We Love God!

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

The will of natural man is the worst part about him. The worst thing he has, the greatest enemy he has, is his own heart and will. It is the corrupt will of a man that keeps him under the power of his sins, and keeps him off the power of an ordinance that would procure his everlasting good. I speak it the rather to dash that dream of wicked men, when they do ill, and speak ill, yet (say they), “my heart is good.” No, truly, if thy life be naught, thy heart is worse. It is the worst thing thou hast about thee… The deceitfulness of the heart is above all; the masterfulness of the heart is beyond all that we can conceive. A man may discern a man’s life, “but the heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure.” The will of man is uncontrollable, it will stand out against all reasons and arguments, and nothing can move the will except God work upon it.
Thomas Hooker

We begin to believe our lies. What started as lying to others has turned against us. We tried to keep other people from seeing our private addictions; now we can barely see them ourselves. We once tried to persuade others that we didn’t have a problem; how we have persuaded ourselves that we don’t have a problem. When we are blind to our own problem, there is no reason to change.
Edward Welch

Bible Reading: MAY29: Job 1-5

MAY 29

In chapter 3 we see Job’s perplexity. We must not
misunderstand this chapter. Job did not curse God, as Satan
predicted, or as Job’s wife suggested.

It is good to know that Satan cannot predict the future. He
only knows it as God has written it in His Word. Job did curse his
birthday; he felt it would have been better had he died at birth
than live and endure such grief. In verses 20-24 Job asked why
miserable people such as himself had to live at all!

Chapters 4 and 5 record Eliphaz’s first speech. He rebuked
Job and insisted that the righteous are not cut off.

I believe a key verse in these chapters is verse 17 of
chapter 5. “Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: therefore
despise not thou the chastening of the Almighty.” God is just, and
must correct His children. When we are chastised it is for our own
good. Hebrews 12:6,7 says, “For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth,
and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. If ye endure chastening,
God dealeth with you as with sons; for what son is he whom the
father chasteneth not?” God loves us, and chastens us because He
loves us. Parents correct their children when they have been
disobedient. Sometimes a rod is necessary. But we do not correct our
children because we are brutal or unloving, but because we do love
them and want to teach them the way they should go. So it is with
God. When His children falter, and fail to repent of their sin, He
must chastise them in order to bring them back to Himself. Job says,
“Happy is the man whom God correcteth.”