A daily devotional dedicated to the glory of Jesus Christ by Rev. Jeffery Russell.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

27 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Knocking on the Door" Matthew 7:7-11

27 June 2007  Devotion for Today  “Knocking on the Door”  Matthew 7:7-11

 

Devotional passage:  Matthew 7:7-11

 

For many years I have been amused by the story of the pastor Story of a pastor who went calling on a woman who had not been in church in some time.  He came to the door of the woman’s house and knocked.  No one answered, so he knocked again.  It appeared that there was someone home, her automobile was in the driveway and there seemed to be lights on inside.  So the preacher knocked again.    No one answered again, so he decided to leave his business card in the door, with this inscription written on it  “Sorry I missed you- “behold I stand at the door and knock” Rev. 3:20.”  The following Sunday, the woman showed up in the service.  When the offering plate was passed, she slipped into it this note She wrote- “ I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself. Genesis 3:10!”

Knock and it will be opened   Then there is knocking- knock and the door will be opened.  Again this is a continuous action.  Keep on knocking. Keep on banging away on the door until it is answered. Story of a pastor who came to the door of a woman’s house- “behold I stand at the door and knock” Rev. 3:20 She wrote- “ I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself. Genesis 3:10

 

From its proper context, Jesus says in Revelation 3:20 Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me.”   Back in first century Palestine, they would construct homes with doors with handles on the inside, not on the outside.  So if you bolted the door on the inside, someone on the outside obviously could not get in unless he knocked on the door to be allowed access to the house.  If you open that door, you had better trust the person who is on the outside of it.  He wants you to be persistent enough so that your answered prayer matters to you as much as it matters to Him.   But what it comes down to is, prayer is trusting God. God wants you to be persistent enough so that your answered prayer matters to you as much as it matters to Him.  Knock and the door will be opened.  This is not just knocking once and then leaving.  Again this is a continuous action.  Keep on knocking. Keep on banging away on the door until it is answered.

            They say that opportunity only knocks once.  Jesus knocks continually, and shows by His example that if we are to live by faith, we need to be persistent in the exercise of our faith- especially in our prayer life.  If there is a door that is closed, it doesn’t mean necessarily that it is closed in order for you to be disappointed.  But are you as serious about opening it as your Savior is?

            Have a blessed day.

 

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

26 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Seeking" Matthew 7:7-11

26 June 2007  Devotion for Today  “Seeking”  Matthew 7:7-11

 

This is a continuation of yesterday’s devotion with the same Scripture text:

 

Also in Matthew 7:7 Jesus tells us to seek and you will find.  Again, seeking, like asking, is a continuous action verb.  Jesus is referring to a prayer of supplication or petition urging us to move forward on our requests and not stop until we get the answer.  As its not enough just to ask one time, we need to keep on seeking to demonstrate not just to God, but to ourselves, how serious we are to find the answer God wants to give us.  Seeking is a demonstration of our faith.  We need to seek the way a woman seeks, not like a man seeks.  If a woman goes to the mall to shop, she woman will take all afternoon searching for something she wants.  Seeking is part of the experience of shopping.  But a man won’t do that- if he goes to the shopping mall at all, he goes into the store, gets what he’s wants, pays for it, goes home.  The whole experience takes him 20 minutes verses 2-3 hours.  The same is true in the refrigerator.  If a woman is looking for a jar of mayonnaise, it might take a half an hour because while she is looking for it, she sees other things in there that doesn’t need to be in there and take them out, also. But if a man goes looking for that jar of mayonnaise and it doesn’t fall into his outstretched hand the first time he looks, forget it! 

  Jesus was saying keep seeking, keep on searching, keep on looking. God wants you to seek out what it is you really want so that you can be specific enough to ask by faith.

            HEB 11;6 And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly SEEK him. "The lions may grow weak and hungry, but those who SEEK the LORD lack no good thing." PS 34;10. 

In seeking, remember this attitude: Pray as if everything depends on God, then work as if everything depends on you. Martin Luther

 

Have a blessed day!

 

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Monday, June 25, 2007

25 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Supplication" Matthew 7:7-11

25 June 2007  Devotion for Today  “Supplication”  Matthew 7:7-11

 

            In 1981 I was working at as a bagger and a stock clerk at Food Lion grocery store on Tidewater Dr in Norfolk, Virginia, when a harried mother wheeled her cart up to the check out line while her 5 year old son, sitting in the grocery cart, pestered her for chewing gum, asking, “Mama, can I have some chewing gum.”  “No!”  “Mama, I want some chewing gum!”  “No!”  “Mama, can I please have some chewing gum?”  “No.”  “Aw! Mama, why can’t I have some chewing gum?”  “No, you don’t need chewing gum, that stuff will make the teeth fall right out of your head.”  “Please mama, give me that gum?”  In the meantime, a whole bunch of people were listening to the conversation at the check-out line until that kid finally started crying and then said, “In the name of Jesus, please give me that chewing gum!”  All the sympathetic listeners heard that appeal, and next thing that kid knows, he’s got 50 packs of chewing gum thrown into his mother’s shopping basket!  You have to hand it to that child, for he was practicing what Jesus said in Matthew 7:7-8

  “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. 8 For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened. 9

            Today I want us to continue on the series on prayer that I began a few weeks ago with the Acrostic ACTS.  A- was for adoration.  C- was for confession.  T- was for thanksgiving.  Today we come to the letter S- which means supplication- here is a word that is almost lost to us because it is a word that was used in the KJV.  But to supplicate simply means to ask, to make a request, to make a petition for something (and in this case in prayer to God) on our own behalf.  Asking is always from someone who is in a lower position making a request of someone in a higher position, such as a child to a parent, an employee to an employer, a player to a coach, and in this instance, man asking God.   Inherent in the asking is the realization that the person you are asking has the ability and the resources available to make good on the request.   Jesus says that if you ask, it will be given you.  We must also understand the language that Jesus was using.  What Jesus is saying is, Continue asking.  To ask, ask, ask- to keep on asking.  In the original language, this word is a continuous action verb.  

            In the book of James 4:8 he says, “You have not because you ask not, because you ask amiss, that you may spend it on your pleasures.”   In other words, you don’t have because you ask for the wrong things for the wrong reasons.   But just as wrong as asking for the wrong reasons is not to ask at all. Like the man who whose house was overtaken in Hurricane Katrina.  And he gets up on his house and he prays knowing God will save him. In a moment, a  Red Cross worker comes by in hip boots!  No, God will save me!  The water rises higher, and a sheriff’s deputy comes by in a jon-boat, Come on, get in!  No, God will save me!   The flood waters reach the roof of the man’s house, and a helicopter comes by and announces, “This is the Coast Guard!  We’re lowering a ladder down to you.  Get on it!”  The man hollers back, “No thank you, God will save me!” So the helicopter flys away.  The man drowns.  He’s standing before God very disappointed, “I don’t understand I prayed and you didn’t save me, what’s up with that?  And God said, “I sent you a Red Cross worker in a rowboat, a sheriff’s deputy in a bigger boat, and the Coast Guard- how much did you expect me to do?”

            Ask and it shall be given you, but we have to take it whenever it is offered!

Have a blessed day!

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

20 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Swamping the Boat" John 10:15-16

20 June 2007  Devotion for Today  “Swamping the Boat”   John 10:15-16

 

 “The Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep. And I have other sheep that are not of this fold; I must bring them also, and they will heed my voice. So there shall be one flock, one shepherd.”    John 10:15-16

 

Dr. Tony Evans tells this story, that in 1912, the Titanic lost 1500 people, most of whom did not have to die because only half of the life boats were only half full. The occupants of the boats were too afraid to turn around to rescue the victims in the icy waters for fear that they lost would flip their boat. Evans continued: “That is the way it is with those who will not share Christ with the lost, afraid that they are going to flip our ‘Jesus’ boat.” 

 

 It is a shame that such short-sightedness would be found among Christians, but it is.  Its sad that so few recognize the sacrifices of those who pulled them into the life boat in the first place, but it is sadder still that those who have been saved somehow come to view that the life boat belongs to them. According to our recent publication of the Southern Baptist North American Mission Board, study showed that only 8 to 10 % of Christians regularly shared their faith in Christ.  But among those who did not share, 33.5% are afraid of being rejected or embarrassed if they share Christ. Whatever the response, it is clear that the focus is not on Christ nor on the ones who needs to receive the messenger, but upon themselves. What it amounts to is fear of swamping the boat or falling out of it themselves.  Jesus commands us, that as long as there are more people who are out of the fold than inside of it, we must follow His example and bring them into it.  We also need to remember the Christ's salvation belongs to him and given to us as a free gift- not to the ones who receive it as a free gift.

 

 Have a blessed day.

 

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

19 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Credibility" Matthew 5:33-37

19 June 2007 Devotion for Today  "Credibility"  Matthew 5:33-37
 
Pastor Bryan Sherman tells the story of a bus load of politicians that 
were driving down a country road when, all of a sudden, the bus ran off
the road & crashed into a tree in an old farmer’s field. The old farmer,
after seeing what happened, went over to investigate. He then proceeded
to dig a hole & bury the politicians. A few days later, the local 
sheriff came out, saw the crashed bus & asked the old farmer where all 
the politicians had gone. The old farmer said he had buried them.
The sheriff asked the old farmer, "The coroner wasn’t here. Are you 
sure they were all dead?" The old farmer replied, "Well, some of them 
said they weren’t, but you know how them politicians lie!"
 
Credibility- the art of being able to tell the truth.  Unfortunately,
our society has lived with a "credibility gap" for so long no one is
able to recognize the truth anymore.  In fact, those who honestly are
telling the truth are accused of lying because people will automatically
assume that they are.  Like the farmer in the story who buried the 
politicians, many will try to bury or conceal their deeds out of shame
or embarrassment they might cause us.  And when some one comes around
asking questions, they put "our own spin on it" to keep those facts from
coming to light.  
 
As believers in Christ, one of our formost responsibilities is to be
propagators of the truth, not only by what we say, but especially in 
what we do.  Are our lifestyles should credible to the point that people can
see the change that Christ has brought to our lives or do we engage in
a false front of spirituality and pray that nobody finds out what we 
are really like?  I had someone tell me recently that when someone
comes around him spouting a litany of "praise Jesus, hallelujah, amen,
praise the Lord, etc." he immediately writes him off.  I asked why he
felt that way.  He said "because when people do that (God talk) stuff,
they are trying to manipulate my good favor toward them when they know
it is not deserved in any other way."  Sadly, he is right.
 
Christ said in Matthew 5:33-37: "Again, ye hgave heard that it hath 
been said by them of old time, Thou shalt not forswear thyself, but 
shalt perform unto the Lord thine oaths.  But I say unto you, Swear not
at all; neither by heaven; for it is God's throne: nor by the earth; for
it is His footstool:  neither by Jerusalem; for it is the city of the
great King.  Neither shalt thou swear by thy head, because thou canst
not make one hair white or black.  But let your communication be, Yea,
yea; Nay, nay: for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil."
 
In these verses, Jesus is not only condemning those who swear oaths,
but the very fact that they feel that they have to do that demonstrates
that they would not have to do it if they truely believed what they
said themselves.  May we do all that we can, by God's grace, to close
the gap of credibility around us.  Have a blessed day!

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Monday, June 18, 2007

18 June 2007 Devotion for Today "While You Have Light" John 12.36-37

18 June 2007 Devotion for Today "While You Have Light" John 12.36-37

 

 “While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the children of light. These things spake Jesus, and departed, and did hide himself from them. But though he had done so many miracles before them, yet they believed not on him.” John 12.36-37

 

It is interesting how we may have few moments of brilliance, followed by long periods of ordinary dullness.  There are exceptions to this of course, but most of us flow down channels of least resistance without being open to anything that might challenge the status quo; even it would rescue us from plunging over a water fall. 

Jesus challenged the mind-set of His own generation as He sat reading and teaching in the synagogue one Sabbath.  This was the synagogue where He had been taught as a child-where He had been bar-mitzvahed and where He served as a layman. It was extremely difficult for the people of Jesus' hometown to accept Him.  They could only remember Him as a boy, but could not accept Him as a grown man, much less as the Son of God.  There were some who believed, but feared to commit themselves.  They failed to act upon what they knew to be true.  Some feared being put out of the synagogue, but I suspect most just did not want to commit themselves because it was too much trouble to think about.

 

Jesus tells us to believe in the light while we have it.  Its not that He does not want us to think too much about it, but many people will consider something, and then get busy, and then allow it to lapse into the recesses of their memories.  Christ doesn’t wish for that to happen to us with regard to the light He offers  us.  Its best to commit to it now while we have it.  When the period of momentary brilliance has been thrust upon us, act upon it now.  We may never have another chance again.

 

Have a blessed day.

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Thursday, June 14, 2007

14 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Opening Closed Doors" Revelation 3:8

14 June 2007  Devotion for Today  "Opening Closed Doors"  Revelation 3:8

 

I wanted to revisit the thought I expounded upon yesterday about doors.   There are some doors of opportunity  which seem closed to us because everybody else thinks that they are closed- that it is useless to try to open them.  Sometimes those doors are closed because of our own expectations, sometimes they are closed because of our own limitations.

            Jesus says to us in Revelation 3:8 “I know your deeds. See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut. I know that you have little strength, yet you have kept my word and have not denied my name.”

 

History is replete with examples of doors that seemed to be locked tight but proved later to be opportunities for God to do much greater work than anyone thought possible.  The young Dwight L. Moody was so uneducated and used such poor grammar that the members of his church requested that he should not speak publicly.  It was as if someone who was completely tone deaf aspiring to become a vocalist or to record a hit album.  No one in his church ever imagined Moody succeeding in becoming a preacher, but by God's grace Moody became one of the greatest preachers of his time.   Even Billy Graham's gifts were discountenanced by his college professors.  At his first church, Graham's deacons recommended that Graham be dismissed.  They believed that Graham did not hold out much promise as a preacher.  What if Billy Graham had listened to those who said that the doors were closed to ministry and that he ought to go back to the farm in Charlotte, N.C.?  Millions of people would be without Christ today. 

 

What doors seemed closed to you today?  Do not let them discourage you.  If the door is closed because it may be God shutting it for you because He may feel you are not yet ready for the challenges it has for you.  But others may be shutting the door on you, also.  Let God show you their errors and by faith all you may need to do is just push on it a little bit.  Watch and see it fall open the rest of the way by itself.

 

Have a blessed day.

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

13 June 2007 Devotion for Today Open/Closed Doors Revelation 3:8;20

13 June 2007  Devotion for Today  Open/Closed Doors Revelation 3:8, 20

 

"See, I have set before you an open door, and no one can shut it." Rev. 3:8 

 

 Have you ever heard the expression, "Where God closes a door, He opens a window?"  I heard that remark just the other day.  It sounds like one of those sweet, sentimental ideas that make sense but really make no sense.  For one thing, this statement is never found in Scripture.  Secondly, if God wished for a door to be closed, why would He then open up a smaller opportunity somewhere else about the same thing?  Why would He then just keep the original "door" open?   It is true that God does open doors of opportunity as He guides us.  Henry Blackaby says that "this matter of open and closed doors must be approached with caution because it is easily misunderstood. " (Henry and Richard Blackaby Hearing God's Voice Holman and Broadman Press, Nashville, 2002; p.145.)    Too many Christians base their decision making on the "open door policy," as though every open door that they find is an invitation from God to enter it.   Just because one might be offered a promotion or a new job that includes a pay increase, does not necessarily mean that God is in it.   Doors are open around us everywhere.  Many doors the devil has opened as well.  How can we discern the difference?

   

The difficulty with the open door policy is the emphasis that is on the door rather than on God.   God desires not just open doors, He desires a love relationship with us.   Sometimes the doors that God opens for us may not be as pleasant to go through as the door we would choose- but we will always find God behind it.   The closed doors we find are not always shut to us by God, either.  We may find them circumstantially blocked or they may be barred by the devil.  Either way, God may be using you to open that door despite the opposition you are finding at this moment.  It could be that God desires you to pray more about the closed door to determine if you really want to go through it.  It could be that God desires you to confront the opposition that is bolting the door.  God's doors are not always easy, but it is clear that He desires us to focus on God, not just the door, whether the door be open or closed.

 

    Another aspect to open and closed doors is the idea that today too many Christians approach their relationship with God so casually.  They will catagorically reject something because they don't think they have the time, or it doesn't fit into their schedule, when what they really want is not to be tied down to the commitment of opening the door in the first place. 

    

God has set before you an open door.  Pray carefully before you enter it to ensure it is of God and not just your own desire.  Take a careful look at the other doors that are before you.  If the door is closed, it may not be God who shut it.  Even today His Son is saying to someone "Behold I stand at the door and knock, if any man hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and dine with him and he with me." Rev. 3:20  

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

12 June 2007 Devotion for Today "At Wits End" Psalm 107:27-31

12 June 2007  Devotion for Today "At Wits End"  Psalm 107:27-31

 

Have you ever been in this place the Psalmist calls 'Wits End?" (Psalm 107:27)  The psalmist describes sailors who are in a ship in extremely heavy seas.  They have done all that they know to do, and still the ship threatens to founder.   For the land-lubber, Wits End  is an exasperating place of frustration and fatigue; where nothing goes right and everything seems to be falling apart, unraveling at the seems, or heading in that direction.   Wits End is a week where the transmission in your car breaks down, the wash machine's water pump goes out, and the septic tank backs up while you are battling the mother of all stomach viruses!  On top of that, the bank calls to let you know that you have overdrawn your checking account.   But don't fear, Wits End can get a lot worse, and it will if you allow your level of frustration to spill over onto the ones who are going through Wits End with you. 

   

I have visited Wits End more times than I would like to tell, and each time I find a whole new facet or feature that I have never seen before.  Its like having the Midas' touch, only in reverse! 

 

The Psalmist understood Wits End more than any of us, and what is more is that he recognizes the presence of Someone in Wits End who goes through this place with us.    We have difficulty seeing Him in this place because the fog of our frustration obscures us from view.   But no matter how lost we may feel at Wits End, the Psalmist tells us where to find Him:    "Then they cry out to the Lord in their trouble, and He brings them out of their distresses. He calms the storm, so that its waves are still.  Then they are glad because they are quiet: so He guides them to their desired haven.  Oh that men would give thanks to the LORD for His goodness, and for His wonderful works to the children of men"  Psalm 107:  28-31

 

      One thing I have discovered about Wits End and that is it is unavoidable- all roads seem to lead to it, are in it presently, or lead away from it.  Just make certain that the Lord is with you now before you get there.

 

Have a blessed day.

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Monday, June 11, 2007

Devotion for Today "Walk Worthy" I Thess. 2:10-12

Devotion for Today  "Walk Worthy"  I Thess. 2:10-12
 
Walking is good exercize.  I have found that walking helps my whole
outlook and perspective.  I am not what you would call a dedicated 
walker, because I  have missed my walking routine during the
winter months.  At least once a week I try to go to the gym and walk on the 
treadmill, the treadmill is a poor substitute to getting out and enjoying
the fresh air, the beautiful scenery around our little country town,
and spending time talking to God.  While the grey pall hangs over the
continent, I look forward to when I can get back out again.   
 
Today our devotion focuses not just on walking, but upon how one walks.
As much as I enjoy my walks I know that there are places that I 
cannot go.  A German farmer would not appreciate me walking through 
his newly sewn field.  The Hausfrau would certainly have some things
to say to me should I walk through her bed of tulips.  Those are places
to look at but not to walk through.  A house burned down in our 
community right before Christmas.  The rubble and debris was piled up
right outside of Mittel Gruendau.  I would get myself hurt if I were
to walk through those piles of debris.  A commuter rail line runs 
through our community and stops at a station.  There is a sign on the
edge of the line which reads: "Eintritt Verboten."  In equivilent
English it means "No Trespassing."  If I were to walk there, I would
not only be violating someone else's property but might also be run 
over by a train.  
 
You get the idea.  It is not enough that we walk, but that we walk in
the right places and in the right ways.  Such an idea was conveyed by
the Apostle Paul when he wrote in I Thessalonians 2:10-12 "You are
witnesses, and God also, how devoutly and justly and blamelessly we
behaved ourselves among you who believe; as you know how we exhorted,
and comforted, and charged every one of you, as a father does his own
children, that you would walk worthy of God who calls you into His
own Kingdom and glory."
 
It is important that our behavior as believers in Jesus Christ reflects
the priviledge we were called to bear.  We are to walk not as swaggering
gang members and hoodlums, but as sons and daughters of the King of 
kings and Lord of lords.  We walk not as entitled, but as priviledged.
We did not earn the right to do this- it was given to us by God.  In
fact we do not walk because we are worthy, but as we are worthy.  That
worthiness was not innately within us;  God gave us that worthiness.
 
When you walk, how do you walk?  Do you walk as worthy?  Begin focusing
on those steps today.
 
 
From 29 March 2001

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Devotion for Today "Look Right before Left" 2 Corinthians 10:8-18

Devotion for Today  "Look Right before Left" 2 Corinthians 10:8-18 
 
The first of the week I paid a visit to Spurgeon's College in the south of London with
two American ministry collegues.  Perhaps these men had fully examined their faith, got their
house in order, and knew where they stood with the Lord because they had elected me to drive
on that venture.  True, I lived in that country for over four years- but that did not mean
I knew how to drive there.  Actually I must admit I did not do all that badly with a right-
hand-drive vehicle, shifting the gears with my left hand and trying my best to remember to
stay to the left.  Actually I only made one mistake- a mistake that could have been fatal
had not the Lord intervened miraculously on our behalf.  As we were looking for the 
entrance to Spurgeon's College, I passed the entrance and realized that I needed to go back.
As there was no place to turn around in the street, I made a left turn off the main road to
make a block around.  Someone suggested that I should just turn around in a drive way.  I 
didn't want to tell him that I had trouble getting the car in reverse, so I made another
left and then another until I came to the top of the hill to turn right and recover the
error which I had made.  On this steep hill I was riding the clutch and after I stopped at
the stop sign, the car stalled. The excitement of the thought of rolling backwards down the
hill behind me threw me into a momentary lapse once I got the car started again.  I looked
left for oncoming traffic.  Not seeing any I turned right when suddenly an older model
Vauxhall station wagon containing an elderly gent and his wife was barreling down the hill.
When I turned into their path my passengers went pale.  Fortunately the other driver 
managed to stop, but not without a severe blast on the horn and flailing his hands in the
air.  His wife scowled at me, and shook her finger at me as if to say, "No, no, no, no, no!"
My fear turned to embarrassment and I instantly apologized to my crew who had dived under
their seats.  
 
"I'm so sorry!" I said, "I looked left when I should have been looking right!  I know I
must have scared that poor old couple to death!"
 
"That's all right," said Bob Bade, European Baptist Convention's Education Director, "You
got their blood pumping!  That's probably the only exercize they will have gotten all day
long!"
 
We had a good laugh about that and drove on and parked safely at the College.  I was very
glad to have learned a good lesson- when driving in Britain, look right before left.
 
In our devotional text today we read in 2 Corinthians 10:8-18 
8.  For though I should boast somewhat more of our authority, which the Lord hath given us 
for edification, and not for your destruction, I should not be ashamed:
 9.  That I may not seem as if I would terrify you by letters.
 10.  For his letters, say they, are weighty and powerful; but his bodily presence is weak, 
and his speech contemptible.
 11.  Let such an one think this, that, such as we are in word by letters when we are absent
, such will we be also in deed when we are present.
 12.  For we dare not make ourselves of the number, or compare ourselves with some that 
commend themselves: but they measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves 
among themselves, are not wise.
 13.  But we will not boast of things without our measure, but according to the measure of
 the rule which God hath distributed to us, a measure to reach even unto you.
 14.  For we stretch not ourselves beyond our measure, as though we reached not unto you: 
for we are come as far as to you also in preaching the gospel of Christ:
 15.  Not boasting of things without our measure, that is, of other men's labours; but 
having hope, when your faith is increased, that we shall be enlarged by you according to our rule abundantly,
 16.  To preach the gospel in the regions beyond you, and not to boast in another man's line
 of things made ready to our hand.
 17.  But he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.
 18.  For not he that commendeth himself is approved, but whom the Lord commendeth.
 
When God tells us something in His Word, it is not for our destruction; it is for our 
edification- if not for our survival.  To ignore what He says can be as deadly as my forgetting
to look right before left.  Those who represent God, like Paul, are often received and 
treated with disdain because man's pride does not like another telling him what he ought to
do.  That was the attitude of the Corinthian believers.  Perhaps they understood already 
that they were in error, but they didn't like Paul telling them about it so they chafed at
what he had to say with a passion.  They didn't like this little man preaching at them and
it "got their blood pumping," too.  But Paul reminded them that he represented God when he
wrote and when he spoke and not himself.  He came in the preaching of the gospel of Christ.
 
When others speak to us whom we know are representing God we ought not to tune out what they
say.  They know they are not perfect just as we know we are not perfect.  They do not 
compare themselves to you or think they are better than you are in their stature, wisdom, 
or in faith.  Receiving God's Word with humility might be embarrassing for the moment, but
we will recover and learn from the lessons that God wants to teach us so that we wont make
the same mistake again because the next time our failure might well be fatal.
 
What about you today?  Are you pleased to receive the instruction that God purposes to tell
you?  Open your heart and you will have a blessed day.

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

05 June 2007 Devotion for Today "Still Kickin' " Job 19:25-26

05 June 2007  Devotion for Today  “Still Kickin’ ”  Job 19:25-26

 

            The other night we had an event at our church in which an elderly gent from another church attended.  I greeted him and asked him how he was doing.  Well past 90 years of age, the man retorted, “I’m still kickin!”

            I grinned admiringly at his comment.  He had seen a lot in his 90 plus years.  A lot of joy, and I am sure, a lot of heartache, too.  Yet he still goes on- a little tottery perhaps, but he’s still moving.  If I ever live to be that age, I wonder if I will be able to get around as well?  I’ll be happy enough to still have my mind, much less still get around at that age.

            Today I am also reminded of another individual who encountered perhaps more than his fair share of disappointment.  His name was Job.  Nearly everyone knows about the sufferings of Job, and the bitter disappointments and heartaches he experienced in life.  Yet when we read about the losses of Job’s children, his wealth, his health, and all of his possessions, it causes our sufferings and disappointments to look very tame, comparatively.  In spite of all Job went through, including the temptation to curse God and die, Job was still able to say in Job 19:25-26, “I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God.”

            I heard a preacher tell a story that teaches us to persevere through life's difficulties. He told the story of two frogs that were hopping through a barn where a farmer was milking a cow. When the farmer finished, he got up to care for one of the animals and left the bucket of milk sitting on the floor of the barn. The two frogs came upon the bucket and wondered what was inside. One suggested that the other hop into the bucket to investigate.

            "I'm not going alone," he replied. "Very well," responded the other frog, "I'll jump in if you will."

            Well, they both took a big leap and landed in the milk. At first, they were splashing around and having a great time until they realized they couldn't get out of the pail. Then, as they began to tire from swimming around, one of the frogs said, "We might as well give up. We're never going to get out of here!"

            "Oh no," said the other frog. "We can't give up now. We have to keep on trying."

            "Not me," said the first frog. "I've had enough. I'm going to give up." Down he went into the milk and drowned.

            The other frog kept splashing and kicking, splashing and kicking, until finally, to his amazement, the milk began to curdle, and after a while it became a plug of butter. Then the frog hopped from the top of that plug of butter and jumped out of the bucket.

The moral to this story is that  a child of God never gives up. He keeps on kicking because he knows God is in control. And God will always make a way out for those who trust Him and never give up.  So if one day you find yourself like those frogs, in over your head, know that your if your faith is solid, you will get your feet on it eventually, and God will deliver you from it, or through it.  Are you still kickin?

 

            Have a blessed day!

 

 

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

Monday, June 04, 2007

Devotion for Today "Turn the Light On!" Matthew 5:13-16

Devotion for Today  "Turn the Light On!"  Matthew 5:13-16
 
A few years ago I was in Cumberland, Maryland at a men's clothing store
shopping for a new suit when a severe thunderstorm hit.  The florescent
lighting fixtures blinked, hissed, and then everything went dark.  That
would not have been so bad, but just before that, I had entered one of
the changing stalls to try on a new pair of trousers.  This happened
right after I had slipped out of my jeans and I had not yet been able 
to try on the new ones.  All of a sudden, there was total darkness in
a tiny cubicle with a pair of pants down around my ankles. The emergency
lights came on in the store, but from where I was, I could not see it.
Perhaps it was a good thing that I could not move out of my confinement, because
I might have panicked and tried to run, falling on my face because of
the position of the new pair of pants.  So I decided to stand still.
The darkness lasted only about thirty seconds, but it seemed like an
eternity to me in that stall. When the lights came back on, I exited
(not before pulling up the pair of pants) and acted as though nothing
had happened. 
 
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus talks a lot about light and darkness.
We don't think that much about the light, and often take it for granted
until we don't have it.  Then we find ourselves in a desperate situation.
That is why Jesus exorts us to let our lights shine as much as possible,
because while we might be able to see the "light", others might be in
desperate darkness.  Jesus says: "You are the light of the world.  A city
that is set on a hill cannot be hidden.  Nor do they light a lamp and
put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all
who are in the house.  Let your light so shine before men, that they
might see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven."  Have
a blessed day!

 

 

Rev. Jeffery C. Russell
Salem Baptist Church
Elizabeth City, NC
jefferyrussell@embarqmail.com

jcrussell@liberty.edu

 

Church website:   http://25621.lifewaylink.com
Devotion Archives:
http://www.msnusers.com/DevotionforToday

 

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