This was sent to me by my good friend Stephen Robertson.  I thought it would 
make a very good "Daily
Devotion."

Is God good?

"God is good. ..." We hear this statement usually in conjunction with good news 
or at a celebration
of some kind. Also, the Bible tells us again and again
that God is good. Psalm 34:8 invites us to "Taste and see that the Lord is 
good," and 1 Chronicles
16:34, as well as a number of psalms, tells us to "give
thanks to the Lord, for He is good." (NIV)
So God is good. And when the Bible says "good," it means that God is the final 
standard of good. All
that God is and does is worthy of approval. God determines
what is good, and he also tells us what is bad.
But it also begs the question: What is good? It is easy to say that God is good 
until something bad
happens, and then we wonder whether God is good. But
maybe we don't know what good is. Maybe our definition of good is different 
than God's definition of
good.
The same God who declares himself to be good promises in Romans 8:28 "that in 
all things God works
for the good of those who love him, who have been called
according to his purpose." (NIV) We hear this verse invoked a lot, but have we 
ever thought it all
the way through? God is, in all things, working for
the good of those who love him.
But what is good? That all depends on whom you ask. For some, good would be 
defined as blue skies,
good health, paid bills, open parking spaces and no reruns
on television. They wouldn't regard an illness as good. They wouldn't regard a 
crisis as good. And
for most of us, good means smooth sailing and the absence
of conflict. If we could have our way, that is the kind of life we would choose 
to lead.
(Column continues below)

Have you ever considered the possibility that a conflict-free life could be the 
worst thing for you
to have? Did you know that God can actually use conflict
and hardship to produce something of immeasurable good in your life? Think 
about the most important
lessons you have learned. Were they the result of things
going well? Or did they often come through hardship or difficulty?
Take children, for example. They want to eat only what they want to eat. They 
would live on candy if
they were given the option. My little granddaughter
Stella would eat quesadillas for the rest of her life if she could. Whenever I 
ask her what she
wants to eat, the answer is "quesadilla." Every now and
then, she will broaden her repertoire with chicken fingers. But she is often 
more interested in the
fries that frequently come with the chicken fingers
than the chicken fingers themselves. That is how kids are, and that is how we 
are. We just want the
good times. We want it easy.
But conflict can actually be good in our lives. Tragedy reminds us that we 
can't do this on our own.
Sometimes we get a little bit too arrogant, and we
forget to acknowledge who is giving us the strength to do what we are doing. 
James 1:2 says, "Dear
brothers and sisters, when troubles come your way, consider
it an opportunity for great joy. For you know that when your faith is tested, 
your endurance has a
chance to grow." (NLT) That thing you think is bad today
is something you may regard later as good.
We all pray for God's protection over our lives, but what about when an 
accident or tragedy happens
in the life of God's child? Where was his protection
then? In asking a question like that, we are somehow assuming that we have a 
right to live long,
relatively easy lives and that we will one day peacefully
die in our sleep at an advanced age. The Bible teaches that our times are in 
His hands. Our life is
a gift to us from God. That breath you just drew and
the next one you will draw and the one following it are all gifts to you as 
well.
This is something I sometime struggle with personally, because as a dad, I am 
always protecting. And
when my son died, I felt, in a way, as though I could
do nothing to fix it and that I had failed. Why didn't I protect him? Why 
wasn't I there to stop it?
Why can't I fix it? I always am able, for the most
part, to fix things as a dad. Isn't that what dads do? But I couldn't do it in 
this case. Then I
realized that my son is in the presence of my Heavenly
Father who has fixed it. I don't need to fix this. What I do need is for God to 
fix me. And I need
to trust my Father who holds my son safely in his arms.

Even in death, God will keep us. Because when you are a child of God, death 
doesn't mean that God
has failed in His promise to keep you. It means that when
that day comes for you to go home, you will be taken safely into God's 
presence, because his
commitment to keep you doesn't just stop with this life alone.
It continues until he has taken us into his presence in glory.
Is God good? Without a doubt, he is.


O. Addison Gethers
e-mail address : [email protected] or [email protected]
window live messenger: [email protected] aim: durangoadd64 skype: 
cowboys62 yahoo messenger: OADDISONGETHERS
 
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