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Sacred Whispers Devotional

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Intoxication of Success
Jan 17 3:45 AM

Intoxication of Success

Jan 17 3:45 AM
Jan 17 3:45 AM

Intoxication of Success

Nor will we say anymore to the work of our hands, ‘You are our gods.’

Hosea 14:3

In our culture, it is all too easy to become consumed with success. Society teaches us to strive to make the most money, to build the biggest houses, and to drive the fanciest cars. We measure success, not by the quality of a person’s character or the impact they make in the lives of others, not even by their piety and devotion to God. Instead, we measure success by the accumulation of material things. Sadly, this is a reality not only in the broader culture, but it is a reality in much of the church culture as well. We often, in great error, equate riches with blessings.

This constant striving for material wealth is unhealthy in its own right, but it also leads to a dangerous consequence—the elevation of the “blessing” over the One who makes the blessing possible. This pattern was seen often in the history of the nation of Israel. Israel, of course, was God’s chosen people. They had a special relationship with God and were instructed to worship God alone. But time after time, they turned their worship from the one true God and worshipped idols made of wood and stone.

To be sure, it is God who gives us the power to create wealth, but we should never worship the success that God has made possible. When we do this, we have, in effect, replaced the image of the one true God with the image of our own success.  This condition is often manifested in pride and arrogance, and we know that pride comes right before the moment we fall. 

It is a dangerous thing for us to get to a place where we worship the things we have made, rather than worshipping the God who made the universe.  Let us focus our worship exclusively on God our Father and watch our relationship with Him flourish into a loving harmony between our soul and His heart.

Faithfulness Over Everything
Jan 16 3:43 AM

Faithfulness Over Everything

Jan 16 3:43 AM
Jan 16 3:43 AM

Faithfulness Over Everything

“He who is faithful in what is least is faithful also in much; and he who is unjust in what is least is unjust also in much. Therefore if you have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if you have not been faithful in what is another man’s, who will give you what is your own? “No servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.”

Luke 16:10–13

Christ requires faithfulness. He demands that His disciples are faithful to Him and His commands. Christ spells out in this parable that we have a responsibility to be faithful, even in what we deem to be the smallest of matters. We can’t think to ourselves or seek to convince ourselves that faithfulness in small things doesn’t matter, because it does. Christ said if you’re faithful in very small matters, then you will be faithful in larger matters. So often, we want to be trusted by the Lord with more, but we refuse to be faithful over what we have already been entrusted with. We have to train ourselves to live faithfully in all of life.

When we look back at this parable, we see that the manager was unfaithful over his master’s resources. This unfaithfulness led to his unrighteous action in stealing from his master by forging debtors’ notes that were owed to his master. In doing this, he proves himself unable to be trusted with anything of his own. The problem with the manager was that he was seeking to use his master’s resources, to which he had full access, to serve both his master and himself.  This is exactly what unfaithfulness looks like—self-service, selfishness, self-centered ambition, etc.  What he was attempting is impossible, and that is Christ’s point. You simply cannot serve the Lord and yourself at the same time.

But how many times do we seek to serve Christ and something or someone else? We try to straddle the fence, as if that’s possible, but we are well aware that it isn’t. We need to steady our devotion to the Lord and make sure we use our resources as they were meant to be used, according to His definition.  If we are unfaithful in doing this, we place ourselves at risk of creating an idol that displaces the Lord in our lives.

I encourage you to be faithful.  No matter how heavy or light the responsibility, be faithful. Faithfulness always has its rewards.  The LORD will look upon our faithfulness, and honor it with even greater responsibilities.

Divine Interruption
Jan 15 3:41 AM

Divine Interruption

Jan 15 3:41 AM
Jan 15 3:41 AM

Divine Interruption

Then Mary said, “Behold the maidservant of the Lord! Let it be to me according to your word.” And the angel departed from her.

Luke 1:38

Luke 1:26-38 lays out the incredible miraculous story of how The Messiah was to be born.  When the angel Gabriel appeared and made this announcement to Mary, this was indeed good news! Mary, a young Jewish woman, like all pious Jews, would have been expecting his arrival.  Although the angel did not specifically say Messiah is coming, she would have recognized the things that the angel proclaimed about the child were similar to what Samuel prophesied to King David in 2 Sam. 7:9–16.  Like David, she would have known this was Messiah. And oh what a privilege-she was chosen as his mother!  O blessed was she among women!

I want to call your attention to a little detail in v. 26-27, “In the sixth month, the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David…”   Did you catch it? Mary was betrothed or engaged to be married at the time that the angel appeared. We have to understand that an unplanned pregnancy, even with the Messiah, had serious implications for her anticipated future and her very life. According to the Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, betrothal is “the act of engagement for marriage in Bible times and was as binding as marriage…Betrothal and marriage comprised a moral and spiritual principle for the home and society. The penalty under the law of Moses for disrupting this principle by adultery, rape, fornication, or incest was death.”

Let me also call your attention to Mary’s response. V. 38 notes, “And Mary said, ‘Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.” Wait, what?!  In those few moments Mary, considering the implications of this announcement, said YES!  Yes, to the possibility of  ridicule and shame on herself and her family for being unmarried and pregnant; yes to the possible loss of her relationship with Joseph and being single the rest of her life; yes, to the possibility of even death for her seeming betrayal of her betrothal commitment.  She said yes to this divine interruption!

Maybe you, like Mary, are experiencing a divine interruption, something that has come out of the blue and has seriously disrupted your life as you knew it. Perhaps it’s a sickness or injury, an unplanned pregnancy, a career dream that just will not happen, or maybe even a worldwide Pandemic!

I have often been inspired by Mary’s response to the angel. Obviously to her, the sacrifice to receive this interruption was well worth it.  Just think, her obedience allowed her to mother the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords. Her sacrifice allowed God’s will to be done and she was blessed in the process. Let her example encourage you to surrender when divine interruptions show up. God will be glorified and you will be blessed in the process.

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Day 18
Jan 18 12:04 AM

Day 18

Jan 18 12:04 AM
Jan 18 12:04 AM

Helicopter pilot, Ray Asgar, flew over Gilcrest, Texas, and took a photo of a single little yellow house belonging to Warren and Pam Adams. What is remarkable about this house is that it is the only house left standing after Hurricane Ike completely demolished nearly every home and business in this small, once-thriving community.

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Day 17
Jan 17 12:31 AM

Day 17

Jan 17 12:31 AM
Jan 17 12:31 AM

The Apostle Paul uses an illustration in 2 Timothy 4:7 reminiscent of competing in the Roman Olympic games in order to demonstrate the Christian believer’s life of faithfulness. He says, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.”

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Day 16
Jan 16 12:48 AM

Day 16

Jan 16 12:48 AM
Jan 16 12:48 AM

From time to time, I like to tackle do-it-yourself (DIY) projects. I’ve done simple things such as replacing light fixtures, ceiling fans, and plumbing hardware. I’ve done slightly more complex tasks: building bookshelves, window boxes, and raised garden beds. I’ve also done more advanced projects, including building a shed and finishing our basement.

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Day 15
Jan 15 12:14 AM

Day 15

Jan 15 12:14 AM
Jan 15 12:14 AM

Have you ever heard the saying, “Pressure will burst a pipe”? For those of you who have never heard this saying, it’s a metaphor that suggests that when you’re carrying a lot of stress, feeling overwhelmed with the excess negative weight of life, and not taking care of yourself, the pressure of life can break the strongest person down. Applying enough pressure to the strongest substance can break it down and crush it. However, today we are talking about a different kind of pressure. 

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Day 14
Jan 14 12:50 AM

Day 14

Jan 14 12:50 AM
Jan 14 12:50 AM

Charles Dickens wrote his famous book, “A Tale of Two Cities”, by beginning it with the tension of contradictory realities existing within the same historical era. He writes, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times… it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”

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