Monday, April 27, 2020

DAILY PRAYERS & BLESSINGS - APRIL 26



APRIL 26

As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same
one to another,  as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.
1 Peter 4:10

Please let me help you

however I can.

Long ages ago

it was God’s plan

for me to serve,

to love, and to share,

helping ease another’s 

burden of care.

So let me be 

God’s loving gift to you

because in serving others,

I am blessed, too.  



UNFAMILIAR ROADS

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

UNFAMILIAR ROADS

READ:  Psalm 119:105-112

Teach me Your way, O Lord, and lead me
in a smooth path.  Psalm 27:11

Trouble often lies ahead when we go down unfamiliar roads.  

I know a teenager who decided to take a different way to work one morning.  As he tried to navigate unfamiliar city streets, he went through an intersection without seeing the red octagonal sign that said “Stop.”

With in a few seconds, he did stop, but not for a stop sign.  He was pulled over by a helpful gentleman in a police car who reminded him that he should have stopped.  It cost him eighty dollars to learn about unfamiliar roads.

What would have happened if a guide had accompanied this young driver?  What if someone had been next to him to tell him which way to go and to alert him to danger ahead?  He wouldn’t be out the eighty dollars, that’s for sure.

In life, we often have to walk down unfamiliar paths-paths that may feel threatening.  So how do we do that without making costly mistakes?

We take Someone along who knows the way.  The psalmist recognized that Guide when he wrote, “Lead me, O Lord, in Your righteousness…make Your way straight before my face” (Psalm 5:8).

Does your path today seem unfamiliar?  Ask your Father to travel the road with you.   DB

Take Jesus with you as your faithful guide,
You cannot fail when He is at your side;
You may encounter trouble on life’s road,
But He will help to lift your heavy load. -Hess

The Spirit within us will faithfully guide us. 



OUR FATHER SINGS

Our Father Sings

He . . . will rejoice over you with singing.
Zephaniah 3:17


Dandy loves encouraging people by singing to them. One day we were having lunch at his favorite restaurant, and he noticed the waitress was having a hard day. He asked her a few questions and then started quietly singing a catchy, upbeat song to cheer her up. “Well, kind sir, you just made my day. Thank you so much,” she said with a big smile, as she wrote down our food order.

When we open the book of Zephaniah, we find that God loves to sing. The prophet masterfully drew a picture with his words in which he described God as a musician who loves to sing for and with His children. He wrote that God “will take great delight in you; in his love he will no longer rebuke you, but will rejoice over you with singing” (3:17). God promised to be present forever with those who have been transformed by His mercy. But it doesn’t stop there! He invites and joins in with His people to “be glad and rejoice with all your heart” (v. 14).

We can only imagine the day when we’ll be together with God and with all those who’ve put their trust in Jesus as their Savior. How amazing it will be to hear our heavenly Father sing songs for and with us and experience His love, approval, and acceptance.
By Estera Pirosca Escobar

REFLECT & PRAY
Heavenly Father, we know that because of our allegiance to Jesus, You not only accept us but celebrate with us and delight in us as Your children. Thank You for Your love.

How can you celebrate God’s love for you? What song is He singing over you and with you today?

Your gift changes lives. Help us share God’s love with millions every day.

INSIGHT
It’s not uncommon for Bible readers to scratch their heads when they encounter the brief but powerful prophecy of Zephaniah—the ninth among the twelve shorter prophetic writings (Minor Prophets) of the Old Testament. Zephaniah (whose name means “the Lord hides” or “he whom the Lord hides”) prophesied during the kingship of Josiah (640-609 bc; Zephaniah 1:1). The dominant theme is one of far-reaching judgment—judgment that included God’s people: “ ‘When I destroy all mankind on the face of the earth,’ declares the Lord, ‘I will stretch out my hand against Judah and against all who live in Jerusalem’ ” (1:3-4). The term “day of the Lord” (1:7)—a time of widespread divine reckoning against evil—is used seven times in the book, more than in any other Old Testament prophet. However, the book ends on a note of hope and rescue (3:14-20).

To gain an overview of the book of Zephaniah visit Christian University: Old Testament and scroll down to the video on Zephaniah. Arthur Jackson



DAILY PRAYERS & BLESSINGS - APRIL 25



APRIL 25

And thou shalt be secure, because there is hope; yea, thou shalt
dig about thee, and thou shalt take they rest in safety.
Job 11:18

Almighty God, I know you are supremely faithful!  Today I ask you to restore hope to the hopeless.  Plant seeds of hope in hearts that have lain fallow for so long.  Send down showers of hope on those struggling with illness, persecution, or difficult relationships.  Hope that comes from you in hope with the power to sustain us when nothing around us seems the least bit hopeful.


NOTHING HIDDEN

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

NOTHING HIDDEN

READ:  1 Timothy 5:24-25

Some men’s sins are clearly evident…. Likewise,
the good worlds of some…and those that are otherwise
cannot be hidden.  1 Timothy 5:24-25

A woman had been maligned and misrepresented by an envious coworker.  She was frustrated because her attempts to confront the coworker in private had only made matters worse.  So she decided to swallow her pride and let the matter go.  She said, “I’m glad the Lord knows the true situation.”  She expressed a profound truth that both warns and comforts.

Paul pointed out that nothing can be concealed forever (1 Timothy 5:24-25).  This serves as a solemn warning.  For example, a news report told about a highly respected person who was arrested for crimes he had been secretly committing for years.

Yet the fact that nothing can be hidden can also be a great consolation.  I have known people who never held a position of honor, nor were they recognized for their service.  After they died, however, I learned that in their own quiet way they had touched many lives with their kind words and helpful deeds.  There foot works could not remain hidden.

We can hide nothing from God-that’s a solemn warning!  But it’s also a great comfort, for our heavenly Father knows about every encouraging smile, every kind word, and every loving deed done in Jesus’s name.  And someday He will reward us.   HVL

Neither vice nor virtue can remain a secret forever.
  


RUN TOWARD CHALLENGE

Run Toward Challenge

He looked and saw the hills full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.
2 Kings 6:17


Tom chased the young men who were stealing his poor friend’s bike. He didn’t have a plan. He only knew he needed to get it back. To his surprise, the three thieves looked his way, dropped the bike and backed away. Tom was both relieved and impressed with himself as he picked up the bike and turned around. That’s when he saw Jeff, his muscular friend who had been trailing close behind.

Elisha’s servant panicked when he saw his town surrounded by an enemy army. He ran to Elisha, “Oh no, my lord! What shall we do?” Elisha told him to relax. “Those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” Then God opened the servant’s eyes, and he “saw the hills full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha” (vv. 15-17).

You may also find yourself in some dicey situations. You may have to risk your reputation, and perhaps even your security, because you’re determined to do what’s right. You may lose sleep wondering how it will all turn out. Remember, you’re not alone. You don’t have to be stronger or smarter than the challenge before you. Jesus is with you, and His power is greater than all rivals. Today, many believers are on the front lines in the battle against the Covid-19 virus. May we pray for them and others who are running toward the challenge. Ask yourself Paul’s question, “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31). Really, who? No one. Run toward your challenge, with God.
By Mike Wittmer

REFLECT & PRAY
Help me, Jesus, to truly see that You’re bigger than any problem facing me today. Thank You for Your everlasting presence! For help, read Overcoming Worry .

What wakes you up at night? How can you give your worries to God?

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SCRIPTURE INSIGHT

Today’s passage describes the fascinating reality of a world with both a visible physical dimension and an invisible (most of the time) spiritual dimension. The servant panicked because he couldn’t see the army that surrounded them—“horses and chariots of fire all around” (2 Kings 6:17). This contrasts to Elisha’s calm response as he asked God to open the servant’s eyes. The servant’s response to his new vision isn’t recorded. The author shows the reader, without telling us specifically, what can happen when we focus on only one part of reality. When we’re afraid, we need to remember that we don’t always see how God is helping and protecting us. J.R. Hudberg

Friday, April 24, 2020

DAILY PRAYERS & BLESSINGS - APRIL 24



APRIL 24

Thou wilt shew me the path of life:  in thy presence is fulness of
joy; at they right hand there are pleasures for evermore.
Psalm 16:11

God, shine your healing light down upon me today, for my path is filled with painful obstacles and my suffering fogs my vision.  Clear the challenges from the road I must walk upon, or at least walk with me as I confront them.  With you, I know I can endure anything.  With you, I know I can make it through to the other side, where joy awaits.  Amen.



GROUND SQUIRRELS

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

GROUND SQUIRRELS

READ:  Romans 8:27-39

I was at ease, but He has shattered me.
Job 16:12

Ground squirrels hibernate near our home during the winter, and they reappear when the snow melts in the spring.  My wife Carolyn and I enjoy watching them scurry back and forth from one hole to another, while others stand like tiny sentries watching for predators.

In mid-May, a man from a nearby golf course arrives on a little green tractor with a tank loaded with lethal gas.  The groundskeeper tells us that these little critters have to be eliminated because they dig holes in the fairways.  Some survive, but most do not.  It always makes us a little sad to see the tractor arrive.

If I could, I’d chase the little animals away.  I’d destroy their holes and force them to settle someplace else.  I’m sure they would resent my interference, but my actions would be solely for their good.

So it is with God.  He may break up our comfortable nests now and then, but behind every difficult change lies His love and eternal purpose.  He is not cruel or capricious; He is working for our ultimate good (Romans 8:28).  He wants us to be “conformed to the image of His Son” (v. 29) and to give us glorious enjoyment in heaven forever.  How then can we fear change when it comes from Someone whose love for us never changes? (vv. 38-39).   DHR

What tenderness the Father shows
To sinners in their pain!
He grants to them His strength to bear
The hurt that brings them gain. -DJD

God’s love can seem harsh until we view it with hindsight.   


DIVINELY ALIGNED

Divinely Aligned

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out!
Romans 11:33


I was deeply troubled and woke in the night to pace the floor and pray. Frankly, my attitude was not one of prayerful submission to God, but one of questioning and anger. Finding no release, I sat and stared out a large window at the night sky. I was unexpectedly drawn to focus on Orion’s Belt—those three perfectly arranged stars often visible on clear nights. I knew just enough about astronomy to understand that those three stars were hundreds of light years apart.

I realized the closer I could be to those stars, the less they would appear to be aligned. Yet from my distant perspective, they looked carefully configured in the heavens. At that moment, I realized I was too close to my life to see what God sees. In His big picture, everything is in perfect alignment.
The apostle Paul, as he completes a summary of the ultimate purposes of God, breaks into a hymn of praise (Romans 11:33-36). His words lift our gaze to our sovereign God, whose ways are beyond our limited ability to understand or trace (v. 33). Yet the One who holds all things together in the heavens and on earth is intimately and lovingly involved with every detail of our lives (Matthew 6:25-34; Colossians 1:16).

Even when things seem confusing, God’s divine plans are unfolding for our good and for God’s honor and glory.
By Evan Morgan

REFLECT & PRAY
Dear God, remind me that Your purposes and plans for my life are beyond my understanding, and help me rest in You.

What questions do you long for God to answer? How can you find rest and release through faith that His perspective of our lives is in perfect alignment with His ultimate purposes?

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SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
Paul wasn’t the first author in the Bible to speak of God’s inscrutability—that He’s beyond comprehension (Romans 11:33-36). Two thousand years earlier, Job (believed to have lived at about the time of Abraham) asked, “Can you fathom the mysteries of God? Can you probe the limits of the Almighty?” (Job 11:7). Isaiah also acknowledged that God is beyond human understanding (Isaiah 55:8-9). But God wanted us to know Him and said, “I will give them a heart to know me, that I am the Lord” (Jeremiah 24:7). Years later, John the apostle told us how we know Him: “No one has ever seen God, but the one and only Son, who is himself God and is in closest relationship with the Father, has made him known” (John 1:18). To know Jesus is to know God. Jesus said, “If you knew me, you would know my Father also” (8:19; see also 17:3). K. T. Sim


DAILY PRAYERS & BLESSINGS - APRIL 23



APRIL 23

I have made the earth, and created man upon
it: I, even my hands, have stretched out the 
heavens, and all their host have I commanded.
Isaiah 45:12


What “speaks” to you in nature?  The amazing variety of birds coming and going at your bird feeder?  The petals on those wildflowers by your mailbox? The smell of the air after a rainstorm?  The night sky?  Maybe you simply wonder how those weeds can find a way to thrive in the cracks of the sidewalk.  Whatever impresses us among the things God has made, it’s a part of his messaging system to us, inviting us to search him out and find relationship with him

MENTAL HEALTH, PROACTIVITY, AND THE PURSUIT OF A HIGHER GOAL

MENTAL HEALTH, PROACTIVITY, AND THE PURSUIT OF A HIGHER GOAL

For more great blogs as this one go to danielmannsword.blogspot.com


Whenever my family physician sees me, she asks, “Have you been exercising?” Why? If we don’t use it, we will lose it. This pertains to, not only our muscles, but also our health. Moreover, our practice requires an adequate reason for our practice. This is a general rule – We need to live proactively by pursuing meaningful goals, those in which we believe.

I was just told about a young atheist musician with stage IV cancer, who has just lost control of his bodily functions. However, right up until this point, he had been composing songs with the help of some caring people. His life has been a testimony to our need to be pursuing our goals, even till the end. When our eyes are focused ahead at our goals, it is easier to ignore the grasping and damning threats, which encircle us like flies.

However, the goals of this young musician will die with him, even if others will continue to enjoy his music. This is the dismal refrain sounded by King Solomon who had been searching for the meaning of life:

       I devoted myself to study and to explore by wisdom all that is done under heaven. What a heavy burden God has laid on men! I have seen all the things that are done under the sun; all of them are meaningless, a chasing after the wind. (Ecclesiastes 1:13-14)

Although Solomon had many pleasures and goals to occupy him, he hadn’t been convinced of their worth:

       The wise man has eyes in his head, while the fool walks in the darkness; but I came to realize that the same fate overtakes them both. Then I thought in my heart, "The fate of the fool will overtake me also. What then do I gain by being wise?" I said in my heart, "This too is meaningless." For the wise man, like the fool, will not be long remembered; in days to come both will be forgotten. Like the fool, the wise man too must die! (Ecclesiastes 2:14-16)

Did the young artist share Solomon’s lament, once the visitors departed? I wasn’t told. Despite Solomon’s great wisdom, he was unable to grasp what was most important – an eternal life follows this one, where all of our pain and confusion will be joyously addressed.

The Apostle Paul had written wisely that our goals and successes, if limited to this life, will not give us what we require:
       For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied….What do I gain if, humanly speaking, I fought with beasts at Ephesus? If the dead are not raised, “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die.”  (1 Corinthians 15:16-19, 32)


We long for goals that reach into eternity, the prize for which we have been created. Without this glorious expectation, our lives are crushed by the weights of life. The late atheist and mathematician and author of Why I am not a Christian, Bertrand Russell, had also been content with his own life. He was convinced that the hope of a heaven was both foolish and unnecessary. Instead, he was confident that he could chart his own life and navigate it to all the satisfying ports-of-call. However, some years later, the harsh realities of the narrow atheistic worldview caught up with him. Russell then conceded:

       "I wrote with passion and force because I really thought I had a gospel [by creating his own meaning]. Now I am cynical about the gospel because it won’t stand the test of life." (Os Guinness, The Journey, 106)

We were made for an indelible purpose and a higher meaning to support it. Otherwise, our fate is what the late lawyer, Clarence Darrow, had famously described:

       “The purpose of man is like the purpose of a pollywog—two wiggle along as far as he can without dying; or, to hang to life until death takes him.” https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/35745-the-purpose-of-man-is-like-the-purpose-of-a

All of this made me reconsider my own blessedness. I have been richly honored to serve my Creator and Lover, the Author of all truth and goodness. How this has dignified my life! As a result of this higher calling, I no longer need to compare myself with others, since God is my reference point. This has enabled me to rejoice with those who rejoice and to mourn with those who mourn.

Jesus also acknowledged that His goal and nourishment were to serve the Father (John 4:34). In this, He delighted (Isaiah 11:1-4).

I too delight in the fact that my life is nourished by God’s unfading meaning and purpose. Nothing can be more edifying, especially as we see our bodies decaying towards the grave, where worms will gnaw at them:

       So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal. (2 Corinthians 4:16-18)

Our eyes must continue to look towards our Prize.




New York School of the Bible: http://www.cbcnyc.org/nysb

A BITTER ATTITUDE

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

A BITTER ATTITUDE

READ:  Deuteronomy 32:44-52

Set your hearts on all the words which I testify among you today….
it is your life.  Deuteronomy 32:46-47

Great emphasis is being placed on living longer and better.  

Advances in medical science are making it possible for more and more people.  Yet in spite of this, none of us can avoid growing old.  One day aging will overtake all of us, and our bodies will shut down.

What is preventable, however, is an attitude of bitterness and regret as we grow older.  Look at the life of Moses. When he was 120 years old, he stood with the Israelites before they crossed the Jordan River and entered the Promised Land.  He could not go with them because he had disobeyed the Lord when in anger he struck the rock in the wilderness (Numbers 20:11-12; 24).

How easily Moses could have slipped into a self-pitying and resentful frame of mind.  Had he not borne the burden of a stubborn and stiff-necked people for forty years?  Had he not interceded for them time after time?  Yet at the end of his life he praised the Lord and urged a new generation of Israelites to obey Him (Deuteronomy 32:1-4, 45-47).

As we grow older, we can dwell on the failures and hardships of our past, or we can remember God’s faithfulness, accept His discipline, and keep looking to the future in faith.  It’s the only way to avoid a bitter attitude.   DJD

Though wrinkles and weakness come with age
And life with its stress takes its toll
Yet beauty and vigor can still be seen
When Jesus give peace to our soul. -DJD

We cannot avoid growing old, but we can avoid growing cold.   



THE SADDEST GOOSE

The Saddest Goose

Though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken.

Ecclesiastes 4:12


Why is there a football in the parking lot? I wondered. But as I got closer, I realized the greyish lump wasn’t a football: it was a goose—the saddest Canada goose I’d ever seen.

Geese often congregate on the lawn near my workplace in the spring and fall. But today there was only one, its neck arced back and its head tucked beneath a wing. Where are your buddies? I thought. Poor thing was all alone. It looked so lonely, I wanted to give it a hug. (Note: don’t try this.)
I’ve rarely seen a goose completely alone like my lonesome feathered friend. Geese are notably communal, flying in a V-formation to deflect the wind. They’re made to be together.

As human beings, we were created for community too (see Genesis 2:18). And in Ecclesiastes 4:10, Solomon describes how vulnerable we are when we’re alone: “Pity anyone who falls and has no one to help them up.” There’s strength in numbers, he added, for “though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken” (v. 12).

This is just as true for us spiritually as it is physically. God never intended for us to “fly” alone, vulnerably isolated. We need relationships with each other for encouragement, refreshment, and growth (see also 1 Corinthians 12:21). During these extraordinary days, due to the Covid-19 virus many of us have needed to practice physical distancing to help contain the disease. Phone calls, video chats, and texting have helped. But how we look forward to the time we can meet face-to-face with our local church families again!

Together, we can stand firm when life’s headwinds gust our way. Together.
By Adam R. Holz

REFLECT & PRAY
Loving God, help us to remember that You never meant us to fly solo, but together with our brothers and sisters in Christ. Today, help us to see and support someone in need of encouragement.

What kinds of circumstances tempt you to go it alone? Who do you know who could use a word of encouragement from you?

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SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
The author of Ecclesiastes uses practical illustrations that show the importance of companionship. Looking at verse 9, we learn that two “have a good return for their labor.” This verse points back to verse 8 which explains that it’s meaningless and miserable to toil for oneself. Not only do two have a better return, but two can help each other in multiple ways.



In the illustration of one person falling down, many commentators believe it refers to a serious fall (v. 10). In that time, it was common to dig pits and cover them to trap animals. Falling into one could cause injury and being left alone could be fatal. Additionally, roads were dangerous in the ancient Near East, and two could better defend themselves against robbers and other attacks. The author’s conclusion that “a cord of three strands is not quickly broken” (v. 12) emphasizes the need for companionship. Julie Schwab

DAILY PRAYERS & BLESSINGS - APRIL 22



APRIL 22

Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the
kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not enter therein.
And he tool them up in his arms, put his hands upon 
them, and blessed them.
Mark 10:15-16

O Lord, what a blessing children are in this world.  Thy bring such joy into our lives and are a precious composite of the et of our past and the hopes for the future.  Thank you for your love for all children, Lord.  Please guard them always.


POWER OUTAGE

GREAT IS THY FAITHFULNESS

365 DEVOTIONS FROM OUR DAILY BREAD

POWER OUTAGE

READ:  2 Timothy 1:6-12

God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love
and of a sound mind.  2 Timothy 1:7

The silence awakened me at 5:30 one morning.  There was no gentle whir of fan blades, no reassuring hum from the refrigerator downstairs.  A glance out the window confirmed that a power outage had left everyone in our neighborhood without electricity just as they would be preparing for work.

I realized that alarm clocks would not sound, and there would be no TV news.  Coffee makers, toasters, hair dryers, and many telephones would be useless.  Beginning a day without power was simply an inconvenience and a disruption of routine-but it felt like a disaster.

Then I thought of how often I rush into the day without spiritual power.  I spend more time reading the newspaper than the Bible.  Talk radio replaces listening to the Spirit.  I react to difficult people and circumstances in a spirit of fear rather than the spirit of “power and of love and of a sound mind”  that  God has given us (2 Timothy 1:7).  I must appear as spiritually unkempt as a person who dressed and groomed in the dark.

Our power outage was short-lived, but the lesson remains of my need to begin each day by seeking the Lord.  His strength is not for my success or well-being, but so that I will glorify Christ by living in His power.   DCM

There’s never a lack of God’s power
In prayer and reading His Word,
For Jesus in heaven is listening-
Your prayer will always be heard. - Hess

The human spirit fails us unless the Holy Sprit fills us.   



A WORLD OF PROVISION

A World of Provision

There is the sea, vast and spacious, teeming with creatures beyond number.
Psalm 104:25


It’s 2 a.m. when Nadia, a farmer of sea cucumbers, walks into a roped-off pen in the ocean shallows near her Madagascar village to harvest her “crop.” The early hour doesn’t bother her. “Life was very hard before I started farming,” she says. “I didn’t have any source of income.” Now, as a member of a marine-protection program called Velondriake, meaning “to live with the sea,” Nadia sees her income growing and stabilizing. “We thank God that this project appeared,” she adds.

It appeared in large part because God’s creation provided what their project needs—a natural supply of sea life. In praise of our providing God, the psalmist wrote, “He makes grass grow for the cattle, and plants for people to cultivate” (Psalm 104:14). As well, “there is the sea . . . teeming with creatures beyond number—living things both large and small” (v. 25).

It’s a wonder, indeed, how God’s wondrous creation also provides for us. The humble sea cucumber, for example, helps form a healthy marine food chain. Careful harvesting of sea cucumbers, in turn, grants Nadia and her neighbors a living wage.
Nothing is random in God’s creation. He uses it all for His glory and our good. Thus, “I will sing to the Lord all my life,” says the psalmist (v. 33). We too can praise Him today as we ponder all that He provides.
By Patricia Raybon

REFLECT & PRAY
O Creator God, we’re humbled by Your vast creation and all the ways You provide for our needs.

In what ways does God provide for you through His creation? How can you thank Him for that today?
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SCRIPTURE INSIGHT
Though the psalmist in Psalm 104 makes reference to various creatures in the earth, sky, and sea, only one creature is referenced using its proper name—Leviathan (v. 26). This is one of five times that Leviathan is mentioned in Scripture (see also Job 3:8; 41:1-34; Psalm 74:14; Isaiah 27:1). Who or what was Leviathan? All biblical references are in poetic passages, and Leviathan is cast in both literal and figurative roles. In Psalm 104, Leviathan is a sea creature: “There is the sea . . . and Leviathan, which you formed to frolic there” (vv. 25-26). Similarly, in Job 41 Leviathan is depicted as a large, intimidating sea animal (vv. 31-34). On the other hand, references like Psalm 74:14 and Isaiah 27:1 figuratively depict Leviathan as being a threat to God’s people and being marked for overthrow by the Almighty. Arthur Jackson