Sunday, September 29, 2013

MOSES’ PRAYER IN THE TENT OF MEETING

Ark of the Covenant
Time with Jesus - 30 Sept 2013
Hi all,
For me, Genesis is the most important book in the Old Testament. The reason is, without this book, the remainder of the Old Testament would be meaningless. Certainly the other books are important. But Genesis takes us back to the very beginning of sacred history. 
It gives us a “birds-eye” view concerning why the world is in the state that it is currently in. It introduces us to the perfection of God’s creation. It touches on the place of man in God’s creation. We learn of the fall of man because of sin. We see how sin was “ingested” into Adam and the way it distorted our genetics. 
Death suddenly became a part of life. It became “normal” for living creatures to die. We learn of the utter impossibility of man finding a solution to the “death” problem. More importantly, we see how God is committed to finding a perfect solution to His problem. Then we see how, step by step, God started on the road to bringing a solution for the human race.
Noah's Ark
Perhaps the best reason for the presence of Genesis in the Scripture is because without it, the Bible would begin with a bunch of slaves in Egypt. Would anyone be interested in the adventures of a murderer and a bunch of slaves coming out of Egypt? It would be of interest to an historian. But why would you and I have a desire to read it? After all, there are dozens of other tales from antiquity that also might be worth reading?

Genesis is often called the “seed plot” of the Bible. In it almost every other part, is laid out for us in pictorial form. It is said, “The new is in the old concealed; the old is in the new revealed.” This famous statement by Saint Augustine expresses the remarkable way in which the two testaments of the Bible are so closely interrelated. The key to understanding the New Testament in its fullest is to see in it the fulfilment of those things that were revealed in the background of the Old. It points forward in time, preparing God’s people for the work of Christ in the New Testament. (Courtesy Wikipedia)
Abraham Willing to
Sacrifice Isaac
Genesis 15 speaks of God cutting a Covenant with Abram. Many Christians fail to spot the significance of this portion of Scripture. In it is recorded the step by step procedure for cutting covenant. This is not the time to look at covenant in detail. What must be said is that part of covenant includes making promises. If we read the vows made at a wedding service, we see what this means. Bride and groom “swear” before God they will be true to each other. These are supposed to be unbreakable promises. 
In fact, a wedding is a covenant between two people before God. In Genesis 15 God made an unbreakable covenant with Abram, later called to Abraham. 13 Then the LORD said to Abram, "You can be sure that your descendants will be strangers in a foreign land, where they will be oppressed as slaves for 400 years. 14 But I will punish the nation that enslaves them, and in the end they will come away with great wealth…. 16 After four generations your descendants will return here to this land, for the sins of the Amorites do not yet warrant their destruction."…

18 So the LORD made a covenant with Abram that day and said, "I have given this land to your descendants, all the way from the border of Egypt to the great Euphrates River. -- 19 the land now occupied by the Kenites, Kenizzites, Kadmonites, 20 Hittites, Perizzites, Rephaites, 21 Amorites, Canaanites, Girgashites, and Jebusites." Gen 15:13-14, 16 & 18-19 NLT God does not break covenant. His word is His promise. He tells us that only by death – His death – would His covenant be broken.

Moses and the
Burning Bush
History tells us that precisely what God had promised, happened. The book of Exodus commences from the point in history where God was about to bring to reality, His promise to Abraham. Just as God had said, His people were enslaved by the Egyptians. God would release them from slavery.
In this world, we find God works in and through men and women. To liberate His people, God would use a liberator. That liberator was Moses. Exodus is defined as: a going out; a departure or emigration, usually of a large number of people
Moses found in Basket
That’s exactly what we find in this book. We find Moses, a somewhat reluctant liberator, being commissioned by God to bring His people out of Egypt. We read of Moses birth and later his call at the burning bush. We read of the way God dealt with the gods of Egypt and of the Egyptians. We read of God’s miracles which culminated in the death of the firstborn of the Egyptians. 

We see the hand of God leading His people through the Red Sea. We read of the miracle of the pillar of cloud by day and fire by night; a sort of Divine air-conditioning to keep His people safe. We read of the miracle of the people being fed with “manna” in the Wilderness. It’s a book filled with the miracles God wrought, because of the suffering of His people and because of the covenant promise God had made to Abraham.
Pillar of Cloud by Day
& Fire by Night 
We learn in particular of the special relationship God had with Moses. We read of Moses speaking with God, “face to face”. We read of the terrible sin (the golden calf) committed by the people. We learn that Moses was willing to lay his life down for God’s people. In this we see Moses as a “type” of Jesus. Moses offered. Jesus did it. 
In the Cleft
of the Rock
We learn of Moses standing on the rock and being hidden in a cleft so he could get a glimpse of God’s glory. “What a book!”
Show me Your Glory
Our meditation today comes from Exodus 33. It focuses on Moses’ prayer asking God to be with them on the journey from Horeb to the Promised Land. Part of the prayer deals with Moses’ relationship with the Lord.
Shalom,

Jim & Phyllida Strickland

Mt Sinai

Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give
Time with Jesus – 30 Sept 2013
Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give
©
These devotionals are the intellectual property of Jim Strickland and copyright protected. You are welcome to copy and distribute them to anyone provided it is for non-commercial Christian purposes
©
INTRODUCTION
DAILY LIGHT EVENING SCRIPTURES
MOSES’ PRAYER IN THE TENT OF MEETING
Have you heard people question God’s decisions? Those who do, imply that they could do things better than He does. Essentially it means that they are better than God and would make a better job of running things than Him. Perhaps the most common statement is, “How could a God of love send anyone to hell?” Two comments are warranted here. The first is that God doesn’t send people to Hell. They go there because they choose to do so. Hell was made for the devil and his angels. But people will go there by their own choice. God does not want anyone to be lost. Being lost is their own choice.
The second comment is that God’s patience with sinners is beyond anything we can understand. A promise God gave to Abraham immediately prior to Him entering into a covenant with him was: 16 "Your children's grandchildren will come back here. That is because the sin of the Amorites has not yet reached the point where I must judge them." Genesis 15:16 NIrV God is aware of each and every sin ever committed or will be committed. At that time the Amorites were one of many nations in Canaan. Sin was rampant. God knew that between the date of this Covenant and the date of the Israelite invasion of Canaan, sin would escalate. It would reach the point where He would have to destroy the inhabitants and their animals. He had used the flood to cleanse the world on one occasion. He would not repeat that. Instead He would send a “flood” of His people into the land to cleanse it by totally annihilating the inhabitants and their livestock.
Science has examined this. It has been established that the Canaanite sexual perversions were disgusting and included bestiality of the worst possible sort. Abraham lived ± 700 years before Canaan was invaded. It follows that it would be a further 700 years before sin of the Canaanites would be “full”. Such patience is incredible!
Somewhere between these two events, Moses led the people of Israel out of Egypt. The dialog between God and Moses in Exodus 33 took place in Moses’ tent of meeting. It is unlikely that this was the tabernacle built according to the pattern given to him by God. God’s tabernacle had not yet been made. It’s more likely that it was a tent or tabernacle of Moses’ own design.
What of this dialog? Do we know the details? We only know what has been recorded in Scripture. Today’s meditation is an extrapolation of what Moses may have said to the Lord. It is not intended as a new revelation. It is merely my own idea of what may have been said by Moses to the Lord.
Jim & Phyllida
Strickland
4 Show me your ways, LORD, teach me your paths.
Psalms 25:4 TNIV
“O Lord You have been telling me”, “These people you must lead”.
But who will You send with me, to finish off the deed?
You’ve told me You are with me. My name, You’ve said You know.
That I have found Your favour; for You have said it’s so.
I know You aren’t a liar and since all this is true,
Tell me please My Lord and God, just what I need to do!
I know the destination. It’s called the Promised Land.
Where Abraham first heard about the things which You have planned,
To give as his inheritance, upon some future date.
His family had lived there. But they would have to wait,
Until the people living there, could be obliterated;
For all the wicked practices that You’ve abominated,
For Lord, you have a measure by which you judge men’s sin.
And only when that measure’s full may we all enter in.
I know about their wickedness. The news has reached my ears.
They practise their perversions and now, Lord, it appears
That what they have been doing is so utterly depraved.
It is no longer possible that any could be saved.
I’m told the same perversions took place before the flood.
That even all their animals had this perverted blood.
The only way to cleanse the land was to destroy the lot.
That’s why You brought the deluge; and that is what they got!
You’ve said that I’ve found favour. You know me by my name
Help me know You better, so that I will remain;
And stay within Your favour. O Lord, Teach me Your ways.
That I might get to know You, throughout my earthly days.
O Lord, these are Your people. They are all Jacob’s seed.
We really can’t go up from here O Lord unless You lead.
Unless we know Your presence is with us from the start,
We dare not take another step, or even less, depart.
How will the other nations know that we belong to You?
How can they differentiate the false from what is true?
How will they know that You’re with us, unless they understand,
That You have brought Your people to take the Promised Land!
And Lord, how will they ever know that You are always near.
Lord, if You do not stay with us, don’t send us up from here.”
Jim Strickland
Written 30th Sept. 2012
12 One day Moses said to the LORD, "You have been telling me, 'Take these people up to the Promised Land.' But You haven't told me whom You will send with me. You have told me, 'I know you by name, and I look favourably on you.' 13 If it is true that You look favourably on me, let me know Your ways so I may understand You more fully and continue to enjoy Your favour. And remember that this nation is Your very own people." 14 The LORD replied, "I will personally go with you, Moses, and I will give you rest--everything will be fine for you."
Exodus 33:12-14 NLT
7 He let Moses know his ways. He let the Israelites know the things he had done.
Psalms 103:7 GW
9 He guides the humble in what is right and teaches them his way.
Psalms 25:9 TNIV
12 Who, then, are those who fear the LORD? He will instruct them in the ways they should choose.
Psalms 25:12 TNIV
5 Trust the LORD with all your heart, and do not rely on your own understanding. 6 In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths smooth.
Proverbs 3:5-6 GW
11 You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.
Psalms 16:11 ESV
8 The LORD says, "I will instruct you. I will teach you the way that you should go. I will advise you as my eyes watch over you.
Psalms 32:8 GW
18 The path of the righteous is like the first gleam of dawn, shining ever brighter till the full light of day.
Proverbs 4:18 NIV

LIKE FATHER LIKE SON

Time with Jesus - 29 Sept. 2013 

Hi all,
I’ve mentioned once before that 1955 was a watershed year for me. It was the year when I became a teenager. The family had moved from Port Elizabeth to Taaibos Power Station close to Sasolburg. My primary school days were over and I went to school in Sasolburg for my high school years. In those days it was called Standard 6. 
Factory
The other exciting thing was that my Dad’s employer, called him back to England for a 6 month refresher course. So, after Easter that year, we travelled by train to Durban. There, we boarded the “Athlone Castle”, for a 3 week trip to Southampton. The intention was to return in September, in time for me to start the 4th term at school!
That was an amazing year. Meeting relations I should have known; seeing something of the UK by train and bus. (We didn’t have a car in UK back then); seeing what was left of the war damage in the towns we visited.
Mom’s parents lived in Hull in Yorkshire. Dad’s parents lived in Newcastle-on-Tyne in Northumberland. Dad would travel to and from Newcastle to Hull on the bus most weekends.
The Clock in Thirsk
On one occasion, we three went from Hull to Newcastle on the bus. What a lovely drive. We went from Hull to York, then on to a little place called “Thirsk”. Place names in UK have often puzzled me. Subsequently, I’ve done a spot of historical digging and found the following information.
The town is mentioned twice in the Doomsday Book. By 1145, what is now Old Thirsk was known as a borough. In 1723 it was sold to Ralph Bell of Sowerby and remained in the Bell family into the 20th century.

The name is derived from the Viking (Old Norse) word þresk meaning fen or lake. (Courtesy Wikipedia) For me, looking back down the years, the great attraction of Thirsk is not so much the quaintness of the name as the connections therewith. It was the birthplace of Thomas Lord (23 Nov 1755 – 13 Jan 1832) an English professional cricketer who played first-class cricket from 1787 to 1802. He is best remembered as the founder of Lord's Cricket Ground in London.

In the mid 1960’s the name James Herriot became famous to the book reading public. It was the pen name of James Alfred Wight, OBE, FRCVS, also known as Alf Wight (3 Oct 1916 – 23 Feb 1995), a British veterinary surgeon and writer. He used his many years of experiences as a veterinary surgeon, to write a series of books of stories about animals and their owners. Alf’s veterinary practice was in Thirsk, at 23 Kirkgate. He is best known for his semi-autobiographical works, which are often referred to collectively as “All Creatures Great and Small”.

Back in 1955, I had no idea that one day, I would wish to return to Thirsk, to visit the Herriot Museum. We understand that Alf’s son is also a vet who lives and practices in Thirsk! Like father, like son! In today’s meditation we look take a look at this. “Like Father, like Son”.
In John’s gospel, Jesus said to Philip. 9 "Have I been with you all this time, Philip, yet you still don't know who I am? Anyone who has seen Me has seen the Father! So why are you asking Me to show Him to you? John 14:9 NLT
Like father, like son!
There’s the world of difference between Alf and his son. They may have looked similar. They both took up the same profession – veterinary surgery. Certainly there must have been many instances connected with them where it could be said, “Like Father, like Son!” The similarities would be superficial. Things you could look at and recognise in them a as strong similarity; perhaps even a strong family association. 
Like father, like daughter
I’m told that scientifically, if you investigate their genes, you would find a close family connection. There were also differences which made them unique.
In much the same way, people have said the same about my dad and me.
Dad and Daughter
“Like father, like son. Dad and I looked very much alike. Our genes would have proved the close family ties. But that is not what Jesus meant when he said, “Anyone who has seen Me has seen the Father!” His statement is inimitable. 
Dressed to look alike!
Commenting on this verse, John Gill wrote: He that hath seen me; not with the eyes of his body, but with the eyes of his understanding; he that has beheld the perfections of the Godhead in me, hath seen the Father; 
the perfections which are in him also; for the same that are in me are in him, and the same that are in him are in me: I am the very image of Him, and am possessed of the same nature, attributes, and glory, that He is; so that he that sees the one, sees the other. How sayest thou then show us the Father? (Courtesy John Gill).
Footprints in the Sand
We forget that Jesus was 100% man and 100% God. As the Son of God He is an integral part of the Holy Trinity. In this Divine mystery we have one God Who is three Persons. God is three in one. 
Yet God is indivisible. A poor yet helpful illustration is to consider an egg. It is one egg. It has a shell, a white and a yolk. Indeed it is three in one, but this does not adequately describe the Trinity. In some respects it clouds the mystery of the Holy Trinity.
It’s 58 years since that bus trip and the brief visit to Thirsk. Back then it was a quiet, sleepy little town bordering on the Yorkshire Dales. Of course, Herriot’s “Skelldale House” is at “23 Kirkgate”. Probably it’s something like the sleepy little towns around the Sea of Galilee in which Jesus devoted much of His time in ministry. 
Like son, like father
Those who saw Him then were greatly blessed. They have “looked” upon the “face of God”! In those days it was “Like Son, like Father!” 
Today it is still true. His adopted sons and daughters long to “press in” to be more like Him. As His character and nature grow in us, the objective is always to be, like Him. In other words, “Like me & you, like Son, like Father.
Shalom,

Jim & Phyllida Strickland

Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give
Time with Jesus – 29 Sept. 2013
Matt 10:8
Freely you received, Freely give
©
These devotionals are the intellectual property of Jim Strickland and copyright protected. You are welcome to copy and distribute them to anyone provided it is for non-commercial Christian purposes
©
INTRODUCTION
DAILY LIGHT EVENING SCRIPTURES
LIKE FATHER LIKE SON
Dad met Mom in Hull, Yorkshire in 1938. She was his first and only girlfriend. They married the day after Mom’s 21st birthday in 1940. I arrived two years later. Mom died in 2001 so their marriage had lasted 61 years. Dad passed away 8 months before his 90th birthday in 2007.
Life in England was very different in 1940. Many thought the UK was finished. They expected an invasion by Germany. Mercifully, it didn’t happen. There were no TV services in UK in those days. All they had was dance halls, the theatre and the movies; mostly black and white. Radio had started and was used to help keep up the morale of the people. Programs like ITMA, Flanagan and Allen, Jimmy Edwards and Dick Bentley, George Formby, Gracie Fields and Vera Lynn, along with the sounds of the big dance bands like Glen Miller, Billy Cotton and numerous others, helped the people in the UK endure the blitz. All able-bodied men were called up. Only the few men who were in reserved occupations were not conscripted. Even the women were called up. They were used to keep up wartime production. This included Dad’s two elder sisters. Suddenly women were required to do work that previously was reserved for men only.
Dad was not conscripted. He spent most of the war repairing and overhauling equipment in power stations and factories damaged by bombing. Very often he was only in one place for a few days or perhaps a week. He told me that the company didn’t want to give him a week off to get married. They did in the end, so Mom and Dad had one week for their honeymoon. All this was marvellous experience for a young man who had just completed his apprenticeship. This was the foundation for his remarkable engineering skills.
In September 1960, I started as an apprentice in the same company my Dad worked for. I must confess that I was not a patch on him. But there was a major difference. In the following month, I committed my life to Jesus Christ in the Methodist Church. I went there because I noticed that all the pretty girls went there. For a young man of 18, nothing is more important than pretty girls. In spite of my questionable motives, He “saved” me. At times, I think this was His way of getting me “saved”. Almost immediately I wanted to be a Methodist Minister. Dad, in his wisdom said “No! You must first finish your engineering training!” He was so right. One of the problems was other peoples’ expectations. They thought I would be as good an engineer as he was. Anyway, I stuck it out and when it was time for me make a decision to go into the ministry, I was comfortable doing what I was doing. Furthermore, as I grew older the more like my dad I became in appearance. People would say, “If you’ve seen Jim you have seen Ernie. (dad) It remained that way to the day he died. I tried to be like him. I just didn’t have his skill!
Now, much to my amazement, young men have said they would like to be like me. So I tell them to follow me as I follow Jesus. It’s rather difficult for me to think that I’m now standing in dad’s shoes. Not in engineering, but in Christian service. I suppose to some extent it’s understandable. Sadly, unlike my dad in engineering, I have feet of clay. Hopefully Phyllida and I will stand long enough to let the Light of Jesus shine out of us clearly and visibly. Only time will tell.
Jim & Phyllida
Strickland

19 So Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of his own accord, but only what he sees the Father doing. For whatever the Father does, that the Son does likewise.
John 5:19 ESV

I loved my father very much. He was a special man.
He always seemed to do things, far better than I can.
His hands, once rough through working, appeared to have a skill,
Which I would love to emulate, but think I never will.
In engineering he was good. He worked throughout the war,
Mending broken turbines, that England needed for,
Producing electricity, for armament and tanks;
To help with the war effort and to support the Yanks.
They didn’t supervise him. They left him on his own,
Because his problem-solving was best done all alone!
He was my boyhood hero and later, as I grew,
I found I was more like him than anyone I knew.
They’d look at me and father. He looked so like his son!
They thought we were twin brothers; I thought that it was fun.
The people said to “see me” was also seeing him.
Though twenty five years older some thought he was my twin!
The thing that I was missing was his ability.
His touch for engineering and his dexterity,
Was something I could emulate, but never quite succeed.
And though I am well qualified, his life I’d never lead.
I tried to only ever do, the things which he had said.
I tried to do them his way, so I could get ahead.
If this could have continued, I’m sure I could have been,
A somewhat better engineer than what my peers have seen!
He passed away five years ago. His age was eighty nine.
And everything that he possessed; each little bit is mine.
But it is not a substitute for walking with my Dad,
The way that I have tried to do since I was just a lad.
But now there is a problem which came as quite a shock.
I know in engineering, he surely was my rock.
But now the strangest thing I’ve found is happening to me.
I’ve found there are some menfolk, who’ve said they want to be,
Touched by what I’ve learned about, upon life’s busy road.
I didn’t think they’d see it; but somehow I have sowed,
A life in Christianity these people have admired!
A life that every one of them has said they have desired.
This makes me very frightened; for Jesus Christ has done,
A sovereign work within me, as an adopted son.
We have the self-same Father. But when men look to me,
It isn’t the Lord Jesus whom all these people see.
So I have told them follow me as I follow the Lord.
He is the one to emulate and ought to be adored.
So life has gone full circle and I will soon be gone;
And in the strength of Christ alone, they all must carry on.
Jim Strickland
Written 29th Sept. 2012

6 The LORD gives wisdom. From his mouth come knowledge and understanding.
Proverbs 2:6 GW


15 For I will give you words and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to resist or contradict.
Luke 21:15 TNIV


14 Wait for the LORD; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the LORD!
Psalms 27:14 ESV


9 But he said to me, "My grace is all you need. My power is strongest when you are weak." So I am very happy to brag about how weak I am. Then Christ's power can rest on me.
2 Corinthians 12:9 NIrV


1 Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James, To those who are called, beloved in God the Father and kept for Jesus Christ:
Jude 1:1 ESV


11 For He who sanctifies and those who are sanctified all have one source. That is why he is not ashamed to call them brothers,
Hebrews 2:11 ESV


24 Can anyone hide from Me in a secret place? Am I not everywhere in all the heavens and earth?" says the LORD.
Jeremiah 23:24 NLT
23 The church is Christ's body. It is filled by Christ. He fills everything in every way.
Ephesians 1:23 NIrV
11 I, yes I, am the LORD, and there is no other Saviour.
Isaiah 43:11 NLT

42 They said to the woman, "We no longer believe just because of what you said; now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this man really is the Saviour of the world."
John 4:42 TNIV

4 I am writing to Titus, my true son in the faith that we share. May God the Father and Christ Jesus our Saviour give you grace and peace.
Titus 1:4 NLT