Uncertainty

I know the thoughts that I think toward you

Yet To Be #193

The old year exits while a new one enters.
The future holds promise, disappointment, sorrow, or joy.
Uncertainty looms large.
We bow blinded by the experiences of the past.
Toil to seek the best possible outcome as we stumble aimlessly in the dark.
Yet, there is hope.
Hope which rises, not compressed, not stamped out.
It stands eternal in our hearts.
Anticipation brightens the eyes and lightens the path.
When there is hope, there is life.
When there is life, there is God, the Master, the Creator, our heavenly Father.

For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end. (KJV) or to give you a future and a hope. (ESV) Jeremiah 29:11

Ask God Without Fear

He invites you to call out to Him in the day of trouble.

Yet To Be #192

Oh, why do you fear?
Why is your heart so cast down?
Did He not say ask anything?
He invites you to call out to Him in the day of trouble.
He wants you to turn to Him with all your heart and humble yourself, so shall you find rest in the time of need.
God said it.
We ought to believe it and take Him at His word.
He hears all your prayers and answers them all on time.
Ask and see if He will not open the heavens and pour out a blessing just for you.


(reference: Psalm 43:5, Jeremiah 33:3, James 4:10, Proverbs 3: 5-6)

Hope in Prayer

Ask anything in the Lord’s name

The First Five – More About the Bible: Exodus Part 5 Continues…

The bondage of the Israelites in Egypt

Yet To Be #191

Exodus

  • The second book of the law can be referred to as the going out or departure
  • God is the Deliverer
  • In the Hebrew language Exodus is called We’elleh Shemot
  • Written approximately 1445 BC

Important Events

  • The bondage of the Israelites in Egypt, Chapter 1:1-12:36
  • The birth of Moses and his rise as the Law Giver Chapter 12:37 to 14:31
  • The ten plagues of Egypt
  • The institution of the Passover
  • The journey into the wilderness begins
  • The parting of the Red Sea
  • The Israelites in the Sinai, 15:1-40:38
    • Manna and quails, Chapter 16
    • 10 Commandments, Chapter 20
    • All About the Tabernacle, Chapter 25 to 31
    • The priests and their duties, Chapter 28 to 29
    • The Golden Calf and Who is on the Lord’s side? Chapter 32
    • The Tabernacle is Reared up, Chapter 40
    • God’s glory fills the tabernacle Chapter 40

Faithfulness of God.

If we believe not, yet he abides faithful. 2 Timothy 2:13

God’s Promise: Love Eternal

He will give unto them beauty for ashes

Yet To Be # 190

As night gives way to the dawn, so too our God turns sorrow into joy, ashes into beauty.
He will never leave us to suffer in pain to suffer alone.
He will not forsake us but will remain constant through tribulations.
Ours is not a God made with hands or designed by human imagination.
He is real.
He is the true and living God who sits sovereign on his throne.
Nothing escapes him.
His children are not lost.
He comforts us all and loves us equally.
Great is his love and his faithfulness.

And the Lord shall guide you continually, and satisfy your soul in drought, and satisfy your bones: and you shall be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not. Isaiah 58:11

the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither his ear heavy that it cannot hear. Isaiah 59:1

To appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that he might be glorified. Isaiah 61:3

God’s Promises in Action: Confidence

The Lord God is my strength.

Yet To Be # 189

Although the fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines; the labour of the olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls. Habakkuk 3:17

Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. Habakkuk 3: 18

The Prophet speaks with confidence though there is nothing, and everything around is dry and desolate, he will praise the Lord.

The Lord God is my strength, and he will make my feet like hinds’ feet, and he will make me to walk upon my high places. To the chief singer on my stringed instruments. Habakkuk 3:19


He will surrender to God and let Him guide his feet like hinds’ feet. The feet of a hind a female deer is sure and solid, swift, and beautiful. Their steps are even. The back legs follow the front legs in perfect symmetry and precision. There is no faltering, no slipping because the front legs are wonderfully pivotal as guides for the entire body.

Like the ancient prophet Habakkuk, I have confidence in my God. If I slip, He guides me back onto the right path. In those high places of worship, I am light and graceful as a gazelle while I sing my praises and adoration to God, the highest

More About the Bible: Part 4

Let us make man in our image.

Yet To Be #187

Genesis

Author: Moses

Written: between 1446 and 1406 BC

Details:

  • first book of the Hebrew Bible called bereshit or in the beginning and the first book of the Christian Bible.
  • Genesis is the Greek word meaning origin or beginning.
  • First book of the Torah or the Law
  • Primeval history
  • Ancestral history

First Line sets the tone of the entire book, “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.” Genesis 1:1.

The Primeval history consists of relationships. The first relationship presented and most important, is the relationship between God and the Son as mapped out in the name of God or Elohim. The root El translated from Hebrew into English for God, the first name of God as seen in Genesis 1:1. Elohim is the plural for God. The Hebrews of the Old Testament had only one God who was Yahweh. They believed in monotheism which is the worship of one God. As Elohim is plural and Eloah is singular, this is the first evidence that the Son was with God the Father in eternity past before the creation.
And God said, “let us make man in our image, after our likeness.” (Genesis 1:26) In the beginning, before time began, He was not alone but, is speaking with someone else.
Then there is the relationship between God and man and the relationship between man and beasts and then man and woman as seen in the creation story. (Chapters 1- 11)
The ancestral history details the rise of the nation of Israel as God’s chosen people and God’s covenant to Abraham (the patriarch) and his descendants. (Chapters 12-50)

Overview

  • Creation and the fall, (so-called original sin, casting out of the Garden, first promise of God, first murder and first murderer, the story of Cain and Abel) 1:1-5:32
  • Noah and his descendants, (the Ark, the Deluge, tower of Babel, dividing of language) 6:1-11:26
  • Abram (Abraham) and his descendants, (command to leave the Ur of the Chaldees, Covenant of God with Abram, Melchizedek the King of Salem and high priest of El Elyon is introduced, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, Lot’s Wife, the birth of Moab and Ammon, Ishmael of Haggai, Abraham’s last test, the sacrifice of Isaac and Abraham’s belief in the promise of God and belief in resurrection is introduced) 11:27-25:18
  • Story of Isaac, Jacob, and Esau, (stolen birthright, Jacob, Leah, and Rachel, birth of Edom, the twelve sons of Jacob, brotherly jealousy, coat of many colors)25:19-36:43
  • Story of Joseph, (coat of many colors destroyed, Joseph sold into slavery, Joseph becomes governor, reunion of all the brothers and forgiveness, Jacob journeys to Egypt, the families all go down to Egypt and Joseph’s death) 37:1-50:26

More About the Bible: Part 3

The first five books of the Old Testament are called the Pentateuch.

Yet To Be # 186

The sixty-six books of the Bible are categorized into nine classifications:

  • The Pentateuch
  • History
  • Poetry
  • Prophets
  • Gospels
  • History
  • Pauline Epistles
  • General Epistles
  • Prophecy – Apocalypse

The first five books of the Old Testament are called the Pentateuch which title comes from the Greek Penta meaning, five and teuchos meaning scroll. Also known as the Law or the books of Moses, the lawgiver. In Jewish tradition, these five books make up what is called the Torah. The books begin with Genesis that chronicles the Creation, the covenant with Abraham and his descendants to Deuteronomy, ending with the death of Moses. Many scholars discuss the authorship of these books with the consensus that Moses composed them.

More About the Bible Leading to the Book of John: Part 1

Yet To Be #184

More about the Bible
The Bible is the most influential book named in the world. Translated into every known existing language, it is still read daily by large numbers of people around the world. The Bible is more than a so-called religious book filled with instructions for life and commandments to follow, it has changed lives, laid out foundations of many governments to follow, it is the basis on which judicial and educational institutions around the globe dedicate their code of conduct. In general, it chronicles the ancient promises to the Jewish people and their activities, but further historically, it is sometimes used as an anthropological bridge to help verify lost gaps of time for the dating of ancient events and people when no other script is accurate enough.
Whether you are a true Believer in God and his only son Jesus Christ or not, the Bible is the Word of God and is given “by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.” The Bible is not just a book, but it tells God’s plans for mankind from the beginning of creation right to the future when the Son of God shall reign forever.