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Friday, November 20, 2015

Brown's Daily Word 11/20/15

Praise the Lord for this last Friday before Thanksgiving. The Lord blessed us with a very wonderful time and tender moments with our Release Time students yesterday afternoon.  Alice And I drove to the city of Cortland yesterday afternoon.  We used to live in Cortland in 1978.  We drove past the apartment complex where we lived and passed by the Ice cream stand that is still there.  Our oldest daughter Janice was only 16 months old.  Alice did work at the College.  The city has grown much since then and changed until it is almost unrecognizable. 
 

    We are getting to host our Endicott family for a Thanksgiving banquet tomorrow evening.  We will be traveling to Washington, DC for our annual Thanksgiving Celebration.  We are getting ready for worship this Sunday.  Plan to be in the house of the Lord where ever you might be.

 

    The  culture that has negated Christ, the world that has forgotten the Lord of Lords is suddenly on the verge of fear and frenzy as we face terror and danger on the every front, around the corner and around the globe.  The nations that have rejected Christ, now almost bankrupt spiritually and morally, are facing the dread of terrorism.  Suddenly many of the world leaders find them self caught in the midst of quandary. 

 

    We had a meeting yesterday with our Bishop, Bishop Webb, who loves Jesus and serves him and the Church with great fervor and zeal.  He shared with us that various commentators from all back grounds agree that Germany, France, and England faced the crisis in  the 18th century, we are facing today.  Germany and France went through a cataclysmic revolution whereas England was saved from the devastating and destructive revolution because of the two Wesley Brothers, John and Charles.   They proclaimed the Gospel  throughout the land.  The current times and the political and economic climate demand for us to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus, unafraid and without any apology or compromise.  What a wonderful time to be alive and to be part of the eternal Kingdom of Jesus Christ.

 

    One of the Psalms I love to read during the times of crisis and confusion is Psalm 121.  I love the words shade, help, and especially keep.  These are words that are used to describe what God is and does for His people.  He is our shade.  He is our help.  And especially, repeatedly in this psalm, He is our keeper.  That's a term of His providence and His protection.  He keeps His people.  This is repeated through the psalm.  We read about the hills or the mountains in the very first stanza of the song, although the hills do not constitute the source of the psalmist's security.  The hills are not his refuge; they are in fact a menace.  Travel in the mountains or the hills could be dangerous.  It's a place where your foot could easily slip and bring you harm.  (I grew up in the area in Orissa surrounded by mountains where tigers and wild animals roamed, where the venomous snakes crawled.)  Robbers can also hide in the mountains and present a danger to pilgrims.  As David lifted his eyes to the hills he did not see the source of his help, but a source of fear, so he asked, “What is the source of my help?”

 

    Some of us try to find security in ourselves and through what we do.  When we find ourselves in dangerous and challenging situations, we sometimes try to find an answer for our insecurities in an activity; we try to fix the situation.  At other times we look for a sense of security and help and stability in other things.  It may be in circumstances or it may be aid from some other location rather than God, but ultimately, whether we look inwardly or whether we look to our circumstances, neither of those things can be the source of our help and our security.  The only source, the psalmist tells us, is in God. 

 

    It is vital that we ask ourselves, "what is the source of our security?"  The monumental spiritual answer comes in verse 2, and that is that God Himself, the Lord, is the only reliable source of our security.  “My help comes from the LORD who made the heavens and the earth.”  We can see the same thought replicated in Psalm 124:8, “Our help is in the name of the LORD who made the heavens and the earth.”  John Calvin used this verse for the call to worship for every worship service.  “Our help is in the name of the LORD,”  “My help comes from the LORD.” The psalmist personally, individually, acknowledged that the Lord was his help.

 

    It is important that Our help is in the name of the Lord and my help is in the name of the Lord.  There is both a corporate and a personal and individual aspect to the Christian life. They are not competing; there is no contradiction here.  We need them both.  If all we have is the pronoun “my” in our spiritual vocabulary we're in trouble because we need one another.  God does not send us off into the world by ourselves.  He gave us family, a church family in the first place, to walk the walk of faith, to be pilgrims and sojourners in this world.  We need the “our” of the Christian life as well as the “my” of the Christian life. 

 

    The psalmist made a very emphatic personal statement, “My help comes from the LORD who made earth and heaven”.  He also emphasized that, “God is the only reliable source of our security.  Behold, He who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”   He will guide our steps.  He will not let our feet be moved. In other words, He won't let us  fall.  “He who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.”  He's never asleep!  He's always watching!  

 

    I love Mendelssohn's Elijah.  “He watcheth over Israel, slumbers not nor sleeps.” It's one of the great contrasts between the God of Israel and the gods of Canaan, Mesopotamia, and Egypt, all of whom who are depicted in various artifacts of culture, as sleeping from time to time.  When gods in Mesopotamia didn't answer their people's prayers, their people said, “Well, our god was sleeping.” Elijah went out of his way to emphasize that in contrast to the false gods, the Baals, the God of Israel never slept.  He never took a nap.  He was always watching over His people.  The psalmist here just reminds himself of that.  “He who keeps Israel” is the language of protection.  It's the language of providence.  It begins here and it echoes throughout the psalm.  What we all need  is protection and so the language is repeated over and over.  He will keep you; He will protect you; He is your keeper; He is your protector.  He protects Israel; He will protect you.  He also preaches this to himself.  “He will guide me. He will always guide me because He's never sleeping.  He's watching over me and He will keep me.  He will protect me.”  There is a comprehensive providence over us by the Lord and the psalmist preaches this message to himself.  “He is concerned for my whole existence.  He will keep your life.”  Not only is He concerned for the whole of your existence, look at how the psalm ends.  He is concerned for the whole course of our life, from beginning to end.  “The LORD will keep your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forevermore.”

 

  In Christ,

    Brown

1 comment:

Al DeFilippo said...

Thank you for the post. For more on John Wesley, I would like to invite you to the website for the book series, The Asbury Triptych Series. The trilogy based on the life of Francis Asbury, the young protégé of John Wesley and George Whitefield, opens with the book, Black Country. The opening novel in this three-book series details the amazing movement of Wesley and Whitefield in England and Ireland as well as its life-changing effect on a Great Britain sadly in need of transformation. Black Country also details the Wesleyan movement's effect on the future leader of Christianity in the American colonies, Francis Asbury. The website for the book series is www.francisasburytriptych.com. Please enjoy the numerous articles on the website. Again, thank you, for the post.