Time with Jesus - Sunday, 12 August
2012
Hi all,
Today’s meditation is about heroes; heroes of all types. The greatest superhero this world has ever seen is Jesus Christ. Furthermore, He is real. Superman, Batman, Green Lantern, Spiderman and Hulk etc. are figments of imagination. But Jesus outshines them all and He is the only one!
Blessings
Jim
& Phyllida Strickland
Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give |
Time with Jesus – Sunday, 12 August 2012
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Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give |
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These
devotionals are the intellectual property of Jim Strickland and copyright
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©
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INTRODUCTION
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DAILY
LIGHT EVENING SCRIPTURES
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DEATH
SENTENCE
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Heroes and super-heroes. We live in a world which
admires heroics and shuns cowards. It’s not really surprising in a world that
has gone through two world wars in the past 100 years. If we try and add to
these the other “international conflicts” we notice that our world thrives on
conflicts and death. Anglo-Boer, Korea, Viet Nam, Arab-Israeli, Kosovo and
the rest we begin to ask if there has ever been a time when war has not been
in vogue. It’s strange that we shout and sing about peace. But the one thing
this world does not experience is peace. The world established the League of
Nations and later the United Nations with the intention of attaining peace.
But peace is still a pipe-dream. Satan thrives on man’s inhumanity to man,
greed and torture. So while he runs the world, the only place we will find
peace is in the hearts of believers and in the dictionary.
As a youngster, my hero was Superman. Clark Kent,
Lois Lane and Gotham City were more familiar to me than most world leaders.
Mom even made me a Superman outfit for the local fancy dress contest. I
didn’t win. There were probably other boys wearing the same outfit. Then we
had the Saturday morning “bioscope”. The youngsters from all over Port
Elizabeth would meet at the “Grand” to swap comics and watch the latest
edition of our hero. Mostly it was Tarzan, Batman and Robin, Superman and the
inevitable Western. Who remembers “High Noon” starring Gary Cooper and Grace
Kelly? It came out in 1952. I’m not sure how many times I sat through it.
Later it became standard viewing at least once per year on British TV during
the Christmas season.
For many years I wondered why we had such a
fascination for superheroes. After Becoming a Christian in 1960, the “penny
dropped”! Everyone is looking for a superhero. But there is one! His name is
Jesus Christ. As God, He is the superhero of all superheroes! Suddenly the
deeds of many of the Biblical heroes began to make sense. Every one of them
in their day stood against evil and oppression of some sort. In today’s
Scriptures, four are mentioned by name. Ehud, Shamgar, Gideon and Zerubbabel.
What the first three did is recorded for us in the book of Judges. No doubt most
are familiar with the deeds of Gideon and Samson. These are firmly etched
into our memory. But what about the deeds of the other Judges? How many can
you remember? I have to refresh my memory by going back to the Bible!
To find the name Zerubbabel among the list of
superheroes is a bit unusual. What was so special about him? His name is one
of the very few men in the list of Jesus’ ancestors after the Babylonian
captivity. Two lines are quoted in Luke and Matthew. The one line lists Mary
precedents. The other Joseph’s precedents. What is so important about this?
It illustrates the difference between what is important to man and what is
important to God. Zerubbabel is important to God. We think in terms of
Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar and other little men who litter the pages
of history. Men who we think have achieved great things. To God, the most
important people are those through whom Jesus descended. Thus Zerubbabel is
the most important person to Him from the Babylonian captivity to the birth
of Jesus!
Jim &
Phyllida Strickland
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27 But God chose the foolish things of the
world to shame the wise. He chose the weak things of the world to shame the
strong.
1 Corinthians 1:27 NIrV
15 Again the people of
Israel cried out to the LORD. Then he gave them a man to save them. His name
was Ehud, the son of Gera. Ehud was left-handed. He was from the tribe
of Benjamin. The people of Israel sent Ehud to Eglon, the king of Moab. They
sent him to give the king what he required them to bring him.
Judges
3:15 NIrV
31 After Ehud came Shamgar, son of Anath. He
killed 600 Philistines with a sharp stick used for herding oxen. So he, too,
rescued Israel.
Judges 3:31 GW
14 Then the LORD turned to him and said,
"Go with the strength you have, and rescue Israel from the
Midianites. I am sending you!" 15
"But Lord," Gideon replied, "how
can I rescue Israel? My clan is the weakest in the whole tribe of Manasseh,
and I am the least in my entire family!"
Judges 6:14-15 NLT
2 The LORD said to Gideon, "You have
too many warriors with you. If I let all of you fight the Midianites, the
Israelites will boast to Me that they saved themselves by their own strength.
Judges 7:2 NLT
6 Then he said to me, "This is what the LORD says to Zerubbabel: It is not by force nor by strength, but by My Spirit,
says the LORD of Heaven's Armies.
Zechariah 4:6 NLT
10 Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the
strength of his might.
Ephesians 6:10 ESV
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Ehud;
Shamgar; Gideon; were Judges in their day.
Ehud was left handed and killed Eglon in this way.
Shamgar
killed the Philistines, six hundred with a stick,
That’s used for herding oxen. It wasn’t just a trick,
Gideon
was hiding in a winepress threshing wheat;
There wasn’t any other way his family could eat.
But
they were all assisted, when God was on their side.
The enemy discovered that it was their time to hide.
Throughout
the book of Judges, the story’s much the same.
God came to deliver when people called His Name.
The
problem was their lifestyle. They’d slip and would backslide.
The enemy would then return. They
couldn’t be denied!
Right
through the Old Testament the story changes not.
And when they’d been delivered, they very soon forgot,
That
God came to their rescue. Just like a round-about,
The story was repeated. The cure was, “Be Devout”!
The
kings they chose to rule them were very much the same.
Some of them were very good. The bad ones got the blame.
The
problem was idolatry; they broke the Lord’s commands;
So they were invaded and went to foreign lands.
The
Father brought them back again, so that they could restore,
A sample of the glory they’d known so long before.
Kings
were not permitted. A governor would do.
They built the temple once again, the walls rebuilt as new.
Zerubbabel
was leader; he would have been their king.
But they were not permitted to have that very thing.
They’d
learned a great big lesson while in captivity.
Don’t pursue the things that will annoy our Deity!
Idols
were forbidden, and images were out.
The priests had all concluded, it was far beyond a doubt,
That
it had been idolatry that had led them all astray.
They vowed it wouldn’t happen to them again that way.
Instead
they started worshipping God’s pure and Holy Law.
They added several fences in ways not done before.
These
became traditions, which they would never break.
Then Jesus came and told them that they should all forsake,
These
little bitty extras than none of them could do;
Unless they had the money to help them see it through!
Of
course, they were offended. “Get rid of Him they cried!”
And this became the reason why God was crucified!
How
sad to be a people who worshipped God Most High
And through their misplaced zealousness, to sentence Him to die!
Jim Strickland
Written 12th August 2012 |