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daily devotional

"These have no root."-Luke 8:13.
MY soul, examine thyself this morning by the light of this text. Thou hast 
received the word with joy; thy feelings have been stirred and a lively 
impression has been made; but, remember, that to receive the word in the ear is 
one thing, and to receive Jesus into thy very soul is quite another; 
superficial feeling is often joined to inward hardness of heart, and a lively 
impression of the word is not always a lasting one. In the parable, the seed in 
one case fell upon ground having a rocky bottom, covered over with a thin layer 
of earth; when the seed began to take root, its downward growth was hindered by 
the hard stone and therefore it spent its strength in pushing its green shoot 
aloft as high as it could, but having no inward moisture derived from root 
nourishment, it withered away. Is this my case? Have I been making a fair show 
in the flesh without having a corresponding inner life? Good growth takes place 
upwards and downwards at the same time. Am I rooted in sincere fidelity and 
love to Jesus? If my heart remains unsoftened and unfertilized by grace, the 
good seed may germinate for a season, but it must ultimately wither, for it 
cannot flourish on a rocky, unbroken, unsanctified heart. Let me dread a 
godliness as rapid in growth and as wanting in endurance as Jonah's gourd; let 
me count the cost of being a follower of Jesus, above all let me feel the 
energy of His Holy Spirit, and then I shall possess an abiding and enduring 
seed in my soul. If my mind remains as obdurate as it was by nature, the sun of 
trial will scorch, and my hard heart will help to cast the heat the more 
terribly upon the ill-covered seed, and my religion will soon die, and my 
despair will be terrible; therefore, O heavenly Sower, plough me first, and 
then cast the truth into me, and let me yield Thee a bounteous harvest.
"I have prayed for thee."-Luke 22:32.
HOW encouraging is the thought of the Redeemer's never-ceasing intercession for 
us. When we pray, He pleads for us; and when we are not praying, He is 
advocating our cause, and by His supplications shielding us from unseen 
dangers. Notice the word of comfort addressed to Peter-"Simon, Simon, Satan 
hath desired to have you that he may sift you as wheat; but"-what? "But go and 
pray for yourself." That would be good advice, but it is not so written. 
Neither does he say, "But I will keep you watchful, and so you shall be 
preserved." That were a great blessing. No, it is, "But I have prayed for thee, 
that thy faith fail not." We little know what we owe to our Saviour's prayers. 
When we reach the hill-tops of heaven, and look back upon all the way whereby 
the Lord our God hath led us, how we shall praise Him who, before the eternal 
throne, undid the mischief which Satan was doing upon earth. How shall we thank 
Him because He never held His peace, but day and night pointed to the wounds 
upon His hands, and carried our names upon His breastplate! Even before Satan 
had begun to tempt, Jesus had forestalled him and entered a plea in heaven. 
Mercy outruns malice. Mark, He does not say, "Satan hath desired to have you." 
He checks Satan even in his very desire, and nips it in the bud. He does not 
say, "But I have desired to pray for you." No, but "I have prayed for you: I 
have done it already; I have gone to court and entered a counterplea even 
before an accusation is made." O Jesus, what a comfort it is that thou hast 
pleaded our cause against our unseen enemies; countermined their mines, and 
unmasked their ambushes. Here is a matter for joy, gratitude, hope, and 
confidence.

Luke 10:16
(16) He that heareth you heareth me; and he that despiseth you despiseth me; 
and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me. 

Luke 10:16 shows that one way to slam the door shut on Christ is to look at the 
men giving the messages rather than the God who is behind them: "My followers, 
whoever listens to you is listening to me. Anyone who says 'No' to you is 
saying 'No' to me. And anyone who says 'No' to me is really saying 'No' to the 
one who sent me" (Contemporary English Version).
If we believe in how minutely God is involved in our lives, then it follows 
that what is preached in Sabbath services has a purpose and is allowed by the 
Sovereign God. Therefore, a complaint that we have about a speaker or the 
message is a complaint against God. Despising the spiritual food God has 
prepared is dangerous ground to tread.
This does not mean the speaker is infallible, by any means, but the wrong 
attitude effectively diminishes what we can glean from his message. A safer 
approach would be to offer a prayer for help to understand and see how the food 
is for our good ( Psalm 84:11) rather than to slam the door on the message or 
the messenger. Either we trust and have faith in God's sovereignty and His love 
for us, or we do not. There is no safe middle ground ( Deuteronomy 30:19).

Pat Higgins 
>From   Are We Opening the Door? 
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"Jehoshaphat made ships of Tharshish to go to Ophir for gold: but they went 
not; for the ships were broken at Ezion-geber."-1 Kings 22:48.
SOLOMON'S ships had returned in safety, but Jehoshaphat's vessels never reached 
the land of gold. Providence prospers one, and frustrates the desires of 
another, in the same business and at the same spot, yet the Great Ruler is as 
good and wise at one time as another. May we have grace to-day, in the 
remembrance of this text, to bless the Lord for ships broken at Ezion-geber, as 
well as for vessels freighted with temporal blessings; let us not envy the more 
successful, nor murmur at our losses as though we were singularly and specially 
tried. Like Jehoshaphat, we may be precious in the Lord's sight, although our 
schemes end in disappointment.
The secret cause of Jehoshaphat's loss is well worthy of notice, for it is the 
root of very much of the suffering of the Lord's people; it was his alliance 
with a sinful family, his fellowship with sinners. In 2 Chron. 20:37, we are 
told that the Lord sent a prophet to declare, "Because thou hast joined thyself 
with Ahaziah, the Lord hath broken thy works." This was a fatherly 
chastisement, which appears to have been blest to him; for in the verse which 
succeeds our morning's text we find him refusing to allow his servants to sail 
in the same vessels with those of the wicked king. Would to God that 
Jehoshaphat's experience might be a warning to the rest of the Lord's people, 
to avoid being unequally yoked together with unbelievers! A life of misery is 
usually the lot of those who are united in marriage, or in any other way of 
their own choosing, with the men of the world. O for such love to Jesus that, 
like Him, we may be holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners; for 
if it be not so with us, we may expect to hear it often said, "The Lord hath 
broken thy works."
"The iron did swim."-2 Kings 6:9.
THE axe-head seemed hopelessly lost, and as it was borrowed, the honour of the 
prophetic band was likely to be imperilled, and so the name of their God to be 
compromised. Contrary to all expectation, the iron was made to mount from the 
depth of the stream and to swim; for things impossible with man are possible 
with God. I knew a man in Christ but a few years ago who was called to 
undertake a work far exceeding his strength. It appeared so difficult as to 
involve absurdity in the bare idea of attempting it. Yet he was called thereto, 
and his faith rose with the occasion; God honoured his faith, unlooked-for aid 
was sent, and the iron did swim. Another of the Lord's family was in grievous 
financial straits, he was able to meet all claims, and much more if he could 
have realized a certain portion of his estate, but he was overtaken with a 
sudden pressure; he sought for friends in vain, but faith led him to the 
unfailing Helper, and lo, the trouble was averted, his footsteps were enlarged, 
and the iron did swim. A third had a sorrowful case of depravity to deal with. 
He had taught, reproved, warned, invited, and interceded, but all in vain. Old 
Adam was too strong for young Melancthon, the stubborn spirit would not relent. 
Then came an agony of prayer, and before long a blessed answer was sent from 
heaven. The hard heart was broken, the iron did swim.
Beloved reader, what is thy desperate case? What heavy matter hast thou in hand 
this evening? Bring it hither. The God of the prophets lives, and lives to help 
His saints. He will not suffer thee to lack any good thing. Believe thou in the 
Lord of hosts! Approach Him pleading the name of Jesus, and the iron shall 
swim; thou too shalt see the finger of God working marvels for His people. 
According to thy faith be it unto thee, and yet again the iron shall swim.

Habakkuk 1:1
(1) The burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see. 

This is a very simple introduction. He does not say, "In the tenth year, in the 
tenth month of the reign of a certain king, Habakkuk the prophet, from a 
certain town, who was a Levite and a priest, saw a vision." He simply says, 
"This is what the prophet Habakkuk saw." We begin to see immediately some of 
Habakkuk's character. He removes himself almost entirely from the book. He is 
not worried about himself or his pedigree. His book is just a narrative of his 
conversation with God.
All we know about Habakkuk is that he was the prophet at the time. He is an 
obscure character, not appearing anywhere else in Scripture. In effect, there 
is nothing to learn except from what he says; the Bible contains no extraneous 
details about him. It is possible to extrapolate a few things about him. He may 
have been a Levite, one of the singers or musicians in the Temple, perhaps one 
of the sons of Asaph, because he writes a very fine song in the third chapter.
Even his name is uncertain. It seems not even to be Hebrew but foreign, an 
Akkadian word. Moreover, its meaning is disputed, the best guess being that 
Habakkuk means "embracer," almost like "hugger"-one who wrestles. In a way, 
that is what he does throughout the whole book. He embraces God, wrestles Him, 
for an answer-similar to what Jacob did-and he does not let go because he wants 
God to answer his troubling questions.
The date of the book is also uncertain. We know a general time, that it was 
probably written within twenty-five years of Jerusalem's fall in Judah, 
somewhere between 610-585 BC. This was right after Nineveh fell to the 
Babylonians in 612, and about the time that Nebuchadnezzar was besieging Tyre 
and before he came against Jerusalem. His first attack on Jerusalem occurred in 
604, so the general consensus is that Habakkuk was probably written sometime 
during Nebuchadnezzar's seige of Tyre.
The awesome might of the Chaldeans was just one country away, and Judah itself 
was sinking further into sin. Josiah, one of Judah's best kings, had died, and 
his sons had come to the throne, and they had failed to hold the country 
together morally. Judah was beginning to fear that they would be next in the 
domino of nations that were falling, and they were terrified because word had 
reached them of what the Chaldeans, the Babylonians, did to those they 
conquered. Judah's day of reckoning was near, and so Habakkuk's cry to God is 
only a natural response of a man who loved his people and his nation.
We can see that Habakkuk's situation fits current circumstances quite closely. 
The fall of Israel is not too far off. This land is sinking further into sin, 
and no one seems to want to stand up to stop it. It could go quickly, even 
though we are the world's superpower. Just one terrorist who says he has a 
briefcase-size nuclear bomb could hold this country hostage, because no 
President would want to give up Houston, Denver, Seattle, Chicago, or any city 
in the United States to call the bluff of some terrorist group or some nation 
who decides that America needs to be cut down to size.
Not only that, things are happening in the church itself that make people ask 
questions, even of God Himself. "Why are you doing this, God?" "Why is the 
church disintegrating?" "Who are these people that have come in and destroyed 
the doctrines of the church?" "Why have You allowed it to happen?" Many of us 
have asked questions like these. They are the same questions Habakkuk was 
contemplating. He did not know what to think because what was happening did not 
seem to follow what he knew of God. "Why would God work this way?"
Like Habakkuk, we want to reconcile what we know of God with what is happening 
because we understand that He is sovereign. However, sometimes with God, it 
seems that two and two do not quite equal four, but with God two and two always 
make four. Our perspective is just not the same as His. So, we must go to God 
for answers when things do not seem to be going the way we expect them to. In 
this is the real value of this little, obscure book: It helps to answer some of 
these kinds of questions.
Notice that Habakkuk calls his message, his prophecy, a "burden." This is a 
very important word. Sometimes God's ministers, especially the prophets, had to 
deliver messages that people really did not want to hear. Often, speaking God's 
words is a burden because they are not always sweetness and light. Sweetness 
and light seem to come only at the end of the message, as a quick conclusion to 
the matter. What is so burdensome are the heavy, depressing terrible things 
that are the main part of the message. In addition, we all know what often 
happens to the messenger who bears bad news-sometimes he gets his head cut off! 
People who hear bad news too often take their wrath, their disappointment, 
their frustration out on the messenger. So it is no wonder Habakkuk says this 
is a burden! He bears a heavy load: He must tell his people something that they 
will despise, and because he says it, they will despise him. Thus, as he 
begins, Habakkuk says, "All right, here goes. You will not like what I have to 
say here, but read on." And so he presents his "burden."

Richard T. Ritenbaugh 
>From   Habakkuk 

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