We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

I have always been fascinated with the lives of the twelve apostles. Who isn’t? The personality types of these men are familiar to us. They are just like us, and they are like other people we know. They are approachable. They are real and living characters we can identify with. Their faults and foibles, as well as their triumphs and endearing features, are chronicled in some of the most fascinating accounts of the Bible. These are men we want to know. That’s because they were perfectly ordinary men in every way. Not one of them was renowned for scholarship or great erudition. They had no track record as orators or theologians. In fact, they were outsiders as far as the religious establishment of Jesus’ day was concerned. They were not outstanding because of any natural talents or intellectual abilities. On the contrary, they were all too prone to mistakes, misstatements, wrong attitudes, lapses of faith, and bitter failure – no one more so than the leader of the group, Peter. Even Jesus remarked that they were slow learners and somewhat spiritually dense (Luke 24:25).
John MacArthur

Doing nothing only reinforces depression and leads to greater unfaithfulness. By the same token, never use activity to narcotize (dull) the pain. Give it to the Lord. Rest, relaxation, and solitude with the Lord needs the balance of involvement in faithful work and ministry, but always out of a spirit of faith, never just activity.
J. Hampton Keathley

Bible Reading: JUN10: Psalms 1-3

JUNE 10

God did not charge Job with the sins his friends had accused
him of committing. However, God did charge him with not seeing
himself in the light of the greatness and the majesty of God. Job’s
religious experience was no longer second-hand. He had met God
personally, and this made all his earthly sufferings worthwhile.

In the last verses of chapter 42, God honors Job. Job had
humbled himself before God and now God exalts him. First, God
rebukes the friends of Job; then He restores Job’s fortune.

Job lived for another 140 years, which suggests that he may
have been 70 years old when these events took place. Since God
doubled everything else in Job’s life, it is reasonable to believe
He doubled his 70 years also.

The main lesson in the Book of Job is not that a person will
be rich and powerful when suffering is over; but, rather, that God
has a purpose in suffering, and nothing can disturb that purpose.
Even Satan must bow to God’s control. Job was not suffering because
of sins, but his suffering still made him a better man. I hope the
Book of Job has been a great inspiration to you and that you will
now be able to better endure the trials that come your way.

We now begin a study of the Psalms. Praise, worship,
confession, and the outpouring of prayer characterize the
Psalms. David was the author of 73 of the Psalms, Asaph composed 12,
the children of Korah 11, Solomon two, and one each is ascribed to
Moses and Ethan. The remaining fifty Psalms are anonymous. We speak
of the Psalms as the “Psalms of David” because he was the principal
writer, or compiler. David’s real character is portrayed in them,
and in them God’s people generally see a pretty fair picture of
themselves, their struggles, their sins, their sorrows, their
aspirations, their joys, their failures, and their victories.