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daily devotional

Evening ...
Romans 3:31
Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the 
law.
When the believer is adopted into the Lord's family, his relationship to old 
Adam and the law ceases at once; but then he is under a new rule, and a new 
covenant. Believer, you are God's child; it is your first duty to obey your 
heavenly Father. A servile spirit you have nothing to do with: you are not a 
slave, but a child; and now, inasmuch as you are a beloved child, you are bound 
to obey your Father's faintest wish, the least intimation of His will. Does He 
bid you fulfil a sacred ordinance? It is at your peril that you neglect it, for 
you will be disobeying your Father. Does He command you to seek the image of 
Jesus? It is not your joy to do so? Does Jesus tell you, "Be ye perfect, even 
as your Father which is in heaven is perfect"? Then not because the law 
commands, but because your Saviour enjoins, you will labour to be perfect in 
holiness. Does He bid his saints love one another? Do it, not because the law 
says, "Love thy neighbour," but because Jesus says, "If ye love Me, keep My 
commandments;" and this is the commandment that He has given unto you, "that ye 
love one another." Are you told to distribute to the poor? Do it, not because 
charity is a burden which you dare not shirk, but because Jesus teaches, "Give 
to him that asketh of thee." Does the Word say, "Love God with all your heart"? 
Look at the commandment and reply, "Ah! commandment, Christ hath fulfilled thee 
already-I have no need, therefore, to fulfill thee for my salvation, but I 
rejoice to yield obedience to thee because God is my Father now and He has a 
claim upon me, which I would not dispute." May the Holy Ghost make your heart 
obedient to the constraining power of Christ's love, that your prayer may be, 
"Make me to go in the path of Thy commandments; for therein do I delight." 
Grace is the mother and nurse of holiness, and not the apologist of sin

Revelation 2:7
(7) He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; 
To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the 
midst of the paradise of God. 

Revelation 2:11
(11) He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; 
He that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death. 

Revelation 2:17
(17) He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; 
To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna, and will give 
him a white stone, and in the stone a new name written, which no man knoweth 
saving he that receiveth it. 

Revelation 2:26
(26) And he that overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end, to him will I 
give power over the nations: 

Revelation 3:5
(5) He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will 
not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name 
before my Father, and before his angels. 

Revelation 3:12
(12) Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and he 
shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the name of my God, and the 
name of the city of my God, which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of 
heaven from my God: and I will write upon him my new name. 

Revelation 3:21
(21) To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I 
also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne. 

We can see what most concerns Christ, what is most important to Him, at the 
end, when the pressures will be more intense than they have ever been in the 
history of man, when Satan is lining up all of his forces, all of his armies, 
all of his weaponry. The Devil will mount a persecution against God's people to 
such an extent that the whole earth will be thrown into convulsions, the likes 
of which this world has never seen!
Christ, like any good leader who sees what is coming, will take steps to 
prepare His people. He will focus their attention on what is most important to 
survive and grow during that period. This is why He talks about what He does to 
the churches in the messages in Revelation 2 and 3.
The word translated as "overcomes" can just as easily and correctly be-and is 
perhaps better-translated "conquers." We are involved in a war against Satan 
and his demons, against a world he designed and built through men, and against 
ourselves, who carry with us the self-centered nature, habits, and attitudes of 
Satan and his system. Thus, Christ's concern for us as we approach the end is 
whether we are carrying through in the warfare, continuing in well doing, and 
enduring to the end, because Satan is bringing about every pressure to make us 
surrender .
loyalty is not a quality that we Americans and Canadians are endowed with to 
any great degree. Our cultures tend to stress individuality-doing our own 
thing. This lack of loyalty in America and Canada perhaps shows more clearly in 
divorce and infidelity than perhaps anywhere else. Loyalty's synonym is 
"faithful." It means faithful in allegiance to one's lawful sovereign, to be 
faithful to a private person to whom fidelity is due, or faithful to a cause. 
It means to be steadfast in affection, to adhere to the performance of duty, to 
be conscientious, to give firm resistance to any temptation to desert or 
betray. Can we see what the works are Christ is so concerned about?

This is why every message says, "I know your works!" ( Revelation 2:2, 9, 13, 
19; 3:1, 8, 15). He does not say, "I know your profession" or "I know your 
desires." Neither does He say, "I know your sincerity" or "I know your wishes." 
He says, "I know your works"! Why? Because works prove what a person is doing 
with his knowledge, time, and energies.
Titus 1:16 says, "They profess to know God, but in works they deny Him, being 
abominable, disobedient, and disqualified." Notice that they "profess" to know 
God. Christ says, "I see what you are doing. I know your works." Why are works 
are so important? They prove where our heart is! They prove our loyalty! They 
prove whether we are conscientious and faithful. They prove whether there is 
fidelity to Jesus Christ-whether we are steadfast in our affection for the One 
we are going to marry.
Many believe that we do not have to qualify for the Kingdom of God. It is true 
that works cannot justify us; they cannot wipe out our sins. However, it does 
not follow that, because they cannot save us, they are of no importance. Recall 
that James uses Abraham, the father of the faithful-the father of the loyal, 
the conscientious-as the illustration that faith without works is dead! Living 
faith works! Jesus says, "I know your works"!
Revelation 2 and 3 are an examination of our works because Christ wants to see 
whether we believe Him! Living faith exhibits itself in works! It is a test of 
our faith. If we are faithful, we will be working: overcoming Satan, the world, 
and our self-centeredness. That is what works accomplish.

John W. Ritenbaugh 
>From   Revelation 2-3 and Works 
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Morning ...
Psalm 91:3
Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler.
God delivers His people from the snare of the fowler in two senses. From, and 
out of. First, He delivers them from the snare-does not let them enter it; and 
secondly, if they should be caught therein, He delivers them out of it. The 
first promise is the most precious to some; the second is the best to others. 
"He shall deliver thee from the snare." How? Trouble is often the means whereby 
God delivers us. God knows that our backsliding will soon end in our 
destruction, and He in mercy sends the rod. We say, "Lord, why is this?" not 
knowing that our trouble has been the means of delivering us from far greater 
evil. Many have been thus saved from ruin by their sorrows and their crosses; 
these have frightened the birds from the net. At other times, God keeps His 
people from the snare of the fowler by giving them great spiritual strength, so 
that when they are tempted to do evil they say, "How can I do this great 
wickedness, and sin against God?" But what a blessed thing it is that if the 
believer shall, in an evil hour, come into the net, yet God will bring him out 
of it! O backslider, be cast down, but do not despair. Wanderer though thou 
hast been, hear what thy Redeemer saith-"Return, O backsliding children; I will 
have mercy upon you." But you say you cannot return, for you are a captive. 
Then listen to the promise-"Surely He shall deliver thee out of the snare of 
the fowler." Thou shalt yet be brought out of all evil into which thou hast 
fallen, and though thou shalt never cease to repent of thy ways, yet He that 
hath loved thee will not cast thee away; He will receive thee, and give thee 
joy and gladness, that the bones which He has broken may rejoice. No bird of 
paradise shall die in the fowler's net.

Proverbs 27:17
(17) Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend. 

This is another indication from Scripture that, when we are in the 
companionship and the fellowship of others, we tend to shape each other. We rub 
off on each other.
A clear illustration of this is our relationship with our children. When a 
child is born, he is not born with the inflections or the twangs of the area 
into which he is born. Nobody has to teach anybody how to speak "Brooklynese" 
or "Southern." The nasal tone or drawl just rubs off. The child picks it up. It 
is ingrained within him unconsciously.
The same principle is at work in terms of character and personality. We rub off 
on each other. Are we rubbing off on each other for good, or are we rubbing off 
on each other for evil? Are we lifting one another up, or are we pulling one 
another down? We do not have to try consciously to do either. It will just 
happen. The world, largely, does not care how it rubs off on others-except that 
human nature wants people to think well of it, even while it is doing evil.
But in our Christian fellowship, we have the responsibility before God to work 
to rub off on each other for good. As long as we are conducting ourselves 
aright, it will rub off in the right way. In other words, all we have to do is 
work on ourselves. If we work on ourselves, then the projection of the self, 
the spirit that will go out from us, will be right, and it will have the right 
kind of impact.
God intends that prayer be an act of a free moral agent who consciously chooses 
to fellowship with God for the development of their relationship and the 
completion of himself as an individual.
Do we realize that, when we pray, we are in the presence of God, and He has the 
opportunity to rub off on us? It seems so simple as to be almost unbelievable, 
but it is right. Some of His Spirit reaches out and begins to affect us for 
good. Prayer is a major tool in our spiritual development through God's rubbing 
off on us. All the while this is happening, our minds are being subtly shaped 
by Him because we are in His presence.
  
John W. Ritenbaugh 
>From  What Is Prayer?

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