Daily Devotional
O. Addison Gethers
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----- Original Message ----- 
From: SF Daily Devotional 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 3:27 AM
Subject: SF Daily Devotional - Vent Up


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                  Wednesday, March 24, 2010   Print Article
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                  Vent Up
                  Milan Ford 
                  Over the past three to four years, there has perhaps been no 
other passage of scripture that has helped refine my perspective of God than 
that of Ecclesiastes 7:13. 

                  "Consider the work of God; for who can make straight what He 
has made crooked?"

                  Now I have to admit, when I first read that passage, I was 
slightly confused. I thought for certain that I had read it wrong, or that King 
Solomon, the man responsible for writing the the book Ecclesiastes, had made 
some kind of mistake.

                  Surely he meant to write 'who can make crooked what He (God) 
has made straight?' What kind of all-knowing, all-powerful God would decide to 
make something crooked? As I sat there puzzled, I decided to continue on and 
read the next verse.

                  "In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of 
adversity consider: Surely God has APPOINTED the one as well as the other, so 
that man can find nothing that will come after him." - Ecclesiastes 7:14v.

                  Let's face it; this is not exactly the kind of scripture you 
and I tend to post on our refrigerator door or rush to a nearby Christian 
bookstore to find a bumper sticker of.

                  Now more than ever before, there is an alarming number of 
Christians who insist on believing that the sole purpose of God is to fulfill 
our purposes, and that His sole desire is to fulfill our desires. After years 
of being presented with a Gospel that is sadly incomplete, many have begun to 
question whether the God they grew up believing in is really real.

                  For those of you reading this devotional today that may be 
currently navigating through a season of doubt in your life, I want you to know 
that we serve a God who not only designs STRAIGHT paths for our lives, but 
CROOKED ones as well.

                  The sooner you and I embrace the fact both PROSPERITY and 
ADVERSITY are a sign of God's workmanship, the sooner we can use both as a 
catalyst to draw closer to Him.

                  One of the best ways we can do just that is to renew our 
commitment to PRAISE. While we have done a great job limiting its role to just 
songs of adoration we sing in church, I discovered not long ago that PRAISE is 
what we have the ability to create...

                  ...when we decide to always VENT UP. 

                  Our natural tendency as human beings when things do not go 
our way is to either VENT OUT to our family and closest friends for comfort, or 
to VENT DOWN to those we have influence over, in order to use our pain as a way 
of rallying others less mature on our side. A very bad decision I might add.

                  When life seems unbearable, you and I have to make a 
commitment to VENT UP. When we consistently take our concerns (and complaints) 
to God, something unique occurs.

                  Our requests for what WE WANT are exchanged for who HE IS. 

                  When we begin to vent up to God concerning a new job...
                  ...it is not long before we find ourselves praising Him for 
the job we have.

                  When we vent up to God concerning more healthy 
relationships...
                  ...it is not long before we begin praising Him for the ones 
He has helped us escape from.

                  Praise has a way of reconnecting our hearts with what is 
important, giving us the confidence to still look ahead to a brighter tomorrow 
no matter how difficult the day may be. It is my prayer that we all will fully 
understand this one simple truth; a truth I had to painfully encounter nearly 
three years ago:

                  Here it is: TRAGEDY and WORSHIP are inseparable.

                  At our lowest of moments, God is still ever present. He is 
ever faithful. To know Him, is to worship Him. A lesson I am grateful to learn 
each morning through the power of praise.




                        Milan Ford has been a leader (and survivor) of ministry 
within the local church for most of his life. A lover of Red Vines Licorice and 
all things pointing North, Milan released his first book, 83 Things I Wish The 
Black Church Would Stop Doing in December (2009). You can find Milan rambling 
and writing at ThePewView.com. 

                  © Milan Ford all rights reserved.
                 

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