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daily devotional

Evening ... 
John 14:16
He shall give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you for ever. 
Great Father revealed Himself to believers of old before the coming of His Son, 
and was known to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as the God Almighty. Then Jesus 
came, and the ever-blessed Son in His own proper person, was the delight of His 
people's eyes. At the time of the Redeemer's ascension, the Holy Spirit became 
the head of the present dispensation, and His power was gloriously manifested 
in and after Pentecost. He remains at this hour the present Immanuel-God with 
us, dwelling in and with His people, quickening, guiding, and ruling in their 
midst. Is His presence recognized as it ought to be? We cannot control His 
working; He is most sovereign in all His operations, but are we sufficiently 
anxious to obtain His help, or sufficiently watchful lest we provoke Him to 
withdraw His aid? Without Him we can do nothing, but by His almighty energy the 
most extraordinary results can be produced: everything depends upon his 
manifesting or concealing His power. Do we always look up to Him both for our 
inner life and our outward service with the respectful dependence which is 
fitting? Do we not too often run before His call and act independently of His 
aid? Let us humble ourselves this evening for past neglects, and now entreat 
the heavenly dew to rest upon us, the sacred oil to anoint us, the celestial 
flame to burn within us. The Holy Ghost is no temporary gift, He abides with 
the saints. We have but to seek Him aright, and He will be found of us. He is 
jealous, but He is pitiful; if He leaves in anger, He returns in mercy. 
Condescending and tender, He does not weary of us, but awaits to be gracious 
still. 
Sin has been hammering my heart
Unto a hardness, void of love,
Let supplying grace to cross his art
Drop from above. 

1 Kings 12:25-33
(25) Then Jeroboam built Shechem in mount Ephraim, and dwelt therein; and went 
out from thence, and built Penuel. (26) And Jeroboam said in his heart, Now 
shall the kingdom return to the house of David: (27) If this people go up to do 
sacrifice in the house of the LORD at Jerusalem, then shall the heart of this 
people turn again unto their lord, even unto Rehoboam king of Judah, and they 
shall kill me, and go again to Rehoboam king of Judah. (28) Whereupon the king 
took counsel, and made two calves of gold, and said unto them, It is too much 
for you to go up to Jerusalem: behold thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up 
out of the land of Egypt. (29) And he set the one in Bethel, and the other put 
he in Dan. (30) And this thing became a sin: for the people went to worship 
before the one, even unto Dan. (31) And he made an house of high places, and 
made priests of the lowest of the people, which were not of the sons of Levi. 
(32) And Jeroboam ordained a feast in the eighth month, on the fifteenth day of 
the month, like unto the feast that is in Judah, and he offered upon the altar. 
So did he in Bethel, sacrificing unto the calves that he had made: and he 
placed in Bethel the priests of the high places which he had made. (33) So he 
offered upon the altar which he had made in Bethel the fifteenth day of the 
eighth month, even in the month which he had devised of his own heart; and 
ordained a feast unto the children of Israel: and he offered upon the altar, 
and burnt incense. 

I Kings 12:25-33 records the beginning of the Kingdom of Israel's apostasy. 
Fearing that he might eventually lose political control over the ten tribes 
because of their long-standing religious ties to Jerusalem, capital of the 
Kingdom of Judah (verse 27), Jeroboam I instituted a state religion designed to 
meet his peoples' needs for convenience-and his own need for power. He built 
two shrines, one in Bethel, at the southern extremity of his kingdom, the other 
in Dan, near its northern boundary (verse 29). If not de jure, at least de 
facto, he exiled the Levites, the priestly tribe established by God, and 
installed in their place a priesthood of his own devising (verse 31). Finally, 
he moved the fall holy day season from the seventh month to the eighth, thereby 
effectively setting aside the Sabbath commandment, since the holy days are 
God's Sabbaths (see Leviticus 23:1-3, 23-44). All this "became a sin" for 
Israel ( I Kings 12:30).
Jeroboam's apostasy, his movement to false religious practices, took deep root. 
In fact, the house of Israel never departed from the practices he established. 
II Kings 17:21-23 records this fact:
Jeroboam drove Israel from following the LORD, and made them commit a great 
sin. For the children of Israel walked in all the sins of Jeroboam which he 
did; they did not depart from them, until the LORD removed Israel out of His 
sight. . . .
Having abandoned the Sabbath, the God-given sign marking them as His people ( 
Exodus 31:13-17), the folk of the northern tribes eventually lost their 
identification. That is why most Israelites do not know who they are to this 
day. The forefathers forsook the sign that denoted their connection to God.
Take this line of thought to its logical conclusion: The Sabbath is a memorial 
to creation and, by extension, to the Creator God (see Exodus 20:11). 
Modern-day Israelites do not know who they are today because their forefathers, 
generations ago, abandoned this memorial to the Creator God. Therefore, 
modern-day Israelites have come to abandon more than the sign: They have 
abandoned the God to whom the sign points. They no longer know God.
This is not an overstatement. Make no mistake: Failure to recognize who Israel 
is today is failure to recognize the God who made Israel! The distressing 
secularism running rampant in the modern nations of Israel today has its roots 
in Sabbath-breaking. The antidote for secularism in America is not an inane 
Constitutional amendment requiring the teaching of creationism (whatever that 
is) in the state schools. The panacea some offer, prayer in the public schools, 
will not do the trick. Increased Sunday church attendance will not stanch the 
flood of secularism; after all, most Sunday worshippers accept the doctrines of 
biologic and economic determinism (i.e., evolution and socialism, respectively) 
just as avowed atheists do. Attempting to unite a people with its God through 
these measures is surely akin to building a wall with "untempered mortar" (see 
Ezekiel 13:9-23). In the coming storm, such a wall will fall.
However, one will never find a Sabbath-keeper who is a secularist, for the 
Sabbath-keeper has maintained his link with the Creator God. Sabbath-keeping 
and secularism mix about as well as oil and water.

Charles Whitaker 
>From   Searching for Israel (Part Twelve): The Sign 
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daily devotional

Evening ... 
Revelation 2:4
Thou hast left thy first love. 

Ever to be remembered is that best and brightest of hours, when first we saw 
the Lord, lost our burden, received the roll of promise, rejoiced in full 
salvation, and went on our way in peace. It was spring time in the soul; the 
winter was past; the mutterings of Sinai's thunders were hushed; the flashings 
of its lightnings were no more perceived; God was beheld as reconciled; the law 
threatened no vengeance, justice demanded no punishment. Then the flowers 
appeared in our heart; hope, love, peace, and patience sprung from the sod; the 
hyacinth of repentance, the snowdrop of pure holiness, the crocus of golden 
faith, the daffodil of early love, all decked the garden of the soul. The time 
of the singing of birds was come, and we rejoiced with thanksgiving; we 
magnified the holy name of our forgiving God, and our resolve was, "Lord, I am 
Thine, wholly Thine; all I am, and all I have, I would devote to Thee. Thou 
hast brought me with Thy blood-let me spend myself and be spent in Thy service. 
In life and in death let me be consecrated to Thee." How have we kept this 
resolve? Our espousal love burned with a holy flame of devoutedness to Jesus-is 
it the same now? Might not Jesus well say to us, "I have somewhat against thee, 
because thou hast left they first love"? Alas! it is but little we have done 
for our Master's glory. Our winter has lasted all too long. We are as cold as 
ice when we should feel a summer's glow and bloom with sacred flowers. We give 
to God pence when He deserveth pounds, nay, deserveth our heart's blood to be 
coined in the service of His church and of His truth. But shall we continue 
thus? O Lord, after Thou hast so richly blessed us, shall we be ungrateful and 
become indifferent to Thy good cause and work? O quicken us that we may return 
to our first love, and do our first works! Send us a genial spring, O Sun of 
Righteousness.

John 6:63
(63) It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words 
that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life. 

Notice what one of the main manifestations of God's Spirit is: words. The 
entire revelation of God-the Bible-is composed of words. If His Word is not a 
manifestation of God's Spirit, we do not know what is! Many of these words are 
the words of God Himself. Many of them are words of God's servants that have 
been written down for our admonition.
Everything, though, comes down to words because the way of God is a set of 
ideas. These ideas we put down on paper as words, or when we speak, we speak 
them as words. We cannot understand them otherwise.
The servant of God may do other works. He can perform healings, which are not 
necessarily manifested as words, although often words accompany a healing, 
specifically a prayer. Casting out demons is similar, as there is usually a 
prayer involved. Miracles, too, often involve certain words that are spoken to 
beseech God to act. But the works themselves-the healings, the casting out of 
demons, the miracles-are not words, but they are manifestations of the Spirit.
However, the primary job of a servant of God is to speak or to write words to 
convict people of God's truth. So, in the speaking or in the writing of words, 
he witnesses for God. In the end, in the final analysis, the witness of the Two 
Witnesses is words. They will give evidence, testimony, for God.

Richard T. Ritenbaugh 
>From   The Two Witnesses (Part 4) 

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