Welcome to A Word from the Word

We're glad you're here! Please take a moment to subscribe. And don't forget to share and invite your friends. May God's blessings be upon you.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 8

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 8:6

Give Us a King

When Samuel got to be an old man, he set his sons up as judges in Israel. But his sons were shady characters and didn’t take after him; they were out for what they could get for themselves, taking bribes, and corrupting justice.

Fed up, all the elders of Israel got together and confronted Samuel. They presented their case: “Look, you’re an old man, and your sons aren’t following in your footsteps. Here’s what we want you to do: Appoint a king to rule us, just like everybody else.”

When Samuel heard their demand—“Give us a king to rule us!”—he was crushed.  So, Samuel prayed to God, who answered him and said, “Go ahead and do what they’re asking. They are not rejecting you. They’ve rejected ME as their King. From the day I brought them out of Egypt until this very day they’ve been behaving like this, leaving me for other gods. And now they’re doing it to you. So let them have their own way. But warn them of what they’re in for. Tell them the way kings operate, just what they’re likely to get from a king.”

So Samuel told them in no uncertain terms what it will be like when they have a king.  He said, “Your king will take your sons and make soldiers of them and force them into dangerous battles.  He’ll put some of you to forced labor on his farms, plowing and harvesting, and others to making either weapons of war or chariots in which he can ride in luxury. He’ll put your daughters to work as servants and slaves. He’ll confiscate your best fields, vineyards, and orchards and hand them over to his special friends. He’ll tax your harvests and vineyards to support his extensive bureaucracy. Your prize workers and best animals he’ll take for his own use. He’ll lay a tax on your flocks and you’ll end up no better than slaves. The day will come when you will cry in desperation because of this king you so much want for yourselves. But don’t expect the LORD to answer.”

But the people wouldn’t listen to Samuel. “No!” they said. “We will have a king to rule us! Then we’ll be just like all the other nations. Our king will rule us and lead us and fight our battles.”  It is remarkable that they want to be “like all the other nations,” when no other nation has had such an amazing opportunity as Israel.  No other nation had ever been chosen by the LORD to be His special people.  No other nation had ever had the unimaginable privilege of entering into a covenant with their Creator.  No other nation had been promised the coming of the Savior of the World!  No other nation was the object of God’s special care and protection and provision.  No other nation had the LORD, Himself as their King.  Yet, the people were blind to all of these incredible privileges and decide to settle for a human king.  

Tragically, as humans often do, they settle for “second best.”  Nevertheless, the LORD told Samuel, “Do as they request. Give them a king.”

So often we, too, settle for "second best."  We seek comfort and success in this world's systems when we have the incredible privilege of being God's chosen people and following His leadership.  If we insist long enough, the LORD will allow us to have our way.  But beware, you will regret not staying the course with God's perfect plan for your life.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 6 & 7

 

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 7:12

I Will Not Forget

“Ebenezer” means “stone of help.”  Many times in the Bible a stone, or a pile of stones, has been used as a reminder of how God has helped someone. The stories of Noah, Jacob, Joshua, and Samuel are just a few.  Here, Samuel sets up this stone of help so the people will remember all the times the LORD had helped them in the past.  Samuel knew that remembering God’s help in the past would build up the people’s confidence in His help for the future.

Memories of God’s faithfulness enable us to bring the joys and victories of yesterday into today.  If God has done it before, He will do it again.  As we recall God’s faithfulness, we remained centered on Him and we can move forward with a sense of God’s sure promises for our present and future circumstances.  It has been said that God’s past acts are a prophecy of His future acts.

There are things that the Scripture admonishes us never to forget.  We are to “not forget the works of God” (Psalm 78:&); “forget none of His benefits (Psalm 103:2); we are to “remember His covenant forever, the word which He commanded to a thousand generations” (1 Chronicles 16:15). The Psalmist said, “will not forget your word” (Psalm 119:16); and, “you shall not forget the covenant that I have made with you” (2 Kings 17:38).

In the midst of difficult and heartbreaking times, it can be challenging to remain confident in the future.  That’s one of the reasons God has exhorted all of us to remember His faithful acts in the past.  What are some of the times when God has come through for you?  When has He provided for you, protected you, or enabled you to conquer your rough times?  Remember, since He has done it in the past, He will continue to do it in the future.  His past acts are a prophecy of His future acts.

Have you set up your own “Ebenezer” - some tangible reminder of God’s faithfulness?  Something that you can look at and be reminded of God’s faithfulness?  It’s probably not a pile of stones (though it could be), but I would encourage you to find a tangible article you can look back at.  Perhaps it is a note in your journal, or a poster on your wall, or a stone on your nightstand.  Perhaps it is a Facebook post from years ago that you see and it makes you say, “I will not forget; God has helped me in the past, and I know He holds my future.”

Monday, September 20, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 4 & 5

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 4:4

Misplaced Faith

The Philistines were one of Israel’s fiercest enemies.  They are first mentioned in Genesis 21 where we read that Abraham traveled through their land for many days (Genesis 21:34).  Their threat to Israel surfaces during the period of the Judges when they attacked Israel and Samson defeated them (Judges 13-16).  The Philistines were a very war-like people and had a highly trained military organization.  They were equipped with horses and chariots, numerous foot soldiers, and archers.  The armor of Philistine soldiers included bronze helmets, coats of mail, leg protectors, spears, and shields.  The Philistines were by nature an aggressive and expansionist people, which was ultimately the primary reason why they clashed with the Israelites.

Now they are at it again.  They drew their armies up against Israel and attacked them at Ebenezer, an area along the western region of the nation.  They were strong and they defeated Israel soundly.  They killed about four thousand men on the battlefield that day (1 Samuel 4:2).  Afterwards, the Israelites retreated and began to assess their losses.  As they ponder the situation, they reach an unusual and unfounded conclusion: “We lost because the Ark of the Covenant wasn’t with us.  If we bring it here from Shiloh, surely it’s power and protection will save us from our enemies.”

This is an example of misplaced faith.  Rather than turning to Yahweh, Himself, the Living God, to deliver them, they turn to a lifeless artifact. It is true that God had given them the Ark of the Covenant.  And it is also true that God told them to place it at the center of their worship. But it had no power in and of itself.  It was there as an instrument meant to turn their hearts and minds to the True and Living God.  It is not wrong to respect the things of God, but it is wrong to place our faith and trust in those things.

This is why we should never place our faith or trust in “Christian trinkets” or manmade symbols of faith. Bible keychains, necklaces, crosses, beads, prayer cloths, medallions, statues, faith-stones, WWJD bracelets, and the like do not and can not produce any power or victory in our lives and we should never place our faith and trust in them.  There are so-called “preachers” who will send you a “prayer-hanky” which they have purportedly “anointed” with God’s healing power.  They tell their unsuspecting viewers to just send in their donation, and they will receive God’s mighty power through their hanky.  Tragically, many are drawn away after these types of things. While none of these things are wrong in themselves, it is wrong to place our faith and trust in anything or anyone other than our God, Yahweh, Himself.

The Israelites learned this lesson the hard way when their plan to bring victory through the Ark was soundly defeated.  Not only did they lose the ensuing battle, but the Ark of the Covenant was captured and taken by the Philistines.  Spiritual defeat is the inevitable outcome of misplacing our faith.

 

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 3

 

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 3:19

In Tune With God

Verse 19 says that God let none of Samuel’s words “fall to the ground.”  That means not one of the things Samuel spoke failed.  If he spoke it, it came to pass.  That does not mean that every idle word Samuel spoke, God acted upon.  It means that Samuel was so in tune to God that he continually heard God just as clearly as he did as boy in the Temple.  And when God spoke to him, Samuel spoke to the people the words he had heard.

Not just as a child, but throughout his adult life, God spoke to Samuel. And Samuel heard Him clearly. Samuel spoke the words of God and, as He spoke the words of God, God could move through those words to bring them to pass.  Samuel came to be recognized by all of Israel as being a prophet of God, and all of Israel had witnessed that when Samuel speaks, what he speaks comes to pass.  A mark of Samuel’s life was that God preserved his words so that they would not waste away.

Back in Deuteronomy 18, Moses had taught the people of Israel how to recognize a true prophet from God.  The first test was this, “And I will put my words in his mouth.”  In other words, when a prophet speaks, He speaks not from his own whims or intellect, but he speaks the words given to him by God.  Anyone who claims to be speaking for God must speak words that are given to him/her and that are consistent with the already revealed Scriptures.  God will not contradict Himself.  When He speaks, His words are true. 

Secondly, when a so-called prophet speaks in the “name of other gods,” he/she is a false prophet. 

Finally, Moses said that when a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord, if the word does not come to pass or come true, that is a word that the Lord has not spoken; the prophet has spoken it presumptuously. This is the “acid test” of prophecy.  Did it come to pass?  Or did the “prophets” words fall to the ground and waste away? 

Samuel was a prophet in tune with God.  When God spoke to him, he heard His voice.  And when Samuel spoke in the name of the LORD, none of his words fell to the ground.  As we continue our journey through Samuel’s life, we will see that he was a man in tune with God and who was used mightily by God to speak forth His words.

If you are called to speak for God, make certain you are speaking only the words God puts in your mouth; that you are not speaking in the name of other “gods;” and then allow God to work.  If the words were from Him, they will come to pass.


Saturday, September 18, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 2

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 2:2

 The Otherness of God

In Chapter 2, the Holy Spirit records for us the prayer-song of Hannah after the birth of her son, Samuel. Hannah’s prayer begins on a high note with personal expressions of pure joy and enthusiastic delight in the Lord and His salvation.  In verse 2 she declares, “there is none holy like the LORD.”  By these words, she is declaring the distinct and utter uniqueness of God. 

The root word for “holy” in the original Hebrew language is, “qodesh.”  It means “apartness” or “set-apartness.” It is a word that describes the matchlessness and exclusiveness of God.  Someone has rightly said that this word means “otherness,” thus describing the total exceptionalness of God.  This word applies to God because He is – in His person and substance – totally “other than” anyone or anything else.  The Oxford Dictionary defines “otherness” as “the quality or fact of being different.”  The LORD is exceptionally rare – in fact, so rare that He is other than anything or anyone else.

Hannah goes on in her prayer-song to point out some of the rare qualities of God that make up His “otherness.”   For the Lord alone is a God of knowledge - God knows what’s going on. He alone takes into account everything that is going on. Even mighty people can be defeated – and their weapons destroyed, but not the LORD, who is not feeble in any way. God is the only One who can bring life out of barrenness.  He alone has the power of life and death.  The LORD is the One who controls poverty and wealth.  He makes some poor and some rich. He alone can put poor people on their feet again. He rekindles burned-out lives with fresh hope. 

Hannah goes on to say the “otherness” of God extends to His creative acts and His care for His faithful ones.  The very structures of earth are within the realm of God, and God alone. For the pillars of the earth are the Lord’s, and on them he has set the world.  He will guard the feet of his faithful ones but will leave the wicked to stumble in the dark.  The strength of the mighty warriors is insufficient to defeat God’s purposes - for not by might shall a man prevail.

God is not like any human.  He is other than us.  God is not like any “superhero” or “champion.”  He is other than them in every way.  God is not like any so-called “god” or “deity” which has been fabricated in the minds of men.  He is other than them.  He is holy.  He is apart.  He is other than anyone or anything ever conceived. There is none holy like the LORD; for there is none besides You; there is no rock like our God!


Friday, September 17, 2021

Today's Reading: 1 Samuel 1

 

Key Verse - 1 Samuel 1:28

Lent to the Lord

In deep distress, Hannah cried to God, asking him to give her a son. She promised that if God answered her prayer, she would give her son back to God to serve him as a Nazirite for life.  The priest Eli encouraged Hannah to believe that God would answer her prayer. And sure enough, in due course, she gave birth to a son, whom she named Samuel.  The Hebrew name Samuel, was “Shaulme’El” – a contraction of “shaul” (lent) and meEl (to God). When the child was two or three years old, Hannah took him to Shiloh, where she dedicated him to God for life.

When verse 28 says she “lent” him to the LORD, it doesn’t mean that she ever expected to receive him back again. This was no temporary “loan.” She “gave” her son to God.  Whatever we give to the Lord may said to be lent to him, because, though we may not get it back, yet He will certainly repay it to our unspeakable advantage.   Hannah realized this truth and gladly gave her son to God in deep appreciation for the blessing He had bestowed upon her.  In reality, Hannah realized that Samuel belonged to God and it was God who had “lent” him to her for a brief period.

As Christian parents, it should be our number one priority to “lend” (give) our children to the Lord.  We are exhorted throughout Scripture to bring our children up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.  To impart God’s truth into their hearts and minds.  To guide them to lives devoted to the service and worship of their Creator.  It is wonderful when parents put their children’s welfare ahead of their own.  It is wonderful when parents sacrifice their time and resources to support their child’s intellectual, emotional, and physical growth.  But it is a tragedy if, while doing so, they neglect their spiritual development. This should never be.

As parents, we must always keep in mind that our children are God’s and they are on loan for us to raise for His Kingdom purposes.  If you are a parent, know that you were created, called, for this task. Probably the single most important thing you can do for your children is to constantly pray that they would have a personal encounter with God, Himself, and wholeheartedly dedicate their life to serving and worshipping Him. Never underestimate the power of your prayers on this matter.

As the Apostle John said, “I have no greater joy than to hear that my children walk in truth.” (3 John 1:4) The inverse of this is also true, “I have no greater sorrow than to hear that my children don’t.”  Hannah could live her life in blessed peace knowing that her “loan” to the Lord was reaping eternal dividends.


Thursday, September 16, 2021

Today's Reading: Judges 21

 

Key Verse - Judges 21:2

Weeping at Beth'El

The people came to Bethel and wept before God.  Weeping over the moral degeneracy that had invaded their land.  Weeping over the loss of so many lives in the battle with the Benjaminites.  Weeping over the shattered condition of their nation and their fellow tribesmen from Benjamin.  Weeping is the inevitable end for...