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Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Brown's Daily Word 7/13/16


 Praise the Lord indeed for this glorious day, one of the ten best days of July. I woke up early this morning to gaze at the morning sun.  The Eastern sky was dazzling with the dawn of a new day.  The Lord of the beauty of all creation decorates the Earth in all seasons with much grandeur and majesty and ethereal beauty.  It is going to be very hot and sizzling here in Central New York today.  Thank you, each and every one, for your kind and prayer-filled thoughts and greetings, coated with fervent friendships and affections.  My heart is warmed and blessed  to know that I am surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses.  I am feeling  better and strong and back "in the saddle again".  I will be preaching this coming Sunday on "We have entertained Angels unaware", based on Genesis 18.



    The Lord blessed us with heartwarming and soul-filled moments with three of our grandchildren in Washington, DC.  They are blessed to be living in Washington, DC our Nation's Capital.  They live within walking distance from the  Washington Mall and Union Station, and are very close to the National Arboretum.  Gabe, who is three years old, LOVES trains.  He particularly loves Thomas.  He also LOVES books to be read to him, and he memorizes lines from Children's books.  Addie, who is 19 months old, loves the Hillsong Children's songs (especially when Auntie Laureen is having dance parties with the children.  She is a graceful dancer and sweet in serenading sweet songs.  Asha, who is 10 months old, is all smiles and very gregarious.  She loves people and life so much that she refuses to go to sleep.  Perhaps she is afraid that she might  miss out  something  beautiful.  The children loved to listen to Bach's "Sheep May Safely Graze " before their bed time.  While we were In Washington our granddaughter Ada, who lives in Boston, called me and talked.  She wanted lots of mangoes and apples for her brother Simeon.  She wanted lots of blueberries, strawberries, and raspberries for herself.  She is 5 years old.  She talked to me for 28 minutes.  She is an avid conversationalist.  Micah, who is 10, said that she would love to learn how to cook Indian Curry. 



    My family in India had saved the choicest mangoes for my  visit to  India.  As I could not go there, the team from the USA ate some of the mangoes.  My family  in India was thinking to send some mangoes  for me.  My family  from the States,  refused to bring mangoes back for me as it is against the Federal Law.  In God's providence, Alice and I were in one of   the Wholesale Grocery Stores in the Triple Cities yesterday.  To my utter amazement I saw a bin full of mangoes on sale.  They were red delicious, colorful and tantalizing.  I purchased 18 of them.  I am saving most of those mangoes to share with our grandson Simeon. 



    While we were away in Washington, DC, we missed a very special event in the Philadelphia area, as our dear Jessica made a very special birthday party for one sweet little granddaughter, Lindy, who just turned 1 on July 8.  (She and Simeon share that birth date).  Lindy is very sweet and lovely, and very winsome, and we miss her dearly.  Although we wanted to drive up for the party, my wife and I were still recovering from a particularly nasty stomach bug.  Dear Lindy brings so much joy to her mommy and daddy and to us. 



    Alice I worked in our garden last evening.  As we drove to the Garden the evening skies were  magnificent, ornate with unbelievable colors and brilliance.  We praise the Lord for the fields, gardens, and orchards.  The Lord has blessed us with a luxuriant garden.  It is full of tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, cucumbers onions, pumpkins, squash, beans, snap peas, eggplant, and more.  Praise the Lord for His abundance in every way and in all seasons.  He makes our cups to overflow.  What a God we serve!



    One of the Messages that I was to share during the Mission trip to Orissa, India was based on Exodus 1 and 2.  We discover in this Scripture the astounding way the Lord uses ordinary people to accomplish His extraordinary purposes and promises.  In this instance, the Egyptian midwives were more anxious to please God than to please Pharaoh, and God rewarded them.  Because of the faith of these women, chapter 2 of Exodus records the supernatural events concerning the birth of Moses, his salvation from infanticide, his divine protection, and his engrafting into the Egyptian household, while being reared by his Hebrew mother and sister.  All of this demonstrated the providential power of God over the diabolical plans of a human king.

    In the passage, our wonderful Savior worked on our behalf to accomplish our salvation through improbable ways.  The Egyptian king really was a pawn (as in a chess match), not a king.  He was a pawn in the hands of the true King, Almighty God, to bring about His grand design to save mankind.  Every evil move the pawn made against the true King was a move that was countered and used to advance the true King’s noble and good cause.  The diabolical activity of the pharaoh was, in fact, moving the Hebrew children closer to the birth of Moses, closer to the Exodus, closer to the Promised Land, closer to theocracy, closer to the kingdom of David, closer to the birth of Jesus, closer to the resurrection, closer to His ascension, closer to Pentecost, closer to your birth and mine, and closer to the second coming of Christ.  God used the midwives to demonstrate His sovereign power.  They are the heroines of the story.  They  stood in the gap as the Instrument of the Lord of History in  bringing forth Moses, the one who would save the Hebrew people and bring about the nation of Our Lord God sovereign and mighty yet merciful specializes in bringing life out of death, order out of chaos, and hope our of despair.  He often uses real life heroes and heroines to be His instruments.

    Let us pause and ponder about the "Midwives" who worked silently behind the scene to birth hope in our life's journey - to deliver our dreams and to bring forth faith.  Maybe it is time today to thank God for that person who has had that kind of impact upon our lives.  Maybe it is time to rededicate ourselves to the Lord and say, “Lord, I am ready to be the midwife for another.  I am ready to do Your will. I am ready to bring life, faith, hope, healing to another.  Use me, Lord.”

     Our God still performs miracles today.  Moses was a miracle.  He was born by the intervention of a midwife, through the care of his sister, through the unlikely compassion of the evil pharaoh’s loving daughter and the nursing love of his birth mother.  The miracle is that God intervened on Israel’s behalf at just the right time with the birth of  a savior.  Jesus Christ our Lord came this way: as a miracle to an obscure place in supernatural arrangements and with threats all around.  The answer to your own prayer will come this way, as well.  God most often comes to us not as a King on a steed but as a baby in a reed basket, surrounded by crocs, unseen, unknown, yet powerful to save.

  In Christ,

   Brown

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