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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Brown's Daily Word 7-31-13

    Praise the Lord for this last day of July.  It is going to be one of the brilliant days of July.  I picked a big bowl of Nectarines from one of the fruit trees we had planted this year.  It is amazing that this little tree was bending down with summer fruit.  I also planted another apple tree which has two apples.  We have three Pear trees that are full of pears.  Thank you Lord for summer fruit.  Praise the Lord for His bountiful blessings.  

    While we had our grand children with us, Micah and Simeon were watching intently some of the videos of Mt. McKinley and Mount Everest.  They were curious, even thrilled, and somehow saying, "We want those mountains". 

    A study of two hundred life histories of outstanding people revealed that they had ordered lives which were steered toward selected goals.  Each person had something to live for.  Another study of people who committed suicide indicated that they felt their lives had become intolerable because they had nothing to aim for, no goal to seek.  Goals, or lack of them, were the difference.

    It is written in  Numbers 13 that ten of the twelve spies (sent out by Moses to spy out the promised land) reported to Moses that the land was full of giants.  "There is no way," they declared, "that we can take possession of the land."  Two of the scouts, however, believed that with God on their side, no goal was beyond their grasp.  "Let us go up at once and possess the land," they said, "for we are well able to do it" (Numbers 13:30).  One of these two was Joshua, who would lead the Hebrews into the promised land forty years later.  The other was Caleb.

    It is written in Joshua 14 that forty-five years had gone by since the other incident when the Israelites moved into the promised land.  Caleb, 85 years old at that time, said to Joshua, "God promised that Hebron belonged to me.  And now I want that mountain!"  When Caleb and Joshua had returned from scouting the land, Moses made this promise to Caleb: "Surely the land on which your foot has trodden shall be an inheritance to you and to your children forever."  God said, "Caleb, this land is for you.  It is my plan for you to posses this land."  Caleb's goal, then, was to claim what God had already promised.

    Caleb said in Joshua 14:10, "And now behold, the Lord has let me live, just as he spoke, these 45 years, from the time that the Lord spoke this word to Moses, when Israel walked in the wilderness, and now behold, I am 85 years old today."  Eighty-five years old!  That's the time most people are sitting back and settling in, but it was not so for Caleb!  At 85, after a lifetime in which Caleb had "followed the Lord ... wholeheartedly" (Joshua 14:14), he set his eyes on the land of Hebron and said, "I want that mountain!"

    The point is that we  are never too old to set new goals, to set out for new horizons, to begin new quests with Jesus our Lord and the Captain.  I read sometime ago that Michelangelo completed his greatest work of art at age 87.

Albert Schweitzer still headed his hospital in Africa at the age of 89. 

    Indeed, we  are never too old to set goals.  For each of us, there is a land of Hebron that God has set before us and His desire for each of us is that we stand up and declare, "I want that mountain!"  Reaching our goals will not be easy.  It wasn't for Caleb and it won't be for us.  For Caleb to claim his mountain, he had to run the giants out of the land.  As we strive to reach our goals and as we attempt to claim our mountain there will also be giants that we will have to overcome.  Among those giants will be the giants of adversity, failure, and laziness.

    In Joshua 14:12 Caleb said, "You yourself heard then that the Amalekites were there, and their cities were large and fortified, but the Lord helping me, I will drive them out just as he said"   The key phrase here is, "The Lord helping me".  The factor which will determine whether or not we reach our goals is not our strength or weakness.  The answer lies ultimately in the use of God's power.  In the Bible, those who reached their goals seemed to do so in spite of their own weaknesses.

    Moses, a tongue-tied shepherd, stood up to Pharaoh and won!  Gideon, supported by an army of 300 armed only with trumpets and empty jars, fought the Midianites and won!  David, untrained and unprotected, challenged Goliath and won!  The early disciples set out to conquer the Roman world with nothing but the Gospel and they won!

    "Somehow Jesus comes and gives us the victory".

 In Christ,

  Brown

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