His Word, God gives us His answer. He never promises to remove the suffering or lessen it (though He certainly can and does sometimes). He does, however, tells us that only by looking at His face can we attain the peace and comfort we desperately need. Our hearts will never be satisfied until we see His likeness.

God is preparing all of us for a much greater purpose than we realize. Yes, God cares for our lives here on earth (on this side of eternity). However, He desperately wants us to see His face when our life on earth is complete. He wants us to want Him, and will do anything to get us to look at Him. He knows we will not be satisfied until we see His likeness. Sufferings are one tool God utilizes to woo us to look at Him.

Is your heart crying and pouring out tears? Do you feel alone and hopeless? Turn your eyes to God, and know that you cannot be satisfied until you see His likeness. Cast yourself onto Christ and ask Him to forgive your transgressions. Ask Him to pour out His righteousness unto you. Only then will you be able to see His face. Only then will you awake on the other side of eternity and be satisfied - satisfied in seeing His likeness. As David prayed in Psalm 27:8, "My heart says of you, 'Seek His face!' Your face, Lord, I will seek."

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Life is Like A Hallway

Life is like walking down a long hallway inside a large house.
On each side of the hallway are many doors.
Some of the doors are laden with brilliance and colors.
Other doors are more humble, plain, undecorated.
You find yourself walking down the hall, looking for something.
You do not know what you are searching. But you do know that you must search.

You meet and pass by others who are also walking down the hall.
Many are excited and enter various doors, shouting, "Hurrah! I have found my place!"
Some whom you consider friends exclaim to you, "Enter this door - this must be for you too!"
However, you just know those doors are not for you. Something inside you tells you to keep searching.

You happen to glance inside some open doors to see what all the excitement is about.
You see pleasure, comfort, riches, and entertainment.
Yet you also see sadness, pain, deceitfulness, and separation.
You look more intensely inside the doorways and discover that beyond the gaze of your friends, inside the door, is darkness and entrapment.
You yell to your friends not to enter, but they do not listen.
Your friends appear to be blinded by the lure of the doors to the dangers therein.
Your friends do not heed your words.
In fact, you realize that they cannot heed your words.
Dazed by the brilliance and cunning decoration of the doors, they jump headlong into the doorway, ignoring your warning cries.

You seek, you warn, you search.
The hallway becomes more narrow now. You press on, unable to turn around because of the ever-narrowing of the hall.
You begin to feel nervous, fainthearted, and hopeless.
You become concerned for your family, whom you have brought along down the hall.
You have become exasperated, exhausted with the warnings you have shouted to your family.
Your feelings of joy for keeping your family from entering various doorways ebb away as you become weighed down with the burden of finding a door, the right door.

Your family begins to cry out for help, begging you to stop the pain of the ever-narrowing hallway.
You encourage your family to keep pressing on, to never give up.
You begin to feel overwhelmed and begin to question if you fatally erred by not entering an open door before the hallway closed.
You cry to God for help.
You encourage your family to cry out to God for help.

And just as you think you are about to be crushed by the hallway,
you find yourself walking on a long, thin plank.
The walls and ceiling and floor all vanish instantly.
You steady yourself on the long thin plank.
You caution your family to keep close and to stay focused.
You realize that one false step could send you plummeting off the plank into utter darkness.

As you walk along the plank, you see a dim light in the horizon.
Your spirit quickens, swelling with an unexpected joy and hope.
You encourage your family to press on, knowing that the end of the journey is near.
The light brightens and becomes more brilliant with each passing step.
You shade your eyes at the ever increasing, blinding light.

And just as you can bear the light no longer, you reach a crossroads with another plank.
You cry our for joy, and push your family ahead of you.
Your search has ended.
Darkness is no more.
Pain is no more.
You have found the crossroads of the two planks - the Cross.
You discover Jesus Christ waiting for you.

As your family rejoices with you, You realize that Christ had prepared the hallway for you.
He had made the way very straight and very narrow.
He wanted to find you and bring you to Himself.
He provided a way for all to come to Him.
He called you and spoke to you in your heart.

And as your eyes fill with tears, rejoicing in the presence of the never-ending Light,
He welcomes you into His arms and carries you the rest of the way Home.

Be sure to read the Bible daily. And when you have the time, be sure to read these books also:

  • Confessions - by Aurelius Augustinus
  • Pilgrim's Progress - by John Bunyan
  • The Gift of Pain - by Paul Brand
  • The Holiness of God - by RC Sproul