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Daily Bread

Bedlam

The Philippine Star

My Word . . . shall not return to Me void, but it shall accomplish what I please. — Isaiah 55:11

 

Do I really have to read Leviticus?” A young executive asked me this in earnest as we talked about the value of spending time in reading the Bible. “The Old Testament seems so boring and difficult,” he said.

Many Christians feel this way. The answer, of course, is that the Old Testament, including Leviticus, offers background and even contrasts essential to grasping the New Testament. While Isaiah challenges us to seek God (55:6), he also promises us that God’s Word accomplishes what the Lord wants it to accomplish (v.11). Scripture is alive and powerful (Heb. 4:12), and it is useful to teach, correct, and instruct us (2 Tim. 3:16). God’s Word never returns void (Isa. 55:8-11), but sometimes it is not until later that God’s words come to mind as we need them.

The Holy Spirit uses the truths we’ve stored from reading or memorization, and He helps us to apply them at just the right time. For example, Leviticus 19:10-11 speaks of business competition and even caring for the poor. The Spirit can remind us of these concepts, and we can use them, if we’ve spent time reading and contemplating that passage.

Reading the Bible turns our minds into storehouses through which the Spirit can work. That’s a great reason to read Leviticus and the other 65 books as well.                              — Randy Kilgore

       

Lord, I want to learn to love Your Word more and more. Teach me and help me to hide it in my heart so that I can live it, be encouraged by it, and help others to know it too. Amen.

 

 

 

To understand the Word of God, rely on the Spirit of God.

 

 

Those who leave the paths of uprightness . . . rejoice in doing evil, and delight in the perversity of the wicked.

                                 â€” Proverbs 2:13-14

 

England’s Imperial War Museum is housed in a building in London that was a former location of the Bethlem Royal Hospital, a care center for the mentally ill. The hospital was commonly known as “Bedlam,” which gradually became a term used to describe scenes of chaos and madness.

It’s ironic that the War Museum would occupy Bedlam’s former location. As you walk through the museum, in addition to stories of heroism and sacrifice in wartime, you also find bone-chilling accounts of the madness of man’s inhumanity to man. From the exhibits about modern genocide and ethnic cleansing to the one on the Holocaust, it is evil on display.

Solomon observed mankind’s propensity for evil, describing it as those who “rejoice in doing evil, and delight in the perversity of the wicked” (Prov. 2:14). While this may describe much of the world around us, followers of Jesus have a refreshingly different way to handle life. Paul challenged us: “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good” (Rom. 12:21). Christ-centered actions such as living morally (v.17), making peace (v.18), and treating our enemies with care (v.20) will affect the world for good.

If each of us were to live as a reflection of God’s love, perhaps there would be a lot less bedlam.       — Bill Crowder

 

The godless and sinful everywhere

Are objects of God’s love and care,

But they will always know

hopeless despair

Unless His love with them we share.                                       â€” D. De Haan

 

READ: Romans 12:9-21

 

A despairing world needs caring Christians. 

 

 

The Bible in one year:

• Psalms 26-28

• Acts 22

BETHLEM ROYAL HOSPITAL

BILL CROWDER

DE HAAN

DO I

GOD

HOLY SPIRIT

IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM

MANY CHRISTIANS

OLD TESTAMENT

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