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daily devotional

Morning and Evening 
Morning ...
2 Samuel 23:5
Yet He hath made with me an everlasting covenant.

This covenant is divine in its origin. "HE hath made with me an everlasting 
covenant." Oh that great word HE! Stop, my soul. God, the everlasting Father, 
has positively made a covenant with thee; yes, that God who spake the world 
into existence by a word; He, stooping from His majesty, takes hold of thy hand 
and makes a covenant with thee. Is it not a deed, the stupendous condescension 
of which might ravish our hearts for ever if we could really understand it? "HE 
hath made with me a covenant." A king has not made a covenant with me-that were 
somewhat; but the Prince of the kings of the earth, Shaddai, the Lord 
All-sufficient, the Jehovah of ages, the everlasting Elohim, "He hath made with 
me an everlasting covenant." But notice, it is particular in its application. 
"Yet hath He made with ME an everlasting covenant." Here lies the sweetness of 
it to each believer. It is nought for me that He made peace for the world; I 
want to know whether He made peace for me! It is little that He hath made a 
covenant, I wan t to know whether He has made a covenant with me. Blessed is 
the assurance that He hath made a covenant with me! If God the Holy Ghost gives 
me assurance of this, then His salvation is mine, His heart is mine, He Himself 
is mine-He is my God. This covenant is everlasting in its duration. An 
everlasting covenant means a covenant which had no beginning, and which shall 
never, never end. How sweet amidst all the uncertainties of life, to know that 
"the foundation of the Lord standeth sure," and to have God's own promise, "My 
covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips." 
Like dying David, I will sing of this, even though my house be not so with God 
as my heart desireth.

Genesis 3:7-10
(7) And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; 
and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons. (8) And they 
heard the voice of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day: 
and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God amongst 
the trees of the garden. (9) And the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto 
him, Where art thou? (10) And he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I 
was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself. 

Genesis 3:7-10 illustrates how no one is ever quite the same after sinning with 
knowledge. Notice Adam and Eve's sin occurs after God had instructed them ( 
Genesis 2:16-17). Nobody had to tell them they had done wrong-they knew! Now 
they looked at things differently than they had before; a sense of wrong rushed 
in on them immediately. Just moments before, all had been friendly and joyful. 
All of nature seemed obedient to their every wish, and life was good. Suddenly, 
however, they felt guilt and fear, and it seemed as if every creature in the 
Garden had witnessed their act and condemned them. Feeling exposed, they sought 
to hide, illustrating that separation from the purity of God began immediately. 
The virtue of their innocence began to lose its luster.
David writes in Psalm 40:11-13:
Do not withhold Your tender mercies from me, O LORD; let Your lovingkindness 
and Your truth continually preserve me. For innumerable evils have surrounded 
me; my iniquities have overtaken me, so that I am not able to look up; they are 
more than the hairs of my head; therefore my heart fails me. Be pleased, O 
LORD, to deliver me; O LORD, make haste to help me!
Sin creates a sense of estrangement from God, leaving a tarnishing film on a 
person's mind. Paul reminds Titus, "To the pure all things are pure, but to 
those who are defiled and unbelieving nothing is pure; but even their mind and 
conscience are defiled" ( Titus 1:15). Sin perverts the mind so that one does 
not look at life in the same way as before. Jeremiah 6:15 describes a sickening 
end to repeated sin:
"Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? No! They were not at 
all ashamed; nor did they know how to blush. Therefore they shall fall among 
those who fall; at the time I punish them, they shall be cast down," says the 
LORD.
Some children are adorable because we love to see the beauty of their 
innocence. But what happens on the trip to adulthood? Sin alters the way a 
person looks at life and the world. With maturity, people become distrustful, 
sophisticated, competitive, cosmopolitan, cynical, suspicious, sarcastic, 
prejudiced, self-centered, and uninvolved. It is sin that drives people apart 
and creates fear.

John W. Ritenbaugh 
>From   The Elements of Motivation (Part Seven): Fear of Judgment 
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Morning and Evening 
Morning ...
2 Corinthians 8:9
For your sakes he became poor. 

The Lord Jesus Christ was eternally rich, glorious, and exalted; but "though He 
was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor." As the rich saint cannot be true 
in his communion with his poor brethren unless of his substance he ministers to 
their necessities, so (the same rule holding with the head as between the 
members), it is impossible that our Divine Lord could have had fellowship with 
us unless He had imparted to us of His own abounding wealth, and had become 
poor to make us rich. Had He remained upon His throne of glory, and had we 
continued in the ruins of the fall without receiving His salvation, communion 
would have been impossible on both sides. Our position by the fall, apart from 
the covenant of grace, made it as impossible for fallen man to communicate with 
God as it is for Belial to be in concord with Christ. In order, therefore, that 
communion might be compassed, it was necessary that the rich kinsman should 
bestow his estate upon his poor relatives, that the righteous Saviour should 
give to His sinning brethren of His own perfection, and that we, the poor and 
guilty, should receive of His fulness grace for grace; that thus in giving and 
receiving, the One might descend from the heights, and the other ascend from 
the depths, and so be able to embrace each other in true and hearty fellowship. 
Poverty must be enriched by Him in whom are infinite treasures before it can 
venture to commune; and guilt must lose itself in imputed and imparted 
righteousness ere the soul can walk in fellowship with purity. Jesus must 
clothe His people in His own garments, or He cannot admit them into His palace 
of glory; and He must wash them in His own blood, or else they will be too 
defiled for the embrace of His fellowship. O believer, herein is love! For your 
sake the Lord Jesus "became poor" that He might lift you up into communion with 
Himself.

Numbers 22:32-33
(32) And the angel of the LORD said unto him, Wherefore hast thou smitten thine 
ass these three times? behold, I went out to withstand thee, because thy way is 
perverse before me: (33) And the ass saw me, and turned from me these three 
times: unless she had turned from me, surely now also I had slain thee, and 
saved her alive. 

Perverse (verse 32) is in Hebrew yarat. It does not quite mean "perverse"; the 
preferred meaning is interesting: "to precipitate; to be precipitant; to push 
headlong; to drive recklessly."
God says to Balaam, "Your way is headlong and reckless before Me. It is 
precipitant." It is as if Balaam were driving 90 mph down a steep hill, 
heedless of the danger at the bottom. He had no foresight. God says, "That's 
perverse. Balaam, you are not looking ahead to the consequences! Your way is 
going to get you into trouble."
He is like a daredevil, like Evel Knievel, who without thought or fear, 
endangers his and others' lives for his own selfish purposes. He rushes through 
life for everything that he can get out of it, never thinking about what will 
happen afterward, in the end. He is a man who cannot look past the end of his 
nose. He is so consumed with himself that he sees nothing down the road, only 
what is happening now. God says that is perverse.
A wise man looks ahead and sees where he is going to land. If a man like Balaam 
gets up a head of steam, he thinks that no one will stop him. Conversely, if we 
consider the donkey to stand for those who actually see God at work, we can 
notice a few things:
The donkey responds to God's direction.
The donkey is persecuted for her obedience.
The donkey, in her meekness, does not retaliate. Does she reach back and nip 
Balaam like he should have been? No.
God says that it is for her sake that He has not carried out His judgment on 
Balaam. This is interesting because the same thing happens because of us. Jesus 
calls us the salt of the earth, and part of its meaning is that we are the 
preservative in this world. If the saints did not exist, there would be no 
world. This donkey was the only thing standing in God's way of totally 
consuming Balaam. We are the donkey. Because God has mercy on us, we who see 
God are the only ones keeping the Balaams of this world from getting totally 
snuffed out.

Richard T. Ritenbaugh 
>From   Balaam and the End-Time Church (Part 2) 

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