Category: 2018/19 Devos

Devo 26

“They shall not hunger or thirst, neither scorching wind nor sun shall strike them, for He who has pity on them will lead them, and by springs of water will guide them.”  Isaiah 49:10

Well, I’d hoped to have a neat and tidy little devo to go with this week’s readings but I’ve honestly just been left scratching my head.  The problem is Jonah.  You might wonder how a fish story ends up in an astronomy blog but the book of Jonah is about a lot more than a really big fish.  This tiny book is all about a really big God.  A God who hurls winds, quiets raging seas, appoints great fish for rescue missions and relocations, plants for botanical cabanas, a worm for demolition, and sun and wind to sap ones strength and scorch ones head.   All these elements of nature obey God’s bidding, except for man.  Jonah, like all people, rebellled against his Creator and creation became his scourge.  

Nineveh was no exception.  Nineveh deservedly awaited God’s wrath.  But instead God sent His word.  He sent Jonah to scatter the seed.  Jonah proclaimed Nineveh’s impending destruction and Nineveh believed God’s word and repented in fasting and sackcloth!

So God relented, just like Jonah suspected He would.  “For I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, and relenting from disaster.”  And that really ticked Jonah off—so much so that he just wanted to die.

It’s fascinating to me what Jonah did next.  He scattered the seed of the word like he was told, Nineveh repented like he was afraid they would, God has mercy just like he figured, and then instead of going home, he built himself a shelter on a hill overlooking Nineveh and sat in it “till he should see what becomes of the city.”  Why?  We’ve already read that because the Ninevites responded to the word in repentance, God did not destroy the city.  So what was Jonah waiting to see? 

I think Chapter 4, verse 6 gives us a little hint.  “The Lord God appointed a plant and made it come up over Jonah, that it might be a shade over his head, to save him from his discomfort.”  At least that’s what the ESV says, but they also include a note that says “discomfort” or “evil.” Well, I don’t know about you, but that was a little disconcerting for an amateur Bible reader like myself.  I don’t know a thing about Hebrew but this sure made me wish I did! 

My trusty Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance and Hebrew Lexicon verified the typical translation of “ra ah” as “evil” or less often as “disaster.”  In fact this is the only time “ra ah” is ever translated as “discomfort.” If that IS an accurate translation than I can totally accept the consensus in the stack of commentaries my husband has accumulated on this particular book, Colin Smith’s “Jonah: Navigating a God-Centered Life” being one of them.  But if it isn’t an accurate translation and the plant was intended to save Jonah from something a whole lot worse than “discomfort,” than God’s immediate removal of that comfort before it even has a chance to be effective sheds a different light on Jonah’s situation (insert head-scratching here).

Now, back to that other question about what Jonah might possibly have been waiting to see from the hilltop.  Interestingly enough, the next reading on this week’s list is from Mark 4, the end of which has Jesus showing the same power God exhibits over the wind and the waves in the book of Jonah.  But in the first part there’s this parable about the sower.  Now all of this week’s readings had a scorching sun in common but these 2 had something else as well, namely the preaching of the word and the springing up of plants.  

In Mark 4:13, Jesus explains that when the word is sown, it can fall where Satan will immediately snatch it up again, or it can fall on rocky ground and spring up quickly and with great joy but because it has no root it withers at the first sign of persecution (this is the scorching sun analogy).  The word can also fall among thorns and get choked by “the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches and the desires for other things.”  But when the word is sown on good soil prepared to receive it, it will bear much fruit.  

I have to wonder if that might be what Jonah was waiting to see from his shelter on top of the hill.  He had sown the word and rather to his dismay, Nineveh had responded in repentance.  So God had pity on them.  But would it last?  Would Nineveh be like the rocky soil, or the thorny soil or was it actually going to bear fruit?  Was there maybe just a chance that he might be able to witness this wicked city’s  destruction after all?  

I don’t know exactly what was going on in Jonah’s heart but God’s way of addressing it was to appoint this plant to spring up and save him from either its effects or the sun’s.  We know God’s purposes always succeed, so whichever malady God was saving Jonah from, the removal of the plant must also have been necessary to the success of the mission.  For before the sun had even arisen God appointed a worm to devour it.  

Jonah responded in his usual rash manner.  God graciously describes his outburst as misplaced pity for the plant.  But then He says something that I think gets to the heart of the whole book. 

“You pity the plant, for which you did not labor, nor did you make it grow, which came into being in a night and perished in a night.  And should not I pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than 120,000 persons who do not know their right hand from their left?”  

Oh friend!  Do you not know that if you have received the word of the Lord, the Good News of the gospel of Jesus Christ, and that gospel has taken root in your life and born fruit, that it is only by the mercy of God that it has done so?  Were it not for the pity of our heavenly Father, we would be facing the same destruction Nineveh was, only on an infinitely greater scale.  But God in His great mercy and steadfast love, takes out our heart of stone and replaces it with a heart of flesh, ready to receive His implanted word.  He makes it take root.  He makes it grow.  He causes it to bear fruit.  And according to James 1:18, He does this according to His own will, not ours.  “Of His own will He brought us forth by the word of truth, that we should be a kind of first fruits of His creatures.”

In the preceding verses James contrasts those deep-rooted plants that joyfully and steadfastly face trials and persecutions with those that spring up quickly and just as quickly fade away when the scorching sun of adversity hinders their worldly pursuits.

Was Jonah one of those plants?  Was he, as Smith suggests in his book, so exceedingly delighted in the comforts God had provided as to become “vine-centered,” freely accepting the good from God’s hand but cursing the worm and the wind (111)?

Our last reading of the week is a heavy one, but it’s one that can’t be ignored.  Revelation 16:8 says there will surely come a day when God is going to allow the sun to so increase in intensity that people will be “scorched by the fierce heat.”  Their response will be to curse the name of God rather than “repent and give Him glory.”  

Smith suggests that Jonah must have repented and given God the glory or such a God-exalting, self-humiliating testimony could never have been written (141).  Maybe it was the plant and its subsequent demise that was used to save him from his own “vine-centeredness.”  I’m left with so many questions.  Perhaps some of you real scholars out there can enlighten me.  In the mean time, all I can do is keep scattering the seed to my little homeschool flock.

Devo 25

“I have seen everything that is done under the sun, and behold, all is vanity and a striving after wind.” Ecclesiastes 1:14

My homework for our ladies Bible study had me in Genesis 2 and 3 this morning.  I’ll take Genesis any day over Ecclesiastes.  I never know what to do with Ecclesiastes.  Genesis is just so PURPOSEFUL.  Every single element of creation intentionally placed to play its part in the great drama of redemption.  Types and shadows of the coming Messiah, the last Adam and the bride He purchases for Himself, the Sabbath rest that is to come, the New Heavens and Earth where we, clothed in Christ’s righteousness, will dwell securely— these just seem to jump from the page at me.

So it was a reluctant leap for me this afternoon from the loftiness of Genesis into the murky waters of Ecclesiastes.  But when I dove in, I found Eden all over again.

Solomon’s descriptions of life under the sun, read like a dirge of lament over what was lost in the garden.  The purposefulness of creation carries now an air of purposelessness, or vanity, as the Preacher calls it.  Here sits the king in Jerusalem, another imperfect ruler like Eden’s first, in the imperfect shadow of the City of God, and all he can see is how nothing on earth can ever be made right again as long as sin and death reign.  

“What does man gain by all the toil at which he toils under the sun?”  He asks.  Generations come and go.  The sun keeps on rising and setting and there is nothing new under it (Eccl. 1:3-9).  You work.  And then you die.  “All are from the dust, and to dust all return (Eccl. 2:20).  Is he not echoing the very words of God to Adam in Genesis 3:19?  

“By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, till you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust and to dust you shall return.”

Welcome to the curse.

Was the curse intended to make us happy and contented with our lot?  No!  Solomon’s depression over the situation in which we all find ourselves makes perfect sense.  What wouldn’t make sense is for one to revel in the vanity of life and somehow find fulfillment therein.  He even tests this approach to see if it would work.  And in doing so only ends up repeating all of Eve’s first foibles.  

When the serpent challenges God’s authority by twisting His command thusly, “Did God actually say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree in the garden?” Eve should have rebuked his error but instead she falls prey to it and adds her own twist to God’s command not to eat the fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.  “Neither shall you touch it,” she adds. 

In the same way, Solomon twists the creation mandate by adding to it.  He doesn’t just stop with the God-given task of building houses and planting vineyards, gardens, parks, and fruit trees and making pools of water to irrigate it all.  Instead of being content to work and tend his gardens, he acquires slaves to do the work for him.  And instead of cleaving to one wife he collects concubines.  And just as Adam is led astray by his wife, Solomon’s many wives and concubines turn his heart away from the one true God as well.

Like Eve, Solomon’s choices are governed by his appetites.  Eve “saw that the tree was good for food.” He searched his heart how to cheer his body with wine (Eccl. 2:3.) Eve saw that the tree was “a delight to the eyes.”  Whatever Solomon’s eyes desired he did not keep from them (Eccl. 2:10).  Eve saw that the tree “was desired to make one wise.” Solomon, too applied himself to know wisdom, with an infamous fervor, only to discover that “in much wisdom is much vexation and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow (Eccl. 1:18).”

Tragically, Eve discovered the same thing.  “She took of its fruit and ate and gave some to her husband.” Just as the serpent foretold, Adam and Eve’s eyes were opened to both good and evil and they immediately saw their own nakedness.  Solomon reached for wisdom and his eyes too were opened to all the vanity and evil and oppression and vexation under the sun. “I applied my heart to know wisdom” but this also he perceived to be “a striving after the wind (Eccl. 1:17).”

Adam and Eve commenced their striving after the wind right away.  

“Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked.  And they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loincloths (Gen. 3:7).”

Oh the vanity!  As if that would cover their disgrace!  And then vanity of vanities, as soon as they become aware of God’s presence in the garden, they hide!  

Two truly remarkable things happen next.  The first is, God calls Adam’s name. Think of the power behind that summons!  “Samuel! (1Sam.3),” “Lazarus! (John 11),” “Saul! (Acts 9).” One has to assume that had God not come calling for them, Adam and Eve would have tried hiding forever.  But when God calls, you come out, you wake up, you rise from the dead, you fall to the ground in repentance. 

Adam’s response is also noteworthy. He claims to have been hiding due to their nakedness, except that was AFTER they had sown themselves the leafy loincloths.  But amid the soul- penetrating sound of the voice of God, all our pretenses fall away, don’t they?  Our own vain attempts at self-righteousness are exposed for what they are, filthy rags.  

And so God stoops to clothe his pathetic, naked, rebellious creatures.  He slays an animal and makes them skins and in so doing Adam and Eve are given a glimpse of what their disobedience will some day result in —the brutal death of God’s own Son, who will willingly lay down His life so that we might be clothed in His own righteousness, creating a way for us cowering creatures to once again come boldly into God’s presence without shame. 

THIS, my friends, is the righteousness Jesus was encouraging us to seek after in Matthew 6:28-32.

“Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.  But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will He not much more clothe you, O you of little faith?”

Solomon’s royal robes were no more impressive to God than Adam and Eve’s leafy loincloths.  We, all of us, are as helpless in covering our own nakedness as the grass of the field.  God, Himself must do the covering.  And He does it gloriously.

Just think!  Those words in Matthew were the very words of the one wise “Shepherd” referenced at the end of Ecclesiastes.  “Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the whole duty of man,” Solomon concludes, which is exactly what Adam and Eve failed so miserably in doing.  And it’s where we all fall short as well.  That’s why we need the ‘Shepherd’s’ righteous covering.  That’s why we need His wisdom and not our own! 1 Corinthians 1: 21-24 says,

“For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, it pleased God through the folly of what we preach to save those who believe.  For Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, BUT TO THOSE WHO ARE CALLED, both Jews and Greeks, CHRIST THE POWER OF GOD AND THE WISDOM OF GOD.”

And what does Christ, the very wisdom of God, command us to do?  Take of Him and eat! 

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven.  If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever (John 6:58).”

Is God calling your name?  Come out and be clothed in the righteousness of His Son, Jesus Christ!  Reach for Him, the Living Bread, the Beauty and the Wisdom of God!  Take of Him and eat and live forever!

Devo 24

“Heaven and earth will pass away but my words will not pass away.”  Matthew 24:35

Last week’s devo was long, so I’ll make this one short and sweet.  In a way, this week’s memory verse answers the same question we grappled with last week, namely, what’s the point of trying to understand the really hard passages of scripture?  We already talked about how the Bible is God’s revelation to all mankind concerning His Son, Jesus Christ and the means He provided for us to be reconciled unto Himself.  So every time we dig deeply into God’s Word we are only going to find more reason to worship our crucified and risen Lord!   We also talked about how God has given us His Spirit and indeed, the very mind of Christ, to help us understand those difficult truths!   

This week’s scripture readings all have to do with the eternality of God, His Word and ways,  and the finiteness of basically everything else. The heavens above are often referenced from a human perspective of permanence.  They seem to us firmly fixed, an endless picture of God’s faithful and eternal nature.  But scripture also reminds us that even the long enduring heavens are but a shadow.  They too, will wear out, perish, pass away.  Even the most seemingly ancient fixtures in our universe are but a breath in God’s economy.

Oh, but God’s Name and His fame (Psalm 72:17), His throne and His own, His steadfast love and faithfulness (Psalm 89:2,36), His salvation, righteousness (Isaiah 51:6) and His Word (Matt. 24:35) WILL NOT PASS AWAY!  

The infinite nature of God’s Word should beckon us to waste not a minute in plumbing its depths.  The most difficult passages are but a portal to a clearer revelation of our Glorious Lord!

Tolle lege, friends!